Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Sept. 16, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
--THE TIMES STEAM BOOK MID JOB OFFICE We keep on band a foil .took of letter heads, note heads, state ments, BILL HEADS, ENVEL- OPES, TAGS, VISITING CARDS-WEDDING INVITATIONS, ETC ETC. GOOD PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS reE T . j 7 . TIMES. John B. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. :cr j uut ,-NfD peab z&cttj $LOO a rear, la AdraacQ, Volume XXI. Concord, N. C., Wednesday. September 18. 1903. Number 11. WMUlHtOlMlll. i prop know it. I UMtKS STATS rAe.TS- I niili UUfH HORSE HEN ! ror aiding me digestion, creatine appetite and for giving- life,v vigor, and strength to horses and mules, the best remedy of all is - , Condition Powders ! Stockmen who have used, with indifferent resultscoa- anion powaers recom mended equally good for horses, cattle, povl try, swine, etc, will find in Ashcraft's a remedy beneficial to horses and mules only. It is not a cure-all, but invalua ble, for the purposes recommended. Ashcraf t's Condition Powders are prepared from the formulae of a practical veterinarian of over -30, years' experience, and when once used, horsemen will have no other. "This la to certify that we have been selling A shcraft'g Remedies or a number of years. biiu mm tuey nave given universal sausiac tlon. The parent drugs are incorporated In their manufacture, and each remedy is espe cially prepared for the disease for which it Is Intended to cure. Many of our customers hav ing used Ashcraft's Remedies for years will have no other. ENGLISH DRUG.CO., Monroe, 1. V. -.'- Ashcraft's Powders fatten but never bloat, ' the hair becoming sleek and glossy. Always high grade. Price 25 cents. Sold bv iV , I I- LVTJ k XI HI"" Hri LIFE ITOBT WBIT TKSI BY BI91SBLF. f I .A T Blackstone. Ia two or three months I wu admitted to the bar on promise of The following sketch of tbe birth, continuing my atadiee, which promise youth? and manhood of the late Major 1 1 kept, and in doe time began to tide Charles H. Smith, "Bill Arp," was writ-1 the circuit at the tail of the procession. ten by himself and appears in his last I uui what a procession it wss, Judge book, "From the Uncivil War to DatoHamu HiHyer, Judge Jackson, tbe 1861-1903:" j Doughertys,; Hope Hull, Howell Cobb And now a brief mention of my wife I his brother Tom Cobb, dndnnatus and myself, my birth and youth and Peeples, Bal Overby, and meeting oc manhood. On the 15th day of June, caaionally Bobert Toombs and Alex 1826, half a million children were born Stephens. AH great lawyers , and elo- into the world and I was one of them, quent, both in tbe forum and on the In the pleasant village of Lawrenceville, platform. They are all dead, and I, Gwinnett county, Georgia, I first saw OI"7 Jp lef the light. My infancy was not unlike Then there were the Judges of the that of other children, except that I upreme court, Lumpkin, Warner and sometimes I bad little fits of passion I Wisbet, whom I well knew, and some and threw myself upon the floor or bow ihese noble men made a pet bumped my head against thewsll, at of me nd from them I drew4 lnspira which my mother smiled and some- tion knowledge. In 1851, 1 took times said couldn't help it, for it was tne westtern fever, and moved to Rome South Carolina fighting Massachusetts. 10 K10 P with the town and the My childhood was happy, and so were country. I was soon associated with .... - - - I T A tt,i I i ' m l my school days. 1 still have fondjuu uuuclww" " pnuw t w, recollections of my .teachers. - Miss nd ,or thirteen years we were as inti- Cooley, an aunt of Mrs. George Hill- mate as brothers. lhe war came and yerjwas the first one. She was good we parted- After the war I became and kind to us alL Then came Dr. I associated with Judge Joel Branham, PROFESSIONAL CARDS. DR. H. C. HG. DENTIST, Is now on the ground floor of the Litaltei Building. V - F . OO.WCOHD. IT. O. 1 Dr. W. C. Houston Surgeon fij Dentist, . i CONCORD, N. C. i E Is prepared to do all kinds of dental work In tne most approved manner. Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone 11. Office 'Phone 42. , L. T. HARTSELL, Attorney-at-Lai, CONCORD, NOETH CABOLINA, t i Prompt attention given to all baslness. Office in Morris building, opposite the court nouse. Drs. Lilly & Walker, offer their professional services to the cltl- sens or uoncord ana surrounaing country. cans promptly attended aay or nigm. W J. MOHTGOMEBY. . , UEBOBOWSII- MOHTGOMERY 4 CROWELL, Attorneys and Connselors-at-Law, CONOOPD, N. O. As partners, will practice law In Cabarrus, Wilson and Mr. Saye, John Norton and Dr. Patterson and Mr. McAlpin in succession. I was a mischievous lad, and Mr. Norton whipped me occasion' ally, not hard but lightly: once he whipped me on my boil and burst it, and nearly broke my mother's heart, but it was good for the boil. My teachers are all dead. A few years ago old Father Saye called to see me in Chester, South Carolina, and as he grasped my hand said: "Yes, you went to school to me: I never whinned hre calamity or aflhctiOn. . My motto you but once. Perhaps if I had whip-1 " of the Latin poet, Carpe Diem, ped you more you would have made aet,i0y the day, enjoy every day as far better man, but I am proud of you, my I m possible. We have been blessed in boy. Yes, I am proudt of you.".4 In our children, for they have been -gocd course of time I was sent to the man-1 to us. . Our boys are all in good form another most delightful partnership, which was only served by his elevation to the bench And now in my old age I cannot say s Jacob said to Pharoah, "few and evil have been the days of the year of my pilgrimage." We have had more than oar share of blesaiDgs. We have been blessed with health and comforts of life. Of course the war made an inroad upon our peace and happiness' for a time, but the good Lord preserved us and we suffered . no SASt JOJKS WRITES OF llftir, LOTS AND HI LAMKXTSD PBIB1D,UBILL 4Br.; Stanly and adjoining counties, in the nor ana supreme vov Supe- surts o i the State and in the Eederal Courts. Office in court house. Parties desiring to lend moifey can leave It with ns or place It In Concord National Bank for us, and we wUi lend it on good real es tate security free ol cnarsre to tne aepositor. We make thorough examination of title to lands onerea as security tor ioans. Mortgages foreclosed without expense to owners of same. , Frank Armficld. Tola D.' Maness. and feature not a single deformity to mar their manhood. ' Our girls are modest and well favored, not a Leah ! among them. All are Rachels. All are frugal and industrious and love their paternal home. It is their Mecca and will be until we die. For twenty- seven years we live in Borne and pros pered. Then we retired to a beautiful little farm near Cartersville, where there were springs and branches, a meadow and a creak near by, with a canebreak border, Not far away was a mill and pona, - juaa tbere - was - mountain in the background where, small game abounded, There we raised Jersey cows and colts and sheep and chickens and peafowls, ana uvea weu oy aay ana leas tea on music by night, for every member of the family is a musiciari, which art. .1 . .... ' I thA r Vk ovn fWvm rhnt tmntkA me home to take care of the business. "um i."" So I went to selline eoods aeain. In was lovely home and e younger tW mMtitimrf ft nrAtftr v.p1-.vpH children grew up there' to manhood lassie I had only known as a child had and womanhood, and were happy. grown out of her pantalets and into Lheu 5Uool was not neglected, though I T 1 3 Jl 1 x 1 3 1 long dresses, and was casting sly l 86110 dui one ooy ana one gin dana at th . hnv wnt tnWn T to couege. It was on the farm that the B . . , imatrinnl nr.fi punt nnma at mfi. for nriA DOyB learneQ WUai a OOliaT Was WOrtn uai laDor insutute, two miles away, where I mingled with the boys of the best famlies of the state,' the Gould' mea, Jtiolta, Aliens, Alexanders, Un- tons and Crawfords, and others. They are all dead but two that I know of. My father was a merchant, and when I was nearly grown he gave me a clerk's place in his store, and I sold goods for two or three years. About this time, of course, I fell in love, and dressed better and brushed my hair with a cow lick touch and irom boots and milc sweetly ' on ""my sweethearts as they passed. When I was nineteen I was sent to college at Athens, land found a new sweetheart there. She played and toyed with me while she was secretly engaged to an other fellow. When i was senior- my father, was taken seriously ill, and called Atlanta Journal. t After playing the Wandering Gentile for about ten weeks, I returned home the evening of the 24th, and felt like throwing up my bat in memory of John Howard Payne because he was the author of "Home, Bweet Home." If these lounging, buy, stay-at-home-all-the-time husbands could get out and go around awhile, they would "have time to think and realize what good wife they had and how sweet home life was. Oh, the nights I have spent in a lonesome room in a great hotel ir in the berth of a Pullman ear, an the grub, the grub a fellow gets along the wayl In many instances it would take the gizzard of an alligator to grind it and the stomach of a carnivorous animal to digest it. The beef steak you order you find ' out is a mistake; the lamb chops were off of an old sheep that was a lamb in the dim, distant past; spring chicken that was hatched in the spring of 1900, and frequently the butter, like that in the boarding house when the boarder, sitting alone in the dining room at the table,, the landlady walked in said: "I thought I heard you speaking, and that some body was in here with you." "No," said he, "I was Just talking to tne but ter, dear old friend, and about the same age." tsa like fat, I always take hash when I can get it, for I want -to know "what I am eating. The average town hotel is run for two dollars a day principally, and incidentally for the accommodation of wayfaring travelers But home is like a peaceful harbor into which the. Ocean voyager may come and feel that the storms and bil- owa that tossed and : rocked it at sea cannot enter to disturb it now. It is to me the shadow of a great rock-fin a weary land, and whatever may be the troubles and cares and difficulties thtt' belong to the outside life,, no matter which comes to me in hours like these, I wonder thai If r! so toft and kind towards everyeoe living, and amid these hours of gUdoe and I say gtadneM, because, as someone ehw has said, amid the darkest hours which come to us, faith looks up and sees a star and hope can hear- rustle of angvl's wiog and with fjth and hope, like the faithful and yet sometimes jaded team, they carry us on and on and on towards the the city of rest and the house of refuge. ' Yours sad and sorrowful, ; - 8a P. Jcxek. Henry B. Adams. Thos. J. Jerome. Ataas, Jerome, AraSeli I Mm, ' Attorneys and Counsellors at law, CONCORD, N. C. Practice In ' all the State and V. S. Courts. Prompt attention given to collections and general law practice. Persons interested in the settlement of estates, administrators. executors, and guardians are especially in- taka me lone to fall desperately in love, Titd to call on them. Continued and Dain-1 - stating attention will be given, at a reason- liked to trade at my store and was in no hurry to go, and was pleased to boy what I advised her and never asked the price. She was a bashful brunette, with hair as black as that of Pocahon tas, and it is yet, and her name was Mary Octavia, the eldest daughter of Judee Hutchins. Of course it didn't sonable price, to all legal business. Office in Pythian Building, over Dry-Heath-Miller & Co.'a opposite D. P. Dayvault At Bros, ap-ly WANTED! 7 to 12 Horse Power Engine and boiler wanted. K. L. CRAVEN, Concord: N. C when they earned it. But bye and bye and one by one the boys left us for other vocations, and five of the six now live in five' different .states from New York to Mexico. As I had to be away a good portion of my time, my wife and daughters were left without a pro tector so I moved to this town of Carters ville and bought this pleasant home, which we call The Shadows, because it is embowered by the shade of many beautiful trees. This is all. we are What better does a pretty 1 in hands of the Jiving, where mercy may be sougnt ana pardon found. Enough of this. It savors of self-conceit and vanity ' to write so much about myself, and I feel that what I am or what I have done should Piano to exchange for good horse or mule. With " An Experience nor did it take a longsiege for me to take that fort, for I was a right hand some youth myself, and was smart and doing well, girl want? Yes, I found that pearl, and did not throw it away like Othello. I've got it yet. From the beginning I knew that she loved me, and I never had to plead or get on my knees, nor did I, ever ask her to have me, but one moonlight night as we were walking, I said. "Oc tavia, when Bhall we get married?" and, be told by another. as in OF Married at Open Grave While a crowd oi mourners was Amhlfid arnnnri the nnen era v as she pressed my handt Bhe'whisperecTj which Mrs. George Stevens, was being "WtiAnPvBrunn think hfist," 1 1 t Ti :n Til u...Uie.n...l j v I uiuini Ab iftuiuiUj lu.. icvcuuTunuiucj It was like the murmur of a dream, YEARS YEARS but I heard it. NoW she will deny all this,' but nevertheless it is the truth, and so within three mouthswe were wed ded. I knew very.well that with her par ents I was an acceptable lover, for - my mother had found it out from her mother, and everything was calm and She was sweet sixteen and I twenty-one. . I took her young, think ing JLould train?her to suit my notion, but she soon trained me to suit hers. Now my young friend, that was nearly fifty five years ago. I was one of ten children: my wife was one of ten. We IN WRITING -Fire Insurance, settling: losses serene. and representing ' &irst (olass ' Companies, 1 uiu w-, OJ J cign, we abK your piuimgc. twet- and iust keep OQ multiplying Urhpr .nm1 hia fnneral aermon Our.facihties for Employer s i n , Liability, Accident and Health Mv brothers are dead. I have three I sisters living, who are very dear to me. Well, I built a little cottage in a pretty Smiley and Mrs. Annie Wagener, of Beckwith, rushed up and . pushed their way to the side of the min ister in charge of the services, Bev J. . Greeing,of the Methodist Church, Mr. smiley explained that he and Mrs. Wagener had eloped and that friends of the lady were in hot pursuit. As he handed the minister the license he asked that the marriage cermony be performed at once. Kev, Mr. Greeing, who was interrupted in the midst of his sermon, was at first astounded and somewhat vexed, but performed the ceremony. V As the couple walked away the! .- Tfe srrw4 CtrpM Haa. ' GreetuTKro Bacord. Here is a story that comes to The Record from a policeman of the city who says he has it fresh from tbe mouths of an engineer and a fireman. . This morning soon after 4 o'clock a shifting engine was pushing aflat car in front, coming along near the coal chute. The engineer said he saw an obstruction on the rail in front of him, and was sure it was the body of a man. He was moving slowly and. at once reversed his engine and stopped. Tbe fireman got down and exploring''Vith his lantern, found that the front wheel of the rear truck bad run 'over the body of a man and that it was to wedged between the wheels that it could not be removed. It was deter mined, then, to shove the car forwaid a few inches so that, the body could be taken out, but to do this it was neces sary' to run the other wheel over it. However, was the man not dead, any way, and where was the harm? Gently, as if lowering a corpse into a grave, the throttle of his engine and moved forward about a foot Before any one could take hold of the body it suddenly hopped up and ran, remaking-) "Didn't- touch me!" The -emt n fainted and the engineer jumped fro u his cab quicker than if he were aboit to put into another train. While star ing a each other, the fireman having "come to," another man walked around the flat car and asked what in thunder they meant by running a train over the toe of his shoe. And there be stood-ra shoe in his hand,- minus toe." . . ' There were two men, one on either side of. the track. The fireman de clares that the front wheel of the front truck had passed squarely over the middle of the man he saw and that he would have sworn he was dead, even before the car . was pushed forward causing the second wheel to pass over it. But the eye is deceitful, or was in this instance. ' In was afterwards ascertain that both men they were negroes worked for the railway company ana were from Charlotte. PUaarMaaM las rrai la a-alMla. . Architect Fraijk P. Mil barn has eon pitted bis plan fur enlarging: lb Xorth Carolina Pule Capitol of Eakigh, to eot' 1300,000. I-1- lu this plan the prevent architocCaral bfauty of the building 1 preeerved. da the north sod south aide wings COx 1U0 fee are added. Oo the t the how tired and worn a fellow may be, one night of rest and peace in jthe quietude of a home that he loves and home that loves him, he rises in the moruing with courage and faith that enables him to fight the outside battles of the new dawned - day: the home where love is the background,, with its light and shadow, bringing out every faatnre of beauty that characterizes each member of the family and mini fies -and shuts out from view whatever may be unseemly. Some one has said that love is blind. If so, it is blind only to that which- is unsightly to the eyes of Qthers, ; and carries within its bosom the power to paint its own picture of its loved ones, and gathering up the Bounds and melo dies which come to the ear, and for the time being love feels like it is not lis tening but looking. Love remembers only the words that are kind and the deeds that are pure and gentle, and forgives all that was ever said in un- kindness or done in anger by those on whom love puts its crown. I : had rather encompass my nerves 'and have permeate my muscles every contortion that rehumatism could produce and every pang that neuralgia .could give, than to feel and know it was true that I did; not love anyone and that no one loved me. It iB our love for the pure, the noble and the good that furnishes inspiration for every noble deed and every generous word. It is the absence of love that fires the B0ulf anger and murder that manifests itself in ghoulish greed, that sets self, up on its town pedestal and worships self until both worshiper and idol crumble into ashes. The diff ejrence between God .and the devil is that one is love and the other is hate, and all tbe deeds that heaven has done and all the kindly words that heaven has spoken orginate in a . heart oflpve:and ail the sunenng, - agony l v, .nfterpd fmm and despair that fills the souls of those weevn but wherever he has planted wno are aamneo, naa lts prgm in ; ine the 'tor bean he has crops that have heart of man s direst enemy, : the A Remedy For The Boll Weevil. Charlotte Chronicle. The government expert sent to Tex as recently to devise means for: exter minating the boll weevil in that State made everybody tired by throwing up the sponge and insisting that there .was no way possible to get rid of this pest Upon the heeels of this pessimistic report, however, comes a gleam of hope. A special from Austin, Texas, to The New York Times savs that it has been found that the boll weevil will not show up in a cotton field where the castor bean is growing. A farmer living near ,:Merrilltown'k Tex., has made the discovery; and while all his neighbors have Buffered greatly from the ravages of the worm, he him self has a superb , field of the white staple, and will make a neat sum of money when he gets his yield ! to the market, and besides hois thinking of putting in a claim for the $50,000 prize which the Lone Star State is Offering to the person, who shall discover the way to 'eradicate the weevil. This the boll present portico wtU be removed and a wing 45x75 feet added forth aeommo da lion of the Slate library on the first floor, the Supreme Court oo the second, the Supreme Court horary oa the third. The wings on the north a&d aooUi wtU contain adequate baaement and. the first floors will be utilised by offices for the Governor and! Sfate Treasurer on the north and thf Secretary of ' State and the Superintendent of Public Instruc tion on the south. j The first floor of the old building will be devoted to the State Auditor, Insur ance Commissioner and Corporation Commission. The second floor of the wings oontaifluthe Senate and the Hall of Representatives, while the present chambers will be converted into com mittee rooms and other necessary offices. The third floer will be devoted to galleries, committee rooms, a hall of painting and statuary and offices, j - With the north and south wings added the building would be 800 feet which would still leave 100 feet from the capitol to the sidewalk. . The west side would remain, as at present, and the east extension would be , only 84 feet beyond the present portico. The especially notable points about Architect Milburn's plans areas follows: The present architectural structure of the capitol will be preserved; the mod ernized building will be in even more beautiful architectural proportions; commodious balls for legislation will be furnished; fire-proof rooms for the State Library and of the Supreme Court Library, both of which are now , very much exposed, will b provided; two elevators will be from the first floor. there will be record rooms in the base ment and adequate arrangement for the preservation of the State archives. "Every State in the Union has built a new capitol or enlarged its capitol with in the last 100 years except Kentucky, v lrginia; and ' North Carolina" said Chief Justice Walter Clark, "and the former two have measures now pending for the enlargment of their capitol. am confident that if the capitol is mod ernized according: to Mr. Milburn's plan North Carolina will have one of the faost beautiful and adequate capi tola vsnerica." - maaonte Fair at Raleigh. lhe Masons of worth Carolina are making a determined .effort to erect a handsome Masonic Temple in Baleigb, the capital city of the State. They are now preparing a grand Masonic Fair on a large scale to be held in Nash Square, Kaleigh, , October 12 to 24, 1903. Col. Noble F. Martin, one of the best managers of such events in the United States, has charge of the fair, while various committees are work,-, and Masons all are talking and pulling for the success of the fair. There will be absolutely none of the usual vulgar midway at tractions about it. Everything wUi be clean and bright, and the standard-of Masonry will be kept elevated. The railroad will grant reduced rates, so that all can avail themselves of an op portunity of having a good time' and placing one or more bricks in the grand temple building. llilwaaktro, rWf-4. .Tb Jmai to-day; syi;Th afefaw few what fromiw to Woee of tbe trri wa. tretiottS lu whkh fai4 lata has twa fegag-al, o with . U Cftihoh Church, haa been amiedad by tthr M.J. Ward, t( tVtuU. bo has d dared that neither b not aay hct prke of tU omaia CkthoS faith i3 gi ve abauhtuoo to those who have tales the oath oi the latrntatioaai Typo graphical fnioa. U oath c this union require that the mrmbrrT a3f Unce to his unioa shall have priority over every otJlgstioo, reatMPa and otbenriae, fuWJU y. admisktrator of the Archdiocw. said to-day that Father Ward was altogether Justified Ut making such a statement, and that be would i himself say the thing." OareleaantM ta raapooaihle far many aa accident and we. never know whea to expect on. It ia well to know for our own benefit and for others that Back- en's ArnJdk Salve Is the beat remedy oo earth for Sums, ftmlda. BrtusM, Outs, Fekma. Boil and TUo. Only tie. Guaranteed by P. B, Fetser, Dmgiat. Some people fall in lovs so hard then fall clear throng aod out of it before they stop. Nothing makes a wife to suspicious as to detect traces of aa unusual perfume, about her husband. -Truth doesn't seem to be stuck on ying at the bottom of a Texas oil well. CO. Insurance are excellent. C. Gr RICHMOND 'Phone 184. EflflYROYAL PILLS SAFE. AiwlTimuDK. unm w wruiw for CnlCllcSllUi'S lutbusn 1. urn .mi Miii.llln boxes, .illd ith uuribbom. Tke thew. Befue DumM Sabatltatteas M Ijaite. tloma. f Jv Dnoi. im um Ibr PBrtlalrs, TcstlKOalaU ul -KelleT for Ladle," " r. b ry. u.il- , A.AM TMtiBoaiAla. Bold bT IDnwrlM. t kl-ketr- emleit; AT F A -1- I WlKtS WHtht ALL tUt rAILo. Beat Coob Sjmp. Tauea Good, to time. Bold b? rtmpelrts. HZ uP grove -and we moved there. Judge Hutchins had a large plantation on th a " h -WW river, and over a nunarea Biaves. a did hot offer us any money, for h knew we did not need it but sent u two of the favorite family servants, am Tip, the same faithful Tip of whom haye written, was one of them. They begged old masterto give them to Miss Tavyand he did so ter our marriage .Judge Hutchins in sisted that T should study law, for he needed a young man to help in his of fice. So I placed my mercantile inter est in other hands and began to pursue Stomach Troable. "I have been troubled with my stom ach for the past four years," says D. L. Beach, of Clover Nook Farm, Greenfield, Mass. "A few days ago I was induced to buy a box of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets.' I have taken part of them and feel a great deal better." If you have any trouble with your stomach try ahox of these Tablets. You are cer tain to be pleased with the result. Price 25 cents. For sale by M. L. Marsh. The press dispatches from Constanti- A few months af-1 nople assert that from 30,000 to 40,000 devil. ; : I have said that is one reason why I honored Bill Arp while he lived . and respect his memory is because in all he wrote or said, whatever may have been the criticisms of others upon what he wrote, it all came out of a great I big heart that loved every man and hated no man. The names and memories of Luther and Whitfield and Wesley land Spurgeon and! Pierce and Marvin and Moody, etc., will, live' and shine when the dollars and dust millionaires shall have faded both out of sight ; and memory. "Mom ana rust aotn cor rupt, and thieves break' through and steal" the dollars and ducats,! but love is too high' to ! be reached, h and too scared to be touched by these corroding influences. I have come in touch with so many things that saddened my own heart and looked into bo many tearful eyes these latter weeks .that I feel som times like, with bandages and balms, people have been massacred by-Turkish soldiers. , There are doubtless but two I place in the world where such things could occur without causing a stir in the Balkans and in China. escaped the ravages of every other sort of plantdestroying vermin. This is a great discovery, if it pans out. While we rejoice with Texasover it, our respect for the boll weevil is somewhat enhanced by the fact that it can't stomach the castor plant. Dear to our -hearts are the scenes of our childhood, when fond! recollection presents them to view, and among the recollections is one of a keed sympathy for any thine that would put up a stiff fight against partaking of the slimy juice of the castor. We are not sur prised at the effectiveness j of the remedy. It is a wonder somebody hasn't thought of it before. : TTbatleLtfe? ' In the last analysis nobody knows, but we do know that it is under strict law. Abuse that law even sligntiy, pain re sults. Irregular living means derange ment of the onrans, resulting' in Consti pation, Headache or Liver trouble. Dr. King's New Life Pills quickly re-adjusts 25c. at P. P. Fetzer's Drug Store. with gentleness and sympathy, I would m ji's gentle, yet thorough. Only go forth in this world and ;work wth the skill of an angel if I could, and heal every wound" and wipe away every tear from every eye. " '?v' :vi.-f."i With wife in bed, and sister dear hopeless ill, and neighbors fresh from Bids have been asked for the building of the union depot which the Fennsy; vania and the Baltimore & Ohio roads are to erect at Washington, and which the grave with hearts bleedingind eyes is to cost 4,000,000. This depot will streaming, as I look on the scenes I be perhaps the most magnificent in the about me and the tenderness of spirit I country. lit Pleasant Collegiate Institute, Mt. Pleasant, N. C. ; ' ' High Grade School for Boys and Young Men. aawawaaweaeaw - Preparatory and Collegiate rtenarUaefiU. HMntlfnl fn altuAtbin kintA t ht,h Tbree lara-e brlok IwUdloaa. ttood libmrta and kara eletranU? ruriiiatied eoetatr ha ha Metbeda the moat approved, btaeipltue alll. bat arm. Tbtaroufb work. tTtoea iaonati. Session .Opens Sept. 16, 1903. OorreapoDdenos aolMted. H.A.Mcctri.f)ron. -i O.r.McAXUHTBH. Prtocipala. hard, at over the' state .s I:- Dismal Swamp Disappearing. Btchmond Tlmea- Dispatch. Progress is an iconoclast and ob literates "old landmarks" without mercy. The Dismal Swamp has been the supiect of song. But the water from the lake has been largely . drawn off for commercial purposes, and now we are told that the Ohio capitalists and- farmers who recently purchased 20,000 acres of land in the heart of the swamp are rapidly cutting the timbers away and draining the lands and put ting them in arable condition. The Dismal Swamp is doomed. It will not be many year before the morass which from time immemorial has been the home of bear and deer and other wild animals, will be the home of prosperous settlers. We old fogies necessarily feel a sense of sorrow in the passing of the .Dismal Swamp. .But there is no sentiment in progress, 'j ! ; " ML Shattered NorTes and WiK Ho art, Too Nervous to Sleep or leit. ' Dr.MlU.'Heart Cure and Ntrrine Cured Me. A an I a. in mmm wmi mw taiir ie pmr bmx m mi WM44rr e aOw mi.u te MlUa U to a Sit taat ere. WlHntAMMkWt e rUy afv r. sieelf IM aa uittea. a tiiaiai aaaai - ..IkaWM aa r-aU -winZTii Cee uxl Wk I aetMJakiat tW aWKtae aa4 aWt, Fa tkf la akW e. av law aM, a4 Imim iint,ialJ mU. J mmm ww Bad 1 eaaM eet ateT4 at t.-J-Lli na fwai . aa4 vat a iwetfew aad aarviw taat I a(.le .. Nw I aaa mmm Wtatv4 with Wk aa a M, ia V are ea U aa4 Ar it aJt. laaa.am r,w " "na e aa aa ta btmi .Mat Nr itrui fc 4i4 aa m mk Us Dr. MriUaWan. Ve4 la tr bak TS. .r7V. f4 1 A4Ams Vt. UiIh ItedJtal Ca, Likaar U4. Cabarrus Sayings Bank. CoBCori i Atbesurle, I. C CAPITA, $50,000.00. S tariMae a4 aaSlvM j rata, Mt, aoo.ee. Resources Over $300,000. Oeoeral Uauklfl UuiUaaa. TrawaactiL A; eoanta of tadlTtduat; ftnea a4 cvygrkM eoUotied. We eordiallr tevtt Evciry Man, Woman and QitU wbo rieba to "lay by eoeaa4hia lor a rmlay Say, U ope a Reviae Amat )U aa. per pent, la tenet peM oa aarlao aoalU aod Utat certlOoat. orricam D. r.fewjro. m.i woonnoraK. FraaM. C'Mltr MART1M laJORlL. C V.IWUk. Vlee-l'rMtdaak TaitaT. Mar, IS t. m a-ani. A High Class Steel RANGE or STOVE Can Be Purchased Here at a Moderate Price. We are showing a line that contains a number of different styles. These hare been selected by us because of their handsome design, fine construction and known efficiency. All the know ledge eained in years of stove r , ii . maiung is emDoaiea in inese We haTt made Special Prices tot tnis season . it tne old stove is not workine all right this is a good time to buy a new one. 'Phone 163. ; CluS. H. Sbflll. Wood BjBaaB((jBa UUUUO I 0l FOR FALL SOWING. Farmers and Gardeners who de sire tbe latest and fullest inform-' tlon about j- r - Ye8tab! and Fana Seeds should write for Wood's New Fat Catalogue. It tells all about the fall planting of Lettoce, Cab-. bare and other Vegetable crops, which are proving so profitable to southern growers. Also about . Crimson Gorer, Vetches, Grasses and Gorers, Seed Oats, Wheat, Rye, Barley, etc Wood's New Fall Catalogue mailed free on request. Write for It. T.W. WOOD & SONS Seedsmen, - Richmond, Vs. Ilia 1.1 fe saved sv Ckaaaberfalai'a Colle, Cbolrra Dlarrkieea "B. L. Byer, a wen known cooper of this town, says he believes Chamberlain' Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy saved hia life last summer. He had been sick for a month -with what the?doctors call bilious dysentery, and could get nothing to do him any good until he tried this remedy. It gave him im mediate relief," says B. T. little, mer chant, Hancock, Md. For sale by if. L. Marsh. -. .: !'j y If silence is golden money must talk in silvery tones. For a bilious at tack Take Chamberlain'a Stomach and liver Tablets and a quick cure is certain. For sale by H. Ia. Marah. , ' '.-.:''.:..-'.-':.: ''. '-j ('''":.. "' Waatee eeveral rcrMii of bara ter aod rood reputation la each rtaie, (one In ttila eoaotv required) to repreeent aod ad' verttee old eatabUabed wealtoy buainea. bona, of aolid Bnaaelal etandlnc. Salarv ' weeUr with eraenaee additional. aU parable each wedneadaT from head office.. Bo and carriage fornlahed when Deceaaarv- Ht erenoea. Encloae aelf-addreaaed envelope. Colonial. VB Dearborn Bt, uucaco. Sept. S ISt - : . : - - -.- - ' - THE ePsaaTse Dovble Daily Trains Carrying Pall man Sltepera. Cafe Cars ta la carte) and Chair Cars (scats free). Electric Lighted Throvthovt Blraligiasu Mcaiplli at. Ktssu City Tcut, OUtloflU tad lidlas tcrrttorks V, AWO TaJS . " far West aa. Ksrtjwttt rns onlv TMtouon scseptvo caa uni BBTWICN TUB SOCTMSAJT AMD Kansas art DeacriptlTS literatare, tickets sr. ranged aod through reaervatlosa made upon application to . w.T. tAUNOf RS, Ota t AeV. aSS. Dlrv, OB) r.C.Ciass, Taa.PM.Av Anaeva,' Oa. W. T. SAUNDERS Cen'l Asset Pasasassr Oeeertmsat ATLANTA, CA., TO TIIS Glorious Mountains of Western North Carolina TUB SOUTHERN RAILWAY tarltee tbe attention t4 all Haltb or . . FkMurar. Mebera. THE-TOURIST SEASOU orpeoed Jooe 1. J aad oo that dale Low Rate Summer Excursion -Tickets wee oa ami from prioctpal point, in tae BtfeMurt. to ium rkraUi and Soot aotad rorta kwaoaadreectedbySothera Kilr. Ttcketaon aale ap to and Ineludlna- yUHm ber Wl, 1MB, 11ml lad to October i, a ad return. . j "The Land of the Sky" I AID ' i Sapphire Country, " AaberUla jr. C-. and Hpt Sprtore. . C,, offer ererr attraction to tbe "maar Traveler or InvaiH- " Tie EiitTtiiicssw ud Tlrfjaii Resorts i l ateo offer many ladooetaeete tut i L Healtb aod Meeeore. I M Ve peaevptf iHitafa XT. S. eejd Vsaafra y VlaaM.adT taMarkOCIaia V anormya(WL laral arte, br aoamaav M j SW1 FT & CO., C5 V 10aWAyateatOa Ask any Soother- JUU-.y 'J.?"0 - mer lincM. Polder, deacruniv. of tbe , many Della-bUal VmoriM reached try Bootbera Balj-av.- Manager Wanted. Trostwot tby 14 f or caoima U pianaji. htm I ii a la tbl. eoon(y and a-1Atiin Utrri torv lor a weU and taorably fcao a Honae of aold Bnaaelal ataadla.. fmm oaab a rr and eirat. paM acb'' by raeca dlreet from haadqi rtara. a penae mowj ulvaDd; poaiuoa pmmat. AMrm MAJIAOi. WMoooa mUbc. Cblcajro. 10. " - ' wiiTiD-rAJTHrcL rto t travel and aoperrtoe force of aal-wwio nonTtl,bt aalarv S ncnee. rtelarr paid weaklv and. exneaae moomy advanord. rrrrVn e err. Local twrttory. &alo. mteemmtut. Poaltloa peraneot Kncloa. erf-addrwMKl enTeiope. Sopertateodeot, AM iMarbona b, Cbloaco, ni. .
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 16, 1903, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75