BOOK AND JOB PRINTING I : f -iT";1'" ; '.f--i-,vri"-.. - , . Executed in the Best Sty 1 - - , at lrynv a pbices. Our Job Printing Department J with every necessary equipment -is prepared to turn out every vaj riety of Printing in first-clas-j? style. No botch-work turned out from this office. We dupl: cate the prices of any legitimate establishment." . rnKC n; 'T , .1 in I. : H BiclfSlond 'rr:; Mon fomeryr 4 1 TvW 10 son. - 5 enlV,-son Uui4l Counties. $ JOHN B. SHEBR1LL, Editor. - 4 - a Tear, ii Advance. Number 14!- , yolume xin. concord, n: a, thurbd ay, October 3,1895. r Tli MPS i , - medicine, and re- ile-$,"r Hitalizer s SB: : Bloos , i ?UMavtf , L cthndHpreemii KothJt medicines, -is SarBiaoariHa Hfeitsjfold upon the; Lrti d thdl'eople byiits 1 - -Ji , , ... fri n sitv merit al whsl we say, yut Sarsapanlla the stort: ures , v bill ARP's ijjttkis. j and auntg and cousins all dead. What t ?." :.. . - - - ' an eventful life have I lived, and what . Memory is a strange faculty. It seems an advance in the world's progress have independent of the mind, but is myste- I seen. The time was when I had to riqusly connected with it. The forget- do all my reading and studying at night fuf witness is' right when he says "I by the light of a tallow dipped candle didn't charge my memory with it." not only that, but I and my brother had. vuen we were "children , memory was to dip. them, andi if I had a corner in " THE WASUIIstiTOIf NTEGBO, - Correspondence Charlotte Observer.! ..' 'The Post to-day has an editorial voic ing what I have heard scores of; people say, and what I know to be true that some of i the i well dressed and. appar ent! v intelligent negroes on the streets of this city and in tne pubuc CLEVEtAXD SOUTH. - AND THE strong and the mind was weak. As we s the exposition I would like to show the dpS iaTa inUecuUng get old the mental powe.r grows stronger . boys and'girls how it was done, We Ssolt to aTg Xt would not be ere--Ct of the It IS n;v foes, w- a Hopdsi r,-3n when ai jtions ard pre t hi rnnnir i Wi'oraionstJie, Joed' Test Virginia. other prepar criptions faiL aorea on one of my 1 began; taKingr s-CafsaarirJi auu now i5; I L..f gamed in sprengui ankfal tht tnera medicine asIHood'S thought we had a good time and we did. but it would be awful to live that way now. Bui. Akp. -' Oar Faith In Human Nature. - . .. Dr. Chauncey - M. Depew, in ; -his speech at the, celebration of bi3 sixty first birthday, said : "Let us never lose our faith: in human nature, no matter how often we are deceived. Do not let the deceptions destroy confidence. in the real honestyoodness, generosity, hu manity and friendship that exists in the world. - x have loot twcm'yT-p! of all I have ever made in lending money and indorsing notes, and have incurred ? i - J s -t! s e36 srijV - - TTT" H - H t3teles4; mfld. effeo- 5EIM ARYj gieasant - led to be 3 L and the memory weakens, but the men ones that ' fastened somewhere m our cranium in our youth do never fade. I remember well the scenes, names and incidents of my childhood. I remem ber when I wore aprons and how old Aunt Mintj, the cook, looked, and how my.father killed the dog because he foamed at the mouth and was thought to be going mad. I was only three years old then. ..V hen I was six years old my mother found her long lost brother," and I remember the meeting, and how they embraced each other and cried for ..joy. Their" parents died in Charleston of yellow f ever, and -were bu ried in one grave and the two little chil dren were hurried away during the pan- ' helped because- iC and got separated, for they had. no J But every once in a while 'there was kicdred to care for them, v The boy was somebody who" did .return in such full put on a ship and sent to. Boston the measure- the credit for the help-that was girl on another vessel and sent to Sa- rendered, that faith was kept alive and vanaah. Each was placed in an orphan the "i- beauty and; goodness of our hu asylum and; they nevet found each man nature were " .made evident. I other until some years after . they were have had appointed about" a thousand grown .and married. Diligent- search men to employment which gave them was - made in; Charleston, but no clew support and a chance to climb: to posi- could be found, and as a last resort my tions of rgreater respbnsittUty and trust lather advertised in a Boston paper and if they had the inclination aud abiUty, i was seen, and a btter came (hat was About Inine 3 out of ; every ten threw written intoars. I remember all the ex- stones at me becauseC l did not do better citement and how her brother came and for them, and keep pushing them, and what a handsome young man he was, yet there are a hundred or so who, by .and how the people of the little ' village I the exercise of their own ability, their. ioined in the reioicing; l I remember I own grasp of the situation. how the next year my father and moths Ion to the accomplishment of such high er, with my brother and myself, went ambitions and successes, "'and have, ap tb Savannah in a carriage 350 miles. predated in so many ways the help ex and took a sail vessel there for Boston tended to them by helping others, that b visit that brother and his family. ;: I again , my faith in human nature, re was ruminating' about this, for I was in J mains undiminished." " - tolerated anywhere south of the Po tomac and Ohio. The reasoni.assigned Atla ;ta Journal. : recent interview General Simon "R - liackner.! sneakins of the conduct of tle free silver extremist in Kentucky, said? "the president, whose firm attitude the laws had restored the country,"? so seriously im- 1 fc 1 I paiiA uy. tne ., legisiauou iorceu upuu An -i-poii Kw ftVio Tnm'ntr intereBta. . was is probably true-in part These offen- deruncedrjom one enu oi tue oui w ;'- !rwr, rroto Brith the Jther as an enemy to the country. Korthem people. On th contrary, HiiJ ladmmistration has .gtven fuller a ;5AKi'-'M chM .nfl recormtion to the south than any; since the time of General Jackson, and his : e pu TAf ;t hrt lmtfeitial acts has. tended tn the obliter ;;rv --wi. vvlation of all sectional -feeune. : He had Sun'- showing that a Southern gentle- particularly i : recognized Kentucky by Jrl v-.v;'t J o.rn. bestowing the most important portfolio j a u: o wv nnmon who la .his cabinet on a distinguished citizen wka burdened with a baby and some of the stated He had, appointed two of van( I nnr most raominent " citizens, one ot hd nr.'rt-..iih .thi wmirb- 'T I them a Confederate, aa-minister to sholYdoe8 thank yon, sir.",; a ooutn-4cig" uu, for- He had sent others as generally the enmity of tthose il have T n. th , t is aiwavi kind to consuls abroad and appointed la gallant a 1 did not keep- it -up. neroea when .th. wiu kt him be. Confederate soldier, the brother of our out scandal or reproacht It is a fact that the nude has no place in Japanese art,: an undraped human - figure never appearing unless with the intention on the part of the printer of producing an immoral impression. Here are two very peculiar extremes negroes . when they- will let mim ue. uumcuaaw ww, V; i iu inunuitjf auu ,iuouuwui TTnfnrtnnatlv Southern gentlemen 1 senior senator marshal of the Kentucky I ons of Europe and America regard bete are not always permitted to set the dishict Sour of the seven meinbers of uxidity of the person the worst; possible inn. '-ftf thinra.' I have for years I nis caDines arts uuucuo W1 ,u. expregaon ouewanea nu luuuumuvjf, wnhpd the conduct of the Washing-1 An ex-Confederate soldier, an able ju- but they fill the walls of their .picture rnnU Rrtino- with a nre- rist, was placed by him on the supreme eaUerie8 and drawing rooms withVpio; .mn tn xmP for their evident bench.. A confederate general is, our ture8 and statues: of naked : humanity. lnfc rvf nnhteness. so.cnaractenstic oi i ixuuislcj.. ui - 1 - , ine uapa-iicoo. yvuu id !",," ni,i.f,m. n,rnL ATv first evcuse. tlantic a southern citizen may be found TOntra nothinr improper in strip- long persisted in, was that they had at one-third of the ports we may , toich ping off cloths in public, if there been spoUed by the Republicans after representing this country as its consul, be a necessity for it, but they exclude the wa7 especially during their ibrief An eminent citizen of Delewareis our from their objects of art all undraped rule while the" District of IColumbia ambassador to' England, afl ex-Confed- figures. - Here is a Bubject for profound was a trinity; Then, I argued thatlerate from l3Uisiana .tame great repuu- conaderation. were - numerically ; considerable n ot ranee, nu u uu " l . it has been jveu saia man virtue FASHION AND MOBAI1TT. New Orleans Picayune .,xi - '. A curious discussion as to the con nection between morality -and the line arts has -come.np in connection with painting ' recently :;: executed by a Japanese artist. namedKurado ;who was educated in . Fans.rhis picture represents . a nude female? figure posed in front of a mirror, so that back -and front are displayed. Th exMted at the Kyoto (Japan) exposir tion, where it was the object i severe criticism, and its removal was demanded on the grounds that it was an inexcus ably immoral representation. This seems a very remarkable expres-1 sion in a country where persons of both j Highest ofall in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report' 2.: PASTE THIS IN YOCR HAT. PROFESSIONAL CjBDS, ; In hia "recenti sound tnoney speech' at Hillsboro, ; Tex, , Judge - Ruf us Hardy cited the following historical facts; ' -The United States today has a larger sexes do not hesitate to bathe in public ' citation i , capita than any free in an enturely nude condition, ana witn- i W H. I1UT K.D. S. I MONTQOMEBV, U in m:i mwm,- they at lit- ii desti is ' ;--,iK YOUN (1 ! - ! LADIES inasouin. AnAb e Faculty Athorongblv r C. L. T. if 3e School is the am- nianagement. S 5. mSHETlJ Princioal. ; It 0..X.U Concord 0p( Pre ' BUS!- jewelry i'iau:;..r, ire Delicate ' I Cr m Uldi T. MiilM.:...- -it ,.r, (.',, 1 ii, pRACRELd 5r Savannah last week and I recalled the river and the Wharf and the vessel that we took passage on, and the loisg voyage of thirty-seven days. .1 remembered the long wide street, and it had a double row pf immense china, .trees that Ogle thorpe 'planted, Thes-v trees rare all gone and other Kinds, have taken their places.' I was told that their old trunks were planted in the'water- to support the wharves, and that - some of - them are thtre yet," lor the sea worms will not touch china wood. As I meandered along the streets I wondered how many were living in that city who were there sixty years ago' when I visited it. Itod- ably there are . not fifty perhaps not ten. There are not-but five in Rome who were there forty-live years ago when 1 was settled there. What a peo pie we are to die or move away. Savannah 'is a : lovely city. . How elpn hnv PhaH(1. how ornamented 3 TeaClierS.1 with evergreens 'and flowers t What beautiful parks with tne green grass growing all around f where the happy children frolic and the; "babycarriages abound.- Monuments are there, too, to commemorate noble men Pulaski and Jasper, and W. W. Gordon and others, but none to Oglethorpe. What a grand people ueed o adorn this historic and classic city, l remem ber -the times when . the" Habershams, TTowiooa F,lHntsr Bullocks. Joneses. HoustonV, laws, Jacksons and Telfairs lived there. Some of their descendants live there now, and wear the mantle of their fathers in tone and manners and high moral principles. They are gen tlemen by inheritance and training. Who ever saw nobler "gentlemen of the olden times than Generals Lawton and Jackson ? ! Who ever saw a finer specimen- of : the younger manhood than Fleming DnBignon, the most classic anjj elckjuent young man In Georgia a lawyer, statesman ana orator. .. When I Was a college boy I did not at first mix with, the dots:, from Sa van nah, Tor it was said they were stuck, up and proud, but in tune x was unun.cn ed and was pleased to fank them as my friends. I did not understand their pe culiar pronunciation. They said pa and ma like pad and mad, while we up countrv bovs said pa and ma like par n rtA TY-.OT artA mir hackwoods bovs said and . maw. The low country boy said gyurl for girl and we thought it was afffwtatirtn.' Savannah has the same ni;i. fnll-lnrp vet and X like it. It pt uni - j . . nAh trpntle and ; soft and refined Even the negro lingo has a charm about it I heard an old nurse say to a child in the park.; "Honey,; your mar say came dare to her ; run along chile fore de bukra mancotchyou. ; . There if no rush in Savannah. "Ev Krw nd everything take their time. A dignified leisure prevails among the business men, and they will take time trt rivp. courteous attention to visitors, ..naa Jr. Atlanta thev have no - time J." J A.tr.irtAgteaof life "How are you, hnr rin . are all well ? Come round at or intonation; ad- and see me,yoine North Georgia mainly. The people are kind, liberal, progressive and desper k,W"in wmpst. especially after money savannah people are more J scholarly and classic" and that is why the Histon- 9r. Andrews of Brown University Answer s Pertinent Question. Perhaps the, most scholarly, intellec tual and honesM the bimetallists is the president of Brown university,? He was Of our own l t him hwn well Mid'that virtue and r . , - r tzl - - , . , ... i . nmavmnrr imm tno jodq j. jjrcvikiM lute w uunv. . fnaniuv are nut iu vuc uumuu vwwj- f,i-l J,io j anA rr intnii- at the imperial court of St. Petersburg. I -m but in the heart and soul,' and the have gone I - , , iU ; iL w;k I Thesft and other acts lof this :admmis-1 i-tj-- matter mnst be resarded from the i ! -L I'HICU WHU IUO UUHCllV, Ul V"W . lvu -7--- - ; , . ,L1..J ii. v T". . . - . as the nation's wards. But they have icman, r"1, , t-uT respective Bianapoinw utwBU.a. hada chance to sober down; their political position to which it is entitled, piutarch, in his life of Lycurgus, recites cu.i-u ..-ww 5;l and it is seem td have been forgotten,- because that the ereat Uwriver of SparU lnstit- ua t,m- -w.lwh'o-mrlttie.jdtato:'aMbM' vadvaeM would uted the Phyrrhic dances, in which the i.i .a ;nn!.nHn -firh and not advocate a policy which; expmencd vounjr men and the virgins appeared a i' -M;SnT iT-jt has Bhown-would prove disastrous to naked in public exercises under, the where they have committed offences. esery jnateniw j , Qxrecuonoi tne mow ageu mu.,uu- The vounff veneration erowa up . Since 1 ana necauoe uicj . aoie men or me couuwy, wn iixai. their fathers and- mothers were sia?es!Jn"f-io" -- --4-----.ulu. uauexuxo hhoxahuuw., tv,,v rrrMtenr iipnRA is in oneniwho, wnatever tueir uiuci tu, dation. ana H is neciarea inajfiui. umr are ones.- . virt !i j u:u nKvonLl never been accused of an .act of dism- wft9 there no scandal ierowing out of uuo Ui uio ucicgawo uuui wuuuj w: f b I H. tX. 11 1 11 Willi;! iviauuj iav. - ww-. 1 - - , . , j - " I . v , ;' , the international monetarv conference tt w wiv indnlc-ed. They walk 1 tcrested patriotisnu . ' ; this institution, but that the people 1 4 In Ar rlnvo fai-T( i OUH1C IU "CO omci S"""- I were remaTKADiy UUU1 tuuuuuuii , alon- "the street shouting indecencies j0eorgia tried the .plan.ot denouncing m this connection it can be . under as if "there were no law to restrain scur- President, Cleveland, -but they seem to 8tood how the purestand most modest o-v, . . rw, amo nf the hestl nave naa enougn u . n. j-ucj ...u-.. w0men Ot J!JUrope ana America tau snuares and circles they make the even- found tbiVe.rpledo, ioa hideons with noise and vulgarity. 1 thernwnen ineyaeciarB uw , uncovered, ana mat witnoui uio wiguv .:Mn to their iihea if dent is a tool of Wall street; ?tney .na,ve 6uege8tion of shame or; impropriety question, -Shall; the 'United States at4 thev choose to make him the object of lhad convincing evidence tnat tne peo- The fact is, education, ana training Mr' f!ivpiTand to' be both I v, nanr v;nrr frt Hn with the exercise TuTTi til t ri u t r-M nui ii 'l i7M in ki tviT MinriMr i i 1 1. . rirni t n am wir inr: miiti v . . . 1 1 a rx riu t iiLaxuc v v i s. w Tf w tat tin th m'fttai aino: and aa yArA or.r.ntrV, i cam bie ana incorrupuuie u uwi I or virtue ana morauty.' ana ior ww . - t 1. 1 ii- iew ijuiititTLiiau 4 ajsm. t . - , t v. I L . that cours& results as I should antiei 1 tn Mtrh the vou'ne pistoliera1 and "raz-1 consider that a very weak cause wiik." son it is excessively unjust to juage tne pate Tin the expnlsion of gold, w3 shall U, flana thVBtthier vetches has to be bolstered by sianaenng tne manners and customs of One people py held at Brussels in .1 8S 2 and is an ar dent advocate of the wider use of silver. But he sees the folly and danger of at tempting the impossible at least when rilous' -speech one nation attempts it single canoea; The following is Dr. Andrews' reply. pnuiisneu in me vmcago iiecora, iu m i citizen 13 have in the first place a financial crisis wh0 break into houses from the back J President those of another. coinage country ever did have. It has more gold dollars per capita than any free coinage', country on earth today has of all kinds of money. . It has more silver dollars per capita than any free silver country today. " ., It has more gold than silver, and the volume of its silver circulation is greatr ex per capita than the entire circulation of gold, silverand paper reduced to Buyer ox any iree coiuugo uauuu. :,;!: The United States under a gold stand ard' since 1878' has - maintained a creator circulation .per capita .than it ever did before. There has been five times more silver coined under the gold standard, from 1873 till now, 22 years, than there was under free coinage from li93 to 183, 81 veara. Every nation ' that has adopted tne gold standard, except one or two who are on depreciated paper bases, nas m creased its circulation. No nationrof first: class civilization has the silver standard. Mexico is the highest type of free sil ver nation on earth on double standard, so called, and its per capita circulation is $4.71. - - Our per. capita circulation has in creased since 1873 more than the entire circulation t)f Mexico. The wastes of no free silver country on earth average a third of those in the United States. No country on earth has in practice a double (gold and silver) standard. No country for 2Q0 years (since com merce became international) ever has in practice had a double standard. The proposition that there" can be but one standard is in fact self evident. (Carlisle and Mr. Ingham, secretary of treasury in 1830 under Jackson. ) Both metals undei free coinage, have never circulated concurrently and indis criminately in any country where there are; banks and money dealers, , (Select committee of house under Jackson m 1832.) The overvalued metal under free coin- ace drives but the other. (Benton. 183-1. offer their professional services to the citizens of Concord and yiomity . All calls promptly attended day or night. umce . ana . residence on isast Depot 8 tree t. opposite Presbyterian church. . Br.W. C. Houston, Snrpan Bcilist ' CONCORD, N. C. " " . A!mJ. f J VXX - xxy Is prepared to do all kinds of. Denta " work in the most approved manner. " l-- , umce oyer Johnson s Drus Store. W J. KONTQOaTKKT. JT. tli CBOWEIiL " Attorneys ani Counsellors at Im '. CONCORD, N:C As partners, will practice law in Cabar rus, Stanly and adjoining counties,. -the Superior and Supreme Courts of the , Stat and in the Federal Courts. Office on Depot Street. . MORRISON:! CALDWELL, ' -Attorney at Lsw, . - C0XC0ED, N. C. - : Office in Morris building, opposite courthouse. - July 4 tf Dr. J. E. GARTLAHU. Dentist. ; CONCORD, N. C. " V.. worse than any ever sneered in tne country. This .because we cannot in a long time, even by working our mints day and night, coin , silver enough " to take thelace which would-be vacated iy gold. Prices.would surely falL Im mense numbers- ftwiora-wiid jOccur. laborers Would be thrown out of work. Altneethet a dreadful "paroxysm in: our window. Nowhere else perhaps in all the land is there quite so much hberty j The Yolce. of lung and elbow extended; to the col-1 Three i hundred Coming to Taw. Tonus Uetfi Bent Opportunities. New York, saloon-1 s t ne vouher men oi the present day nred rnnth as here at the capital of -thel tenners crowded into the "'Court of Spec- wh aT Btartinff out iri life would com- . ... m . l 1. -1 - 11 I. . .! -. .ir.JI 1 - J A -ntUn I . ... , . , J . . . ' i -' it prent republic. ane oiacit. uuwuuuj iarsessions. last rnuav. lueaucu kuut hat trie modern tenaency unw ku iuc Altogethea dreacirui paroxysm - in our Snatcbmg a lady's .purse or business wcnM be precipitated.. Slowly nfllft ;n annthpr nPoTOs vitals, says and does what he wishes and feelsl to aelhn liquor on Sunday, and paid J great centres of population, and, cast TCaliy BEtncvru it titt mu im pleasures he is even BATCHES' thegap left by gold would he filled by the minina and coinatra of siver.; Prices would then gradually rise. At last they would become higher than now, more and more approaching the Mexican and Japanese leveL . .. " . ; "-' t- 4fiL.ol hi8l cmL -. .aacrreizatinsr nearly i f 8,000. 1 their hnea in some of the smaller cities arrested f or J This remarkable change, of front on the I :t nlA he better for the country and making alpart cf the law-breakers was due lo thel it be better for them, writes Ed- announcement by the Court that after ward yy. Bok in the October Ladies September 1 the fines of guilty 'saloon-1 Home Journal. I know of no young Uncoin's lve Making. I keeners I would be increased and iau l man wk.mI envv more to-day than.he In 1839 Miss Mary Todd, of Ken-1 sentences imposed. On Sunday, Sepr who having energy and ability, has the sa KnriTfiM in virf t a I tember lj the saloons of members of the I -Hadom and the determination to re- -.' . . . , ..j. -.--11 .L.lr:nnl.. nn.lora A ccrvniattrin WOTft rinsed I : : .molloi. rltioa AlrS.. jLAlWaiUO. . At lUC I iJdMUUl iaiV-.o I OlOlU 111 UUC Ul uiwo.ouiwv. vimvw, Iliarilt-U OlDlCl. iUlD. jjuhiu 1 -1 . . . J .. 1- u: iA sirA .he wor as renmred bv law. An nonest ana But a consequence iar worse tnan imiucou - uu L , . - depart in. silver hasis would erect aeainst for- i visitor at the Edwards', and before long ment or BO A -O T e Potoffice. Stoif iHighi SgiiooI, 1 - - s Sept. 2 v ....... for. Any College jhe- State I 1 and , honest courts have thus Km VnrV Brui Lnndon. reneatms terrible inconvenience in our European j as they were made, and it exchanges which we suffered in war impossible that Miss Todd knd Mr. Lin- of hqupr laws. times when basis." . ' ,we were upon a paper go to one 01 tnem, ana Bian upuu business career witn any son 01 pro- spective success, ane nappiest xina 01 before him. With a more limit before him than in a vaster arid more meaningless city, he can concentrate his efforts and cement his connections in a way that is, impossible in. a laree city. 'With honest dealing as his watchword every step he takes is v.,.4vv.r: mUff --s mnnths I the linnor onestion. except for the be-1 rintieH F.verv advance "counts just so other than Mrs. Edwards lief that such laws can be enforced, has jmucil fQr him." ; He is in direct touch would annihilate all nxea par netweea meu av T-L kk hear so much uuo 1 uuiuwu, nv - - . I . - ! ' .-.1 e 4 S not at au I aDOUl aa necebaarv, uj . iaic uwi".- Public sentiment on coin : were oeiore . I " . V , t it aA and Mr. Speed knew of it, wntes John not cnangea mucn biuws xc Gdmer Speed in the October Ladies' Goff wenV lnto olhce wnai;.nas T.f-rT- It h; time na was bronflrht: the liauor " outlaws to., .-their soonritlea or nronertv of anvkind, which I .-,1 t n,oa ',i4n1 in the I IrnpM ia the moral certainty ;that they has decreased in value since Jan.;i, Presidencr his one special rival in II- would be punished if they continued 1 005 n -iriBtv rharea the sreater part 1 ,. . - 'c-i. t,ia fr I tn hrenlr the law. Anv other com- Makes a specialty of filling your teetn without pain. - Gas, ether or chloroform 1 used when desired. Sixteen years' ex perience. : Office over Lippards Bar rieifs store. ' Chargeable to th SUver. Asltation. Every holder of land, bonds, notes, POUGH, PRACTICE S3- TRAINING. , , iHfiTilfAyD THOMPSON, ! Oon(jord,"N.U. of this loss to the friends or silver. -Every laborer thrown out of employ ment during this time, or who has suf fered a reduction of wages as a result! of this panic, can justly charge hia loss of Wages to the same source.. , - 1 ' , These disasters are made none the less cruel and oppressive by' the" fact that the silver- party did not intend the result. This country has 'suffered as much and perhaps more from the .'tree silver- mnvement than 15 wouia nave jsuu-cxcu from - a great foreign war, excepting the loss of life. The losses of a war in a ! j-ftst cause might not only be borne with fortitude, but be considered glorious sacrifices.: The losses oi property ana wages which have come fromn "hon est" effort to "help silver , ana uie Bu yer miners are as-real as those of war and must be borne under the conviction that they ara.the result of an inconceiv able folly. R. WeissingeV in "What Is Money?" . j ' Douglas had more of the! social graces munity can thus triumph, over its law- thau Mr. Lincoln, and it appeared to breakers by making: their punishment him that "nothing would be more in- cerUinf. Let us hear no more of the teresting than to cut out his political cant that "ProhibiUon cannot be made rival in the affections of the entertain- to prohibit," and that hquor laws are t m.TW antia naiA atantotl trt ho, hmken instead OI en- with the neople who make up the life pf his community; hia acts are Known 01 all men. t He grows; with the -comr munity, and' in time becomes part i Of its best life, and thej degree of his suc- rew rlenenda entirely UPOtt UlS OWU efforts and opportunities. . - . a - . . i - , . her court. A spirited young laoy irom Kentucky at that time in Illinois would have been alm'oBt less than human if she had refused to accept frhe attentions of the two leading men of the locality. Therefore, Miss Todd being quite human, encouraged Douglas, and again ihere was what-nowaaays wouia nave been called a flirtation. This course of AiA tint ftnnr Lincola 011 in his Aninn. but made him . less ardent and he concluded, after tnucn sen-wor-riment: to break off the engagement, which be did,' but at the isame interview there was a reconciliation and a renewal of the engagement. - Spcaklns- Sllslitliijfly of ffmni WTien a youngman habitually speaas oiiffhtinfflv-of women one may feel rea- sonably sure tnat a mnu uiiui. his own character, a ounius m S -3 f-i m women 10ULD USE . BM&FIELD'S IFemalp Redulato edient possesses superb a andetert a wondcir- law Qtotiineunandstrenetti-S! frtrmd breakfast awaitin -a by . driving through ''nannel - .'all pmpuriUcs. 6 rt npth are guaranteed io p -iuse. ; J :;: ;: t bedridden 'for elthlecn 5 KltADt'IKl.D'S Yemai t.K ".V'.rtoniiiB. is gelling wH. Jf VAlaerii. Arl. H f ra8iits atjBiJoo per boftia. .-; SEGULATOn COi, Atlanta, a. Pennarlvania For Sound Money. In ppite of the efforts of a small clique ef silverites in Philadelphia the Repub-. lican state convention of Pennsylvania rtnTiren r uiauuiiu i -..t-. tronglyland clearly against me rebuke was once convey ea to a mau ui delnsion. After indorsing inter- . iaaa . who. at a pUbhe dinner at national bimetallism the plank reads as whch no ladies were present, was called follows. ' . ' hinAn tn regpohd to the toast of 1'Wo- . " . m l l v - r - . . . . . - Wo oppose the debasement 01 tne ua- - He dwelt almost enureiy upon "tional currency by the admission of, sil- he f j-eg 0f the sex j claiming that yer to free and unlimited coinage at the hest kmong them are little better ifi to 1: for the -reason-" that if iu the chief difference be- snch a policy be adopted it will not be . KUrroundings. At thecon- l.ohg Unasihle to maintain the parity of values nf his sDeech. one of the guests ioumey of six days to Savannah by car- of the two ; metals, and the purchasing d Mld . Ml fruit the gentleman riae, and how the pther nignt - and debtl paying power, oi wi uV, horth in a 6ieeper &v 1 ,yiv' , 1 wnemer ui eui, r-ri ,aked next morning in tavannau 1 contmue to pf equai fTh n, about that - Mine Owner. Te Cotton Crowera. we suffered a cal cocieiy wao wuu - been so long and liberally sustained. In our college days Henry Law andMon roe Mclver were the most giftedorators and the oration ot the former on "Paul t Mars Hill" is still - remembered by those who-beard it are yei t was rnminatinflr about that of dis the truth of it," sa of getting h. - s n f a tall-he .i. no tFjork Cement, rntt for if:)'.. 'o i o i,. !,,-. f ? f X 4 l- jr lie. 4-R ! ri'o Soto hotel. .?.r;" h. mwi. nf onr southern cotton stormy voyage OtWu - -"1: 800.000.000, is sold in Boston, ana nurv w r standard coun ck,anayiu""- TT -Mnlvflxed in Liverpool on snb6itS theUnited?ate span oi -biacK "i. . ..-nA wna, without international agree- crossed a rail- All II . , . -1 u M-maTn e-mrt.lv tne southern farmer above an 1.11- c-i in -Bftimd money, or ther trinJ and nOW we ucyci' 1 f.'it.imi TOiis none to cross.; muijwuwuyv.. r . i k fnr hia cotton 13 KWV M 6""1 r-heethebrmkm Europe or America. ieet .. " 1 rTT-: .;nAUt nroflt in There ia 100 Tier1 freo silver, to the western he awful chasm below. -Well, W we v - farmer.West. ;ea mnt-e me feel sad, ior ui h 4he ar.r.lications'ot;his remarks, re-. fers to his own mothers; and sisters, not ours." ii This, young man, -m his low estimate of women, nnpnsciously veri fied a eententions Saying by the author of "Youth" r "The criterion of a man s ur iw)t in his creed-religious, inteUectual or moral l it is the degree of re-nect he has for woman." As a con trast to the- light and flippant tone in 4.,i.:v. w rnnnv voiintfmenof thepres- j... D,i, nf the other sex. is the -ui 4h,ite f mm an eminent clergy . . iT rTi TY-rro crrfttPIUl man, wno bjd. x ; , r the. sense that came to ;m uuu . .. . . t throueh'my mother and: sisters of the substantial integrity hilify of: womanhood forced. - ' ... ... t. - Deeper and Deeper. Thtre is only one way out honesty, and that is to teu The process of t "lying out .ailed l is only a.-ure way v y , . . . - .- ,,- mnre deenlv mired. 1 his is wen uius- tfnri; . ntnrv tiorrowea irum w. avvvii v - -- ;; Christian Secretary. - -.:.'-- .-' A man of doubtful reputauon was on hia wav; home ! one night,; and came across a pile of planks which for some had been unloaded upon the rnatisiA Tie. couldn't-or thoueht ne Mn'treaist. the tempation i to steal WW.v. w . one nf them. . ' :' " v TTe rnuld not co throueh . the village . .. - . ... . ...... al ;th tf nd so took: a cut across me - Bv and bv. in the eathetin, dusk, he wandered into a bog-hole ana oanv in themire. The more he" strag gled the deeper he sank, until gettin alarmed, he criea lustiiy ior ueip. His 6houts brought a neignoor wnu, lantern ' ' "Why. Jones, what does this meauf . asked the good Samaritan. "How the urfirM rame vou here?" - i was in a hurry to get home, ' said the thief,- "and so I cut across. Then I got into this bog. The more I tried -to null hivself out, the deeper I got in. and finaly I went back to the road and got this plank to see" if I couldn't get myself out witn mat. ... . , . ; -TbeSeifTo in the South. . The Augusta Chronicle quetes largely m its editorial columns from the admi rable speech ot Prof. Booker T. W ash-inoin.-coldred. at the opening: of the Atlanta-Exposition, and adds:. "let the young negroes learn thet it is hon orable to work with the hammer and the saw, to follow the plow, to use the painter 8 brush, to wield the axe or to engage in any honest labor, ana mat 111 order to be a respectable ana respecieu citizen, it is only necessary to honestly discharge one's duties it wnatever sphere of life he labors. It is not nec essary to be a ponucian, to oe a &iuujp speaker or to follow one of the profes- 8ions. but simply to laitniuuy aiscuarge th dntv that 13 vours. And in tne language of Judge Speer, who spoke up on the same occasion with Washington, there is one thing Bince his emancipa tion the South has . ever granted to , the negro that is, no matter what his trade or occupation, his privilege of earning a uvm. it io wui-'" tacle upon structures ot every cnaracter to behold numbers of white ana negru mechanics working side by side.. ,1 have regretted to learn 'that this is not true in the Northern States.' " D. Gt CALDWELL, M. D., Offers his professional services to the people of Concord and vicinity. Office-, in rear ef bank. Night calls should be ; left at Mrs. Dr, Henderson's. - Office Hours, 7 to 8 a. m.,' 1 to. 2, and 7 to 8 p. m. Telephone call. No. 67. Sept. 20.'94. ly. ...... Th Shirt-WaUtUlrl.-:; The Birminehami Ace-Herald ; says As the summer draws near td its close we are forcibly reminded of the -passing of many eood things. Soon wiu the soda-water fountain hna itseil negiectea for the bureau of hot chocolate, the ham sandwich' will yield to- weinerwurst and 'hot. red hot." tamalley, the palm eaf fan will herself be relegated to the shelf with many another has-been, the aailnr hat will no loncer- sail i and , the tan shoe will pine in a sad, neglected state, while Vmore kber hind-foot garb rules ; the . day. ssaaaest oi au is ; me naaainir of the shirt-waist gutT She has dominated the nations, buf her days are. numbered. - The unexampled -and nnsuroassed comfort of her cuffs, which did notslipand her collar," which never sued for adivorce from tne rest oi ner attire, must now eive place to whatever fancy Madame Fashion dictates ior me winter, whether , it be either light or weighty harness", ' The summer has brought us many good things, but we easily select the best when we can rtidiv : acknowledge all along that we have pinned our faith to the; shirt-waist girl." - fhe Hatarlea andlneomes Of Kuler. Harper's Toanj? People, , ;; There is certainly one very nice fea- tnw ohnht. heinp a jKttentate. and that ia the. income that comes to" the occu- nantnf a loftv: place. Besides navmg all all his wants attended to," and a large number of palaces always at hia dispos al.'the Emneror of Russia isaid to re- teflon a davr the Sultan of t-Turkey receives $18,000 a day; the Em- riorer or Austria reiuiueo. iu Vj.v,v-w dayf Emperor William has to get along on $8,000 from; breakfast to bedtime; Oneen Victoria has Soo.UUu to epeuu everv week, and the President of - the TTnited States receives a trifle under $1,000 a week, but a great deal of free advertising goes with the oiuce, , DR. H.' HOLDEN. ECLECTIC PHYSICIAN, ' . OONCOBP, . C, - - , Offers his professsonal seryicos to the citizens of Concord, and vicinityin the treatment of acute and chronic diseases. Office over Yorke's jewelry store on Main street, where he, can be found at all hours day or night, when not profes sionally engaged. . . D fcD, zi. onx. We have a hcf;?r. preparea especially ior you, wiiich we mult- treo. II kreHi ot -ia atomach disorders wftrnn. :?.-. th&t every child la liable to uud for Vermifuge faas been sacceasfallTOsod t: ior a iiaii century. Ob Drttte by Mil tor Ke. l half century, brttte b. Mil to ?E. 4.8. FEET, B-ilUmsn El m?mr&k e kin of the natural i-:-. whn then lived I only am my aiiiV- - - oe. iatner- anu wvmw. , -J the southern cotton i Tennessee Whig. Mirth is a great sweetener. anything in this world." purity, and no- than - for almost bu irfrimnnv is a hard teacher, some people wiU leani; under no other, ' Knlclita otthe Siaccabees. - - The sure commander writes us from Lincoln, Neb , as foHws; "After trying very obstinate cough in. our ; two child- riA iif TCinor'a New Discovery A. wU W0 w.a 1 " . t -t 4- tha Yri At two aavs ine cousu eu- tirely left them. We wiu noi do wiui- out it hereafter, as our experiouw Fx, w tht it nres where all other; remedies .iifiiiH h'.- w.' Btevena. ok etj- ' Wi, nkt nrvirA this Erreat medi cine a trial, aff it is guaranteeu wiu bottles are free at P. Fetzer dxx store. Begular'size ouc ana n.w- - K Hood's Pills cure nausea, sicicnesa, indigestion and biliousness. . zoc - - Tired women need td have their blood purified and enriched by Hood's Sarsa parilhv: It will give strength andealtn. It May Do as Mach for Toa. t MnA filler nt Irvine. HL, writes i,o ho ho1 a Severe. Kidnev trouble for im with severe oains.ia his K,t-an.l alsn !that his bladder was ef s r . . n.ii7:ji. fected He tried many so canou j nf. withnnt anv eoou renuiy tsixxo - - 1 , About a year Ago he Degan use oi i T!,3 nrl fnnnd relief at once. iLIU A'""'" . j . iM..i uiHom iu esnemaiiv aaaoMsu kv care all Kidney and x.iyer .wmuuw uu niM almost instant relief, une d i will nrnvfl oar Biaieuiciiii. i-KA, ' fnv'-1arrA bottle, j At P, B- uujj . ww. v- "-n . . Fetzer's drag store. ' ' -' ": - Time and tide, wait for no man, but if they did ; some men would get there late just the same. - , . ,--' ..A Orea Battle V fs continually going on in the human system- The demon of impure.-blood tr. cram victory over the consti- oui" o - , j SIMM OH ;s ..r-f .(.. ,-.- i REG UtAT0jr: ? 7 i'f4-&r?fSy-V fir The proper thing t - ! do is - J TO BE ONgritfET , ... ...- You Lose Nothing, but gain quite a great deal IP YOU Wl LL BUY A ft-iTM.rr- a Troll feiMnc SisnioNS Lives Reo- tnA-roB, the "Kino of Lives Medi cines?" That , is what our readers want, and nothing but that. It iS the same old menu to wmuu. mo pinned their faith and were never dis appointed. But another good recom-ftf.r-nfIa.Hftn for it is. that it is BETTEB THAf Pnxs, never gripes, never weak er.??, but works in such an easy and natural way, just like nature Itself; that relief comes quick and sure, and one feels new all 'over. It never fails. Everybody needs take a nver remeay, $4.00 Watch. -FB03I- cokcoed, k. c. 00if drive the desperate enemy from, the field; and restore bodily health for many years. . . Be sure you get is on the wrapper. Co., Philadelphia. J.H.Zeilin& -WJNT13I.--:A " gentieman of hstandiner to represent Uouapmeu on- rx . nl :n 12 to lo;, MtulU punauig, wuiuwu, D.O i j. left.: 'i 1 3. ecluiiifcus.O

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