Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Nov. 10, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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7 H John B. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. rUJ3IIiSlIJ2r TWICK WEEK. 1.00 a Tear, la -dfrjLnc. T " TIMES. Volume iXXI. STARVED OUT. a garrison nas neen iorcea to the litfht an1 &anS H1 tne ""hite l oirrender, whn lack of food has ncil Hie men past all power to ,ue the struggle . t " Many a man 4a similarly starved out of business. His digestion is impaired. His food does not nourish him, and for lack of ttrenK''1 to carry on the struggle he turoj .tree's Golden Discove-ry ' Of bC - , toud. other or v digestion and a. It restores strength to weak, nerv-ou- ,i i m-down men and " A'.out ten years ago I b(ii-' to t afflicted with ,i ,nnrh trouble, also diar-rh-i " writ en Mr. Wm. Va'rri. of Antrim, Mo. In warm weather it jffiw w iiv until it would throw nir into a cramping chill. Wns troubled so often that I aitietime thought ray enrl hurt oome. Tried many rem flies, but they gave oi.!y temporary relief. In November, 199. thought I would try Doctor Pierces Gulden Medical Discovery. I (ot tli bottle and took five in succession, then thought I would wait for a time and take the oar left. Boon found I had symptom of the tt uble coming back, to took the sixth bottle tn 1 It cured ma. I hare enjoyed the beat of health thia aummer, and the credit all belong- to your 'Golden Medical Discovery.' I cmrTt eiprei my many tbanka to Dr. Pierce for hia remedy, for It did ao much for me. Word, can not rxpreaa how severely I luffered, -If soy doubt tht above atatement let them tddrett me. and I will take great pleaaure in tDiwering " Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cleanse the bowels and stimulate the sluggish liver. PROFESStGfAL CARDS. DR.' H. C. HERRING. Dentist, In now on tho ground floor of the LI taker Building. 0ON0OHD, IT. O. Dr. W. C. Houston Surgeon Dentist, CONCOH.D, W. C. Is preparod to do all kinds ot dental work In the most approved manner. Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone 11 Ofllce 'Phone 42. L. T. HARTS ELL, Attorney-at-Law, CONCOHD, NOHTn OABOLINA. ' I'romnt attAnt.lon n-lven tn nil hnitnosi Office l$ Morris building, opposite the; court Df Lilly & Walker, offer tielr professional services to the cltt rnns af Concord and surrounding country. Calls promptly attended day or nUl't. W J. MONTGOMERY. J. MCECBOWEIJ MOSTGOMERY & CROWELL, Attorneys and Counselors-at-Uw, CONOORD, N. 0. As partners, trill "practice law in Cabarrus, Stanlv and adjoining counties, In the Supe rior and Supreme Court9 o 1 the State and In thi Kxrlpral Courts' ffllce In court hOUSH. Partlfld desirlnjr to lend money can leave It with us or nlacelt lOtloncord National Hank for us, and wa will tend it on tcnod real es tate HBcuritv free of charge to the depositor, We make thorougU examination of title to lands offered as security for loans. Mortgages foreclosed without expense to owners or same. Jlcury B. Adams. Thos. J. Jerome'. Prank Arnifield. Tola I). Mnncss, Aims, Jerome, Armfield Si Uiness Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, tiON'CORD, N. C. Practice fh all lie State and IT. S. Courts. 1'rompt atteotloA ghcu to collections and general law practice. Persons Interested In the settlement of estaies, " administrators, executors, and guardians ure espeel illy In vlted to call on them. Continued and ""pain staking attention will bo gl on, at a reason sonable price, to all legal l)tiiiiesH. omce In Pythian liulldlng, over Ury-lleath-Mliler A; Co.'S opposite D. P. Day vault & Bros ap-ly Pire Accident, Liability, 1" IISfSURANCE. LONG EXPERIENCE. Large number of Very BestCompanies represented at our Agency on West Depot Street. Thone No. 184. G, G. RICHMOND & CO. HARD SOFT SMITH STEAM FOR SitLE BY L La LVPjVSL 1 rnuLC luuiuL .11 tilt t in c rirt LUHrSWHtHI- All 1AUS. nest OouKh Byrup. Tant UikjO, in time. !1 by ani(rrmtn. over to art- J AX. ItKV. nn JO ICS WHITES A BUTT PAKniNO ANI A LKO DIN Atlanta Journal. Thee are times when men should sit steady in the saddle. There are boogers along the way there will be more or less dodging and jumping off the horse we ride, and now and then we see some man or some institution dumped in the fence corner by the way. Yesterday a big Piitsbarg bank hit the grit, some other big firms have been powerfully shaken in the saddle within the last wk. I look for no panic, though there are among the assete oi banks and firm many undigested securities and uncollectible notes and ac4xruuu; anti erery firm or fellow that goes down will go down with the cry, "we could not realize on our securities." If men will keep their heads and good common sense has charge of the field there is no trouble in the financial world to-day that cannot be adjusted and overcome. This country was never ia better con- ditiQn, with bread for the eater, and seed for the sower, with the banks in tho towns and small cities full of money, with the farmers, perhaps, in the bet condition they have been in years. having in the last five years paid off hundreds of million of dollars of mort- gages on their farms, and with first- class credit at banks and with mer- chants, and everything has a momen- turn that will carry it along unless ob- atarlM rp thmwn nlnrnr the, wv tn .w - .... u j i impede and stop. Millions of dollars in buildings under way now. Contracts alrPadv mad frr fiitiirfl dplivprv nf products in the manufacturing centers. The western fanner getting splendid prices for cattle and hogs wheat and Oats and corn, the southern farmer eet- ting a good price for his cotton, lumber men, coal men, brick men, all sorts of men are doing well. The merchants are a little, blue in the south because of the beautiful weather, which keeps men at their work, and makes it unnecessary to purchase the fall and winter goods, but the cold weather will come and the merchants will do business. Shoes and clothes, and blankets and cotton fabrics and sugar and coffee and meat and meal, etc., are as necessary I have been farming some in the last ten days in Tuy weak and feeble way. Really I have been farming, more or lees, for twenty years, and the less I iarm me more a uiaitc, um my 8'ul tural prochvitiea and practices put me in touch with the farmer. How bad it makes me feel to see the hundreds of bales of cotton rolling in town every day, and the sturdy old farmer selling at yj and to pay guano notes, some due the 15th of October aud some 'the first of November. A farmer better do without commercial fertilizers than bind himself to pay for tbem in the early fall. The guano manufacturers ought to change their plans, especially the time the guano notes shall fall due, and the farmers ought to have a meet- ing and agree they will buy no guano unless the notes are made payable Jan- uary 1st, proximo (or next, as the old farmer would put it). Hundreds of housands of bales of cotton will be sold n October to pay for guano and this is true every year, and cotton buyers and cotton consumers calculate on that emereencv sale every year, and buy it at their own figure; it is a Btraight out O hold-up and it ought to be stopped. . ...1. 11 The guano business ia absolutely depen- ent for its life and ita prosperity upon the farmers, and that business ought to help the farmers every way it can, and they ought to let all guano notes falr'due January 1st, after date. That pives a farmer time to -consider, and o- time to figure on the cotton crop and the probable prices of cotton, and it prevents this hold-up of the poor fellow in October and November, but I expect the thing will go on just as it has, each year the old farmer swearing he will never make another cotton note pay able in October, and then again he does the same thing, kicking the stuff ingoutof himsell an tne time, ana cussing the other fellow because he . t . kicked himself. - tv,q non- mmmnipR would lose onlv 1 - the interest perhaps from October to January 1st, but as it is the guano agents or the companies lose much more than the interest every year by pushing and crowding, disgruntled ' and dissatisfied patrons. I repeat, the interest is mutual' and the prosperity, the permanent prosperity or the guano manufacturer, is dependent upon the permanent success and prosperity the farmer. Let the notes be maae payable January 1, at the option the farmer, even if the farmer muat nay 0. per cent, intereat from the 15th nf okober: it will be better for the onH hPtter for the cuano manu iai uiv w--- - c arr ovprv vear. I have gone far enough now to see that the yield cotton on my little farm will not n-hlf of the averaee crop, and 1 ton in Bartow county. The crop i immerjtttljr short this year, and J would not be surprised to see cotton bring 15 cents a pound before the first day of next March, though it may sell uot higher than 12 cents. If I had a barrel of! money, I would buy cotton, not lutures, out spots, and grow up I with the country instead of going west. I am leading with some interest the daily report of Dr. Dowie's efforts to purify New York. I dare say, we hard' get fair; reports of what he is icg through; the pre, -2TBe average city paper rjaxe ruor for sensation than sense, Akit for the ridiculous thau the iigiouj. I dcta't suppose Dowie would hare hir oiricUls put the newpaier reporteifa out of his meetings just for ,unl Dowie my be a fake, but he is no fooli but he is a financier. No liv ln& roaa can Know wnat De haa done in Chicago, without saying he is the greate8t, the biggest personality that Btruck town. He has builded a great citv win it8 many manufacturing in in Wrests, he has paid his debts, he has be6a general in cormnand, a czar rul in? over hi8 People, he has made the Iame w waJJc the 8,ck 10 be well, he ha3 defied the governor, the legislature, the c0"1". the police of Illinois and iew lork ' m8 power may be satamc, DUl n na9 power to ourn; mere is something about the personality of the man l"at makes me think of a cyclone or an earthquake. No man can do what 1)0 wie has done without power 'mmeD8e Pwfr e Shall See about hl9 ew ork inP ,aier aiODK- t aon t believe all 1 in tne PaPr9- 1 hve been lied on 80 mucb myself, that 1 would be a fool 10 Deiiere au 1 see about uowie or any oer man. it looks like newspapers woultl Praise and flatter a sensational Preacner jusi Decause tney want sensa- tion. And big hed lines so bad. but they load up their columns with ex cerpts and garbled sentences, and then editorially lump on the fellow that furnished them the blood and thunder fortheircolumna. Butallinall, I venture Dowie don't lack for a crowd: and if wbat he 8ay8 is true 1 don,t think he lacks for money to run his machine I have seen something of what he has done. Yours truly, Sam P. Jones. Tlie Gnbernatlpnal Rare. Raleigh Cor. Charlotte Observer There ia'more and more talk' now aD0Ut the race for the Democratic nomination for Governor next year, which is certainly sure to be the live 1 tni8 State has ever seen. As yet oniy four gentlemen have announced tneir candidacy for the nomination, these being Lieutenant Governor Wil- fre(j D. Turner, of Iredell; Robert B Glenn, of Forsyth; Charles M. Sted- maa 0f Guilford, and Theodore F. Davidson, of Buncombe. R. A. Dough n, of Alleghaney, may plater enter the race, and ex-Judge A. W. Graham, j0hn S. Cuningham and others will be eure t0 be in it before it ends. A gen tleman of marked prominence, who professes to be a very good guesser, to- Ljav expressed hia belief that Turner WOuld be the winner, but said he re- garded Glenn as standing next on account of his ereat service to the I w party which gives him peculiar strength. He went on to say that btedman was . . very strong just now, hia war record being an element of much influence Davidson he regarded a3 a very able aEl excellent man, who had gotten out 0f touch with the masses of people, but Dy no manner of means out of sym nathv with them. He declared the I I J candidates to be a very fine lot of men, and added that the State could not go wrong in nominating any one of them. His views are, no doubt, of in terest at this time Quick Arrest J. A. Gulledge of Verbena, Ala., was twi in the hosnital from a severe case - f 24 tumors. After doc- ll - a- tor8 and all remedies failed, Bucklen's Arnica Salve quickly arrested farther inflammation and cured him. It con I nnprs arsnes and kills naiu. 2oc. at all I 1 Druggists The Pullman Palace Car Company, the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis and the Louisville & Nashville jaiiroa(j are said to have joined in issu- in n or(jer prohibiting negroes from Lg tne same puilman sleeping cara anj from U8ing the same dining .c&ta witn wbite people in the State of of Tennessee . , heaAache try Chamberlain's M gtomach and Ltver Tablets; they will ward off the attack if taken in tune. For sale by M. L. Marsh - "A Charlotte man got on the wrong . j j side of the market and ruined -a good of business. 11 ne naa strucK n ngui ue be would have been a financier," remarks 1 1 The Lexington uispatcn bate better than average crop of cot -1 Concord, n. c, Noveaber 10, 1903. Mil T TIIR KLKCriQ MMKD. hrloiu t)tirTtr. We are unable to df tect any j. ?oal significance in the result of the fW tions of Tuesday, except to thret j-ar-ticulars hereafter menliooc4. Th chief it may be said the cmJ gecetal iatcf est, centred in thoe of the citjof X York and tb States ot MaryUuid and Ohio. Nev 1'ork City od f aryland w normal r Democratic and be Dem ocrats hare but returned to thrnr own. Ohio is naturally a Republican State, and when, as has occurred occasionally, it ges Democratic, it presents as gro tesque a figure as New York ity and Maryland do when they go Republican. In New York the prty spirit had the assistance of a quite generail disgust with the out-going administration. With sniveling professions of reform, it has permitted a scandalous degree of grafting and its expenses have Mich as to have amounted to $15 per year per capita population. It went in as a non-partisan, fusion affair, but Tam many has torn the mask from its face and revealed the Republican party, while exposing the falsity of its claims to a superior virtue. The on3y surprise .. .... . in the result is in the size of the ma- jority, which is greater thai! the con- fidential estimate of the Democratic leaders. beds of concrete built up to the level of Democrats everywhere may well re- tne c,r 8tepe. This concrete construc ioice over the victory in Maryland, and tion within the tube has a three-fold there is no occasion for them to have tearfl on account of the disaster in Ohio, since it rids national politics of a par ticularly pestiferous person. The elec tion in that State was a Repuinicun tri- 1 'A. I 4?4 .1 umpn, u is true, dui u was oiner ana more than that it was a pronounce- ment upon the socialism, the single tax theory and the other fads and isms of Mr. Tom Johnson, and in length and breadth the adverseness of the judge ment ia without precedent in Ohio. It ia a far cry from Vallandigham, Ewing, Thurman, Pendleton and Hurd to Tom Johnson, and the voters of the State which they honored and which honored them have registered their verdict upon the contrast with an energy which leaves no room for misunderstanding and no occasion for any thing additional -ISeait 01 last u Island, where the Democrats ejected their candidate for Governor and" lost all the other State officers and the Leg islature, was curiously duplicated Tues- day. Mr. Garvin ia clearly a man of great personal popularity and must have made a very excellent Governor, Nebraska, after a season of fusion, has returned to the Republican fold ap- parently for good, as its vote this year ia oracticallv a replica of that of last, x That Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Iowu should have voted Republican was a8 reasonable an expectation aa that Virginia and Mississippi would go Dem ocratic. The sum total of it all ia that Senator Gorman is kept to the front aa a presi dential probability and that Tuesday demonstrated that New York ia good fighting ground next year. Beyond these demonstrations we fail to see that the elections signify. Births. About G p m.,laat Friday night news spread over town that Hiram Butter- worth's wife had made . him a present of a 12-pound boy, whereupon about 20 of Bingville's representative citizens, who had assembled in Hen Weatherby's store, left the store in a body and re- paired to Hiram's house to congratu- late him. Everybody in BingviMe knows that Hi has the beat hard cider in the county. As they neared the house the boys began to Bingr but Doc Livermore opened the door very sud- umt ana saia : -onui up, you aern fools ! What be you making so much noiae for?" Then Lem Brown spoke up and says : "Ain't Hiram the father of a Impound boy?" "Not yet he ain't." savs Doc. "It ain't happened ' J 1 yet, and I want you fellers to clear out of here ?" Then the crowd went back to the! store diaappoiuted and began to bet whether it would be a boy or a girl. Considerable money changed hand. Up to the hour of going to press the new arrival haa not yet put in an ap. pearance. More particulars next week. WbT She Wanted Help. Louise Maud says Charley Banker son grabbed her and kissed her last night. Lillian What did she do? "Threatened to call for help." "Why? What for?" "Afraid she couldn't hold him alone, I presume." After January 1, 1904, no liquor can be sold legally in Charlotte between the hours of 8 p. m. and 6 a. m., the clos ing hour having been changed from 9 to 8 o'clock in the eveniag at the reg ular meeting of the board of sldermen last Monday night. Tift Tal t 4r rfc oit- Hi IVntuv'vatiii nd' tunue! ' undVr th rivr, to enl2 it U r h ! New York t ily, haa ( rxbatJy aura trd j more atUnUa then any fDf. opting f-tof rwat umn, and ihr di(-uetn if ftin gi4ng uu. Tie fact that a Urge part of the tin dtrxid would t under vitrr 4hw causes tome to nU-rlaio (rn a to its ultimate aafety. but 10 a tau-mrnt mad by the engiors of the rod tht idea is scouted. Here it what th-y have to say on the uhj-ct: "A tunnel under a river is every bit as safe as a laud tunnel. The tuta in which the trains will run will be lined with a ehell of concrete 18 inches thick I and the metal casing will be cat iron 1 inches thick somewhat thicker than that at the Hanger. That con' struction will stand any ehK k that cu come to it. As there are two tubes, each equipped with a single track ent tirely separate and iudejiendent of each other in their construction, there can, of course, be no collisions under the river. And no two trains Groin? in the "ame direction will be allowed in the tunnel at the same time The tunuel wil' be about a mile long, and it will i . . 1 . . WJte eacu irain two minutes to pass through "On both sides of the track will be purjiose. it will serve as a ddewalk all through the tube, which will pro vide a quick and safe exit ip case of emergency. Trpltold and Vrrmlti. Haitlmore Sun In a recent issue of Medicine is pre sented a paper by Dr. Rosa Kngelmann, who discusses the agency of cock roaches in spreading typhoid epidemics. Insects, it is declared, play a large part in the dissemination of disease. Kit asato and other Japanese scientists have found that fleas, bed bugs and flies are active factors in spreading the plague As the cockroach is omipresent, his role, as reapecta disease, if any, must be important. Miss Engelmann in 1902 made an investigation of a house epidemic of typhoid in Chicago. The dsea f f t 'in a high"KC,188 nobeff, "wnVre fmih'ycas'es'SSa burred: Near it was a like apartment house where no cases occurred. The cause I of the presence of the fever in the one house and not in the other waa simply, it ia urged, that the one was infested with cockroaches while the other waa not. The vermin had access to the water used in ordinary operations and contaminated it with germs obtained from some source Booker Wanhlnxton's Good Advice Protfresbhe Farmer. Booker Washsngton did not mince words in his Raleigh speech last Friday and the advice he gave the negroes, from start to finish, was thoroughly sound. Make yourselves good work men good farmers, good blacksmiths, good carpenters, good cooks, good ser vants. Insist on practical traiuing in your schools. Make money and save it. Ostracise the idle anjl the vicious of your race. Draw the line on im- moral negroes draw it in the church, in the school and in your own homes, Pay your taxes prompily and help aupport the government that protects you. Keep on good terms with your white neighbors instead of trying to court the favor of people a thousand miles away. Lphold the courts and aid the prosecution of criminals of all classes. This ia the gist of hia address, it is exactly the kind of doctrine the negroes need. stepped Against Hot stove A chlld of Mrs Geo T Benson, when getting his usual Saturday night bath, stepped back against a hot stove which bnrned him severely. The child was in great agony and his mother could do nothing to pacify him. Remembering that she had a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm in the house, she thooght she would try it. In less than half an hour after applying it the child was quiet and asleep, and in less than two weeks was well. Mrs. Benson is a well-known resi dent of Kellar, a. rain rialm is an anticeptic liniment and especially valua ble for burns, cuts., bruises and sprains For sale by M. L. Marsh. One of our esteemed contemporaries suggests that this is Judge Peebles' last term that the people will have a reckoning with him when he comes up for re-election. We apprehend that our contemporary is mistaken about this The people will have forgotten by that time. Charlotte Observer. TIade Toons A sain "One of Dr. King's New Life Pills j esch night for two weeks has pat me in my 'teens' again," writes D. H. Turner of Dempseytown, Pa. They're the best in the world for Liver, Stomach and Bowels. Purelv vegetable. Never gripe. Only 23c. all drug stores. III !. 1 r "I tar tut .t7ii- u ih 'n to ii-t ray dr unuiuain to p-i mmxl am day." d a Ut 14. r at turty ihta ro-bing 'Wri! what' In mater uom" it. juiml a friend, a l-ncdk i "Oh, -raj thing,'' the at- t tin-uey, "Ktrry few day it- fti- kw oidi along with a harrvwttigi Ury and wct my advtcv aUut jjrl- j ung a divorce. I hav- htUrifd to j many ot the aUirtta that I am actually afraid f ahoold tuakr a ruitak.r in fl ling marrn-d and finally cnr 10 want a drew of jraa5n mys If. "The limit in my rxrneiic a reached the fther day," O'titaiuol th attorney, "bn a fellow from rVnithJ Caroliba canie into the cilice atxun panied by a youug woman, aud aaid hewantetl a divorce from hia wife. He kucw he couldn't get adivorv-r in SHith Carxilina, but he waa willing U move across the line into Ganton or Mecklen burg, lie hapjK'ti lo be in Uwu tailh the young womau Le wiahed to marry after tx'ing divuced from his preaont wife, he said, and they thought they would go around and lonoult a lawyer in retard to tin ir irotfU'. " Krrp a irau .vioalb. A diMtinguinhed author anya resolved, when I waa child, never "1 U) use a word which I could not pro nounce before my mother." He kept his resolution, and became a pure nnuded, noble, bonorid geuttf-man. His rule and example 'are worthy of imitation. Hoys readiiy learn class of low, vul gar words and expressions, which are never heard in resectable ciiv.les. Of course we cannot think of girls as le ing so much exposed to this peril. We cannot imagine a decent girl using words she would not utter before her father or mother. ue of Folk .Tllllrr'a Morlr Polk Miller tells a story on a Rich mond Judge and if we are not mis taken JudgeChristian at his Hustings Court was hero. An old darkey was before him for stealing something and the following colloquy took place: The Judge: Are you guilty? , , nothin, at all. The Judge: Have you got any law- yer to defend you? The Negro: Naw, sun, I got no law yer at all. " The Judge: What do you projope to rdo then? The Negro: I jus' gwine th'ow mus- self on de ignunce of de Cote. For a Had ( old. If yon have a bad cold you ne! agod reliable nit-dicme like Chamberlain's Cough Remedy to loosen aud relieve it, aud fo allay the irritation and inflamma tion of the throat and lunirs. For sale by M. L. Marsh. Jml Wanted a Chance. 'Mister Jedge," called out the col ored witness1, after he had been on the witness stand a full hour, "Kin I eay ore word, sub ?" "Yes." replied the iudze "What! i it?" "Hit's des dis, suh- Kf you'll d s make de lawyers set down en keep still IWU UillXLi l.0) U 1111 IXJ. . 1M1U - llttViV y I'll whirl in en tell de truth '" Strain Affected Gen eral Health. Doctor's Doses Weak ened Stomach. Dr. Miles' Nerrlne Cured Me. Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine brine rest mod tweet aleep to the tired brain worn out witn tne caret and anxieties ot tne tick room. Read the following: I have always been healthy with the ei ception of a touch of rheumatism aince my age came on, up to the time of my huiband 1 lrst illness some years ago. 1 assisted in nursing my husband for nearly three months when he departed this lite and the mental strain I think caused my trouble. Aside from extreme nervousness my trouble com menced with tore throat and neuralgia. Mr physician gave me purgative doses which weakened me very much and my stonaach for a time seemed inactive. Mental straw and the dormant condition of my stomach soon told upon my general health. I had little appetite and was soon forced to stay in bed a greater part of the time. Within a week alter the time I began taking Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine and Tonic I waa up about the house. 1 continued their use until completely cured. My faith in Dr. Miles' Remedies baa been strengthened by experience of other people, our d aughter ha v - ing used Restorative Nervine with splendid results in a case of para'ysn and a friend to whom I sent a box of the Anti-Pain Piilt re ports that she has been completely cured of neuralgia by their use. I know of a number of others whom your medicine hat helped in a large degTee. 1 wish you continued tuccesa." Mas. faANCRS Coffman, Dayton, Va. All drug-gists sell and guarantee first bot tle Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send tor tree book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Mile Medical Co, Elkhart, lad, Number 19. Ashcraft's Eureka Liniment Thta LmtmerH wUl remove ip-ann. aplmt. ruijbooe. and all cart i!a vi nous growth, when applied in the ear lier atacet af the diM-attc. aixt will re licve the Umeoeas even in chronic cac. One of the mostcornmoo lame tva amrtni Knrutt and nulci anram of the hk I . 1 a I 1: icniun, ciujcu uy uvrr-ioauiag or hard dr king. A dicraft' Liniment is a ncver-f ailing remedy. The Liniment is aUo extensively uted for chronic rhcunti$m and (or all kinds of UfT joint. For teratchc" Ashcraft's Kurtka Liniment in with out an equal. A few applications is ail that is necessary to cure thia dis ease in it worst form. Owing to the wonderful anti- orra septic qualities, the Eureka Lini ment should lie used in the treat ment of all tumors and sores 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. lYice 50c. bottle. Sold by HUT. L. MABSH MOVED ! Next door to J. P. Allison & Co. I have moved my handsome stoj:k of Stcyes and Tinware and my up-to-date TIN RRHP? to the brick store room formerly ccu pied by Mr. Stoudemire, and when I am still tittering bargains wa a t in all my lines. 1 Have tttuicu a well selected stock of Furniture ! which will le sold lower than you ever bought lcforc. Come and see me, whether vou arc read)' to buy or not. Cbas. II, Shall. Low-Price Man. Thone 103. Cabarrus Savings Bank. Concord and Albemarle, I. C. CAPITAL, $50,000.00. Mar pin and nadlvldrd - mo (uvn nn r HeSOUTCeS UVer $dl)U,UUU. General Tlanklntt Ilualneaa Tracaartad. Ac- pourita of individual, Anna and corjormtkoa ollcliel. We cordially In vita Every Man, Woman and Child ho wiHtH's to "lay by aomrthrng for a rainy y," to open a Sarins. Account with na. jr cnt. In threat paid on aavlng depoatta nd time certlncatea OFFICERS. D. F CANNON. H. I. WdOOIJOt'iB. J'rildnt CaahJar MAKTIN lMiKIC. C W.HWINK, V !-I'realdenU TaUr. Mar. 1 t. a 3m. Manager Wanted. Truatwoithy lad r or antl-man to managa bunlneM in thl ootiniv and a llolnlna trr1- U'ry for a well and favorably known Houaa or aolld nnanciai vnnin aw nniin I cai.h salary aid eituwt, ald aacb Monday bv rbni dlrwt from haadquartara. Ki . wmx1 money advancea; i ; wtrnWitm pannancfit. BlO Monon .Building. Addreaii MANAGER. )' 1 ClilcAtro. Ill Wantfd-arrrral Pcraaaa of C harae- tvr and kx1 reputation In each rtata. (ona in ttila county rejuiri) w rrprraeu mu mn vertlaa old m hooor aolld fl entaollaliaa weaitny omiww nanclal atandlni. Haiarv azi weekly with expenaaa additional, au payable ea ti Wednesday from bead offlcaa. Horaa and cart-la furnlte1 when neceaaary. Uef erencna. IinoUMte elf-addread envalopa. Colon UU. XB Dearborn Bt , Chicago. 8ept-2-18t WASTED A truntwortby en tleman or lady In each county to manage hoalnaaa for an old eatablUbed houaa of aolld nnanciai Htandlnic A utralKht, bona flda weekly aalarr of flBJU paid by check aacb Monday with all expenw-a direct from headquarter Money advanced for expenaea. Enckiea addrad enrelorw. Manager, 8A0 tax ton BulMtng, C-hlcaKO. Oct H-iet WANTED FAITHFUL PERHON TO travel and auperviaa force of aaleapaopte and make coliectlona for manufacturing house. StraUrht salary $30 00 a week and -pencea. Balary paid weakly and azuanaa money advanced. Prevtoua axpenao unnac eanary. Local territory. Buainea. oocaaaf ui. Position permanent Enclose aeif-addreeaed envelope. Superintendent, iB4 Dearborn ft . Chicago. 111. PADKER'S HAIR BALSAM C--. JZZL-U Pf-. Mqjj:J21-aaaaa-a- mm
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 10, 1903, edition 1
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