Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / April 8, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE TIMES STEAM BOOK RND JOB OFFICE We keen on hand a foil stook cf LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS, STATE MENTS, BILL HEADS, ENVEL OPES, TAGS, ViSITlNS: CARDS WED DING INVITATIONS, ETC, ETC. - . - , : : . 1 111 THE- CONCORD TIMES. GOOD PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS de pctl know it. John B, Sherriil, Editor and Owner. MBE H7ST 2iT3D PTIA'R TIV &L00 a Texr, ia -Ad rare. Volume XX, Concord, N. C.f WEdnespay. April 8, 1003. "7 Nuitder 89. Half and Hntf. . The dyspeptic may well be represented pictorially -a being half masculine and half feminine, and combining the least aesirauic cnaractrnsncs ot - eiLner sex. lie has all the stubbornness of the man s i l . . l . :i . . . with the peevish ir ' ritability of a sick woman. He'i not pleasant company at borne or abroad. Dr. Pierce' Golden Medical Discovery cures dyspepsia' and other diseases of the stomach and associ ated organs of diges tion and nutrition. . It renews physical health which carries with it cheerfulness of temper, and makes life a pleasure instead of a penance; , The "Discovery purines the blood by eliminating the cor rupt . and poisonous accumulations from which disease is bred. It increases the ac tivity of the blood making glands, so increasing the supply of pure rich blood, which gives life to every organ of the body. It gives new life and new strength. J "Your 'Golden Medical Discovery' lias per formed a wonderful cure," writes Mr. M H House, of Charleston, Franklin Co., Ark. I had the worn case of dyspepsia, the doctors say, that they ever saw. After frying seven doctors and everything- I could hear of; with no benefit, I tried Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and now I am cured." Accept no substitute for Golden Med ical Discovery." There is nothing "just as good" for diseases of the stomach, blood and lungs. f ! The Common Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 large pages in paper covers, is sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to Eiy expense of mailing only. Address r. . V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. DR. H. C. HERRING. Dentist, Is now on the gronnd floor Building.,. of the Lltaker OOX7COBD, IT. O. Dr. W. c. Houston Surgeon ftfeL Dentist, " ' - COKOOBD, H. C. ' Is prepared to do all kinds of dental work in the most approved manner. - Office over Johnson's Drug Store. . Residence 'Phone 11. Office 'Phone 42. L. T. HARTSELL, attorney-at-Law , CONCORD, NORTH CASOUA. " Prompt attention given to all basiuess. . Office in Morris building, opposite the court house. Drs. Lilly & Walker, oiler their professional services to the citi zens of Concord and surrounding country. Calls promptly attended day or night. DR. J. D. WEBSTER, DENTIST. Formerly of ; Wilmington, now of Concord, N. C offers his professional services to the citizens of Concord and surrounding country. -Crown, bridge and plate work a speciality. Teeth extracted without pain. Prices-reasonable. All work guaranteed. Give him a call. Office over Correll's Jewe'ry stose. W J. MOSTQOMKBT. ! . MtBOBOWKIJ MOSTGOMEP A CROWELL, V Attorneys and Counselors-at-Law, OOMOOBD, N. J- . 1 nai-tnnra. will nractlce law In Cabarrus, Btanlv and adjoining counties, in the Supe rior and Supreme Courts o i the State and In thn ypmi Hnnrta Office in court house. . Parties desiring to lend money can leave it Wltn US Or place ll 111 Wllliwru auuum wu for us, and we wui iena 11 on gouu t cs tjtt.t, BAonrirv free of char ee to the depositor. . We make thorough examination of title to lands offered as security for loans. Mortgages foreclosed without expense to owners or same. . rKA.HK A KX FIELD. T. J. IIEOSIK. T. D. MANKRH. ARMFIELD, JEROME & MANESS, ' Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, .CONCORD, N. C. Practice in all the State and TT. S. Courts. Prompt attention given tot collections and ml law nr&ctice. Persons interested in the settlement of estates, administrators. executors, and guardians are especially in vited to call on them. Continued and pain staking attention will be given, at a reaeon snnable price, to all legal business Office in Pythian Building, over Dry-Heath-Miiler 8c Co.'s opposite D. P. Dayvault & Bros, ap-ly Cabarrus SaYings Bank. Concord and Albemarle, H. C. CAPITAL, $50,000.00, Surplus and nndtvlded .profits, - $22,000.00. Resources Over $300,000. nonnrxl Tbinkine Business Transacted. Ac counts of Individual firms and corporations j solicited. We cordially Invite j Every Man, Woman anclChild!rels ftnd demijohns, that will astonish tor irainvUhe natives. dav." ta o:en a SavinKS Account with ns. who J . . - 4 per cent, interest paid on savings deposits ana units ceiiuiwirc... - . j "OFFICERS. D.F.CANNOS, ' - H. I. WOODHUUbK, President. 1RTTM miRRK. C. Cashier.! w.swink, Vice-P?esldent. - TeUer, Mar. l-t. 4 s. 3ai. PARKER'S m HAH? BALSAM . Mer - IWl. to Eto Oray TMT tO 1IB ZC'-abUIus. Administrator' S Notice ' - ' ' : tbe estate of M. C. Biggers, deceaaed.all J'er- no .ln bmI-I Mttats are hereby otifled th.tth.v mnat make rjromrjl payment, or ' l,ZnUuvg7&SZ. or before the l:ith day of March. 1904, or this. notice witlDe pled in bar oftheir recovery.; J. it. niGUEUs. Administrator. Marchl8.i90. - ; v Bert Coogh Sjrup. Tastes Good. Fe fj ro tlaie. So'a py ornggisis. at DIXIE'S LAND. Ilh I was lade land of cotton, Old time dar am not forgotten; ' Look away look away look a Way Dixie land. In Dixie land whar I was born in Early on one frosty morning. Look away-tookjsway-look away Dixie land. Deo I wish I was In Dixie, Hooray I Hooray! . In Dixie's land 111 take my stand. : To lib and die In Dixie; Away, away, sway down Boutn In Dixie. Old missus marry "win de Weaoer, William was a gay deeeaber; Look away iook away-look away Dfxle land, But when he put his arm around her 8ne smiled as fleree as a'forty-pounder; l Look away look away look away Dixie land. His face was as sharp as a butcher's' cleaber. But dat did uot seem to greabe her; Look ayay look-away look away Dixie land. Old-missus acted a foolish part, ' And died for a man dat broke her heart; Look away took away look away Dixie land. Now here"? a health to the next old missus And all de gals dat want to kiss us; Look away look away look away Dixie land. But If you want to drive away sorrow. Come an' hear dis song to morrow; Look away look away took away Dixie land. Dar's buckwheat cakes and lngen batter. Makes you fat. or a little fatter. , Look away-look away-look away Dixie land Den' hoe it down au' scratch de grabble. To Dixie land I'm bound to trabble ; Look away-look away look away Dixie land. THE HEGBO SND WH1SKBT QCKSTIOftS. Sam Jones In Atlanta Journal. The two prominent, undow liable, unsettleable questions in America to day is the negro and the whiskey ques tion. -' Both are like the fellow's black cat. He said be took it out and killed it every night for nine nights in succes sion very dead, and it was ud everv morning well and hearty. He said he took it out the tenth night and cut its head off, and I granny.it was standing on the front steps next morning with its head in its mouth. Senator Money, of Mississippi, spoke the sentiments of the south the other day . in full volume. God gave this country to the Indiana and we white folks took it away from them and it is our country now, by right of conquest and by right of possession. The disfranchisement of a certain class of voters is legitimate and proper. ! The man who will not pay his poll tax J or register, cannot vote and does not deserve to vote and that is right. When 90 per cent of a certain class of voters can be bought or bribed or scared into voting, : that fact ought to disfranchise ..the whole bunch from snout to tail. The best friends of the neem. race willeive.lhem emoloVment and give them protection in life, liberty and property. ' The worst enemies ' of this government and of the negro race are the politicians that use them at the polls simply to put themselves into office. ' JK ; ;-. The negroi question cannot settle it self any more than the Atlantic ocean can get rid of its brackishness. - It has got to be settled by being fixed and fixed right 'along certain lines. The negro both in his constitution and by laws is closely allied with the whisky question. I have seen the negro carralled and marched and voted for whisky in local option fights, until it made my: heart sick; and the very gang who drove them to the polls is the very gang that debauches them and frequently the gang that lynches them. This country will never be what God and good men what it to be, until the neero is politically relegated and whisky is permanently abolished. I see by the decision of the supreme court, the whisky gang in Floyd county are on the rampage again. Seab Wrieht and the dispensary crowd of Rome no doubt thought th"e whisky gang was dead, but that gang 'possums ' ma 1 ' on you. iney ao not aie. iou may burn them a thousand years' and their ashes will sprout. Whenever a man has Bold whisky he is very nearly in capable of doing anything else. If you run him out of one 'place he will start up at another. If you think he is dead and buried, he is resurrected and ready for the business before you know it. The wave to strike Georgia is like the one in Tennessee and Texas. If the leeislature - of this state will eliminate the negro vote or give us white primary on 6tate local option, we will do some things in Georgia alnncr th a lines of smashing iuers. bar- . . . . Soon there will be only six places in Tennessee, I am told, where it can be sold and perhaps not more than a 1 dozen in Texasr1". when the .proper . .. .... .1 time comes tnere wui be a movement ia Georgia that will drive out 1 whiskey bouses and we will go dry sure enough- Of course the dirty politi cians; whiskey soaked bums and the few greedy deacons in the church, who want the traffic to eo oh, and the dif ference between a dirty politician, a ;J whiskey soaked bum and a money ' monopoUzed deacon is simply in odor as they W ill OCCUpy about the - . strata and maintldn about the Same respectability in hell where they belong. ; i Too Great a Blak. ' .; . r a reliable remedy for bowel com- - r;t, 6h0uld always b kept at hand. The risk is too great for anyone to take. Chamberlain's Colic Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy never fails and wn re- ' dnced with water is pleasant tu, iake, For sale by M. L. Marsh, Druggist. BUL ABPI LaTTCB. AUanta CoosUtociotL. . Kind friends, please forbear, t know that the time for composition! and debates and essays is near at hand, bat I am tick and cannot help yon this spring. I am weak and don't want to strain my mind. I haven't been oat of the house bat twice ia three months. My wife and the doctor watch me and won't let me go. A few weeks ago I lipped off to my. daughter's one pleas ant evening and had to be hauled back in a buggy, for it is up hill to my house, and, I was weaker than I thought. You see I had a sunstroke last Jane and have 'never recovered from it. Every night, if the weather is bad, I have to get up about midnight and sit by the lire and cough for an hour or two. But I can answer letters and have from a dozen to a score every day. It pleases me to answer the letters of the young folks, for many of them need help. I know that I did when I was away off at school. My father was an old school teacher and knew how to help me. He wrote nearly all of my junior orator's speech, and I got credit for it, though I only crossed the t's and dotted the t's and put my name to the end of it. .But there are hundreds of boys and girls who have no help and I am sorry for them and so for many years past I have tried to help them. Some of them just want help a little, a few ideas, but others want the whole thing. In fact, one boy asked me to write him two so that he could take choice. Many of them forget to enclose a stamp and my postage account got to be such a burden that, as Rip Van Winkle Baid, "I swore off" and quit answering such letters. It is bad man ners to write to a man on business that does not concern him and expect him to pay the return' : postage. I receive many long manuscripts with request to read and criticise and return and tell where to have published and what the writer wiHsrotably get paid for them. I have two on hand, just received no stamps enclosed one is a grammatical curiosity. Hardly a line that does not contain bad . grammar or a mis spelled word. It lakes nearly half a line for the word 'spectacles" and it has fourteen letters in it. The word angel is spelled - angle, and yet the writer expects to get . paid for the story, I be other manuscript is an inquiry into the race probl is uuuiams reentaen questions lornnr to answer. Another long letter on fool's-cap writes of the good old times and says in conclusion that if I will answer it he will write ma again and put his name to thejiext letter. There is no name to this. He is an Irishman, I reckon. One other request I wish to make about letters. - Please place your postoffice address plainly at the top and your name plainly at the bottom. Many a time 1 have passed a letter all around the iamily trying to decipher the signature Sometimes I have cut the signature off and pasted it on the th. wmlir f h;ntinr that r.roh- v"v"- ,uv"vf-" a r ably the postmaster home would recognize it. If the post- office address is omitted and the post-. mark on the envelope is blurred, as it frequently is, u is lmpossioie to now .1 " " 1 t A '1 where a reply should be sent, and if I guess at it and guess wrong it goes to the dead letter office, jtfoff.you young people must not forget these little things, for they are important, es - pecially the j stamps. , Sometimes we literary men are greatly perplexed to know what to do with some letters.! One more request. Do not write me at Atlanta. I do not live there. My home is in, Cartersville, and I thought that everybody knew it by this time. 1 have been living here over twenty years. And now let me ask the good charit - able ladies who seek to do something for some eood cause to send no more endless chain letters to me. They are a nuisance ana nave annoyea me ,-i . . . - greatly. I thought that when that common cheat and swindler, Joel Smith, of Monticello, Fla., was broken up and arrested the endless chain busi ness had stopped, but of. late it has re vived and I received three last week. Ode of them started in Canada for a so- called missionary work and got all the way down to Louisiana and from there I lnt. wj uie, wrtn.iug uic iu 'Jt'j ittvj kikio and send ten cents in Christ's name, and under no circumstances to break the chain. Well, I broke it and shall i "v-w v.o I shall burn the letters for they never conta'.n" any return postage. Some years ago the good ladies of Fredericks burg, Va., wrote to me, saying they wanted about $300 or $400 to place head stones to the graves of 260 Geor gia soldiers who were buried there. I made an earnest appeal to our people and asked for a dollar from each good man or woman, and I raised $300 in three weeks." Adjutant General Phil Byrd sent me $2 all the way from New Brunswick. I bought the marble, All lettered nicely, from the northernjmen who own the works at Marietta -bought them at one dollar each, which was less than Ihe cost, for' the company said they helped to put our boys there and they, ought to help mark their graves, The railroads shipped them free. There I waj no endless cbaia in that business. Three thousand neglected confedermle !'mM at . Uidlit ftn Imn Ml dead, buried on our soil, died in de-1 lease of their homes, their state, their J people. On the other side of tl rail-, road are about as many who were tree-," paaa-rsoo oar soil vandals who came as Invaders with arms and torches, and their graves are marked with costly marble and adorned with gravel walks and flowers and evergreens, and there is , a grand . entrance to their city of the dead, 'all done by the na tional government, and a keeper employed. And yet it is now set tled we were right and they were wrong. Oh, liberty and union !' what crimes have been committed in thy naraj. But Secretary Boot seems to be'a good man and is going to help as make op the roster, the muster roliof our living and our dead. Maybe he will get a 'little closer j to us and help the Marietta women to make their eenfed erate graveyard juit as elegant and or namental as the one on the other side. Why not try him? Dead soldiers are not enemies to each other and if theirs could speak maybe they would say, "Give us your hand brother." Is it not about time for our women to make au appeal to the government for aid in this patriotio work? Not only . for Marietta, but wherever our soldiers are buncd. Marietta has many northern visitors wh"o spend their .winters there, and it seems to me if they brought along a heart and a soul with them, they would go to these ladies and say, "Here are ten dollars, j Please mark ten of those graves for me." . But .1 reckon most of them just bring their bodies and leave their hearts at home. Why not do as our Mr. Granger did T Just as soon as our ladies started, a move to build a monument to General Young and our Bartow heroes, he was the first to ask the privilege of subscrib ing $25 to the cause. He has gotten it all back already in our. good .will and gratitude. He brought his heart with him when he moved down here and his wife brought her whole soul. She is always doing something for somebody.' . V. Bill Arp. - : . ," y . . ' . An Egs-eUlnfE Eggs-ft. 1 Oasaonla Gazette. ; , r - A gentleman from the coutry came to town one day last week to dispose of a quantity of eggs. Before reaching the town, however, he sauntered leis- northern section of town and enquired in a business like way ofthe guard, who met him, if ; they wanted to buy an' eggs . at that house. ? "No," said the guard,' "the county furnishes us eggs." "Why, is this the county home?" calmly asked the man with the eggs. "No, this is the smallpox home," was -the bland reply of the guard; and his words were hardly spoken before eggs were rlying like Hakes in a snow storm and the frightened egg-man was heeling it at a rapid rate in the op posite direction. If he kept his gait I iL .t : it.i.. i : u SuuCm y-vvouij I , j. . 4 riT.. . - , time. Those who witnessed the thrill ing scene say that his eggs-it was really egg-citing. - i Too affectionate. j Lippinoott's Magaxlns j The Morten-Browns were a very af- If ectionate family. Kissing was quite the order of the day with them. ' Uncle J giiag Brown, hard-fisted, gnarled old man 0f the fields, had been for a"week's visit to the Morton-BrOwns .Wal, Silas," said his wife, Keziah, his return home, "and what did V0Q think of Abner's folks, the Morton Browns f 1 Uncle Silas changed his "quid" from 0ne cheek- to the other and said J slowly, ! "Wal, 1 should 'a' liked them a darn ed sieht better if they hadn t been so cussified kissyl" A Prominent minister Htrouswadi Chamber laJn'a Colic, ( nolerst and -Plarrtaoem Remedy. ' Rev. Francis J. Davidson, pastor of the St. Matthew Baptist church and president of the Third District Baptist Association, 2731 Second St., New Or leans, writes as follows : ''I have used Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar- rhoea Remedy fcr cramps and pains in theBtomach and found it exceUent. It I . . j i igm iact ine Desi cramp aiiu cxuiu reixietij I have ever used. Also several of my j parishioners have used it with equally satisfactory results." For sale by M. L. Marsh, Druggist. '. Blada Himself "John," said the wife, ''you'll ad mit that you're a bright, brainy man, and have leading qualities?" "I certainly will V was the modest reply. - - ' " "Then, why don't you run for Presi dent of these United States?" x : ; And as he clasped "her to his bosom, he said: . : : . " - v , ' , "Molly, I can't bear to leave homel" Slakes Clean Sweep. There's nothing, like doing a thing thoroughly. Of all the Salves you ever heard of, Bncklen's Arnica' Salve is the ; best. . It sweeps away and cures Barns, Sores. Bruises. Cats. Boils, Ulcers, Skin j Eruptions and Piles. It's only 25c, and guaranteed to give satisfaction by P. B. I Fetsser, Druggist, at.iasr bi lCttaAltauaiownal. , ouice.u caw ox ay ut truer to The Journal I have rose by railwar - w "f. maxin some oo- on lorseic ana geota- 0,nae TTiw of oaniauare, . I am more than ever Impressed wiui we woaaerfoi natural resources of me island, and I am thoroughly per- uaded that its future will be one of great prosperity. -I saw stalks of wild cotton of extra ordinary height, and white with "the flewry staple." One stalk I took pains to measure, and I was amaxed to find it having a diameter of over three inches at the ground and a height of above fourteen feet It was said to be four years old and was still bear iog fruit, although the .staple was rather short. It had not been culti vated, but.sprang up in a rich spot and grew without attention from human bands. . " I met a gentleman who hat alreedy made a , successful experiment on a small scale with cotton growing, and is so pleased with the results that he has bought. a large tract of land and will enter at once into the business of ootton growing in Cuba. He told me that on land which cost him from three to six dollars sn acre he had 'gathered four bales from one acre, and that the staple measured two inches. From observations of my own I was prepared to believe his story; though to many people it will doubtless seem incredible. This ren- tleman isv now returning to the states supply himself with implements for cultivating and ginning the pro duct,1 and to hire hands to make his next crop. He is convinced that one planting in five years will make cot ton of .good staple and that then it will be necessary to replant in order to prevent deterioration. Of this I am not so sure. I think two or three years will be as long as the plant will grow and do well. But even if it runs; a period of only two years, pro ducing, as it does, so enormously this long staple lint, it will bring fahplous profits. Again I say. as in former letter, that cotton of superior quality will j be grown in Cuba at an early day and it will be ?rown.in laree QamxOTgrirr-- . r Hot far from the large cotton stalk which I measured L saw a coffee plant growing. Many years ago a French colony grew coffee on a large scale in the province of Puerto. Prinoipe, bat the ravages of war broke up the colony and destroyed the industry. But now few people are beginning to grow coffee again, and with years of peace the planting will increase. Of course the great industries of to bacco ana sugar will continue, as in former years, to engage much capital and labor. The grazing lands are the best ever saw. .before the war Cuba had over 3,000,000 head of cattle. At its close there were lees than 400,000 head. Mr. Wilson told me that at the oat- set of the year 1899, when he was in charge of the Matanzas ! province, there were not 300 cows in the entire province: Biding yesterday : from Mar tanzas to Havana I counted frc-m the car window on one side of the rail road 993, and they were as fat as the richest pasturage could make them. A friend saw as many more in the fields in sight on the other side of the railway. It is estimated that there are now about 1,000,000 head on the entire island. " But not les than 2,000, 000 more are required, and the pastur age is sufficient to sustain 5,000,000 to 7,000,000. -Here is room for another great industry.' " I , i Then there are the tropical fruits and the vegetables. Never bitten by frost nor blighted by drought, they can be shipped from Havana to New York in four days. The railroad now running from one end cf the island to the oth r can carry them quickly to the north ports for shipment. Look out for Cu ban veeeUbles and fruita m Savannah. Maon and AUanta next winter. To . . . . , ' . . manent benefit. A few months agohe not expect strawberries, however, fort . , . . , 1 commenced taking Chamberlain's Colic, none are grown in Cuba. The peopte01TtotoEemedy say ihe strawberry does not do well : hort !time waa entirely cured. Many here. I believe the raspberry would citizeng of Enterprise who know the nounsii, nowever. ui tnat tne nauves seem to know nothing. !i The hard wood timbers will rive rise to another profitable line of invest ment. . The mahogany, rosewood and other such growths have scarcely been touched. And the reason of their neg lect is not far to seek. Until the new caimwu peuckraicu ure icgiuu m fuii.u :i x . .1 z v:-t. they grow most abunaanuy mere wasj no means of hauling the trees out they had been cut. All that will change now. - r From all these sources of wealthit is evident that Cuba will scon be enor - mously enriched, . :' j But some one may be disposed to dis count these statements by asking some such questions as these: ; If Cuba has such resources, why did not the Span iard find it oat and enrich himself? And why did not Americans, always keen-eyed to tarn a imay, Cad sJ To tae fim qtti0R I eorwrr the enaniard did fiHi ant feat wast htrr, !.j mm.:,v..,.j. . I ssww -niananimi Hie weal of akia made bis here, I2 whence so many large and wca&hj tiesf Betide Hsto with 550,000 w . ' m . ... ittU 1 menuoa toe itxwwing clues. j DOoe of which have fees ihao 30,000 ia- - habitaola, and some of which have above rv,wvr. wiiwuw, Vert's i urjTj, uaraenas, santaUara, Puerto Principe, ana oanuago. A page' Of the paper upon wlTich I write would not suffice for the names of the cities and towns having 2,000 to 10,000 inhabitants. I write a few, as Pinar del Rio, Guana- jay, Remedios, Sagua la Grande, Co lon, Placetas, Cruees, Ranchaela, Hol qain, Caibarien, NeuviUa, MansaniUo and Guantanamo., Now be it remem bered that Cuba lacks over 10,000 square tnilee of being as large as the state of Georg a. Could so small an island sustain to many cities of such wealth as these if it were not rich be yond all possibility of exaggeration? And It most. not be forgotten that leas than one-fourth of Cuba has ever been brought coder cultivation. No won der the Spaniard fwught so bard to retain it; it was one of his best asset. No wonder he expended so much life and treasure in its defense; it was well worth defending. And it is no wonder that Americans, since the barriers erected by Spain around their island (isolated as it was by barriers of commerce, government, religion and language) have been meas urably removed, are rusbnig in from every direction. Senator. Sanguilly, speaking in the Cubafi senate on the treaty of reciprocity , today, declared that since the war Americans had in vested in Cuba over 180.000.000. 1 If these figures of the senator are correct it is entirely within reason to predict that at the end of the next ten years American investments in Cuba will Aggregate more than $300,000,000 or above the value of all the real estate in the island at the cose of the war. Havana, Cuba. ', A Bloody Rlol ! irioBterer. Monterey, Mexico, April 2. During the. celebration here to-day, of the vic tory of the republic with trdqps under General Diaj, at Pueblo, April 2, 1867, iatr tiy-tne partisans of the various candidates for Governor of the State ot Neuvo Leon, and a mob of 15,000 citizens formed and marched to the residence of Governor Beyes. They hurled a shower of stones at the Gov ernor and shoaled, "Death to Beyes!" The police were snt for and in the mix-up that ensued in dispersing the mob two policemen and two citizens were killed and many wounded. Quiet now prevails, but it is not unlikely that the trouble may break out afresh political sentiment is high and a strong feeling prevails against . Governor Beyes. : . Tbe President In Cblcaco. Chicago, April 2. Six thousand peo ple, in a hall," the seating capacity of which is but 5,000, gave enthusiastic greeting to President Boosevelt when he stepped upon the stage of the au ditorium to-night. The building has held many a throng, but never one that was more hearty and. unstinted in its applause for any man than the crowd that fillel it to night. From the first floor to the roof, it was packed to its utmost capacity. Every seat wa oc cupied, and although the aisles' were I kept clear, all the space in the lobbies and on the stairways was taken and even . the passageway v leaning to the hall from the lower floor were jammed with, hundreds, of men who were utter ly enable to hear a word of the Preei deut's address. - . A Demonatratlas) ! Wksl Chamber- lata'a CoIIe, Cnlerm ss4 Dlar . jrboea lltmej Caa Do. On$ of our customers, a highly re spected citizen of this place, had been for ten years a sufferer from chronic diax ' rhoea," writes Walden & Martin, drug' Im'cti nt V.ntamrik Ala. "TT ha1 flani t Tanous patent preparations and been treated by physicians without any per- eentleman will testify to the truthful- ( nees of this statement." For sale by M. ". Marsh, Druggist. "My husband is a perfect brute!" "You amaze me!" Since the baby began teething noth ing would quiet the little angel put puli- i ine his papa's beard, and yesterday he ' . s , i mm ,, went ana naa nis oeara snayea on. au were Baflea. ill Word comes from Wake. Ark., that ReV. John J. Cox had a strange malady I accompanied br yellow jaundice. For 13 years physicians were baffled and ! though everything known to the prpfee- sion was used, the trouble reinajned. One day he began to use Electric Bitters and in a week a change for the better came and at length he was' entirely cored. It's the most reliable medicine for liver and Kidney trouble. . Only 60c. and guaranteed by P. B. Fetzer, Druggist. Horse ; Health I For putting ia wias eoediiioa anj bona or rode, the best of all remedies trAabcraft'a Coadttk Powdenu These Powder ar woo- derfully effect! re becatus) they cre ate appetite, the tUcestioa is m4e perfect, worms and parasite Se-1 strored, tad the system cleansed of 411 cross humor. The Iwi dcrs fatten bat never bloat. Asbcrsit's Condition rowders are wrapped in doses. In fact, in their preparstion the same care it used that a druggist would exer cise ia the filling of a physician's prescription. High grade and real merit is the first consideratJon. Aircraft's Powders : consist of small doses, prepared from the purest and highly concentrated in ! gredients, that have I been found I beneficial to horses and moles. Ashcraft's Condition Powders always high grade are not to be classed with the many bulky, good- tor-everythlng powders now on the market. Ask for Ashcraft's, the kind pot UD in doses, and rood fnr horaoa ! .vavktaJaru-.. aera. I aueatder AKorar tk kaw M h I Buuavt. t lake Imw to BUX, Btokoir, H. C -Price 2Sc package Sold by IrfLT. MABSH With An Experience YEARS YEARS IN WRITING Fire Insurance, settling losses and representing , Stirst Glass Companies, Southern, Northern and Fpr- Insurance are excellent. G. G. RICH1I0HD & 'Phone 184. CO, .Tllb Concord National Bank. With tbo lateas apprcrrod form of books and ayer-y (aoUltr tor baadllns tooouu, orm FIRST t CLASS SER7ICE TO Capital, . . ' Profit, Individual responsibility , of Shareholders, 150,0001 22,000 W,00f Keep Your accourt with Us. Interact paid as aarssd. Li boral dation to all our CBStoaMra. , X. M.OI)ILL.PrldBt, D. B OOLTKAJia. CSMthMr. Manager Wonted- ' Trustworthy lady or seotlomast to hmom busineea In tbls Coanty and adjoining terri tory (or wen and favorably knows Hons ot solid floanctol standins. S3) 00 straight casta salary and oxnenea. paid Men Monday by check direct from beadqnarter. Bxpoasa money advanced; position permanent. , Ad drees, Tbnui .'aort nair, K0O A eoorae ta doable and slnale entry book-keening absolute ly rra oi eost to anyone wita push. Add reaa, . Maryisoa Training Hchool, (ommercial Baltimore Md Mar.lS-at. Children Ml a.. HMint alt tin. motaf. TMr waat ar. mum palaaaiila, aiBpla, vagvtafei. i Froy's Vcnnifnga kbf BMia. Lit. PKEV, Itlttmora, Steel Plows. Cast Iron, Stoves, Pots and Burnt Iron of all grades, Brass, Copper, Zinc, Lead, and OF 7 Free Old Iron All SortS Ot Metalmn modeU that, do not bulge bought for cash bv K. L.CRAVEN. -SCrvWcslWs rmzxtaai s sssrpaiae av, Haasaiai oceviaavse a aiakay. i larrs book ef a ttaaiars oa aeaw aaaatarlaai trsal 1 I " MBD ' Of. WOOLLKV t. be wooixxtco. One Car Load SEED POTATOES ShjjicU Ulrrct. from Arris V:-- ' I 'I ' took Countv Matnes the. home of the fmctt SetrJ Toutoct in fmcncau If )ou want the most prolific1, quickest jvix!uc tng Potato you can get call and get your shire of thU car. iPe ATslT iTS 01T OOi es co. Within the ; Range ; of Eyery One. Stoies and Furnishings in the city. If you are in' the market forany thing in my line, 1 entreat you to visit my store, and assure you that you will be the the gainer thereby. J Ghas. H. Shall. 'Phone 103. i m b hl mm. Magnetic Jleahng ii now of fercd to all people sullcnng from anj disease, chronic or acute. Testimonials can be furnished of diseases cured by me. Any one desiring health will do well to consult me. Personal and absent treatmfnt. given. Am competent to tcacn uns mcmoa to oiners. -1 Yours to serve, Prot Join HartmaOe II. P., 59 W. Marsh St., Concord, N. C. , i P. O. Box 190. April 1 lsa. When a lady "wants a wstcb, she wants one that will keep time as well &9 look pretty. Our Ladies' Watcho? are fitted with Elgin or Waltliam move ment that are guaranteed accu rate.' ! When a man wants a watch he wants one of our modern the pocket, yet sacrificing none of the strength and time-keeping qualities of their clumsy predecessors. CPfr f'k I sY ss I W. C. CORRELL, Leading Jeweler. . i - " - !
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 8, 1903, edition 1
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