Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / March 11, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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-ie-THETIC.1E3-- STEAM BOOK O JOB OFFICE - - ; - 1- - r A A i ImI 1 MM Ws keen on hand a foil (took of LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS, STATE MENTS, BILL HEADS, ENVEL OPES, TAGS, VISITING CARDS WED DING INVITATIONS, ETC, ETC. CSTAttUtMgD 1 IITt. Joint B. SherriU, Editor and Owner. $tOO a rear, Xa .dtf rase. If yo KfttT e;iUftjt to mS, Wi GOOD PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS Volume XX. Concord, N. C.f Wednesday, JWarch 11. 1803, NUUBER8B, . " A Sudden Twin TO Of pain ia generally the first warning of an attack of rneumauarn. u ieei as u the disease were in the bonea or muscles. but the real cause of rheumatism ia found in impure blood. In order to care rheumatism the blood must be cleansed of the poisonous impurities which axe the cause of the disease. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has been very successful in the core of raeumausm, o c cause it entirely cleanses the blood from the poison l one substances which are -the cause of the. dis ease. It not only purifies the blood but by increasing the activity of the blood -.ma kin if glands, it increases the supply of pure, rich blood which adda to the vigor of every physical organ. Mr. R.A.McKnlW. of Cades, Williams burg- Co., S. C, write : I bad baen troubled with rheumatism for twelve years, so bed at rimca I could not leave my bed. I waa badly crippled. Tried many doctor ana two of tnem gave me up to die. None of them did me a Noneof themdidme good.. The pains in my back, hip and legs (and at lines in my head), would nearly kill me. My 'appetite waa very bad. Everybody wko saw me aaid t must die. I took five bottles of the 'Golden Medical Discovery,' and four vial of Pellets,' and to-day my neaim is good after suffering twelve years with rheumatism." The sole motive for substitution is to permit the dealer to make the little more profit paid by the aale of less meritorious medicines. He gains : yon lose. Therefore accept so substitute for "ooiaen meaicai uisuuvei j Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cleanse the bowels and stimulate the sluggisif liver. , ! PROFESSIONAL CARDS. DR. H. C. HERRING. DENTIST, Is now on the ground floor of the LI taker COJrOOBS, 7. o. Dr. W. C.Houston Surgeon . Dentist, " OOHCOBD, w. o. -' Is prepared to do all kinds ot dental work in me most spprovea manner. Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone 11. . Ofllce 'Phone IS. L. T. HARTSELL, ittdmey-at-Lai, ; CONCORD, XTOBTH OASOUHfA Promot attention riven to. all baslnesa Office In Morris building, opposite the court noose. v - ... i Firs T.illv J& WdltPP 1lUi AJltlJ U UU1UV1 offer their professional services to the cltl-1 sens or concord ana surrounding country. , calls promptly attenaea aay or mgnc w 1. XONTQOXIBI, . LXBOBOWAXr T M0ITG0MES1 ft CROIELL, ittorneys and Connselors-at-Lav, OONOOBD, If. O. As partners, will practice law In Cabarrus, Stanly and adjoining counties. In the supe rior and 8dpreme Courts o f the State and to the Federal Courts. Office 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 seenritv free of charge to the depositor. We make thorough examination of title tc landa offered as securltv for loans. Mortga orech iiosea witnont expense vo owners o: e. BRIGK! BR a uric, js a urrca, jrcs. uuii wuan m uuw . . t V I 1 I 1 1 JttAM ence intbem. Good brick, good machinery, up-to-date methods, In fact, a thousand de tails m naooafilr.v tit nrruliirrA the riMTt brick- We have our plant fully equipped for a capacity of 45,000,000 not only that, but have a body of the finest river clay ever lo cated In this country. Our plant U on tte Catawba river near .Fort Mill. & shipping u.UOirattan, 8. C. ! A man is a man for a' that,1, but what a difference in 'em. . Ton require the bestlum- ber for your house; the beat coal for your en trine: the best Hour for your table. One does not buy a common horse when he can get much better one for near the same price. Tina la tmfl uTmitATArvthlnff Ana needs. - In a building nothing is more essentia! than good material. It adds to the safety ' and wear, besides twill sell for more. Who -would not pay more for a building put up out of first quality material than for one thrown together out of common ordinary brick. . . i Let Us Correspond Witn Yon. Prompt Senice in Shipments Chirlotis Bfisk Company, i ' ' " I, j - OFFICE WITCH ! S. S. HcSINCH & COMPANY ' CHARLOTTE, N. C Dec. 18 3m. " HacMnery for Sale. l- One pair Platform Scales. One 20 horse power Boiler. One 40 horse power boiler, i One Cotton Press. One 20 horse power Engine. Two Cotton Gins. One Saw Mill. - Lot of Shafting. ' i Apply to 'MRS. M. L. GOODMAN, r pr Z. A, MORRIS. nP-UUW "Jli:l CH LUHfS WhtKt AiL tLS FAIL: Ki Beat Coogh Brrop. Taatea Good. tn tima. ttoid br dnwaiata. v-4 j - Alas! my chad, where Is the pa That eaa do justice to tfce bear Like royalty she foes her way, Laftot fotipditloni every day. Though not for public building, yet For oustard, cake and omeieU. - -Or. U too cold for such a Baa, They have their fling at tome !aae. ' As when to censor plays aritt Upou the stage they make a hit; , Or at elections seal the fats Of an obnoxious candidate. ' No wonder, child,, ws prize the hau, -Whose egg Is mightier thxa the pea. -OumEturosD in ThbGcildkk. BILL ASP'S LfcTTEtt. AtUata Constttotion. - ; . - My wife reads the papers more or less every day And keeps op with it eenea tions. Host of the time she sits in hr acoustomed corner and plies Her needle and thread, making little garments for her grand children, or new covers for the cushions or mending underclothes or darning stockings or something. When she gets tired she walks in the garden or goes down to see Jessie And the children. She went to town yester- day and boughtsome thread and tome toilet soap And got weighed and asked the family all around to guess how much and one guessed it, exactly one hundred And fifty pounds. She asked me to guess, but I said no she had had her way so often and so long that I couldn't come near it and she shook her fist at me. Good gracious! when I larried her she didn't weigh a hundred .ad wore numbeij two shoes and stepped like a deer. "Tempos fugit," next week will be the fifty-fourth anniversary of our , wedding day, fifty-four the alismanic number made up of nines or its multiple, as 3, g, 9, 18, 27, 54, and 6 are 9j 1 and 8 are 9, 2- and 7. are v, o ana 4 are y. And soon our birthdays will come'; along again, the drat and fifteenth of June,' and time keeps rolling on. ; , My wife was reading the paper and suddenly stopped and spoke to me, say ing : "Well, isn't it about time to quit writing about the negro?" "Why so?" said I. "Why, den't you see that the whole buinesa of the' race problem was settled in Atlanta last Sunday ? The mayor and the preachers, black and white, all made speeches, and seemed to agree and everything is harmonious. So if I was you I j would write about something else. Take up George Washington for Booker 'go'Iead." change and let Well, they did play on the harmoni- can right smart and I hope the prob lem will take a rest, for everybody is tired of it. Even Crampacker is tired, and -now says the negro mast work' out his own 'salvation. That's all right. When they call off the dogs, I'll quit. - They are waking up to the true character of the negro. A Chicago man who has been visiting the prisons says there are about forty-six thousand negroes in that eity, which is about two per cent, of the population and that the prison records as shown him by war dens, show the nespoes to be thirty per cent, of all the criminals confined, and that the negro quarter of the city is the rendezvous and the refuge of nearly all the white burglars and thieves that in fest the city. But that's none of my business,' oa my wife Bays. Chicago needs them for municipal politics. ! But I have quit. Let tme negro go along and evolute, as Crumpacker says. I had rather look out ,otj my window and see two little girls coming up the walk hand in hand to see me than to write about anything And the little boy is coming, too. His nurse is rolling him in his carriage and be wOl rin to me soon as he gets in the riom, and will nestle,on my knees and say his little words, and my great est comfort is that all of them love me and Won't go home without kissing me a sweet goodby. J That nurse is a cop per-colored girl about twelve years old, and she loves that baby and watches him as carefully as a mother. She is the daughter of our sexton, who is the jan itor ot the public school. He and his good wife are exceptions to all the frail ties of the race, and so are their chil dren. If there were many like them there would be no race problem. Those three little children come to see me every day and make me to forget my self and my , long illness, and I find myself whispering, 'Suffer little chil dren to come unto me. "And a utUe chUd shall lead! them," What a pity they have to grow up and lose their innocence and see grief and trouble. How-., sweetly sad are the memories of the youth, - - One poet says : j Y Otii would I were a boy again. When life seemed formed of snnnr years. And all the heart then knew of pain Was wept away in transient tears. -And another Bays : -. . I remember, I remember, the bouse where I was born, i . The little window where the sun came peep- lag In at morn. i It never rose a wink too soon. Nor brought too Ion? a flay, - But now I often wish the night- : 1, Had borne my breath away. And so do I remember the little win- dow and the long have never wished childhood, nor ' do happy days, but I that I had died in I wish to die now. I wish to live for the sake of these same 'grandchildren, for I know I can do something to guide and "comfort them Along the journey of life, And they would mis me. A child without t grandpa and grandma has not had its share of happiness. What a beautiful verse is the Last one j of poor Tom Hood's poem: "I remember, I remember, the fir tree, dart andhlxb. I used to think their slander top were close against the sky. It was A childless Ixnoraace, And now Us little Joy To know rm farther off I was a boy, from heaves than when Last summer the little baby boy was la sick. We feared he would die. As be lay ttpoh a pillow in his mother's Up, the little 4-year-old girl went up close and whuDered to her mother. "Mamma. if baby dies mayn't I keep bim for a doll?" 1 1 never tire of their childish talk. It is always sincere, and that is truth, for sincere means without wax- unsealed, "sine cerum" -no secrets, open and read u you wish. It is an old adage that ''children and fool never lie." and this reminds me of George - Washington, who, tradition says,- cut down a cherry tree, and when his father inquired who did it, replied. "Father, I cannot tell a lie. I did it with my little hatchet." Z don't be lieve that. It must have been a mighty little tree that a little boy could cut down with a little hatchet. And if he waa bad enough to do it and knew bet ter he wouldn t nave made, suca a saintly speech as "Father, I cannot tell lie." My history says that many of these iittle stories came from the nurs ery. cut tnat ne did, wnen yet in nis teenB. undertake to mount and subdue an untrained blooded horse, and the horse reared and ran and plunged so furiously that be bursted a blood vessel and fell dead with George on top. - His mother was gre&tly grieved, and scolded him severely. I ' never knew until re-1 cently that he took the smallpox on Barbados - island, and was' slightly marked all his tife. . George says in letters that his negroes gave -him much trouble and great concern, for he had to be away on public business most of the time and could not look after them. He inherited one hundred aod forty and six hundreds acres of land and his wife one hundred and fifty more and seven hundred acres of land, and I reckon they did give him trouble.1 He never bought or sold any, and set them all free in nis will. .' .Mrs. Robert E. Park, regent for the Georgia room of the Confederate ma- seum at Richmond, wishes me to givJ notice that next month (April) the Con federate bazaair will be held there for the benefit of the museum aod the Jef ferson Davis memorial arch. Mrs. Park asks for special Georgia contribu tions for the Georgia room, and all the regents of the Southern states ask for help from every man, woman and child, so that the entire south may share in the .honor. The circular is much too ' long to be appended to my letter, but P will inclose it to I The Con stitution. And now please excuse my mention of a matter personal to an old soldier, W. F, Lee, a private of Company D in Hampton Legion. He has lost his horn, a large, long beautiful horn that while in camp belovr lUchmond he dressed and polished and engraved with his name and a wreath. He took the horn from the head of a Texas steer at butcher pen in the rear' of Grant's army.' He sent it home in the fall of 1864 by his brother, who stopped over night at ; Columbia at the Wayside Home and ' there lost it. ; ; He says, "Major, I am growing old, awaiting Qf f to my own horn once mor? before I die." Do please somebody send him that horn C. O. D. to Piedmont, S. C. Bill Abp. - nBtret to Be aVbandeoea. Ashevtlle, . Marcn b. Toe , an nouncement that Montreat is about to be abandoned as a religions assembly will be a matter of much regret not only to Asheville people but to hundreds of others who have spent summer at this delightful little village, , located in one of the most picturesque sections of western North Carolinn. ;f The; Montreat Association has not been a paying investment and the pro perty and land has now passed into that hands of John S. Huyler, the mil lionaire candy manufacturer who k the president and one of the founders of the association. What f j disposition Mr. Huyler may make of the property is not known but it is understood that he' contemplates making of it a hunting preserve. - y Traced y Averted. "Just in the nick of time our little boy was saved" writes Mrs. W. Watkins, i Pleasant City, Ohio. "Pneumonia had played sad havoo with him and a terrible cough set in besides. Doctors treated him, bnt he grew worse every day. At length we tried Dr. King's New Disoov- ery for , Consumption, and bur darling was saved. He's now sound and well.1 TCvAfrrairlv on o-hr. to Vnnw it's tha rmVv sure cure for Coughs, Colds and allLnng diseases. Guaranteed by P. B. Fetzer, Druggist. Price 50o and $1.00. Trial bottles free. SAID BtS KILLata LIBOvLK. Heart Wlifc Wilts BamaaoreSaa. ;;l 1 Ever since President Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth, rumor have been cropping op periodically which Aimed to discredit the fact that Booth was buried in Oreenmount Cemetery and have been as regularly denied. Now comes a story, stranger than Any which hAve preceded it, all the way from Guthrie, O. T. . It ia that Booth hat not been dead all these yean an, was not snot by uostoa w m .a a . at . bett, but Has just oieo. n is oenevea. by his own nana. This was the euirn Daniel JS. Ueorge, who had been a resident of Oklahoma for several years. and was somewhat of a mystery. lie announced that he was the slayer of President Lincoln, had eluded the vigi lance of the officers immediately alter the tragedy and had been traveling about under an assumed, name ever since. George's first declaration that he was Booth was made- to Mrs. Harper, wife of the pastor of the First Methodist Church of Enid, O. T. She state: that from observing him she became satis fied that he was somcoae other than what he seemed, lie was a mail' of eccentric nature. Although he claim ed to be a house painter, he was a man of more than the average intelligence and told frequently of visits he had made to- Jerusalem and of his travels through Europe, Asia and Africa. Generally, he was gloomy, but occasion ally he would sing stage songs and; re peat passages from Shakespeare, with whose works he appeared thoroughly familiar. Last spring, according to the story, George became ill and. thought he was going to die. He sent for Mrs. Harper nd said "I have something to tell you. am going to die in a few minutes and I must tell someone. I believe yoa are a friend and would not do anything to injure me. , Did it ever occur to you that I was anything but an ordinary painter? I killed the best who ever lived Abraham Lincoln." . " r j - '' George said that he was rich and that he had written a book of his j life which would be published after his death. He said that there were men high in official life who hated Lincoln and hadrniiaedhijjtt a great reward if he would kill Lincoln, Seward and others. He said that Mrs. "Surratt was I innocent and that he had been respon sible for her death and that of several others. L George recovered and seemed wor ried over the fact that he had confided his secret to a second person. Not long ago he died from what are supposed to have been from .the effects of poison self administered. It is that when some surgeons examined him they found that his leg had been broken in j the same place and same manner as Booth's was when he jumped from the Presi dent's box in the theatre after the shooting. There has never been any doubt that Booth was killed and proofs have been brought of his interment in Greenmount cemeterjrwhich have usually been re garded as perfectly satisfactory. I In the cemetery records is the . original permit, dated j February 18, 1869, is sued to J. H. Weaver, a local under taker, to bury the body, and Messrs. Charles and John T. Ford witnessed the reinterment. I " lit Mr. Joseph j. Lowry a photographer of this city, has declared that he was in the. undertaking establishment of Mr. Weaver when the body of Booth was taken thither alter having been brought to Baltimore from Washing ington. He hd seen him play 20 times at the Holliday Street Theatre and knew him well by sight, and he had no suspicion that the face which he looked at was not that of the actor whom he had seen so many times in life. The features were the same, lie said, although considerably sunken. His dark hair, which. was remarkably thick and curly, was very well pre served. r "7 : ' 'i ' '--'a misfit. The authorship of "little Breeches," written by Secretary of State John Hay, was frequently attributed to the late Bret Harte. A young lady once - said to him: "I ami highly ' pleased to meet you, Mr. Harte. i I have read all your poems, but I have enjoyed 'little Breeches' the most. ; " Pardon me, madam," replied Mr. Harte, ''but you have put the 'Little Breeches' on the wrong man." Celda are Daaa;erme. How often yon hear it remarked : "It's only a cold, and a few days later learn that, the man is on his back with pneu monia. Tins is or such common occur- 1 rence that a cold, however slight, should not be disregarded. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy counteracts any tend ency toward pneumonia... It always cures and is pleasant to take.' Sold by M.L. Marsh. - t It is said that Representative Augus tus W Uraham, of Granville, is an at UCi AUJWi,l"u uu!um" &on 'or Governor. He has been very prominent at this session of the Legis lature. rsiT. AttaatS) CommiaUam. I doo't like steam beat la die wbrf. Hit Ukes a hot, open firs ter keep ds sinner la min er.de hereafter. ; I notice some folks cats op mo dan usual ia de winter season, kaxe bit's den de devil fools em later de belief dat bell's froae ewer. Hits all right fet Charity ter begin at home; but she otter git circus sometimes, ef only ter v i De man what dimbs ter de hilltop fer Happiness, finds w'en he gits dar, dat Happiness ia oa a picnic wid de po folks in de violets er de valleys. I ain't after no front seat In Glory. 1 don't wan ter git whar de anreld will be likely ter ax too many leadin' ques tions. - , Dis wort' is a field er trouble, en I got ten acres, en can't sell ouL De rich man go ter heaven tboo de eye er a needle, but de po man got ter squeeze in tboo' any crack ha kin find in defence...-" ' - , De end er de righteous is peace, but by de way he sen fer de doctor when he sick, 'pears lak he don't want ter tackle Diiworl ww made ter go ter heaven in, but I hex come ter de conclusion dat it's done jumped the track. No use fer mens ter talk 'bout dark- nesa. JJe Tnith Is de Light. . Some folks complains 'bout de fire bein' out in dis worl'; but ef dey keeps on in de way dey gwine, It won't be out In de next CUome is de bee' place on de top aide er dis won, but, strange ter say, its de las' place some folks wants ter go. Heaven is so cjoet ter you dat all you got ter do is ter reach it. But some folks is got mighty short arms. Notwithatandin' de good dies young, ain't got any objections ter bein' gray-headed. Hit's onpossible to love yo' neigh bor ex yo'se'f , except on de days w'en he pays you back de $10 what he ,owe you. - ; One-half de people in dis worl' makes deyse'f puffickly miserable tryin ter he happy. z:.::--,:: ' J J Some folks looks on heaven ex bein' for off, w'en all de time hit ain't half a mile fum home. ; De - rich man is moe' inginrully 'flicted - wid ; de -dyBpepsia; - en de po' man don't git enough ter eat ter have it.: f-r . . mckiiw rati De good book-say de meek sh'll toVXrlJZZrZ? herit de airth: en dey may inherit it. but Lawd know, dev don't aril ill Rlfn;.1 ia a. tMn tc A xnithpr feller lr v,rari Arlam wni trtft tnnA v ar,Tj, tv r- ai..,a. In Ac. Suit businees.- . r Some er de bi nreacher. ia now aav- in' dey'U be no risin' fer de body. Ef a c f dkt should be de case it'll be a big dis- appointment ter some folks what done made up dey min' dat dey'd yit raise sfnd. :,;;t - Dey tells us dat de new comet is gwine 'way fum de won -faster dan a race hoes on a plank road; en dat wus a wise decision, kaxe de comet knowed dat de worl' "would strike fire soon enough ef it des keep on in de way it's gwine. ; Biibas Oeea m Frlaosu Cbarlotte Observer, tth. ; Arthur L. Bishop, the slayer of Thos. J. Wilson, will leave Charlotte . this morning for Raleigh; to enter on a term of. five, years .in penitentiary. Bishop made tho decision at 7 o'clock last night. He had the choice of an I teL Kt de .umptuously fur appeal for a new trial f or accepting the hed apartment. for bis special bene- juagemeni oi tnexonn, ana tne umei for his decision was up last night. He too- tne iuu nmit permiitea mm py v . a law, and. when at 7 o'clock Sheriff WWW a a a " a ' ' a. Z." wauace nounea mm mat ne must ap - peai or go to tne pemienuary, ne. sain ' aVi a ?Jl sn, ue wouiu unoergo mo mux iu prison, unaer ma seoience ne wm ne employed at nara laoor. loere is no job of clerkship or book-keeping, or such other soft snap open to him, serve, unless executive clemency is ex tended, ne is ureiy to get all tnat is coming to him. , Bla Twealy Saeaad B Rocilestek, N. Y., March 5. With a record of Zz, bones broken in his body, Hiram Bartholomew, 6 years old, of North Cohocton, has the misfortune of being one of the . most - fragile pieces of humanity in existence. The boy's latest accident occurred to-day when in a fit of coughing his right leg was fractured. -The boy is jtow strapped to a conch to prevent his breaking more bonea before the present fracture is reunited. He has suffered from fragile bones since he was 2 years old.,-, r":rr-'' : ' - ' The Durham Herald observes: "Per - baps a lawyer cannot prosecute a luw- yer on the supposition that a lav yer can do no . wrong.'. Old man Frank Cbnieliuei of IredelL failine in his ef forts to get a lawyer to prosecute a law yer, wagged his head, and remarked, Charlotte Observer. - . Kit's a bilious attack, take Chamber Iain's Stomach aod Liver Tablets and nniMr ia mrtain Vtw ain hw M.L.Marah.; " I a Brasilia kidsi aaS,Y rata. ,.- Bow Tnsa atajtrxse pUt aMtI TwWSa, A veteran railway official was ake4 what was his most exciting espesieoe anj replied : fThal makes me trfi you what I re gard as a oovrl Incideot. Some years r ago the town of Miirfrtaboro, ia taat out ter oe l . n . .orvn uarouna, uuui a roan to coo ec imm wiut on oi lut tar syaMcna. k fTkw bonds were bought by a Balti more man, the road . was graded and Ironed. Then the road found that k moat call upon the big system for help. The Ug road fojniahed trains and crews. put in aide tracks and other thing. and operated the fine. f By and by and the townsfolk who had sold the bonds thought 'the big road was making a good thing out of thei operation, and called upon it to turn over the road. ' fThi was done, and at the end of a year the townpeople found they had an army contract on inetr nanus. iuey asked the big road to again operate the system which it obligingly did for a while, when suddenly the town again took up the idea that it wanted big money out of its road. fit made this demand upon the big line. The hater's answer was a sensa tional one. One night it ran a long train of flat cars all the way down to town, with 200 well-trained employees on, board. The train at midnight crept with as little noiael as possible to the station, where the employees .. loaded the safes, pipes and all sorts of other belongings which the big: road placed there. ; - I .'.V' j'Aq ex-judge in the town heard the noise, and, running out, discovered what wis being done, live miles up the road there was a bridge. The ex judge sent out a trusty daredevil to burn the bridge and keep the train from getting back to the main line, The train people presently saw the bridge in flames. It was not a long bridge, and they rushed the train there. Finding that only the large beams on top had been burned they made, other ! .a Deams, uuq mem oown, put rails upon them, and got the train over. ; fThen they went to stripping the road as they went, taking up every side trac ana removing every parucie ot their property .from the stations, taking it into Virginia. The anrer of the ex- " i W1U " m haniD 0x9 bridge was to hold the uufc" "JCJr wulu U "J UUUi'",UUW kUC" fThe UtUe road owed another man a 01 r tte nIt ne appeared, bad the property seised for debt, got about half the road and sold it I to . another road. Since then the town has been without any road, and pie have to . drive 10 miles to get th ilkesfccro Folas Will Beast Coals ef Fire est Bv Head. Greensboro Special to Charlotte Observer. citizen of WilkesbOro ho here to-day says the people of his town have determined to chanee Judire Bovd's opinion of the people of Wilkes. -When Judge Boyd goes to Wilkes boro to. hold court next July he will be met at the station by a committee of leading citi zens and a magnificent eouiDaee drawn by a span Of the finest horses to be found in Western North Carolina, and will find that the Droorietor of the hoe- fitt It s, atated .a order has al ready been placed for Brussels carpels, i ie-ther covered di vana and couches and il -;-1 of birdseve maole furniture. 1 I I " r i i that a Dlumber kg eneaeed to ingUll me and porcelain bath outfit. i I wr i tq coal black negroes, dressed in pure wkite( wgi be in waiting. I I i e report, referred to by our Ral-J h correspondent yesterday that ' ex- dge and Representative Augustus W. Graham, of Granville, is an aspirant for the nomination for Governor by the Democratic State contention is quite current in Raleigh. It ia said there that he is Judge Clark's candidate With Judge Clark in the Senate and Jb dge Graham in the executive office at Raleigh, "the people" will have come to their own and every day will then be Sunday. The railroads will pay all the taxes and "the people" can knock off work and live off the pin tocracy. Charlotte Observer. ' "4 Well Acalsu . The many friends of John Blount vrill be pleased to learn that he has entirely recovered from his attackof rhnematiam Chamberlain's Pain Balm cured him 1 after the best doctors in the town (Hon J on, Ind.) had failed to give relief. The PP from tnis Bni- mint affords Is alone worth many times its cost. For sale by M. I Marsh. Bishop Turner, of the African Meth odist Church,' in his letter to Senator Tillman, says that the negro is a fool for wanting office or enlisting in the - ' oouig "ylhing "to a P1? MS wmk I the stars and leaves nothing but the stripes to the negro. TOBeisruaKftrKUa Tfc SIiUiry Baa sU 1st a fwet tasos by ' i ..ienaAor that he i3 IntrodiM-w a U3 aUakaUeg thW fiatat hkh murder . into .tsrol trra, hmM th U oo this Jxjt m U sx4 Hears a second 4rm was ' o4i lot,. ISch a liU, Ti paaant, wottkl go far toward aiding jttatkww To our saiadf this fts gree has never bra a4d at4 tr4 rathrt to defeat JusOce than ssist It Human Ufe baa ef Ut ytvs gro-m very cheap la Xorth Cartiiaa and It is NOl-nigh Impoasible to coorkt of mt der ia the first drm, aWs th d- fendant chancre to be frio41ws and peaalleaa. The dittding CmUltwa the first and sxwoed degrsw , Is so fine that it wallers not how deliberate or maUcibua a murder may have hera the aveooe of escape from la treme penally- of the taw U always open. The aeoond degree Is aa ob stacle la the way of ther&at ia aveng ing murder and cannot be done a aay with too toon. Our contemporary may be right but there are two aides to the qocetioo. I'o doubtedly men who should be banged are convicted of murder la the evened degree, but if there were no second de gree is there sot great danger that many of these men would be acquitted f is difficult to convict of murder in the first degree except la ease of prison or assassination from ambush, and a jury is more apt to turn a criminal loose than to take his life if it can find a peg upon which to hang a doubt of his complete guilt. We are rather in clined to think that the second degree of murder should stand. It catchr for punishment inadequate punithroent, it is true, but still punishment crimi nals who, but for it, would not be pun iehed at all. ' : a aav B.atfclatu Law. -" PhlUUelphia Beoord. - Professor Maxwell BommervUle discussing the other day the Buddhist faith, for which he baa a profound re spect - Some of the striking teneets of Buddhism that he quoted were: k I Use not perfume about thy person. To cough or sneeze in order to win tne notice of a group of girls U a sin. Destroy no tree. , Kill no animal. L Drink no intoxicating beverage. Care for the aged and infirm. It is sinful to think one way and to speak another. It is a sin to pass judgment on the acts of other men. Give no flowers to women, and sing nogaw songs. Keep neither .silver nor gold. When you eat make not a noise like a dog. - -J J It is a sin to eat the flesh of man, elephant,' horse, crocodile, dog, cat. bgeror serpent ; A priest may not wash himself in the twilight or dark, lest he should un knowingly kill some insect or other liv ing thing. . ; r . i . 1 i" Lend nothing on Interest. . ; mile aa Textile ItkMlt. Atlanta JoornaL The child labor question is one that has forced itself on people of all classes. 8tartedby humanitarians and organ ized labor bodies, it hat appealed to all thinking people, and various efforts are being put forward to find a proper solu tion for this vexed problem. It is generally admitted, we think, that there is an evil involved in allow ing (or compelling, as is more often the case) little tots, eight, fen and twelve years of age, to work in the cotton fac tories and other industrial plants, where neither Ube work nor atmosphere are conducive to their proper development But there is the ever present ques tion, "What shall we do with thenar" It is a question not to be underrated. The Charleston News and Courier pre sents this same question in a somewhat new phase when it makes the point that .if the children of. the Sooth under 1C years of age are to be excluded from the mills, the only school open to them for manual and technical training, then the' south should open schools to give them such manual training, otherwise they will have to go on hoe ing and picking cotton. Cattle atarvtavc the PrsOrtee, Topebu, March 6. Beports of the loss Of cattle from starvation come from the plains of western Kansas and eastern Colorado, where the ranchmen have not provided their herds with shelter and food.: Whole herds perish ed from cold and lack of food. : Twenty inches ot snow now covers the region where the only feed for many of the herd is buffalo rnim. It is estimated that over ten , thousand head of cattle perished in the recent storm. II aaveat Ola Lee. P. A.Danorth. of LaGrange. Oa, suf fered for six months with a frightful running sore on his leg ; bet writes that Bncklen's Arnica Salve wholly cured it in five days. For Dicers, Wounds, Piles, it's the best aalve ia the world. Cure Knaranteerl Only S5 cents. Sold by P. P. Fetser, Druggist, Women as Well as Men Are Made Mlwrabtc by' ! Kidney Tr&utla. tCUsayatW t vVspfci. VW I 1 ftel aa a a. kM tvXyff2?53 ? "A TV f i I -h .a. ataa taat aJWaa. ia mcmih 0e fcaaa t . W ta eVil fti aa ars waa m simm l4a as ai o fmt mm jm mtu bVrg. e?'i4 a v fee M tka ifftcfcy tt ajteey wadMa, a4 ims tas-t tserares M bwiwwi H ttawa trn erraaa. IV w4tUatsaiata a mm raaAti a 4 te ai3y as4 UU aa4 aas as a kaM lw t pf4e iwmet. - .-.) .- Votaea as w3 at snea ire stale ft eraMa waa Mhmr aa4 UaUw l4a. Taa tmil aM m at 4 tt Is rU by . cVwrtta, ta ty rr. i i m aaveal J ide f -m-mmrmJ. Kamtikkai ta. - usa. Yea aasntsts Wue trea, am fmpt.m aaaat sag ea aWS R. tael4iaf saaaf el tfee tWtaaints et wMUmoa.uU iar rKKrv treta svfterert cw4. la rttt Or. tUlmev kCa- HintUmtea, N. t be m aa4 WA1TTX1V-A lrMVnf muimui W4f la ava enrtf h an Hntaaaai h aa evutOM torn mi sU4 iMwul iaa.lln- A trait tit. n St mt t Ularf ul WUIt rhMt aav AaV M ail imi lrar troaa teaaMt .uar' mf Moatajf a4acaJ . Wa. actr aw u ha tus With An Experience YEARS IN WRITING Fire Insurance, setthh sr losses a and representing Wvst Gloss Companies, Southern. Northern and For eign, we ask jour patronage. Our facilities for hmployer i Liability, Accident and Health Insurance are excellent - G. G. RICHMOND 4 CO. I ' Thone 184. THB Concord National Bank. With tfeatat appro roras of boots , and svnr racuiry fur haaiilfi aaooaaM, - 01TZ3J A FIRST t CLASS SERVICE TO TOT FTJBZaZO. Capita j . - IO.OOU Froflt, S2,0W Individual ramonaibiUty of Shareholders, - 60,00f Keep foim Account with Us. Tntoraat pt 2 as acraad. Liberal aeeoo datum so all oar ewstumsrs. J. W. onKI.I.fMML U. B. OotlsLAjra. Casuiar. MM That, mm. a . w taa aiaJaawsaaaJ saVsayasia ww94Ass4VaW fsMlMssf Frojf's Vcrnlfujo r taw. Baa'aa thm aa.4 U aitit . aa a.riai i tmm Saaaa aai nal .l.mp. BUalaia W awl a. a a. raar aaaw IF..M.J.C ,r?rrmri t ai WsJiata aksf satslsiata. ssa 1IIP-1HS raaa. W AMD M. WOTjIXIT CO. Matrrjavairaa Tobacco Tags WANTED. We win pay ttotf rr bua4r& tr fjwaep tttaka. m ramta par beaurwi ur ail oUtr brands ot otbmr ttr bjoWs Ta., IT. Peseta, and HatrbM'a. W cut. Ail UrtaUrv ars boasht for trad. ; J. P.Allison U Co. Llercliant Tailor. Clothes Made - to Order, i Gleaning and Repairing QV t 71 i i done on short notice. I. WISSBIRC,
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 11, 1903, edition 1
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