: ! ; If if : I ' f i r : , I ! .V f I ii i.1, 'i Ml ; I t i t ill. 'I 3 -1. ':. 'IS r.,-S '! I PS I , ; ( THE STANDARD. JAMES 1 COOK, - -Til l" us day, - -March. is KAisii; .mo r.v ioim iii: iii k( ii Selling kisses for the purpose of raising money to pay oil church in debtedness is not always a success. It was tried at burns, X V., recent ly, frix pairs of tempting lips were 'placed on sale." The "bald heads" and young men present soon spent a small fortune at the game. but soon the married ladies of the con gregat'.on got jealous and the trouble began. They blew out the lights and the crowd adjourned to the side walk and fought like tigers ior two hours. TLe church is now '-full of money," but badly organized. Progressive Farmer. It is becoming fashionable to raise money by many means for the church. It is a question about the correct ness of some methods. The Stand ard, laying no chums to being a re ligions paper, but taking on itself as much theology as belongs to any eeculai paper, rises to remark th it all contributions to the church should be entirely "voluntary. It's the cheerful giver. Tis true that there is no harm in a concert to raise money for church work, for here a numbei of people sell their talents a:nl wares for the door receipts, and t'aey contribute it as a voluntary gift to some phase of church work. lUit these festivals are out of place. It looks hard to beg ttaa from people and then beg those people to buy it at monstrous price.;. Then to sell kisses is a downright gambling scheme. You think you are about to get something, when in re ality you get an empty, unsatisfying . report that's all. There are some men fools enough to spend their last cent for the delusive kiss, for getting that it is better and cheaper when stolen. Let the church consider these methods. tMV!0 AWAY LAND. The state board of education made sale of 3,000 acres of swamp land in Tyrell county to C U Johnson, of Cornland, Va. The sale was made through Charles 2d Redman, of Ashville, the board's agent, fifty cents an acre being the pric? paid Exchange. North Carolina maintains a peni tentiary, which has hundreds of convicts. These people should be put to draining those lands and to putting them in shape for cultiva tion. It such were done, they would be the best of lands in the state. Thi3 thing of giving way land at 0 cents per acre has been going on too long, and it's time there's a halt made. The Legislature ought to ei.act a law prohibiting thj giving away of these lands. ISN'T IT TIMK I OK tiit AIN ? On the free coinage issue as on other political questions the South proceeds on the theory that its gain would be the North's loss. Penn sylvania Sheet. You are wrong, sir. The South is not selfish. The South does not want to rob the North, but it wants to stop the North ftom robbing the United States treasury at the expense of the South. The South is the etial of tin North in every respect, except in maintaining fraudulent schemes. Give us as much of the whiilletree as the North n.j'r, Yankecdom will be under the front wheels. It would be gratifying, ind-ed, were the $1GO,000,UM of pensions cut down to an honest figure, say 1 O00,00). One would think th.it your brave patriots (?) would gel tired of sucking the treasury, inas much as they don't die at least the number is still increasing. The most modest term to be given to the above is, th it the Northern paper lied. AX AM I I I- "1 !'. ' In another column the Standard bublishes the picture of a good-si.ed row that took place at u Lutheran church in New York. The character of the proceeding is just such as delights the devil and his special admirers. That par ticular congregation is a subject for the prayers and missionary influence of the truly pious. Selling kisses at 25 ccnls-for the raising of a pastors saiary wi liquidating a church uebt holy horrors '. These fandangoes that people indulging in to raise money for -i v. am u-idfi swaths from are the the direction that it strikes us the scrip tures suggest. The church is just a little bordering on the field of gam bling and it's a serious question that it presents. . God pity those women that .old their kisscs-they gambled under the wing of a religious pretext and they cheated and they excited im- holy appetites at a place that ough to be sacred. In the name of cold and unvar nished truth AVero some cf our fathers and grand faf hers, .whose pious natuies and truly consecrated lives were known and believed by all in their days, ptnuitted to return and see to:ne of the evil tendencies and the gambling and marketing methods that are countenanced by the church, Well, don't you think there would bo consternation ? It's a pity they can't come back ! am om s;i.vi:r in: hi:. ?t;ito C'!inmu'!o. The new silver money is yet very scarce here. soi l iii::;n ii:oii.i; rixsor swal low. The Standard has all along been, in principle, Alliance. It believes there was room ami absolute necessi ty for such an orcanizatiou. That uecesity still exists. It believes that the Alliance lias done good, great gooel in fact, a fair minded man oaa not eloubt this at all; it is a certainty. The Standard will not stop to question these matters, nor arjrue that the Staudard has not only been in sympathy with the alliance but a belie ver in it. The standard is yet a believer in the right and necessity of its existence. Some members of the Alliance hive organized what is known as the People's Party. A platform has been adopted. From what we know of Cabarrii3 men and have heard them say, Ave are certain that the vast majority of the Alliance is op posed to the organization of th Thiid Party. And we do not he lieve the Alliance of the State favors such an organization, but desires to light for these reforms inside of their own party they are the De mocracy. The Standard has published that platform, and the Stanelard sees no dvnamite in it. as elo some other trtie-s, except '1 0. We demand that the Govern ment issue legal tender note3, and pay Union soldiers the difference between the price of depreciated money in which he was paid, and gold." It is against the latter part of this twelfth demand that the Stan dard kicks. Let U3 lexk at it By the cowardice? of the average Yankee, the southern army whipped the north until the southern army wore itself out to a fraz. Had the same patriotism, manhood and bravery characterized t tie north ern as were manifest in the south ern soldier, the war wouhl not have continued so long, and the lmmens war debt that was made would not rest for payment, and principally by taxation of the south. For his magnificent (?) display of valor and soldiery he's being pension ulnow .;'H'0,000,0o0 being paid in pension?, lo0,000.00o of this being poured out in northern laps and laps of some of the vilest scoun drels and cowards God ever let live. Do you know that this pension business cost the country nearly half the value of the annual production of the entire cotton crop 'i These men were paid for fighting the south, and the debt incurred we are now helping to pay. What was the pay of the southern soldier, who marched poorly clad, sore-footed and half starved for several years ? What? Great God alone knows the hardships the south ern soldiers endured in the name of his home and family, for four long years, for ii(t much more than 1 5 cents per month ! Then we are asked to fall in, howl ourselves hoarse and contend that up shall make gooel the depre ciation below gold of the money, in which the Yankees were paid for allowing us to whip him so long un til our brothers and fathers whipped themselves to a fraz ! This is the most contemptible piec- of the most pusillanimous che k yet made known to the Amer ican people. Who's to pay the southern sol dier for the depreciation of the mon ey in which he was paid? If the Southern average man sets his heart ou thi3 declaration, then the Standard is disappointed in the character of the stuff out of which the pure Caucasian Southerner is built. Let's put out the fire, callj the dogs, and throw open the money manufacturing implements of the government and invite Yankeedom to help herself. May God have pity on the glut tons and other hounds. ex.;oyi:ok iioi.ih.x. Ex-Gov. W W I .olden, of Kaleigh is dead. His life, at one time, wa3 one of influence. lie lost an opportunity, such as is seldom presented to man, to endear himself to North Carolina and North Carolinian?. Toesibly no man ever bore the trials and mental pains he did, all of which -. -e his own mak ing. At one time, Ex-Gov. Ilofdeu had it within his power to weave around lis name garlands, imperishable, uid v ithout proving traitoron3 to a trust, cr suffering the pangs of neg cteel duty. He prefereil other wise. In 1S70, llohlen was impreached, deposed from office and disfranchis ed a sentence under which he lived up to his death. lie's deael, and let us hope that peace be to his ashes in a greater measure than peace .vas to his earth ly life. oi wi.nsn.n A CAMIIATI A gentleman, who seems well up in political news, remarked a few days ago that Col. Jno. 11 Webster, of the Keidsville Weekly, would be a gubanatorial candidate. Tnis is the first time the Staudard has heard he brother's name mentioned for the chief executive's place. Col. Webster was once Speaker of the House of representatives. NTAXIAlCDIS.nS Thtse are hard times; the fellow that can grin and bear it is a phil osopher. Most people are akin now out of money. In his game, Hill has played his biggest trump and about the only one he had. lie needs 000 votes to capture the convention. He has 52S yet to get where will the office seeker finel them ? """Juelge Lynch is still popular. lie will be thus, so long as courts mis carry justice. The leading Geiman papers in Ohio, New York, Iowa aud Missouri are opposed to Hill. In fact, the vast majority of the pure English type are so too. Een Chairman Springer want3 a Western man for President Gen. Palmer. Sons of TlM-ir Fuli'r. C'.cvc'.mJ I'lain Dta'cr. How would this do for the repub lican ticket : For president, Kobert Lincoln, of Illinois; for vice presi dent, Fred Grant, of New York. A "sons of their fathers" ticket ought to have stronger relative claims than a "grandson of his grandfather" ticket. Aslrrii on I lie Track. Charlotte Chruniclo. The- young man killed by the east bound freight on the Western North Carolina Kail road, near Morganton, on Saturday night last, was Webb Morrow, a plasterer at the State Hos pital, lie was originally from Cald well anel left a wife and several young children, lie was drunk and asleep on the track at the time of his death and no blame attaches to the engineer of the freight. The I'rople S-ak Last. Bridgeport Farmer. Senator Hill's sneer, "They can have the brass bauds aud meetings, lam getting .the delegate?,' was a very injudicious remark. It was in substance, "They may have the peo ple, I have the machine.' But the 'machine' does preliminary work only; the people speak last ami with greater effe. t, and he who speaks contemptuously of them is likely to 'hear something drop." Itip' I'.xericiiCF In Seven Year. Salisbury lleralil. The editor celebrates his seventh birthday to-day in a quiet manner. It's not often we have the pleasure that the vast majority of mankind and womankind enjoy, but the fact that we grow old slowly is a sweet consolation. Concord Standard. The above clipping settles the long mooted question regarding the fresh nes3 of the Standard. A juvenile of seven summers figuring as an editor is something "on-common," but this settles all dutitable points. He was born one. and it grows on him. ISeaale Is Away. From '.he Shelby Aurora. Lust Saturday both Capt. Seagle and the Superintendent of the Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley railroad re ceived letters from Charlie Seagle, written from New Orleans in which he said he was just taking a boat for a foreign country, but did not say where. To both he said that he had taken some ot the Company's money a3 he had gotten into a difficulty and was obliged to leave, but that it would be returned in full inside of twelve months. There is still much mystery surrounding the Case. Whether he really thought he had killed a man or whether the shooting of which he spoke last week was merely a blind is not yet fully known. The general opinion is that there is some other difficulty still back of it, all or else the young man has become mentally unbalanced and is laboring under a hallucination. The books were all straight up to the time he left. Capt. Seagle will at once make good to the Company the money taken by Charles on the eve of his departure. There is yet considerable moving about. iiii:tiiiki imrtv. Ollcrinl Call forllio vmiiiat Iiijj 'ii veiilion at Omaha, July ft t la. St. Louis, Feb. 2.". The joint committee, in w hose charge the mat ter was placed by the industrial conference just ended here, met this morning, and after all day session selecte-d Omaha, Neb., as the place of holding the nominating conven tion of the newly-born Third party. July 4th was last night selected as the date', and that action was re affirmed. A formal call was issued in the following terms: To the People of the IT. S : The National committee of the People'3 party of the United State. acting in conjunction with the fol lowing: C II Van Wyck, of Nebras ka ; C W Macune, of Texas ; M J Branch, of Georgia; J II Powers, of Nebraska; R M Humphrey, of Texas ; L D Laurent, of Louisiana ; Marion Cannon, of California; T II Maguire, of New York ; J II 'Wil liams, of Kansas ; L L Polk, of North Carolina ; Pierce Ilatchett, of Missouri; M M Garrett, of Illi nois ; John Seitz, of Ohio ; Mary E Lease, of Kansas; Anna L Diggs, District of Columbia ; Anna Debbs, of Texas ; A P Parksen, of Florida, and Benjamin Terrell, of Texas, representatives of a certain meeting of members of the various organiza tions of this country held in the city of St. Louis, Mo., on the 21th day of February, 1S'J", respectfully sub mit to the United States the follow ing preamble and platform of the conference of said labor organiza tions of our nation, held on the 2Cd, 2od and 24th days of February, lSt'2, in the city of St. Louis. Here follows the preamble and platform already published. We urge that all citizens w ho support these demands shall meet on the last Saturday in March next in their respective towns and vil lages and hold a public met ting and ratify these demands, and take steps to organize preparatory to electing delegates to a national convention, and we call upon all duly qualified voters of the United States who are in favor of these principles aud of nominating candidates for President and Vice President on the above platform to send delegates to a con vention of the People's party, to be held in Omaha, Neb., July 4, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon. The executive committee of the People's party in each State is charged with the duty of promulgating this call and of fixing the time, phi .e and method by which the said delegates shall be chosen. The basis of rep resentation shall be four delegates from each Congressional district and eight delegates from each State at large, making the total number 1,- :ro. We call upon all citizens of the United States to help us make our principles triumphant. We believe that if the voters neglect their duty this year it may be impossible in any future canvass to protect the rights of the peep!e and save the institutions of our country. The voters must protect themselves. They can expect no one else to de fend them. In the name of the rights of the people, the homes of the land and the welfare of all fu ture generation?, we call to all honest men to come to our support in the great contest. Signed II. E. Tauiiexck, Chairman. KoiiKitT Schilling, Se cretary National Committe, Peo ple's Party. For the committee appointed by the mas3 meeting. Benjamin Tekkill, Texas; II. M. Locks, South Dakota. Mt. IMeasanl Items. Base ball is in season once more. C B Cox closed out his school and now dwells in our midst. John llarkey and family have moved to Mt. Pleasant. The measles have broken out and are raging in district No. 29. Prof. C LT Fisher is at his post again, having traveled in the inter ests of the college for the past two weeks. Luther Widenhouse eutered co1 lege this week. This makes the number about eighty on the roll. The ladies of the seminary are preparing to give the public a drama at Easter. There is to be a public debate be tween the China Grove and Enoch ville debating societies on next Sat urday night. The societies have elected Lawyer Cromer, of South Carolina, to ad dress them at the commencement. On last Saturday night the ladies had a leap year party at Hon. II C McAllister's, and, of course the boys were not left out. There were about forty present and a general good time was the experience of each present. But the nicest and most interesting to most of us was the nice supper prepared by the hands of the fairer sex. Thi3 was the nicest and most entertaining party that we have seen lately, and we would not cbject to the girls making another leap. Fudge. FOR ONLY 99 YEA US HAS THE liOAXOIil". AXI tux iji:i:x i.easeu. i ii- l lir Xorllok Hinl Western Xo i on- .! llie Xe Line iiimI Keeoiiies lie- spwnsible lor K2.0OO.OOO. Winston, Feb. 27. The Loaned, Southern Bail road has been leased by the Norfolk and Western railroad. Negotiations for the lease were con summated in Philadelphia and the Norfolk and Western will take con trol of its new line March 1. The purchasing company guarantees the principal and interest of lioanoke Southern first mortgage bonds to the amount of 2,000,000. The Boanoke Southern was built with money furnished from Balti more, Boanoke, aud Winston anel Salem. It extends frcm Boanoke southward through Virginia and North Carolina to the South Caro lina line, and the-enterprise was ele signed by Col. F II Fries and other citizens of Winston. It will be come an important connection of thei Norfolk and W stern. Through the Cape Fear and Yad kin Valley" mil 'he Norfolk and Western will con .; -A - ah the Bich mond and Danville, Atlantic Coast Line, Seaboard and lioanoke. Soon it will extend its system to Monroe or Charlotte, N. which will t 'n it a connection with Columbia, S over the south bound railroad. Th Boanoke Soetlu-m will also be useful in giving the Norfolk a id Wesvn: an outlet for its Pocahontas coal to Wilmington, N. C, Charleston, Sa vannah, and even to Ailan'a wr the Georgia, Carolina, aud North. i n Line. Three divisions make up the fail line of the Boanoke and S niili 'i- j Division A ex tends from Martins ville, Ya , to Winston ;md S ihm, Z G; division B from Boa:iuke to Martinsville; iud division C, from Winston and S.ilcm t; th- SoWb Carolina lire. The total it i:g;h i the route from Boanoke to the ern terminus is 201 mih-s. The road was built by the Virginia North Carolina Construction Com pany. The ti'ati.-fer oi the li u Southern to the Norfolk Ce WesUrn was completed today, PlVS'deht Fries wires : '"The contract hasluen si-tied." The road was principally owned here. The deal gives Win.-- frs..ti.n-i f li.i I. .if (- tO i v.. r. ,n .. ! in the South. It has now three large and entirely independent systems. The road will extended iJouth to ii - depeiit connections at once. The present officials are retained. I'liosi!iate Men ;loiiiy. Macon, Ga., Feb. 21 Knight Agent Dorsey, of the Georgia Soutii- i -i .. . i .. i i , ern iiauroau, reuiineu iioir.e yiiei day from South Carolina, whore h has been since the first of the year, looking after the phosphate business in that State for his road. -Mr. Dor sey reports great, gloom in the phos phate industry of South Carolina, and says that the busimss has been badly crippled this season. Noth ing like the amount of pho.-phate sold last season has been sold this. The decrease in business is not less than 4U p r cent" None of the plants are now in operation, anel S, 000 men are out of i ploymtiit. Mr. Dorsey thinks the farmers of south Georgia, will put 50 per cent, le-s fertilizers in the ground this year than has ever been known Senator Vniioe Ilrukr Down. Iii the Sonato yesterday, while Mr. l'u.-.'h was fpeakin to the ma jority report in favor of si-atiiit,' Dubois, the chair of Seii.uor Vance, who was seated near lum, broke down, letting iho North Caioiina Senator fall to the lioor wi;h sonic force and much noise- As -Mr. Vance picked himself up, apr.arenN ly uniwiit, ho said (v.iin a lau-h " 'T be your pardon i' r iateiTiiptini? you, to which Mr. Posh rejoined that he had not supposed that his argument would be no nvoiNpinvcr inir. falmer oii a C::iili!:te. Chicago, Feb. 27. Senator John M Palmer made a peach at Spring field to-day in which he announced his candidacy before th-- Democratic national convention for the nomina tion for President. lie saiel he w;; sure he could carry Illinois. A .Iiidmeit! Aiimsi Dr. T.-il ilia:; " Ta!ei'ii;? 1 e. On February 10th Charles T Willis, the contractor of Dr. Ta1 mage's new tabernacle, liied a me chanic's lien against that property for over i2,000. He was afraid he was not going to get his money, and took this way of securing himself. The building cost ,f 100,000. .Mr. Talmage will have to hustle around considerably if he intends to hold the property. HORSES MULES FOR SALE. We have a number of young horses and mules that are tips on the market. If you need stock, come at once and there by get choice. - M. L. Bkown & Bko. Mcli. 2 '92. -itcsrjrrracrasawwBoataiia JOI KX.lMSIiC JAi.S. Hill's convention of yesterday makes him absolutely ineligible .s a ! candidate before the Xatioaal Deuio I i- . ..i: ... i',i 1 ti( c!-;ltlC Coll VelHlOll L till vi niaun. iiii'muumi '-.111.1, Dem. "David B Hill was admitted to the bar, it is said, in 1SG4. Has been retained for Hill ever since and has been a good lawyer. N. World, Dem. Th? office -seeker's grip is a p cu liar kind of complaint that Governor McKinley is already experiencing in "that tired feeling" of the right arm. Cincinnati Gazette. Up with the Democratic standard 1 Down with trickery and chicancery. Let us be done with cheap politics of cheap men in a national campaign. We cannot ";toop to con'iuer," nor can we courier by stooping in the war of "j'Z. Boston Post, Pern. Governor McKinley has been Gov ernor of Ohio for a month and hasn't yet found the Ohio man whose wages have been increased by the high tariff. Why doesn't he call in Pinkcrton Louisville Courier Jour nal, Dem. When Senator Stanford is Presi dent ; and the fsrmers are getting all the money they want at 2 per cent, they will go to raising 25,0)0 colts, just lik. thos.; Senator Stanford raise.-. Louisville Courier Journal, ! Dem. 4 II " - , e 7"v f-N . --'; KID GLOVES FGR GENTLEMEN. ELEGANT FOR-DRESS. Assorted Shades. Oaiiiioiis Si Fetzer . Vv'iiy f-p.eiid your money for ."nrtli!essi watches when you '::n o-et a genuine Elgin, Wal or Seth Thomas move i'leiit in an on-n face, silver 'ro case for &"", warranted for i-' months, at CO 11 HELL & HBO. Mils h & Parties desiring to purchase a h'jise or p;;ir of horses, will do well to call on Key. Tan! iiarr . i-aii iwo twin (d" good qualities nnJ ors t heir t-ale will b a bargain for some one. f-' 2V ADKIXISTRATOIi'S NOTICE. Ibmiig h(m ,1U!V nppoitite.l and q :-:h3.1 as Aandnictr-itois cf J-J-",bl;nrr, h e'd, h persons ;i;,it,,n;? Ci:iini3 ca,3t the Kftli l-svaturr are hereby notifipd to in . sent them to the undersi-ned 1 v n or before" the J hI dav ol ibuvl,, IS'.U. or this not tice will be plead ns a bar to ther recover. Also all persons owin s:id deed are noMtieel that prompt payment is expected. uiupc ILuch 2, 1802. ,). (!. ST TN'S . . n. ii laaibertI Adinimstrdtors of Erc-d urr ; i ; SI i J) 11. J E. CAHTLAJN I), rill- C-d J SJOiiiiXi. S-Jscsssor to 2r. 11. C. Herring. Feb.'.), w 2 in) pp.sv.ffa i f4 i More llian liUe'y will advance later on. 1 f von want OATS for Spring sowing, place your orders xow. Call at FETZEtt'S Drug Store and see samples of Elack Spring Oats, Rod Rust Proof Gats. Our stock of clover anel grass seeds for Spring sowing tire now arriving. We will not be undersold. Call on us. N. D. FETZER, Manager. Notice Id hmu, AH p-.rti f ;i h hereby forbidden to limit, ".mr., tisli or drive over m.y plantation in .No. 11 township. This is bashu-sx. A. F. LEFLEU. d,c 10 lm "The Burden More and Cheaper Funiture. We Lane labored in season and out of season, dav and night, to give the people or Concord and vicinity for twenty miles around, a SK COM) TO NOiCK v f H 1T' i!av" preceded. Enving, as we do dnect from !?, lactorie.,, in large quantities for'pot Y ate ab e ana will give you better prievs than you can 4t eleuhere. If there should be any doubting Thomases;! wer.sk is, ccme and see. "We will s.dl vn" w ' Our word for it, we have everythnig in the furniture line, and don't you v e are in the business to do business, and all we a us a chance. Thanking you for past favors, w are Yours Camions, Fetzer & Bell. TORKE & WADSWORTH HAVE THE LATEST ad they are cheaper than ever. Go and see them and von -an buy one on very reasonable terms. Tl is is a machVi e that any farmer can afford toown, as the cost is so liUle PPfSW nthf.timto vx in 3'our XKW COTTON GIX and X i i UKU1 ,liave tb most improved GINS this rem that have been on the market. Go and get one right away! loike it V adsworth liave iust vooU. ti, ..r, . 'I1- but Yor-? i Wo6 """'"liienea barbecne at tho Fair, ekfo The monev'T1 1 WlU S11 0U th best wagon on .aim ior the money. Get yourself one and take the family. SALE OF LAN J). By virtue of a ruortt-a;e - ei:i. .1 to mo by W. K. ilrnd ami bis v ;,. em the 22nd day of July 1s-!. ; , , recorded in tho c.J:i of Bci! t . ,,f Deeds for Cuban us county, in !.. orJ of Mortgages, No. 4. !! :, 1 will sell for cash, at public iuk-i,,,; in front of the courthouse dm.r , Concord, (it 12 o'clock. M. on day, the 11th day of March, l-xt., u tract of land containing s 'r t -1 , t - three (7:5) aeres, situated in X. i township, s'.id co -.nly, adjunct Ibej Jandti of Vi'.uini i Krvin, 'f. Pharr, M. F. J'e tej- and othns, t c metes u;ii tcunti.tvios cf whwh tr et are fuiiv eh-ii in tr.id mortal This 12th day of Feb. 18!i2 FLAM KING. Trustee. IIIF TWO IKON j:i:lI)fiE.S Oil Rocky PlVer to b'T puintd. Ail pei-. sons who wi.-h to do t-aid work wi:l hand their f-t a'e bids to the under signed oner L toietlie first M.i., day m March. 102. J. DOVE. i f Strictly Business. The tfs"fs me lue anel must bo paid. Tn s-chcol taxes are due on ii." o'.-'l ( i IVet ml'i", nnd the btiUe tuX"S on the 1st of January. Oeu ieinete 'mt near nil of this i codeceVf; 1. -u most come for. ward -this is a mutter Unit cannot b'.s lurtber pout ioi;ed. Come riyht UP' L :.L MORKION, Sheriff. FO! SAL 5" T.Iy engine b.'-ih-r ar l eoHoii gin ar,- f;-,r s.sl'?. They CHU be peciTat my j -.-ei-iien (the ,pa j u nh.Mdt Phu'f), .'!" .you can ieaau about thf m by t-pcakiisij to J. Drvo, in Concord. JIM K. DEAiON. doc 10 lia TAX KOTiCE. THIRD AND LAST CALL. This i-i siuCriy bnii ess. The Shen't i i foreed te make payments ncevrdir to jaw. i hirt li euiiT ot do vvisii.-iiit each me pity-, his tax, tLfrif-K; it is iircvssarv for every one) lo pay at oiic. All t.ises on if-ai esiate not paid before April 1st the property wi:i advertised. All taxes must b1 p id. Coma up, pay up una save costs. L IM MOEIIISOX. uaic 1HJ2. TKT i2u 3Sff 0 - -MAXTFACTUEED BT lie Wilcox & Gibbs Guano Co. CiIARLESrOX, S. C, of Cur Song" is J. THE STATE. forget ir. isk is, give Anxious To Please eh ii if a i fern aest 101 Ol 1U!J , - 1 L "Site-

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