Newspapers / The Standard (Concord, N.C.) / July 11, 1895, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 THE : STANDARD. UOWCOBD, Cababrtjb County, N. C. THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1895. JAMES P.COOK :- - wtor THE BITrATIOH AS IT IS. Confederate soldiers and North ern soldiers raised f nnds and erected a monument in Chicago to the mem ory of the Confederate dead, buried . there. Speaking beautif ullj of the t dedication of this monument. Barn's Horn, a Northern paper, says : "It makes as blush to think that some our Northern friends have taken oceasion. to speak in Tiolent hostility to this celebration." Both armies fought in defense of what they believed right. The sun sent its rays Sown for four years upon the bravest soldiers the world ' ever saw they were clad in gray ' and clad in blue When the sur render came, the true soldier accepted in good faith the results and set himself to the work of re building, and healing the wounds, , personal and national, reserying, howeverUthe inalienable right to preserve in a fitting manner the memories of the brave dead and to defend the good name and honor of each section. This thing of having a good taste in the month is impossible and .not human, when insults and slanders are hurled at us and circulated nst na. ,. It is the duty of all to strive to lay aside end bury the animosities . and the jealousies and backbiting!, . and to encourage a friendly feeling between tbe sections and to plant the seeds of brotherly love. This is reasonable ; it is patriotic ; it is ' Christian. We of the South, for thirty years, ava borne much, suffered manv indignities and insults; and the work, formerly openly now sneak - ingly, is jet going on. And during all this time the degree of forbear, ance and patience under all sucb Viae been remarkable. . -"" That the feeling between the two ' sections is not more strained is not the fault of South haters and slan derers. That more ill feeling does is due to the good people of all sections : that it exists at all ; (how 30 years after the war) is due to political knaves and unprinci pled and unblushing slanderers. There are some people who think they can heap upon us, with impu nity, their insults and misrepresen tations ; and when a decent though emphatic protest is made, they think ns ugly and vicious, and lash themseTveB into a frenzy because of our not submitting in good, patient humor to it all. These impudent and cheeky slanderers might think us clever and noble people, did we sit. smiling while they abuse ns and lie about us to their heart's content Wfth all respect we recall that, in Is. it took six Yankees to whip one-Southerner, but it will require ten dozen Yankees to one South. 'erner a ratio of 120 to 1, if you pjease to force us to feel good oyer slanders upon onr women and our. section and make us love and respect" the authors of such Blanders, j It will be an evil day for us and our domestic institution if we pas tieotly be quiet while emissaries of evil designs and fiendish schemes, .erthe.clcak ofrajTSton and a missionary spmtTsee? to eliminate the distinctive lines that separate the races, a line that God Almighty 'himself drew, and while they send painted and illuminated incendiary articles back to their homes to fetch more funds to carry on the nefa rious business. .Respectable men and women f the South have gone north and have been treated kindly and decently; table and honorable .men and women of the North come, take up their homes among us and are wel come and are' always treated with the profonndest courtesy, with not a particle of friction. All this has bjsei demonstrated time and again In 'this wholesome welcome to out siders, we sometimes take Into our bosomsa yile serpent; but with characteristic Southern promptness and'sense of right and justice the serpent is ". unbosomed, but often times not until some poison has been lpdged. It is then we suffer. Bain's Horn spoke beautifully. fcere-are inalienable rights that be long to each section of this common Union,! " - .- During, last year the big fire in rTranolscb when the water raa he firemen coupled their hoes 8,000 gallon tank of claret tarnedit on tbe flames. ers broke down at the -n bitterly.- ' THK ABTCfiSTOK OF HAS. Up jumps a modern ;.' scientist with a nev thecry about man's original ancestor. A Western paper says that "thinking men have never been exactly satisfied with ' taking literally the biblical account of the origin of their species-." What if thej haven't? After they write, talk, spread their literature, they lie down and die and with them their theories die and are scarcely ever recalled. The agnostic the fellow, who after all has to acknowledge "I do hot know" figures for awhile, sowj some seeds of doubts here and there, and finallv dies he never offeis anything better, he does not dis prove what biblical believers haye the greatest confidence in, (though they may not be able to prove it with mathematical certainty), much of which has already received the stamp of authenticity by the rec ords of profane history, by tbe in fluences upon man and the world and by the prophecies whieh have been fulfilled, and which biblical teachings have been so strengthened in thousands ef ways until the moBt cautious and skeptic ought to be satiEfied. There are doubtless many who pose as agnostics merely to be odd, original, independent, or something. About the best one, the greatest intellectually, was the late Huxley "I do not know" Was his trade mark, The world perhaps admired him for his intellectual greatness and he had many interested ones to watch him and to read him and to study him yet a mighty few of them would be willing to die on such uncertainties. Men often timed ride hobbies that the Bible does net excuse and which enter tain, amuse and eyen fascinate many and especially those "that do not know." but it is safe to say that when they are nearlng the bnnk of the dark river they wiBh for some thing more certain, even that which the old, old story tells of. But to return ' The Bame authority above quoted says also : "Since the dawn of civ ilization the higher types of reason ing mortals have held the belief that man is a near relative to tbe lower animals." There are so few who endorse this, that their fewness makes them conspicuous their iso lation, so to speak, causes more im portance to be-attached to them and their teachings than is justly due. Such men are usually lionized, and were it not for the numerous and frequent references made to them and their contentions by the ortho dox, they would not rise above the horizon of the ordinary. The evolutionists ought to have a platform, on which all could stand. They differ, and promulgating widely different yiews they carry conviction to but few. Professor Edward D Cope.a sctEX' tific scholar'now'connected with the University of Pennsylvania, solved (?) man's ancestry. He has found an unbroken chain from man back to a low grade of fishes which existed in palezoic time. This may account for some persons being so "fishy," From the anthropoids or manlike apes, Cope's theory extends back eight removes, by so doing each creature on the line of ascent gets an ancestry not to be much proud of. How an opossum or like animal TSfe'volve from a cold-blooded rep tiie or a nootea-cre&ture trom an oppossum, is eertainly a very "scien tific discovery." Frederick O Gherke is another scientist. He sprang iito promi nence after the death of Darwin in 1882. He adyanced a unique theory. tie says tnat.tne ape is not even, a remote cousin to man. This is re. freshing. But he makes it bad enough ha traces -man to bears, polar bears at that Says Gherke, the bear man ; "My1 idea is that the earlier bears came down through Behring Straits on. icebergs whicn .drifted to the shores of tropical . Asia. In the course of ages they took to the cayes and there shed their heavy coats of hair The connecting link be tween what is now man and the bear being an'indescribable manslike bear or bearIike man, whichever ex pression suits your fancy best." Prof. Allen, an Australian scien tist, argues that the last animal an cestor of man was a kangaroo. Quite natural for ah Australian. The meanest scientist is a German savant who recently proved (?) that man's original ancestor was a plant louse, and that the human race will again degenerate to yeget able-eating mites. : ' ' - Dr. J. 8. Flagg, a' scientist of Boston, lectured last year and said among other things: " "Man, although the 'triumph of evolu tion,' is toot necessarily descended from the ape, "but rather that the ape is a living example of one of the stages of J man's development : from the ;lowcr animals.". " These great t-iinkerB?) ought to get together and promulgate a plat form of principles on which could stand, without conflict, manlike apes, reptiles, opossnms, kangaroos, polar bears and vegetable parasites. Wheneyer, reasoning (?) men be gin to formulate new ideas, speculate on vital matters and forget that God "created man in his own image" and try to set up a new system of religion and wander away from the Bible and its teachings and say "I do not know" then they have no case and amount to nothing except manufacturers o dangerous netwoiks for themselves, and confusion to a few who read and study them. THE FATHEB OF A TKIO. The news has flashed, with the speed of electricity, across the coun try that Grover Cleveland has an other baby in his home. It is a lady baby, and this is tbe third, and all are ladies. Grover Cleveland may some day, in the distant future, again be presi dent and who knows but that he may haye daughters and sons in-law enougn to make up his cabinet with out going out of his family for ma terial for secretaries. And if his daughters have as much wisdom in selecting their husbands, as the old man has shown on various occasions, he will have a set of strong advisers. LOOKI.NO AFTER H1STOK1, The Standard prints in another column a card from Mr. W M Voils, of Mooresville. Mr. Voils touches on a subject that should elicit the sympathy of all who take an interest in history and desire to preserve all matters spoken of in our correspon dent's letter. Sometime ago our townsman, Mr. 0 K White, gave us the facts rela tive to the grave of Bigner Patton ; and it was intimated then. that the grave of another signer was in the county, but could not be located. If anyone can throw light on the subject, sprung by Mr. Voils, for the sake of history and erecting a monus ment let it come. . A SEW TRAVELER, Last Wednesday G W Bowman left Denver in a buggy propelled by gas, and will attempt to reach Chi. cago at a coat not to exceed $5.10. We have not learned whether he got there on time or not. If he succeeded he will receive from a capitalist in Chicago the sum of $10,000 for the right to sell the machine in half of the State of Illinois. Tha gas engine weighs 275 pounds and the supply of gaao line may be put under the seat, where it may be drawn upon when ocjeasion demands. He estimates that a gallon per horse power is sufficient for ten hours' run. The machine complete is designed to cost just about what a good horse and harness Is worth, and the expense of running the vehicle is less than the cost of. feeding and shoeing a horBe. When -a man or firm has to cur tail expenses the first thing he jimps on is the town newspaper the organ that deyotes its time and energies to the upbuilding of the town in which it is published. But when it comes to economizing they forget the free advertising it does for Baid town, and the local paper gets it where the chicken got .the axe inhe neck. Every busihees should be represented in the local paper, if only by a two or three inch adyertismeut. The curfew ordmar.ee which is ao popular in other Minnesota town?, will soon be adopted in Duluth The proposed ordiance prohibits all persons, under 15 years of age from appearing on, the streets after 9 o'clock in the evening,' and provides a penalty of $100 fine or ninety days imprisonment for violation of the law. If such an ordinance got on the books of Concord, there are several or more who would be boreted shortly or sooner. . . The New York Herald has been turning on some very important and much needed light as t) tbe last bond sale cf $65,000,000. The British syndicate reaped, it says, a profit of $12,000,000. The bonds fetched about 4 per cent., it says. They now sell for 122. The issue of the Raleigh News and Obseryer gotten outTuesday and which it justly calls a school edi tion was made, up of 24 pages. It contained cuts of many teachers in the State and school news from- Currituck to Cherokee.. It .is one of the finest papers ever issued in the State. Josephus Daniels is doing a good work in North Carolina. J H Harley.'of Rhode Island, has purchased an ielaud in Lke Worth, Fid., for 37 cunts. He paid $5 entry fee, and now makes $80 a month Bit ting on the island and catching green turtles as they pass. The Charlotte Observer editorially noting the birth Sunday last of the new lady baby in the family of the president, gets off this sorrowful complaint and it is also amusing "Mrs. Cleveland was ' hardly fair to the daily newspapers which do not get out Monday morning editions." ' "Give a lie one day the start, and truth will have to chase it around the world." When it has six months the start, the world has to be en circled a thousand times before truth catches up. Mrs. Lease still rides her hob bies, but she alao rides a bicycle, which makes her a sort of a "atraddler," so to speak. But she stili keeps "the middle of the road," Ham's Horn says : "If there is any dog in a man, it is sure to growl when his food ia not to his taste." Lots of people are doggish. The Governor reprieved a negro who had assaulted and murdered a white girl of fourteen after he had beetn convicted. Lynchers enforced the law by hanging Price to a tree. He begged for mercy but got that he showed the defenseless little girl. With our local reporter,. H. P. Deaton, on 'the wing, and the old man with a rest and aim, The Standard gets about all the game that's out. As a good huhtmg day and the amount of gaaoe on the wing, this issue speaks for itself. For several days we have been having some dispatches. It looks nice to 'see "Special &c. Today we have a lot condensed. It is quite probable that The Standard will take the telegraphic seryice at an early day. Concord deserves tbe very best . - Electricity and the bicycle may drive the noble horse, the faithful mule and the steady ox to the rear, but no mechanical substitute will eyer tupplant - the humble cow. When milking time comes, .bicycles are not in it. Tbe whortleoerry crop of Samp son, county is said to be worth $100,000. Great. I Scotts! what a financial picnic Dr. Herring is miss ing By moving his vine from his natiye county. An exchange inquires whether it is not possible to take the new woman too seriously to heart. Not where she is lovely and willing In St. Louis they are dropping city employees from the. pay jolls for jot voting. In Chicago they used to be dropped if they did not yote several times or more on the same day. Quite a contrast, 'St Louis is way behind. For OverVifly Yern. Mrs. Winslow's Sooth'ng Syrup has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle Be sure and ask.for "Mrs. Winslow's Soohing Syrup," and take no other kind. - mwZ&w - Just Think Of It. How many of our people realize how much building is going on in this city ad how many know that there is not enough dwelling houses for the demand ? There are four houses being bnilt at the Cabarrus mills ; there are five new ones going np at Forest Hill ; there will be several built at the new roller mill ; there will be twenty new ones built at the Cannon mills ; there will be eighteen built at the Buffalo Thread mill, besides many new ones under course of construction in -the heart of the city, In all there are or will be fifty houses built within the next few months. At an average of fonr to a family, the city's popular tion will be increased by 200. And thus we prosper. - Worms la His Cantaloupes. J C Johnston, a prominent Geor gia melon raiser, sends out the following information, which may benefit some of bur melon raisers : "tTpon examination of my canta loupes since the wet weather, I find small white worms on them ' next to the ground, and some of them have nearly bored in half their length. It will be well to turn, the melon over and scrape off the the worms and lesye them (the melons) turned over, which- I think will --prevent the worm from destroying them. -1 haye turned them all over ' and destroyed the worms. If the wet weather con tinues it will be well to look after. them again after the first turning." - MR'. TROUTMAN MISSING. . Bad Xw Fromfelatkstone Hi Crowd at the Npriugs Personal Matter. . . . . Fine weatner aud - good seasons prevail. , Corn ia growing rapidly; laying by corn ia tbe order of the day. , A young man was found on the 4tb near the creek called Curl fail; he was a little under the influence of John Barleycorn. It is probable that J A Price Troutman, once in the service of the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company, and a resident of Coni cord, has eloped. His wife, a fine woman, and live children are fat J A Troutman's, Eq., in Stanly county. Mr. J D -GrimeB, of th6 Lexing ton roller mills, and Mr. Mendenhall, of Lexington, were in our yillage Thursday last. They visited the great Yadkin River at the Narrows and other points and returned Fri day evening. Mr. Grimes also visited the Misenheimer & Lentz Springs oyer Sunday and left- for Charlotte and South Carolina Monday. . They are still coming to the Misenheimer & Lentz Springs; some from Raleigh, Greensboro and Char lotte. Others are expected soon. No one can grumble for pies now. "Blackberries plentiful. Isaac. Trytnir to Find an Old Grave Some weeks ago we saw an article in The Standard in reference to the graye of "Patton,1' one of the signers of the Mecklenburg Decla ration of Independence. Mr. Pat tan's grave was almost unmarked, and it is one mile and a half from Concord. Another one is within five miles of Concord and un marked. Some of his descendents have written me to locate the graye if possible. They wish to erect a monument to bis memory. If any one of the oldest inhabitants can give me any information that will help me to locate the grave of David Reese, I shall be gratefnl. if the grave can be located, a monnment will be put up at once. He was buried either at Poplar Tent or at what is known as the old Long grave-yard. Respectfully, - W. M. Voils. Mooresville, July 8, 1895. The County t'oiiuiiixsionors full of . BUNlllCHM. v The County Commissioners met Monday to hear complaints about the assessment of real estate. It appears that it was understood by many that tbe values were to be Cut down 20 percent. In some town ships this was done; in others the cut was greater and still others the cut was not more than 3 per cent This, as is readily seen, does not equalize tne hardens over the county In No. 6 the assessed value of real estate is not cut- down more than $2,000 in the aggregate, while in No. 8 the decrease is about $35,000. This is the matter that held the attention of 'the Commissioners on Monday and Tuesday. They want to distribute the burdens of taxa'ion over the county in equal measures. They, the Commissioners are con servative and just men, and whatever they do, will be right so far as they are able to make it. Huuday Nt'bool Convention in Mo. JO TOWUKtlip. The Sunday School Convention of No. 10 township will -be held at Boger's Chapel on Saturday, July 20th, 1835. Addresses will be made by Revs. Bryant and Long, Messrs L T Hartsell, J F Newell, H C Cook. Dr. Lufferty, and others. The several choirs of the township will furnish music tor the occasion. A cordial invitation ia extended to the public. . J. H. Long, President. D. J. Little, Secretary, An Inflated Effff. Master Harry Montgomery brought to The Standard this morning an egg tkin that bore a remarkable resemblance to an in Hated balloon, with an extension on the small end that looked like a parachute attached minus the bas ket or bars. The covering to this egg had a silken finish and was filled with a substance that was not gasoline, but from appearances on the outside of the skin it contained something the same color as that of gasoline. This specimen of hen fruit was found by Harry's grandmother in the yard of Dr. W H Lilly. Conlan't Stop Tbeiu. Sidewalk bicycle' riding was one of the main questions discussed be fore the board of aldermen Tuesday night. An amendment was offered to tbe present ordinance to impose a fine on any person who might run against another not less than $10, but "was lost. . It was then tried to prohibit riding on the sidewalks al together, but this motion was lost by a vote of 4 to 3. As it now stands the boy a have the monopoly of the sidewalks. They seldom ring a bell and few, if any, have laD terns after dark. The Ijaw should be enforced, and every man should be made ring his bell. The AUiancemen have rented the ball oyer the store,room of Mr. M 0 Walter, hear the. depot, and will, in the future, hold their meetings there. The room is to be fitted np for this order's especial use. - ; i OUR OLDEST " COUNT'S MAN Was' Sick But Is lie Iter Look.ng for Gold Prof. Brooks Begins August JItti tinerterly Mcetliitc-An Instru ment Tbat Smells Gold. Georevile, N. C. July 9. Crops are looking fine in this vi cinity. There will be a township Sunday school convention at Georgeville on the 25th of July. The Mt. Pleass ant, Cold Springs, St. Paul's and Georgeville choirs will furnish mu sic for the occasion. Prof. Brooks will take charge of the school at this place th3 oth of August. We wish vhim a pleasant stay among us. Quarterly meeting will be held at Center Grove next Sunday. . A hired boy in this neighborhood while hauling wheat fell overboard in the ditch. Two gentlemen from Canada are visiting the Nugget gold mine. They have an instrument which they call an indicator ann they say that they can find a gold dollar in a twenty acre held with this instrument. ir tit.. i . jure, win Aieenard, living near Nugget Gold Mine, is quite Bick Her many friends wish her a speedy recovery. - Mr. Charles Widenhouse has been having chills, but he is about done shaking. Mr. Martin Widenhouse. one of Cabarrus' oldeet -itizens has beenlfive mi!e8 from this PPntment- sick, but is improving. He is 91 years old. E. E. W. additional news from "joiar. Plenty of f rtyt. The recent rains haye made wonderful change in the crops. Farmers have their wheat in their barns, and are low laying by their crops. Mrs. Maggie Sikes, of Charlotte, is visiting relatives in and around Georgeville. Mr. E A Jerome and Dr. Hartsell went on a visit to Albemarle on the Fourth. Quite a number of young people attended the 4th of July picnics at pifferent placeB this year. The Odd Fellows Chan-re Booms. . The Odd Fellows have determined $p change their home. tor more than a year this order has been living in a room rented from Mr. Jas. Barrage, on North Main street. The Alliance has caused trouble. It seems that Mr. Barrage, the owner of the building, had a key to the ha!lnd the Alliance went, up and met in the Odd Fellows' lodge. This was wiihoue tbe permission or the knowledge of the Odd Fellows' who had the hail rented.. By accident, Noble Grand Coble learned of it and the meetiug last FrMay night was suddenly ended. Many of the Odd fellows are not pleased with such intrusion, and the Odd Fellows waited on the Masons and asked to rent the privileges of their hall for the meeting of the Odd Fellows. - So the Lodge comes back to where it was reorganized several years ago. The Masons and Knights of Pythias and the Odd Fellows can live together but there is a vigorous protest when the Alliance seeks as. sociation. When Baby was sick, we gave her Costorl.t. tThen she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she bad Children, she gave them Castoria. Concord's Church Attendance. This matter was sprung at Ja re cent meeting of the Concord Miniss ters' Association. The question was asked how many, on the aver age, attended the services that is how many different persons, count ing no one twice, attended the morning and night services of the town churches. Rev. W 0 Alexander, of the Presbyterian church, thought abont 200 at his church ; Rev. J 0 Alders man about 300 at the Baptist ; Rev. Parker about 100 at Central ; and Rev. M G G Scherer about 150 at St. James' Lutheran. We could not get the estimates of the ,other churches in town. . The Standard knows that every church could accommodate many more than attend, but there is one thing sure that one half of the town's' population could not be packed into our churches. Rev. Alderman is engaged in the very pleaBant and interesting work of ascertaining the number attend ing the churches of both races in Concord. To those living in malarial districts Tutt's Pills are indispensible, they keep the system in perfect order and are an absolute cure for sick headache, indigestion malaria, torpid liver, constipa uon and all bilious diseases. Tutt's Liver Pills Clear Creek Items. Crops want just a "leetle" more ram. A few farmers have threshed wheat around here and we learn that the yield is just tolerable. Wherry Alexander was thrown from a mule a few days ago and almost killed, but we are glad to know that he is rapidly recovering from bis injuries and will soon be himself again. Wherry is a re markably good boy and deserves better treatment, even though it be from tbe heels of a mule. On Saturday Mr. Thomas McEachern's wife fell suddenly to the floor and lay for some time ap parently dea 1 ; two physicians were summoned with all possible haste and up to this writing she is still lingering between life and death with little or no hopes of recovery. Bethel church is having a series of Bible readings this 1b quite a de parture from the usual cuetom of country churches and was instituted by Re r. Mr. Bryant, the paBtor. Bethel people have every reason to be proud of their pastor as he is an affable, scholary, devout, and ex tremely intellectual man. Rev. A C Dayis passed through on his way to Cold Water Baptist church last Saturday where he preaches once a month. He lires at Unionville which place ia4 twenty surely it is a strong man that can endure such a hardship as going by private conveyance this long and rough distance every month to preach. Bill Tally has a renter, Bill Tay lor, whom, he furnished a horse and feed to make a crop. Tally has ac cused Taylor of misappropriating the feed that he sends to lay lor to feed the horse upon and has entered suit against him. We ltarn that the trial will be Wednesday the .10th inst, at Clay's school house. The case will come up before Justices Cook, Black, McEachern, Newell and Kluttz. The case being rather novel one with so many of the legal fraternity connected with it seems to have awakened a great in terest in the community. airs. Mwlnk Dead. Mr. Katie Swink died at her home on Lee street, next to the Rowan House, about noon today, Mrs. Swmk was oyer 80 years old and leaves seven children. Tuesday's Salisbury Herald. Mrs, Swink was tbe mother of our townsman, Mr. George Swink, who has been at his mother's bedside for several week's expecting the sum mons to come at any time. QET THE BEST Iflien you ere cbout to boy a SewinR Machine do nut h's decei'-rd by alluring advertisements Bti-1 be led to think you can get the best made, Most Popular for a tr.er'.- Kong. See to it that you buy trum reliable manu facturers thrit have ir.iined a 'put at ton by hotsst and square ." vvinsr Mac-nine that ia noted yo'i will then get the world over for its flura lii:!.y. You want the one that is easiest to manage and ii New Home It has Automatic Tension, Doable Feed, alike on both sides c needle (fatenttd), no other has it ; New St:nd (t'ttenleJ), driving wheel hinged on adjustable centers, thus reducing friction to the minimum. W8 STE FOR C8RCU LARS. THE HEW HOME SEWIKG MiCHIHE CO. Ohasoe, Muss. Boktow, M.uw. 28 TinoK foras, H. Y CiiiCAIfO. ItX- ST. LOI'IS, MO. I'Al.I AS. TEXAS. bAX l'lUCXCO, CAL. ATI.AHlA, tA. FOR SALE OY YORKE & WADSWORTH Coxcord, N, C. UNIVERSITY OF Comprises the University, the College,, the Law and Medical Schools, and the SUMMER . SCHOOL for teachers. Tuition $60 ; 35 teachers. 471 students. Ad dress President Winston, Chapel Hill, N C, for Cata logue and handbook on "UNI VERSITY EDUCATION." CONCORD MARKETS' COTTOK MAEKET. Corrected by Cannons & Fetzer ' ? Good middling 6 i Middlings bi . Low middling , 5.7!) Stains 4to5 PHODUCE MAEKET. Corrected bv C. W Swink. BacoB ' 8 Sugar-cared cams 12itol5 Balk .aeats, sides a to y Beeswax ...5 Butter 15 Chickens......... . . .V. 20to25 Corn 45 Eggs... ..r ....io Lard........ .'. ......8toll Flour (North Carolina) 1.75 Meal...... ..50 Oats...................... 3?) Tallow 3to4 n A af ACHBtino. Bhbtmatifm rellewfl PAw IVby Dr, lilies- Is'erre Plasters. Light Running . f t :r There U none In the world that Rladsiuii,' c"n eclua' 'n mechanical con- struction, durability of working klTlSa parts, fineness of finish, beauty ITli'fl'd ,n appearance, or has as many improvements as the NORTH 1 Bushel of CLAY 3 PEAS will be " sold, cheap for cash, at Pattterson's WHOLESALE AND RETAIL STORE CONCORD, N. 0. . Nokth Carolina 1 c . Cabarrrus County buPeno: Court- W J Hill, Administrator of C A Suther, p aintiff, ya. J G Suther, John W Suther, Lilly Suther, Octy 0 Suther, M C Downum and husband. Jno F Downum, M L Morgan and husdand, W S Morgan, H L Su her, W A, Suther, ME Suther, ChaaGl Suther. Jennie Oswald and husband J P Oswald, H A tsundy ana nusnand, W 11 "Bundy, defendants. It appearing o the satisfaction of the Court from the return of J A Sims, Sheriff of Cabrrrus County, N. C, and from the affidavit cf W J Hill filed in the above entitled ac tion, that J G Suther, Jno V Suth er Lilly Suther, Octy O Sethr, M tl Tinurmm nnA rtimriAnrl- .Tnn V Downum, and M L Morgan and husband and W S Morgan are non residents of this state, and after due diligence cannot be found within the State of North Carolina, and are necessary und proper par ties to tae above entitled action, and whereas the plaintiff above named has begun an action in said Court to subject the real estate of said C A Suther described iu the coruplaiut of the plaintiffs for assets to pay the debts of said C A Suther deceased, and whereas the saut de fendants J G. Jno W, Lilly, Octy O Suther, M C Downum and husband, Jno IP Downum. M L Morgan and husband, W S Morgsn have an in terest actual or contingent as heirs at law of said C A tiuther. Now therefore, the said J G. Jno W, Lilly. Octy O Suthr, M C Downum and husband. Jno. F Downum and M L Morgan aud husband, W S Morgan are hereby notified that unless they be and appear at the ofiice of the Cletk of Superior Court of eaid county a"d State Aforesaid on or before ihe 19 day of August. 1895 and plead, answer or demur tn the complaint of the plaintiff in this action, that the . plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief de manded in the comi I tint and for costs of action. This 3rd day of July, 1895. JAMES OL GIBSON. Clerk Superior Court. NEW BICYCLES CALL AND LOOK AT THEM. , 6. L. Patterson, n. Agent COLUMBIA, HARTFORD AND CRES CENT BICYCLES, Concord. Nv C.
The Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 11, 1895, edition 1
2
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