Newspapers / The Standard (Concord, N.C.) / Oct. 18, 1889, edition 1 / Page 2
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Till SUllDIRD. Friday, - - - - October 18. Jab. P. Cook, B. E. Harris, Editors and Proprietors The town of Henderson is to have "coon" postmaster. God pity those people ! The latest title: u Sugar-monkey," I for a dude. He'll become an angel I in the near future. I A Philadelphia hotel porter ha 1 made $100,000 out of nil position, j This Is encouraging ! I That Mr. Bateman, who married I this week dressed in cotton bagging, I is pretty well advertised. I There is a trust on onions. They I are mighty bad things to fool ith.tccordinf to lWf if it will not a T&e scent win oeiray wera. I Von t near mucn irom uen. nan namaker's Snndav-school these dars. I John's a daisy mail manager, - There art 1.500 children in the public schools of Baleiirh. This is a pretty good year for this crop. A Mr. McDonald has introduced a bill in the Georgia Legislature to tax dogs. This gentleman's legislative days Tare numbered. Virginia is said to have a fair girl thief; she stole a horse. That girl never knew how to make biscuits, keep house and sew. The election at Harrison's old home has gone Democratic by 9,000 xnaierity the frit time. Light is dawning out in Indianapolis I The Raleigh sfgnal has resumed publication. It is not to be an ad ministration paper, though Republi can Rafter the straitest sect" " It Is predicted thai Senator Ban torn will deliver the best address of his life at the Fayetteville Centen nial. Senator Matt gets there ! There are lots of people who have found a royal road to making a Dort-" Thev have nothing, do no- thine, dress well and board likewise, In four years Mr. Cleveland reilie7 meet ln tne woods at nignc, moved in all 1,119 in the railway mail service. In the last three months the removals foot up 3,434. This tells in part of a defeat in 1688. A child out in Nebraska ha just srotten a divoroe from her husband. how name is "Good." He failed to show much good sense in marrying fourteen-year-old girl. u What fools these mortals be." Mrs. Mary Pear tall, over In De troit, has sued her employer in the I sum of $5,000 for kissing her. If I that's the value of a His, some peo- pie in this country are " heels-over-1 head-in-debt" vidow, too ! Mrs. Pearsall is a 44 There were more drunk men fool, staggering drunk in Dallas mptkgr I Oar brother has evidently seen vise, erect drunks. The? paid Bam Jones $1,800 up in I Durham for a few days work. How much do the residing pators get I nnuallyf A few more dollars put! Into home stors pocktta would enable them to live a little more com-1 fortablv and accomplish about as XUCH LASTIYO good. Why is it that although the In crease of the cotton crop ln the de cade between 1872 and 1882 was - from about 4,000,000 to I 7,000,000 bales, daring the seven Tears of the present decade the in-1 crease is less than 1,000,000 bales? Does this show that the consump - tion of cotton goods is not increas - Ing .according to the increase of population, or that the exports of cotton have not increased, the de - xnand for cotton in foreign coun - tries being supplied by Egypt and! India? This is an interesting ones - tion. CENTENNIAL AT FAYETTEVILLE. Our people should not forget that en November Jilt the great centei nial celebration of the ratification by .North Carolina of the Conititu tion of the United States will be held at FayttteviHe. What it will be will depend upon the generosity cf the people, and right now the patriotic sons of the State are show ing themselves equal to she duty. Let the citizens of Caberrin 'think of this. We would be unworthy of the name we have were we not to how our veneration for the great works of our fathers and appreci - svtion for their deeds. Let every one that can exert him - elf la behalf of the celebration and attend if posiibU, Bemember the! MfakATMnWw 91 aL FOURTEEN BURGLARS, Fonrteen negroes are now under arrest in Charlotte for burglary. Strange to say they are all country darkeys, whereas the burglaries were so skillfully done and with so much secrecy that it was the general im pression that it was the work of pro fessionals. The circumstances that led to their arrest are singular. A short time ago a negro sold a gold badge that had been stolen from Rev. Mr. White, of Mecklenburg county. jn tracing p this badge stolen pro perty was found and other negroes were implicated. As fast as one would be arrested he would tell of KTaB one that was connected, and so on until up to date fourteen have been arrested. Stolen goods DATe been found and left for identi fixation at the office of D. G. Max well, gq.( a 8BCh quantities that it is atid to look like a racket store. If f th convicted and hancred uft vmw tim in Charlotte it will I 1m flnmethinc like it. THE POLITICAL FIGHT IN VIRGINIA Though it seems very much against Billy Mahone's chances for success, that many prominent men of his own party have deserted him and its best elements seem to be against him, so great is his reputation for wire pulling and demagoguery that those who are interested in the success of the Democratic party in the Old Dominion will not feel safe until Capt Philip W. McKinney, the De mocratic nominee for Governor, is declared elected. It is asserted that Mahone's party is well supplied with boodle, which no one is inclined to doubt who knows that Boss Quay is still a member of that party and can on short notice put his nefarious machinery to work. It is said 4,000 votes by doubtful men will be con- forat that it should be admitted by those who are acquainted with Virginia and her citizens that such a thing is possible, owing to the financial de nression prevailing in that State caused by bad crops, floods, etc. An other trick that seems to cause some uneasiness, perhaps because of its norelty, is the organization in the sup-11111 u"wiw oi lorest ciaus, wuiuu re nutea to a certain numDeror members eacn, ana seem to oe witn. out nead, leader or presiding omcer. UI 0Ter e Mtnanon and devise means to zurtner tne ends or. tneir party. Democrats everywhere are looking at the fight in Virginia and hoping ' genuine democratic victory ana " Virginia is to De P misrule tnat woum surely characterize the admimstraUen of one corrupt and unscrupulous as i Gen. Mahone is. BERRIER LYNCHED. It seems that in spite of nniver sal condemnation by the State press, the Governor's proclamation and the general disapprobation of the peo pie, the abominable and barbarous practice of lynching malefactors is becoming more and more frequent in our State. Robert Berrier, who shot his mother-in-law, Mrs. Walser, last trying to pre prevent him from taking his child, contrary to the wishes of its mother, was hanged last Monday evening by a mob. He had waived the prelimi Mr7 examination and was tempora- y confined in the jail at idling being the intention of theau- tnoritiei to remove mm to ureens I wro, lor sale keeping, on tne even mK train. But before train time a mob of Mrs. Walser's friends sor rounded the jail, got possession of the prisoner, and in a short time his fate was forever sealed. There can be, and is, no defense for such a dastardly, cowardly deed as uus man committed, and no one tries to Justify him. Nevertheless this cannot excuse those who need jlessly take the law into their own l hands and thus offer insult to our 1 State, her laws and her courts. If lour people become accustomed to J such proceedings it will engender a 1 still greater disrespect for law and 1 order, and be a continual menace to life. For if every infuriated crowd 1 is to be governed by the impulse of the moment, mistakes will sooner or later be made that no amount of re gret and sorrow will atone for, i Such occurrences show np our State in a most unfavorable light; and tho' the only practicable way to prevent such occurrences is to educate our I people to a plane that will preclude I the possibility of such acts as being I characteristic of barbarous, lawless I people, this plan is so far a failure, The North Carolina State g'thel 'aiT papers ia v-a, conducted was a success. -rd to hed I Wf ,paMe men' tnat are fim Jones ieCU0,naay eT in TW I his recent meeti lAInt nf "O !&. (asked all present depositto rii if Super..,. jbook f Hezekiah m ouenio. I six pious looking gei villi.. dema,. 1 congregation arose I air of having read it informed by Sam that tWgg. SON, I anoh hnrilr in ha Bible, t" - x . such book in the Bible. DROPS OF Tr, Pitch and Tnrpntine from m Old Xortb State. A new jail is building at Elizabeth City. Samuel II. Vick, a negro, has been made postmaster of "Wilson. There are now forty in the 1 resh- man Class at Davidson College. The Mt. Airy News threatens to suspend unless better supported. Rockingham, Richmond county, has invested $600 in a town clock. A man in New Berne is manufac turing ink and Bhipping it to ten States. A little fall of snow in a corner of Buncombe county Monday is re ported. Mr. J. L. Nelson has been elected mayor of Lenoir, succeeding Mr. W. C. Erwin, resigned. Hiram Wilson shot and killed a young man named noneycuu in Yancey county on the 2d. Over fifty young men in North Carolina have pledged themselves to go as foreign missionaries. Among the new lawyers licensed ast week to practice law was Editor Rush, of the Asheboro Courier. An Edgecombe county farmer shipped over a thousand barrels of rish potatoes from fifteen acres. Land in Salisbury has been offered the Mill Bridge Alliance if they will move their fair to that place next year. The oil mills in Raleigh are now making 3,000 gallons of oil per day and paying out $500 a week in wages. The Wilmington Star says the av erage weight of the cotton bales re ceived there thus far this season is 506 pounds. The Wilkesboro Chronicle asserts that it is the best paper published in that town and then adds that it is the only one. Dick Crumpet, au old negro, was found dead at bis home in Anson county last week. He died from natural causes. A drunken negro on the train near Greenville lost his hat, lit off get it and received injuries from which he died. The Enterprise says that one f lilf T1art threshing machine threshed 20,803 bushels of grain this past season. A three thousand dollar 22,000 pound safety vault ha3 been put up by the Merchants' and Farmers' bank of Charlotte. Mr. R. J. Holmes has been elec ted president of the First National Bank of Salisbury, succeeding the ate Maj. S. W. Cole. There are now six Presbyteries in the Synod of North Carolina, a new one having been formed of Orange under the name of Albemarle. A Building and Loan Association has been formed in Taylorsville, a branch of a general B. and L. Asso ciation established at Atlanta. One firm in Winston, as the re sult of a part of their season's ope ration, shipped from that place the past week 150,000 pounds of dried fruit Hon. J. J. Davis, Associate Jus tice of the Supreme Court, has been very ill at his home in Louisburg, but is improving, we are glad to note. At the civil service examination at Goldsboro, Thursday of last week, there were forty-eight applicants for positions as route agents. Twenty- six of them were colored. The contract for building the Raleigh Cotton Mills from the foun dation up was awarded to Ellington, Royster and Co. The buildings, when completed, will have cost $35, 000. Five hundred dollars is to be given away in prizes to the visiting bands and military at the Fayetteville Cen tennial. The pyrotechnic display promises to be the grandest ever seen south of Baltimore. The Oxford Ledger records the fact that Col. R. O. Grecorv has undoUDtediy strucx a bonanza on his plantation, near Stovall, in the shape of anthracite coal. The sam pies burn Bplendidly. The Washington Star says that Mr. Samuel F. Phillips, having found that his duties as a member of the Venezuelan commissioner- ship will conflict with his practice, has resigned and become the counsel of the Venezuelan government at a salary of $10,000. V-K Support your home paper. No matter how small, sustain it If not a good paper nowjvou odh make f,or o by xriiltte. S .-vii.v.. . i "fwrL. - I " u existence, iieipinem 'I - i-.v. A W8eK1Y newspaper lT6 0rhaA vnertrv anil Rhilif a w J -"cm irom m.uw mj juu.uuu 111 rHt.i . fET AftA A- M r tir WioD'k, the county in which it is s"Vitis a Bolid fact Wilmington i 1 ' CORRESPONDENCE. Poplar Tent Items. The cotton crop of this section of Cabarrus was badly damaged by the recent frost. "They say" there is to be a wed ding in Poplar Tent soon. Maybe you will get some cake. Mr. Shakespeare Harris has sent " Black Bess " to the State Fair at Raleigh to sweep the stakes. Mr. and Mrs. Mills Mooney are in Poplar Tent for a few months, and are boarding at Mr. Mc Caldwell's. Dr. C. H. Bingham had the mis fortune to have his handsome new residence burned a few nights ago. It was just completed. He had not yet moved into it. Mr. John Cannon, a son of Ibson Cannon, an old resident of Poplar Tent, was here this week on a visit to friends and relatives. His home is now iu Greensboro. Cbinft Grove Items. Cotton is coming in gradually. There is very little sickness here. There is now a vacation at the academy. -New goods are coming in and bus iness is improving. Farmers are as busy as bees and ants sowing wheat Much fertilizer i3 being used, and drills are quite common. China Grove is making substan tial progress. Three neat, substan tial, and I might say elegant build ings are nearing completion. There will be a meeting of the trustees on the 17th inst to act upon Mr. Cline's resignation and look to the furtherance of the school in terest. Peacock & Barrier's spoke and shuttle saw plant is opening up to timber owners of this section an op portunity to dispose of timber in their line at prices that will prove advantageous to the land owners. Rev. R. H. Cline has resigned his work here both in the school and the pulpit He is going to Salem, Va., to recruit his health. We are sorry to lose him, and hope he may in the early future be able to resume his labors here. The lumber is on the ground to erect a calaboose, and two sets of wagon scales are in our streets, and three new warehouses are in line, so you see that China Grove is going to pass out of the sphere of " wayside station " and don the name of town. Cupid is hurling his darts right and left among our young folks, and, one by one the victims, though resigned, are being hurled into other spheres, and the places that once they occupied are made vacant and tne names oy wnicn tnev were known are to be called no more. Bllesvllle Items. Dr. R. W. Ivy has returned from the North. A cold wave struck our village on last Sunday night One case of diphtheria at Mil- ledfreville this week. Many of our citizens are courting at Albemarle this week. n i , several more or. our citizens are speaking of moving to Concord. Mr. Will Bingham, of Concord, spent a day or two at Bilesville last week. Mr. Greely, who has been at Con cord 6ome time, is at Bilesville this week. Little Stella, daughter of H. C. Crowell, is quite sick with typhoid fever. Dr. A. G. Henderson has gone to his home in Caswell county to spend a few days. Some of our people were in Con cord on show day just to see the animals (?). Mr. J. Lee Crowell is down for the purpose of attending court at Albe marie next week. Mrs. Dr. R. W. Ivy has returned to her home after an absence of a week or two at Palmerville. The railroad subject is Bleeping ; it had too much election at one dose. We hope the sleep is not unto death. Mr. J. F. Hunnycutt is to leave for Baltimore soon, where he will take a course in a business college. The farmers have laid in a good supply of roughness for the winter, and from present indications they will need it all. Our farmers are taking great pains about putting in wheat this fall. A smaller acreage with better prepara ion.j the plan. 'jftf& sugar market at this place Sbigh. We like sweet things, but v. must deny ourself the plea sure of eating many of them until the price changes. Mr. L. Earnhardt and family will move to Concord next week. Just extend the corporate limits of Con cord and take Stanly in and be done with this matter of moving. Mr. John Cujp has raised so much corn that he cannot find room for Btorage, He built one large crib, but it is full to overflowing, and his crop is scarcely half gathered. Mt. Pleasant Items. Mrs. Lizzie Bingham, of Concord, is visiting at Mr. L. J. Foil's. Mrs. J. A. Linn is visiting her mother at Watsonville, Rowan coun- Miss Phoebe McPherson, sister ot the late Mrs. Cox, left Monday for her home in Knoxville, Tenn. We are glad to know that Miss Aurelia Rose, who has been sick for several weekB with typhoid fever, is improving. There will be communion service at Mt Carmel Lutheran church on the fourth Sunday of this month at 11 o'clock, a. k., Ret. J. H. Wyse, pastor. Prof. Hemry Fisher, principal of preparatory department of North Carolina College, and Mrs. Fisher, wife of Rev. Prof. C. L. S. Fisher, arrived last. week. The first brick was laid this week for the large building for the Frick Manufacturing Company by Mr. H. O. McAllister, and work will be pushed vigorously on until comple ted. Our charming female correspon dent can have as much space as she wants. Come agai n. Ed. 1 DIED, October 5th. 1889. at MounrPleasant, N. C, Mrs. Naknie E. Cox, wife of Her. George H. Cox; aged forty-four years and eighteen days. Mrs. Cox was born in Chatham county, N. C, September 17, 1845. She was mar ried January 20, 1866, and confirmed October 8th, 1870, in Emanuel Lutheran church, Sullivan county, East Tennessee, by Rev. A. J. Brown, D. D. She was the mother of nine children, all of whom are living. She was buried October Cth in the Lutheran burying-ground at Mount Pleasant, the services being conducted by Rev. Prof. J. D. Shirey. Though but a short time a resident of Mount Pleasant, and all the time an in valid, she had attracted many friends, and in their sore bereavement the af flicted family have the sympathy of the entire community. The attendance at the burying was very large. A great many of the pastor's parishioners showed their sympathy for the bereaved family by their attendance at the burying. II. Fell asleep in Jesus, at her home in Cabarrus county, N. C, August 21st. '89, Mrs. Martha H. White, beloved wife of Mr. R. Benton White, aged nfty-nine years, ten months and twenty-one days. This good woman gave her heart to Christ in early youth, and for forty years lived in the free fellowship, confidence and esteem of God's people. For thirty five years her connection was at Rocky River Presbyterian church and for five years at Zion Presbyterian church. She possessed great excellencies of character; her true worth and helpfulness will be greatly missed. Her modesty and hum bleness of mind and meekness were al ways noticeable, and especially during the months of suffering and feebleness which she endured with such beautiful patience and submission. " Her end was peace ; our lost her gain." Our sympa thies and prayers go out for the bereaved family, " but we sorrow not as others who have no hope." " Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord." A Fkiend. J. Y. FITZGERALD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. My professional services are offered to the citizens of Concord and vicinity. Calls, day or night, are promptly attend ed to. Office next door to the old post office building, ly, June 21. W. J. MOXTGOMEBV. J. LEE CROWELL. Montgomery & Crowell, Attorneys and Counsellors at law, Concord, N-C, As partners, will practice law in Cabarrus, Stanly and adjoining counties, in the Su perior and Supreme Court of the State, and in the Federal Court. Office on Depot Street. it -)0(- Having moved into the com modious building lately occupied by W. C. J. Caton, onCaton's corner, CHAS. A. COOK is now prepared to furnish GROCERIES AT VERY LOW PRICES. MY STOCh IS FRESH AND NEW I and the trade WILL FIND IT TO THEIR ADVANTAGE to call and see me before buy ing anywhere else. Very respectfully, CHAS. A. COOK. MEN Who are Weak, Nervous and Debiliated, who aie suf fering from tha effected of early evil habits, the result of ignorance or folly, will find in Fears. Specific a positive and permanent cure for Nervous Depihty, Seminal Weak ness Involuntary vital losses, etc Cures guarentoed. Send six cent in stamps for Pears Treatise on disiases of man; their cause and cure. J. S. Pears. 612 Church St., Nashville, Ten. An Old FaceinaNewP J. S -II More Poetry -:o: Swink cannot let you attend the Fair Without .call ing your attention to his $2.00 a pair Which to your comfort you'll undoubtedly find Will far outlast those of any other good kind. But to prove what I saj-, just go to the devil, (Now dear reader, please do not think any evil ; It's Tiik Standard "devil" who keeps up with the times,) A number one fellow, with sense and with dimes, Which he earns most honestly in printing the news, And streightway invests them in Swink's $2.00 shoes. He'll tell you much better than I can indite. Just get a pair ontv and you'll find them all right. "ST E S . Tax Notice. I will be at the following places designated to collect taxes for the year 1880 to-wit : Township. No. 1, Hocky River, Oct. 14, 1839 " 15, " 2, Poplar lent, " 3, Deweese, " " 4, Cook's Store, " " 5, Mt. Gilead, " 6, J. M. Fussart's, " " 7,Ileed Misenhimer " " 8, Mt. Pleasant, " " 9, Piatt's Place, " 10, Bethel, " " 11, Old Field, " 12, Concord, " 10, " 17, " 18, " 19, " 21, " 22, " 23, " 24, " 25, " 26, " I earnestly ask the taxpayers to meet me promptly and settle Sept. 30, 18S!. Wm. Propst, oc 4 ,-l)enil Cabarrus County. ntkrtlulliq! Tradition tells us that once upon a time a cow jumped over the moon. When she did it, where she did, why she did it, we are not informed. Only the bare and undisputed fact of her having accomplished this wonderful acrobatic feat has been preserved to us from the all-devouring waves of obliv ion that ceaselessly pulsate upon the shores of Time. Of one thing we may rest assured, however, that it was only by repeated trials that this myth ical cow succeeded in her un dertaking. Practice only can make perfect. . For the past twenty-four years I have been trying to please the public as a dealer in Fancy Goods, Toys, Musical Instruments, etc. To say that I have been moder. ately successful would not, I hope, be construed as a piece of vanity on my part, but at the close of each season I have felt that my level best had not vet been attained. This vear, however, the goal of my ambi tion has been reached, and at Gibson's Drug Store is now to be found an unri valled selection and complete assortment of Fancy Goods, Knick-Knacks and Novelties, for the inspection of which the public is hereby cordially invited. I have in stock today $1,000 worth of China and Glassware tea sets, 50 pieces, tea sets, 3 pieces, salad and berry bowls, cabarets, com. forts, epergnes, ice cream sets, oyster sets ; plates from 5c. to 75c. apiece ; fruit saucers, pitchers from 10c. to $2 each ; vases in endless variety, from 5c. to $3 apiece, etc., etc. Cut and engraved glassware, plush brush and comb cases from 81.25 to $12 apiece ; plush work boxes from 50c. to $6 each ; plush albums from 50c. to $10 ; plush and leather mu sic rolls and folios, writing desks from $1 to $6 apiece, and scores of articles suitable for wedding and holiday pre sents from 50c. to 812 apiece. Christmas Cards a specialty this season, from lc. to $4 apiece; children's picture books from lc. to $1.25 each ; dolls from lc. to $7 ; toys till you can't rest, as the fellow said ; $500 worth of musical instruments; a 10-hole har monica for 5c; accordeons from 50c. to $8 apiece ; banjos from $1 to $8 ; violins from 25c. to $10 each. Bows, pegs, strings and. all sorts of trim- mings for violins, guitars and banjos. Children's wagons from 5c. to $8 apiece ; baskets from 5c. to $3 each ; photo graph frames from 5c. to $4 apiece. Moulding and picture frames in twenty different styles, and the latter can be made to order in a few minutes. My stock of Drugs and Pat ent Medicines was never so complete, and two registered pharmacists are ready at all times to fill prescriptions. Call and see for yourselves. mvl0-ly J.P.GIBSON. Look C W I J K A S g You to Read HAVING JUST RETURNED FROM NEW YORK and other Northern cities, wishes to say to 'her friends and the public generally that they will find with her the iargesi I M Complete LINE OF MILLINERY SHE HAS EVER SHOWN I THE VERY LATEST STYLES ! Would be pleased to have you call and examine. Also a beautiful assortment of NOTIONS. . AT THE FARMERS' STORE. se 27-lm STORE ! Have now opened up IN THE NEW BRICK STORE recently built on lot a complete, new stock of Furnitur; and they offer to sell at FOR CASH or on THE INSTALMENT PLAN ! Bed Steads from $1.25 to $10 ; Bureaus from $6.50 to $20 ; Baby Cradles from $1.25 up; Baby Cribs, swinging and folding ; Baby Carriages all styles ; Chamber Suites, Parlor Suites, Extra Wash stands, Chiffonieres, Desks, Centre Tables, Work Tables, Bed Lounges, Canvas Cots, Woven Wire Cots, Woven Wire Mattresses, Husk and Cotton Mattresses, Marble Top Walnut Tables, Marble Top Imitation Walnut Ta bles, Dining Tables, Falling Leaf and Extension Top, Side Boards, Safes and Cup boards, Lounges, Sofas, plain and cushioned Chairs, Arm and Rocker Chairs, Baby Chairs, Dining Chairs, Cor ner Brackets, Wall Pockets, Curtain Poles, AVindow Shades, and all kinds of House Furnishing Goods. Come and see us, and we will try to please you in goods and prices. au 23 mm mii IT us i am Aext TheirDry Goods Store MY LW PRICES Bibie Readings FOR THE- Home Circle. This ia certni nv nra .-t n interesting books that Las fouiSlil way into this place. It vn,i h. difficult in this brief statement to give a description of its true worth It embraces lfi2 rnr. historical and prophetical, answer! juK uemiy uiree mousand question from the Mine of Truth. This ex cellent collection of TJihlc T is contributed by more than a 'scorn oi clergymen, practical Bibe stu dents, temperance and social puritv workers,etc.,and considering tbnK.s pf the deepest interest, especially to those who desire a better knowledge of the prophetic portions of tf1G Scriptures. It is replete with ju struction and consolation for ti, seeker after truth and evidences for the candid unbeliever, closing wi'h the "Illustrated Game of T.if L three parts. SA work that should be in every home. Agents are selline t "ere. f decl NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE. Next session begins, tie first Jj0n. day of September. Locatiou healthy Terms moderate. For catalougue or paiticulars, ad- Rev. J. G. SCHAID, Pres't, Mt. Pleasant, N. (J. August 3, 188S, The new Free Tontine policy of the Equitable Life Assurance Society has no conditions on its back, ami the face of the policy is a simple promise that, in consideration of the premiums paid the Society, it will pay the beneficiary the amount of the policy on the maturity of the contract. Instead of a long li6t of arduous and ambiguous restrictions, printed m small type, difficult of interpre tation and open to dispute, the back of the policy may, if the applicant desire it, be simply a sheet of blank paper. To meet the preference of most assurers, however, the Stein v (instead of leaving the back f t he policy blank) will unless otherwise instructed (endorse upon it a list nf the special privileges granted. For particulars apply to BEEM & CO., A.;V. se C:3m Charlotte, . ( . I Have a Corner (LITAKER'S CORNER) o x FAMILY GROCERIES, FINE CONFECTION KU 1 KS. AND EVERYTHING IX THAT LINE. Fresh Meat AT ALL TIMES. FRSH : FISH : EVERY SATURDAY. SdgT' County Produce of nil kinds bought for cash or but ter. Goods delivered to any part of the town. J. A. KIMMONS. ! J, PAINTS, OILS, CIGARS, TOBACCO, SOAP, HAIR, TOOTH, NAIL AND PAINT BBUSHES. COME, SEE, BUY FROM D. D. JOHNSON, DUUGGIST. Non-Resident Notice, North Carolina, ) HrvFVR , V,1:T. jaoarrus jo my A. J. Groner riniiitiil', against James G. Groner Defendant. It appeal ins to the satisfaction -A the court from the returns of Win Propst, sheriff of Cabarrus county. N- C-, and from the affidavit of H S. Purytar, filed in the above (-untied action, that James G. Groner is a non-resident of this State, an ' after due diligence cannot bo found within the State of North Carolina. and it a necessary and proper party to the above entitled action, and whereas the plaintiff above named has begun an action in said court for a divorce : Now, therefore, the said James G. Groner is hereby no tified that unless he be and ai)'fir before the judge of our Superior Court at a court to be held for tho county of Cabarrus at the court house, in Concord, on the 8th Mon day after the l6t Monday in Septem ber, 1889, and plead, answer or h' mnr to the complaint of tlie plum tiff, which will be deposited in ti e office of the clerk of Superior Court within the first three days of sanl term, that the plaintiff will apply t the court for the relief demanded ia the complaint and for costs of action. This 18th day of September, iw JAS. C. GIBSON. Be 20-6t Clerk Superior Coui'i. A liDeral Policy Wit
The Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1889, edition 1
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