Newspapers / The Standard (Concord, N.C.) / Aug. 17, 1888, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE STA1ID&BD. FlilDAY, ArorsT 17, 188S. I -- The Last, I-Ax,h, The hioott hung glorious in the sky, M heart to heart, and eye to eye, , Unheediog all the boui s llew by That last, last night. The Irees were brillantre 1 and cold, How passing cweet the story old Ah! never long and never old That last, last night, pledged each other to attain To Pisgnh he.'gh Is of heart and Iraiu, And each to each should trui remain, That last, last night. Your baud, electric to my own, Your lips, more precious than a tLrone, Ycre ruin, ab.jov! and mine aone, That last, last night. I wonder, if in years to be, "You will remember glade and tree, And w lipered vows of eonsiauoy, That last, last night. Sahah K. Bolton. ! The .South ImprovreiHhed. The nine cotton States, have rc- tcived since the war a vafc amount of money. The value of the cotton crop during the ten years eudiug in 1880 was three billions of dollars: end for the eight years just past it was equally asf much. During the past eighteen years the South has received from the outside world for cotton alone quite six billions of dollars. Where is all that immense sum of money a sum greater than fall the known silver and gold in the world? What has become of it? The South has received it, but we have none of it left. It has come and cone. None remains. Rut some . t vut4t" will Say it has made the outh pros the picture is different There evi dences of wealth abound; there great public buildings, fine residences, immense industries spring up as if ' by magic as if some fairy's wand had wrousrht an enchantment. The ; contrast is too strong for us to portray it without plainly discover ing our indignation. It is a cause of thame a biuning shame a terrible reproach. Consider the situation. The national banks of the Union have on deposit 1,1 73,000,000; lh nine cottou Slates which have pro duced from the soil fix billions of dollars in cotton have barely $40, J00,000 ou tUYxwi-fc- Tlu rei of tin Union has thirty times as much c urrency as the South. The two little States of Connecti cut and Rhode Island have on de- Dosifc as much na nil th i,J " . 7 , partv and voted for a bill repealing ! corrupting burdens of the surplus, ! "utl tU iU ; now appears is that well placed, in- prosperity t here is to be seen at'1, - , , , . . v ' . , ... , i it is not fifteen miles from tide-;. . , . . , , , , the 6ouh a trace of that vat tobacco tax and reducing taxes, j m the direction of letting people use ; wat the iut-TeinEg land beinjr! M1,Se,lt and C01ltented 1:lbor has umonnt of money Wx billions of the 1IlTblican leaders in his dis- their money as they want to. The fi kvel 6lore aiul exotpt for tLp; been and is systematically driven out , , . ,' trict demanded that he should re-' Republicans think to drown his prac- trees cxceedirclv casv to channel, i by the cheap labor which has been money and nothing lei t of it, and . ,. . . , ,, i.- : f t . , . .-n ' i i V ! A i , , . , . . . sign his nonunation for Congress. tical wisdom by aery oi "free trade. Aud, stranger still, the channels j thrown upon our wharres in tne nothing to SHOW for it. At the x ortil , ;if ti,nf uti ! l:1r('(.inrr.-.iwfftli11f,wlirf an.l bnvo been dusr for over 100 rears but t f..- nirttJ Tl, t cotton states pnt toptthtr. The ok part in the pursuit of state of Minnesota, in the far west f'e Confederates from Corinth, May has seven times as much currency in i 30 to Jl"! Z und 1,1 tIlc wSa& the banks as the State of North Car- !"c' at 15wntfSVllk Jt,1J 1, when lina. Here are illustrations from the northeast, the northwest audi t he South. The difference is appall ing. It makes us cry for shame and it tills us with indignation. Why is it? It is the northern system that gainds down the South. We have received isx billions of dollars and a paltry forty millions is all we have! wived! N otwitlistanding t he steady, protracted work of the South, not withstanding the fine results of our industry, we can amass nothing. It 3 cni.l 4lirv i;,i r. .. , i I 1 i. ) - -" .... j rw . i UlU Southern planters jxtor the answer comes thundering, wher; arv1 the riches which the merchants have amassed ? No, that h not it. The South is drained year afer year in paying tribute to the North. In the three items of the bonded debt, interest and pensions, the South ha3 paid $71,000,003 a year, amount ing in eighteen years to more than one bill iou dollars. Of this we iret nothing back. It goes to enrich the North. But this is only a part. We have paid another billion to the North through government taxation for other purposes. And that is not all yet. Aa heavy as the drain of i direct taxation has been, thed;rect Ju " hiie iUli,ll3y employed m suhsklvto thn VnHb il .v.Jreconiioiteriiig and protecting the protective features of the tariff tax lias tome with etill greater weight upon us. The tariff has burdened tis and crushed us down without anv compensation to us. We aie drained at every pore. It is the Northern system, under which the life ,Uh1 is sucked from the South as the vain- jrire drains the arteries of its victim. And this system is the boasted gV - tern which Oliver Dockerv s m.'ch commends, approves and lauJi to ' the sky. And the South continues to raise lier great orops and remain jn - rptft - "ally impoverished. Poverty is the! ------ - ; rule among us in strong contract -with the wealth accumulated in the other section. There is no currency at the Sontl There is no money in our banks; there i 3 no capital as the basis for diversified industries. It is work, -work, work ; and then our products are sold and the money flows North as the sparks fly upward nsver to "return. . The need of the Couth today is earnest statesmen, who will study her condition and present it to the! world in 6uch efcape as to secure tar dy justice for our people. No sec tion can be drained as the South is being drained and prosper. If the money which the South has paid to the North without consider ation had remained with us, flucti fyhig, doubling, rolling up interest, increasing prosperity, establishing new industries, paying wages to our people, what a tremendous differ ence w ould be observable in our con dition! Instead of a paltry $40, 000,000 in our banks, we would have amassed billions of dollars. Let southern statesmen realize these facts and think upon them. It is the duty of southerners to think of their homes and of their people. Dan Kusscll has said that he and Dockery and other Republi cans are southern men with northern principles. They are southern men who advocate measures that drain and impoverish our home people that others may thrive and roll In riches and luxury. All the present session of CungTcs the c ontest has bci-n let ween the Democrats and Reiublicans over these admirable measures. The Republicans insists 1.iinrA?x i toi cni n cr fh Tu nciniK Wo ,uv ? 8, 000,000 ,T I to me onueru touuers, anu iue Republicans insist, on pensioning the last one of the three millions of j soldiers, their wives and children This would entail still heavier lur den on as. Col. Dockery and the ! Republicans have insisted that the 1 , , , , , , , 1 taxes should not be decreased, but . that the money should continue to be j raised and paid to the bondholder?, j and squandi'red.When Mr. Rrower, ' the Republican member, from the T,;,wf 1,mb nMv fmm ,U 1 -- J " "i T hey are all in the same boat, What ! the South needs is a chanjre in the h.ws, and the Republicans oppose I the change. Raleigh .News and Ob- server. SWcuIi of Uml. Sheridan's Career General Philip Henry Sheridan was born March 6, 1831. He grad uated at West I'uiiit in 1853, served in TVxas in 1834-5, and on the IV ciiic coast until May 14, 1802, when he was made captain of the Thir teenth Infantry, chief quartermas ter and commissary of the Army of Southwestern Missouri, and subse quently quartermaster to Gen. Hal leck in t he Mississippi campaign of the spring of ISfri. On May 23th, 1S'J2, he was made colonel of the Second Michigan Volunteer Caval- he was made brigadier general of volunteers. In command of the eleventh division of the Army of j Ohio he led the advance into Ken tucky, and was in the battle of Per ry ville, October 8, aud in the subse quent march to the relief of Nash ville, Assigned to the Army of the Cumberland, his division was in the n;llll-l?ril . if Tjih nn.viji fi.s..,, " vember, 1802, to September, 18C3, taking active part to the fall of Murfreciboro, when he was made major general of volunteers. He captured a train and prisoners at Kaglesville in March; crossed the Cumberland mountaius andTeunes sae river in August ; took part in the battle of the Chickamauga Sep tember 111 and 20, and in the opera tions about Chattanooga, including the battle of Missionary Ridge, No veniln.T 23-23, ai;d was subsequently engaged in Kast Tennessee until March, 1801. FromApiil 4 until August 3, he Mas in command of the cavalry corps of the Army of the Potomac, and, with his 10,000 men, was actively employed in operations tin the Wilderness and between it anu ulclm,ona 111 May, June ami j ilaukof thearmy his corps made se-er-; al vigorous raids, cutting off railway j """'i' j stw u, stoivfl' Wil3 nio-"than twen- ' tiuies VI,Sagcd with the Confed- I c'rate cavalr.v ar-d s,) an impor- Prt iu the actions in and about Co!d-IIar,Jr- 0,1 August 1 he was j W-" to the command of the ; !Arm'of tIi0 Shenandoah, and on j ; tlii? Tth io lhat of th(; rnWha- j Cii ; 'liK'" 1W on j jia Oerjuan September If, for ! ,vhich he WilT3 matle a ljrindier gen- j 1 0l,'al Jho LTnitcd States urmy, at ; 1 ,Mm s uul '1'"'"'' Si, and at f ' 1 i ' l l 1 L'--,lai-I""k Ocio.r 10, Wiitiv U "vu ,l ,uulc a iJ"i"anr victo- l'h fo1' which he ; oca t-d the thunki ; f Congress. Oa November 8 he ' was made a ma ior general. From F: blT::ir.- '7 to Murr.l, ) A 1Q-, 1 , 1 " , xu.v., . was engaged m the raid from Win chester to Petersburg, during which he destroyed the James River and Kanawha canal, cut important rail way connections, destroyed military and commissary stores and had num erous skirmishes withjhe enemy. From march 25 to April 0 he was in the Richmond campaign. On April 1 he gained the battle of Fve Forks, which insured tho abandonment by the Confederates of Petersburg and Richmond, and he led in the pur suit of Lee and was present at his capitulation, April 9. He was ap pointed to the command of the X Southwest June 3, and of the mili tary division of the Gulf July 17; of the department of the Gulf Au gust 15, 1800; of the fifth Military district, including Louisiana and. Texas, March 11, 1867, and of the department of the Missouri Septem ber 12. On March 4, 18G9, he was made lieutenant general and assign ed to the command of the division of the Missouri, including the de partments of Dakota, of Missouri, of the Tlatte of Texas, with headquar ters at Chicago. During the politi cal disturbances in Louisiana he was stationed for a few weeks in New Orleans. Why He M ill Vote for Cleveland. Extract from a letter of Dr. Win. Everett, a distinguished ex-Republi- can of Massachusetts. The Democratic platform confines itself to calling for a single, and as I think necessary, reform; but the Ktr,Uica i aabsoMtely reac- iia,uu wmrm "i ing lor enormous protective unties, as being good in themselves, against j nil the theories of earlv protection-1 i. u I i$ts, all experience or recent nations, , all ririn voices of the people; so temined that it will not be advised , i i i if a by Lug and, that it plants itself hrm-; ly m a line with Spain. The Dem- ocratic party here, at le;t, if in no other point, comes strongly up to the appeal of President Cleveland to re- lease the countrv from some of the I - reduction of a number of oppressive iliitit'j!- is no innvi1 fivo trsi1f- tlmn t)ir remodelling of the House of Lords j would be anarchy, or than making marrn-!,re a civil contract would be ! tree love. But if the Republicans want to turn tariff reform into free trade, the surest way to effect that process in a very few rears is bv re sisting it in the interests of theoretic protection as an ideal policy and ad- voerating the preposterous removal of the whiskey tax in preference to any part of the tariif. President Cleveland, as it seems to me, has equally blown the reform trumpet with no uncertain sound by the mag nilicent courage of his pension ve toes, whereby lie has rightly rebuk ed all self-seeking politicians of whatever name, who are doing their best, as our late war passes into his tory, to have it leave no footsteps of heroic sacrifice, but only of raids on the public purse ; I believe I would vote for his reelection for that brave and wise action alone. Nor am I afraid to say that I vote for him as a magistrate who has advanced and strengthened the cause of civil se-r-! vice reform, lie has done 1, than , , . , . , . I,. i he hoped lie might. But what rea- son have we to think that General Harrison, if elected, would do any more ? That he would do so much!' If he be elected, and if he did not make a dean sweep of all Democrat- ic -office holders before the Fourth of July, 1889, it would be because Mr. Cleveland's action in sustaining and enlarging the operation of the law has made the old profligacy of the i spoilsmen impossible in the future. And if the Mugwumps have been mistaken in their prophecies of the ruin of the spoils system, what is their error beside that of the Repub lic ans, who confidently prophesied that Mr. Cleveland's election would sound the death knell of all prosper ity and domestic happiness? A Ltd Killed Ity A Knnke. While two boys, Jackson Moore and John Harvey, aged about 17 years, were hunting squirrels acioss the river from Memphis5in Arkansas, iuey uiscovereu a large rattlesnake i coiled upon a rock, apparently asleen. Moore said he m-ohM capture the s::oke alive. lie crept up to the rat- tier and by a quick moument caught finrdy below the head and held it at arm's lengthen triumph. Suddenly the snake coiled 'itself around the boy's arm. He became frightened and attempted to throw it oft', when the reptile struck him in the neck. The unfortunate victim screamed with horror and Lraspin- the snake with both hands tore it loose and i thins it to the ground. He then fell ' to the earth in a swoon while his terrified friend fled for assistance The nearest houce was two miles " ' - 11 i u lllllvD distant, and w hen help arrived the ! por ivx wa3 ?ll.t beSj agon v. The 'snake was dose bv, and w ieli killed measured if on r ieet nine inches and iuvi eiji- . . ratn rattles Thehigh protectionist should have his attention directed to China, whose people have been laboring under a prohibitory taiiff several hundred years, and yet whose com mon laborers recieved but 20 cents a day and whose skilled mechanics get but ?0cM. Kews and Observer. THE DISMAL SWAMP In Eastern Worth Carolina and irlnia. The region of the Dismal Swamp, says J. Boyl O'Reilly in the Boston Herat, was intended by nature to be a pleasure ground, a health resort and a game preserve for tho eastern side of the continent. In spite of all that has been done and left undone to destroy it, the swamp itself is probably the healthiest spot in America. Its delicious juniper water prevents malaria more effec tively than the famed escalyptns of Australia. The flying game of the continent center in this region and the lake in winter is the best shootii-g ground in the countiy. Now that wealth clubs and individ uals are buying up the coast shoot ing, this incomparable natural pre serve ought to be svcuieu for the nation or the State. Its original undoing was probably some accident or cataclysm of na ture, cl anging a watercourse or opening a crater-like spring or num ber of springs. Rut the remedy from the first was as easy and open to intelligence as the tapping of a vtiu to prevent plethora. The like, it is probable, wa the centre and the cause of the swamp, and is pr; ved by the streams flowing out instead of into it. Its overflowing waters, when swelled by rains or ening the densely wooded shot e. Iu ti,;s way hag been brought the singular conditious of the lake,! which, instead of being the lowest,; - . iui:.t, eur.,nf(unii is the high-st poition of the JJisniai ; de-lamp .It could be pierced and, I at ? and reduceu to i natural and brilliant proportions, q tbe j 6Urrounding land, could be guided j ; jn io.ooo sparkling channels-to'emicb i and adorn its wonderful "enrivon- j ment. The lake of the Dismal Swamp is, by survey, about twenty ii ii.:.!,..ii ii.. i uiey are jocsea up at ue outer euus : . i ..I , ' with wooden gates. ! & q IiSuial 8 marvelous fact: waain. three i miles by two aud a halt ni extert, j and from seven to fifteen feet in j pretences under which poor people depth, is situated on the side and j are seduced across the sea from pov almost on top of a bill, aud yet it crtv at home to vaunerisni heiv:of ! creates by overflow all around it for i iiii4 ii trade with China, and morailv as densest and daikest morasses on the! ' surface of the earth. In I7f3 George I l,ad as the oM slave triule Wlth Af ri- Washinston surveyed the Dismal I1'11- II is 11 painful story, full of the Swamp and discover! that the j deepest enterests, especially concern- western side wns much higher than the eastern, and that riveis ran out of the twamp and not into it. He then wrcte that tho swamp was "neithf r a plain uor a hollow, but a hillside." A member of the Nation al Geological Survey entered the Dismal Swamp, proceeding west wrd from the Dismal Swamp, came towards the lake ard found that the rise in the land was 5i feet in seven miles. We met this gentleman, Mr. Atkinson, withii. the bounds of the swamp, and on h earing hi? statement asked him. "Could the lake be low- eredandthe Kwamp draird with a m"-"S P'e oi tne Urom such an incline?" "Certainly, - he wel1 !?SG0, an Oxford crown said. "Itisaveiy decided water shed. An opening from thelako to Uie uae ou Uie lvt'r oil ;!1C on,e side the other, would have a fall of 22 L10 feet in a distanco of ,3 tLau j fifteen mile?." j j Xof "'' j There is hardly any occasion for j controversy between the Kinston i 1'ree Press and The Landmark upon 1 the relation of the Third party j movement; but the haste which our j contemporary makes to explain the difference between them, indicate that it has caught our idea exactly and is a trifle sensitive about the matter. We grant that few of those who have taken part in the prohibi tion movement in its various forms in this State had any idea of the fpiestion ever coming in to upset po litical calculations; and that is where the majority have been short sighted. Certainly "there is a vast difference between supporting prohi bition as a moral issue aud support ing a prohibition party;" but the Free Press need not be surprised to I j learn, as it is now learning, that - there are hundreds of leather-headed people who cannot see it ; people who, lji pionioiuou in uie spring, feel that, in order to be perfectly consistent, they must vote for prohi bition candidates in the fall. We repeat, it is amusing to see how this class is now being labored with by their allies of the three months ago. The Landmark can bear no other re lation to this good work than that of an interested spectator, not being in a Psltl-to exercise any influence OTer the waJ wal"d brethren who are carr.vhlS tlie jok'- too far. It wishes its fricnd3 of the Free Press and all otherot lts tnena who are- in the sanw lmt the utin succe. ss m con- and dk-d in p"lti"S LUO!e tn wnom tn-.y start -founi cailed ! e tnut tlie-7 have 01ie ar enough ; ..: ii . i -i ,i but if defeat conies to the D.'inoorat ic party through this Third party nonsense, and the election of Dock ery is all that any Third party man, who has any sense at all, can hope to accomplish, then The Landmark can at least have the consolation of being able to stand up before the bar of public opinion and plead "not guil ty." Statesville Landmark, Two Women Arraisned tor Harder. In the Criminal Court Tuesday, two colored women were arranged before Judge Mears on presentments by the graud jury, charging them with murder. Jane Morrison, the woman who, in January 1887, killed her husband with a skillet, stood np before the Judge, and and Tuesday next was the day set for her trial to take place. Ann Wallace, who cut the throat of Millie Robinson, will be tried next Friday. Charlotte Chronicle. Financial Acumen. A young man who has a deposit in a down-town savings bank, called and asked to withdraw a single dollar of his hard-earned cash. "We don't bother with nothing less than five dollars. If you want the five dollars, you can have it, but nothing less." "But it is printed on the pass book t hat sums of one dollar aud up ward will be received on depoist." "Yes; but that's a different thing You can deposit less then five dollars.' The Young man was thonghtfui for a moment, and then he said: "Well, let me have five dollars iu one dollar bills." The money w as gracefully flipped out to him. He put one of the bills into his pocket, and handed the remaining four back, with the remark that he wish- 1 1 he tank man was inclined to be . ed into a snule, he said tlu-yd have to amend the rules, ew ork IItral sa3'g: " Ue investigations of the committee of Congress into the immigration ques- tiou yesterday developed aline of ivm.fnilv interej.tin.rPVidon. Wbnf 1 - c iminisration is known. We had heard of the brokers who buy laborers as they would cattle; of ' usurious nnerest ; ot the false a svsteni as watched as the coolie 1 1 '7 ing women who work for wages. The committee reserves credit for its thorough, bold methods, and we feel sure from the inquiry good must come." A silver crown piece, known as the petition crown of the reign of Charles II., fetched $1,775 at a re cent sale iu England. At the latest previous sale a similar coin had hromMit onlr y'l.liW A f x- i-T,T ,. , - , ',f.dw?.X 1 ?mie b.roUf ht S sovereign BC85. A penny of Ethelbald brought $230, and other old pennies sOO and $80 each. A Wm Par, Containing more reading Witter Hum any paper ever puhUshed in CoJICOril Dyed-in-the-wool Demo cratic. Just lol Local lews! 1.25 a hi Job Work A SPECIALTY. Address " THE STAND ARD, Concord, JV. C, T STANDARD Only i' NORTH CAROLINA ... COLLEGE. Nxt srssion begins, tie first Von day of September. Location healthy. Terms' Moderate. " For catalouguo cr paiticulars, ad dress, Rev. J. G. SCn AID, Prcs't, . Mt. Pieasant, N. C. August 3, 188S, d C Aft f or any part to b an. on ipU)JJJi YeH pptate in Cabar rus county. W. M. SMITH. Mortgage Sale of Town Lot. By auth'Mity of r.iortgage-deed, ex ecuted to me by Wilscn Icaid and his lifp. Marv Jane, ou the 3rd day of November, and worded in the ftice of the Register of Deeds for Cabarrus ccurly, in book 37, page 394 1 will sell, by puol c auciiou, tor cash. t the court house door in Con- cord. N. C. on Monday the 3rd day of September, '83, at 12 m, one fine lot in Coletmr?, near Concord, on lonru ament Place hireet, fifty feet front, v. ith pod dwelling ete., being the same described in and conveyed, to me, by said inurt gage-deed. ASA BOST, Trustee. S. C, July. 2G, '83. Aug 3 8S Revenue Notice ! The following prcx-rty to wit : One wagon, o e giey hor-e, about 56 gallons t corn viii-kcy, one box of cooking uteusils &c , havipja; been seized for violation of the Internal LU venue Law, the owners thereof will ap car lefoie me wi'hiu 30 days from fir:t apj earauce of this notice, accord ing io tbe provisions of ireclion 3460 t evked Statutes, and mnke claim there to, or the s:nie will be forteited ta the use i the United States. Keke t eaige. Collector 5th. N. C. P.i Geo. W. Meas, Deputy at Large. July I3;h, Concord Fsmak Academy, The next ses.sion of this Institu-1 tiou opens Monday, An?. l?th., ! 1888. Having secured the services of competent teachers, the Princi pals, oU'er to the community the advantages of a first class school, and ask n continuance of the same patrorRirc so liberally given in the past. Tuition in Literary Depart ments $1.50 to $3.50. Music S3.00 to 51.0'J. For further information ap ply to Misses Bessext. & Fetzer Principals. In order t: close out my stock of Hats. Bonnet?, Ribbons. Flowers. &c, I will ofter great inducements to purchasers until the same is dis posed of. Call and see me. I mean just what I sa3'. Mks. J. M. CRSS. COTTON WEIGHER. I respectfully announce myself a candidate for the office of cottou weigher, subject to the action of the convention. R. S. HARRIS. August 3, '83. School Notice ! Miss Anna Ne;d assisted by Mrs. Virginia Erwiu anl Lucy . Richmond, will open a school in the I'aniel Fi.-hcr building, on Main Street, in Concord, on the J3ih dry of Augu-r, 1HS3, session to continue tweenty weeks Every Sort will be made t make it a first clats school m evi ry respect Modern school furniture will be pro vided including good i;mo Music LatiD, French and the higher branches of mathematics will be taught to those desiring it hi addition to the ordinary English binnches. For rate of Tuition, &c, apply-to Mrs Virginia Erwiii or .lis ltichiiioiid n the absence of M.ss Ncal. University of NORTH CAROLINA. Oil Al'EL HILL, N.C. ( Ihe next cession beg ns August 3d. Tuition rt-duced to 3 a ka'lf j-ear. Poor studentn may give u tes. Faculty of fifteen teavliers. 1 hree full courses of study leading to degrees. 1 hree short courses for the training of bus t eas men, teachers, physdeians and harmacits Law schitoi' fully acjuio oed. Write for catxlogue to Ilox KEMP l UAI TLE, -.'i . i" i'i"sideiit. The Weekly News-Observer. H;e Weekly News and 0.erver s n long ways the bet pa;er ev r pa1 -ii-hid in North Carolina..- I1 is a (rd it to the. people and to tlie St.-de. 'J !n peojle should take a pride i i it. It should be iu every family 1; i an eight -aje japer, chock fu'l of t!;e he t sort ot reading inatter, news, tuark i ret orts, and a!l that. You c-i'. ii' t al t..rd tf be without it. I'rice ' 1 -") t ear, w t wid furnish t!i6 Weik'y. N'ws and Oisi'vei TMt.l January Is', 1830, for it. Se..d for s.'.;n;decopy. ! Adds. i News and Observes! 'o , i l'aleigli. N .('. ! CHAMPION fltx ) tfi 11U ) ( I still keep on hand a stock of Champion Mower Repairs. My old customers will find uie at the c d stand, Allison.' corner. . ;nl tf ," C. R. WHITE. GREAT S! L 1 11 gT QT'PTT-Nrf- CANNONS WE HAVE DECIDED NOT TO SEASON TO PUT PEICES IDO"W3r3 BUT HAVE PUT THE KNIFE IN RIGHT AT THE START How Catch On. WE HAVE A CLOTHING, HATS AND SHOES, AND THEY MUST GO! AVE OFFER : A BLUE FLANNEL SUIT, men's A GOOD TTNIOX CASSTMF.RF. A GOOD WORSTED SUIT, men's size, at 5 00 A GOOD UNION CHEVIOT SUIT, men's size, at 6 00 A GOOD UNION CASSIMERE SUIT, men's size, at . . . 4 00 A GOOD TWEED SUIT, men's size, at 4 50 A GOOD ALL-WOOL CHEVIOT SUIT, men's size, at 8 f-0 A FINE ALL-WOOL CASSIMERE SUIT, men's size, at 10 CO A FINE ALL-W OOL WORSTED SUIT, men's size, at 12 50 JK2-AN ENDLESS VARIETY OF PANTS at 75c. 81, 81.23 and fmf: AU -f LIGHT SUMMER IHITS, Boys,' Men's Men's Men's Men's Men's Men's Men's Men's Men's Men's Malaga Malaga Malaga, extra wide Mackinaw Sundav- Hat 1 .... . Vnite Canton Sunday Hat White Canton Sunday Hat "White Canton Sunday Hat Drab and Calf Canton Fine Manilla, six different style?, all good urown iuanma Brown Manilla JCSf ALL OTHERS Ladies Gents', Misses Children's Shoes, AT PRICES TO PLEASE THE MILLIONS IF YOU DON'T CxVTCn ON, COME AND SEE US, AND THEN YOU WrLL. DON'T SAY NO! 33TXT T-KZE IT I35T. CANNONS & FETZEli . No. 3903. TREASURY DEPARTMENT, OFFICE OF COMPTROLLER Or THE COH3ENCY, Washixgtoj.-, June 26, 1888. Wliereas, by satisfactory evidence to the undefsurned.it has been mnde to appear that "The Concord Na tional Bank," in the town of Con cord, in the county of Cabarrus and State of North Carolina, has com plied with all the provisions of the Statutes of the United States re quired tote complied with before an association shall be authorized to commence the busines cf bfinkinsr : Now therefore I, Jessj D. Abra-L-iu3,Deputy and acting comr troller of the Cmrency, do hereby certify that "The Concert National Ban,' in the town of Concord, in the county of Cabarrus and Stae of North Carolina, is authorized to commence the busiuess of banking a3 providi.d in section fiftv one hundred and sixty-nine oi tlie Revised Statutes of the United States. In testijiioijy whereof witness my rand and rA of ofiie this 'ioth tihy of June, J. D. ERAIIAMS, Di'iuty and Acting Comptroller of the Currtiiy. jy 20 ii rv. EERIESS DYES Bo Tour Own Iyclns, at Ilome. Th y will dye everything. They i. resold every where. Price I Oo. a imeita e. Tiiey have tioeqml for Strengih, Bnghtneu, Amount in Pnckascs or for Fattntss of Color, or no:i-fa"in Qualities. They do not crock or smut; 40eo'.ou. Tonaleby For sale at 12 FETZER'S DRUG STORE, and D. D. JOHNSON'S DRUG STORE. A new andprettlot just received, which will be sold cheap. 2Igs, J. M. CEOSS, LADiiS P uiuuu LI11U nut A..TTO HATS AT- & FETZER'! WAIT UNTIL THE END OF THE :o:- BIG STOCK OF size, at... KTTTT. mon'a siw 'ii' ' r nn . .8 5 00 worth 8 8 00 9 00 8 5 8 00 7 0O fi 50 11 00 12 50 15 00 ZEE A T S - lOcent 15 " 20 " 50 worth 40 50 05 65 SI 50 1 00 1 00 2 00 1 75 JJ 50 1 25 ............ 1 00 IN PROPORTION., F, j We are now prepared to make yCu tpecial prices, spot cash, on : DRY GOODS, I10TI0II$, &C as well as other lit:es of our goods reparatory to maki.ig Special Prices in our entire lit? e of merchandise j We romisr-d you wsnie timesince to I make this reduction in case you gav j ns your traie, and we are ghsd to thus I puUicly state thnt your increased rat- rmiftoe citnppls us to make goodour j prom'sc, so study vo ir interest by ex. I amiiiing our bargains. 'Jo our City Trade we thinik you for your support, ard you will find with us a general hue of COUNTRY PRODUCE country flour, country bacon an(l choice fresh t-utter on ice. Thaokfu ly, 2G 4t BELL & SIMS, Agt's. KEEP COOL! A large lot of square palm leaf fans at the Millinery Store. Mbs. J. M. CKOSS. m an d Patron i lie 1 ' T CO
The Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 17, 1888, edition 1
4
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