Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Sept. 25, 1902, edition 1 / Page 1
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-:ts-THETIME8-- STEHM BOOK AND JOB OFFICE '- We keen on hand a full sfock of LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS, STATE mcntr BILL HEADS. ENVEL- : 0PES; TAGS, VISIJINQ CARDS WED- niwcllNVITATIflN'S FTft FTP ' GOOI I PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS SILEPJCEF jl-e instinct of modesty natural to eU.ry woman is often a great hindrance to the cure of womanly diseases. Women sb'iiifc from the personal questions of tjje local puy siciar. which get-m indelicate. Xhi- thought of e'.uui:iation is abhorrent to tht.;;1, and so tjiev endure .in ice a wuui- r J : . sure! y progresses irom jj.l t., worse. It li a s been pr. Pierce's privilege-, to cure a great many w o ni en who Lave found a refuge for-modesty in his offer of free consulta tiorr by' letter. All correspond ence is held as strictly private ami sacredly con ti d e n t i a 1. Address Doctor R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. - Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre-, crrintion " estab lishes regularity, dries weakening drains, heals inflammation and ulceration, and cures female weakness. JFHE : : CONCORD ' TIMES; , mmmmmm - ' 'T?TT'""'M-M'MMM,'',""'""e'e-eaeaaaa I 'MMM-IMMWMMMIl4lWWM j BB rCTST AOT PBAU ! . SlMmTeiiiAdrAncm. u t su- whiriv - Haviuat used Dr. Pierce' Favorite Prescrip tion and 'Golden Medical Discovery during the p.it vear," writes Mr. Mattie fccrag, of pfnuti Valley, Perry Co., Pa.j I can truthfully recommend these medicines for all female weak ncsc. I have used several bottles of ' Favorite prrscntion,' which I consider a great blessing -to 'Weak, women. I was so nervous and di couraircl that I hardly knew what to do. Your kiiiil ailvice for home treatment helped me won derfully. Thanks to Dr. Pierce." Biliousness is cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. PROFESS f CM L CARDS. John B, SherriU, Editor and Owner, j Volume xx. I AN OLD FAVORITE Concord, N. cM Thursday, September 25. 1902. Number 12. CuTAfJLIftHCO in ttrs. If you bur iinjrlhtni: o cH, kt tlx fxplf know it. I oesiocB atio ArpKarsiATioiia. siews r m a,Ar stavs. Jde Wosoack at BtarthAeld- the 5 I I IMm S 4 ( THE SONG OF THE MYSTIC By ThOtat Ryan FATHER AB&Alf RTAN was born about USA, com ay. to Limerick. Ireland, and others, Norfolk. Va.. while still other sajr Haertown. Md. Ha was rl dalned to mho priesthood and labored to many southern cities. He died to 1MJ. Ho was devoted to the cause of the south, and. aside from his devotional poem. nys of his writings has mors passion or slneerlty than those commomortUnf the deeds of the Confed erate army and the cause for which It foucht. I WALK down the Valley of Silence- Down the dim, Tolceless valley alone. And I hear not the fall of a f ootsteo Around me save Cod' a and my own: And the hush of my heart la as holy . As hover where angels hate flown! Long ago I was weary of voices Whose music my heart could not win; Long ago I was weary of noises That fretted my soul with their din; Long ago I was weary of places Where I met but the human and sin. In tie hash of the Valley of Silence 1 1 dream all the songs that I sing. And the music floats down the dim valley Till each finds a word for a wing. That to hearts, like the dove of the deluge, A message of peace they may bring. Do you ask me the place of the valley. Ye hearts that are harrowed bxcare? It lieth afar between mountains. And God and his angels are there; - And one is the dark mount of Sorrow And one the bright mountain of Prayer. I Seventh say A4vtts Sat re The Democratic party I alwava own I World u Hearts Its Bad. and frank with tbe raooie. It has I Ltoeoha, Keh. Dtepasrh. nothing to conceal, iu management ist The Seventh Dav Advenusl arain clean, it has no defaulter, it has al-1 are sdrring parts of the West by tbr ways met every responsibility as it has prophecy that the end of the world U arisen, and in this campaign proposes dose at hand. Their beliefs are now to ao the same thing. I being spread in Kansas, Nebraska and With the exception of the btukUoc I Iowa, where manv bir meetinr have for the blind at Raleigh, which the been held in the nail month. A two F uaiouiata decorated with Jim Young's I veeka' carnp-meeting has just come to name as a person to whom credit I an end in this atr. should be given, a small appropriation I The membership of the sect is now K tne aeaf and dumb insUtute at Mor-1 about 75.000 principally in- the West. DR. H. C HERRING, DENTIST, now on the gronna noor or the utaker 1 Building. L CO7COHB. IT. O. . DRfW. Snrgegn C. HOUSTON Dentist,. CONCORD, H. C. ' Is prepared to do all kinds of dental work In The most approvea manner, i . . Office over Johnson's Drag Store. Residence 'Phone il. Offlce 'Phone 43. L. T. HARTSELL, . Attorney-at-Law, ". CONCORD, NORTH OABOXJITA. I'rompt attention ' given to all baslness. Orticein Morris building, opposite the court . nouse. ;'. i ; i- i Drs. Lilly & Walker, offer their professional services to the "citi zens or. Loncord ana surrounoing country. Calls promptly attended day or night; W J. MONTOOMBBV.: I. IiSXOBOWSU .MONTGOMERY & CROWELL, : Attorneys and Connselors-at-Law, i CONOOBD, N. O. As partners, will practice law in Cabarrus, Stanlvittid adjoining counties, in the Supe rior and Supreme Courts o 1 the State and In tbe Feileral Courts. Offlce in court house. Parties desiring to lend money can leave It with u-i or Dlaoe it in Concord National Bank for us. and we will lend It on good real es--tate security free. of charge to the depositor. We make thorough examination of title to lands offered as security for loans. Mort?ai?es foreclosed without expense to owners of same. u t The Tourist Season f .Opens with the Month of June, AND THE SOUTHERN RAILWAY - announces the sale of Summer Excnrsion Tickets Northern People Coming Sontb. The cry of the time is for cheap land, cheap in price, but rich in productive ness. Laud has become so hifrh in the middle West that farmers are looking elsewhere for a more favorable location where they can become owners and not renters. .The southern states are offer ing some exceptionally good bargains in land values and in locations that are easily accessible to railroads. A demonstration of what these lands ean produce was exemplified in the fine exhibit shown on the Iowa State Fair grounds last week by the Southern Bail- way. JTair visitors were amazed to see what can be raised in southern states, and especially was this noticeable it. the many varieties of gram grown. The showing of fruit could not be ex celled anywhere, and the grasses grown be paid out under for fodder were the equal of anything I hundred thousand in that line. There is a floe field for northern farmers in the South, and many of those who have gone down there have made a great success of their fanning. These lands are suitable for every branch of agriculture and can be purchased at a very low figure. This is especially 'so in the states of Virginia, the two Carohnas, Georgia, Alabama. Mississippi. Tennessee and Kentucky. Mr. John F. Olsen, who had charge of this fine exhibit on the fair ground, said to a representative of "The Homestead that the people of the North were last finding out that a good farm in the South was! very valuable, and that other grains besides cotton could be grown at a profit. States can Pensions forZConfederate soldiers. P. M. Simmons, at Greensboro. During-our tenure we have appropri ated and at the end of the present fiscal year will have spent over two hundred thousand dollars more than the Fusion ists appropriated and spent during the four years of their tenure of office for pensions' to disabled Confederate sol diers. Who will complain ? Who will begrudge this pittance to these old heroes ? The Republican party has voted through Congress this year a bill appro priating one hundred and forty million dollars for pensions to Union soldiers. The Republican party has voted through Congress this year another bill pension ing certain persons who left the Con federate army, and it is said there will this bill about five dollars annually in North Carolina.Thg . amount . North Carolina will have to contribute towards the payment of these pensions to Union soldiers during the present year will reach between twenty and thirty hun dred thousand dollars. We do not crit icise or complain of Just pensions to Union soldiers; but it would be ungra cious indeed in that party which has voted these liberal pensions, and to the payment of ; which we will so largely contribute, to the brave men who fol lowed Grant and Sheridan, to begrudge the little mite which we have felt able to contribute to relieve in part at least the pressing nesds of the brave men who followed Lee and Jackson. ean ton, and one or two small appro priations in 1895 for betterments to the insane asylum, the Fusionists did noth ing for our great charitable institutions. In 1897 the Democratic party met the indebtedness and mismanagement of the penitentiary and attempted to look alter the oyster industry of the State, It increased the appropriations to the various charitable institutions and made liberal appropriations - for permanent improvements. But in 1901 it was seen that the contemplated improvements had not kept pace with the growth of the State, that numbers of the insane persons were cared for in the jails and county homes of the various counties. that the deaf and dumb and blind were not sufficiently cared for, that the old Confederate soldier was not sufficiently housed at the Soldiers'. Home, and that the pensions previously paid to' him were totally inadequate. The Demo cratic party, in advocating the Consti tutional Amendment, had pledged it self to the maintenance of a, four- months school, in each district of the State, which pledge has been kept." In order to meet the responsibilities which this situation placed upon the party, it rjecame necessary to make a large number of appropriations for per manent improvements and betterments of these institutions, increase appro priation lor their maintenance and care, because of the great increase in the cost of living on account of trust prices, and increase appropriations for soldiers and; for the cause of education. They passed a new revenue act, decreasing the rate of taxation for public purposes. increasing it for pensions, and increas ing the amount of taxes to be collected from railroad, telegraph and telephone companies and the like. A number of provisions were proposed that upon in vesugauon were shown would prove burdensome to the industrial interests of the State, upon which being shown they were modified to meet demands of the representatives of these interests. The hardships of the previous revenue acts,: first enacted by the Fusionists in isyo and and several of them re tained by the Democrats in 1899, were relieved. The Merchants' Purchase tax was changed to meet the wishes of the merchants themselves, and as a result the State will not derive so great a revenue from these taxes as hereto fore.' And as a result we find that the although miaaionary work has been pushed for a score of years elsewhere. The centres of the propaganda now are this city and BatUe Creek, Mich. In 1874 Europe was invaded, and a great deal of the Scandinavian and Norwegian emigration to this region came as a result of these missionary efforts. In 1 885 a church was estab lished in Australia. Publications in thirty-seven different languages are now circulated, among thrm some of the dialect of the South Pacific. The Adventists do not fix any definite date for the end of the world. They base their prediction upon the prophecy of Daniel, in which it was said that in 2,300 days the sanctuary would be cleaned. A day means a year, they say, and the 2,300 years ended in 1844, the year set by Miller for the end of the world. The mistake of the Adventists of 1844 pertained to the nature of the event then to occur and not to the time, they say. U bat took place then, they be lieve was the beginning of the IMy of J augment. When that is over, the world will end. The Adventists say the approach of the end of the world is indicated by the signs of the times, as pointed out in the Scriptures. The movement for uni versal arbitration, they say, is a fulfil ment of the prophecy of Micah that in the last days many people shall, say let the Lord judge and nations shall not war with each other. Joel says that while they shall talk peace they shall prepare for , war, and the Adventists point to tbe great stand ing armies and the war talk of the day as confirmation. In the fifth chapter of James it is predicted that in the last days the rich will be heaping up treasures and the poor crying because their hire is kept back. Every trust, they say, is a sign of the coming King, and every strike the posting of a notice that the end is near. Matthew eays the social world will be in the last days as in Noah's day, and the innumerable crimes of the day are quoted as confirmation. Timothy tells of the sins of the religious world, and the Adventlat preachers dwell upon the theatre-going, dancing, card-playing and rich dressing of the church mem bers as proof of this condition. The AdvenustsaU dress plainly, es a pirsmr mnr. revenues of the State have not been suf-1 chewing gold, jewels and nch attire, ncient to pay all of its appropriations. I and are generally model citizens h ill Southern Points - S i ' .To the delightful Resorts located on aud reached via Its lines. These tickets bear final limit October 31, 1902. That section of North Carolina known as the . "Till- LAND OF THE SKY," :' '-, ; and the. SAPPHIRE COUNTRY," No section of the United offer a better place for stock raising, at! a less cost, than tbe South. Water and pasture are in abundance. Not an acre of this land requires irriga tion to make it productive. If any of our readers aie seeking a home where land is cheao and very productive the climate genial and healthful educational facilities good, and where success can be . . ! . . . . . u ; a most easily obtainea,tney snouia write w Mr. John F. Oslen, land and industrial aeent of the Southern Railway Co. 225 Dearborn SL, Chicago, 111., and he will be pleased to answer all inquiries and furnish maps and pamphlets de- scriDtive of this new South. The above editorial wnicn appeareu in - me; jtiome&ieaa, muiireo, Iowa.' dated September 4, shows the work being done by the Southern Rail- i way Company in the jNortnwest. Deepest mine lu the World. It is claimed, with reason, that the Rpd Jacked shaft of the Calumet and ! Hecla coDDfer onine; in Northern Mich iean. is th deepest in the world. In has taken nine years of day and night work to sink and has cost f 2,5UU,UUU. This shaft is vertical, but all the other shafts' of the Calumet and Hecla follow the dip of the lode. Work On it atartftd in 1889. immediately after The Colonel Is a Warm Number. Charlotte Observer. 0 What is there left that Col. Henry Watterson hasn't jumped on and stamped the feathers off of ? He has jumped on the President and torn the plume from the Rough Rider hat of the Broncho Buster in the White House." He has jumped on ex-President Cleve land for speaking at a Democratic har mony meeting and wiped the earth up with the ! retiring Princetonian. "He jumped on the Democratic machine in Kentucky when they wanted to run him for Governor and complained that politics was too corrupt for him to con nect with. He jumps on tbe J our Hundred and scatters the ostrich plumes of the women's hats in his wrathy de monstration. The Harry Hotspur of the press is on a rip-staving big tear, even for him. Sufficiently Neat. Monroe Journal. It will be noted that in his speech at Asheville President Roosevelt referred in forcible terms to the treachery of Benedict Arnold, , The President had evidently forgotten Senator Pritchard's . bill which pensions deserters who left the Confederate armies and joined the A Smart Boy. There was once a provision dealer who was minding his shop while his assistant was away at dinner. A nice-looking boy came in with a basket on his head and satd: "1 saw a boy snatch up this 'ere basket from the door and run away, but I ran after him and made him give it up. Here it is." "My lad, you are an honest boy." 'Yes, sir." 4"And good boys should be encouraged. In a box in the back room there are eight dozen eggs; you may take. them home to your mother and keep the basket. The shopkeeper had been saving those eggs, one at a time for weeks and months : to reward someone. In re- Fair Treatment to All Interested. F. M. Simmons at Greensboro. As long as the Democratic party re mains in power it will treat every legiti mate interest in the State with absolute fairness and justice, and it will protect in all of their just rights all the agencies and instrumentalities of progress and development by the enactment of wise, equal and just laws, administered with out discrimination and interpreted without fear, favor, bias or preiudice, Equality in benefits ana equality in burdens is fundamental in the Demo cratic creed. This much every legiti mate interest in the State has a right to expect and demand of the party in est will receive as long as the Demo- 7Mdm P W gft eight eredthat the girl has no negroblood cratic nartv remains in Dower in the I QOZen Dat c11 uul SUte3. But naSmTteres" ta l ftalTleance Sa.' . A pathetic story comes fount Brook lyn.' A certain man, who had srvwl a term in lbs penitentiary, aflrr bring released, went home to bis wife and two Utile children, who had torn suf fering great oVfirahoo daring bis ea fomd absrnee. The children l wrre overjoyed la sec their father, sod they never knew the cause of hk aiiaroc. The wife had remained dVvotrd to her hatband, and there was a moat baptf family minion. The man dues not appear to be ot a vicious orcriaunaJ nature, and declared ; that lb offense for which he had tcn punished was not intentional. He determined then when he got back to Brooklyn to work hard for bk family and atone by aU means in bis power for the disgrace be had brought upon them. ; With this good intention he went out to seek for work. But h searched in vain. It was known thai h had been in the lienitentiary and no one would employ him. Hi position became i4tiable. In deiie ration he applied to a street car company for employment and filled in thetblank form of application with an assnmed name, but did not sign it. He was employed as a conductor and went to work with 4y. The com .any found him to be reliable and faithful and hi family was very happy in what they called this time of prosperity. One day, after he had been at work, among tbe passenger on the car the conduc tor recognized the judge who had sen tenced him to the penitentiary, but who bad been- lenient with him and had spoken kindly to him. In an evil hour I he told the judge who he was and gave him his history. Later on the judge mentioned the incident to a friend, aud the story came to the ear of a jo I ice man, who had a grudge against the man and who promptly arrested him. The conductor had violated the law by applying for employment under an as sumed name. The arrest seems to have ended a happy career and brourht ruin again upon a family of Innocent peo ple wno were just recovering from a great calamity. If the good people of Brooklyn will permit the law to be so applied as to destroy this man and his family, while bo many flagrant cases of law breaking go unpunished, they are wanting in humanity. If the unfortunate, man, after the struggle he has made to rein state; himself in society and to be a good citisen and husband and father, is de nied employment, then the ministers of the Gospel should take the people of lirooklyn in band. Bsee Prejudlee In tbe North Baltimore Sun, Race hatred and preludloe seem to be getting so bitter in the North that brunette girls may be compelled to use complexion powders. It is only sary to be sucpocted of relationship with the negro race to be subjected to all kindjf indignities. The other day in Boston the door of a trades union was closed upon all black faces. Then in Chicago, at the Northwestern Univer sity, the headquarters of liberty, young colored woman who had entered the school was turned out in the street As soon as it was discovered that she had negro blood she was expelled. But the most extraordinary thing happened Ml- T.J . 1 f.l 1 at fivansviue, inu. a gin wun a uara complexion entered at one of the pub lic schools, and at once all the other children left and the teacher was con fronted with empty benches. Truant officers were sent after tbe children, but their parents said they should not at tend ecnool with the dark faced girl, whom they suspected of being a negro The board of education took the. matter up and after an investigation discov- ra w TrtM, . About U,0m.fck mrrrn lu twrtbsr1 era Nebraaka ar so sandy as to I unfit fur Uilac. Two-third. 4 the i&m m U3 the pKimrty of the Xatwaal OotwwwoI, A bunt twfo jwar ut Hoard of Agrsr&Jtur and lb arnrasta ttausrwiral trvrv tYaa lu tody the sand hills from -a srwanar petal of view, s&4 reported that it was twtfsred to be ManU to nmt tart tract of this country ; wtllt Um and shrubs trow which a good rrvrttne might eventually derived. Mr. Hidk. of the Gexdogkal Surwy, a Wo mvul mat im lortwiar of the sand tulle would probably lead to rotMdWiJ ctioaonue results. The National UovvmnwaL therefor. sent a Urg aumbrr of Scotch. Austrian. rock and jack pine, whkh were H out in furrow in on of the worst tuoation in the sand hill in lb southwestern part of Holt county. iYarticaily all t these trees bar thrived. Tbe rwtrb and Austrian bine bare now attained a height of six to eight fort, the rock pines four to six feet, and the jack tit ore twelve to eighteen feet. Tbe trees are now entering ation the period of their uhsh rapta growin, wetr urmng ap pearance show that they ar well adapted to the condition and the 11- viaioo of Forestry retorts that they are certain, unless turned out, to atuin suitable site for lumberinc. Thj varieties of the pine tree, it is declared, are perfectly adapted for hundreds of thousand of acres in th sand hills. where the : natural condition, are the same as those under which the present lore i is growing. It is proposed to continue the work mat is so promising. An extensive forest in the sand hills would be of great value to the region where it exists and also have a favorable influence upon the winus ana temperature oi a large iiart of western Nebraska sod thus uion tbe agricultural conditions there. The forest iiseii would yield, in fifteen or twenty year, fuel and posts, the timber would be large enough in twenty-five or thirty year for telegraph pole and railroad tie and thereafter, if properly managed, wouiu be a source of continual revenue. The possibility of turning a large and worthies area into a region of great uuuty nas been demonstrated. It is an interesting illustration of the efforts. now constantly widening to reclaim tbe waste places of th country and turn them to good account. In view of the progress that is beior made in this direction, we cannot say that any re gion in our land will not some day be found capable of aiding to the general weaitn. ax...- - . - m aw-w sMa w jsaBessl ?f Jy S With An Experience or YEARS fY YEARS IN WK1TINO Fire Insurance, settling lovtc and representing Hirst Class Companies, Southern, Northern anil For eign, wc ask your patronage. , . Our facilities for kmjHoycr Liability,: Accident ami Health Insurance are excellent. C. G. RICHMOND & 'Phone I $4. CO. Carolina MT. PLEASANT, N. C. An experienced Faculty nd com- nicMlious, well emiiiMicu . f th fol- the State has a right to expect" or de mand of the party in power any special exemptions, either in duties or burdens, and none will be given while the Demo cratic party remains in power in the State. Tin inn side. The Wadesboro M esse li the last of the three great underground eer an Intelligencer, referring to these I they took the cotton off him fires in the which did $1,000,000 particularly attractive to those in search I upon it sinfce that time, and the shaft Solder workings of the rnine, damage of more than Work has been continued ! Bailed a Playmate Alive. Monroe. Sept. 18. A most distress ing occurence took place at Ansonville, in Anson county, late yesterday after noon. It was nothing less than the burial alive of a little seven-year-old boy by his companions. A number of children were playing "bury the dead" in a large pile ol seed cotton. They scooped out a big hole and put one of the little fellows into it and covered him up, tightly packed the cotton seed over and around him. By and bye thev due him up, when it came time to change the game, and the little fel lows were horrified to find that their little playmate ' could not move when They two facts, says: "And yet the man who pulled him out of the hole and found pronounced this scathing denunciation his body - cold. The innocents had atrainst a deserter recently signed a bill, smothered him in the cotton pile and or mi hi n tain resorts, where the air Is ever cool an,t ivigoratlnf?, and where accommo dations an t,e had either at the comfortable ana WHii-iept board lug houses or the more "pensive g.nd up-to-date hotels. . "ADDITION All SLEEPING CARS. Placed in Service from Various Points 1"-l'rin;ipal Resorts, thua affording l l; KATLV IMPROVED FACILITIES l or reaching those Point. stands without a parallel in mining. It is 4,900 feet in depth, or" 380 feet less than a imile. It contains six com partments, I each equal in size to an ordmarv mining shatt, lour oi wnicn are used toi hoisting rock and lowering timW. One shaft is utilized for the lmlrlerwavsJ and ; the sixth and last comDartment carries the wires and the passage of which was secured by Senator Pritchard, through the opera tion of which several thousand of these, the most despicable of criminals, will receive a money reward for their treach ery." Which is sufficiently neat- How the' Preacher Paid His Fine. Raleigh Cor. Charott Qhserve. A eood Btori8 told on a Hardshell knew not what they had done they1 had run and told some people about it. ' Until older Children's Eyes Dteaedt The Health Board of New York city have; discovered that out of 55,470 school children examined 6,670 were afflicted'with tricoma. This is a dia- home to dinner. The morning after, as he returned, wearing a very complacent smile, in addition to his other clothes,; his eye caught a basket of eight dosen clean, fresh-looking eggs, j "Been buying I egg T" he said to the shopman. "They look nice. ' "Yes," ! the shopman re plied. "I eot them from a farmer s boy." "A lame boy,; with a blue capr ' said the proprietor. "Yes," answered Lis assistant. "Two front teeth outt" Vm anid IVia man me snopiteeper sat qown ana ex amined tbe eggs. The shells had been washed dean, but they were the same eggs the boy had carried home to his mother the day before, and now his shopman had bought them for cash. South Carolinians Qettlns; Together. Balttmara Sun. The Governor-elect of South Carolina delivered an address last week at WaJ- terboro, after the result of the primary election waa known, which shows him to be a man of liberal ; views. He ex pressed pleasure at the fact that "the prejudice between town and country is passing away," and pledged himself to be "Governor of the whole people, to know no selfish interest, hut to shape all his acts to the upbuilding and up lifting of the entire State.' For twelve years South Carolina has presented the spectacle of one class of its cltiaens ar rayed against the other -in political She is simply a brunette, and her pa rents are French. It will be well here after for brunette girls, when they enter the public schools in the North, to use some kind of complexion powders. It is really painful to note the existence of such prejudices in the minds of our Northern brethren. I pipes for telephones, light, power water A J W i anil rriTYiTraaifl .i P. -tr t -'r .... Particular attention is directed to the eler IE-wit Dining Car Service on principal .. : through trains. ease of the eye, so dangerous and in- atrue, aunougn oom classes were proies- from Mlniu that an immigrant ao afflicted eQiy oi me same pouucai laitn. UOV- Southern Hallway has lust issued its hand some Kesort FoMer, descriptive of the many aeiiKhtrul resorts along the line of Its road, -"is fo'iier also gives the names of proprie vi 'hotels and boarding houses and num wsr ,f suestsCthey can accommodate. Copy i, ,e luid upon application to any Southern Hallway A Kent. i - WA. irUK, S.H.HARDWICK, 1 ass. Trame Mgr. -! Get 'I Pass. Agent. ' ' Washington, D. C - AGENTS WANTED. LIFE of T. DEWITT TALMAGE. by his J"' Frank DeWitt Ta Image and asso tnrt e(1!t"i s ot Christian Herald Only book 1 br Talnmge family. Enormous nt for agents wifo act quielcly. Onttit ten Ssr'i,. Tile immediately Clark A. Co., Pape ht ' Philadelphia, Pa. Mention this UJBfcS WHfcBc All fclS (AILS. luugb Syrup. T antes (iood. . V n time. Sold by drninriets. UBaausml The Advantages of Using Convict !" hor In Public Road Bulldlnj Are 1 1. That' an organized force can be hAtter maintained than could be done with free labor for -road building. cheaner than free labor is subject to deportation. The Health ernor-eieci rieywara was cnosen. as ne a-imrnlssion who makes this r.-oort. re- &y" "by tbe people of the State, irre-. commends that all the school children "P?" H "WUUU8 ur iacuoM. e r.t .hi .(v K PTummwl without delav wul do all that he can to unite the peo- -t,h w aroom4n each school be set I pl of South parolina and' will have 2. It is would be. 3. It frees the country from the ex pense of keeping prisoners without any pay. a of his own iWOhey mtiirn-Jvalue. ' v - " I : ... - A Tf Dnirairisii v-irwict lahor in health- - Hot iWomed tor Wle fuloccupation without bringing jt inl v.T -tvas treatedor three yearsby good enmnetitiori with free labor. I doctors," writes W 5. It is t$e best possible punishment nellsville, O for the common criminal, here. It appears that at a wedding ne became what may be gracefully yet accurately termed hilarious. His church disciplined him, and. he wss sentenced to pay for shingling the church ro f. He accepted this meek ly but got to work on the quiet and TTa nnnceeded so weu in raising tne I also hokls the opinion tnat au cnuaren r? .""r .""J" "JJ funds that it i3 said he did not have tc-1 so afflicted should at once be eluded so that the disease rrjay not spreaa. anart for that DUTTjose and a physician Wg w op. witn ppuuca iacuqns, i nibie. he annointed for every three schools' so I 'guiding thought." he. deelares, down as at k wnrt nhav V triorouirh'. ' He i .shall be the last words of Wade Hamp-1 President's 1 - u:a. I i for A. Greer, Piles, and McCon- Fistnla, Fortune Favors a Texan. "Having distressing pains in. the head, back; and stomach, and being without appetite, I began to use Dr. King's New 6. It cures the tramp nU:sance 7. The result (good roads) is a bene faction. I Many farmers in the county are de claring that, cotton will reach the 10 cent mark and that those who are able in ntnre the stairfe and wait will be ! financially blessed. Charlotte Observer. but, when all failed, Bucklen's Arnica jjfe Pills," writes W. P. Whitehead, of galre cured in two weeks. ' uures cunis, i Kennedaje Tex., "and soon felt like a Bruises, Outs, Corns, Sores, tGruptions, Salt Rheum, Piles or .ho pay- 35p at Fetzer's drug store. . - When a man has difficulty in finding a chance to propose 'he can make'up his mind that the girl doesn't want him' new man." Xnfalhtua in btomacn ana Liver troubles,.' Only 25c at Fetzer drug store. quick know tern Some people who get rich seem to think nooooy wui t unless they make fools of selves. " Tipfinlo white and black.'. " That i is an admirable sentiment, tsoutn itquh. needs a long rest from the turmoil and bitter ness. Qf (actional politics. If Governor elect Heyward's administration is all that he promises it shall be, it will he a great blessing to the ppopje of he Pal- Her IpsYo, aspiah mah daugbtah, aah ? H'm. yo r proepec T ' ' The Suitor (a widoweryEbery single one ob de pussons fo' whom mah late lammented wife done waahin fo hab promised ter Ubsr'ly psierniM hex sue ht - ... I: ' -. Stories or London Weather. London DaJ Mail. The Manchester Guardian tells a good story of the weather. The scene was a Strand omnibus. A leaden sky was overhead, the rain poured down uncompromisingly, mud was under foot, i A red capped ParseeT who had been sitting near the dripping driver, got down as the driver came op. "What soif o chap is that?" asked the driver. -'Don't yer know that T" asked the conductor. "Why, that's one o' them Indians that worship the sun !" "Worship the sun?" said the shivering driver. "I suppose e s come over ere to 'have a rest." This recalls the re ply given on one occasion by an East ern potentate to Queen Victoria, who asked hin whether his people did not worship the sun. tea, your Majesty," saia : tne urtentai, "aud if yon saw him you would worship him also." Toddr etrt or Adaptability. Charlotte Observer. The New York Herald reported Presi dent Roosevelt, as he crawled out of the wreck, as saying to the motonruo of the street car thai ran into his car riage at PittsfiekL Mass., something like this: "If you lost control of your car of course, it couldn't be helped; but if.lv ou. didnt, . it 8 aid d outrage. ' The Observer's eye the other day fell on an announcememt of a reliiriou meeting at which Air. liooaevelt is booked to make at address on ' the Are we to mark these things further illustrations , of the remarkable gift of adapt- biutv? tlx. ter marry Whadam An Oruatholosieal The wife of a Methodist minister in West Virginia has been married three times. Her maiden name was Part ridge, her first husband was named Robin, her second Sparrow, and the present one's name is Quayle. There are now two young Robins, one Spar row and three little Quayles in the fam ily. One grandfather was a Swann and another was a Jay. bat he's dead and now a bird of Paradise. They live on Hawk avenue, Eagleville, Canary Islands, and the fellow who writes this article is a lyre bird and an interested relative of the, family, i Hulattoesj Cannot Vote Cader "Grandfather Clause. Charlotte Observer. ' The Observer Is ih receipt of the lowing from a friend at Carthage: "A question whichi having some dii cussion here is: Can a mulatto whose father was a white man register under the "grandfather clause T" Now it is s generally accepted fact that moat mu- lattoes are such from the fact that their fathers and not their mothers were white. Would this general application be sumcient grounds for a general ma laiio registrauonr it not, could a mulatto whose mother was a negro but whose father is unknown register ac- coram g to taw r is tne buraen upon the applicant for registration to prove that his father was a white man and could vote prior to 1867? "Your subscriber, would be pleased to have you give some editor answer. and explanations. I am certain such would be of interest to manv neoiJ throughout the State at this time.' Assuming thst the mulatto was the illegitimate son of a white man (which must be assured, as marriage between whites and blacks is and was unlawful) the negro cannot vote, as the law does not recognize that an illigitimaie ha any father and unless tbe said mulatto is otherwise qualified he cannot get in under the "grandfather clause." A nearly all negroes were slave prior to their emancipation tbe presumption is that the grandfather of any mulatto was disqualified from voting prior to 1868, and the burden rests upon him to show to the contrary before he shall be entitled to register or vote. Pretty Hard) The A correspondent of the Newbern Journal, writing from Swans boro, seem to be somewhat out of sorts. He voices his complaint as follows: We people around here ought to be good people; we ought to be Christian people, but we can't, it seems. Now, we have a nice bar room near here that is near enough to get our drink easy, and yet our people talk of good, sober officer, needed. They would vote for the greatest drunkard out of jail, Just so he was nominated by. his party, then talk about good, sober government men. Nearly nine-tenths of all the men elected as officer now -a -days are either lawyers or drunkard, and some time both, and they legislate to suit themselves and you have got to vote for them or be called scalwags, ragtaila, bolters, disorganuers or something mean. Then talk about good govern ment. Bah! The poor people are In a bad fix in this country, and it seem rney won't learn to vote as they think. Snot Thro ash the Bear and Lives. Tbe Lancet. Cures by suture of wound of the heart are becoming more and more common Hitherto, however, ail tbe reported have been of wounds caused by knife or sword, but M. Launay, a young surgeon " attached to the Paris hopitais,ha just related to the Acad emy of Medicine the details of a in which tbe heart waa pierced through bv a revolver bullet. During the operation the bullet was found lying in the pericardial cavity. There were two wounds of the ventricle, one on the an terior surface; these were sutured with catgut. The pericardium was then su tured in its turn and the nap of the thoracic wall was fastened in place. No drainage wa employed, and the without a single bad i Tbe enures of etudy tknroih Method Of the tiret rharM-ler end dW,liLln Brm llate or tuition ami buard very rraialile Parents bavin sua to edocevs are aafced to confer with u aa earty as puesiuta. nmtitr or inmnMUi mnniiMMiMi. Adareea stuter of uw mi.i-ni n-u Ztev. I. XL Smby, D. D. Geo. F. mcAilicter, A. B., Principals. Mt. Pleasant M. C Auuatli. IWB. Ans-.W-H MONT AMCENA Female Seminary, I embracing all the ual eolleetste l-raorlw. Kleellv course SqjierlMr Moeic and Art de partment! .1(4 will per tbe entire 'rw' eiix rut, to. clndtns toftl4H, board, room, tautxlryi Ilirht, and pbVMrlen BttPttdancw, MuuiV' ur Art Mt addlUonal a year, tor eatatoM.e address J. H. C. FISHER, President, MT. Juiy Tt !m. PLEASANT, W C. TUB Concord National Bank, With thelateat approved form of boot sad every faculty for naadiln aoooaau. OrTZKI A. FIRST CLASS SERVICE to tbb runuo. CspiUl, - - I50.00U Profit, , - 22,000 Individual responibihty of Shareholder, ... .- bO.wr Keep Your Account with Us. Interest paid a asreod. Uberalsonosao- dattoa to all our customer. . J M. U. H ODEI.U lrxrilt. UMLTKAJra. Caabier, Ilcalihy Children kept iron and well llttl lotke are anaote lcmNM safe sad oae of Utat bumw rewi ex.1 FREY'S VERMIFUGE Cprreet all disorder of th Uirh. pate worm, ate. Paiatila and positive la art Ion. Hotti toy (sail. ja. K. at . SttKT, KalMaaee, Md. Llercliant Tailor. Clothes Made to Orders Gleaning and Repairing done on short notice. I. VyiSSBIRC, Over Patterson', store. ApJ-tf. Cnloe Street. patient recovered symptom. I ; The sound of rumbling through the brewery wagon the street is sweet music in the devil's ears. 1 , a n. tf..ii.szsT mix 10 an Wl llKSIief Sjaam of avf.a. ais sr kiaktr. MD Qt.W( rasa, rt wwuui w-. Fryer Street, l. weergts.
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 25, 1902, edition 1
1
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