Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Oct. 7, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE TIMEO-H STEAM BOOK UNO JOB OFFICE We keen on band a fall itook of. LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS, STATE MENTS, BILL HEADS, ENVEL OPES, TAGS, VISITING CARDS WED DING INVITATIONS, ETC, ETC. i a -i 1 1 1 .1 i t . L GOOD PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS 1 "" : H 1MB "' John B. SherxiU, Editor and Owner. 'BE J UbT 2T3D $1.00 4 Year, in Advance Volume XXI. Concord, N. C., Wednesday October 7. 1903. Number 14. - V r- um up wmxm tssxixvi ; I ! ya tare ntjihws t k'Ui tbcixt;4elaorit. 1 9 VN. Ashcraft's Eureka Liniment i ., This Liniment will remove spavin, splint, ringbones, and all cartilagi nous growths, when applied in the ear lier stages of the disease, and will re lieve the lameness even in chronic cases. One. of the mast common lame ness among horses and mules is sprain of the back tendon, caused by over-loading or hard thriving. Ashcraft's Liniment is a 'riever-f ailing remedy. The Linimejit is also extensively used for chronic rheumatism and for all kinds of stiff joints. For scratches" Ashcraft's Eureka Liniment is 'with out an equal. A few applications is all that is necessary to cure this dis ease in its worst former V Owing to the wonderful anti-. scratches. septic qualities, the Eureka Lini ment should be' used in the treat ment of all tumors ancTsores where proud flesh is present. It is both healing and cleansing, entirely de stroying all parasites and putre faction. This Liniment acts as a counter-irritant and stimulant. Price 50c. bottle. Sold by PROFESSIONAL CARDS. e" DR. H. C. "HERRING. Dentist, T4 r i ea 4,ea e ' -W Amf - . aarv CAIHIEB BKVBT VltL BETt'BH Pretcal Silcrlu.U Cr eater the Law Caalaateta New and Obaenrer. - , TkaB AM JOXKS TBLU efflOBX ITOB I EH Boot BTBLT OS LTHCBIXO. Atlanta Journal. Mj stenographer is oat of pocket and I mm tvmrW hnl whoro there) ia a. will Below weprint in full a letter recdyed tnttrtk ?. T tmlr tmttta- , by the editor from Mr. Thomaa W. k fcw r Dewey, ex-cashier of the Merchant and twv,n tvA nnt tmn VMk. and T'aa Farmers Bank of New Bern, who left .een more beanUful ctoodlea. daya. tied New Bern same weeks .go and ha. not ether x mtuU( nightt j eTfr since been heard from. There was a ftot They remind me in their large shortage in hia account, varioualy lAfiL nf lTino n, fl,wlMJ1 in. Wkn He "Wrete te Carer BirMa IWil Haaclac Beree Xk ! la now on the gronnd floor of the Lltaker BulKUng. OOfTCOBD. XT. O. Dr. w. C. Houston. . Surgeon g' Dentist, CONCORD, . C. la prepared to do all kinds ot dental work In rne most approyea manner. Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone 11. Office 'Phone 43. L., T. HARTSELL, I Attorney-at-Law, COZrCORS, NOETH OAEOUNA. estimated at from $100,000 to 1135, 000. The capital stock of the bank was $75,000. ' The State Bank Examiner discovered some irregularities or shortage in his accounts on Friday,, July Slut. On Saturday night, August 1st, Dewey came to Baleigh, and no trace has been heard of him since a little after mid night, when he is supposed to . have taken the midnight train on the Sea board Air line bound for the North. .The Merchants and Farmers'; Bank offered a large reward for his arrest, the Governor offered a reward, his picture. with the reward offered, was printed all over the country, but nothing has been heard from him from the hour of his departure until tne editor of the News and Observer received a letter from him yesterday afternoon. The letter was not addressed in Mr. Dewey's handwriting, bat was in the, handwrit ing of a lady. It bore this pot mark; Golds and Greens. Sept. 30," 1903. 11:35. The last line on the postmark is too dim to make out. On the reverse side of the envelope is this postmark: "Raleigh, N. C, Sept. 80., 4:30 p. m., '03." It is addressed thus: Mr. Josephus Daniels, Edr. ; . Baleigh, N. C. The letter is in Mr. Dewey's hand writing and covers four pages of Mr. Dewey's back handwriting and is in full as follows: Will you do me the kindness to publish this? , '-, Josephus Daniels, Esq., Editor, Baleigh, N. C. My Dear Sir: There have incident- tenpersed with beads of jet. The per fect nights are the background for the indescribable . days. . When' ;: strong enough I have spent hoars of jeach day with the calves and . colts and pigs. For my daughter's home is the former home of my lamented friend Bill Arp, where he wrote of neighbor Freeman and Cobe, of 'the haunted room in the homestead, etc. . And the room is still haunted. Daughter says she could not Vrw Tort Aatrtoaa. Ia the Sooth a very dreadful crime. the most dreadful oooceivatle, fills with constant alarm thousands of families. The newspapers tell briefly the story that cannot possibly be told in detail. The father: is compelled to lean, me for short time, h s turns to Ind one of his family has been mor- lered under most atrocious conditions. it may be his wife and the mother : of his children. It may be his daughter, a mere child. . v . 1 For this crime Jn the Booth, at it used to be with horse stealing in the West, the penalty is death. . rThe most respectable and law-abid ing citizens in the 8outh help to shut down the ferocious creature who makes OCTBKatM VACTOBT SSIStLSV I TtlSt aCAStrlTT OS VM j uaMOSa. Cmartotta CVnnlcl, What the Factory lias Done for Women Workers" Is a very interesting article by Hon. Carroll D. Wright in the October ; number of the Ladies Home Journal. Mr. Wrirht says that bis first school teacher was a weaver in one wine oweu, waas., cotton we-jUmrIl knn.ih.i n,.n. ;.k. tone-, wno augm tne anon fw kwUcoronKWlfw unable to A - M . i I" a. a?S 1 1 pot oat Itrge crop by reaaoo of the be induced to sleep in that historid U ' women unsafe. When room. Ghosts, hobgoblins,' etc., have ever and anon appeared to her and she is constantly "seeing things at night." Bat wife and I occupy the haunted room, as all the other rooms are occup ied and frequently, daughter hears things and comes in at all . hours of the night to see that - the ghosts j have not carried off her fond . parents. "A trained nurse who was with" us last week affirms she saw ' the ghost and her fright testified that she saw some thing. But she was somewhat like the negro who said he was not afraid of ghosts and another negro told him he would give him a bale of cotton if he would go in that old cabin in the field by the graveyard and stay all, night by himseff. He replied "that bale of cot ton is as good as mine." So after sup per he went over into the old deserted fonnd he is killed, as the horse thief used to be killed. Of all the lynchings that have been so much talked about in the United States a vast majority have been based upon the two crimes referred to above. - It seems uncalled for to.ask any ; hu man being which of those two crimes be considers the more serious. Which offers the" better excuse for lynching a stolen cow pony or an out raged and murdered girl T Yet Mr? Roosevelt, accidentally the Chief Executive of this country, has answered yery strangely in his different communications to the public that question "Which offers the beet ex cuse for lynching stealing a horse Cr the shameful murder of a white wo man?" - All of you know what Mr. Roosevelt cabin, made him a fire and sat down n&P recently written onthe subject of on an old bench and about 12 o'clock I lynching. if when hia fire was burning low a ghost all robed in white came; in and Bat down by him and said: "There' don't seem to be but two of us here tonight.'? The negro, scared almost to "deathl jumped up and looked at the ghost and said; ; "No by golley, and there ; w: only be one from now on," . and ! ou 3 Mr. Roosevelt sympathizes with the negroes, and he says in a letter written to Governor Durbin, of Indiana, on August 9, 1903: v "All thoughtful men must feel the gravest alarm over the growth of lynch ing in this country, and especially over the peculiarly hideous forms so bften taken by mob violence when colored r term oi pontic school, fone was a re markable woman, "the contemporary in the factory," says Mr. Wright, "of Lucy Larcom, the poet; of Harriet F. Curtis, one of the reformatory spirits' of her day, and the organiser of the first known woman's dab: of Ilarritt I Jane Hansen (now Mrs. Harriet II. Robinson), author of "New Pandora" and "Loom and Spindle," and of others who made for themselves names ia the great world of letters and philan thropy."! This woman by her factory earnings senta brother through college, support ed an insane mother, and at her death left $2,500 to establish a free library in her native town. In her day and in her town, however, factory labor seems to have reached its high water 'marc. The mill girls of Lowell published a magazine, "The Lowell Offering which attracted the attention of the literary men of that day the 80s and the 40s. Charles Dickens was notably impressed with it, and of the few com plimentary things that he said about this country in his "American Notes" was his tribute to the eirla. who publish ed tbis periodical. The Lowell Offer ing was quoted far and wide to show tnat tnere might be "mind among the Spindles." It is little wonder, therefore, insists Mr. Wright, that he grew to manhood with the feeling that there was nothing in the life of a fac tory operative that detracted in any sense from character of a noble woman. his very interesting bit of history shows the possibility before the factory girls, and The Chronicle wishes that it fact that they cannot emplqy a suf- Scent number of laborers lo cultivate and harvest them, and the mum con ditions exist, in a more or em aggrav ated form throughout the South. Pro bably it is felt more keenly by the con- ton planters than any others, for every year we hear of thousands of bales of cotton that remain in the fields for lack of laborer. , 'Favorable weather conditions and high market prices are worth but little to the farmers so long as present . con ditions exist. There is scarcely a farm er in Mecklenburg county who has not been affected by the labor problem. Although farm hands are paid more now than formerly, there are fewer laborers at work In the fields, and the supply is constantly diminishing. Some one has estimated that fully 100, 000 white laborers bave left the farms of North Carolina during the past year, finding employment in the mills and factories and on the railroads. While the number may not reach that figure, it is certainly high enough to prove a great handicap to farming operations. Similar reports come from every section ofjlhe South. "What is the remedy you ask?. To my mind, there is no clear remedy, at least, not in the immediate future. The problerh is a grave one and wiser men than I have devoted their best thought to it without any satisfactory result, No one will deny that the necessity of more men for work in the fields is imperative. I do not know where the supply is to come from, if it might be related to all the mill girls bf oomes at alb Discussing the question Prompt attention give: umce in Morris Duuaing, house. to all baslness. PP08ite the court Drs. Lilly & miKer, offer their professional services to the citi zens of Concord and surrounding country. Calls promptly attended day or nignc the door he escaped and ran for dear ally fallen infoi my hands some of the I iife and when out of strength ahq I men 8X6 the victims." - reports' published in both Raleigh and I breath he sat down on an old stump tcj I Here you see that Mr. Roosevelt de Charlotte papers concerning my defal-re8t. Jost then another ghost all rol5 1 nounces the men guilty of lynching a cation, etc. , which I denounce as mali-1 ed in white walked up and said, "You I negro, who in his turn absolutely ruined, cious "Ties one in ' particular, twoMdnnn nnmn fin rnnnino-;" "Yea " 1 if he did not actually destroy, the life columns Ions: with ecarcel v aseroblance 1 moiAjtjncC'tti'''aa l at a helpless woman. of trath from the Derinnine to theend. I t pil tri what T'a trnino- to do now." I Now what does Mr. Roosevelt and off he goes again. , Booker has had too smooth Bailing for some time. - You may put it down in J. MONTGOKKBT a 1. ZiKXCBOWELT H0HTG0XERY4 CROWELL, Attorneys aad Connsslors-at-Law, CONOO&D, N. O. .. As D&rtners. will practice law in Cabarrus, Stanly and adjoining counties, in the Supe rior ana supreme uourts o I tne state ana in . thn Fndnral Cnilrta Office In court house. - Parties desiring to lend money can leave it with im nr nljtce it in Concord National Bank for us. and we will lend it on eood real es- tat.A sMMiritv free of charze to the depositor, We make thorough examination of title to lands offered as security for loans. ' Mortgages foreclosed without expense to owners oi sam. Henry B. Adams. Thos. J. Jerome. Frank Armfield. Tola D. Maness. Aims, Jeromer' Armfield & Uiness The facts are grave enough, but I will swear by all past associations and -by my hope of forgiveness by the Great Judge of all hearts, that the true short age will not And cannot be made by honest men to aggregate one half of amounts published, i 1 have not aB yet attempted any defense, and if I ever do there will be a few shattered banes in the Glass Houses of some of those "prominent families of New Berni" who seem to have "swallowed their consciences" (if they had any to swallow) and are .now so eagerly and harshly sitting in judg ment against me; and while I say this, I have not a word of reproach for any one who is trying to do me justice, whatever the penalty of that justice may be. This I consider the un say about the lynching of the man who steals a horse T Read page 93 of Mr. Roosevelt's your dooic tnat wnoever is aoing i cum wo u.uuWuS much in any line of life that is helpful Trail, " ; pubhshed , . very recenUy-n to humanity is going to get into trou-1 1899 ble. A man only does his best work "Horse thieves are always numerous as he is assailed, opposed and perse-land formidable on the frontier, though ented. There ia no movement UDward I in Our own country they have been without friction and not much friction summarily thinned out of late years, until fire- shows up. I am still for It i the fashion to laugh at the severity Booker, ho matter if they are going to with Which horse -stealing is punished hang half of his students. He is the oh the border, but the reasons are evi best leader bis race has ever produced, I dentJ Horses are , the most valuable because he is the wisest. His- great property of the frontiersman, whether vnrk anil ro rtn and tf.A mora he is cowboy, hunter or aettler, and are prodded and the. more he is criticised of teri absolutely essential , to his weU tv.o Kottr hAwill An it. ; being and even to his life. They are Critics never jump on a fellow who is always marketable and they are very doing nothing only to call him a vaea- easily stolen, for they carry Attorneys and Counsellors at Law. .Ax,onr, Vt . may be. This I consider the unpwr doin? nothinsr onlv to caU nun a vaea- eaauy sioien, lor tney carry tnem- Practice in all the state and u. s. Courts, donable sin to speak mahciously orl bond, but the better and more f efl&cient selves off ; instead of. having to be i-rompt attention given to collections anu j. ,..,- la I A, u ll 4tt. nn general law practice, fersons interested in I iai' t&1"fclj i juu ui u uc; j"1"! . v -.?25"en?nt?I-a.8: di1?if.!fS.to.' ine for hone. When the man without .o. If thev can't Dick a flaw in your staantto'n wm giVen for job, they will Jump on your methods moe reckless ruffians, and it is always sonable price, to all legal business. Office in knowing no better."- When the man I etc Co.'a opposite D. P. Day vault & Bros, ap-ly with brains does it, he 1 should be carried. Horse stealing is thus a most tempting business, especially to the WANTED! ' Engine 7 to 12 Horse Power and boiler wanted. K. L. CRA.VEN, , . ' Concord, N. C , Piano to exchange for good horse or mule. Fire Accident, Liability, L . ;:!::: ani Ihe-acd- INSURANCE. I suppose some prefer to be and do ashamed to look his fellow mortals in I nothing so they can shun the shafts and tongue of men and devils. dyed than giving a stone to those who I I am profoundly interested in the ask for bread, or giving poison to those J matter of Dr. Broughton's decision who ask for a cup of cold water. My I whether he will go to the Boston church heart has neve been intentionally evil, I or remain in Atlanta. It is a question nor am I the recipient of any ill-gotten I every law abiding citizen of Atlanta gains. I realize to tne xuiiest capabui-1 should feel interested in. - urougnton ties of a proud and sensitive nature (for I has all to gain and Atlanta all to lose the pall has hung hourly before my I if he chooses to go to the Boston call, I eyes,) the turpitude and lasting Bhame I He may be all his critics say of him F .a - 1 X J I . ia a At a- a a. a,1 in ineir every pna&e; oi my errvrB, anu i and Still ne IS tne Dravest, truest apuaue remorse, must be. my eternal portion in I of Christianity and civic righteousness this life. I havenever had any other I T know on earth today. A voice and a idea than that of returning voluntarily, I conscience crying out hke John the followed by armed men, and they can only be kept in. check by ruthless sever ity " So man can deny that Mr. Roose velt, the same man who denounces so severely the lynching of a negro who has murdered a white woman, con doned most decidedly the lynching of a white man guilty of stealing a horse Mr. Roosevelt says that for lynching a -1 a ' ? a norse tmei "ine reasoua are evi dent." ' Qccsp the store. "Don't you want anything else?" said the merchant. j"Yes,".said How the Saloons Hart Baalnes. Charlotte Newt The story is told on a Jew merchant in Sahsburv. A mechanic earning if not otherwise,! whei I felt that I had J Baptist, Atlanta needs him now as bad good wages made a small purchase at the strength and courage to do so, fori as ever, and will miss him now more mv present Bufferings are far greater I than if he had never labored within her man nan inflict I I KmHam 1 RoUkti, nrii him 4 If he I tne TtUrcnaseT. ratreuuuv, . "1 nvuiu wish to live only! for the innocent ones goes, who will take his place ? Name like to buy several more things that dependent upon jme. (, There is nothing the man. He has no peer in Georgia, we cannot live down, and rise above, I and none who would dare to' try to do hia work, and they could not do it if they dared. They ain't built that way I swallow Dr. Broughtoh, bones and hair, and that means about all of him, except one gallon of blood and 7 J LONG EXPERIENCE. i Large number of - A- J It will be observed that .this letter I pounds of flesh V cry DeSlOOllipclIIIC& give8 nohint of his whereabouts. It But I am off the subject. I wanted indicates that it is his purpose to return to say that I am trying to rest my and overcome. 1 1 would rather learn nathv and nobleness of heart IJ Mr . . through sin than never learn it at all. Truthfully, , -' . J T.W.Dewey. i represented at our Agency on West Depot Street. ; 'Phone No. 184. " : .u.6-. RICHMOND & CO. EfiriYROYAL,eiLLS: fcC CHltUtSI a MXUM4AJ3MM . Ii KED m4 Holt metMie bmi m-1 ; with bin HMwb. Take m mthmr. BerM i PugenM &kt!t-ti.. mm !--tinu. Kuj af jor Drunirt. m xod . la Ma 'Relief far 14 lea," te lar, hj rjs tara 111 mil. 1 . TeKiMoaial. 8pl4 by H Onidn. Calea eater hemlaaJ Jja S444 MmUm Sum PU1LJU. fA. - I'.IIHtS WH(Hr All flKF f AILS. Beat Cotitfh Byrun. Tanwa Good. TJi In time. Sold by rtrnggtwta. VTITST? 3) "LaT to say that l am home and make a clean breast of the j nerves and recuperate my strength whole transaction. Indeed he says ne I jtB hard to rest and harder to recU has always intended to return when he. j derate. Worn but nerves and tired flesh had the ''strength and courage to do fon't come up like the elevator does to really need, but I've got a bill of nine teen dollars at Blank's saloon to pay firBL" "And if the saloon was not there you would trade that out with me. would you not?" "Yes." - "Then the saloons are not doing me any good I am going to vote for prohibition, was the very sensible conclusion of the man with an eye to his own business interests. Gained Forty Poanda ta Thirty Daya For several months oar younger Crtoc,CbHOs-a. ' "The Lost serious proUeta froU- log the farmers' to-day la the maU of tabor, Said a. thoughtful buatacaw man U the course of a coavcnatloa with a Chronicle reporter this raornia. It "awa cka4 an V a laird af a erutara ml raaaaraabta aad matforta car, a rarori a aa ao otar tadr far ta di waaaaaaawa ftacaiiar U Rataad, la arawWtofa ot Dr. yavortta fTaacrlpuo aow ft raUy raatcd ia odrrtar to eay fans WU r ar ta Ualtad eata. for aV caa of taorraa, faaaaW TVaaaa. fraUi eaa, or FalUaf of W oaab a aica Sy u All taar aak w a fair aad ri abi trial of uttr sataaa of cart. I aaad aar lwwlaa r yaar aad cm af '0mm ltadtral wrttaa Utm tlmt O. SaMraa. of Maaisa. acpa, taaaaatar C, ta.. aad caa My that I aai arcd of taa draadad Alaaaaa, atvrtaa tpaaibas. aa la batiar health thaa rva bAra. Mai. eate arho kaoara aaa la anrpnn m aa a taaa a arau. la jaaa araa at atttoMal aaaM aat walk. t 11 tiarihadr thai itr. Harca a acrlpttua nin Fbkb. Pr. Were 'a Corataoa Srttaa Mad. kal Adriarr ta aant A oa rvcaipt of atanp lo MT cipaaaa af mailla r. Saad u eaat atam pa for the atota boaa4 votaaaa. in its broadest aspect, many have ar rived at the conclusion that the only apparent hope lies in turning the tide of foreign immigration from the North and Northwest to the Southern States. I am not prepared to say whether that is practible or desirable. - In the mean- u uvr jMvrnuig ueiua auu pitt ing cotton in Mecklenburg." the south. It would set before them a high ideal. The girls that published this Magazine were gathered from the farms and homes of New England, and had received a common school educa tion, while some of them had attended academies. The girls that go into our Southern mills to-day ara, aWjarcMJir Irotn unr and aWme ox the ooutb, but they have not received such educa tional advantages as their New England fellow-craftswomen of olden day . men tioned had enjoyed. Education in the South, however, is making rapid strides. The girls that are receiving it are just as capable as those of Massachusetts were then. They have keen .minds and strong, healthy bodies. They are descended from the early settlers of the South, And have in their veins the good blood of the Scotch-Irish, and the Anglo-Saxon. They may have suf fered through the ! proverty of their parents for some generations past but they have great possibilities within them and great opportunities ahead of them. Mr. Wright thinks so. This is what he says about the girls that are now working in the Southern cotton factories t "This conclusion is re-enforced by (but the circulation of unfounded ra the experience in the Southern States, I mors will do much harm! Professor where, the factories have bought into j Sherman says : active industry that great class of per- "Doubtless it is some other insect sons known 'aa "the poor witness." that has damaged the cotton in Union Prior to the factory in the South they and Mecklenburg. There is every in- lived a nomadio life. They felt that I dication that the Mexican boll weevil they could not compete with negro la-1 will eventually spread throughout the bor, and even the negroes themselves cotton belt, but I do not believe that it looked down upon them. will appear in North Carolina for sev- IllVItU k iinati'ni, f iliii hntnn tltil " i J . J - ..I - nun wuuuj v v j i erai years yet o come. condition changed, ine poor wnite I , "Last year it was. stated in one of women of the South are now consider- J the government crop reports that the ed as constituting the best factory boll weevil had done damage in the vi- population in the United States. Aa ciajty 0f Gibson, this state, but by cor- they have come into the factory towns responding with the person who origi their children have been given oppor- nated the report from Gibson I found turn ties jfor education. The elders that it was entirely incorrect. themselves have taken on a seu-re-1 ' j t angnect the aame ia trne in this spect which they did not know before. J instance." They are better! , housed, fed, better i Hljch Grade School for Boys and Young: Men. ' i "i ' i : Praaarator and (VilUuriatn lumrni..ii Beauaful for situation. Noted for healthl Three larva brick bulldlnira IhvuI ntna and larae eletrantljr furnkbad anctatr halta netDoua na inoc approved. Plwlpllne mild, but Arm. ThorouSb Work. Prka reaaooalila. Session Opens Sept. 16, (903. Corrpapondanca abllcitort. . M. A. McrfLlJOrOHJ O. K.McALLIHTEIi. i ITtocipala. No Weevil la Ifortk Carolina. Raleigh, N. C, Oct. 1. From time to time reports are circulated that the Mexican cotton boll weevil has ap peared in North Carolina. A report was printed in a paper in Union county that the weevil bad appeared in that county and in Mecklenburg. Franklin Sherman,' the state ento mologist, says no such report baa come to him direct and that no specimens suspected to be this pet have been sent to the agricultural! department. He does not believe that this insect is in North Carolina and will be greatly obliged if persons living in the sus pected localities will send him speci mens, in order that the matter may be settled. If the weevil is in the state the truth should be- known at once. clothed, and are making for themselves a reputation for industry entirely to their credit. They are no ' longer afraid of negro competition, because the negroes generally do not enter the factories, and in the communties where factories,' exist Ithey are rapidly becom ing a self-respecting people. "The best factory population in the United States." This is a high tribute coming from the United States Com missioner of Labor. ! E all Throng Hia Raa a Tea Ptaar 1 na While opening a box, J. O. Mount, of Three Mile Bay, N. Y., ran a ten penny nail through the fleshy, part of bis hand, "I thought at once of all the pain and Bareness this would cause me," he says and immediately applied Chamber lain's Pain Balm and occasionally after- Wards. To my surprise it removed all pain and soreness and the injured parts were' soon healed.'' For sale by M. L. Marsh.' "There goes a man," some one Gat a Divorce From Hia lnaanefVlfa I i- brother Dickev. "Who has A Charlotte lawyer tells the Observer j living wives. "My, my!" exclaimed the old "irux he bo'n crazy, or lbs' his so, that a man in this State, whose name he refuses to disclose, recently went: to Florida and procured a divorce from brother had been troubled with indigeeu I his insane wife who is m an asylum sion. He tried several remedies but got ! fa this State, and has married another no benefit from them. We purchased I woman. The ' divorce was obtained some of Chamberlain's Stomach and 1 said three man mind growing up?? , under the law made especially for Fla the touch of the hand or will of the boy When he will return, how he will manipulating it. My good wife and i a v. b-v a ama-avar ma rnraa -a- v - i ; a. . a tkA i a a - . return, aau wucrc uc aoctor say x nave to buuuuv auu uTer Tablets ana ne commencea wmg ; iniUionaire, who wished a legal quejBtions that will rise involuntarily to 1 jw0 stronger than I," and I submit J them. ; Inside of thirty daya hehadj . . T. . .f ; all triAoa ava aa mnfh flhrrnlnAn I a . T .t- A monA I m'atn Afw nftnnrla m flflflh HAIftnflWi r in rrrvsterv as ever. 'But the letter wiH T .-n't heln mvself. It's hard to rest fully recovered. We have a good trade k rovA oniv. intfirpst bv evervbodvi in I i.,.A inK ar. .alia await. I on the xawets. nouey rsros., North Carolina and all will expect that 1 ; vo; hnt thev will have to wait' a "O af W a it is a precursor of Cashier Dewey's J wyie ftt least. " - Sam P. Jones. return. .! Whether this conjecture m true "timet alone can tell. ; J For a pleasant physic take Chamber- I . r ' . j Iain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. Wasted opportunities are usually I to take. Pleasant in effect chants, Long Branch, Mo. M. L. Marsh. Mer- For sale by those that go to the wrong people. IM. L. Mash. nakea a Cleaa Sweep. There's nothrag like doing a tiling t.rirtrrmirril'a--. Of all the Salvea TOO. ever ! i heard of. Bucklen'a Arnica Salve ia the ..i ucak u .wnw u wuw vuu When a woman doses ner. invaa - Bruises. Cuts. Boils, Ulcers. Skin AAaQ- I - . -a aa " . Ea I husband with herb tea and he aoean t rjraptions and Piles. It's only 25c, Vnr Rain bv I get well she considers him either con- and guaranteed to give satisfaction i by trary or ungrateful. B- eter druggist. A Taoasatfal Bf aa. IM. M. Austin, of Winchester, Ind., knew what to do in the hoar of need, His wifa had such an nnnsoal case' of stomach and liver trouble, physicians could not helplier. He thought of and tried Dr, King's New Life Pills and she got relief at once and was finally cured. Only 25c, at Fetaser's drug store. aaiaaaaBapa"aaaBBaaaaBBBBBaaBBBaaBaBa Mike What's the maning of "eon tingent fee"? Pat It's loike this: If ye los the case yer lawyer gets nawthin'; if ye win you git nawthin'. . . Mar ta Malta thai Ta-da 1 mm raa aat Addraaa World's Dtapaaaary atrdtaaA cisnoa, rraprmora, nasal a, w. . Ut. Pleasant Collegiate Institute, Mt. Pleasant, K. C. abarros Savings Bank. Ccscord ni llbesule, h C COITAL, $50,000.00. aaralaa mm a4ltM4 vaia, fss.ooo.eai .'j ' Resources Over $300,000. . ! . Oaaaral nankin Ruaiaaa Tranaaoaal. lo. con ota of ladlThlttat, Brmt and onrtwratlutia aoiiclta4. ! Wa conuaDr tn iia Ivcty Man, Woman anil Chili! ar bo wicitra k"lay bj ao(hiB far a ralay dr( ta opaaa Jtavtaaa Aonoaat wlta a.- tar oast, lataraat paM oaaavlaaaAWpaaUS aod Uata oartiarataa J omcaita. d. . CAjrsow. it. t, wuonnot. lraill.nt. t ..1,1.. MAKTIN laxiKii. a W,lv. vu-a-rra4let. TaUar. Ukr. IS-c a.-atn. wtAHTan-raiTHrri, pkhhw ti buan. hi ralirlii aaiarv lata) a l aixt aa pfxtaaa. iarjf (a)t aravktv aaa .iimHim ludnay .li.mv4 I'ratr Ha aifaaaaa nnv aaaary. uoemi wwnvury. nminaw wrrmi mi, I'uallUtD Mrmuriil fwkiai aa-ir a4(lriai. rnaka huiarliilDlral, SM LaaartMira M , ciuoaco. III. I - . High RANGE Class. Steel STOVE or Can Be Purchased Here at a Moderate Price We are showing a line that contains a number of different styles., These have been selected by us because ot their handsome design, fine ! construction and known efficiency. All the know ledge gained in years of stove making - is embodied in these. We have made Special 1'nces lot thu season, it the old stove is not working all right this ia a good time to buy a new one. ; Phone 163. CMs. H. Sbnll. TO THE lorious Mountains of Western North Carolina THK SOUTHERN RAILWAY UiTttes the attentton of aU Health or meaaara aaeaera. THE JOURIST SEASON opened Jud 1, 190l and on Uiat data Low Rate Summer ; Excursion Tickets went on aa) from principal polnta la tb South and SoaUtaaai, to the noted resort located oa and reached bX-Soothera Kali war. Ticket on aale ap to and Including Septem ber 80. 1903, limited to October Ul, Uua,aad re tarn. . 'The Land of the Sky" "Sapphire Country, Aabevllle, H. C, and Hot Sprlnga. K. offer eTerj attractloa to tne Sam mar Traveler or In valid. ' Tne East Tennessee ind Yirginli Besorts alao offer aian Healtaaad my indnoeatanta for Fle aare. Ask any Soothern BaOwar A rent for Sam mer Motnee roioer, aeaeripttTe or toe manT Uelltrbtfal Beeorta reacbed by Sootbern KalJwaT. Almost Unncrrcd Mo -Heart Pains. Short of Qrentht Faint and Languid. Dr.MlU'Hert Cur and Nervine Cured Mt, 1l kaa Laa a f a kaart fcrra W ciaTa4Na.n caa, a4 t mm itt aa aa a aw.. b tkai t ata, far 1 14 f '"" -a4 9-P-J at taaC ooaaa4 m ajM laaaa axteaiUial a4U41l. fU leaat .. ?r' T 54 aiaaaat mmmmrm aa. faa taa um H-f.alia aUtka ma. '". aa4 attet Ifw aiaar ETaa4 t' ihaiaw-ia .Ka aUata raiati. t aa t4.4 aa n imm4mm a I a mi4 tU mm4 Ur. aa4 a Uivrt ikna a Ut aadae a4 irar ware taaa.a4 aa4 aaa-j arr WaxMt aicaj al rataiaavlUtr, Caa. W. JOm CAaaraaaaa.-a. TVera aaa taaay iia 1 1 l kaaa ii-. aba a um; lam i UMM M I raaaj 4mmt4t aa aa bnaMt'i Ha. Wa4 taa mmmAmm ahnkiaav littaa tm um af mmn traaale ittnnnk kutmLkHM taar tMeaaM Uarta4. t Af mi Um ,tmtmm aur W lhaa e4 areaa4 aafvea. a ta4 taaitaa. aieaaltaaa feania. taa mimi ia eaeirt t.rMaaOa aa4 art ki a- atthai caaaa, ti taa aaa tim U aa.aarlna tkat rear fcaart U vaaa al a4au mmA IM aa a r. XiW ltan Car, taa great Mart aa4 aaao4 toal amaaat a iia AM rarrla aaS a4 raanlata Crat t) 1. M Jm Rta.4w. a4 tot fr t W4. a NraM aa llal la, A44raa IM. um. MfriMel tav KUiaan. taa, ranat;er Wanted. Trtwtarotttiy tadr or i-ant Umn taataaar bualnea tn thla cottnly and a llnli( Urrt tory for a wall aad tavoralily kaa HaaM of aolld nnanclal aaallta t ou aralbt oaah aaiary and etpeoaaa. aWt aavh mUmAf Uf raeca airara rrutn uaaujuanara.i a penae money adranra-1; iaiiia parwainaat, Al.1raae MANAUKK, tlU Honoa Uuiidla-, Cbioaao, 111. , WtalM-aaaeral rraaa af r ttaraa ter and aood refutation la eaoa atata a t(i la eoamy raxjulraoi to rrt,r.-an an ai- vertlaa Old eetabllabed waaltny intalne boaaa of actlld Bnanrtal aiandinc Katary :l weekly amb tjeae a4litlMtal. ail aaria awb'weloaalaT fmtn liaawl oaU aad carriage fumUlieo rn naneaaary, nf ereaona, Koeloae aair aoaiaaaaa earajup, Colonial, n Oaartmra liU t bioao. ' Bept.-)M '- J iTTfTTr V Double Daily Trains Carrying- Pallman Sleeper. Caf Can (a la carte) Aad Chair Can (aeaU frca). Electric Lighted Throughout ' ., ' ', ITWflN , , BlrffllflalAsu NeapbU ttd Kama. City aNB TO Att rOiNTtlN Tcus, OkUloaA aad IiiIIai Territoflei AMD fMI rw West tid Nwtlwesl rflB ONLY THKOUOH LBCrd CA UxB BETWEEN TMB aoCTMBAJT AnO Kansas cmr TLaaM4ttla 1l.ra'tara. tlcketa af ranged and through reacnrtUona made apoo application to W.T; SawNOIBB. Ocart Aer. Paaa. Otrr ' om - - r.C.CUiaa.Ta."aa.aT.. Artaara, Oa. W. T. SAUNDERS Gan'l Agent Paaaaafar DM ATLANTA. CA. I Wood's Seeds FOR FALL SOWING. Fansen and Gardner who le Ira tha lateat aad folicat informa tion abotit , Yegstatla and ahrfald write for r-aiJ KMMMyfne, Fana Seeds ' W'ood'a : New It tlla ail ata-rat tha aU planUnu of 4 Uf! at a t "aaaaataWaaMafl ffAfM tare knd other VetetaWa crops which, ara proving ao profitable ta aoa them grower. Aio aboot Crifflsoa Clover, Vetches, Grasses, and Clovers, Wheat,, 7fZ76i 7 1 Seed Oats, Wheat, (CCBfpm V 1 I R7C Barley, etc. I A. A 1 Wood' New Fall Cmuioppe mill 1 J We praaiptlf efctata V. U. aad ForHra J M fMAnlMoMt Write IOC It. B y rittaaaa4Tn4.KarkMretaniaatir y 1 on reqoejBW " . 1 0 ztBBtESS. 0 I T. W. WOOD & SOUS, J KFJigT seedsa.CT."tachmond.V i- 1
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 7, 1903, edition 1
1
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