Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Oct. 3, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE TIMES n:Ecc:;cc;jv,miYTi:HS STEAM BOOK RHD JOB .OFFICE We keeD on hand a fall stock of - ETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS, STATE MENTS, SILL HEADS, ENVEL 0?ES. TA53, VISIT INS CARDS WED- c;s3 INVITATIONS, ETC, ETC. 'gOOIi PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS Jl . CTAUtHKO IN Ii?. " John B. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. $LOO a Tear, ia Adrszc. Volume XIX. Concord, N. c., Thursday, October 3, 1901, NUMBER 14. tfc jxrp' V.nor It, i mm ft Don't tto the top of year Jelly and preserve Jars la theold fashioned way. Beat tnem by tba new, quick. absolutely gateway by m mm cqhudioi rrire Refined ParaXQne. Has no taste or .odor, la atr tight and acid proof. Easily applied. Useful In a dozen other ways about the bouse. Full directions with each cake. Bold everywhere. Hade by STANDARD OIL CO. DR. FRQFtSSICftAL CARDS. u iwaiii at bis old place over Vorke'B Jewelrj - Store, - COWCOBD, N. C. . J' Jdr. w. C. Houston, ;t Surgeon Dentist, ;- CONCORD, N. C. r Isprepiired to do all kinds of dental work in the niot -approved manner. Office over Johnson's.Drug Store. Resilience 'Phone U. - Offlee 'Phone 43. L T. HARTSELL, Attorney-at-Law, CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA. l'rompt attention riven to all business. Oiliee in Morris building, opposite the court lioue- - - - DB.. 77". H. LILLY", ofti-rs liis' professional services to the citi zens of Concord and vicinity. All calls promptly attended day or night. Office and resilience on East Depot street, opposite Presbvterian church. - : KILL AltlS LKTTKB. Atlanta Constitution. j ton, and Alter two years he u taken 1 home by a wealthy gentleman of Ran 1 dolph, who had an only daughter and Ninety-nine years ago to-day Robert no son..-'.'This daughter James married Emmet was executed for high treason,.wbn e was 21 and they received the I wonder how many, of the old . school'! old man's blereing and a rood estate. boys have spoken his speech his beau- f In Vain, and in vain, had James visited J. K. SMOOT, M. D. Kes. "Phone 125. W. . PEMBERTQN, M..D. . Ees. 'Phone 157. DRS. SMOOT & PEMBERTON Offer their professional services to the people ot ConcorX and surroundiDg community UfflcelUane 38. . ;;. "" " . W J. MONTUOKBX. - JT. tjsfi OKOWBl L M08TG0MERI & CROYELL, Attorneys and Couaselcrs-at-Law .- cospobd, n. a - ; is hnrtners. will nractice law In Cabarrus. Staulv iind adjoining counties, in the 8upe- rior and Supreme ttourts of the State ana in the Federal Courts Office on Ienot street. Parties desiring to lend money can leave it with us or nlaee it in Concord National Bank for us, and we will lend It on good real es tate security free of charge to the depositor. We mute thorough examination of title to btnite offered as security for loans. . .Mortgages foreclosed without expense to owners ot same. - . tiful speech in defense of himself. and his companions for the Insh rebellion, and their attempt to seize the arsenal and the arms in Dublin and set Ireland free, I wonder how many of the mod ern school boys ever beard of Emmet, one of the noblest, ; purest and most eloquent patriots in all history. It took a smart boy, a gifted boy, a good, kind-hearted boy, to speak that speech with feeling and pathos. Chan Holt could do it, and he was the only one of our set who could make the" turkey bumps rige on our spines and our hearts go pity-pat as he' stretched himself a little higher and exclaimed: "Let no man write my epitaph. Until Ireland is free let not my epitaph be written." He had been already tried and convict ed, and when the stern old chief justice asked him if he had anything to say why sentence of death should" not be pronounced, he made this speech. The judge could not conceal his emotion, and all the cOurt was in tears. Eobert Emmet - was a very great man. Al though but 22 years old at his death, he was the peer and companion of Cur ran; Grattan and Phillips, and the friend and college mate of Thomas Moore, the .poet. When executed he was engaged to Curran's daughter, the beautiful Sarah, and Tom Moore has written a charming poem : about their sad and broken-hearted destiny. Had it not been for Sarah ajid his love7 Em.; met would not have been tried, for he and his fellow patriots, who were lead ers of the rebellion of 1798, had already escaped, most of them to America, but Emmet lingered for Sarah's sake and was. arrested and tried for treason. Among those rebels who escaped to America was a young man named Ma guire, who landed at Charleston and settled there. He had some meanR. and began business as a linen mer chant, and prospered. Not long after this he married an orphan girl, the daughter of a sea captain, and they lved happily together. Two children were born to them, James and Caro- ine. No children ever had more lov ing parents, no parents ever had more loving and lovely children, and for years there was no foreboding of any calamity 'or anucuon inai could or would befall them. I Corre i JEWELER. Since the first of the year I have been receiving 'new goods and adding to myv stock constantly. I am showing all the new, up-to-date . . . . things . lor tne ap- Charleaton to find some clue to his lost sister; 'and sadly he return ed and mourned her as dead. Caroline was sent to school at bid Midway, i,n liberty county, where she made good progress in her studies. Her teacher took great interest in her and kindly visited Charleston and ad vertised in the city papers for her brother, but learned nothing. When Caroline was 15 her teacher became so deeply grieved over her sad and lonely fate that he married her and here I am. Again he advertised, in several papers and at last in a Boston taper,' and said in good, large type, "If James ; Ma guire, w,hose parents died of yellow fe ver in Charleston,-South Carolina, in 1815, is living he can find his sister. Caroline, by. addressing the undersign ed.' ' 1 re saw that. A friend handed it to him in church one Sunday and there was a scene. ; He came to Geor gia by the first vessel that was bound for Savannah. From there he came to Lawrenceville, where my father was then living.. I was then but- 7 years years old, but I remember the meeting and no pen can describe it. The young people must imagine the rest. When last in Savannah" I visited the very ground and reverently looked upon the place that gave to my mother a wel come and a home. It I am anvthine that is worthy, I owe it chiefly to my mother, and she owed all that she was to an orphanage? Friends, do not for get the day nor the deed that should be done. It will par iti the long run. Maybe it will open St. Peter's gate to some who have taken a leetle too much toll. Forty times are the fatherless mentioned in the Bible. " The word motherless is not there, but the word fatherless includes all orphans in the translation. Let us not forget the day nor the deed. A dime or a dollar or more given will be like lending it to the Lord. Send to Rev. H. S. Crum- ey, No 200 Oak street, Atlanta, Ga. know him well and love him. His life work is for the orphans. Bill Artr. gCitsu&c crasED Jtnont wiio now rLKreiAsoTt rz:diws S.KST II 1 71 TO DKATII. j T(UB TKLLOW Jat KAAIw The sssasrunation of President Mv Chartotte ; Kinley recalls the Litory of the (lui- The fjeeh of G rover (Vrvltihl, si teau trial and conviction and surgests Princeton Ut Tharsdsy on the death theeorrection of a pojMilir error io re- - of Prendent McKinlry and the kwaon gard to the fate f the jury that eon k be drawn therefrom have svuractrd demned the assassin to the , ganows . wide attention for the commrn-etie, nearly twenty years ago. 1 nractical nature of Ihe Of4njoos ex Xiras and again it has been pnUirh- presii'di and as a crreioodent says ed that all of that jury are dead; that i ia to-day's ieue of this pajr, "It is some of them went insane, while others ! just what wei should have' cxptcird nave come to untimely ends in some way. Guiteau, at the time of the ver dict: was rendered, did denounce the jury in terms that made the cold chills run down the backs of all in the Wash ington court room at that .time but such is not the casty Only four of 'Ua? famous jury have passed way from earth; the other eight are living ia asbington city. from Cleveland." Whatever ele, good or bad, may be said about the m!y man elected ItiMlent by the Demo crats si rice the'ciril war, it will go down in history that he was a lain and practical individual, and one who ooutd never be carried off his feet by any body's or everybody's hysterics. This fact has been shown ta Biinjr ways, but probably in none more than in the t. ii. , .-. i The trial and peculiar incidents sur-l answer he gave to Mr. W. K. Hearst, rounding the assassin, Guiteau's efforts I proirietor of the New York Journalj to escape the penalty of the law have Hast after the blowing up of the'' Maine, proaching business.; Spring Diamonds. Jewelry, Cut Class. Etc., i ' this Seasons of Design. W. C, CORRELL, THE JEWELER. THE Concord National Bank. With the latest approved form of books, and eyery facility for handling accounts, Ol'FERS A FIRST CLASS SERVICE TO THE PUBLIC- Capital, - - Profit, - - - -Individual refifionsibility o Shareholders, $50,000 22,000 -50, OOP Keep Your'-Account with Us Interest paid as ajrreed. I4bi al accommo dation to all our customers. J. M. D. B. ODELL, "President, COLT BANE. Cashier. RUPTURE Write to the Mohawk Remedy Co Koine. N. Y.. and thev will tell you how you can cure your rupture or hernia ana the only way they can possibly be cured free of Charae It will cost you but one cent. Don't wait, you will neverreret it. .ViluHi Plantation Fcr ;Sall On Thursdav. Octiber 10th. 1901. 1 will sell, rn the premLses. the lands of James A. Sims, deceased, containing two hundred and . twenty-six (226) acres lying on the waters of Coddle Creek, two miles south-east of "Coddle ' ppstofflee. Cabarrus county. The above plantation is well adapted to grain, especial ly corn. The creek bottom never fails, navingevcu this extra wet season, a good crop. . , Any one wishing to look at the place will pe shown over it by Ben raham. colored, tenant on the place. Terms CASH, or if so desired sbr. months credit may be given. JNO.A.SIMS. Aug.ar-dts. Concord, N. C. But now. as "next Saturday, the 28th, is Orphan's Day, -my ruminations that began with Eobert Emmet have, with out design, brought my thoughts along j . i. ii ir . -- . aown to mis juaguire, wno was one of his friefids and compatriots. I wish to tell the young people a httle story about what happened to James and Caroline; It may read like a romanoe, butit is all fact. The story will fit the day that is to come, the Ssbth, and will fit the or phans at the home, hear Decatur, and those at Clinton, in South Carolina, and those anywhere and everywhere, for it is a fact that 10 per cent, of all the children under 12 years of age are either fatherless or motherless. Or phans arei the wards of the nation, and aie as much, entitled to our care and maintenance "as are the blind and the deaf. Charity to -helpless, friendless children is one thing we can all agree upon. We may differ in polities or re ligion, but chanty is a universal senti ment. The man who loves his fellow men and sympathizes with them in their distress is forgiven for his faults for charity hideth a multitude of sins.. man may gamble or cheat or drink or lie. but if he is good to the poor and friend ess it balances the scales. It is Dutch Btory that Jacob Snyder kept a mill. When he died and knocked at St. Peter's gate for admission, the good saint said, "Jacob, you did keep a mill down in de lower vorld, ' and you" did sometimes take too, much toll thee cannot come in," ' 'Ah! goot ' saint, dot is true. . said Jacob-: "sometimes ven de vater vas low and de stones vas dull, I did take a little too rnuch toll but I always gave'it to the poor." ;The good saint pondered and ruminated ong; but finally said, "Jacob, Jacob, vill let vou in, but it do strain the gate. -..'-'- - In the summer of 1815 the yellow fe yer, tnat awiui scourge, visitea unanes- ton, and in a week's time had swept the people away by thousands. It was several days before the panic became universal, and then all - who could go fled in terror, but in hundreds of f ami lies one or more were taken, and could not leave. Maguire and his wife were taken the same day. They lived but twenty-frurhours and were buried by it in the same grave. 1 he little boy of 9 years was hurried away by a kind hearted man, and the little girl of by another. Just then the order came from the. board of physicians to remove all the children immediately, and James was hurried on a schooner bound for Boston, and" Caroline on an other bound for Savannah. They did not meet nor kiss a sad. farewell, nor knew of each other's fate' nor where they were going. What grief were theirs! What briny tears'! Bereft! Be reft! that is the word, for it means snatched away. Yes,- I knew some thing about these orpnans, . tor tnis same Caroline was my mother, and manv a time have I sat at her knee and listened and weDt over the sad story of her orphanage. How in a day she lost her parents and her brotner, ana was left alone without a relative this side of the sea. . : - '"'. " - ' -. She was placed in an orphan asylum in Savannah and was cared for by good people until she was 10 years old, when one day a good lady came in a fine car riage to chocse and adopt a child. The orphans were all clad in their best, gar ni ents and gathered in the great, big company room and after they were seated the grand lady went round and rnnnd tAlkinsr kindlv to one and an other, and after long inspection stopped at Caroline and said, "I will take.this one.'' The poor girl was. alarmed and eried with crief at being separated from shA had learned to love. The tuvuv trreat ladv was the mother of Bev. Dr. rinnhlino- and ths erandmother of H ran k Goldinz, who wrote the pretty ,Mrv nf "Youne! Marooners." In the mpantime Caroline's brother had been placed in an orphans' asylum in Bos- au become history, yet it will everjre main a matter of interest, not only to our own country, but to all other nations. .- 'v4?.7."C- John P. Hamlin, who was foreman of the jury, ia a messenger to Senator Morgan's committee in the United Statessenate. lie is a hale afid hearty old gentleman of over three score and ten years. He was seen some days ago at his home on-M organ avenue, lie id in speaking of the event in his life: ; "Judge Walter Cox had. given his charge to the jury, and a .breathless silence hung over the vast multitude assembled in the ' court- room to witness the closine scene in the judicial I committee to erect a of tne great ; nauonai 'Czolgoaz Sentenced to Die. Buffalo, Sept. 26. Leon F. Czol- gosz, tne assassin of l'resident McKin ley, was this afternoon sentenced ta be electrocuted in the Auburn State prison during the week beginning October 28, Before sentence was passed the assas sin evinced a desire to speak, but he could not get his voice above a whis per and his words were repeated to the court by his counsel. "There was no one else hfit me," the prisoner said in whisper.- "No one else told me to do it, and no one paid me to do it. I was not told anything abon t "ihTT crime, and never thoughtanything about that until a couple days before T committed the crime." " X - Czolgosz sat down. -He was quite calm but" it was evident that his mind was flooded with thoughts of his own distress. His eyes were dilated, mak ing them heavy and bright, and his cheeks were a trifle pale. The guards put the handcuffs on his wrists. He looked at one 'of the officers. There was an expression of the profoundest fear and, helplessness in his eyes. He glanced about at the people who crowd ed together in efforts to get a look at him. The prisoner's eyelids rose and fell and then "tie fixed his gaze upon the floor in front of him. i At this point Judge Titus came over to the prisoner and bade lum good-bye. Czolgosz replied very faintly, letting his eye rest upon the man who had. been his counsel. " Good-bye, he said weakly. Czolgosz was then hurried downstairs and through "the Tunnel of Sobs" to the jail, where he will remain until removed to Auburn to pay the penalty for his crime. : ' Although the time announced for the convening of court was 2 o'clock every seat and every ioot of standing room wer-e occupied before 1 :30 and scores investigation of the great tragedy. . The verdict of guilty was an nounced, whereupon Guiteau arose and said, pointing his finger at the twelve men, 'My blood be upon the head of that jury, and don't you forget it! That is my answer. God will avenge this outrage.' "My fellow jurymen were fully con vinced that Guiteau was conscious of what he was doing when he fired the fatal shot. , "Out average ages at the time was 50 years."'" Eight of us are still living in this district. Gates, I think, was the youngest and Hobbs, who was the second of our cumber to die, was., the oldest,' if I mistake not. Mr. Prather died only a few days . ago. Thomas Heinlem and Fred Brandenberg have passed away. -Poor Sheaham is in the insane asylum. - His misfortune, I am sure, is not from anything that has to do with the Guiteau trial and convic tion," said Mr. Hamlin, "Stewart, I believe, has retired from business. ': Gates, is - employed at the navy yard. '? Brawner is in the. district service. Wormley is also employed in the district government. ; Langley has been employed for a long time in the treasury department.' . "1 often meet my fellow jurymen and I cannot detect that there is any thing wrong with any of them. Yet, like myself, they are en-owing old and m Havana oiarbor. lae iew oi Evening Pont, in i n-interesting "edito rial on the responj iblL'ity for the exis tence of the hysterical press commonly called "yellow journals,' recalls the in stance noted and also print the fact in the case. "On the 27th of Febru ary, 18U3, says The Tost, "W, It. Hearst telegraphed to U rover He vela ml that Levi P. Morton, On Miles, Rear Admiral Selfridge, William . Whit ney, O. II. P. Belmont, George Gould, C. M. Depew, Gen. O, O. Howard, the Governors of fifteen States, the mayors Of fifty-two cities, and a large number of other citizens in public and private life, had accepted membership on his national monu ment by popular' subscription to the men who went down with the Maine, and asked permission to add 'the ex- President s name to the list of national committee. This reply was sent as soon as the wires '-could carry it : Priscetox,N. J Feb. 28, 1898. To W. R. Hearst, New York Journal, New York:; "; ";':" "I decline to allow my sorrow for those who died on the Maine to l;e per verted" to an .'advertisine scheme for The New York Journal, K ii- vy "(4 ROVER vLETELAXD. Tlie words of Mr, Cleveland in this instance are charming in their cleaf- cut simplicity, but the most creditable phase of the telegram; is , that the ex- PreBident refused to. be overwhelmed by the outward manifestations of sor row of a yellow editor, and,despile the fact that all the eminent men named had been caught by, the fakir, Cleve land at one turned him down. Perhaps it is this "good eye" for the cloven foot that caused the rank and file of the Democratic politicians to despise their former leader, hut when we come to think of it, the politicians never did have much use for him. Cleveland was nominated the second time on the demand of the " people at large and if he lives the space allotted to mankind, he will again see himself installed in their affections; if he dies before that time he will not he forgot- Xri ed tUnrtw. .. . W have tr-o ami-uJomJ to langh at um Uuuh-frfiurtf easrm&ts 4 the Cw of Kun aa4 at the roardji that urruund the tnottarrhs tif Kbrt. That the Uttf h is m vain ete, aad lb boast that our ru"r da eut becd guards is untrue, as'lbe fjlowisc cor J sttows i-- :,. In the ieriod eow4 bv the murd-T of Lincoln, GarflfU ami McWiatrr tb wolrs tf Kurmte have bn Might dto a Cur of Kuia, King of luly, Prrs- dent of Franc, so Kuijws t'f Aotria and two iYimi r of Hjin. Unly tw ruling sovemgns of Kuro haw falkn white have lost three .. lridf nhi of the United Mute. : la the entire hittorf of our CetuUic fire Pt kuu of th United rAtau have died in o:So, and of lh thr&i have been murdered. In other word, the death rate among our Pmsident from, asassiuauon has uen hfty r- cent greater than from aS other cam comtaneu.' But that dm not b 11 the whole story. The assassination of a President was an unknown crime in- our :. first three quarters of a century? ,. In the last forty years three lVijeht have died in ouice. and every one of them has been murdered. That is to say, assassination has con stituted the entire Presidential tleath rate during the past geneintion. CommenUng ution this mxinl. and is tne returning popularity oi urover deveiana; for mat fact carries a great deal with-it. s M t -. m -11 I uo in a lew years uniy . uiemory vl u win ten Qne of thfe-favorabe tign9 of the . t. times is the iur. naumu earn iu regaru mj 111a ue- mg selected as a juror: ; "Of the hundred men in the panel I was the first one that would answer for a iuror out of thirteen called hence" was made foreman. "The confinement was long and arduous over two months in the National hotel, closely guarded by .United States marshals. ; When Judge Cox gave us his charge-and we retired 1 don t think that we were out more than an hour. Brawner read ; the in dictment. We voted only twice. Eleven was for conviction and one : blank We soon found out the trouble, which was explained away." : The next vote sealed the doomed man. - . "Nearly a generation has grown up iftr JtanrB mb awirT Pclscn caiiF Poison ivd MMUlVUltl f tSrS y --54 Uts M. 4M tMnmm&tem t. 4 lha Msu TS tnKWi ieMM( m m a hm ttUe USaM aJ r ff4 k4 iw1m4 P Uk a! a.tak 4 at rrUi tstrvU a4 et Mm ta Tu, a4 iwtj MKe H frjy Mrstst mtiKn sir Tst WU. . " Th lrtin. ts'4?sti riviii. tko mart anrarf. n w 4 th fiv 4 2 tmtm '.i4 0ttmmem 4 an arrhUts tu-ti to mw&- th nd at sut, are iht-r-: :'-. i. Out lh fsM 4 th rUff rt oUpnitivw b cuore immxmmtu frdd against much atUit it? y - i: Cut th aiMMKut t 4alt . w Uh m to diirf tMhf f . . - . Th 6rl jutxm, m far as Ai' can iTrtiilmls u,jnmrxfti.-'U r Ui n!y to l fi4 " . airaUvlv. Iioct4a was au-hn b$ IV without ' tli U$ kumi U&An&c ; h was anjUag in a theatre U l.n.SaUJ mm hm fn4 t H i Um4 hMm mm he was walkin arm it art a i?U tl'i, ii I ' through a railway tua.muwutflJ livMCHC nlrC'I AlUCilC by a wngU gxwi, ji a any eibsvnk NX V : 7 ; ron rnrgn w. A4 tnm McMaWr balr Ji In. JKlfrt r' lawn K. J nl r.si 1.11 t u I V Sw V-' I - one of an imuwoiw thron 4 vW- " . tors to expTOotw who w a. iZLi.tiS!???. lowd o iHir ta iroiiCttou4y to! a - a , .j. na tut band. wiUi.Hit ttt kits w r stneuons f any. tort, jutt as if tlrre were no such characters as anart luu or crank. uriy it is ij14e to make it moeh.h ry for unknown IraM to rH so cloet as this to Uw lrident It wiU be senlituenUlly objected iluU this wju4dtnjy the oM American custom of ireideriual hand shaking free to mil etmHt. lUilold discusiiiug what is to be done id free Us I customs must be changed to meet ' new irora mis awiut reproacn, tne aw i conuwon. York Journal makes this suggestion : s : " Tlie .Democratic simplicity , of our unguarded lYesiden i has beeu a bean tiful and an aduuraUe thing, but the price we liave jAia lias been too guast most timely I To the second ouestion the answer U more dimcult. Tue nalty of dwitn -is the -severest ttist can le inihcud4, thougli it micht 'reanaWy l estotl- ad to all stteni4 to kill the IVewucnt, wtteUwr successful tr nt There W, ly. Aud while we are protecting future I however, much tJauwUliiy ia the sag- Presidents, let us see that ' McKinley's murderer gets swift and speedy iustice. Iet us have no long drawn-out tuu- teau scandal to feed the assassin's !ve of notoriety. Let the hsir-splitfing lawyers reserve their ingenuity for a more fitting occasion, and let the elec tric chaff render' without delsy such poor and inadequate retribution for an irreparable wrong as lies in its ; power Then when Concress . meets in IK" comber it should enact such legisla tion as will ma,ke it impossible for any propaganda of anarclust principles to be conducted in this country. Czoi- gosR S crime makes this, imterauve Tliere is no place in the ' American form of government for such doctrines or. for the men who teach them incit- inz others to acts of murderous vio lence against tlie heads of government. A blow at the President of the United States, because he is the President, is a blow at the government, and it is es sential that all necessary, and all pos sible precautions be taken to protect free institutions from those who do not believe in government at all. since then. How Mr. Hamlin. . time passes,"- said Lincoln, Garfield, MeKlniey. "In recalling the history of past assassinations," says the Chicago Jour nal, "we are struck by the fact 'Jaat the three Presidents who have thu3 far fallen were clamoring outside for admission. Victims tgjnurderous fanaticism have The doors " were locked and no more I been three of the. mildest and most were admitted to the room. The pris oner was brought into the room 'at 5 1 minutes at 2. . "- Justice White passed sentence as fol lows: "In taking the life of our be loved President you committed a crime which shocked and outraged the moral sens of the civilized world. You have confessed that guilt, and after learning all that at this time can be learned from the facts and circumstances of the case, twelve good jurors have-pronounced you guilty and have found you guilty of murder in the first degree. "You have said, according to tne testimony of creditable witnesses and yourself, that no other person aided or abetted you in- the commission of this terrible act. God grant It may be so. The penalty, for the crime- for which you stand convicted is fixed by this statute and it now becomes my duty to pronounce this judgment againgt you : The sentence of this ftourt is that in the week beginning October 28, 1901 at the place, in the manner and means' prescribed by law, you suffer the pun ishment of death. Remove the pris- lovable men in their personal characters who ever occupied the position of Chief Magistrate of the nation. : "Lincoln's infinite humanity made his memory something like religion, Garfield's personal charm and ready sympathy were almost the strongest in fluences in his elevation to the post that brought death to him, and- McKinley has been designated by Senator Hoar, who differs widely with him in im portant political matters, as the best- loved .President the country ever had.' "If there is any significance in this fact it is merely by way of emphasis in the conclusion that these deeds of mad men are directed against the office and not against the man. ; We 'have, had Presidents who were the objects of many and bitter personal animosities and hatreds; hut these escaped, while mad men chose as their victims the gentlest and most generous of all our line of Executives." ' Faces H la Slater In floiiae of Shame. Chattanooga, Tenn., Special. Dying at Erlanger Hospital lies Jas Reilly-Thompsonj a young mechanic of Raleigh, N . C. lie ' drank two ounces of laudanum with suicidal in tent. Back of the story is a deed pa thetically dramatic. Thompson came to this city several days ago in search of work. Shortly after his arrival here he received a letter from his mother, stating that his sister, a beautiful young woman, had been enticed from home and that she had come toward Chattanooga. . The matter did not im press Thompson much,' but he quickly went from grave to gay. To-day he was in a notorious resort on Helen street, talking to one of the inmates, when he heard the rustling of , skirts, and looking into the hallway, met the full gaze of his sister in habiliments of the resort. ; She fainted and Thomp son, crazed with grief and mortifica tion, rushed over her prostrate form into the street-.and thence into a drug store, where he purchased a bottle of laudanum. He drained the bottle as he wended his way back to the resort to die in the presence of his sister, Overcome by the drug he fell on the street, and was taken to the hospital, where he is dying. - - " geation made by msny eminent crimt- nologiais that every assassin should, sol far as posiahie. have his idcnUly ef faced.- if even ibis name were auj pressed in the reports of the critrn and h& was hurried to trial sty I exmtion without having any i-mnal promi nence in the public's eye, so that he would cut no figure at all, either at the umeon in history, it ts evident that the stimulus of notoriety and the Jove of public posing would l taken awsy. Aud that men of the Bresci and Csol goes type love ; noUmety ami public posing above all things is U-lievtd by nearly all the sejenUsUi who have stud ied them. ;'- '"' 1 :.'-v"' - Tne President mt tto A. H. CS, Ma tin ft$0OO. - The forty-seve'nth annual stockholJ ers- meeung of tne Atlantic ana Aorth Carolina KailrtMid was held at Newberu last week in the company's new office. Every stockholder was represented in person or bypnxy, Tlie report of the ITesident showed matenal progrewi along all lines, j,t The gross esrning for the hncai yearwere s404-lt.y3, an in crease over- ther previous year of f-2, 378.77. It wits listened to closely throughout its reading and amid ap plause was adotted. Mr. Jos. E Rob inson presieed ; over the meeting, the deliberations of which were very har monious. " ! .-- . . On motion of a' private stockholder the salary of tiipreidnt was increas ed : from fl.800 to 2,500 ter year There was np change in' the iersonnei of the directors representing the pti vate stockholders these Dempsy Wood, Henry Weill, Q.-E. Foyand IL C Dun can being elected. The uovernor has appointed the; following directors: G; M. Uusbee, Italeigh; W, JI. hiuith Goldsboro: L. HartTy, Kinston; J. C. Parker, Jones coun tweed enlvMlwlybf roataJ WrU. New is ths Urn to rrt U fvUm mA f ymt system. dLiy taases yor Cf-atkMi wwe-.-,tVsit eaiwvtMntt Umfrt wuk Salve, waahf sad SMSps-Hhey tmf rwr. air aw M.riort, w V ft AW ' M t M 1. Hill) v f M ! M Wml kl iu iKtmMj t hnltkiu m ktu Mf . a a X Teopls are oft cntaoaed wtikmtt kiwwtag whea c how. tUpUla fvmt cm fully ta our pbrelriaaa, st tWy wta ehscrfuDytve s5 Uformatio sad ad v as yon rcoirc, without hrf, sad we wdt 4 at lbs same time a tatertst tag twk mm tOooi as4 fVkla I Ha TM twin tnctrw , srusis. t. TRIED AND PROVED. Like the old fatlr'. Ililile xvrc markctl T nnd'lV Urs." Grier's .: Real . Hair Restorer ' ' is icinir constantly tried nnu proved.- ; MtM Mary Doaclawi WmmtI, of Fet-nt B. II. H. ta pwfeeUj i(4t4 lanOrst aad faum batr i m4 mm als IkXum." Mm Viiit tViwera. Dhannbat. (ta, wrttae Uf ttalr waaUtllMtMi( rrfllr. and arate Ban uetvitne wtimj Greensboro Fair. The. Central Carolina Fair Associa tion of Greensboro is making a consid erable effort, and no doubt will get up a fine fair, which' is to be -held October 8. 9. 10 and 11, next. They have de parted somewhat from the regular line of fairs in that they have secured a number jof free attractions. " Outside of this general, display there will be sideshows and open air performances. The horse racing promises to be the finest in the State. Theexhibits are very full and the public interest that is. taken in it will make the fair a grand suocess. . There will be something to amuse everybody. Gen. J. S. juarr will make the opening Wno-flav iherB will m an interest-1 W. Taylor, Moreheavl ram nf W-Vdl between Guilford el8. Bayboro. 8t&e College and the A. and M. College Of Raleigh. "There -will be a balloon as cension every day as well as high tower dives, trapeze performances, etc. . Reduced railroad rates wih be on sale from October 5th to -11th which are good to return including the 14th. This will be a fine opportunity to go to Greensboro and-buy your goods and transact business if you do not want to visit the fair alone. The Elks have" charge of the amuse ments, and they 'are building a temple in which to entertain their visitors and friends. Those that come. will be benefited by a visit to the agricultural 'exhibits and circus amusements, and a pleasant and profitable time is promised to all who attend. . A tier ir It. Hr nr. atvn mm bf ytmr Saaaltter. Mr. Itiain.ttMi balr crew out tmut4taUraS the" cmlp bwew Imaltay and ttmm tram mntrt." 50 Cents at aU Drug Store. FOR ciurlottb; X, c. Situation 5tr of eltjr, few blocks from Utr aaa cburrtm, Build fcTUf-J'sw HU!pj4 Wftlr !! room. . ... ;' -'.-'j.-f- -.'- .- Tabl0-Pet atij ia fare. Faculty TralBl tcMrs'plv StnndPd--At:sJ to tivttof firrt-ctaM cu-gf oi vim miaum : . , MU1? and Art-Tarlr trained iMwt A dm-i k an aud Kuropan w-buula. la Crg;e-li'romSMU)iowr tfea m'WMti of aar tbe eaate craoe ta Um Bouts. REV, T: R. BRIDGES, Dv D.t : President. JulvS Sm." oner. norpltine Habit Grow Ins In England Even the Arab does not he so per sistently as does the morphia victim. All sense of honor deserts her. Whereas, perhaps, she rapidly becomes little less than a tmei. ii sne is naru up, m order to buy drugs she will invent, the most elaborate and plausible stories, and screw- money out of the unsuspect ing. There is no doubt whatever tnat drug-taking is "enormously on the in crease. No one who has ever witnessed the rapid deterioration, both in appear ance and in character, which inevitably follows from it can hesitate to "call it one of the most frightful . curses of modern days. v -" : j ' :; '" '-. WliaCs Your Fee Worth t "! ' Sometimes a fortune, but never if yon have a sallow complexion, a jaundiced look, moth natches and blotches on the skin all signs of liver trouble. But Dr. King's. New Life Pills give clear skin, rosy cheeks, rich complexion. On ly 25 cents at Fetzer's drug store. ' A Georgia Girl Taught Vfu to Waitz - New York is now talking of a Georgia girl, Miss Clarice Barksdale, of Augusta.- Miss Barksdale was brought into prominence here by a confession which Mr. Wu Tin-fang, the Chinese minister to the United States, has jus,t made to Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish. Mrs. Fish, delighted with the grace with which the Chinese minister par ticipated in the recent Newport cotillion, begged him to tell her where he had learned to waltz. --T : Wu yesterday finally said that he was taught by the handsomest .woman in America, Miss Clarice Barksdale, of Augusta. . - . '.- - - : Miss Barksdale is a tall, queenly girl, with magnificent brown eyes, chestnut hair and highly-colored complexion, and is a great social favorite in Au gusta, Warm Springs, Brian on KcITIInley. Win. J. Bryan, in the Commoner, speaks'of McKinley's as "a most extra ordinary life," and says further : "His bravery during tne trying or deal, his forgiveness and his fortitude in the final hour,. give glimpses of his inner life which nothing less tragic could have revealed. ""But inexpressibly sad as is the death of McKinley the illustrous citizen, it is the damnable murder of McKinley the President that melts 75,000,000 hearts into one and brings a hush to the farm, to the factory and to Che forum. Death is the inevitable incident of every hu man career. It deposes the warrior and laughs at the cautions suggested by science. ; Wealtn cannot buna wans high enough or thick enough to shut it out and no home is too humble to escape its visitation." Bryan also has a good word to say for the sincerity and honesty of Theodore Roosevelt, who assumes the duties of the President -under conditions which will make more ardent bis natural desire to fulfil the expectations of his country men. . - . - ' . Aiken, Charleston and Washington. Stepped Inte Live Coals. "When a child I burned my f oot frightfully," writes W.'.H. Eads, of Jonesville. Ya.. which caused horrible leg sores for SO years, but Buckleh Arnica Salve wholly cured me after ev erything else failed." -Infallible for burns, scalds, cut sores, brnises and Montgomery, 1 Piles, sold by P. B. Fetzer, druggist. When you -have no appetite, do not relish your food and feel dull after eat ing you may know that you need a dose of Chrmberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. Price, 25 cents. Samples free at Marsh's Drug Store, How to Froaonnc President's IV a - There are very few people who pro nounce correctly the name of the new president of the United States. It pronouncee by himself and family as if unfilled "Rozevelt." with heavy accent on the first syllable. m 4 m m v..w wsi si m wiaw A i. ma ty; James A. Bryan, I 1 M II 11 V M 1 IL H H ' II 11 IL Dewey. Newberu : U. 1 h A H II II 1 I 1 I A II III r ty; L.O.Dan- M H HH IU VJJH , j. w. : i rasas i an l r i , Newbern; T. Wt. i heal Cii proxy Grainger, Kinston. J.Ai Meadows, T. A- Green, Dr, Frank W. Hughes, representing tbe private stockholders, and G." H. Rob erts and B. Wl Cannady the State, were chosen as the finance committee. At the directors Tmeeting belli, im mediately afterwards, Jas. A. Bryan and Watt Manly were unanimously re elected president and treasurer, re Bpectively. . ! Freedom ol Japanese Babies. Youth' Companion.' . Among the characteristics of the Jap anese an American at once notices their ove for children, j It is doubtful if any Japanese child ever got a whipping.; An American woman who becomes acouainted with a Japanese - matron noticed that she allowed her utile child ren to ramble through the streets at will. and one dav commented on it. y "Why," said the Japanese lady, what harm can cOme of it? Our child ren never quarrel and no grown person would harm a child." "But." said tlie American, "the child might get lost." , "That would make no trouble,' was the reply, And she showed how in little children's apparel there were in serted cards containing their name and address, and explaining that -should thev stray, any' person finding tnem will first give them a full meal and bring them home. , Teuu Vlrtfnfa v-reaenfr Seapendsd .-.';' for Draake aaett, Richmond SpeciaL Rev. Dr James Arthur, a brilliant young . minister of the Presbyterian Church, was suspended by Montgom ery Presbytery at Roanoke recently by a practically unanimous vote, on the change of drunkenness. There were four charges and be denied three oi tnem. He has recently been called to Tabb Street church. Petersburg, one of the largest and oldest churches in the South. The action of the Presbytery has caused a great sensauon. i "What you chillun been doin'?" "We ain't been doin nothinV "Deah me! You grow moah like yonr ia every day!" So Trelb In the Staiement "All Coons ; Look Alike." Charlotte Observer. A humor-gifted colored camp-meet ing exhorter, who is said to always give a good performance, at a camp-meeting Once upon a time, at which a crowd of white people; were present, is said to have emphatically denied the statement that "all coons look' alike." "Look at those white folks over vonder," he said, They all look alike with their white skins . You can t tell 'em i-art. Now turn around and look at this great au dience of colored iwople and note the contrast. Here's a man with a ginger- cake complexion, there another a black as a lump of coal, and right over yonder is a-nigger with red hair.;- Talk about all coons looking alike' -there am t a word of truth in it. . It s white folks that all looks alike l" There ap pears to be much, to give color to this line Of argument and yet there are some things that knock it in the head as, for instance, the statement in our Shelby correejjondence . recently that! Sheriff Buttle, of that place, has made; expensive trips to Rome, ; Ga., to Rich mond, Va., and to Murphy, this' State, after the body of Jim Lowery, the ne gro wanted in fehtiby for murder. Three negroes, either dead or alive, have been spotted as Iwry and yet none of them was he. But evMienuy they were all coons that looked alike. fKTJ- m - k Isrtnlml CeostuBviuals Dt.Ottrs . SpruGO Gum Dalsam TaM Nmsif M S Slsilta eoa4.a4 H ri tasa ars lartw S mmtt I teUieaasbl as VI Wbtat. tne prutapti r xtras4 SoS the aliUal s4 Jrhick ma eotns4. 1 be ewst sutttmre seagh mtot t lo rW4 tmi'f Wkon UtiS. h) WM. It theaa aa4 faievj. CiaurmT afirrerrrs Wj (iMtlMMn.1 wish lo writs SB triM n Ufa. I bad a bad eoee wim our fmi!T tbyaa Set "t a toought I would go low eaftsoB ooa tottis of Ut.OM Spraao K ear no. 1 save am wnqrh ctone. I resocar' ttftrisna. I1 m4 root ear troly, - MAM Qkaekyesfef sedSoetftrM tun. i swii ui Con Sweaai aa4 oUm4 wiui s asairme ieaa i ACT If W Jfte TAKB AO SVBSTtTVTB. Gemds 1 mpared only Vl t&s Carfstedt defUcInw Co KVAHSVILU, IRO. . rrlse SS aad S Owta a gottla, For sale at Gibson Drug Store. file Interest In Chine. He was very young. To be precise, be was 5 years and 7 month. As long he could remember he had to set aside a part of tbe money he received to educate the little children of China. He didn't i love them as much a be should, or he would not have asked: .- "Mother, they're kiihng all the Chi nese children, aren't they?" ; - "Yes; i3n't it dreadful? Are you not D.- U, Tvrr t aL I f strs at taw of f. C. Tarr, deceaasd. M'tt ve AHrt Wiuuuasuo. Tbe defendant aro amd win take tlrm that the BtaiStm SbuV pamsd b ifotomeared a pw-tal . pro5edlmr ta tbe Hmvrlnr tirt Of tills rountr t'T tlte MrU- tiun of tit iaoda O. C Yuri. Tt 4rso4at wui fortner take notlre that If be tail to ap pear and answer or demur to tale petit vm iwhW-n wut bo at4 ta this ovw), m Ui day of ocoter ll. fadgekees wiU be graa sd for the reUef dentanded . TM Sept 1. MOt.-ew. glad you are not a httle Chinese boy?: . "Yes. But when they get them killed I won't have to send them any . more of my money .will I ?" j J j A bachelor is one because he could, tail vmMn't- s nisi. I tfHitiiusliA mrillUI I J but couldn't . f DrJem'sGOLOEII FRfFFj iMe T rf fa, V INFLAMMATIOIVr IH UVUMM. Ktort i . AS- I 0 CwavkAA AU lii4 tohCrfc' aa Ss9 uunv wmnmm . ror tale by Clbeon Vng tor. t
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 3, 1901, edition 1
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