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it- . : : : - ' ' " - - - - ... -. . . . m1. i " 1 i - 1 fHE COIfCORD rTlMES. PUBLI8HEP EVERY THUR8DAY '. CONpORD. N. a B.y JOHN B. SHERRILL, Editor and Proprietjr. RATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For President, W.ILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, - - of Nebraska, - For Vce President, .. ARTHUR SEWALL," , -of Maine. " . - : - DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. Governor. CTRtS B. WATSON, ' Of Forsytbe. . : - 'i ' For Lieutenant Governor, THOMAS W. MASON. Of f0rjhampton. For Secretary of State. CUABJES M. COOKE. Of Franklin- For Treasnreiv BENJAMIN F. AYCOCK, - Of Wayne. . ? t ' For Auditor, ROBEt FURMAN. . Of aBpnconibe. - For Attorney General, -FRANt. -OSBORNE, j, Of Mfiblenburg. For Sui erf ntend'ejit ol public Instruction. - A rrj ysAtusOKOVO H, Of Johnston. . For Justtc'eK6preme Court. t . A. C. AVERV,'of Burke, . T1EO. H. BRON.Jb., of Beaufort. For Elector State-at-lrge, LOCK CRAIGEj of Buncombe. W. C. POD.GLAS, of Moore. J i The editor of this paper was prepared for the result at Chicago, and is neither crestfallen nor soured. The editor hon-' e?tly believing that ' the silver policy if adopted would f bring dishonor to the government arid destruction to the peo ple," and believing; this he could not be an instrument to produce Buch a result, and at the hazard of severing ties of friendship and political associations he "has inflexibly, discharged what he be lieved to be his duty, he how has no re grets and no apologies to offer. While this is bo he bows to. the will of the ma jority of his party ? and will faithfully support the ticket jfaominated and do what he can for its election. The editor is gratified to know that a majority of the jthinking substantial Democrats of thisl pounty endorse the course of The Tixes on the financial question. The psiadO patriots and bla tant demaeojrues who try to make the people believe thai Wery man who ad vocated what is called the sound money policy is an enemy; f' the- people iayej had little if any Impression upon the Democrats of thi pounty.- We ear nestly entreat these; true and sound money Democrata jq .fall into line and support the ticket. ' McKinleyism is by far worse thaa free sijver. The platform upon which Bryan stands, with two or "three exceptions, is -good Democratic doctrine. M , Our Populist friends who are so de- sirous of having the! free silver policy j enacted into! a law now have an oppor- i tunity.of "showing fheir faith by their ) works. ' ' The Democrats have engrafted free silver upon their platform to its J' fullest extent, and have nominated a man whose silver re'brd is undoubted and undoubtable. !(Ts the . Charlotte : . Obsen'er says, his record is not as old as Bland's, but it is just as strong. In ; other respects Bryan i a pure and able man. Two years ag4, without reward t or -hope of reward, hi announced that j he would desert the Democratic party upon the question oi silver. He led " the Democrats of his !f tate to fuse with ' the Populists and to elect a Populist Governor. Now, if du Populist friends want free silver and Tcgard it of such paramount important ' they will vote for Bryan. It is very certain if the ; Populists nominate a 'separate ticket and divide the silver vote that the gold ticket s will be elected. To vote a separate Pop , ",: ulist ticket is a half vote tor Mc- ; Kinley"and gold. The leaders of the ' Populist party will, from present indi- . j. th lrtwTO.iho;t.'hjr.i Wtilln pxk loifeox ' j be leaders if free silver'ere adopted "Othello's occupation wiqjuld be gone." . The question is, can they fool .the peo- i pie rthe honest people 'bf the Populist I party by telling themthat Bryan and . the Democrats are not 'sincere? There are many honest, intelligent men in the . Populist party whose sincerity will be . pat to a test in this matter, and we shall ' Tvatch their course. Sdrely they can- , not and will not let passion and hatred : j pt the Democratic party'butweigh prin t fciple and the good of the country. ' A .great deal is being Baid and written , about the issuing of bonds by the pres ent administration to save the credit of he government. It is well known that , Secretary Foster, .under Harrison, or dered the plates for a bond, issue. " It is. . : Well known that- there as a deficit ' auring the last four months of Harri son's administration of $5,810,549. It ftppears from a careful stement made ty the New Yor Journal of Commerce hat the ' Wilson . tariff jbill produced r nearly twenty millions rntire of revenue han the McKinley tarifif- he first year Jf its existence and the las' year nearly i fifty millions more. . Hii figures are as I follows: " ' , ' . 1 McKinley 1893 1203,155,016. ' f 1894-$131,?18,530. h Wilson 1895-$152158,617. ,r j . 1896 $16034,351. j . So our Republican orators will have V Iq charge the deficit and tie departure . of gold from the 'country & something else than the present tariff.! IRev. Dr. W. S. Creasy, pV Winston, will deliver the address at; ihe Mocks ville Masonic pic Pic in August. Dr. Creasy is one of the most entertaining speakers in North .Carolinrnd is one OX tne ongniest juasons. ' - :- -. I 1: . . . ... . ' ;: -1 . .-: ... - 1 ' . ... ... : - I II . '' : HON. WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE FOR PRESIDENT. CHICAGO CONVENTION. The convention was composed of 929 delegates. A test vote showed 626 for silver and 303 .for gold The gold forces were led by that gallant and true Demo crat, Senator Hill, of New York, and a great fight he made, and though de feated he won admiration from hia fops and increased the devotion of his fol- lowers. ' "-" v; Bland, Boies, Mathews, McLean, Bryan and others were put in nomina tion. Bland led for several ballots, and when he fell behind his name at his re quest was withdrawn. Boise never made any show;' " . . The' convention lasted five days and closed after the nomination of SewalL of MaffieTfbr ITtceTrcsmnCTT" ' Bryan's speech on Silver nominated him. We give below an extract from the Washington Post taken fromthe Charlotte Observer, showing the effect of his speech: "i "What amazes us is that he should have been able,by the mere act of mounting a rostrum and delivering a twentv-minutes sneech to dislocate the Tprocess of the convention machinery, to obscure every veteran aspirant then in viewT to change.men's hearts, to divert the course of their passions and their preferences, and to transform a serious and deliberative body into an instru ment upon which he played as Pan upon his pipe, as the blind prince of music upon his immortal harpsichord. On Thursday afternoon, at a time when Bldnd seemed to be the leader in the race, when Boies was . a laborious second, and when McLean, brainiest and most conservative of them all, was enacting' the role of the dark and dan gerous horse, this voung, man Bryan suddenly appeared, tall, shapely, hand seme as a Greek demigod, classic of out line, impassioned of address, thrilling withnis tremendous message to the people appeared like a fairy upon a dull and lifeless stage, and in-one mo ment threw 20,000 human-tetnpH-toto oriworoi iadcecTlbable exaltation. He cniicCt uaoU bom -the vanished past . the witchery of Orpheus, the magie of De mosthenes, the irresistible forces of the great Napoleon..' He stood there, and with a dozen fiery phrases he' converted thoughtful men into fanatics; he changed them;as utterly as the wiz ard changes the toys he plays with on the stage. In all the annals of politics there was never such a scene. We do not wonder that in the follow ing day, still palpitating under the spell of Bryan 'a wondrous eloquence, the con vention iurned to him as a needle to a magnet. " It may not be capable , of analysis, it may riot be coldly and ac curately demonstrable. The fact re mains, Bryan swept the. fioor of the convention as the fire sweeps the au tumn prairie. The delegates went to him in a strange passion of desire. Nothing could check the fury of their bent. He" was nominated slowly at first, swiftly next, and at last, in a wild crescendo of enthusiasm, he; was lifted on a whitecap of animosity and thrown high and "dry upon ; the beach of his surpassing triumph. r : , The. country at large knows little of this extraordinary jfoung man,' He has been in Congress. He delivered a 8peechupon the, tariff that enchanted and enchained the House. He has spoken several times since with .refer ence to the tariff, and always he has held his audience as the sirens help the fated crew that sailed with Ulysses from the shores of Troy.', He is a minstrel, a from of grace, ; a , thing of beauty. What he is beyond that, who knows ?" BOLUNG. . Every Democratic paper in New York and nearly every., one in New England has bolted; so have the Philadelphia Record and Times. ; The only two Dem ocratic dailies in Chicago have also bolted. So it goes. Yet the Populist leaders say that gold-bugs controlled the convention and that Democrats are apt sincere. " . " Send us the news from your section. WILLIAMS JENNINGS BRYAN, tie is a Tonne Alan Endowed With Many Grace, or Simple JiabiU, and Pos sessed of an Aggresslye and Fngnaacloiu Turn of Mind. William Jennings Bryan is a man of 5 feet 10, inclined to be dark, with a clear, health v complexion, and weighs about 170 pounds. In appearance Mr. Bryan is impressive. He has a massive head and clean shaven face that beto kens intellectuality as well as good na ture. . His nose is aquiline, his under jaw large. , His chin is square and there is a total absence of the boyish look that has been so persistently attributed to him; the eyes are large, dark and lus trous, and his mouth is of a generous width. He is affable and kindly in manner, approachable without lacking dignity. . ' 1 His family comes from Tirgnrrar rus father was born in Culpepper county, in that State, and died in Salem, 111., in 1880. His mother,- whose name was Maria Elizabeth Jennings, was born in Marion county, 111., and died in Salem a week ago last Saturday, after a pro tracted illness. Silas S. Bryan, his father, was a cir cuit Judge in Illinois 'from 1860 to 1870, and ran for Congress in the latter year on the Greeley ticket, but was de feated. "' William Jennings Bryan was born March 19, 1860, in Salem, 111. He was taught under his mother's Care until he was 10 years old, when he went to the public school at Salem, which he at tended for five years. At the 3e of 15 he went to the Whipple Academy, in Jackson viile, I1L, which is the prepara tory department of the IllinoisJollege, located at the same place. He spent two years m th$academy and four years in the college, taking a classical course. ' He represented his' college in the inter-State orational contest in 1880, and was class orator and valedictorian . in 1881. He then went to the Union Col lege of Law, in Chicago, and while in attendance there was in the office of Lyman Trumbull. He left the law school June 18, 1883, and went to Jack sonville to practice law, remaining there till October, 1887 when, ha removed to liaooiBTj-Neb., goingr into partnership wun a. it. "XEioot, a classmate of the law school. He had taken Dart in no- litieal campaigns since 1880, and made a number of speeches. He took part in the campaign of 1888 in Nebraska, and was nominated to represent tne First district in Congress in 1890. Notwith standing that Secretary Morton had been defeated two years before by 4,400 ma jority and the district was considered an impregnable Republican stronghold, he was elected by a majority of 6,713. He supported Springer for Speaker in the Fifty-second Congress, from whose district in Illinois he came originally. This led to his being put on the ways and means wmnn,f in-'!ongroBS, of wnicn . springer was chairman. On March 16, 1892, he made a tariff speech that was the sensation of the day and was-liberally distributed as campaign literature. He was re-elected in 1892, in spite of the fact that the Legislature had re-districted the State and his dis trict in the previous election had given the Republican ticket about 6,000 ma jority, by 140 votes. In the lifty-third Congress he helped to trame tne wnson bill, being a mem ber of the ways and . means committee, and took an especially active part in the income tax provisions. At the close of the debate otL the income tax in Con gress, replying to Bourke Cochran, Au gust 16, 1893, at the Bpecial session, he delivered a three hours' speech, being more largely, circulated than the tariff speech had been. He also spoke in iavor oi me Din to com the seigniorage ana spoKe.. against Carlisle's currencv policy, as also against Cleveland's gold contract with the Rothschilds. " In 1894 he became a candidate for the United States Senate and announced that he would .not be a candidate for the lower house of Congress. r - His platform for the 16 to 1 free coinage of silver caused Morton and otner administration Democrats to tight him bitterly. He was, however, nominated by the State Democratic con vention. Two joint debates at Lincoln acd Omaha respectively, with John M. Thurston, the candidate, for the Sena torehip, attracted much attention. The Leiature was, however, Republican, and -Thnrstnn JT elected." After his retirement from took up the practice of law in Lincoln again', but, the silver campaign opening, he found that the calls on him for speeches and campaign work were so frequent that he was forced to give up his practice. In September, I 1884, he became editor-in-chief of the' Omaha World-Herald,' and had. control of its editorial policy on State and national questions. ' v ; ,- Mr. Bryan is a man of small means. He was married October 1, 1 1884, to Mary Baird. of Perry, 111., who attended tne iemaie acaaemy, in Jacksonville, when he was in the other school at the aame place, and who graduated the same week that he did, and was also the valedictorian of her class. She studied law, and was admitted to the bar with-, out any idea of practicing, but simply -to be more thornno-hlir mmranintuhla u iuiu. duo io-- it you ui i wy. yrijxijfw uianbe."Ynree "cnuarett nave been born to them, Buth, 10 years old; Wil liam J,, Jr., about 7, and Grace, 5. Mr. Bryan is a Presbyterian, having joined the Cumberland Presbyterian church at the age of 14. He is now a member of the First Presbyterian church, of Lincoln. . , . Mr. Bryan neglects none of the acces sories oi oratory. , .nature ricniy en dowed him with rare grace. He is happy in attitude and pose. Melliflu ous is the one word that most aptly de scribes bis voice. It is strong enougn to be heard by . thousands. It is so modulated as not to vex the ear with monotony, and can be stern or pathetic, fierce or gentle, serious or humorous, with the varying emotions of its master. In drawing a comparison between SamuelU. Randall and Bryan, the lat ter is thus desciibed: ' "In four years' service Bryan estab lished a far greater reputation than did .Randall in the same length of time. Indeed, lit may be said, without any ex travagance, that Bryan's fame after four years had spread as widely as had Ran- oau s alter twenty years of Congress." It is riot only for' Mr. Bryan's gifts as a speaker that he is esteemed so highly by the people of his home. Nq taint has ever attached to his public or private acts. Me is a man of simple habits. He neither smokes nor drinks, is quiet in his tastes and moderate in his lan guage, j - . : . "-j .!' - Mr., Bryan lives well in a commodi ous dwelling in the fashionable part' of juncoin. 'lne study in which both Mr and Mrs. Bryan have desks is a very at- iracuye room, it is filled with pooks, Biatuary ana mementoes of campaign, There are busts and portraits of noted men, and among other things there are two butcher . knives which Mr. Bryan u sea in tne campaign with Judee Field. to refute the latter'a boasts of the effects of high protection. t -. Deafness Cannot be Crowd r By looai appUalng,- can&otj iccw.ii uiMjf uueatKju poruon oi me ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, Deafness is cause by an inflamed enn, dition of the mucous lining f the Eu- eiacnian xuoe. wnen tnis tube gets inflamed yeu have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is en tirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal conainon, f bearing will be destroyed forever; nufe cases out of ten are caused by catarrh; which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous anfnra We will jriye One Hundred Dollars for anvr rn tm t ' T t i . ""j v-bto vf uvtuuasa causeu Dy car tarrnj mat cannot be cured by Hall's " ucuu jui uirvuiars, zree F. J, Cheney & Co., Toledo. O. BgL.c50ia by Druggists, 75c. EriT Within an Eer. . ' I N. C, to the Raleieh News, anrl nh.. ver says: It can no longer he said that a hen can lay only one egg at a time. A hght-Scoch Brahmalhen, from the prize poultry yards of PMlL. Spruill of this place, laid two eggs at one time yesterday ne within the other both eggs being perfect in every respect. The outer egg measured 8 inches around the long way, and 7 inches around, and weighed 5J ounces.. The inner egg has a perfect shell and contents, andii the Banie size as an ordinary hen egg Cleveland Star says the Poplista and Republicans of it-;jounty have about agreed on fusion. : ' PQFtlXlST OPINION OF THK M6Y IlCBaBT. , McKXX- a mta nf fiBOi of the St Louis convention delegates, Mark Hanna, the inveterate foe of organized larjor, u ucceeded in nominatinR -his faithful servant, William McKmley, Jr., for President of the United otatea. iiThmt iR nnthinz ordinary about tMt man Hanna. His shrewdness as a political boss is only exceeded by his sa gacity as an overbearing1,, conscienceless, dominant man of money-bags and ex ploiter of labor. He is, certainly the greatest and most dangerous man in American politics to-day. Organised labor has no more deadly enemy thaa Mark Hanna, the Cleveland millionaire, who has forced upon the American peo ple his candidate for Presiddnt' The Labor Leader; Lancaster, Pa. ... - t "Minor McKinlev. havine learned that he had been duly nominated at St. Louis, turned around And kissed several of the females of his family, and imme diately commenced making speeches. The burden of said speeches U the tariff. The manufactures . need mow protec tion, says McKinley. rhe forty-two pr cent, given them under the presenter is not enongbr," says McKinley. 4 "Thft nuestion of finance is of second arv imnortance, says McKinley. "It is the humble opinion of this ob scure scribe that the money question can not be put down by kissing the women and talking tariff.' ThoSf -E. Watson, in hia People's Party Paper. Atlanta, Ga. - -r;:,t ' ' -.; . j tion; a millionaire attorney for the Union -Pacific Railroad to act as permanent chairman; a millionaire representative of the Coal Trust and the Standard 0a Company (Hanna of Ohio) for boss; a millionaire 'St. Paul banker to draw the platlorm; the banks of New York flood ing the leaden with telegrams in favor of gold; Chauncey Depew, the million: aire president of a New York railroad company, a conspicuous figure, and every usurer in the United States sup porting the ticket. ' "Are you going to vote for it? That's the question." The Representative, Ig natius Donnelly's Paper, Minneapolis Minn. f We quote above some extracts from leading Populist papers to show what they think of- the McKinley ticket and platform and we must respectfully ask our Populist friends how they, here in North Carolina, can fuse with the ad herents of such a ticket, which is so ab horred and denounced by their leaders in other States. . The railway commission has nearly completed its assessments of the roads in North Carolina. It finds that during the twelve months ended June 30, fifty miles of road were built as follows: Henderson ville and Brevard twenty two miles, Caldwell and Northern twelve, Aberdeen and West End ten, Ellen boro and Henrietta six. The total mileage is 3,707, of which the South ern has 1,000, Atlantic Coast Line 686, Seabord Air-line 613, miscellaneous roads 1,138. ' Ministers Should Use Dr. Miles Heart Cure. lHEBB IS NO PEOFESSION. whose labors so sererely tax the nervous sys tem, as that of tbe ministry. The de rangement of tbe nerve centers of the brain by over work, frequently brings on attacks of heart trouble, and nervous prostration. Eev. J. P.Kester. M. D., Pastor TJ. B. church, London Hills, Ills., himself a physi cian, writes Feb. 28, 1895: "Heart affection and nerrous prostration had become so serious last fall that a little orer work In the pulpit would so completely prostrate me fif MilS that It seemed certain I L must relinquish the work HeUt Clire ot the nUnlstry entirely, t ..... Heart palpitation became KeSlOreS so bad that my auditors TlmMh would ask me If I did not nCalUltottt hare heart disease. Last November I commenced taking Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure alternately with Dr. Miles Nervine and derived the greatest possible benefit. I have just closed revival work of 10 weeks, preaching nearly every night and twice on the Sabbath, I can speak for hours without suffering as I formerly did. Hard working ministers should keep Dr. Miles grand remedies on hand." . Dr. Miles' Heart Cure Is sold oa guarantee, first bottle will benefit or money relunded. A PARABLE. In the days -when the people tore their hair and pawed rip ground crying out with a loud voice. Free Silver" "Give ins dollar of our daddies," and other people, yea much people, reared back on their due claws "and growled for gold, more gold, great eobs of gold. .JK. 1 l.-tHM i - 11 a young man hailing from the hills ol Stanly, with hay teed and cackle burrs in his hair and grasshoppers roosting in his whiskers, has opened up a Hardware store in Concord, N. C. -I H " Anyth ing in the e- . xxuui muiug uiuuuiiiu iu a marriage license. I .1 1 - Owing to the fact that this young man lost a fraction of over two million dollars in the last Government bond deal by bidding 3 , cents under J. P. Morgan & CoM he is compelled to make l.is lmuff bv selling hardware, and, to build up his tr?ade, he has decided that he shall, for the next 150 years, offer any thing in the line at prices Ithat will make strong men weep tears as big as horse apples, i ' Tbia young man and Ms business are fixtures in this town They Are Here to Stay ! They can't be run off, bought off, nor scared oft. His family ex penses being under low water mark he is here to meet, defy jand defeat all competition. AU are invited and especially mylStanlv friends to come and boo me. . -1 ; , r J I , , Yours for Success. . :m ' BEHHETT. PEACE No superior work done anywhere. North pr South. It has now tbe best (acuity it baa ever bad. Tbe advan tages offered in I4teratute,Languag0s, Music apd Arf are unsurpassed. Address,; Tt a a noticeable fact tnai me jvpuu- hWplatform adopted at St. Louis for the first time since the prgaruzation of the party away back in the fifties has not one line upon the sectional issuer no bloody shirt ,in iti And the New York Weekly Post aptry says the reason. is, the'Democrata as they come into mu control of the government in 1893 promptly wiped the Federal election laws from the "statute books. Does it not look strange and ridiculous to see and hear Linney and others harping and earning about election i laws when the party at large have ignored the subject T One i of the boldest thieves that we have heard of was the negro who re cently stole twelve head of cattle near Spout Springs, in name tuuuij, drove them in broad i dayli2hl anron the public roads through this county tn Greensboro.- where be sold them, pocketed the money tfnd escaped before the owners of. the cattle couia Tene him.- Chatham Recor4. - GRATEFUL' AND COMFORTING i Tot Tired, Aching. Irritated Feet ia . nn beta wttn - GUTICURA SOAP 1 a teatl. enolotiar wrtk CUTI- j CUKA (omuaent), th craat skin cure, j l Thl treatment aUsys tteMas sad trri- i tattua, eootbee UluautiM aa I Bamioi sveuincs or we jeuia, wo-j iiiiiara,miMMiuBWpui- t net iDSpenpinaoa. , . i usee at vtw ) We Now Etave our FULL - STOCK -OF- Spring ?. Summer Goods V consisting of a FULL -:- LINE Men's, Women's and Cloth, Felt and Straw AND CAPS. ' not bay on time and dbt Do doable prices bat comedo see us. Baltimore Bargaikj House'. the the Hardware Line. FOR YOUNG LADIES IBALEIGH, 2tf: CJ. iT?erstT pf Virgil A I -X :'vl i - ; -h ILL::- LigljfUntlefwear, j Children's ' ' i , ! ' "i-.l Siloes U ATS I i """-.:! - in :: : -- --"1 n-I jfi : . THE RACKET I.I I I -o- 2 Balls- i Sewing Thread For 1 Cent. We haTe the cheapest- in Town. See our REMNANTS of 10 and 15 cent at 1 and 10 cents. IN Eyery Department We I nvite Yo u to call and get our prices and see tllH Largest Stock 1 GROCERIES! in Concord. We offer the follow ing at wholesale and retail : 100 barrels of Sugar. 250 cases Arbuckle's Cufleo, 25 bags green coflee. 75 barrels of Keroseue Oil. A car Salt. 1 car of Lime and Cement. 26 cases of Star Potash. 50 cases Menlcann8 Pot'aali. 100 cates Matches. , 50 bOxf s ot Soap. 50 boxttg of Soda. . 25 kegs of Soda. to 1 car of flour. ' t 25 cases "lUx" Bsking Powder. -26 cases Ql "Good Lack" Bak ing Powders. 100 boxes Tobacco. 75 boxea of Snuff, GailN & Ax and Ladies' Choioe. 0,000 Cigarettes. 10,000 Cheroots, ; 100,000 Paper Bags. 200 Tons of WrappingjPaper. , We have a large stock of Bagging and Ties, Both New and Second Hand, i and will make ke you some' very close prices. COME TO SEE US. PATXEttSOW'S - J Wholesale and Betaft Store. ; s LOW DICK The balance 0f oa Low Shoes will g0 At Net Cost All $1.50 Shoes $1.00. : All $1.00 Shoes t 75 cents. WIUVli .J VV jJllUtJSll Summer dress l2Hc. gOodslreC;1 to 8 l-3c. 10c goods reduce! to 7 l-2c. Just received some line of Ladis Shirt Waist Sets aii Ladies' Chains. Mosquito Netting New goods will ai rive every day. & invite you to come nd s-e? tl best line pf wash tabucs wi eyer saw in the towQ pf Concord. I We nave a fou line of from 5 cents lo 25 cut?. Freud Dimitv and French Organdie fa 25 ceuts; Tulle lor 10c, 12k, ui 15 cents. A loll line of Dresdfl and Persian Percale--, 8 1-3, H 1 and 12 13 cenU. Dresden and PersUu Silks'lroip 25 cents to $1, in all tlie upw-t things. FIGURED -: 43 iri( h wiJe GO cents. Plain Moh.iir 38 inches wide f r 5Q centstbu hfnl valae in tou. A9 silk Black Fa iu Duchee f r 75 (jfluts, nr.T-r was soM for I w thm $1.00. Silk Mitt, Silk fll." from 15 c nts to 50 (-ent". The Merrill patent fplei.did fiug1 glove, each pair contaius a gr antee ticket. 1.' n Shoes - and - Oxfi the very best aud ntwest WnP in Hhoes, all in the Nw T ' Narrow, Opera, Razor, Now Yoik and nt edlo Toe. Come and see aijd we i" dojougood: GIBSON & MOKUib- Th nlln. I. .till nno rl.illaf VLr. J" though many idlitlmi.. Includlntf 6a''dII"Lu' Ored plates, have racsolly been utajie w ;, retiiafor tbaaaleof ButUrick rwra- u V.ahlon iJV. . i 12 (-fill . yoqj nam aa4idreM aud have iiniall'" -torxar; " DAYENPORT COLLEGE LENOIR, N. C, CO-EDUCATIONAL Foundnd In VVIH 'Fnrnllment last ya.r,.l. ecoud largest In . tbe hlstorj- of tbe t'jj,. A fu f arultv of efficient teachers. ongh Instruction. Practical courses oi' ' Mnsr3flrt,SteiiograpliyandTyperiUDg. riutnuoa mru1rrfLtt?. JQHN D. . I'residpl11-- St&its Hcnsftl &&d Isdusirial Scbod. . . -r. te' ; " era. 444 rasiilHf k tnde nts. besides i; VKf AKTMKSTS WeJI equipiu. -; ctll! school of pupils. OUnmtrlculat opening In 18. 93 of tne ! . counuw ' iitT seutud, competitive vxaiuhmtion ui .iH seat August 1st, to flU fre-tuiti"U iaji in dormitories, Application sliouli ' iol). before Jnly 20ta to enter tl'i- exai"1' liIie No free tuition except to ai!:i-a"t " ,.SI pledire u become iachers, uii'iu;" V. ' ,,,j-n .4 ..4.4.. ..JAahi.UR.li:ii 'I11'"' . .1, u LOWE DICK rio, (KH tuition-paying sturteii . .EBi HB mi iS7 i ! sa le Ind 1 ai m
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
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July 16, 1896, edition 1
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