Newspapers / Daily Concord Standard (Concord, … / Sept. 3, 1896, edition 1 / Page 2
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JOHND. BARRIER &S01T. ' Editors antrproprietors. JAS.P. COOK. Editorial Correspondent. OFFICE IN BRICK ROW. The Standard is published every ay (Sunday excepted) nd delivers ed by carriers BATES OF SUBSCRIPTION One year. .84 00 Six months............ 2 00 Three months. 1 00 One month.... r...... ...... 35 Single copy 05 THE WEEKLY STANDARD . - , Is a fourpage, eight-column paper. It has a larger circulation in Cabar rus than any other paper. Price $1.00 per annum, in advance. ADVERTISING BATES. Terms for regular advertisements made known on application. Address all communications to THE STANDARD. Concord. N. C. Democratic Ticket. NATIONAL TICKET, . ' FOE PRESIDENT, WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN. FOR VICE PRESIDENT. i ARTHUB SEWALL. STATE TICKET. JFOR GOVERNOR, CYRUS B. WATSON OF FORSYTH, FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, THOS. W. MASON OF NORTHAMPTON. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE, CHAS. M, COOKE OF FRANKLIN. 'FOR TREASURER, B. F. AYCOCK OF WAYNE. FOR AUDITOR, ROBT. M. FUKMAN OF BUNCOMBE. EOR ATTORNEY GENERAL, FRANK I. OSBORNE OF MECKLENBURG. FOR SUPERINTENDENT J OF PUBEIC INSTRUCTION, JOHN C. SCARBOROUGH OF JOHNSTON. FOR ASSOCIATE JUSTICES, A. C. AVERY, of Burke, Qeo. H. BROWN, of Beaufort. FOR CONGRESS FROM 7TH CONGRES SIONAL DISTRICT, SAMUEL J. PEMBERTON. CONCORD. SEPT., 3, 1896. FOREIGN MISSIONS. We nPPdtnh o - Uu new zeal from those whose ad?an tages are less than our own. We are so richly blessed that we expect J s f uxc mm murmur wnen we can t - have' everything our own -way. We would see our noble her- itage of a free, enlivened, Chris- , tun land if we were deprived for a snort time of all our advantages over our brethren of less favored lands. The lecture at the Presbyterian church Wednesday night by the D ; r J - g 7 Kev. Isaac M Yonan, a native Per- sian, puts American zeal and stead- fastness m the Christian work, to aome decided disadvantage. The lecturer was sublime in his earnest appeals to us in this favored laud to extend to the poor heathen the gifts of the gospel with all the blessings of eolightenment and progress that the gospel brings in its-train;- :..s . To the question "Cannotf the heathen be saved without the gos pel ?" he very strikingly aka 'j'Can the church be saved without taking the gospel to them ?" As to the eff ect of the gospel on the heathen, he claims that 1 they are more easily converted than those in our Christian lands, and when converted they are more devoted, self -denying and persistent those of Christian lands. than He showed that the Bible knew no such distinctions as home sions and foreign missions. It knew only to send the gospel to every nation. He related some blood cur dling scenes of persecutions and martyrdom in Asiatic regions, showing the Christian heroism of those who were permitted to Bee the light of the Christian religion. He urged the continual efforta to send the light o the heathen. While converts could be numbered by the thousand, said the speaker, the unconverted were numbered by the millions. His appeal to woman was .none the less appropriate and well di- rected because the facts are not entirely new, that the heathen II--woman is looked upon as a degraded, soulless creature for man's conve niences, with no share of his joys and privileges. There is probably no outward manifestation of the transforming power of our religion so striking as woman, vie wed from the true Chris tian standpoint and the standpoint of heathendom, With the heathen she is a thing to hate, with us a creature to loye ; with him a kind of animal, of grade next to man, capable with man, of production of man, of far reaching superiority to her ; with us she is the very capstone of human erf ection whose virtues send the race on to higher and grander achievements ; with the heathen she is fit only to be kept back in hiding obscurity, with us she is the grace of our life, whose place is by our side and nearest to. our heart, a companion without- whom man is scarcely to be termed man. The heathen would bridle or gag her tongue as an unmitigated evil, but with us woman, in her true and normal sphere, is the one to love into the longing, aching speak heart, to infuse fortitude into the afflicted, to give perseverence to the wavering, to inspire chivalry to the timorous i .1 and to crowd all man's glories with the tonch o her charms. It does not rest with onr nen nnr prooaoiy witn tne speakers elo . . ... . 7 4uc"b voiue w picture woman in ner neatnen degradation or in her Christian exaltation. There is little wonder the mission with ns reeeives so mnch im- petna from woman ; indeed it would be unlike her not to be foremost in the grand work. M3 "!!i tlS"- m writes that he had a severe Kidney trouble for many years, with? severe Dains in his W.fc nnrl nlan fViof bladder was affected. He tried many so called kidney cures but fP callea, kld"? culfes t f resmc' AD0Ut a year ago he bagan use of Electric Bitters and found relief at once, Electric Bitters is especial.y adapts ed to cure all Kidney and Liver troubles and often gives almost in ant relief 0ne trial will will proye outatement- Prie 50c and $1,00 at Fetzer'sDrugStoie. I Original Observations. One rent paid is worth a dozen in your pants. Faith and energy can pull geni u e from its shell. He who sows discord may reap a cord for his neck. The crank is a man whose mind is off on a furlough. The melancholy days have come for campaign lying and profanity. An awkward hotel waiter fre quently plays the deuce wuh the tray. j To bug a girl and give offence shows want of tact or want of sense. If you wish to telephone to God, speak through a little child. - No man rises above his aspira tioni the majority of men fall below them. Alwajs take the word of a tramp He would not even labor under a mistake. ' ' Life would be a howling wilder ness if man could not indulge in faulufinding. Corporations may have no souls. but the majority of them are "well heeled." The moon has been f around for years and yet people are continually calling it "new." If there is any one who should be "wrapped in si umber " it is the man who snores. There is more honesty in ihe wae of a dog's tail than in the shake of many a man's hand. The proverb says: "Laugh and grow iat." ynat a saving of corn it would be if hogs oould laugh. Orange (Va.) Obseryer. Fifty Years Ago. President Polk in the White House chair, wane in Lowell was Doctor Ay er; Both were busy for human weal One to govern and one to heal. And, as a president's power of will Sometimes depends on a liver-pill, Mr. Polk took Ayer's Pills I trow For his liver, 50 years mgo. ' Ayer's Cathartic Pills tTTAUft 3 Z . 'J A m ucaiyutju xo supply a model purgative to people who had so long injured themselves witn griping medicines. Being carefully prepared and their in gredients adjusted to the exact necessities of the bowels and nver, xneir popularity was in . stantaneous. Tna. ,;a larity has been maintained is wen marnea in the medal awarded these pills at the World's Pair 1893 50 Years of Cure FURIMITURE. I 3 I have now in stock in the Morris Dpilding opposite the court house a splendid line of furniture. I dofv competition in regard to Quality and Price You will be snrorised w h An Tmn learn my prices. Come and see. I will sell on installment, that ia part down and so much a week. BIG LOT OP at cut prices. All furniture put up to order. I have a nirft lino nf Undertakers' Goods at prices that win surprise you. l keep a full line on hand for immediate supply. . Very Respectfully, J-T POUNDS, LAWN SETS Justf leceived 200 standard novels at 10c, 50 Seaside Novels at 5c i .- ' Cloth bound Novels 16c A big lot of Ink Tablets worh 5 c to go at 3c First class steel p 3ns at 4c per dozen. Ink 1 and mucilage at 3c, worth .6c . f. . .- Good Shoe Blacking at lc. 15c French blacking at 6c 3 plain cedar lead pencils for lc . I l 3 li r oc coiorea enveioces ac zc Our lc lead pencils are as good as any 5c pencil to be had. ' 25c box paper to go at 10c. 1 . - Ladies' -1'; ' - . FurnisMng 15 c White Collars at 10c 25c white cuffs at 18c Solid Silver Shirt Waist sets for 25c. Also Dearl at the same. . . !- . Swansdown 5c Royal Borated Talcum vorth 25c at 9c Hose supporters, silk elas tic at 10c yd, good cotton at 5c yd Belt pins 2c up. Jet black lace pins 10 and 15c Safety pins 2, B and 4c doz. w i -u lijc fast black seamless hose 3 thread heel and toe for 10cJS VLV: ue at 25 to 37ic - TTnn , . , Handkerchiefs. We have by far the largest assortment Theirs was triple plated be ln town from 2c to 37ic ;Aaa rnh. mL L 1 I 60 inch heayv bleached tas ble linen at 47c 0 i 3 J! Al . d pound feather pillows onlv caii. Feather dusters 15c m Crib counterpanes at 48c o ' -I ' i j V V . f2SP,0lS Percale at 6 14 to 83c mjo8, ac 1UC Crinoline, grass cloth and Cambric at 6c yd Chenille curtains at $3.25 Chenille table covers at 98c Embroidery silk at 12c skein Turkey Red or Navy Blue embroidery cotton at 5c per doz. : . A Colored jinen floss 20c per doz. i - ; Gold embroidery 3c per skein . Shaded crochet cotton 200 yard bolls at 5c Embroidery scrim 12c yd; Bleached butchers'; linen 35c yard Ladies' home made musliD underwear cheaper than you can have it made. Home made percale shirt waist at 50c. Bonnets for 25e New line of embi oider v in a few days $50 Wheeler & Wilson ' - Sew ing 'Machine for $35; Extra value in white and colored shirts; white ones at 25c : . 2 cakes of Turkish bath Soap for 5c Lace curtains at 48c to $3. extra value. Gingham at 3 to 8 Jc 30 inch cotton "Dlaids at 5c. good value. We sell as good Tinware as any house in Concord, Our II-"-vuv A 1 T U U S K nad. Recently one ,of our customers tried to exchange L, ' uoaou iwu, iXlXU. W11CU lie spoke of the Racket selling cneaper he was told they did not handle cheap shoddy stuff hit -d u'aa Juu XXXA VCLIXI J IV lAUy we gave him 15 cents to buy the bucket, wishing to yin- dicate ourselves. He brought Tl fit t.ha Knfttnf T- nraa til ft same size single plate and weighed 1 ounce less than our 10c one- The party took our buefcet and left us the u15c" one. See our extra heavy stamped dish pans at Granite Dippers 15c. s t i m n. de9w30 1
Daily Concord Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 3, 1896, edition 1
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