Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / July 31, 1902, edition 1 / Page 1
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. . . -i , .-THETIMEO-- TuO3 UZHLY TILTS STEAM BOOK AND JOB OFFICE VekeeT)Onhandfallitookof k LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS, STATE MENTS, BILL HEADS, ENVEL OPES, TAGS, VISniNG CARDS WED DING INVITATIONS, ETC, ETC. U2iiU3 csnacn caurci CSTABUftHttO IN ItTS. Uytm Suirc auTtHn to tcH, kt tbc people kow It. G00J) PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS YOLUMEf-XXJ Concord, n. c, Thursday, J uly 81, 19 02. Number 4. -:.''iIS'L;;F":v:-.--,. ; -. ,, . : ' 1 " - 1 11 1 , . , - ,. . - -.. ... . . : ,fJ ' ' ' 1 : " a vftj. -j : ; ; . , . : i! ' ! ' ' . I .. . r. . I I I i II I I 't. II MM "V IV I f m-k -11-: 1 . II "V I , I I I . m . I .11'' f I I . I 1 ' I I ' . II I I I I M II 17 1 I X V ill f I U If II 1 ill VIIIII I I . IV Jb2m B SherriU, Editor and Owner. E3X3 TJS j D -H A T& "0"? $1.00 Fea in AdYnc Soft Harness Toa c-n mtki yoar ba ceoa 4 aoft m gU and aa toagh M w lr bf iwin's EUREKA Har- osa Oil. Toa eu Wngthm Its lLfo makalt LrC twice aa Ions at ordinarily would. mm fin , makes a poor looking bar j nrsa lika new. Matte of pure, hee" bod lad oil, peclally prepared to wits Bold "erywbie) In rani all aliaa. AN OLD CHARGE OFf the( light diugade THE chars- which Term on hu nidt th, axibjoct of hln weU kaowi i 2 i. T,hroh miaconceptl-n a( ardara Id Luoaa oaoT mander of tha EnsUsta cavalry, crdarad Lord Cardlmjw with th XJmht brigade to charge tha Ruaalaa artillery. With a battery la (rooUtl one on each aide, the Light brigada hawed Ita way peat the gate rront and routed th enem lee cavalry. , Of (70 horaem en gtd IM retarned. - H Experience of ., .. IN WRITING Fire I nsurahqe, settling losses i and representing 7ivst Gloss Companies, Southern, Northern and For eign, -ve ask your patronage. Our facilities for Employer's Liability, Accident and Health Insurance are. excellent. G. C. RICHMOND & CO. 'Phone 184. :-. . AL.V a league, half a league, Half a league onward, ; Ail In the valley of death -wed the alx hundred. "Forward, the Light brigade! Charge for the runaf" he aald. Into the valley of death c Rode the alx hundred. I "orward, the Light brigade!4 Wee there a man dismayed? -Not though the soldier knew Some one had blundered; T helm not to make reply, Their net to reason why. Their but to do and die. Into the valley of death . Rod the six hundred. Cannon to right of them. Cannon to left of them, 4? .Cannon In front of them, ; - Volleyed and thundered ; ' Stormed at with shot and shell, ' Boldly they rode and well; Into the Jaw of death. Into the mouth of hell. Rode the six hundred. -: , ' L f Flashed all their sabers bare, : ' . Flashed as they turned In air. - Sabering th gunners there. , Charging an army, while Ail the world wondered; " r 1 Plunged la tha battery em eke. 4 Kiaht through th On Chey broto; Cocaack and Ruaelaa . , Reeled from th saber stroke, . . ShatUred and sundered. Then they rode back, but not Not th six hundred. Cannon to right f them. Cannon to left of tkem. Cannon behind them Volleyed and thundered; Stormed at with sbat and shall. While horse and hero fall. They that bad fought so wall Come through th Jaws of death Back from the mouth f hell. All that was left of them. Left of six hundred. When can their glory fade? Oh. th wild charge they made) Ail th world wondered. Honor the charge they mad I Honor the Light brigade. Noble six hundred! - tfVTTVfTTTTVVf?Tf T MTTTV JTTT TTTt f f f f f f Jf TTf f fff tf ILL ABPI LETTER. ' Three Times a Week. THE MOST WIDELY READ PA-, j ; ; : PER IN AMERICA. Time bas demonstrated , that the Thrlce-a-Week World stands alone In iti class.. Other papers have imi tated its form but not its success. This is because It tells all the news : all the time and tells It Impartially, whether t,tiat news be. political or otherwise. It is, in fact, almost dally at the price of a weekly and tou cannot afford to be without it. Hepublican and Democrat alike can : read; the Thrice-a-Week World with absolute conndence in Its truth. In addition to news. It publishes fl'rst-class serial . stories and other feature suited to the home and lire- side.' .' ' f ' The Tlirice-a-Week World's regular subscription price Is only $100 per year; and this pays for 156 papers. ' We offer this unequalled newspaper ana -The Concord Times tORether one year for SI 65. : .' '" The regular subscription price of the two papers Is $2.00. WEATHER PBKPlCTlOflg. The twelve days after Christmas indi cate the weather for the following year. xaen lay in order shows the weather for one month. - is Blow oat a candle, and if the wick continnues long to smoulder, look - for bad weather. , If it goes out quickly, the weather will be fair. h ' When.it begins to snow, notice the I size ol the -fiakea. If they are Teary fine, the storm, will be along one; if large, the storm will soQn be over. 1 ' After the frogs begin to sing in the Spring, if they; .are ; frozes in' three times, you may be Sure that afterwards you will bave warm weather. If it rains on the first dog-day, it will rain on each of the other thirty-nine. If 011 the other hand, the first dog-day is dry, all the rest will be dry .- When you see a cloud in the sky that grows larger, it is going to storm. When you see a cloud growing smaller and melt away,' it is going to be fair. If the chickens come out while '. it rains, it is a sign mat tne storm n to be a long one.. If they Btand.around 1 under the shed, the storm will be short. " , " ---Hi- As the old woman said, "I never knew it to begin in the mormn . and rain all day in my.life. f But I've known it to begin at noon snd rain all day lotsof times." ' ' " If the breastbones of. the Thanks a r 1 eiving cmckens are ngnier in ouiur, a sor; rBCBR seocritibh COMPANY. Baltimore Sun. , On the strength of the fact that the Louisville and Nashville Railway accepts a charter under the present Constitution of Kentucky, renouncing one granted in the fifties, the Courier-Journal sug gests that there-is to be a. combination of, the Louisville and Nashville and Southern Railway, the latter absorbing the former, or each absorbing the other on the "community of . interest" plan. Whether this will be done, or how it will be done, ; depends, our contemporary guesses, upon the issue of the legal pro ceedings for the , dissolution of the Northern Securities Company. If this scheme for. operating different and competing companies together is decid ed to be valid, then, it is alleged, a Southern Securities Company will be formed to hold and manage the South-; era and the Louisville and Nashville. State laws forbid their consolidation, as State laws forbade the consolidation of the Northwestern railways. Bat a com pany holding both, if lawful, will effect all that ia dessvd, which la tne topi xHh aoa of wastef ul and. cut-throat compe tition. It is not clear, however, how the Louisville and Nashville's accept ing a modified charter will further Mr. Morgan s supposed scheme 01 a south ern securities company. Something has been said about the Southern get- ;n ivutlwl nf ita rival kv hnvinff it there will be a good deal of snow in the fcut 8tock of the Louis ville and Nashville at 150 iff hardly a Winter following. If the color is dark, there will be little snow, . . When a person kills a snake he does well to consider what kind of - weather he would like. If he hanjrs . the snake . a . I ? - - a v tL. up, .it will rain; 11 ne uunes -11, weather will be lair. : - When the cattle lie down as soon as they are turned out to pasture in the morning, it is because - they feel a their Dones, desirable asset, since the present net earning can hardly be expected to . con tinue after the boom is over." JuBt now the net earmnes mar lustily such a price as $150 per share, but that figure is a poor basis for a permanent invest ment. It will be recalled that the pro posal of the Louisville and Nashville to build into a territory already served by the Southern was soon followed by the Atlanta Constitution. A few months ago some doubting correspondents hinted that the story of Jancy liart was probably an exagger ated romance, or a banded down tradi tion or maybe a myth. It is fortunate that the doubt was published, for it awakened and aroused the good old people of Elbert and Hart counties and brought to light facts and records con cerning the old lady that might have passed into oblivion. That the story of Ler heroism is true is now established as clearly aa it was when Hart county was cut off from Elbert and named fox her, the only county in Georgia that was named for a woman. While this newspaper controversy was going ion down in Georgia there was a great strap ping Virginian named Tom Lee, 6 frt high and large in proportion, operating the passenger department of the Lacka wanna railroad. He is the great-grandson of Nancy Hart, decended from her in a bee line through honorable Vir giriia ancestors, "lie knew nothing 'of this controversy concerning his mater nal ancestor and 'said recently when speaking of her that it was the sorrow of his life that he was not personally acquainted with her. I. : f ; Ton) Lee ia a great favorite among the railroad officials. Very recently he wished to try the work ana speed of a new monster locomotive and invited the presidents and superintendents of several railroads and forty-three editors and newspapermen to go with kirn on a special to Pocona v mountains and back again. On the northern roads the superintendents now have an indicator or Dutch clock in their private car that registers the speed. "What do you want" said Tom Lee. "Well, about 70 miles," said the editor. The speed was then 55 miles an hour, but quickly the clock registered 56, 57, 58, 60, 65, 70, where it remained for several min utes while, the engineer was holding her down to an even steady pace. I A glass full of water on the floor would not have spilled a drop. Tom Lee saidl "I would have given you 50 if you had asked: for it." After a while they stop ped at the Swiftwater house, where Washington and Lafayette played cro quet after the war was over and where Joe Jefferson spends his sum mers. Tom Lee, knows his lineage and that his parents were Virginians and nearly re lated to the Harts, for whom Thomas Hart Benton was named. For! the sake of many children who have, never heard the story, I will briefly relate: that during the dark days-of the revolution five tones came to her cabin and order her to get dinner for ' them. She did so and while they were eating and drinking and their guns were Bet up in the corner of the room she quietly took them outside, and standing at the door with- one in her hand she -drew aim on the leader and ordered them to surrender or . die. One man' started toward her and she shot him dead and seized another gun and shot another who had risen from the table. With another gun she kept the others quiet untilj some neighbors came and they were taken prisoners. :" No doubt this is a true story and a man had better not move to Elbert or Hart countjrand ex press any doubta about it. I have been there! and know. Some years ago j I lectured in Hartwell and from there journeyed to Elberton in a buggy with a preacher. We got a late start and the preacher's horse wanted to alow up at every where there was a woman in sight! and when we got to the river the ferryman was away ana we naa k wait an hour for him to come back. So it was dark when we reached Elberton. Th court house was hehted up ana Avery says: '-The folkmicx fist U painfully imperfect. It was takes from the confederate war records at Wash-! ington, P. C, and boat the meager document in the Georgia archives and such peraooal inlormaUoo aa could be had. - Toe department of tne cooferl- eracy was most loosely run. Regi mental master rolls were mingled and confused; the constantly occurring changes were not noted. Sow, ask any on soldier, cm you prove your service by any nndooMed evidence? Two years ago Governor Candler alluded to this shameful neg lect in his message and urged the ap pointment of some one to gather op and make a record of these Georgia soldiers before the witneaeea are . au dead, but nothing was done. Why do not the veterans demand itr It woo la cost but little perhaps the salary of a good man for a year. The children and grand-children of these soldiers are interested and have a right to demand the preservation and record of their father's or grand-fathers' honorable service. Why . not? Will there be enough veterans or patriotism in the next legislature to see to this and have established a muster roll some kind of a roll that the humblest citizen can point to as his hall of fame? : 1 Bill A nr. Tli Polly of Txa a ad North Car llaa In Beallrwalag tlx Kaaaai city Platform. New York World. J The Democratic State conventions in North Carolina and in Texas have "re affirmed allegiance to the Kansas City platform." This is an act of asinine folly for which there is no excuse either in the precedents of the past or the obligations of the present time. Democratic as cendancy is so secure in those South ern States, owing to the negro question, that the election of the party ticket would not be endangered b any plat form that common sense could suggest or policy dictate. For this reason the Democrats of these States are all the more blameworthy for yielding to Mr. Bryan's egotistic insistence, instead of ignoring it, as the party has done this year in Indiana, Illinois, Maine, Minne sota, Mississ'ppi, Georgia, Pennsyl vania and other States. The party in- Texas and in North Carolina will be ' neither helped nor hurt by proclaiming itself still bound to the "body of death," as Mr. Cleveland very accurately styled the Chicago-Kansas City platform. But in the doubtful and the essential States, where the Democrats are trying j to retrieve the disasters of the but two campaigns by abandoning dead issues and false doc trines twice overwhelmingly condemned by people, these exhibitions of an ob durate and brainless Bourbonism will tend to make the Republican campaign ing again easy. The South once had a courage of conviction and a genius for politics which are now sadly lacking in many of the States of that section. eoTBBsem Ttrr.THi vatic! a ft t at rati a Pw.lSTaUB PAKASBaPatn. rheumatic weariness irr yrniOAl CPUnn Und you caalook for a rain Boon. r,,n In Wall atrt that" rjut the control Ane noua" w , , . p MLUlOAL bUHUUL fWen a night andnodewfallsJ Pd.P 1 z a l - . ui w 1 hio 1 ? . 1 Mvrtn(v a rtn ru 1 1 1 11 v itir n 1 11. ajj.ii it is a sign ii u gums ,Ta t onv nrioe" anrjears to be the '"""6 UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. FOUR YEARS COURSE. Seven Laboratories. 22 Instructors. ' . Fall term begins 1902. : .' September 8, For information address, F. R. Venable, President;' Chapel Hill, N. C. Julyii-tiw. ' I.'' . , Statesville Female College A first-class school for women. A faculty of nine able teachers. Courses : Collegiate, Business, Music and Art, and Bible. Both in the instruction jEfiven and tie care of boarders this col kge is one of the best in the f . - r- a. i Mate.: - : r .4'!, ,.,vv. .... I novcvannRn. Ju.lv The expense of board and tui- Stafford, wife of John E. rain. inis omen loses much of its mystery when one remembers that dew has not fallen because the night was clouded. - If the melt of the hog killed in : the Fall is big at the front end, the Winter will be sharpest at the beginning. If the melt is biggest at the rear, the Winter will be coldest in the latter part. When you see the sun drawing water at night, know that'it will rain on the morrow. The sun is said to beVdraw ing water when ita rays can be seen shining through rifts in distant cl uds. In Winter when you see- me wuu geese flying south; expect cold weather. They fly south because the ponds to the north are frozen over. When the geese are Been flying north, warm weath- i tn he exnected. " . . ... Ml If the sun sets in a cioua, u wm rm on the morrow. The person who takes this saying as literally true would do well to remember that unless the cloud that hides the sun from his sight is extremely large, a spectator a short distance to the north or south would at the same moment see the Bun set in clear sky. ' f ; .. if:-'-vV-' T- motto - of our present napoleons 01 Finance. Still, peace bought at the rate nf S150 a share seems to lack the element of permanence. Famoa Ol Bear Hunter I Palling. A sneeial from Asheville says: A renort comes from Black Mountain, not altogether direct, but none the less credited, to the effect that the health of "Big Tom" Wilson is failing fast. Big Tom.whose fame as a bear hunter has Innir since broken through state bounds, proposes to act as guide for President Roosevelt should he take part in the nrrwneetive bear hunt this fall which r ,r .... s . :u Arp.f The preacher 'Arp,' unloaded Bill me Sermon ST Vrd Long. Houghton. Mich., Dispatch. Twice requested to make his sermon brief, Rev. Henry Gillingham, pastor of the Atlantic Methodist Church of Atlantic, a village near Houghton, preached one of the shortest sermons, if not the shortest, on record. At the cbse of Sunday school one of the church officers said to the minister: "It is very warm, and J hope you will make the sermon 'short tonight." The pastor accepted the wish in good humor. He went to the evening service prepared to make a 80-minute discourse. , As he entered the vestibule of the church, however, he met another prominent member of the congregation, lratrrtiiaa Slaadard. ine Ktoauon ta toe liuupftore so far aa U relates to the Friars can be briefly expressed. Code lb onion that existed between church and state, under the (taaniah regime, that is be tween the Spanish government and the Catholic church, the church was really the tmctreas of the situation. I The dif ferent orders of Friars, Fnuxiarana, Jesuits, of which the Jesuits were said to have beea the best, indicating what the other must have been, where the real ruler of the country, the j petty magiatrafs) everywhere, with powvr ol life and death, and thus the power over the property and the pereoos especially the female persona of the Filipino. Any adequate description of their ty rannical, opprtaaive, murderous and lustful rule, . would be onprihuble. There eems to be little doubt even from Catholic testimony that the Friars were about aa unsavory a lot of priests as ever cursed a people by their pre sence and exam ie. . ; Now the Filipino inanrrection was very largely directed against j these Friars. They had wrested tome of the best lands of the Filipinos from them and the people were being reduced to the position of helpless tenants and serfs. There was the feeling that these lands, by fair means or foul should be restored to the people from whom they ere unfairly and foully wrung. And the hatred against the Friars for their outrages of Filipino homes had grown to an intensity of feeling that thought of nothing but revenge.; The Spanish soldiers who fell into Aguinaldo's hands were kindly treated. The Friars were killed or horribly mutilated, after a sort of rude babario effort to make the pun isbtnent fit the crime. And then the United States Government took posses sion and the Friars flocked to Manila by the hundreds and thousands to be under protection of a Protestant power rather than to be left to the vengeance of their co-religionists. With the establishment of order in the Islands it is found that the Friars can not go back to their lands, for fear of the people. But by the Treaty of Paris their lands are not to be confiscated, as the Filipino Government would have done immedi ately, if it could have been established, and their persons are to be protected, so far as such protection is afforded to any of the inhabitants of the j Islands. Meanwhile it is acknowledged that their very presence is a danger to order and a menace to the established government. And now the President of the United States makes the proposition toj buy from these Friars at a fair valuation their lands and to hold them as public lands for the people from whom j they were undoubtedly unlawfully extorted at first.- At the same time, since the uftfiL States has nothing to do with the matters that have made these Friars Bp unpopular that their livesare con stantly in danger, the Vatican aa their authoritative head is asked to recall them with full liberty to send others in their place, if need be. j The proposi tion is a fair one. More that one Euro- martyr SotUcf iaarte a setf-mad like being ignored. There are tisaee wheat it is be never than late. . . t Machof the milk ol haaaaakinlesai taatre ol the pump. If a miser ica e a wUl it's mttUj a deed give-away. Some men ' Imeomm sadder without becoming any wiser. Eiperteoc makes a wiser and poorer simultaneously, Social traiaiag eoahkw oo to appear interested when he isn't. i A man growk, a worn aa sralWe and the latter gains her point. Sum m eo like to nh tascaaae it'a the next thine to doing nothing. - Even the woman of few words It con tinually warming them over. When the money of so e por4 converses it uses a nwepboo. Expect every man to do bis daty then expect to be disappointed. : Any pretty woman's jaw is a thing of beauty when it Isn't working. The way of the transgressx ia fre quently paved with gold bricks. It Is one thing to do a good act and it is another to aa? nothing about it. The more hifikwe a man is the oftener he shifts from one Job to an other. 1 tticceeaful business man Is one. who induces other peo)4e to buy what he dosen't want. .. One of the greatest pleasures in life is to be found in couaUng the money we expect to make. It isn't the little a man has but rather a desire for more that puts him in the poverty-stricken class. When a girl of 90 marries a man of 70 there may be extenuating circum stances in the shape of wealth. . The wise small boy throws his moth er's slippers after his big sister when she starts on her wedding tour. The wise man formerly built his house on a rock, but now be builds it on the sand and call U a seaside hotel. Even the minister whose sermons art of the long-drawn-out variety is prefer able to the sensational grand-stand parson. The south's prof eased friendship for the north is apt to be questioned shortly after the first shipment of early water melons. The average woman dosen't care any more for the pririlege of voting ! than the average man does for privilege of putting a baby to sleep. leadache Iu2t, aot iwcr sMrfly stddeeir twit iftlLY. It prey ttpoo the aarcSecrttsi powers cwere thaa we reaha. It corwuinrs the vitality taatcr than narvrt can rrpktuii it, and we. cannot uQ just what moment a temporary or cotraktw alyrrratioa ol tat miad w3 rreuit. Headache) and pain ahottld b prompt fy re Btowtw-" kt proprrly. Many paia cures ut-mon aUtnnfuJ thaa the naia. IWwart. XI yo wotili b aai, uk.a . JSi.- Pain Pflls. "As a rseah f swwralrU I last tike slgaa4 avr HrU . aad U paia 1 kv wlsng fa tataiP ajaaait K af M4 w take tiaaallr. A wtoed Maes' j. A (rW4 $ smm4Lc rata IMta aa4 tt mm(V re sa. 1 taea BsrtM s Waa4 say tiaeala s g as. Ttwrf ha aeadark. a4 I twartUr racnaa naj taesa te etaefa,"" W. . CuaLSV. Bsoa4.Taaa, Selikf frrisnv tf Dasss,). tV. Mitee Medteal Cs CraaeUd. H.fC HERRING. DR. Dnm$T. Is agala at Ids eta ever Terse imtij dojrooao, xv. o. Dr. W. c. Houston coeooasw a. e. la aiwparW f do en ktada of eeatalwortm w aoa approve i OAo ovar Johaaa U. i brmf Hoi pean country, and iiraul, for; one amone South'American countries, have cut the Gordian knot by passing a near by and told me to go up stairs and who accosted him with .a . I a fT a. ;.Vi1 open1 the ball while he went nome to i i a W J" al nut up his horse, as l .nurnea in tne r . door said s the doorkeeper stopped me and Hold on, my friend, you haven't paid." I modestly told him that I was th sneaker. "Uh. yes, ' saiu ne.. "Mavbe vou are and maybe you ain't. Several other men have tried to pass on that schedule. I reckon you had better nav .V So' I paid a half dollar to go in and hear myself talk, but I got half of it back when we divided proceeds. Now, I don't know that Wancy couia read or write, but she could shoot ana in war times that is better. At any eh.M Trwho I rate Georgians are proud of her and her on .me. wuniwiii""" oo. anriann. Tom Jee: has never ann w n A SV foiYlA tVlO .i . - j a ii uruiBiieu name v. means to make the trip, and to aUsuch Wfaen John Randolph ted persons tne J""1. "T.,r of his ancestral blood, Tristam Burgess, nnvsicai conuiuuu 10 a oumw v. , ti j ti J v: kittonomv i.rnu They fear that in his enfeebled state he o-nuue nil not he able to Keep pace wuu vue rr l. r v,o tion for 9 months i $120.00 Ut her charges moderate. Send for catalogue, j - REV, J. A. SCOTTi June?..- m. L. Statesville, N. C. Kool by Koming t ' to ': j Hotel Montreat, "Land of the Sky," .Western ; North Carolina. Keep twe n'ost f harming spot in all the moun-",'s- at-w hich to Spend the heated term. V "inil&tlB BlIBUIUUIPr. "W Mi it ii I ... i. . 1 1 a . .. mall. tele- Mi n, .;,..' moaern cpmions Utiono . i uuuuie aauy man. T, -nei apn. Soiin,lni,1.?!i from Black Mountain station out"ra liallway. j W. D. Paxton, Prop. Tit ... I evmaiwB! 1 1 IrDkrvniiia KIDNEY BACKACHE L By DruwrifrsZ m W -.wW-aLef Grav Sesxedal la CreeMbore.i -i-Mrs. Ida Stafford, of Greensboro, eloped last night wiin j. Hardine, a book-keeper at me xwev- olution Cotton Mills. 'The couple pur chased tickets for Wasbingten, but it is thought that they got off at Lynchburg, Va and went West. 1 Harding, who is unmarried, has been boarding at the home of the Staffords for some time, but no undue intimacy had been noted between him and Mrs. Stafford, and it is believed their ( elope ment was the result ol a suauen uumu- S " . ation. , - ! ' - Mrs Stafford is a handsome woman of 85 or 40 years of age i and is the mother of four sons, the oldest of whom ; 17'trc.ara nf UtTR. The pair did not take anything with them belonging to Mr Stafford. On the other hand, Mrs. Stafford left all hop ipwplrv in the house, with the ex ception of her engagement ring, which she mailed to her husband last night through the Greensboro poetofSce. The husband of the runaway woman to-day call on Solicitor Brooks for advice. He is giving the matter full publicity, and it is said will probably offer a reward for the arrest of the couple. , . . ILateb: The eioping wupio wwo - strenuous strides of the chief executive. The president's expressed desire to a.u Rniin nn the loftv Black has iriven rise to a number of suggestions, of which are perhaps more amus ing than valuable. One view is that the president should enter the Land of the Sky between two days and imme diately make a brsak for tall timber; otherwise he would be hunted down by office seekers and not get a shot at any onrt nf came nf the class of eentry referred to. Others scout this view, contending that nn nne would be so lacking in sense of the eternal fitness of things as to importune the president under such Those who hold this "lv"' 7 - , a J 1 opinion, and they are in a maiority, say the president should first Come tO AiUO'UlO iur m uj . as-. a rvnnn was OI more jnoequeuv;o uiau gwu. blood in ancestors. -"I have great re spect," "d he, "for the gentleman's English Jtlood and his Indian blood, but .he Bhould rememDer mat ne is moved from, them' by several geoera- tioris and ' that only, one sixty-fourth "Very warm tonight! Hope you will make it short!" tlx. Oillingham changed his mind about the 30-minute sermon. During the opening exercises he prepared other which he thought would be suitably brief. When he arose to announce his text he remarked that he had twice been asked to make his ser mon short and he would try to do so. If this should seem too lonr, he would stop next time with the text. Then he delivered this sermon: Text, Luke: 16-24: "And he cried and said: 'Father Abraham, have mercy and send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, for I am tormented in this flame.'" j Three persons Abraham, Dives, Lazarus. - It was hot where Dives was. He did not like it. He wanted to get out.-; So do we. Let us pray! - That waa the whole sermon.' It made a hit. . - f.c BatterwjeBi th Sea War. The Seaboard Air line is making a int M (tnnHtMmintt nn thn line he- partjpf Lord Eolfe or Pocahontas blood tween H4iet and Atlanta when com- n . : T.;.. rolna That ia nnt mneh 1 . . -i i n.: : . .k uuo ii m I pievea, WUl mue uilb jew ui iiwum to boast of. The rest is widely scatter- one of the finegt in th. fA diluted -and degenerated. Bur-I- rt ,; l.n thAiw are a number of ?JgJr:Jnl trees land Randolph had many spate like lontf of T?LQrJi "8 that but they never came. to blows. r lW. Wherever thereisnotd. - IHastodon Dec TJp li n.tr i Tex.. July 26.Workmen excavating in a gravel pit twelve miles n.ilaa tndav unearthed the r;na rf m aatoaon. - The jaw bones were 8 feet long and perfect, but crumbled when exposed to the air. The teeth remained intact , mnlars are 14 inches long, 7 -ij. .n,i i(rh 15 Doands. i m -411 nmhanlv be sent to the cla-V T f a r SUte University at AusUn. - There never was a time in the south land when so much eager interest was manifested in tracing up ancestry une I receive letters almost daily from people, from Carolina to Texas, asking for help to trace up and prove their claim to join tne oons or wwgu ters pf the Revolution or to service of their father or grandfather in the civil war pf forty years ago. - ihe geneaio- t danger simple edict of banishment of every memer of the obnoxious order. But the United States does not do business that way. Its doctrine of the separa tion of church and state j tolerates the Jesuit or the Franciscan until they become criminals in the eyes of the civil law. - ! I But the President has the whip-hand, nevertheless. If the offer to the Vatican is finally refused and the recall of the Friars is not ordered, the Friars are ttill afraid to take possession of their lands or to have any communica tion with the tenants who now occupy them. They can be condemned fbr the public good, on the : most obvious grounds of necessity and the owners paid what they are deemed to be worth by the appraising board. And then they can look out for themselves, i The United States government is not going to send a bodyguard out with every Friar who wants to get beyond, the police protection of a city. It will try to punish his murderer; if his dath ensues. He is no longer a civil magis trate and his ecclesiastical position does not give him one whit more importance in the eyea of the law than the Filipino that he used to rob and plunder, , It it reported that the Pope is willing enough for the lards to be purchased but is unwilling to order I the recall of the Friars from the Philippines. Of course the proposition bears on its' face more or less humiliation; for the failure of a supposedly Christian Church to have recalled them long ago on its own initiative. But the humiliation had better be less than the more that t will prove to be under public discussion. And we throw out words of ' warning here to all whom it may concern, , pol iticians - or ecclesi astics. Bettter not make a political issue of the Friars. The purchase of their property is more than they deserve, historically con sidered. 1 1 - : Besides this, the President is a Pro- Plstr Ctia e4a Walker Richardson, a former South ern man, but now engaged in the cot ton business in New York, has given out an interview in uhanotte, on the cotton situation. 8peaking of the product of Southern mills, Mr. Bieh ardson says: "I think some of the mills had better improve the goods they are now turning out. 8ome of the yarns being sold are rotten, and when time comes to settle . up these mills will likely be at a disadvantage. This, however, is due to the class of labor employed and to the bad man agement. "It would take several years for i Southern mill to make money on fine cloths, for it would require that time to get the operatives trained sufficiently to be able to make, these goods. Up in New England mill operatives have beea working on these good for many years. and you might say that the required skill had become hereditary in some. instances, but just put a Southern mill on fine goods with the present das of help and it would be in a hole in a mighty short time." Discussing the merger scheme of Southern mills. Mr. Richardson express ed it as his opinion that this could not succeed. Among the objections urged are the questions of what to do with the mill officers, the deterioration In the value of stock, the fact that the mills can now get advances of about 75 per cent, on their yarni from com mission houses and also the unwilling ness of the stockholders to enter such a combination and the complete, loss of individuality or personal interest and authority under a merger. T. HARTSELL, iltSR874tUl, ooxrcomx), sroam oaiouma. bids astaettoe sivea to an Offlo ta Morris bmUdlng, opeoslM the court pre.; Lilly & Mer, offer taelr profasliiiil lai ihas i Utm cftl- ena of uoayoa eaxi ear eouaa , Oaus pc aptly aw dq ear or slab. w. t. momyommxt. t. uuao u I0RGQ1EBY A CEOIELL, ittcriflji cl Cccsilcrm-Laf, ' OOO0aU .'0V As parts, wni p ctlo la w l Oaba aa, baalv and aalotnlna eowaiw. 1 tae a pa rtoraad enr i tibwrw I a4 la ta federal Ooart Oo te eoa rt sjoaaa . rarue aanag te teaa ssoeey eaa ia v is with as or elare It la Ooaeord y aUoaaJ haak for ua, aad w wul lead It oa good real - iritv rre of Marge to ua-a -iwn r. Wa saake Uwrouk etaiwlaattoe ef UIMW lands odered as aacmrtty tor lea. Mortgage foreesgd wliaoat eapeass te rof saw . THIS Concord national Bank. With tb lata smweved roras of books aad every faeUlty tor aaaeUng aeoomata, FIRST t CLASS SERVICB TO arrjsxxo Capital, - $50,000 Profit, - H,000 Individual regprxiaibility of BharehoMerij Keep . M,00f Your Account with Us. Intern e as aa-reed. laauoaio auoar Ueerali kM. ODItt.lVM a OOtTaUjraV. Caaaar. of a ereat flow of water after heavy! teetant, and there are more Protectants habitually ' divide on governmental issues. It would be disastrous to the opposing party to unite Protestantism preponderatingiy on one siae. Heed Mar Help. Often the over-taxed organs of ; diges tion cry out for help by Dyspepsia's rains these trestles are being, converted into fills. ; The trestles ar not being torn down, but the fills are, being built up of dirt dumped from trains on ' the trestles. Aa the trestles are left stand ine there will be no weight on the fills until the dirt has settled down as hard as natural earth. " I This work is being done preparatory Jlaa Till an Called i Columbia, S. C, July 25. At the political meeting to-day at Gaffney, Jim Tillman was called a liar. There as no fight. Ed. H. DeCamp, editor Of The Ledger, in a recent article stig matized Tillman as a "liar, a drunkard and a gambler. " At Newberry,- after Hub Evans had whipped a newspaper I jeditor, Tillman declared that if any editor had insults to offer him, let it be I done to his face. To-day he waa read ing to the crowd and commenting sar castically on DeCamp'a editorial when DeCamp mounted the platform and declared that Tillman was a liar and that it could be proven over Tillman s I signature, ne then produced letters from Tillman in response to letters from DeCamp asking Tillman for a re mittance for an account due for adver tising. DeCamp claimed that Tillman had lied in this correspondence. Pan-1 Per day $1.25 ; per week $5.00 demomum broke lonn, ana as imman was the last speaker the meeting was I abruptly adjourned. Tillman was not! without friends in the crowd. EH BIB JFH, Stanlj County, N. C, Opens Jane 25, 1902. Under tame management aa three (3) preriooa tea aoni. BJtTES FOB BOAJU) I and $6.00; per month $20.00. landrta U-lsr Tea Ton Hitf Price. For farther taXo aatioa. address July R.B.BECKWITH, , BQrer, Baaaly Ccs. . C. . . . . - r I . . - - . I uwu uj w gical aepartment oi xne euu-u to Uying of toe eighty-pouna rail ain. NaaBe4k, Dizziness, Headaches, and iUeorge omna s ww mty witQ which tne Heaboard is to equip ail complainta. bo . J a f Jt T a T aa A AfwntV a 111 QtllP I. . a a al I VLras-ari I a - a ! ----- ? of the Bnckleni resieu at iiuiiui. w o - ir & naa Me Ta And say some other salve, ointment, lotion, oil or alleged healer is as good o"via' Arnica Salve, teU him thirty ,n the evening or me TnsrveloaB cured of Piles, Burns 24th as they were about toxake a dom Felons, Ulcers, .Cuts, Baltimore. ,"0 Braise, and S.ErnpUon. once lor jsonoia, u T. I mvA it's the beet ana on his wife or iend Harding to the pern- Jy. drag store. tionS to The Journal are doing valuable and interesting work on these lines. There is one other line that has been shamefully neglected. From first to last there were near 90,000 Georgia sol diers in the confederate army, and yet there is no record of them neither, in the Counties nor the state nor at Wash ington. I do not suppose there are ten in a hundred of these soldiers whose children or grand-children or near rela tive can prove themselves. Colonel Avery did the best he could to up a roll of each regiment and the! omcers ana tne pu ita main lines. A large order for these rails was given some months ago and the work of laving them will soon be gin on the Atlanta and Hamlet line. Ice Creaaa Drove HI Craxy. 1 Louisville, July 26. A negro boy, Amos Bridgewater, aged 16 years, ate a gallon of ice cream 1 Friday. As a consequence today he was sent in irons to the insane asylum.! The boy de- make I yeloped violent symptoms immediately name I alter eaung tne gmd. nt th I Raidwater waa a freshman at the complaints, bowel disorders. Such troubles call for prompt use of Dr. King's New life Pills. They are gentle thnrnmrh and cmaranteed to cure Zoc at Fetzer's drag store. . Stonewall Jackson, according to the late Dr. Hunter McGuire, of Richmond, asserted, while the Federal army waa re treating from Bull Run: !"Uive me iu,- 000 men and I will take Washington tomorrow." ill Tea CaaH Bewa the Yaagr. A Sunday School superintendent, I says Harper's Magazine, in talking toj the children about cruelty to animals, said: "Only a cowird would abuse al creature that has no way of protecting itaelf. Why children," said bel "I once knew a little boy who cut off a calf tail! Think of it children took a knife and cut the tail right off? Can any one tell me a verse in the Bible that would have taught this cruel boy r a JnTt'! .nT ea Sfafi Schools of M otic, Art and Elocu- JfSSS?. tion. Uterarr Conrae and all irheMVphffiWnatH boy? asked the superintendent, hope n i n I A li GREENSBORO, N. 0. I Literary and Buainea Conraes, . companies, but there U no roll of the Colored gh School and oovao mennor a record of who was killed, ed quite bright m hustudiea. He im Some companies changed their captains J from three to eight umes, oui wuu u i wv.i., - those who drooped out? Col. Ire Roosevelt and a moaxey. The man who has made a fortune i has a profound contempt for the man who has inherited one, ana nee versa. A cvnic is a woman who says 1 diaa- greeble things because it'a the only way , he can get his remarxa noucea. fully. "What God has Joined together. let no man put asunder," responded the small boy. The superintendent I was so impressed that he never brought his own verse to light. The henpecked man who baa to mind i the babies doesn't believe that the hand that rocka the cradle is the hand that I rules the world. ran Indie begla September as, aw. For eatalos apply to LUCT H. EOBEilSOI, Pmll!:L JMIHt '-: I 9mfMrrmJL Has I J I wi S j rr- ! k-T ft . or sale by Qibioa Drugstore. teuuary.j
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 31, 1902, edition 1
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