Newspapers / The Standard (Concord, N.C.) / Aug. 31, 1888, edition 1 / Page 3
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The suiidard. Krip.vy, AuarsT 31, 1888. ' ViTlON AI. TIKET. For President Grover Cleveland, For Vice-Fresidust Allpi il ix. iiiumiciii. STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET. Fon Governor: DAXIELG.FOWLE. Fau Lievtexast-CiOVErxor : TILOMASM,. HOLT. For Secretary of State WILLIAM L. SUN HERS, of Orange County. For State Treasurer: DONALD W. BAIN, of "Wake County. For State Auditor: pEORGE Y. SANDERLIN, of Wayne County. For Supt. of Public Instruction: SIDNEY M. FINGER, of Catawba County. For Attorney-General: THEODORE F. DAVIDSON, of Buncombe County. Associate Justices "Supreme Court: JOSEFII J. DAVIS, of Franklin County. JAMES E. SHEPHERD, of Washington County. 4LPHONSO C. AVERY, of Burke County. For Presidential Electors at Large. ALFRED M. WAD DELL, of New Hanover County. i REDERICK N. STRUDWICK, of Orange County. XOTIE! Hereafter all 'payments to The Standard for subscriptions or ad vertising must be paid to J. M. Cross, managing editor. If paid other-vise no account will be taken of the payment unless acknowledg ed bv him. IARMERS A XT FAIR. Our farmers are the hardest working people in the country. They get up earlier and work later than any other class of people. There is no ten hour system about it. They don't even get out of a job and have a rest. Rainy weather don't force them to knock off. This year it seems as if they had stuck closer than ever to duty and toil, with an intent to increase their crop product. Everything to them seems favorable, and it looks as if their every wish would be real ized. Mother earth is returning to them full value for their diligence. The work of gathering and garner ing the product of their spring and summer labor has commenced in earnest, and for a while their exer tions will 1 e redoubled, and we hope e.ich one will have cause for thanks to Him who sends the rain, both in and out of season. There is an old adage that "aM work "and no play niakes Jack a dull boy," and it will hold good as to our farming class. Every one of them needs a little recreation, and there is no better way than the modern plan of holding fairs and having a geneial coming together, with exhibits of their products in friendly competition. ' Cabarrus county has been foremost j;i our IState, in upholding these' Fair As sociations, under the management of t he G range. ' Year after year, the have met, and every one ha3 profited by the meetings," so much so that these fairs have come now to be looked upon as a iiecesity. They have brought about a friendly com petition in the exhibit of the best wheat, the best corn, the finest cows, the fastest horses, the fattest hogs and the best display of fruits, flow ers, vegetables, and "sich. like," so that now our county is second to iione in the State as a farming coun ty, and our two Associations, with the encouragement heretofore given, kave found it necessary to consoli date and make it a county institu tion for the farmers. For this pur pose, the Fair grounds have been en larged on their removal to Concord as a central point. No expense has been spared to make these grounds equal to any in the State. The yearly admission fee has been put in l each of all, and the coming fair promises to far excel anything of the kind Cabarrus has ever had. The farmer's are expecting a big time, and we hope every Granger, every Allia 'iceman and every farmer that has nut heretofore taker, an interest in our yearly exhibits, will gire th:s no their full support. The farmers are tlio biggest people in this coun ty, and we want them to "blow their own horn," l,y showing what they 'do. OCR INSTITUTE OF 81K. Each week our State exchanges teem with accounts of murder,' in cendiaryism, rape, and lawlessness in all its forms. Nine -tenths nf Vq guilty parties belonir to our colored race. In this charge we regret that the good people of that race have to bear the stigma as well as the bad. We have many of them among us who see this evil and deplore it. They are hard workiug, honest citi zens and would have the law enforc ed to the very letter. rv.,i.. - e .... t iv a lew u;iys ago one or our colored mechanics openly avowed his opposition to the penitentiary 'sys tem as a system that was working ruin to his race, stating that these law breakers ought to have the ben efit of an old time whipping post or made to work our public roads. This colored citizen, who works ev ery day is right iu his assertions. Our penitentiary is just a hot bed of educational rascality. The more youthful convicts are taught by the more advanced, a bolder, higher grade of .lawlessness, and come back to us ready for any act in crim?. Let us if pqsisible as white men, aid our good colored friends in devising some way or means in making lawlessness so obnoxious by severe home' punishment' thaV the very worst element will refrain from transgression. And we trust these good colored friends will aid us in keeping North Carolina in the hands of those who have enacted laws that bring to light these many crimes. The penitentiary is a standing mon ument of Radical tomfoolery, and ought to be done awuy with. THE PRIMARIES. To-morrow the Femocratic pri mary conventions of each township is called to meet. We have so very often urged the importance of a full attendance at these meetings that this may seem but a repetition to our readers. Cabarrus county is by a large ma jority purely Democratic. Some times, in an off year, she goes off at ;i tangent, and elects an independent, but the independent has always been i Democrat : The result of this in dependent success can be traced every time to a non attendance at the Primaries. This is not an off year, and we cannot afford to run any risks of de feat by a defection from Democratic rauks. The success of both the National rnJ Staje tickets depend on a full organization and a deter mined support of the whole ticket. Defeat means an endorsement of High Protective tariff in National politics, and a continuation of the preseut war tax. In State affairs it means a return to that radical rule that formerly was a stench iu the nostrils of every true 'North' Caro- litua.n By a full turn out at the Prima ries to-morrow and a plain expres sion of views and preferences, by everv Democratic voter, the choice of the people will be known, and there will be no hope or chance for Republican success, even with an Independent Democrat for their candidate. e ask every one to so to their township convention to-mor row.' 1 One of Concord's citizens asked another on Tuesday, "How are vou on the Fisheries question?" he got the reply "Well, I've such darned bad luck fishin' I've abandoned it altogether." so with President Cle-eland. and had that Not He the has thrown another bomb hm Republican camp in his message on the Fisheries question. He ' never fails to show his statesmanship and in addition, his good common sense. But, then, 'g.Qpd common sense makes a statesman just as it does anything else. ' One of our best State Dailies, the Charlotte Chronicle, has changed hands. ' We regret to loose Mr. Heniby as one of our daily visiting editors.' May h vocation here after be pleasant and his pecunary success all that he desires. ' To his successor, Mr. G. W. Chalk, whom we have known for many years, we tender the wish for a' brilliant edit orial life. May the Chronicle under his management be a perfect suc cess. - The Third party seems to be on its last legs here. The 'ruth of the matter is, we can't hear anything about it. Wake up boys! Give us something to say. Don't let Mr. Walker nurse the poor little fledgel ing alone. Oh, we forgot Demo crats can't live on Republican pap. CAU0IIT. The paijfcies who wrecked the pas aenger train on the Charlotte, Col umbia and Augusta road'on Sunday afctrno'en, August 5th, have been caught aid are now in jail at York "vilJe. There are three in the crowd and all are colored. Tho passengers who brought the news gave the names as Tony Hutchison,' Bob Sprinea'and Eli White. Ci arlotte Chronicle! " ' ' '",' The' Finger of DaMay. To this, the Landmark's editorial of August 23, we give space will ingly. It tells it all. Read it and be convinced : "We read in the Judges that "the stars in their courses fought against Sisera," and it looks as if the Re publican party of to-day were shar ing his fortune. It is helping them work by rushing blindly upon its fate, but apart from the retribution which is following upon the heels of its own folly, it does really appear as if the very hand of Ih evidence werQ against it. In tho last moment of its last presidentjal campaign wlnle the issue trembled iu the bal ance, the alliterative Burphard came along with his "Rum, Romanism and Rebellion," and tipped the scales in Cleveland's favor. Eight months ago the President sent to Congress that wonderful message, in which he discussed but one single question : the questipn of taxation. He told Congress of the burdens under whjp,! the people were laboring, and pointing to the money accumulating in the treasury, withdrawn ' from circulation and causing a stringency which threatened panic, sail to his ussuciaies iu me government, i is a condition, not "a theory, that confronts us' and took advanced ground in favor of a reduction of taxation. The increasing revenues of the government, the lack of proper objects upon which to spend them, the unnecessary burdening of the people by taxation, were condi Hons which had presented , them selves to the Republican party. In its platform of 1884 it had admitted the necessity for reducing the tariff. Garfield and Arthur, its two last Presidents, had each in messages to Congress advised that the tariff be modified. But the party in 1888, notwithstanding the surplus in the treasury; notwithstanding its own platform declarations and the de liverances of its last Presidents ; imbued with the idea that it must oppose whatever 'Pret-jdeiii Cleve land advocated ; run mad at the last moment by the news from the Oregon election which showed a Republican gain and was construed as a rebuke of the President's tariff policy, repudiated and spat upon its platform of four years ago, kicked the advice of Garfield and Arthur behind it, and laid down as its policy the idea of protection for protection's own sake, without reference to the needs of "the government or the cor dition of the treasury. It was a masterpiece of folly j The President's message had opened j Northern as well as Southern eyes. The importance of eariy action up on its suggestion began to be gen erally recegni zed as the volume of currency in the hands of the people grew less and Jess and the surplus in the treasury greater and greater. As a consequence of the difference in the positions assumed by the two parties of this .vital issue the one demanding that no more taxes should be collected from the people than are needed to pay the expenses of the government, the other hold ing that the tribute must continue to be levied, whether the money was needed or not, in order that "our infant industries might be pro tected" there'began to be a great flocking of men heretofore Republi cans to the Democratic standard on which is inscribed Freer Trade and Reduced Taxation. The wiser of the Republican statesmen have seen the error of their platform declaration. John Sherman has declared that there must be some legislation for the breaking up of the many "trusts" which have lately grown up under the present tariff system. Other leading Republicans have admitted thi't f lie tariff needs revision; and the Senate ha3 so far admitted' it', and so far repudiated the party platform, that thje Republican mem bers' of its finance committee are even now formulating a tariff bill to stay, if possible, the' "rising tide' of public disfavor, and at the same time save the'protectiye features of the present tariff. But at this juncture appears the Burchard of the Republican party, this time in the person of MK Blaine. He had iust gotten home from Europe and been received witji kingly honors. Jle is the recog nized head of his parjty. He plants himself squarely upon his 'party platform, and, going a bow-shot further than any man in this coun try, of any party, has dared to go in defence of monopoly, in defence of the aeerecations of capital which are crushing the life out of the peo pie, said in a speech at Portland, Me., last Thursday : "Well, I shall not discuss trusts this afternoon. I shall not venture to say that they are altogether ad yantageous or disadvantageous. They are largely private affairs with which neither President uieveiang nor any private citizen has any par ticular, right to interfere. "What is a "trust ?'? It is a com binatiou between the manufacturers of a certain article, by which all bind themselves to be governed by a certain policy to be agreed upqn, each putting up money which shall be forfeited if he violates the agree ment. What is the work of a "trust?" We let the able and conservative Baltimore sun answer this question : To restrict production it closes mills and factories, throwing thou sands of workingmen out of employ ment, and in putting up prices through the artificial scarcity it has brought about, it plunders the entire public, not excepting the workmen it has just discharged. "It plunders the entire public." That is what a trust is for. Have yon observed that sugar juts Intel v advanced in price ? It is because XI- - . , - j. i me sugar renners nave iormeu a "trust." Have farmers heard that cotton bagging will be higher this faJ'than it has been for years ? Two manufacturers have formed a "trust" lias the merchant observed tnat when he orders; envelopes from the job printer now, tle price on the bill is 35 per cent, higher than it was six months ago ? The manufacturers of envelopes have formed a "trust" and advance the price 35 per cent, o "in the case of hundreds of articles. The manu facturers comhjrie,; they stop pro duction; they put up prices. The people squeal but J:he manufacturers have them by the throat. President Cleveland says these "trusts" should be broken up. Mr. Blain "will not venture to say that they are alto gether advantageous or disadvanta geous." They are largely private af fairs. What a monstrous expression! They are bleeding the people at ev ery pore and those who compos them are rolling in their ill gotten wealth, yet the leader of the Repub lican party wilj "not venture to say that they are altogether advantage ons or uisaavantasrequs. ihey are largely private affairs with which neither President nor any private citizen has any particular right to interfere." "Rum, Romanism c.nd Rebellion." The'people of thi 'country will tell Mr. Blaine at the polls in No vember whether or not they have any particular right to interfere. They will tell him by voting to put in full control of the government the party which will, by reducing the tariff, admit freer foreign com petition, which will destroy many of these "trusts." The tariff is not responsible for all of them but it fosters the most of them. The American manufacturers can com bine among themselves against the people but they cannot combine with all the manufacturers of all the; world, and whenever the tariff is re duced to' a rational basis upon the articles now snbject jo the "trusts" and upon which it is so high as to practically exclude foreign compe tition, then will the trusts go to pieces and the people can supply their needs at the prices which the articles are worth on the markets of the world. The Senate need no longer hope to hoodwink the people w ith its tariff bill. John Sherman need not again denounce the "trusts." Senator Allison and Judge Gresham need not any longer concede that revision of the "tariffs' imperative, and prom ise that the Republican party will revise it. Their party by its Chica go platform and by its united oppo sition to the Mills bill in the 16vver house of don'gis is rushing blindly on its fate And besides, its leader, its Buchard, has spoken. 'The stars in their courses fought against Sisera." Slave to the Qnlnine Habit' . A tall fine looking woman, dressed in the latest fashion, entered an up town drug store the other evening, and approaching the counter, leaned wearily against it. The clerk, who was Raiting on another customer, reached to the shelf, and taking down a little box shook three pills . Ml' I "S' into a bit of paper. He passed them to the fashionable jady and gave her a glass of mineral water. After put ting the pijls p bar mouthUhe lady drank the water, and with a sigh of relief hurri ed from the shop. "Not a word passed between either custo mer or clerk, acd no money ws paid r 11 -ll- -:( ior tue puis. "Well, that beats me," exclaimed a visitor. fit is rather singular,', said the clerk, smiling, "but such thing's hannen here every day. That ens totter is well known in the social world. She has got the quinine hhbity which tfjll kll herjn the eud. There is two much of his quininp business going on, but we hare to keep "up with the time3. That lady exhausted berselfin eociel and char itable visits, and then began to take a five grain "phi of quinine to brape up on. From five grains every even ing Bhe advanced to fifteen, and soon 6he will want twenty. She likes to feel cheerful and look well when ehe goes out with her husband, aid hav ing become a slave to quinine, she takes it as a stimulant, but her hus band ia ignorant of the habit. She pijs us $1.50 per week, and we keep the pills here for her. It is far worse than drinking alcoholic liquor, and we frequently advise our quinine patients to brace up on whiskey or jrandy, and let quinine eviork Telegram. alone." AT MONROE. Judge Fowle Demolishes the fcem. cogue Dockerr. News and Observer. Monroe, N. C, Aug.27. The biff gest day ever known in Union coun ty 1 Five thousand people were here to hear the discussion between Fowleand Dockery. Judge Fowle reached here on the 12:41 train from Charlotte. He was carried to his hotel in an elegant phaeton drawn by two magnificent bays, decked with silver-mounted harness and flowing bandannas, and was followed by 300 mounted men. Driving through the principal strepts, he stopped in front of the hotel. The street in front was com pletely blocked with surging human ny. ivc mis time a telegram was circulate for the supposed purpose of getting Judge Fowle to make his speech before Dockery arrived. A telegram froni Wadesborosays Dock ery is on the tain. The people are wild with enthusiasm.' Dockery ar rived on the 2:41 train and'is driven to the hotel in a carriage drawn by a uay ana a cjay-banK, no one atteua ing him except his bother and some friends from Rockingham. At 3 p, hi. D'. 4. Cgvington, Esq., announ ces tnat Col. Dockery will open the discussion. Col. Dockery Jpftk's paje and worn ; says he. is sick and will not be able to do justice to his cause. He knew he differed with the largest majority present, but that this was necessary. He said it was no time for white hats and bandannas hen he said this it looked like all the hats and bandannas in North Carolina went up in the air. Col Dockery said : What is the cause of the hard times? The audience completely drowned him with the cry ; "High tariff.' Col. Dockery sa S he is an old Henry Clay Whig, and that he drew it from his moth er s breast. He favors a high tariff because this is indirect and not di rect taxation. Col.' Dockery says the qniy tung necessary to reduce taxation is to aoonsn tne revenue. He says the Democrats have done nothing to redeem their pledges ex cept to pass the Mills bill. One hundred men in the audience ask him w hy his party oppose it. Col. Dockery complains that the Demo cratic platform has not the word revenue in it. lie claims to have voted for the measures that bettered the colored man's condition, but that any man who said he wanted white children and black children to go fo the same school was an in famous liar. Here he becomes ner vous and asks how much time he has. He is evidently at the end of his speech. Dockery arraigns fjc JJemocratip party for the failure of the Blair bill to pass, but had to acknowledge that the two Senators from North Carolina voted .for it. Dockery showed throughout his whole speech that he was in poor condition and his speech is with one accord pro nounced a failure. Judge Eowle, with the exception of a slight hoarsuess, is in fine trim. Certainly man never had more to in spire him. H Sjiys Col. Dockery has to go out of the State to get a record for the Republican party. He showed that while the Republi can party had prostituted the credit of the State, ruined' its school sys tem and stolen the money, the Dem ocratic party had given schools to the children, irrespective of "color; had reduced taxes on the poor man . . .V I and naci built asylums tor the poor and unfortunate of all classes. Judge Fovle put in one telling blow on the fills bill, and show'ed the peo ple that the Republican party had refused to take the only opportuni ty of reducing the revenue on the tariff. Judge Fowle was to the last degree forcible and simple, standing on the broad ground that no law ought to ask more taxes than was sufficient to carry on the expenses of the government. He said labor must be free to be profitable. On county government Judge Fowle said: We feel no enmity to the col ored man, but that we did not think the colored man the fit custodian of this country. Col. Dockery said in his speech he thought white men in the main ought fo hold office. Judge Fowle asked him if he (Dockery) did not on oue occasion, in Richmond, vote for a negro law yer against a good citizen of Rock ingham, and on another occasion, iu the same county, if he (Dockery) did not vote for a black negio against a good man, and he too a one legged soldi r. To both of these indictments Col. Dockery plead guilty in the presence of this vast concourse of people. Judge Fowle's friends and the' Democrats of the'State may feel proud of the effort he produced here today". " " ; Capt. John S. Dancy, a prominent and we'll knowu citizen of Tarboro, and years ago a popular rep e ;entu- tive of Edgecome county in the State t , -i. .1 ;.. Tctk va.ii. dropped dead of heart disease at the jiaxn l u 1 tr, uuu iu mo iuiu j lui j breakfast table a few days ago. He was s ai man of the county Board : of Commissioners at the time of his death. - " . Wort! Repeating. Jn reply to a call for the poem en titled "JIa's. in he Forward Carr" a correspondent ent to the New York Journal of Commerce the following: We!"eraPaPer relates the follow ing story : A gentleman was trying to still a crying child by carrying it to and fro in the car, which by its screams finally irritated a man in one of the bearths to such a degree that be could stand it no longer, and cried out profanely, 'What is the matter with that young one?' And soon again, 'Where is the mother of that child that she is not here to pacify it ?' At this, the poor gentleman in charge of the child stepped up to the berth and said : 'Sir, the mother of that child is in her coffin it the bag gage car f The gruff grumbler im mediately arose and compelled the afflicted father to retire to his berth, and from that time until morning took the little orphan under his own care." 'Jown wh The White Man'a Party." The Durham Recorder calls atten tion to' the fact that the above line is an editorial in the North Carolina Prohibitionist of this week. This is Messrs Tatum Rogers & Cos', organ. xs n possioie tney preter the suc cess of the negro to that of the white man. Do they endorse the sentiment expressed in this sen tence? tl they do not, let them de uounce it. The leading Secretary of the the1 Third Rarty believes ' iu social equality'. He pot only believes in it but practices', forces his wife into the society of the colored "gem men." This is the action of one of tueir leaders. ineir organ cries '"down with the white man's party. Now let them be downed beneath their colored social equality friends, Charlotte Chronicle, TfcE experience of Jacksonville with the yellow fever furnishes a striking illustration of the truth of the old adage that an ounce of pre vention is worth a pound of cure. ow that the dreaded plague has secured a fcothold in the unfortun ate city, the ujbst earnest efforts to stamp it out and pi event its further ravages avail but little. On the con trary, in spite of the fact that a large portion of the Population of the city has fled, the huinbei of new cases is increasing daily. As nearly two months'uiust elapse before the ap pearence of frosbs sufficiently heavy to check the epidemic, the outlook for Jacksonville is cloomv enough. The experience of that city should be sufficient to lead the health au thoiities of all localities in which the plague has not yet appeared to leave no stone unturned to establish an effective quarantine. piFDMONT AIR-LINE ROUTF RICHMOND AND DANVILE RAILROAD. Condensed schedule in effect June 24th, 1887. Trains run by 75 Meridian lima. Dail , . No. 50. Daily No. 52 SOUTHBOUND. Leave X" w York Philadelphia Baltimore Washingion Chi lottc-ville Lynchburg Ar. Danville Lv. Richmond Burkeville Keysvilltt Diak -'a branch D.nville Ar Greensboro Lv. GoMsboro Kaleigh Durham 1 'bapt-1 Hill Hilisboro Ar. Giee' sboro Lv Salem GreeSsb'ro High Point Ar Salisbury iStatest'ille"'1 Asheville' Hot Springs Lv Salisbury Ar Coucord L hsirlotle Spartanburg Greenville Atlanta ' 12 15 1 m 7 -') am 9 45 sim 1 1 24 am 3 4 l 1 m 5 50 pm 8 30 pm 3 10 pm 5 17 pm 5 57 pm G l.'S pui 8 50 pm 10 36 pin 2- 40 pm 5 0qpin G 04 pm f5 2i pm 6 37 pni 8 35 pm 7 10 pm 10 45pm 11 lo'unt 12 01 am ' 1 51 am 7 28 am 9 15 am 12 26 am ' 1 10 am 1 55 a 11 4 40 am 5 50 am 11 00 pm 4 30 pm 6 57 1 m 9 42 pm 11 00 j m 3 CO am 5 10 am 7 45 am 2 30 am 4 24 .ro 5 ('5 am 5 20 am 8 '5 am .9 42 am t8 10 1 m jl 45 am 3 12 am 4 Og am 7 40 am f 30 am 9 50 am 10 10 am 11 18 am 12 12 pm 4 31 pm G l0 pm II 23 pm l2 pm 12 40 pm 3 37 pm 4 48 pm 9 40 pm Daily. No. 51. Daily. No. 53. northbound. "Leave Atianfff1 Arrive Greenville Spartanburg Charlotte -Concord'' 00 pm 7 40 am 1 06 am 2 13 am 4 50 am 5 43 am 6 22 am 1 51 pm 2 53 pm 5 30 pm 6 30 pm 7 05 pm 11 40 am 125 pm 5 .56 pm 6 38 pm 7 15 pm 815 pm 8 40 pm 12 34 am 10 50 pm 3 pm 14 30 am t6 55am til 45 am 9 50 om 10 20 pm 123 am 1 45 am 1 45 am 5 00 am Salisbury Lv. tHot Springs 8 05 pm Asheville ' 9 55 pm iStatesville 3 30 am Ar. Salisbury 4 37 am Lv. Salisbury 6 27 am Ar. Hish Point 7 32 am Greensboro . 8 00 am Salem 1140 am Lv Greensboro '9 50 am Ar Hilisboro ' 11 55 am Chapel Hill U Wain Durham 12 35 am Raleigh 1 15 pm Goldsboro 4 10 pm Lv. Greensboro -6 05 am Danville 9 47 am Drake's Branch 12 25 pm Keysville 12 40 pm Burkeville 1 25 pm Richmond 3 30 pm Lynchburg 11 40 pm Charlottesville 2 25 pm Washington 7 35 pm Baltimore 8 50 am Philadelphia 3 00 am New York 6 20 am 12 55 am 3 05 am 7 00 am 20 air. 10 47 pm 1 20 pm "Daily. fDaily, except Sunday. SLEEPING CAS SERVICE. On trains'50and 51 Pullman Buffet rieeper between Atlanta and New York. - Of trains 52 an 1 53 Pullman Buffet Sleeper between Washington and Montgomery ; Washington and Au gusta. Pullman 'v sleeper between Richmond and Qreennboro. Pull mau 6leeper between Gieersboro, and Ralaigh. Pullman parlor car between Salisbury and Knoxville. Through tickets on sale at pricipal stations to ail "points.- : " For rates and information apply j to any agent of the company, or to DOI XLASS, o. o. luno, Traffic Man'r. Div. Pass: Ag't, W. A TrjBK, - R hmond, Va Div. Pass. Ag't, Jas. L. Tatlob, Raleigh, N G. Gen. Pass. Ag't. OLOTHIN-G CANNONS WE HAVE DECIDED NOT TO SEASON TO BUT PEICES DOWlsT, BUT HAVE PUT THE KNIFE IN RIGHT AT THE START :o: No w Catch On. WE HAVE A BIG STOCK OF CLOTHING, HATS AND SHOES. AND THEY MUST A BLUE FLANNEL SUIT, men's GOOD UNION ASSIMERE SUIT, men's size, at. . GOOD WORSTED SUIT, men's size, at A GOOD UNION HEVIOT SUIT, A GOOD UNION ASSIMERE SUIT, men's size, at. . . 4 00 A GOOD TWEED SUIT, men's size, at 4 50 A GOOD ALL-WOOL HEVIOT SUIT, men's size at 8 P0 A FINE ALL-WOOL CASSTM03RE SUIT, men's size, at It) C8 A FINE ALL-WOOL WORSTED SUIT, men's size, at 12 50 $TAN ENDLESS VARIETY OF PANTS at 75c, $1, $1.25 and 51.50, worth 25 to 60 per eent. wore. All kinds of LIGHT SUMMER FABRICS AT VERY LOW PRICES. ' !; -A. T S Boy 8 Malaga Men's Malaga Men's Malaga, extra w ide Men's Mackinaw Sunday Hat. Men's Wnite Canton Sunday Hat Men's White Can ton Sunday Hat Men's White Canton Sunday Hat ........ Men's Drab' and Calf Canton . . . Men's Fine Manilla',' six-different styles, all good. . Meus Brown Manilla Men's Brown Manilla; 1 1 s BST ALL OTHERS Ladies g Gents', Misses I Children's Shoes, AT PRICES TO PLEASE THE MILLIONS. IF YOU ) DON.'T CATCH ON, COME AND SEE US, AND THEN ' YOU WILL. rON;T SAY NO! BTTT T A TCIE3 IT IIESF. " CANNONS & FETZER. No 3903 .TREASURY DEPARTMENT, OFFICE OF COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY, Vashingtov, Juno 26, 1888. Whereas, by satisfactory evidence to the undersigned,it has been made to appear that "The Concord Na tional Bank,," in theJ town' ' Oon 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 to I: e complied with before an association shall be authorized to commence the busines of banking : Now therefore I, Jesse D. Abra bams.Deputy and acting comr troller of thfef Currency, do hereby certify that "The Concord National Bank, ' in the town of Concord.in the county of Cabarrus' nnd State of North Carolina, is authorized to commence the business of banking as provided in section fifty" one hundred and sixty -nine ot the Revised Statutes of the United States. In testimony whereof witness my V and and seal of office this 26th day of June, 1888. J: D. ABRAHAMS, Deputy and' Acting Comptroller of the Currency. - py 29 2 m. LADIES PEERLESS DYES TW X'n n . Awn Tvinl. fit UOIIIC. Th y will dye ererything. 1 hey are sold ertrj where." Price lOe. pucka. e. They havenoeqaa for Streugth, Brightness, Amount in Package or forTustness of Color, pr nou-foliag Qualities. They do not crock or smut; 0 colors. Tor sale by For sale at FETZER'3 DRUG STORE, and D. D. JOHNSON'S DRUG STORE: A new andprttylot just received, which will be sold cheap. ' ' - - Mas. J, M. CROSS. Bplhi m - AJSng HATS &, FETZER'! WAIT UNTIL THE END, OF THE GO! WE OFFER: size, at $ 5 00 worth $ 8 Of. 5 00 9 00 ; 5 00 8 50 800 700 650 Jl 00 12 50 15 00 men's size, at 6 00 ZEE .A. 37 S - , 10 cent ......15 . ......20 " 50 worth 75 . 40 . 50 . 65 . 65 :$1 50 . 123 , 100 60 75 100 100 2 00 1 75 150 IN PROPORTION.! FARMERS' STORE, We are now prepared to make you fpeciaf prices, spot ca&fi, on ' DliYGOODSJIOTIOliS.&C as weli as other lines of our goods j reparatorj to making Special Prices in our .entire line of merchindisa We promised you some tim'esiuce to make this reduction in case you gave us your trafe, and we' are'1 glad to thus publicly state that your increased pl rmage compels us to make goodoar prom si-, so study yoar interest by ex. amiuirig our b'argajna. To our City Trade we thank you fur your support, ard you will find with us a general line of COUNTRY PRODUCE country flour, couptry bacon and choice fresh butter on ice. Thaokfu'ly, 2C4t BELL & SIMS, Agt'. KEER COOL ! A large lol of square palm leaf fans at the Milnnery more. - - v -i Mrs, J. M. CROSS. ... . . . . v. - e I)
The Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 31, 1888, edition 1
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