THE TIMES STEAM BOOK AND JOB OFFICE We keen on hatd a fall stock of LETTER HEADS, NOTE. HEADS, STATE MENTS, BILL HEADS, ENVEL- i OPES, TAGS, VISniNS CARDS WED DING INVITATIONS, ETC, ETC. GOOD PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS DANGER SIGNALS. No engineer would be mad enpugh to -run by the flag which signaled danger. What the da ger was he might notunder Btand, hut be would take no chances. It is different with the average man or woman., lney at tempt constantly to run by the dan ger signals of Nature and that attempt costs thousands of lives every year. AVIhen the appetite becomes irregu lar or entirely gives out, when sleep is troubled and broken, -when.-there is a loss of flesh,' when there is a constant feel ing of dullness and lan guor, Nature is hoisting the danger signal. 1 The stbmach and - its allied organs are failing in their work and the body is los ing the n utrition on which its strength depends. Such a conijition calls for the prompt use of Dr. Pierce's Qolden Medical Discovery.' It cures dis eases of the. stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition, purifies . and enriches the blood and builds tip the body, with sound, solid -flesh. "-Your -. kindness to tnc I can never forjjct," writes Mrs. Josie E. Clark, of Enterprise, Shelby Co., Mo. "I cannot express half my feelings of gratefulness to you. I had despaired of ever getting well. I had been in bad health for twelve years. Had aches all through me, numb hands, cold feet, and everything I ate distressed me ; bowels constipated, was verv nervous, de pressed and despondent. In fact. I can't express half my bad feelings to vou. When I fi rst wrote 4o you I thoufjht I could never be cured. I have taken six bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and my health is now good. You have my honest recommendation to allsufler ers. I thick there is no medicine in the world as good as Dr. Pierce's." If constipated use Dr. Pierce's Pleas ant ' Pellets. They cure constipation, biliousness and sick headache. They do not produce the " pill habit.'" j PROFESSIONAL CARDS. it DR. H. C. HERRINi Dentist. Is now on the ground floor of the Lltaker liuuamg. OONCOED, N. C. Dr. w. c. Houston .Sargeon " Dentist, CONCORD, N. C. Is prepared to do an kinds of dental work In the most approved manner. Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone 11. Office 'Phone 42. L. T. HARTSELL, Mtorney-at-Law, r .-.-; CONCOKD,NOBTH CAROLINA. Prompt attention siven to all business. Office in Morris building-, opposite the court : bouse. i I Drs. Lilly & Walker, : -offertbelr professional services to the citl j zensof Concord and surrounciing country. 1 -Calls promptly attended day or night. W 1. MONTQOMEBT. i. IiESOBOWBlJ' MOHTGOMERY & CROWELL, i attorneys and Connselors-at-Law . .CONOOKD, IT. O. . As partners, will praqtice law In Cabarrus, Stanly and adjoining counties. In the Supe rior and Supreme Courts o t the State and in the Federal Courts. Otjice In court house. Parties desiring to lend money can leave it with us or place 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 make thorough examination of title to lands offered as security for loans. Mortgages foreclosed I without expense to owners of samn. A brick Is a brick; yes. but. what a differ ence ln'them. Good .brick, good machinery, up-to-date methods, in fact, a thousand de tails, are a necessity to produce the best brlcfc. We have our plant fully equipped for a capacity of 45,000,000 not only that, but have a body of the finest river clay ever lo cated hi this country. Our plant is on the Catawba liver near Fort Mill. 8. C, and shipping station, G rattan, S. C. "A man Is a man foe a' that,'' but what a difference in 'em. Ton require the best lum ber for your house; the best coal 'for your en gine; the best flour for your table. One does not buy a common horse when he can get a much better one for near the same price. This is tue abou t everything one needs. :"In a build ins nothing is more essential than good material.-: It- adds to the safety jand wear, besides twill sell for more. Who 'would not pay. more for a building put up out of first quality nf&terial than for one thrown together out of common ordinary brick. , Let Ds Correspond With Yon. Pnmpt Service -in Shipments. s Brisk Copy, OFFICE WITH S. S. .HcNINCH & COMPANY, . CHARLOTTE, N., C. Pec. lS-rtm. : . Machinery for Sale. One pair Platform Scales.. One 20 horse power Boiler. Une 40 horse pd wer boiler. One Cotton Press. One 20 horse pen wer Emrine. ? Two Cotton Gins. One Saw Mill. ' Lot of Shafting Ajpply to . MRS M. L: GOODMAN, ' or Z. A. MORRIS. IjUKtS WHfclif All FISf (-All S. CTI Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Ue PRI in time, ssold bT rtrareistn. T 1 BR 6 K ! BRI G K BRICK! i Cut THE : CONCORD TIME John. B. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. Volume XX. 8A7I JOHES LETTEK. A tlaota Journal. I have just returned from a hurried trip through Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio and Pennsylvania and hare re versed my ideas of things somewhat about the signs of the times. .-With many other persons, I thought we had turned the crest of the wave of pros perity in December, and that j there would be a .general and constant de cline from his mouth, but the crest really has not been reached, and per chance will not be reached to a de cline until after our nut presidential election. It looks as if we would have two more years of prosperity at least. 1 was talking with a big Pittsburg coal man and manufacturer. He said that the output of the iron manufac turers had been sold eighteen months ahead to July, 1904. This much I know, the railroads cannot begin to move the traffic! I . have seen more belated trains in the last six months than I have ever seen before, it seems, alto gether in twenty years. The conges tion they said had been relieved at Pittsburg it seemed to me that I saw enough loaded Cars to keep every!; en gine almost in the country busy for weeks moving them out and off. Both passenger and freight traffic is 'im mense to behold. While we at j: the south feel the pinch of two short crops, yet it is not universal in 4he United States. Welare doing all the business in the south that we ought to do in building and buying and selling, hard as we think the times are with us now. Our farmers are holding more cotton than for any year that I ean remember, and they will get the benefit of the -high prices, many of them, for I believe cotton, will go to nine cents before this month is out and maybe to ten, no telling. I know if I had cotton I would not sell it tomorrow or next day. The supply, is short and the demand will be strong, and that forces prices up. And the farmer who don't make enough cot ton I to pay his debts can do like Jim Hulsey, of Rockmart, who sat on a box,in the town square all the morning in the sun figuring. Finally one neigh bor went up to him and said: 41 "Jim; what are you figuring on?'' He said: , "I have been figuring on my cotton crop." "Well, what about it ?" Baid the neignbor. , "Well," he Baid, "I have found that it won't pay faae out, and I will just keep my cotton." . So I say to the farmer, "If your cot ton won't pay you out now, maybe it will in a month or six weeks from now; jit is. worth your while to try it, maybe, - I . came down from Cincinnati last night lanta. on the Floiida Limited to At And, my! she is a daisy train wide vestibules, a three hundred-foot palacej on wheels; every comfort and convenience, and if there is anything that will delight Yankeedoodle to come south,' it is the magnificent trains our roads are offering them. The L., N. and C, and Central and Coast Line are also running as fine if not finer trains from Chicago and St. Louis to St. Augustine, and when we think about it, the Yankees are a-coming. By the Southern, the Coast Line and SJ A. L. from New York and Wash- i - ington city, and via the Southern and L. and N. and I. C. from the middle and northwestern slates. Not only the regular trains, but six of these fine trains running to Jacksonville and St. Augustine daily, and I am glad Yan keedoodle comes south. They learn some things and go back wiser, and leave us ! richer, for it is said that Florida has lived on fish and Yankees for nearly a hundred years. The rail roads are vieing with 1 each other on speed and magnificent trains. They deserve a fine business; hope they will have it. . It snowed every day the four days I was north of the Ohio river, and I find it reached to the southern line of Tennessee. Sleighine was fine in west ern Pennsylvania. 1 It was cold as kraut up .there to me, and those citi- Zens, would greet a fellpw with, "fine day, lovely day." It was lovely to me, sitting in the hotel by the fire. They! greet a snow storm with pleasure and call a rainy day a .stormy day. They will run from . rain and run into snow. The south reverses that order of things. We don't care much for rain, but my! how we are afraid of a bliz zard. ' I spent part of today in Atlanta and from Pittsburg to Atlanta the transition is not so great as one would think. Atlanta haa rnt n crnnA , , L . , .. dps nf t.n hiiHtla and atir anil mnvo x-n u j n i ,,. ' HI I l r t u hn rcr a n1 Atlanta haa nMhini, to boast of more than of her daily HaucrB,.Aur mcy compare wen wun any in the -United States, and a paper is known by the men who make it and the city that supports it. I am glad to 1. A 1. .A. T T . " 1 n near mat nenry jtiicnarason is im proving. He is a genial, warm-heart- perhap8 in the world, but friends by the thousands, and they will all hail with pleasure his return to his post on The Journal." ' The Atlanta merchants are not doing a land office business, neither are our country merchants in a ru-.li now. It is said, every dog has his day, and our merchants never did better than they did in September, October, No vember and December. What if tbere be a lull now in trade? Take an optimistic view of the situation, don't growl or worry, there are good times coming just as there are good timfs past. We poor mortals of a cloudy day think that the sun will never shine again, and then on a bright, cloud less day we sometimes think there will neiver le any more clouds. We have bur ups and downs, but like the good old woman as she said, "Amid all my troubles and tribulations, and ups and downs, there is one passage of scripture that always comes to roy re lief." They 'asked her what passage that was. She said ifwas that blessed old verse that said, "Grin and bear it." So, gentlemen, jump up and down and shout when things go well, and when they don't go well, follow the old woman's' scipture and "grin and bear it." j Be thankful for what you have re ceived that's good, and when you haven't enough of that to be thankful for, sit down and think how much bet ter off you are than the fellow that's in jail or that they- hung last week, or that's on a sick bed with cholera or yellow fever or small pox, or that has the svinney so he can't get about be thankful for the blessings you have received and miseries you have missed. And Preeident Roosevelt is in trouble again about a; colored postmistress in Mississippi. He will be wiser when he is older. He is the youngest president we have ever had and his youth sticks out. in every direction and frequently in the wrong direction. If he would follow Bryan's advice and appoint some colored, person postmaster or postmistress up in Yankeedoodle, he would not only show his love for the colored brother, but he would show that he has got as much baek-bone as a rough rider president ought to have. It takes nothing but spite to put a colored person off oh us in the south, but it would take grit to put one off on some northern town or city. , Yours truly, Sam P. Jones. . P. S. Somebody sent me a clipping from Augusta, from The Augusta Trib une, a paper which it seems to me, I never heard of before, giving me hail Columbia, Yankeedoodle and down the country generally, about having punch at my daughter's wedding the other day. Now, the 'simple facts are, the ingredients of said punch were Apol linaris water, plain lemons and plain granulated sugar. This is the kind of punch that don't punch fellows over. The punch-over punch I have punched out of my program thirty odd years ago, with no variations, defalcations, and I hope in the future without ex planation. I - Yours with a flea on me, Sam P. Joxes. Roanoke's &eml-centeuulal. In making arrangements for the celebration of the Semi-Centennial of Roanoke College, June 9th-llth, 1903, the Faculty and the committees in charge "wish to obtain the present ad dreBs and occupation of every former student of the College. As efforts al ready made have not been wholly sue cessful, appeal is now mads to the pub lie, through the courtesy of the press: for aid in completing the register ol students. Wnile many addresses ard lacking for almost every year, the reg ister is especially incomplete for the period of the Civil War, during which no catalogues of the istudents were published. Any persons who are able to aid in this ma'tter will confer a favor by sending information jto Prof. W. A. Smith, Secretary of the Facultjf, Sa lem, Ya. ' ; ' A KlarTelooi Invention, j Wonders never cease. A machine has been invented that will cut paste and j hang wall paper. The field of inventions and discoveries seems to be unlimited, I Notable amon8 great discoveries is i Dr. King's New Discovery for Consump tion.! I It has done a world of good for weak lungs and saved many a life. Thousands have used it and conquered : Grip, Bronchitis, Pneumonia and Con- sumption. Their general verdict is: "It's the best and most reliable medi- cine for throat and lung troubles. Every 1 50c and $1.00 bottle is guaranteed by ' P. B. Fetzer druggist. Trail bottles free. An unofficial, but authorized ! an 'nouncement is that ex-Secretary of State William R. Day will be appointed J L to Bucceed Justice Shiras of the United t Statea Supreme Court. Every Bottle of Chamberlain'- Cough Remedy Warranted. ;We guarantee every bottle Chamber- . lMn 8 Cooeh Remedy and will tefand the money to anyone who is not satisfied fter using two thuds of the contents. This is -the -best remedy in the!' world I hQoviaf, cough ia plea8ant and to to toke-. it prevents any tendency 1 of a cold to result in pneumonia M. I L. Marsh, druggist. . frr la. innnna Annaha rrlria nrntin An1 BE XTTSI1 AND :FXLa a?.' Concord, N. C, Thursday. mbIk4 Xblrtr Tmw Hart j feor la Pealttlar. Hertford, X. CL, Jan. 21. Jam E. Wilcox? was today sentenced to thirty years at hard labor in the State prison for the killing of Ella Maude Cropeey. . The jury returned a verdict r guilty of murder in the second degree. The entire evidence was read to the jury, after which Judge Council deliv ered his charge, which consumed an hour and a half, lie told the jury .hat it could bring io a verdict of murdar in. the first or! second degree, or of ac quittal. ! "If the defendant," said Judge oun cill, "after willful premeditation jand deliberation and malice, killed Ella Cropsey, then your verdict should be murder in the first degree. j "If the Slate has satisfied the jury that the defendant killed Ella Cropeey through malice," he said "but without establishing j the existence of willful premeditation and deliberation, then the verdict should be murder in the second degree. If satisfied of neither of these beyond a reasonable doubt, the verdict should be 'not guilty.' Jim Wilcox betraved no symptoms o: the strain under which he no doubt labored. His only look was a look of scorn. In sentencing the defendant the judge said : "I do not take pleasure in sentencing any one convicted of crime, but do soj from a profound Bensejof duty. The! jury has seen fit t return a verdict of murder in the second uegree. uy what process; of reasoning they arrived at this verdict is not for- me to say. t I express no opinion as to the guilt or iu nocense of the defendant; but Swill give effect to the verdict as becomes my duty. If the defendant is guilty and the Jury has said -sor he deserves, in my judgment the full limit of the law. The judgment of the court is that de fendant be sentenced to a term of thirty years at hard labor in the State's prison." j The defense was not satisfied with the verdict and asked for a new trial. this was not granted, f They will ap peal to the supreme court. Solicitor Ward Bays there is no ground for a new trial, and his opinion is sustained by that of Judge Councill. Mr. Ward, in commenting upon the case, Baid : "I believe that the defendant is guil ty and think that our case was a strong one. Ami I satisfied with the i erdict ? , Well, I'-ll ha.ve to be." Judge Council says that the jury dis played an act of charity in allowing the defendant the benefit of the doubt and making their verdict in the Becond de gree. He Bays that a fair and impar tial trial has been given Jim Wilcox, and he commentson the good conduct of the people throughout the interest ing proceedings. One of the jurors talked tinight. He said that the jury had stood nine for guilty in the first degree while the others disfavored conviction in any form. Said he: "As a compromise we decided upon the second degree." The verdict meets with almost uni versal approval. There are two! parties with whom it is unsatisfactory. These are the Cropseysr and the W lcoxes. The Cropseys say that nothing short of a banging would satisfy them, j'lf Wilcox is guilty at all and he ni guilty he should receive the severest pen a'ty." The Wilcox family are not all pleased, though they talk little, Wil cox, Sr., remarked in significant tones that Jim wasn't in the penitentiary yet. James Wilcox himself is quoted as say ing that death is preferable to the sen tence imposed. He once said, "Give me libertyor give me dea'h," a id evi dently he was not jesting. ' Following are the facts in brief i re garding the murder and subsequ mt de velopments: : v Wilcox went to the home of W. H. Cropsey, father of the dead girl, on the night of November 20, 1901, to fcall:on Miss Ella, to whom he had been paying considerable attention several years. When he arrived at the Cropsey home, about 8 o'clock, the family was; in the sitting room.! Young Roy Crawford wa there calling on Miss Oilic Criopsey, a sister of Miss Ella, i Soon after 9 o'clock all the members of the household except Missed Ollie, Ella and Carrie Cropsey, a cousin from New York, who was visiting there at the time, retired and left the young folks alone. Later, after having made two or three attempts to excuse herself, Miss Carrie went to her room. j ' This left Wilcox, Crawford and the two sis ters in the room. It was said that Wilcox and Crawford were at puts with each other at the time. They dad not speak when they came together. - j At 11 o'clock Wilcox, who had ap peared restless and moody during the evening, rose from his Beat, saying ,"I rhuit go home; my mother will be Uneasy about me if I stay out after this hour" This waa said in a jocular way. Continuing, Wilcox said: "Miss Ella, I would like to see you in the hall." He rolled a cigarette and went out, followed by the girl. After that mo ment Miss Ella Cropsey was never Been again by anyone save Wilcox. Her dead body was found floating just be- January 29, Death the I surface of the water of fca quottok river on the morisitajfj of loember 27 Kiloing. , Thirty minute after Wilcox and MU EUa lejft the room MiatOiiic bad Craw ford good-night, aaw bim k the door and went upstair to her rootn.j thick ing that her tUter had g'e ahad of her; bat not finding her there she con cluded! that she and Witcox, who had been haviog lovers' quarrel, had rude np, crosaed the hall into the parlorjior a quiet talk, and were still there. After having taken a short nap and awaking the heard the clock strike 12, uummxI her lister land gave the alarm. 8oon the whole family was up and searching every wherej for the lost girl. But the effortal were -in vain. No trace of the jrirl could be found until her body wu discovered in the river. A bruise was found on her head. The prosecution declared that this was due to the fact that she had been hit with a weapon and then thrown into the stream.! Wilcox was rrted. He wad unable to account for all his time on thenight of the murder; The en tire case reeled on circumtautial 'evi dence. - j ti . Wilebx was convicted of murdiTin the first degree at his first trial latt March in Elizabeth City, bilt on ac count of a demonstration io the court room a new trial -a granted and the case was moved to an adjoining couuty. He is about 30 yars old and lias never been popular in Elizabeth City, but his record 'previous to the Cropeey affair had been good, so far as any criminal act is concerned. ladimnola Citizens Outwit th Post- office Department. Charlotte Observer. It is ndeed a pleasure to note the neat manner in which the Postonice Department been pkked and the President have up in connection with the Iudianola, Mis. , poetoffice matter. The postoffice at the Mississippi town has been closed for some weeks on account of alleged threats made by the lawU-ss element of the community against the colored I postmaster. Mail directed to Iudianola is now sent to Greenville, some thirty jor forty miles distant. Sen ator McLaurin, of Mississippi, request d the postojfice authorities to order it sent to leathmann, four nnles away. The repiy of the Postmaster General' waa that the! office at the latter place was unable to; naudie the increased mail. This was in the face of the fact that the; postmaster at Heathraann had stated that he had two clerks in his store and could handle the mail with out trouble, j, Mail addressed to India nola wil continue to be held at Green ville, but the citizens of the alleged law less town have instructed their corres- I ; pondenti to address themat Heath- mann arid they have employed a man to make; tripe between the two places, 80 that they j will receive and dispatch their mail from the nearest office with out the consent of the Postoffie Depart ment, and really in defiance of the President and the Postmaster General, who ordered the mail sent to Green ville as ja- more severe punishment. The postmaster at Heathmann cannot refuse to handle mail through his office, and it appears that there is no way in which the Wiswhington authorities can prevent the i Indianola mail being handled thera without closing the office. It has been asserted by the Postmsstier General that the average daily receipts jof the HeathmaRcr ollice aggregated 30 cents, which means that the postmaste received a few dollars a quarter, being paid a percentage'of his stamp cancellation. It was stated that it would be no expense to the' govern ment to send the Indianola mail there ioBtead of to Greenville. This privilege waa denied, however, and now the Postoffice Department finds . itself en tirely outwitted. The Indianola people will not only get their mail at Heath mann, but the! Department must pay the extra! expense incurred in hand ling it. j , The administration, however, ia not at the end of it? row. It can order the discontinuance of the Heathman postoffice and every postoffice in that region, it! seems, if it sees fit, and it could do so with the same justice that it closed the Indianola office, j- Wonderful Nerve, i Is displayed by many a man enduring pains of accidental cuts, wounds, bruises, burns, scalds, sore feet or stiff joints But there's no need for it. Bucklen's Arnica Saive wiH kill the pain and cure the trouble. It's the best salve on earth for the Piles, too, store. J 25c, at Fetzer's drug At the ftnnual meeting of the stock holders of the Southern Express Com pany, in Savannah, Ga., Wednesday, it was determined to increase the com pensation of all salaried employes to an extent that will involve a large and liberal addition to the pay rolls of the company. j j ' ' r :j A new Gusher at Sour Lake, Texas, recently broke away. from the drillers, and is spouting aj solid stream of oil, equal to 75,000 barrels a day. In the Beaumont: district there is a decline in output. . .. - ! The disturbances at Mu4 Pelee cause. have been suggested i as the 1903. iili ir Ltrrrfcm. A tla La CoaaU txttaa. . The GunatiUitkko ays ihrr t (f. ing mom v4 in th ' oorth that ill brrrafter be treard from in tuinj: nfro officials oer iMtitWo & statu lie. That The New York llrrak ba tj-Dl a rift is the clouds by rrbuktrif the Prratdeot, tie. We bop but now that . Ruoarc-U haa appoint a Boston coon to a hirh oftW, the Herald may changv front and y he U coruinteoL That f rowing teuae of justfce U a chameliun of many cokx It in quite visible a littla while afi tirady made his charming speech in New York and Boston, but the preach er withered it and McKinky tnadv more appointments and kept making .them as long aa he lived. lliU grow ing sense' does not teem to tlourivh in many rJaof. The fact is, w haw almost despaired of ever seeing juwiice grow at the north. lately I hare re ceived three letters from tip there that indicate the growing sense, and I have read and reread them with comfort. One of these is from an old Mexican veteran who says that of the 2,700,000 soiden who fought against us, one million were from the east fighting io free the negroes, (rranl'a included. One million from the west fighting for the union and the other 700,000 were the riff raff and scum, the flotsam and jetsam of all nations who joined the army for bounty and booty and lieauty, and they were the element that Snerman employed to make war hell. He speaks of the; war aa unholy, unrighteous and unjust. Another letter is from Port land, Oregon, and says the writer recently got hold of one of my letters whjch said that General Grant .was a slave holder and hired out his negroea up to the close of the war and lived off ofthtirhire. He says: "I dftln't be lieve it, but was induced to examine his biography and I found it was so." He says that nobody in that country ever heard of it and it is amazing and astonishing that Lincoln would appoint a slave-holder to be the head of the army. The writer of this letter was brought up to' believe that the south brought, all the negroes from Africa. Another letter is from a New Hamp shire man,' a veteran, who says that he and seven others from his town joined a company in 1862, and only one be sides him sell got back, iver since thep he haa been reviewing the folly of the war and is ashamed of his peo ple and says that I do not score them in my letters as hard as they deserve. He has Hinton Rowan Helper's famous campaign book, in which he says: "We are going to free your slaves and arm them with pikes and torches and butcher your families and burn up your homes." This book is indorsed by sixty-seven members of congress, including John Sherman. Appleton says that 167,000 copies were sold in three months and it precipitated the raid of John Brown, at whose execution all the church bells of New England tolled a requiem. And so I have found three northerners who have this growing sense and I have hoard of one more who is a suspect. am keeping a tally sheet and as soon as I hear of , any more growing sense. I will-record ! it.; My Oregon friend's generation came up since the war and never had! time to bother themselves about the history of the war or slavery The South was outside of their concern and Jeff Davis was the arch traitor that Roosevelt told about in his history That is all he cared to know. But he ays your late letters have excited our curiosity and if when your book is out, you will let me advertise and sell it in my own way, I will sell 100,000 copies north of the line. This man is a big advertiser with headquarters in Chicago and sent io me a big lot of his cards land literature. Well, Mr. Byrd will see about that, but to my opinion' his northern cus tomers don't care a baubee about me or Grant or his niggers. They remind me of two fellers who went off to camp meeting, and as tney were standing by a tree one of the brethren -ca me up and invited them to go up to the alter and jine 'em in gittin' religion. The men Seemed somewhat i indignant and re plied: "Yob must excuse" us, sir, we don't live iq the county." But I did find a rift in the clouds that gave much comfort. In the twelfth volume of John Lord's "Beacon Lights of History" I find a sketch of Robert E. Lee by Dr. E. Benjamin Andrews, that is a loving tribute to thatj great soldier. Such a glowing tribute was hardly to be expected from a northern source. ' Especially from one born in New Hampshire, educated at Brown University and who joined thejarmy while 18 years old and who lost an eye at Petersburg. As an educator he rose rapidly in his profession and became president of his alma mater. Next he was called to Chicago to take charge of her public schools and biter on waa choeen as chancellor of the University of Nebraska, where he now is. Sinee the war he has frequently championed the cause of the Sooth and became un- popular with, our . malignant enemies. Of course as he joined the1 army so young and lost an eye, we must let him k3o Number 29. k-f hia xwtHi, tl t i a hearted brats j ma c-t t .;kl m have darrd to hat written lisat trUi wotsdef bw U Waffartkfd tl4 mea a Andr-, a4 away ta, wk mca a Vrt!r a&d lUtfcrfe ai4 KnxTktq atid Cbcttie, .uli fvxa uj aud mature nn Us k ad of Nw KflxUftd l trZl villi wucb 4eur"a f1'! j-t trH in 111, at A 4h-rt rCi a e ra ruraocmrul oratiou by Uafa 0.ai. ho was n-ftrdrd as t -t ht ttM, eloquent add tmjor4 t Americ. . ! ihad a '!;htfcits Ufe, and my !ktcn uti. Mi l h viUi p with me, Kir he had to lk Mr Cttoat. for he a n4tmiir itirwl I didn't know rxcUy hat that tixat.t, but found out UUr Th ffeai hall a erwadrd Hh tW a . t m V- i a a . ursi pr-Mi fui .r r.nfiunu: M t ufti ras atth uthrr aralrj iji lat irn. Mr, Choale's f"e ail irf aud fucU, hi Ur re-'t,.l iK.-uih cuipicuoua. f ur hasf an tumr b voice waa ahnt a mni'.te- iih rrv word cart-fully and ihiui Uurr-l, out mi was Mil the tt-aUiiris kA a gentle wind Ufur the irni, S'n he SfH-med to cmiiroi of iti tn emotion arid iMml aay aaxxig the star, and hi faturt - Uxik u an tin earthly gloaj hi rui rjnd'J to every seoU iM, hi frail luxly aaayrxl to and 'fro aud hi audu-i-, unuo sciously waytl with him and held their breath for fear they would In word or a motion. No, I will never furgH that ire--h. He topjad liccauvc he had to Up, for with the lat elo.jucut stntrtu- he Itecame .. exhauUd and Am Ik1i!v lifUxl by my uncle and othvr to the ante room where he was tri l and rubbed down like an cxhautd race hone. In an hour or so he was re newed and revited. llvi tu Kufu. Choate a bundle of uiiveriR. i pas sionate nerves whoe lojucncc no au dience' could calmly lit u u and uo jury withstand. Bit uAur. f'lrvru Wuilori Are ttomM The following Uniltnl hutcs .S naUjr were elected by I-rgiitnrrs on the Uuth Arkansas Jamca I', tlarkp, iK-m. Connecticut Orville H. Ilatt, licp. Illinois Allfcrt J. Hopkiiu, Rep. Indiana Cbarl W. Fairlnnkn, H-p Michigan It. A. Alger, llcp. Missouri William J. 8tone, Ik-m. New Hampshire Jacob H. (iallin ger, Rep. , New YorkThoma O. Piatt, IU p. North Dakota II. C. mnsborough, Rep. South Dakota A. B. Kittredge, Rep. Uuh Iteed -tfinoot, Rep.1 Delaware, Colorado, Waahjngton and uregon laueu to elect. At iovr, no coalition ' ! having leen fortnod, the Democrats and the two Republican factions voted for separate nominee. The Colorado .contest is intensely bit ter, rival State Senates having ten or ganized by Ij)emocraU and Republi cans. In the ritate of Washington and Oregon the contests are caul by rivalry among Republican candidates and are expected to be settled soon. WiIhi Urka Oaly Vf n Vole lvAi.EiGif , Jan. today the air was full of rumon that there would be a break in the ranks to-night in the the senatorial contest and the Crkige men would make thcjrealr. It waa true, and so surjriing were the change that when the last ballot of the night was taken, with Watson C2, Overman 55 and Craige IB, and with 130 votiug that Watson was within 7 votes of winning the grand prize so long con teeted for. It was the first night's cau cus at which there was a sensation wild cheering being repeated again and again and demonstrations for WaUon in which the galleries participated. The following is the ballot : Overman 5 &5 ,. oo Watson 52 5.J 00 m C-J Craige 80 2rt 21 121 19 ItvinrtllrTriiUklr,, j It ia except ional to find a family where there are no domestic mptnrcii Ofcaniou ally, but these can be b-sweued by hav ing Dr. King's New Life Fill around. Much trouble they save by their Kreat work in the stomach and liver trouble. They not only relieve you, but cnr. 25c, at Feteer'a drag store. ; .11 ore La4 far Mlllmore. The Biltmore caUte of George W. Vanderbilt near Aaheville, already the largest contiguous body of land, in North Carolina under -private owner ship, will be greatly extended by a pur chase -of land just made by Mr. Van derbilt. He has bought all the landa on the upper Davidson River with the water power that has for yean been the motive power of the mill there. Thia transaction tarings Mr. Yandt-r-bilt's estate down to the TranylvDia Railroad," where it i uhdentood be will build a station. He will also im prove the approach to Biltmore and will excavate the bed of the Swannaoos River to prevent overflow of the driv way and bridge. . i . Oet a free sample of Chamberlain' Stomach and Liver Tablet at M. li Marsh's drtw store. Thy are easier ti take, and more pleasant in effect than pill. Thea their nee ia not followed by constipation as ia often the ease with pills. Secular atze 25e. per box. THE CCuC(JS3 ViffllY TUIES "WBSMMi "k the ropW know tt. DO YOU GET IT fJUacy tmHe Tew KHrraHc. eMK-r eei kr, mm it t4 ' ttr watm ,' , y f. .... . 1 M imaf.i Sf' sf fmt 4 3" M-wafta t fc-iry axU 4a. 1(4 t-. I mm a. ,4 . tiM t Si4ay VtiW saA4 1 rtf t.t r ha a. M, Xirtf t tijM ttjt H rtj g64 iti r ;y y r It Km 4 m many h i---.,'a! la ' rs-'w:. f.?s-r .im Mm tW r i (r cs f4 Ki f4 m avva! ta tvmrf ct tiit ajfcial arafi" M iis Yf hkii S td iit ffrn Ksva t mhm4f tr-4 . msy lks a rnjJ WsUs nl If ty 14, a ta bm shegl Ssmj K,-4 .rn In ttti4 pvt tf fan bsv k .Ztt l ttMMrf l'eV.H V t!!ir5 fntn'.n t&.ng I Iti rf h f!i In lhi raf S8 ek4 yef 44r 1 . kfr.tss N. Y. TsttL.HM sum sis ci4 tf an 4rufM l ,1 1 stbtltr l.aa v4 . 11 Ccmi A lfl 1 , ft.li (Mi l mm, 1st Hh 'l 1ifr- fitsttt Matlitfca tr U-n!( 4iafwt oiiiA Mm. With An Experience or IN WKlTINtl Fin! Imur.uu settling Jossri anil rejircsrnttn 9first Class Companies, SrtutlWtn, Northern ami I'nr- vw ask your tmtro.n.njc. Our facilities for Mmploy-r'H Liability, Accident ami Health Insurance arc! excellent. . G. G. RICHMOND J' CO. 'I'honc S.. TUll Concord National Bank. With th ItlMl nfrn1 fiirtn' nf hmtU and vrr fudiity fur liatidilns aooowala.. oiriiai a FIRST t CLASS t SERVICE to tub roiuo. Capital, PrrifSt, Individual niouibihty of Khareholdn, i.'Ml,(Kt 22,0i J Keep Your' Account with Us. Intrwt paid aa arrMi 1 J ! i 'jcd ai datioti tO ail our rutoiir. i U. UrTl.. traMi, x 1,1 tt A a. iMiiM NOr.WfiolIir't f r 1 pajaccma skst run i J an of mvvt ociaa, laaaai iuir of m. piur.i at mtkmf. I lasts kw Of t' aealenaa tri Mat Atdrtmm. H iM WIJULIJIV OK HAH. t-tjotmf isiiasta, lw' 1 I AMD . V y - im&kff Cure obacco Tags WANTED. W 1 HI par " cmtif pmr hUfar4 lor Hwwp Mak. if,; nntU r t.oB'1rJ ail rtlr bmU) of yii-r H-fifrUim Tr flf. I'evh. nl Hatrlrf n, U0 ri.U. All U v are Uoucbt tor tca-i. J. P. Alliison ft Co. Merchant 'Tailor. Clothes Made to Order. Cleaning and Repairing done on short notice v I. WISSBIRG, rare 1 ( tSJ -b i rnrn a a r H ( mm ml m j YEARS ff YEARS Vr IM iarMa tf 4--)-. Bwr -f rnlirnt - I I B ' aatasc a i4 I H ft E VERMIFUGE Kg $ twmm-4j MrMti-r K I ff 41 li fM i CI H j0m t f mi, iMTwm, u-fw