Newspapers / Daily Concord Standard (Concord, … / Feb. 4, 1892, edition 1 / Page 1
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Local Ads. SEND Daily or Weekly to a, Friend. The, Standard is badly abused. IX FIRST COLUMN 2 Cts. Per Liii6.att ttt t YVol. IV. No. 7 77. CONCORD, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1892. Wiiolk No. 540 TRtr DAILY STANDARD Irr g -: 1 -; i -V 4f TOWN CIIAJ Our ReiortcrNtreet Work anl New if Hip onniy Hon. S J Ifmbettou lifts retunitd to Albemarle. Col. Valenti ne will celebrate his birth-day this month. Mis Emma Strieker is no longer a saleslady at Hooter & Lore's, Regular ft cord sewing machise thread, only 4catthe Rack;. 3t M JFreeman is off fora'few days' trip, commerctlly. Miss s corsets 40c at the Racket. 2t Mi? Annie McDonald, of Char lotte, is visiting in tlftvcity. Miss Julia Stirewalt, of Coddle Creek, spent Wednesday in town. One quart bottle of Thomas' violet ink only 18c at the Racket. The very finest New Orleaus mo lapses. Send down your jug. Jno. A. Shns. Miss Sallie McAllister, of Mt. Pleasant, is visiting her sister, Mrs. J F Misenheimer. Remember the stereopticou exhi bitioa at the opera house to night lta good, we are told. It is taid that there will be 80 couples at the ' reception by the ladies at the St. Cloud hotel, Friday night. Today is the 17th anniversary of the marriage of Rev. and Mrs. W 0 Campbell. May three 17th anniver saries come to them. W A Deal, a former resident of Rowan county but now of Taylors ville, 111 , was m irried today' (Thurs day) to Miss Annie lownsend, of Charlotte, N C. L;tco curtains bound with tape only 58 and GSc. Curtain poles 25c, and window shades mounted on self acting spring rollers 332c complete at the Racket. 2t Dr. Andrew Wilson F. R. S. R, F. S. A., &c, recommends Lucas' transparent glycerine soap. The best, cheapest and most exquisite of all English complexion soaps. Only 10c at the Racket. lwk There was a big woods fire on the old Gibson place, iu No. 2, on Tues day. Some fine fighting had to be done to save the buildings on Mr. J P Allison's place which adjoins the Gibson tract. The Standard 'gave an aocount of the disappearance of Mr. J F Hold brooks' horse. It ws thought that the horse was stolen. A little boy rode the horse to his own home. ' The animal was returned to Mr. Holdbrooks and the matter is settled. Mrs. Ritch, an 80 year old lady living on East Depot Etreet, has cut and sewed with her own hands au alpaca dress. Very few, ladies one fourth of her age do such noV with out several sewing machines, &q, Mrs. Ritch is a remarkable old lady. The Baptist congregation of the town has extended a call to Rev. Dr. L G Broughton, of Keidsville. Dr. Broughton, it will be remembered, quit thepractice of medicine about a fear abound entered the ministry. He has not yet accepted. Col M X Ball and Col Prof Man gum of the Graded School, exercised on bicycles Wednesday evening. The attention of the town authorities is respectfully called to a busted place in the pavement on Depot Etreet. Col Ball is suspected of being the guilty party. Let the place bo investigated.' Dr. Ouom is gone. Why not call this thing "stStion," instead of "depot?" ine cotton seen business is con-4 slderablv off. . , , . . . n 10 16 y' Charley Overran, of Salisbury, is Uere. . M Oglesby, of Harrisburg, made his usual Thui"idays trip to town. The Odd Fellows meet tonight. A full attendance is desired. IlC McAllister, chairman of the Board of Education, spet several days in town. . Joe Moose, of 'Stanly county, is in town on business. uu.nu onupiug wt.ni over to ine c,:tu o : j. i ,i Hub, or Cnarlotte, to use plain Eng- a birch thicket near by. The doc s tor, then i youtl), oftui visi ed$ the Jim Fink, the town trensurer, birch thicket. JVe do nt know went to Charlotte. His bondsmen how old he is, but are reliably in were not aware of it. fo med that the Southern Con fell - The Y'M C A committee meets cy still owes him for a few weeks' tonight. Will the organization be 8ervlce continued ? Let us hope that it will. The ladies have been using the retty weather in drives and horse- backridinsr- The Republican State Convention is called for April 11th. It meets in Raleigh. Sheriff Morrison has settled with the State in full, paying $9,401.30. Lots of this goes te pay for the State printing. ' We have made our garden we have had it plowed and we have had the anions planted and the ground sprouted. Dr. J E Cartland, son and daughter, of High point, arrived today. Tne doctor is making prep arations to move at once. There must be a lot of cotton yet unsold. Nearly every man you talk with speaks of not haying sold his cotton. It is said that Jno. T Patrick is selling some of his pers onal proper ty, to settle some exposition debts. Has it come to this ? Two hundred and twenty-five brands of fertilizers have been regis tered at the Agricultural Depart ment. Fertilizers will be a bad trade this year. Alexander Sides, for tea years the mail carrier between Concord and Mt. Pleasant, spent the day iu town. He's not a bit older in looks, bat is gettingbald.. . For his services in marrying Mark Morrison, the mayor of Har risburg, Esq. Jesse Willeford receiv ed from the big hearted Morrison one fourth of a gallon of cow peas. Dr. Fetzer offered his services to write up the Leap Year reception, but when thinking of the hard names to spell in writing about the costumes, he tendered his resigna tion. r The night train on the Westf rn NC railroad are discontinued for the present You see how flat the railroad business is ! If they would charge reasonable prices, they'd get more to do, in epite of the hard ti nes. The Lexington Dispatch says : By special request Rev. T A Boone, pastor of the Methodist church, will preach next Sunday morning and night on the subject of "The Second Coming of Christ." Mr. Boone be lieves that we are on the verge of the millennium. f IK. II V lIKKUINti i.i:ay fc t N. je uriaiii suwcdx tiim.-Tiie' r-. i. t . vr mm mm ' iriiu TMit7 rsKiiii nt the Io-tor. 4' The Stendard has known and re- gfetted for some time thai fir. Herring was to leave us. ! On Monday, Dr J ti Cartland, of ft h IW wi)1 move intQ ftM ue .complete )H)sseesion rtf the oflice now Occupied by Dr. Herri frg. A few personal nott s : Dr. Herring was born in Sampson cointy, which is to his credit; 'and that he became a citizen of Cabar rus is siill u greater credit. The first school he attended was in a. log hut cue of the rules of .be muster was to be tfyrc half au J:our by sun. If a pupil failed to conform to this . . . . demand hevas seut on a mi-sion to.: In 18G8 09 he was under the training of B F Grady, now Con gressman from the 3rd district. He was a student at Wake Forest Col lece in 1871-72. He graduated in 18S0 at the Philadelphia Dental College. lie located at Clinton, Sampson county, but health breaking down, he came here, wh.-re he has been for about ten years. Dr. Herring has built up a large 'ami lucrative pruct.icxvatid gathered around himmany friends, who will regret to know of his decision. But he has a littlH girl, who can not bear, aud it is his intention to perfect himself in 'teaching these unfortunate ones speech and devote his life to it. The best wishes of the Standard, together with that of many friends, attend the doctor in his noble pur pose. Dr. Cartland is likewise a gradu ated one of the finest dental col leges north. Two years ago he took a post graduate course in Chicago. He comes with the endorsement of all the people of his acquaintance as an excellent dentist and a Christian gentleman. Dr. Herring could not have chosen a better man for his successor. Narrow i:rnp. Miss Myrfie Brantly a grown young lady, a pupil of tie public school in No. 45 No. 5 township, had a jiarrow escape from a horri ble death on Tuesday. Standing near the fire, her dqes3 caught. Had it not been foi the efforts of the teacher, Miss Loula Barnhardt, and the pupils, Miss JBrantly wonJd surely have Jbeen burnt to death. Her dres3 was entirelyjburnt fiom her, but woolen underclothing served a good purpose' in checking the flames. Miss Brantly was not painfully burnt, but the shock was intensely severe. Xew .SubrrIlMr to Weekly. J S Russell, M D Craton, G R WTinecoff, C R Cook, W F Freeze, M L Ritch, J N Barringer, John Josey, II P Spradley, J D Green, Mrs. S J Overcash, Chas Barnhardt. 12, or a dozen, or words to that effect. Editor Watterson asks: "What is the matter with Cleveland?" Nothing is tke matter with Cleve- land, but his fool friends are trying j garance companies and CS lire insur to smash him and the party, too. ance companies ; total 101. A HK.IIARKAm.E CASE. Ktlc-k of Wood iiimI it Tufl of Hair I(ciiii1 Irom I lie Wo ii it 1 il I.s of, A? I,. Siiik, Victim of tlio l'otiuii 1 ISrlde W i 'It. n Correspondenee !cxingt(H' Dispatch. Your laat week in reference to the ondiion of Air? A L Sink out of the victims of tlfe railro.fd wreck at Bosnian's .bridge, August 27, 1891, yistomew'nar trii si ending. It is true tbt Mr. Sink had been ablewfth the aid df crutshesand an attendant to get ouf on th street, a shot t di sance from the fr.ouse; but then whs waiting at the same time indications of a "rapid" recovery. Mr. Sink, it will be runembered, teceivd a 'very. bad punctured wound six or leen inches deep in, bis right hip at a point about seven inches above the break in his thigh, which has obstinately refused to Real, and by the constant discharges luis been a great d'jiin upon his system. Ir. is doubtless owing to this terrible wou"nd, more than to his broken bone, that his recovery has not been more rapid. To ascertain the cause bf the w-ound not healing, and if possible, to remedy the difficulty, his attend ing physician, Dr. R L Payne, Jr., determined to perform an operat:mi, and accordingly on last Thursday, assisted by doctirs Payne Sr., Craw ford and Riley, he made a perpen dicular incision about four inches lengjind in depth to the bone oppo site the fracture in the thigh an 1 extending upward to the bottom of the old wound. A't this point the Doctor introduced his finger and took from the wouud a splinter of wood about 21 inches lnnp, or .? of mi inch wide and nearly , as. thick On a further search he found another fplinter about one fourth as large, and a small tuft of hair, which had been peeled from the head of some other poor victim (probably his wife), of this most horrWe wreck, befo-e it reached Mr. Sink, and was driven through his clothing and into his flpsh to the depth above stated, and for more than five months has caused intense suffering. The operation was a tedious one, but skilfully performed. Mr. Sink submitted jto and stood the operation with much nerve and fortitude He has, of course, necessarily suf fered much andi3 still suffering from the operation. Hopes may now be entertained of his recovery. L. C. II. Irrlrieiit ortlie It A 1. It ig learned that Samuel Spencer, formerly president of the Baltimore & Ohio system, but now in charge of financial interests of Drexel, Morgan & Co., is booked for the presidency of the Richmond & Danville system. A sneak thief stole th $75 over coat of Rev Henry M Field, brother of Cvrus W Field, as he was preach ing i Chicago. The jeweler has drills so small that they can bore a hole one thous sandth of an inch in diameter through a precious stone. An Englishman who recently visited Boston was most struck with the fact that the men there U3e ice water in shavin?. There are now doing business in this State 33 life and accident in SHORT LOCALS. Mrs. Mary A Shinu, who has been dangerously :ll, is convalescent. Harris Crowell, the miller and jlkist of Mt. Pleasant, was in town to see about court. TtieGraded School of Charlotte will cl'j in three weeks. The with drawal of the whiskey tix pats an end to it. During Januaiyj at Wilmington, there were nine fires and two false alarms. Two of the firo were of incendiry origin. T) total loss by tire during the mont.ii aggiegnted nearly $17,000. Wilmington will very probably soon have a paid ire depart m nt. That plan is favorably ivyorted on. Jim Fink hid a die un that w b a dream. He dreamed that a credi tor a bad, long winded t red; tor ca'iie to settle his a"CO!int. lie sta ted that Col Joe D.tnis h:Jbougat the property and before he made a deed he wanted it unencumbered, lias it come to Hits thac a state oTicerowns bind in Cabarrus? State Chronicle eays: Governor . olt said yesterday that the resigna tion of James 11 Merrimon as Su perior Court Judge from the twelfth district was received, but that he would not make un appointment until next week, to fill the vacancy. The four gentlemen whose namei are formally laid before the Gover nor, from which to nuke a selection, are Messrs Kope EJia", (7 S' TerguV" son, II B Carter, an I George A S'liifoid. Next Monday evening will be marked with a "Wii;:evStone" by all who love ood music and beautiful pictures', for our fiiends who are working co ardently for t heir 1 title church, tell us t hey mean to give the public an entertainment that will reward them for an evening from home. With Miss White whose singing eo enchanted the people of Raleigh at their Exposition, to add. her beautiful and cultivated voice to their artittic talent, we know from what we saw before, what they can. do, and feel that the half has not been told us We predict for there a full house of appreciative Con cordians. iiisi.r. ,. IiiMiiranee. 1 am prepared to furnish Insur ance in the United States Mutual accident association of New York City, the largest and best. J. L. Booer, agent - I,. House For Kent. i lie large house on Spring street opposite Graded School building, is for rent. It is known as the Thorn well house. Call on, 2 wks. J P Allison. ftitorelioye forNale. I will be glad to nave offers for the storehouse and lot now occupied oy Dr. Johnson. OC0 n it r o . Ol. OJUT1I. w Wanted Four thousand cord cf four foot pine and oak wood de livered af Odell Manufacturing Co.'t cotton mil's. LADIES I would be glad t$ l?Sve you call and me the np Ribbons, Face Veili, Chiffon Laces and Children's Caps, which have just been received. I think it will be well worth y.ur time, as the spring styles are pretty and inexpensive. Respectfully, Miss Nannie Alkxandek. Feb. 4 2w. 1 'it-
Daily Concord Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 4, 1892, edition 1
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