Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Oct. 23, 1902, edition 1 / Page 1
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TEE GCnCCHD WEEKLY HUES lulHl 1: a m ;a. i f STEfiM BOOK BHD JOB OFFICE f h jr TTTT-A TfJ TZTIT TTn . A SeieeDOiihai.aMltockof ':' " (( (( 1 )j f (( i ) I V W MENTS, BILL HEADS, . ; "T . ; " v '"IsS :SVlTAT10f4S, ETC, ETC. SherrO!, Editor and Owner. -SB nTST iSTD roAJt 1TOT." : ri- : f. - v::; 1.00 d Tear, ta Advance. nR.XTINGAUyAYSPAYS VOLUME XX. t CONCORD, N. C, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 28, 19Q2. -i liinS -in I 1,1 HIDHUHJJIJJIUIH I , - - . . ii ill m i 1 tW ivopk know1 It. J Liver Diocaoc j CURED BY, '".' I - ! . .. ... ...... Golden Medical Discovery. I was weak, nervous and dizzv. with fainting sensation when walking," writes Jesse Childress, Esq., of Samuel, Sullivan Co., Tenn. "Could not walk any distance; always felt bad after eating; felt as though Something was sticking in my throat, al ways uneasiness in stomach. Doctored with three physicians but they did ot relieve me. I grew 1 worse and used everything I could tntnkof; was nearly ready to give up and then some one told me that Dr. Pierce's medicine was good. so I began taking his 'Golden Medical Discovery. I have taken seven bottles of that now and am as stout as ever, and en ioviiig health as much as ever before. I worked all summer; and . this winter as much as any one. My case was liver dis ease and nervous dyspepsia of which your medicine has cured me. In September isuS my weight was about 01 Dounds. now it is 195. Please accept my sincere thanks." ULU FAVORITE "AbTE NOT, REST NOT By Schiller BILL ABPI LKTTER. Atlanta Constitution. ' Wanted-In mi General Henry B. iTZwfn Icknn.nrUnn.k AUA tl 1. Secretly Sfttrd UOOM I W -) a U V C U A w- JOHANN CHRISTOPHER FRIED RICH von SCHIL LER was born at M&rbach, Germany. Nor. 10, 17M, and died at Weimar May 1. 1805. H la famous as post, dramatiat and historian. Th folio wlna- adaptation Is by Christopher Christian Co, a physician, bom In Balttmora in 1S18. Hswas a surgeon in th TJnlUd 1 Btataa arm and was lieutenant covarnor of Maryland .tn UES. ' , v lanta the moat notable, instructive sod eloquent address that has been beard in Georgia since the civil war. The subject was "The Wanderer." a alava ship that landed on the' Georgia coast in 1858. But the whole addreaa wa an historical recital of many political events that led to the civil war and of which the generation that has grown ap since were profoundly ie-norant and it w. . tT. suu are.t u was delivered - oar interest to starre' our slarea any more than it is to starre our bora and horned cattle. : Bbortly after the hole carto that the Wanderer tarooght aw of them at work La a large rardea in Col am bus, Ga.t and was totd that they were docile and quickly learned to dig and to hoe, hot that it was hard to teach them to eat cooked meat. They wanted it raw and bloody. They were miserable little rants, " "Guinea ne grots," with thick lips and flat troses, but they grew np into better shape and made good servants and I know were far better off than in their native rssKACMKK, rrr rnrrw.m Vocsi :, sits east I r. Jwasea, i!of "1 . of a t maa re 'H 4 mm e rth. a Sun4r itiM tfrml iojt tttm. Uouirt Tfe or Drrhe Hf AUaataJoarssU. j16 3ds eU thrn4 Utf llaTnnilmytnttrcillbeCWi s illlkcr. tft1 W fimt rnxK V,fJn0.rMcaUtlBf ' aed U-kU wiS geW South Georgia. I ft two hour ta ; tofiip. far yoa Satannan Tuesday. They hate large j Wa3 mtk t a rtr Ha JJendUiMWnkmdt.ot l-"?" $5 i, rriary lew station, asthey rail them op tn anie. f vch'r for the kra. Wall atrwt is Kff& Eiltiitf 32i Shlt -now. thought Of Joe Ilia Hall. Allen G TrtwU. ttUma mrf ar. aUtW Ct, lC CniUITmtivC. the out wtere ana grow P avtKI & ve1 Shylacli iri the man who winlcil a 'poutd ci human flak , Tlitfc arc rainv the cdnvaJev sf- TT A WITHOUT haste, without rest; i V fy f , Bind the motto to thy breast; j V y Bear it with thee as a spell, Btorm or sunshine, guard it well; Heed not flowers that round thee bloom Bear ft onward to the tomb. - , Haste not, let no reckless deedj Mar for aye the spirit's speed; V Ponder well and know the right Forward then with all thy might! Haste not; years cannot atone ; . For one reckless action done. Beet not; time is sweeping by Do and dare before you die; -Something mighty and sublime ' ? Leave behind to conquer time Glorious tls to live for aye , When these forms have passed away. Xafttr not, rest not; calmly wait; Meekly bear the storms of fate; Duty be thy polar guide Do the right whate'er betide! Haste net, rest not; conflicts past, God shall crown thy work at last! Of the YnnntrM'. TJK a - juuSts, iuc prry o suooger inum, aou tion, when Henry Grady was its chair man, and I supposed was published in 0 0 I M 1 , Si (Muipiuei iorm ana couia be n d on application. But I have sought in vain to find a copy. I have a newtfbaner copy, but it has been, worn to the quick suuioei luegiue. 1 wrote . to Judge Pope Barrow, who is General : Jackson's executor, and he can find none among the General's paper. Can anv veteran furnish mo mnt T I - " t , made food for csnibaU. No, there was no sin in slavery as in stitutedjn the south by our father and forefathers, and that is why I wri'e this letter perhaps the last I shall ever write on this subject. I wish to Im press it upon our boys and, girls so that they may be ready and willing to de fend their southern ancestors from the baaelt ss charge of suffering now for the sins of their fathers. - A northern friend writes: " a UOITV , - 1 t . . m-r 1 of Daniel Webster's speech at Capon'1 , "V w 7 P u.--u I. lJv iare tired of him. Give us more of 1 Ji'iiujo, nium was eupureteu DJ QU publishers and to which General Jack son makes son a r.t m.n ii. ""wT.I Ue does not, know that the negro militarv lanrSla in th w.,7i ,l T, iZ i nd .at to becomeof htmisaques- I " af - - whv i VVSMU ALa v A I VV ! tie was aeBiatant attorney eeneral ul Z?Jn?jrt& refrain a. long as it U prudent. your pleasant pictures of domestic life, etc., but let the negro go dead." He does not , know that the tion of tremendous moment with us . and it must be written about. But I waTtil vfmiin si si Lwar s si St si rtmanr a 1 1 . t W avassMu asi rvus, swes a m m a- svu was the visilanL f t. 1 j A us f..Mn:nn . . . -. w ui uow a wuuui uae w mro a mu vu determined, conscientious prosecutor v. v.,w , - of those who owned and equipped and T . - a ,u -T a I T oflBcered the only slave s3p tbSmtm' th ' othermght and stole landed on the Georgia "coast. He was ?' K"ud8n?' For fite ears I have a man of splendid Suture and VALJ .fhiHte nA t.t;nn C. .,iuu o, anu now 1 can gnuuuij 8njsjsrtniiitai DR. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. H. C. HERRING. is now on Building CONCORD Htm O. DR. W. C. H OUSTO N ! SnmecD l-fSyfesX Dentist, Political TJnrest of ihe People. Wilmington Mesaenirer. DENTIST, " There eeems to be a comtdete revolu- j tion inj party affairs this year. Every- imng ia lurnea topsy-turvy. Where the gronna floor of the Lltaker Democrats should sweep the board in- depehdentiem is rife. In this State, which is classed as an integral part pf the solid 8outh, there is danger of Democratic defeat or of only partial victory at least. We know there are Democrats who willscout this idea and say it is absurd; that North Carolina is as solidly Democratic to-day as she ever was. That may be their opinipn, but they will find they are very much mis taken (.when the voting closes on November 4th. It will require an her culean! effort to carry this State. The feeling of independentism is abroad in the land. It is not theieeliug which gave temporary victory to the f usionista in 1894 and 1896. It is not a turning away from the principles of Democracy, but an assertion of freedom and libera tion irom wnat nag neretoiore been a close Corporation of the party rulers in this State. The white men have been told by the leaders of the party that they were free; that the party lash would no longer be cracked over their heads and they are enjoying that free dom to the fullest extent time will tell whether to their permanent goofl or to their 1 great . sorrow. Anyhow, they have determined to take an outing and CONCORD, H. O. Is prepared to do all Kinds ot dental work In the most approved manner. Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone 11. r - Office 'Phone 43. L. T. 'HARTSELL, .r Attoraey-at-Lai , CONCORD, NORTH OABOUNA. i I Prompt attention given to all business. . Oilioe in. Morris building-, opposite the court house. : 1 - . Drs. Lilly & Walker, offer their professional services to the eltl zens of Concord and surrounding; country. Calls promptly attended day or nlKht. W. J. MONTOOMKBI. 1 . . IiMOBOWEXl MOHTGOMERY 4 CROWELL, ; Attorney j-and Connselors-at-Law, , An Explanation or Wliy It Is. Charlotte Observer. . , ; Democratic County Chairman A. M, Scales, of Guilford, complains that he reputation. been appended in the appendix of some , . , 1 soutneru History as a landmark for the present generation" It is sad and mor tifying that our young and middle-aged men and our graduates from Southern colleges know so little of our ante bellum history. The northern people are equally ignorant of the origin of is not able to beat it into , the heads of I slavery and the real causes that precip- the people that there is an entirely new registration this year and that those who are not registered will not be al lowed : to vote. Probably every other county chairman has the same experi rience, and newspaper people have it about various matters the experience tated the civil war. Most of them have a vague idea that slavery was born and just grew up in the South came up out of the ground like i the 17-year-locuets and was our sin and our corse. Not one in . ten thousand will believe that the South never imported a slave of printing and printing a thing oyer, from Africa, but got all we had by pur aud over again, and still failing to beat chase from our northern brethren. I have no axe to rst. Bill Art. CONOOBD, N." O. . As partners, will practice law in Cabarrus, ttaniv and adjoining counties, in una rior-and Supreme Courts of the State thf Kmlpral Court Offlcft in court house. Parties desiring to lend money can leave it with us or place 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. Mortgages foreclosed without expense to owners of same. j it into tne neaas 01 people .there is the matter of anonymous communica tions, for instance. They repeat, time and again, that they will print no com munication not accompanied by the name of the writer this paper keeps this announcement standing at the head : of this page but newspaper waste baskets continue to be overload ed with anonymous communications. Folks are about this announcement like the drunk man who went to the circus. Asked afterwards if he -saw the show, he said that he looked at it but didn't see it. They read things but don't take them in. Many a man who reads or at least looks at the newspapers every day, will step up to the ballot box next month and when 'told that he hasn t got on the wedding garment will say, Why, I voted at the last election; ! have voted at this box all my life." would wager" a thousand dollars against j ten that not a man Under fifty nor a school boy who lives north of the line j knows or believes that General Grant, 1 their great military hero and idol, was a slave owner and lived off of their hire and their service while he was' fighting us about ours. Lincoln's proclamation of freedom came in 1863, but General Grant paid no attention to it. "He con tinued to use them as slaves until Jan uary, , 1865. (See his biography by General James Grant Wilson in Apple ton's Encyclopedia.) j General Grant owned these slaves in : St. Louis, Mo., where he lived. He was a bad man ager, and just before the war began he moved to Galena and 'went to work for his brother in the ! tanyard. While there he caught the war fever and got a good position under Lincoln, but had he remained in St. Louis would have the T Sul for a hile they will' kick up their heels There are some things that you can't greatly preferred one on our side. So ate andin I and race aronnd in i.he olav Grounds of make some i neoDle understand exceot 1 said Mrs. Grant a few years ago to a by taking them by the lapels of their coats and explaining it to them. Keg istration is one of these things it is ; a matter of laboring personally with the voter. ' " :- ttreet Fa Ira and Carol vale. 8t. Louis Eepubuc. i j The annual street fairs seem to have earned a place in this section of the country as satisfactory out-of-door amusement institutions. With the ad vent of autumn, pleasure-seekers in small cities look forward with unre strained expectancy to the fun they will have during the fair. For weeks ahead engagements are made by young per sons for the fall holiday week, and when the season arrives they get genu ine entertainment from the freedom they are permitted to exercise in roam ing among the booths and watching the performers on the stands. The Yahr-Market," or year-market, has been popular in Germany for very many years. It retains its favor to this day and probably will continue to be popular s long as conditions there remain unchanged. Whether the street fair will obtain a fast hold on the American public cannot be predicted. But that it is popular , at present for autumnal festivities, in small cities, cannot be gainsaid. , At this time it is as thoroughly char- ctcriatie of soma amall citimi and local ities of the Middle States as the flower parade is of the cities in the South an West, ; notably in Texas, Tennessee, Californa and Colorado, or as the politi cal campaigns are characteristic of' the United States. ' On many people street fairs and political campaigns have the same effect, as both -are engaging and exhilarating. Spencer and, Samurl Candler, of the coming sesakia of tbe Georgia legisla ture, and X thoguht of Joe Hill Hall again, then of the loQg-sufferiog o ple of Atlanta, i Atlanta U - ping through much tribulation, whether l u going op or not. Out of the Carolina Into South G ! gia, the transition i eaty, and while the growing towns and industry of those two state charm! ene, J de clare they are not one whit ahetd of Fitzgerald, Tifton, Cordeki and Moul trie, Vahlosta and WaycrxM, etc rv, I These, towns are growing in leaps and oounas, ana ooum ueorgia seems to have splendid crops, also. The hotels of these towns are simply good, most of them new and elegant, and good hotel and nicely paved streets, electric lights and water works are the four ace that can't be beat. Towns that have been dead for years have begun to build and j equip them selves with these four essentials, and then everything else began to boom. , One marvels at the network of rail roads in South Georgia. The towns I have named above are in the midst of a network of railroads, and all the roads are doing a land office business. The Tifton, Thomasville and Gulf railroad is a little gem, only 56 miles in length, but it's a hummer. This it Harry Atkinson's j and; High tower's road, and it's equipped for business, and it's getting tne business, freight and passenger, and I pay three cents a mile for every mile I ride on it So don't any old Pop., lump on me now about a free pass,' etc. The Georgia Southern and r londa is a most splen did road and under fine management, and is most popular with its patrons. " When I walked ; down yesterday to the depot to take the train here for Moultrie, my old friend of bygone years. Bud Thrash, stepped up to me with overalls on. and said. "Bro. Jones, you have ridden with me often on the Western and Atlantic when I pulled the passenger trains with the U. 8. Grant and Gov. James M. Smith. Now, come out on the engine with me and nde to Moultne. I was glad to see him and accepted his invitation, and spent an hour most pleasantly with him, as with his hand on the throttle he whirled down the track on schedule time. Hud is an old Atlanta boy, and 1 am glad to know that he was his old self again, withj a good Job, and1 held in high esteem by his employers.. My attachment for : railroad om deepens as I travel more and more grow t Uh frurroundt&r t4 it euoduto, HeaJth, vigor and lrerth are lmus tUe amy such tniarua, ;! . Yours trulyr " -v. t Joys. P. H. XoKidy in Atlanta now thiak that the 13 k is a nasty gang. ttasrt Will txrtl TSt Ate,. : Xw Tor HaraUL H J. Hunt, aa invent of No. 15i Kt Fortieth street,. New York dir. declare that he has at last O0tn4r4d a flying machine, or mod4 of one, that, without the use of the balloons or nets, will Im able to stay sit weeks in the sir without touching the ground the whole time. Mr. Hunt aaarrt that his invention has M. rAantos-IKiinont's flying ma chine beaten a mile, as H i neither of the aeroplane or gas bag-pattern, but will derive its power from the air, and thus be able to stay aloft indefinitely, moving about with the greatest ease at the berk and call of the steersman. Oace afloat, he says, it will revolution ise all idea of navigating the atmos phere. ! In his house- under, careful guard, Mr. Hunt has a model of his airship, SO inches long. This, be says, has flown about the room, carrying five pound weight. r " The airship itself, he says, is to be built of aluminum, and U to weigh 6 pounds. In shape the model is very much like a boat r a body of a bird. and from the sides project a pair of light wings. "I have solved the problem of aerial navigation," declared, the inventor, when seen at his workshop yesterday. "The airship will fly like a bird. I have already demonstrated its practica bility. 1 1 don't need and balloons to keep this flying , machine afloat. It keeps itself afloat, i I use no moters either, j The secret of its construction 1 keep to myself. No; the tiring ma chine is not patented. I have,, not trusted the secret to a patent aa yet. rrt The ourist Season Opens with the onth of June,, : 1 AND iTHE independence in politics, and after .a while they will get tired of this play and sober down to business. God knows we hope they will find they have lost nothing by the relaxation and, re alignment of party lines which will fol low, j That there will be a great change in this alignment when the two parties contest in 1904 we have not the least doubt. Ourprayer is that our people will hot go into this, matter blindly and that they .will come out of the hnal con test (without dishonor and without, material loss. SOUTHERN RAILWAY .announces the sale of i Summer Excursion Tictets From &11 i v To the delightful Resorts located on and reached via Its lines. ' These' tickets bear final limit October 31, 1902. , . That section of North Carolina t I known as the THE LAND OR THE SKY," AND THE - V SAPPHIRE COUNTRY, Is particularly attractive to those In search of mountain resorts, i where the air is ever cool and invigorating,' and where accommo dations can he had either at the comfortable and well-kept boarding houses or the more expensive and up-to-date hotels. , ... ' AD nrTION AXi SLEEPING CABS. ' 1'laced In Service from Various Points u i'rlnci pal Resorts, thus affording CKEATLY IMPROVED FACILITIES I For reaching those Points. Particular attention is directed to the ele gant Dininj? Car Service on:principal through trains.. Southern Hallway has Just issued its hand pome liesort Folderv descriptive of the many 'lelihtful resorts along the line of its road. This f older also gives 'the names of proprie tors of hotels and boarding houses and num r of xuestssthey can accommodate. Copy an ie had upon application to any Southern : Cuba Seems to Be Drifting Away. The situation in Cuba is such as at present to give Washington ofiicials ereat concern. It is feared that Cuba is drifting way and evidence.is multi plyine day by day to mark the growth of a 'spirit ' of indifference toward the cultivation of friendly Commercial rela' tions with the United States that almost borders on hostility. The treaty which, by the terms of the Piatt amendment, must be entered into between the two Uovernments is now awaiting the approval of the Cuban Government, which approval is with held, not with intention, but through what is regarded here as the natural inertia of the Cubans in diplomatic matters. This treaty includes provisions for a considerable measure of reciprocity be tween the United States and Cuba, and, while it is true that the Cubans believe that the United States have been rather niggardly in the arrangement of the reciprocity schedules, those objections are not reearded sufficient to accouhfc for" the creat delay in' approving the treaty. -. :: .:. There is no intention, it is said, to resort to undue pressure on the Cubans Coa-Cola Case Argued Atlanta Constitution. At! the session of the United States circuit court of appeals yesterday the case Of the Coca-Cola Company against the United States government was heard. This case was tried before .TrirlcA Newman in Feburuary of the nresent year, and a verdict Was render ed in favor of the Coca-Cola Company for 412.934. The suit arose- because oi tne iaci that the government claimed that the drink known as Coca-Cola was taxable under the war revenue act of 1898, as mvAirstl Trenaration. the claim of the I The Immensity of Siberia. Philadelphia Recor d. -" - A traveller in Siberia Bays that few people realize the immensity of that country. To think of a single State stretching through 130 degrees of lon gitude and possessing one-ninth of all the land surface of the globe is stag gering. The United States and all its possessions, and all Europe, . except Russia, could be put into Siberia, with land enough left over to make thirty- five States hke Connecticut. He had thought of it as a convict settlement only, as most persons do, no doubt. He found it a country of nearly 9,000,- 000 people, 97 per cent, of whom are either natives or voluntary immigrants, and all living, better and enjoying more political and religious liberty than peo ple in European Bussia have. "Where he travelled it . was hke Minnesota, where wheat, rye and vegetables and strawberries, raspberries and currants grow, and sheep and horses graze un sheltered the year round. j : Here's A New Snake Story. Farmer Brown," of Bridgewater, Pa. , was . successful in . capturing ; a snake, or pair of snakes, . hitched j to gether like Siamese twins. 1 . The twins have two heads ana two tails, and the rest of their body is like that of a single snake, with, the excep tion, of a slight depression above nd below, extending the entire length. The bodies join about six inches from the bead. The tails are each almost a foot long. The length of the jointed body-is two feet nine inches. The twins were tarst seen- last sum mer by a little son of Mr. Bmwq, who told his father about them' and showed him the track across the road. 1 He ran across them a few weeks ago and succeded in taking them captive. CoafeMlon ol a Prient. "Rev. Jno. S. Cox, of Wake, Ark., writes: "For la years x sunereo. irom Yellow Jaundice, I consulted a number of nhvsicians and tried all sorts of medi cines, but trot no relief . Then I began newspaper editor in St. Augustine. - . How many of this generation, north or south, know or will believe that as late as November, 1861, Nathaniel Gor don, master of a New England slave ship called the Erie,. ; was convicted in New York City of carrying on the slave trade. (See Appleton.) Just think of j it and wonder. In 1861 our northern brethren made war upon us because we enslaved the negroes we had bought from them, but at the same time they kept on bringing more from Africa and begging us to buy them. How many know that England, our mother coun try, never emancipated our slaves until 1843, when twelve millions were set free in the East Indies and one hun dred millions of dollars paid to their owners by act of Parliament ? It is only within the last: half century that the importation of slaves from Africa has generally ceased. Up to that time every civilized country bought them and enslaved them. English statesmen and clergymen said it was better to bring them away than to have them continue in their barbarism and cani-j balism. And it was better. I believe it was God's providence that they should be brought away and placed in slavery, but the way it was done was inhuman and brutal. The horrors of the middle paf sage, as the ocean voyage was called, is the most awful narrative I ever read and reminds me of Dante's "Inferno." About half the cargo survived and the dead and dying were tumbled into the sea. rue owners saia, we can aiiora to lose half and still have a thousand per cent., profit. Rev. John Newton, one of the sweetest poets' who ever wrote a hymn, the author o "Amazing grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a wretch hke me,". 'Savior, Visit Thy Plantation," "Safely Through Another Week." and many others, was for many years a deck; hand on a slave; ship and saw all its horrors. Hebe- came converted, but soon after became captain of a slaver land for four years pursued it diligently and mitigated its cruelty. Then he ; quit and went to preaching and says in his autobiography that it never occurred to him that there was anything wrong or immoriJ in the slave trade where it was humanely con ducted. The Savior said, "Offenses A jnToltlpIleatlon-Addltloa Table. The following table was worked out by a Harvard professor. It is interest ing to look at, but one is thankful that it is not included among the multipli- 1 time 9 plus 2 equals 11.' . 12 times 9 plus 3 equals 111. . 123 times 9 plus 4 equals 1111. 1234 times 9 plus 5 equals 11111. t 12345 times 9 plus 6 equals 111111. 123456 times 9 plus 7 equals 1111111 1234567 time? 9 plus 8 equals 11111- lii. ;- -...ii. . 12345678 times 9 plus1 equals 111 111111.',. -Vji '' ; -' ' : . ' I. 1 time 8 plus 1 equah 9. 12 times 8 plus 2 equals 98. 123 times 8 plus 3 equals 987. I 1234 times 8 plus 4 equals 9876. ; : 12345 times 8 plus 5 equals 98765. 123456 times 8 plus 6 equals 987654. 1234567 times 8 plus 7 equals 9876 543. ! - ' ::H - ' 1 12345678 times 8 plus 8 equals 98- 765432. 123456789 times 8 plus 9 equals 987654321. I A New Engine That isaWoader. Cleveland Dispatch. . The newest locomotive is be exploited by C. W. French. Only one lias been built and it possesses so many features different from ordinary kinds that it, is being talked about. Besides the elec tric headlight there are incandeacents around the cab and running boards so arranged that every part of the machine may be examined at night the same as in daytime.- j 2 The engine has four driving cranks, which give extraordinary .balance. It is also a horizontal compound. The tender carries 7,000 gallons of water. It also has capacity for four tons of coal. ' . Mr. French says: "In case the tests continue to prove satisfactory this type ot engines will be adopted and used on the Chicago Short line and all its branches." - j - Reoenty the engine hauled 1,200 tons of freight from Warwick to Hudson in such fast time that the records of j the fastest passenger trains were broken. A . THHIf. i R.fl HARflWinK. l'ass. Traffic Mgr. j Gei.H Pass, Agent. .nM,mpnt heiner.that it had been ad- ..e,., i u-tijcH u -remeav ior neauauuo. fVIUSVH - tf The Coca-Cola Company, on the other hand, claimed that Coca-goia was a soda-fountain drink merely, and in no sense a medical preparation. AGENTS WANTED. LIFE OF i T, DEWrfT TALMAGE. by his sou, liov. Frank DeWltt Talmage and asso ciate editors of ChristUn Herald. Only book Vndorsed by Talmage family. Enormous ' "Vrotitfor agents who act quickly. Outfit tea cents. Write immediately Clark 4. Co., 2 S. 4th 86., Philadelphia, ! a. Mention this Paper. i ;. , . liUktS WfiHif All K( tlilS. Bemt Cough Syrup. Taste Good. in lime. Bold bT drnrelntiL- rsraiiTv Broke Into Hla House. . a. TOnmn. of Cavendish," Vt., was rrhlwl of his customary health by inva sion of Chronic Constipation. vvnen ty- trir.r'a Vw Life Pills broke into his house, his trouble was arrested and now he's entirely cured. They're. guar anteed to cure. 25c at Fetzer's Drug Store. must neeas come, put woe uaiomeraj a Ut Utter by wnom tney come. j Would not interest yon if you're look In Appleton's long ana exnausuve;. - ai the use of Electric Bitters and feel that article on slavery it is said that slavery Barngor Otto jjodd, of Ponder, I am now cured of a disease mat ; naa ip some iorm nas existeu ever emou uu- ;Mo.fWrites : ! suffered with an Ugly me in its grasp for twelve years.", . xi man History negan. Ana v. PP gore for a year, but a box of Bucklen's you want a reliable medicine for Liver have been under the sanction of Provi- Aj, Salve cured me. .- It's the best and Kidney trouble, siomacn cuaoruer i uence as i uaca .uc Salre on earth. 25c at Fetter's drug ana Aumwiui. ju uivci uau 'jr great .household and ;many servants whom he had bought with his money. The word slave appears but twice in the Bible. It is synonymous with servant and bondsman. There has been no time since the Christian era, that the If stomach disorder or general debility, get Electric Bitters. It's guaranteed by a etzer s urug store. Only 50c. . - j store. with them. They have done me a thou sand favors and 1 have done me no "dirt." ) . - U ' ' ' The boys; on the old reliable W. & A., Conductors Turner, Hargis, Wylie, Holcomb, ,8tallingB, etc., and Engin eers Welch, Bell, Nance and Harris, etc.. why, we are all brothers. And the brakenien and baggagemen, J feel the same towards them. I hope to meet them all with thousands of other railroad men in heaven. "That part I will leave -for them, for I am going there myself, by God's grace. Yesterday was election day, and with some poor candidates I suppose this is dejection day.' I don't know the feeling of a fellow who got beat., : I never ran for a an office, and was only a candidate, "limited," once. Mayor Howell will make a good one. He ought; to have been elected, for Atlanta never had a better friend. He has done j more for Atlanta than he ever did for himself, j . The supreme bench has a first-class associate justice in the person of Judge John Chandler. : i He is worthy and well qualified and I don't think he drinks. I am almost "show" he don't Really I've got. my doubts about the advisability of any judge drinking (too much), though it has been done, I am pained to say. : ! It would do your soul good to see how The Atlanta Journal is circulated in the Carolines and South Georgia. No trouble to stumble upon an Atlanta Journal in the radius of two or three hundred miles of Alanta. I suppose the preachers had better quit fighting the Sunday papers, for Loyless said the Sunday Journal jump ed up three thousand last Sunday in its circulation. The Chattanooga Times jumped on me about my denunciation of the Sunday papers, and said the "Sunday papers had done more to lift ap the people than all the sensational evangelists that ever shouted at so much a shout.'? lift up, indeed. If The Chattanooga Times ever lifted up any thing it was a dollar that was thrown onto its level to purchase. its columns Then again, I never denounced the Sunday paper. I simply said to a re porter who asked me what I had to say of the Sunday paper "that there was no more harm in a eunqay paper than there was in a Sunday dry goods store, 8undy baseball and Sunday concerts' etc. The Ten . Commandments settle the question one way .or the other; and the publishers of Sunday newspapers will have to settle at last by that standard like the balance Of us poor fellows. I can say this,! however, that there is no dirt in the Atlanta Sunday papers They are clean compared with some of the New .York Sunday papers. Some people will have them. It's the demand for them that puts them on the mar ket, and so it goes. : I would ssy to the pastors, fight ev- Bota Side liars Iseaa Charlotte Obserrsr. As the great anthracite coal min era' strike neare its end it mutt be tp- parentuto all who have followed it course that there has been a good deal of wrong on both sides. ;. Without ref erence to the merits of the controversy in its beginning it is apparent that the operators uave oeen too unoenaing in their attitude, too arbitrary in their re fusal to arbitrate: while the otteratives, who became dissatisfied, with conditions and quit wOrk were wrong, aa strikers so often are, in resorting to intimida tion and violence to prevent other men from taking their places. Laboring men in all deiiartment of life should recognize ; the great principles of equity that the right to go to work and the right to quit work are inalienable. This will not be, perhaps, until the Golden Rule is universally adopted and lived up to, but this can never be shak en as an equitable proiosition, because it is founded on a rock. Chlldrea'stept rroea Srbaal. Freeman Kyscr, a religious enthusi ast, is in Jail at W arsaw, lnd., a mar tyr to his belief that the public school system in the United States is the ban diwork of Satan. Kaser was arrested by a truant officer for his violating the statute requiring him to send his children to school. He was warned, but defied the law by de claring that all the prisons in the country could not induce him to send hio;hildren to school. He says he did not wish to break the law so iong as it did not conflict with the command of heaven, but in this case - there was no reconciling the two'. . He said he would let his family starve and allow his property to go to ruin- rather than surrender his right to keep his children at home. wtxTun, all want human llch an4 'they .can sxt it ulc Scott Kraukion. Scott Emulsion tlcih ami bloc.!, jUane ami muscle. It Iced the nerves Mrengthcn the digestive organs and they evd the h4e IxsJy. For nearly thirty ytan SctittV Emulsion has been the great giver of human flesh. We will send you a couple jaf , J ouatcsfrte. - COTT ft IQWNt, Cbami.ta, OW4IS fart 8trot. NswVtrk, as.4 $m t all OF With An Experience YEARS IK WRITING Ftre Insurance, stettHncr losses and rercscnttn lirst Glass Companies, Southern, Northern and For- etgn, we ask your luitronage. Our facilities for Employer Liability, Accident and I Icalth Insurance arc excellent G. G. RICHMOND & CO. 'Phone 184. TUB Concord National Bank: with. U latest pprovM form of bouts and srtrjr facility tuf hnd4n xubu, FIRST t CLASS ) SERVICE' TO THB 9XXMXSO. Capital, - Profit, Individual rponsitHlity of Shareholders, . 150,000 22,000 KEEP . . W.OOf Your Account with Us. Intiwt rS4 as irMNl. UbeisiaeetMittMt' datlun to ail our ruUutr. 1 M. HDIt LrrMMMt, U. U. UJL1 tcAX B. Caablar. IlccIIhy Children - ara btl Mron an4 2 9mk an4 pftar ltlU Ifilba ar iflivt itr by Ut bm of UmI bmona rMd FREY'S VERPIFUGE OorjU all dtsonWra ot tb mUtmrnri, ipls worm, V. r'alalabM ana ponitl ia art in a. nu br mit. ijo. SCAB. rMCT, MalUM, M4. Stoektass Intake af Paster. Paper gloves and stockings are now being manufactured in Europe. As to the manner in which the former are made little ia known, but the stockings have been carefully ' examined by ex perts, and they are loud in their praise of them. Let no one assume, they say, that these stockings, because they are made of paper, will Only last a few days, for they will really last almost as long as ordinary stoc kings. . The reason, they point out, is because the paper of which they are made was during the process of manufacture transformed into a substance closely resembling wool, and was then woven and otherwise treated as ordinary wool. The price of these paper stockings is low, which is natural, since paper is much cheaper than cotton or wool. Merchant Tailor. Clothes Mado to Order. Cleaning and Repairing done on short notice. I. WISSBIRG, Ovsr Patterson's store. Vokm Mr. , served Htm Blahl. Kw Tors Sun. An Iowa clergyman of the good Latin name of Mecum and on sociology bent, determined to feel the charitable pulse of his flock. Uejrrew a long Uard during his vacation, and when became back he put on 'his shabbiest clothe and most shocking bat. Soaccoutered, he called on some of his best, friends and aeked for something to eat. All be got was the cold shoulder. Served him right. His parishioners are under no obligations to feed wandering sons of leisure. He that will not work, neither shall he eat. And he is a rank BabjrGIrl Left la a Basket. An infant trirl baby,"iu8t a few hours old; was found on the front steps at the home of Mr. Vashen Rose, at Golds boro one morning last week, j The child was neatly and comfortably tuck eoVaway in a basket, in which were an abundant supply ol naDy ciomwj i up of costly material and in good style. dominant nations have not - owned ncicenses, uuueoges, nampiona, i- nlawB sometimes ; the bondage - was gares, Thompsons,' Austins and others .. hut as a general rule the of the period that closed in 1860. He master found it to his interest to be is a refined gentleman; - not a politi- kind to his slaves. As Bob Toombs cian; the antithesis in every way of said in his Boston speech: "It is not to Tillman and his staff o henchmen." I ery thing God condemns, and champion The Chattanooga - Times observes I everything that's right, and make your that "Capt. D. C. Heyward, who will I sermons more interestine and more be elected Governor of South Carolina J sought after than anj Sunday paper i imposter. His parishioners were right, on November 4th, is a blue blood, lean beJ then you " will have bigger ' He had no business to spy upon comes of a family that ranked with the f crowds with . you on Sunday morning Wood's Seeds. VA. GRAY OR TURF Winter Oats . Sown In SpUfuluT or October, make a much Lant yMdins; ana' more profitable crop than Wbestt They can also t gracd daring th winter ami early spring al yieki Just ss largely of grain aftcrwanls. Wood's Fall Cstalogut tills aO shout Vegetable and Farm Seed for Fall Wanting. S4 WRMt. Oats. Itye. Barley. Vetches, (irut and Clover Seeds, eut. - Write for CuWue and prices) of any Seeds desired. T. W. WOOD & SONS. Seedsmen. Richmond, Va, W4s Fact Catatoca s!ao l lis tbnat VClfcl ! IW ImSs. Straw . fcorry aad VmtoMt PI 1. Uw i Orsaa, Hractatto. TaUpa. . ' Cstalsf saaBsS tr mfmm wsssst. them; and this mania.of the well-to do and fewer of your population at home , to play tramp is getting tiresome. and on the streets reading the Sunday j ; : ; - papers. r ! i . A red-beaded woman may have the The preacher has the liveliest theme, ' sweetest temper in the world, but it is the most sensational facts, the most in- i not alwa) wise to rub her fur the teres ting issues to present to the people wrong way to see if she has. "-N Or. VcslIfTs ssrjrr rarx au iaotsst. Iaassjs, laiistt ar ayt.a. t r x mo m. wooixxv co. ann.fTrr mttm. UUssts, fcsoTsja i.
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 23, 1902, edition 1
1
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