THE TIMES STEAM BOOK AND JOB OFFICE We keen on band a full ttook of LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS, STATE MENTS, BILL HEADS, ENVEL OPES, TAGS, VISITING CARDS WED DING INVITATIONS, ETC; ETC. r,OOD PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS THE CONGORD nn IMES John B. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. "BE OTTSI' a&J?2D PEAR HOT.' Volume XXI. Concord, N. C, Wednesday, August 19. 1903. $1.00 a Year, in Adrzzco. NUMBER 7, TEE CCHCCRD YimiYTUIB uxti Jig Kims5ts tssutsi CBTAtUtMtO t ta)Tfk i HORSE HEN! For aiding the digestion, creating appetite and" for giving life, vigor and strength to horses and mules, the best remedy of all is ; Ashcraffs AM JONBS LKTTF.K. Condition Powders ! 1 I A Stockmen who have used, with indifferent results, con dition powders recom mended equally good for horses, cattle, poul try, swine, etc., will find inAshcraft's a remedy c beneficial to horses and mules only. It is not a curtail, but invalua ble for the purposes, recommended. '- Ashcraffs Condition Powders are prepared from, the formulae of a practical veterinarian of over 30 years' experience,! and when once used, horsemen will have no other. This Is to certify that we have been Belling shcraft's Remedies for a number of years, and .that they have given universal satisfac tion: The purest drugs are incorporated in their manufacture, and each remedy is espe cially prepared for the disease for which it is intended to cure. -Many of our customers hav ing used Ashcraffs Remedies for years will have no other. ENGLISH DRUG CO., Monroe, : Ashcraffs Powders fatten but never bloat, the hair becoming sleek and glossy. Always high grade. Price 25 cents. Sold by ZMI- L.MARSH DR. H. C. HERRING. Dentist, Is now on the ground floor ol the LI taker Building. CONCOHD. N. O. Dr. w. c. Houston Surgeon fg- Dentist, 'X CONCORD, H. C. . Is prepared to do all kinds of dental work in the most approved manner. . Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone 11 Office 'Phone 43. L. T. HARTSELL, : Attoraey-at-Lai, fr CONCORD, NOKTH OAioUNA. Prompt attention given to all business. Office in Morris building, opposite the court house. Drs. Lilly & offer their professional services' to the citi zens of Concord and surrounding country. Calls promptly attended day or night. Atlanta Journal. I find in my travels thai the cessa tion of the rains in the middle and western states has flunked the corn crop, and the promise now is for a 66 per cent, crop, and that it will take good seasons of rain and sun to make that estimate hold good. Much of the corn is teaseling, great deal of it grassy, some of it quite small. No bumper crop ox corn this year in the great northwest, if signs count for anything. The crop conditions, like Wall street, are sorter snaky. ' ' These are indeed strange times. Panic and prosperity, buoyancy and despondency, busy railroads and busted, stock speculators, plenty of money and scarcity of funds, brave professions and scared action. But all in all, the signs are not altogether bad. There is life the old jand yet. The buildings ider way will keep the building trades isy for a year. Railroads can't move the traffic in eight for months to come. Manufacturers can't fill all orders for a year or more, etc., etc. Things can't stop now and here. These numberless buildings must be finished, these freights must be hauled, these orders to manufactures must be filled. In the meantime, the financiers are hedging, the railroads are considering the situa tion, and the manufacturers are watch ing events with critical eye and the great masses awaiting events. The great bulks Wf undigested securities have given V!all street the stomach ache, and the doctors have the patients in hand. Yet things go, on in the main as usual. The crowded trains, and full resorts, and well patronized cb.au tauquas convince a fellow that the average citi zen is moving along independent of the agonies of Wall street. 1 noticed with deep sorrow the death of Justice Lumpkin. Georgia lost in his passing away a good citizen,' an able judge, and stroog man. I see with pleasure the appointment of Hcfn. H. G. Turner to fill the vacan cy on the supreme bench, uovernor Terrell put another feather in his cap when he made that appointment. Surely, he had only the best interest of Georgia in view, and a governor who ries above petty politics and personal ends and acts only for the good of his and will get it from the people whom f true that you cannot pass either a very good or very bad measure in our legis lature. If it's a good law, then there is enough bad members to defeat it, and if it is a bad law, then there are enough good members to defeat it Hence, we have very few measures to pass that amount to much either way. Bo yoii see it might be worse, as the old woman said when they told her that the train had killed her husband. But, they said, how could it have been worse tuan that? "Oh," she replied, "the train might have crippled him up and left him here on my hands to wait on."" : I shall for three weeks longer be busy filling Chautauqua engagements in Indiana. Ohio. Illinois. Nebraska. Missouri, Iowa, Virginia, Michigan, etc4 ' which will carry me up- to the Tabernacle meeting in Carteisville, September 5th. Sam P. Jones.. BILL iri lICTTKlt- I Atlanta ConstUaUocv Midnight dark The itb ever never thought j: W J. MONTGOatBBT. J. LWOEOTOI MONTGOMERY & CROIELL, Attorneys and Connselors-at-Law, CQNOOBD, N. 0. As partners, will practice law in Cabarrus, Stan v and adjoining counties. In the Supe rior and Supreme Courts o 1 the State and in thn Federal (Yiirt Ottioa 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 ler.d It on good real es tate securitv free of cLarze to the depositor. We make thorough examination of title to lands offered an securitv for loans. Mortgages foreclosed without expense to owners of same. Frank Armfield. Tola D. Maness. Henry B. Adams. Thos. J. Jerome. Aims, Jsrpffie, Armfield I Mm Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, - CONCORD, N. C. Practice in all the State and TT. S. Courts. Prqmpt attention given to collections and ireneral law uractice. Persons interested in the settlement of estates, administrators, executors, and guardians are especUlTJB In vited to caU on them. Continued and pain 1 staking attention will be given, at a reason a inahiH nrice. to all leiral business- Office in Pythian Building, over Dry-Heath-Mliler & 1 o.'s opposite D. P. Dayvault Ac Bros, ap-ly, WANTED ! he thus honors. I Walter B. Hill as 'president of the Georgia University, and yet no fitter appointment was ever made, and the university was never more honored -by a president. I never thought of Du pont Guerry for presidency of Wes ley an Female College, and yet when elected to the position said to myself : He is the beet man in the state lot that position. So I would not hi.ve thought of Henry G." Turner for asso ciate justice of supreme benchi but now that Governor Terrell has ap pointed him I say, since the days 'of Chief Justice James Jackson, no purer, cleaner, stronger, better man has sat on that bench, and none better equip ped for the honorable place This makes me say, "Honor to whom honor is due," and. again I say, an other feather in - your cap, Governor Terrell. I see no better outlook for the Demo crats as 1 move around. Mr. isryan is politically dead, but personally very much alive. He has more assets as . a i-e corpse than ne naa in political uie, and he can and will do up any Demo cratic candidate who is not in favor 7 to 12 Horse Power Engine of the Kansa8 city platform in toto Falbr Dairy's Witty Betort. The story is told of the celebrated Father Darcy probably the greatest wit of that witty nation, Ireland, that he once visited the palatial mansion of the neuveau riche, who lived in the neigh- hood of Dublin, at the invitation of its pompous owner. ' He was shown all over the house, his host taking great pains, as is habitual in such cases, to keep the witty and observant priest well informed as to the cost of all the beautiful things he was shown. Finally after making the com plete tour of the chateau, the library was reached,' its tremendous shelves groaning under the weight of thousands upon thousands of volumes resplendent in the most masrnificent bindings. Here they seated themselves, and the host said, with a, sigh of snobbish ex ultation: i , ' Welll father, I have brought you here last because this is my favorite room. The other rooms may give pleasure to my wife and my daughters, but this is my place -right here among these books, who are my friends. And these here on the desk," pointing to a score of ultra-looking volumes, "are what I may call my intimate friends." Father Darcy got up and examined one of them, when a broad grin spread over his good-natured face as he said ; 'Well, it's glad I am to see that you never cut you intimate f rierids. " - and boiler wanted K. X. CRA.VEN, Concord, N. C Piano to exchange for horse or mule. good With An Experience YEARS OF YEARS Fire And it's suicide for any Democratic candidate who swallows that-platform. So the situation is about this: If he repudiates any plank in the "Kansas City platform Bryan will knife him to the death, and if he swallows the thing it will kill him. As for me, I would rather be killed than volun- tarially swallow a dose that will kill me. ToSbe murdered is better than suicide. I see James K. is going to give up the , chairmanship. That's the only good sign I've seen for the Democrats. I said personally Mr- Bryan is quite alive. He is the speaker at a score or more of the chautauquas again this year, and the crowds who flock to hear him are as great as of yore. He does not touch on politics in his lecture on MThe Value of an Ideal," but gives the people a great lecture and throws into the lecture; his , charming personality and his splendid oratory. He is not a IN. WRITING Insurance, settling losses and representing Srirst Glass Companies, Southern. Northern and For eign, we ask your patronage On- fi-iiiric frr h mn nvpr ; onlv a drawine cara. dus ne is one ox T a :- a wlth the ereatest living orators, u not tne ncnr:in- nff fvrpllfnt. - - . i grea-teo. I've been-out oi tne Btaie since me Georgia legislature convened. H&e they done anything? I haven't heard; but it's best if they would not. A leg islature is like a standing army, a very expensive luxury, only when G. RICHMOND 'I'honc 184. CO. A Preacher's Illustration. Cincinnati Tost. Cyrus Townsend Brady was talking about the itinerant preachers of the past. These men," he said, "were rugged and sincere. . Their minds, if they were coarse, were also strong. Their eloquence was sometimes powerful; sometimes it was amaziug. mere was a notaDie itinerant wno once 'preached on 'The Glory of the Saints,' and the description of a saint'B glory that he gave in this sermon de serves, I think, to be perpetuated. This is it, word, for word : f " 'Who, my brethren, can describe the glory of a saint? Why, nothing on earth can liken it. If you drill a hole through the 'sun and put it on your head for a crown'and split the moon in sunder and put the j pieces on your shoulders for epaulettes if you tear down the starry curtain of the skies and wrap it around your body for a yobe, And ride to heaven on the light- ping wings of the tempest--this will be nothing to the glory of the saints. : ' Boy Cured of Colic Alter PbyIelH' Treatment Had Failed. , l My boy when ionr years old - was taken with colic and cramps in his stomach. -. I sent "for the doctor and he Injected morphine, but the child kept getting worse. I then cave him a half teaspoonfnl of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and in half an hour he was sleeping and soon recovered. F. L. WilMna, Shell Lake, Wis. , Mr. Wilkins is book-keeper for the Shell Lake Lumber Co. For sale by M. L. Marsh. f r - ; . 5 ,;, . Xoo Critical. "This paper says thet they have Jest deescovered the ree-mains of a 20-foot saurin on th' banks of th' Penobscot River." 1; "What's a saurian?" , "I dunno. Guess mebby it's one o them misprints for sardine." "There ain't no 20-foot sardines." MWell, there might be the ree-mains of one.'? i ; "I don't believe it. Do you suppose anybody'd want ter buy a box of sich sardines? I guess not." "You're too dern critical. Ef there is th' ree-mains of any 2Q-foot sardines on th' : Penobscot don't you suppose there might also be th ree-mains of men big enuff to buy 'em by the box You're a atheeist, thet's what yon are. Dr. Woolley's PAINLESS piur.1 AND YthkeyCura SENT FREE to al users of morphine opium, laudanum xir ef opium, eo calne of whiskey,! lam book ol P tleuiars on nome 01 sanatorlom treat meot. Address, a M. WOOLLKT CO. 104 N. Prior Street Atlanta, tieorgU Mrs. Mollie Allen, of South Fork, Ky. says she has prevented attacks of cholera morbus by taking Chamberlain's Stoui- something is to be done, then we must ach and Liver Tablets when she felt an have them. . I believe we will get along ttack coming on. bach . attacks are hPttsr if 1 the letriBlature of Georeia'y113 S011 these raDiets .are jusc wuat is umitxi w - lad LIlKhS WHtKI- Ail HSh HklLiv. I l uoogn Bjrup. J June L.OOO. vmt tn time, fold br drnggists. a . won t convene any more xor ten years, j Just have the treasurer mail them a pheck to their homes. Of course, this would cut off business from the At lanta saloons mightily, but that is about the only interest I know of that would suffer badly. It is mighty nigh J manners cleanse the stomach and ward off. the arroroaching attack. Attacks of bilious colic may be prevented in the same way. For sale by M. L Marsh, druggist. A fool and his money corrupt good THIS TUB D& V OP T1IK r.M39EM midoighL i heavens bad been illuminated bursting shells and tky rocktU since nightfall, and it kept our aide of the river in alarm, but General. French was over there with 7,000 troops, frh from Texas, and these, with old Joe Johnson's forces Resaca, could whip Sherman all to pieces. Every now and then we sent a messenger over to Gen eral French to know if all was safe. Would old Joe certainly fight at Resaca, or would he fire and fall back. . More and more terrific the bombs kept bursting and nearer and nearer and nearer they came, closer to the roofs of our houses. Another meesen was sent to General French, but he assured us it was all right. But; about midnight the ' general sent a message that Sherman had crossed the river and would burn Borne and : the bridges in half an hour and the troops had orders to move up the railroad. Thenj came the tug of war. The artillery had al ready reached- the crossing and were loading the cars, with everything in a jam. The highway of Broad street, from one bridge to the other, was crowded, and not a soldier could find elbow room. But still they moved. We had loadtd our rockaway with bag gage and my lovely wife and numerous children. I walked a'ong outside in silence to keep off intruders until we found our selves right in the thick of the soldiers. Some were ye ling, j some were whoopiDg, some were cursing, and pretty soon there was a crush and a bang and the door of the Btores Hew open and the soldiers rushed in. f Just then my old friend Meyerhart yelled out: "Oh mine tobacco!" But Col onel Cameron was desperate and rode into the store behind them and whaled them over the heads with his sword and ordered them all out, but it made them all mad to think they couldn't take the tobacco the enemy would plunder in a few minutes. They cursed and jraved furiously, but it made no difference with the colonel. Tobacco wasn't all. They loaded down with , tobacco and then began on cape and bonnets and sugar and coffee. After we had all crossed the bridge it was a funny cavalcade. .Long lines of hill, arrayed with women's garments on bonnets ana snawis ana rtut tne procession didn't turn ' out of the big road. It turned up into the cemetery and began their vandalism there. They got hammers and broke up then iron ailing and tumbled down the tomb stones monuments and then knocked the soldiers' bead stones to pieces, all except one, and that was the handsome one of Lieutenant Bayard Hand, of the United States navy. 1 hey let that go untouched, because he was a United States officer. All the rest were broken to pieces and tumbled down the! hill. My father and son' and hrothers suf fered the same fate. It was shameful! From the top! of the hill they burnt the bridge and fired their shells . across the town and destroyed everything that would burn. Then they followed us for j 6 miles to Silver creek where we ; were going to stop for coffee, for we; were expected to take breakfast and rest. But camp followers pursued us and told us the yaokees were close behind and for -us to get up and get away! from there. So we hurried the harness on and struck a trot for Euharlee "creek, and as we crossed the bridge it wabbled like a snake. -; T.nen we journeyea up a long rocky hill and that night camped near an old house and sent up there to borrow a skillet to fry some meat and the old man said he was washing his feet in it, but as soon as he got through he would send it down. ; j Next camp was in the suburbs of At lanta and next morning we found that two of our servants had departed to Tfco ran of ItalaiUn HrMiM Mortis CaroIlM 1st rararrt' Cow SBOMOTtWllb. Blbucal ateeorder. ' The truth if, every step that emula tion has taken has made for the im provement of the farmer's condition. Every city pays tribute to ibe farturr in rstio of it growth. ' h vr a man grew 0 learned that he outgrew hi inherit ed desire to "raise things."! Evrry man is farmer at heart. Evrry man wants country home with ion-hard and vineyard, hones and rattle, tiding house ; and pond, out of doors, wide vistas and free air aud brotherhood with nature. The farm itself has a deeper place in the heart of man tnan any other institution. It is not only the basis of commerce and r.f civiliza tion; by reason of the long employ ment of his ancestors upon- farms, every jnan has 'inherited an ineradic able interest in farming: This explains why every man advist-s the farmer and why every man expects to buy a farm some time and why every man thinks the farmer does, not know how to at tend to his business. So far from being true that the mod ern trend is away from the farm, there is a tide toward the farm now the like of which was never known. The an cient curse of the farm has been lifted. For there was a curse upon it. Had there not been, human instinct would have kept the entire race on the farm. Fleeing from this curse men have built the cities and the shops of the world; and out of these cities and sho have come not only the farmer's market, but hii present deliverance from the am lent curse. It is not the curse of labor. Men labor j everywhere, and every man thinks his work is-hardest. It is not the curse of poverty, i There are more poor people in the cities than on the farm. We have no problem of the rural poor. It is the curse of Iso- ation. Man's longing for society, for contact, for conflict his gregarious, sheep like nature, against whiehi he so often revolts, but which holds him fust and sends him to church, to school, to political convention and to city and town -p-moves him away from the farm. ' This curse of isolation made him ignorant, for the countenance of man accord- ipg to Solomon is the great educator. organized force?; for it prevented him from organizing. This curse made him a laggard in life's race, cutting him off from the world's great forward march ing, and he has followed fifty years in the rear. "This curse deprived him of the comforts and luxuries that his city brethren enjoy. ' But see how this curse has been de stroyed. Here is the day of Good Bokds, striking its blow upon the head ofthe dragon, Isolation. Here is the Free Rural Delivery striking its blow. Here is the quick transportation four teen hours from North Carolina farms toNew York city -striking its blow, making the truck and fruit and chicken business lucrittive. Here is. the Agri cultural College striking its blow. Here is the rural graded school and its library striking their blow, i Here is the return of . man's ancient ! love for Mother Nature striking its blow. Here are the beginnings of organization striking their blow. Isolation is dying and dying fast. And with if will go ignor ance prejudice. And in their stead will come intelligence and clear headed ness and. progress, and such . content as man is suffered to have. Uf such is tne , agricultural renais sance. Mark how great are the forces iiok run Mtimu w a 1 r Rome and we lost them foroodi One of them came back. The other! went to Chattanooga. The other came back to us last week and said 1 was lust as good looking as when I got married, and she flattered up my wife so that she loaded her down with fancy scraps and calico and told her to come back, and she said she "Bhorely would." She went on down to Jonesboro, where the children camped, and from j there we went down to Alabama to dodge the thick of the fight and save our cotton and cow peas. "But it didn't save the cotton and my wife and cbildrenjgo away from there and she escaped by a round about way to Covington and. run over a lot of soldiers and from there to the plantation and took refuge at my (WWU Usrt!. 1 --:- Tbe lights in II r. C. P. WWkr't Uf trot jilarrdia tb brrrae wkkb trf4 through . b grot 00 Buulh Urt. Tbt-y cat 11 wrird sort' ol a glow orrr th r 1Uuoer and liwjr aloKwt bhudl the seraphi? eyrs t th lcakrr on th t4aif m. TW atW-nor that penradVd th Ubrfnarl was in tensified by the heavy hrtalhtaf of 00 or two tired men who had goo out to the meeting to feed thier Souls at th expense of trting the body after a hard day's wok. i Over to one aid a uu ruber of - negroes, men and women, were grouped together, hastening more la tently than anybody, and trying to suppress their approval of th sentf. menu of t he speaker instead of shout ing as they would do if they had been at their own church. The rxbajutl at the power house just, over the railroad track kept up its inorsaant flutter, ' and firt a treight and next a paMengvr train thundered by, necessitating a momentary cessation of the services, but the speaker only put her bands over her face, and engaged in silent prayer during the interruption, and nobody stirred or looked around. MUs Mattie Perry, of th famous Elhanan Institute at Marion, was the speaker, and she was telling the story f the way the Lord had dealt with her. It was a very 'absorbing story - a! skeptic would have called it a fairy tale, ! but there were 'no skeptics there. They j are raher scarce in the highways and hedges about Charlotte where Charlie Wheeler pilches his GoepeHent. Miss Perry told of her life from girl hood onward. She was led after her conversion to' trust implicitly in the Lord for everything. She was con vinced that it was Hit will for her tn buy the big lumbersome hotel with 60 or CO rooms at Marion. Nobodr else wanted it. She agreed to take it al though she did not have a cent with which to purchase it. She never asked a human being for a cent of money but when the first payment of her hotel came due, by contributions in letters and in other ways, the money was on hand. When the second navment became due, the owners threatened to advertise the property for sale, although Miss Perry had one more day of grace. Go ahead and advertise, she said. the supremacy 1 of 'you will observe, that are making for the farm, coming, from the cities, every one of them But these are not all. The factories have carried away 100,000 tenants, many of whom were land destroyers, and made of them consumers : of farmer's food stuffs and purchasers of farmer's cotton and tobacco and truck'. At the same time the negro has migrat ed to a degree, and ! the farmers have wanted labor. But this is likewise ; an advantage. Less labor will make for intensive farming, will demand more intelligent farming, will put a premium upon up-to-date j farming rotation. truck business, cattle and dairy busi ness, quick marketing, and organiza tion. The forces behind the farmer today are compelling forces. He can not resist them. He must fall in with them and : ise or he must fall out and pass away. They will try many, and the strong and worthy will survive, j ! This is tie farmer's day. . His land s increasing in value. His condition t sir. r 1 cr rtiii . 1 The next day she got a telegram, read ing: "$350 on the way." That was the exact amount of her payment. Now Elhanan Institute is well along on its mission of good. There are boys and girls in it from three months of age to 28 years, mostly from the mountains. They are taught trades, and instructed in the Bible. I take and love the children that nobody else wants or loves," said Miss ferry. "We have three liltlfe boys who saw their father cut their mother's throat. Oh, how many children of drunken fathers we are caring foE They never knew what it is to be loved. We have a house full now and ake all who apply if they obey the rules, and the Lord never lets us need for food and raiment. The largest amount He has ever sent me at one time is $1,000. Sometimes our children run away.; I bad a little chase over the mountains the other day of 90 miles after two boys and they were glad to come back when they saw me." A Hard Cider Drunk Very Fierce. Mooroe Enquirer. The hard cider campaign is now on A fellow has to do a lot of drinking to get drunk on the stuff, but lots of them succeed in getting drunk on iL There are more fights and a greater quantity of fool in a hard cider drunk than in any other kind. It goes without say ing that hard cider, as it is now used in this town, is a nuisance and a big one, too. 1 In insigni The Deatk renaltjr. A little thing sometimes results death. . Thus a mere scratch ; ficant cuts or pnny boils have paid the death penalty. It is wise to have Back len's Arnica Salve ever handy, jit's the best salve on earth and will prevent fatality, when burns, sores, ulcers and Strain Affected Gen oral Health. Doctor's Dose a We ali ened Stomach. Dr. Mile' Nerrln Cured Me. Dc MiW KrM fcrtt Ml a4 svM steep o U tt4 U.ta t wtta ta rates aa4 aauefam 4 U Ml ma "! t).tit Ws Wahfey alia eeplioa f a Umc ( iWumiiui nan art raa, up to U. Un el ay aW4 a taat Ula4 umm years r 1 aur4 la aaisbi ay hta4 for !? tatee aw war be WffU4 Lit ! ux amiti strata 1 Hun caa4 say lot-l. Aa4 tram etreaa tmcwim aar beetle cm. arece4 wila sot tkruet Muf al parstctaa rave as frraM m kM k wkea4 k Yrty a4 as atota tur a um tane4 taacti, Meaul strata ao4 the dtKtaaat coadrtioa t4 any stomach sou told r any geaeral aeaU. 1 a4 Itltk appetna ar4 was knmi tmrej le stay te b4 a rreater jrt 4 the timt, Haaia a week after the time 1 beraa t skier Dr. Miks ketnrst! Nenrioe Mt TmkI was ap aSout the bow. I coauanea Utetf aae ntU jppmpWtrlr cured. XI r Uta ta tr. Miles Keniedte feaa bera srvrtliea4 by eipenenc ol cxaer pe4, ovr daar hter aae tne RiOfu Nrta mlh realt 1a a case of aaxa rata an a Inea4 t whoa I seat a boa t4 lit Aatt I'aia I'tlU re pons that sit ha beea cxnar-ieiety corvJ of aenraleia by thf a. 1 know of a aaaabef pt outers wbona "elitii bat aipe4 ta a larrearfre. Mat F bancsj Co'fmah. Davtoa. Va. I wiah oa roaiiate4 succraa." Am drucrtati sU and puaraatre ant bet- Ue Ur. Miici' krweihra. Send k free book a Nrrvoua and Heart Ihaeaart, Adtlrcas Dr. M uca Madkal C, Etkaart, lad. Ht. Pleasant Collegiate Institute, MT. j'LEASANT, X. C. 1 A Hijch Qradebihoollfor Boys and Younjr Men. ': ' : " j- ; PreparatArr and rilbtatj lkninni.ni. nraattful for altuatlon. . NoLmI iir Tbreelare brick bulUllnes. lnfd llbrarte. and large eleicantlr furtihihed mtdetr balia Methods the nxwt aiMrvid. tnarlpllue anlld. but arm. Tnorouah work. l"rii-o reaaunable. Session Opens Sept. 16, 1903. Correspondence solicited. H. A. Mtrf rMt'tH, U. '.MALUTEIt. Principals. piles threaten, drug store. Only: 26c, at Fetser's The Southern Railway is rushing large forces of negro laborers from dif ferent sections of the South to points in Virginia, where the work of inaugurat ing the double tracking of that system has started. Pata an End ( U All. A grievous wail oftimes conies as result ox unbearable pain from over L j. . ' MauaaA unuih Ayif..iiOP avaau-JavakAat uf vs aa yaauy aiiipruvou. . .. t , Tat thanlra a i a . at a i a tw-w" wile's oia nver nome ana toot a ress- ispiaiea. ins commercial situation I to Dr. King's Jfew life Pflla they pat where her father lived. J - j stronger and his political and social in- U ena to it 1L - TheV are sentl but Our next move was homeward, where fluence is inevitable. We shall have thorough. . Try them. Only 25cents we found darkness and desolation not factories in North j Carolina, and, we Guaranteed by FeUer's drug stOTe. .... . ' i ! r..t i 1 . : t i I a bed or bedstead or mattress or bureau ""I5. UI lTu. uui aic u Sn- j or chair or cooking vesselnothing bnt cultural .Commonwealth and destined the naked floor. No lard or meat ottIorever 10 my iei our w6" sugar or coffee? no nothing; not a hog'ul their sons seiie and build upon the or chicken or cow. Well, I did find a Tnodern advantages. Let Science and cow, for which I paid $3,500 in confed- Intelligence and Progrefs, now knock erate money. I had long before that ing t their door, have full entrance, sold the cotton for a piano in Madison nd nothing more will be necessary tc The color line in the navy is worrying the administration. There are only 500 neeroes in the navy, " but the officers want to get rid of them. When yon want a physio that is mild and eentle. easr to take and certain to ' act. always use Chamberlain's Stomach and liver Tablet. For sale by M. L. Marsh. I and the yankees burnt it up. But we , ushering in of a NewTime that will Hv1 and atlll live thartk the trood i8ue in the building rf a majestic. T.nrd frr TTi mprmVa t s 1 1 Farmers' Commonwealth here in North If a man has no repution to lose he BiixArf. .Carolina, ; (can't afford to ignore public opinion Class Steel STOVE A RANGE or Can Be Purchased Here at a Moderate Price, j We are showing a line that contains a number of different styles. These have been selected by us because of their handsome design, fine construction and known efficiency. All the know- edge gained in years of store making is embodied in these' Vye have made bpecial Prices fot this season. If the old stove is not working all right this, is a good time to buy a new one. Phone 1G3. C&3S. H. SKflll. Cabarrus Savings Bank. Resources Over $300,000 TrttrtmM tmm a.Mai. 4 Kvrry Man, V un AU OtU 'MAKTtN ta .!.. l"ft a-, t?;a It $ w,).tt aft i.-: t aw i a. TMt ,i..n. Double Daily Trains Carrylar Pailman Startral CaftCan (a la carta) and Cbar Cars (la frl Electric Lighted Throvghovt att.. - 1 ElmlMAa. .lcrili J Kitut Qty aie ve-awv mi a . Tcus, OklalafltA itius Tcrrhtflci ap a Tar Wcit isj Ksftiwett Tn oly TrtaKMJOn acat rrwi ca usn t BBTWECN TUB KK'TMIHJT ANO KAMftAS tlTV Deacriptirt literatttr. tickets ar ranged and throagh ryarrvativas m&4 upon appticatioa to .T. awNDiaa. Ota i a. aaaa OS f.CClANH, Taa.as As . Afvaana, fta. W. T. SAUNDERS Caa'l Agaat raaaafr OtitHmsst ATLANTA, OA. Wh vtaUl to travel f-jf U-tm nUMltbril raara and IUi a iara rwftlal. So rail UHo ttiwn JiunU ait1 xriiL f.,r Krraf and lrofllhi tin I'rrn.itnrail Miiaa'ttwit. Wiwkir eaatt aateijr ol t m4 ail MarottM tlui and tutM hill a4nw1 Ut ru tlon tmtwrroem ail rltiM wf Kl.limm) mn vvlofi. t UK HA t - - " Teachers Wanted W. H4 at orwo t mnrt tur Fall at-lMna. : OtnMfiHwitlKfta mm tlnn fltiwl daily bv ua. We ar rtwititia mmjt raUa Utta yjar ttiaa er lfir n-ih and ! aupiltl tUi Twliin if 9 f FKtml KucltMto statu p ir rlr, AIEBICWi TEACHERS' ASSOCUTiOI. 5 ' tUBAMlM.M. Ii.Viincr, lat-UHif ICaaIittti Itull.Jliu, M-inflUa, Tbo ECZEMA, Old Sorts, iteWaa Pttta, Skin Outsits, ABSOLUTELY CURED. HERMIT SALVE, I lltasttCtMTIttOl. So4 by ail ruTri'. T.k aootW. I Old Family Hrmr 2 rr. ' .1 ' ; TO THK Glorious Mountains of Western North Carolina THE Th University of ITortli Carolina. J Academic DepartmenV Law, Medicine, Pharmacy. On hundred and eltrht cholanhl.a Fr-a lunn n lo waciwn auu u sooa oi muumit. ljaiia lor tba needy. ; . , V. 608 Students. 66 Instructors. New Dorm 1 tort. Water iWorka iCantnl Reattna: Hvstent. Library, UU0, Toltuo. Fall term, academic and professional de- panmaota. begins hept. 7, tM. Addrtaw, - aw a a? - . f. r. V.?iiliUi., 1 RESIDENT, CHAPEL, HILL, S.C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY ? Int ltas th" attntk.i 4 all llaanr ' Itraaure akrra j THE TOURIST SEASON opanad June 1. Itau. awi4 on tAat data " Low Rate Summer Excursion Tickets want on aata from tTlix-ipal (-tnt In th tiuoUt and IvnatiiMal. tn th rxil rwifV. located oa and rvaetti l. h..uttiro liaiiwaf . Ttcketaon sale up tu and Itwtudinar tte. tter au. laul. United U ocWirr 41. 14. aad return. "The Land of the Sky" ASO "Sapphire Country," Aahavlllo. S. anl HA rlna, K. I offer every attraction to Uie Hun Traveler or Invalid- The ErTesaessee tad Ylrjlali Resorts also offer many ii'io-twnl t f Healtttaod I'Waur. Ask any Hotttnern Katlway Atrmt .r un tnr Howee "oldir. dw-Tlt.v.f lltm nanv Dellalfol llwrta r-bd by mniUiern Biiaf. nmnuirummniinrroiiimuimiiuiiiimiimiiuHiuuiiimniiniiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiuiiti J TRINITY COLLEGE. g- E A inllljon dollars to Verted In ewowmmt aDl e)u!nM-nt f"rli',r?'Z 5 t; facilities. - Twelve tbouaand volnmes added to linrary urtn U- jfaat ' "...; r sctentlne taboaatortea. (iytnnaalum under erten tine direction. e9'1r?',"!f ffir 2 and craduate courses of study. tour ot study leavlina to t ) U 3 clneerina-. Many scnotarahlpe awarded. Loan land to .aid wortay 7ou - Trinity rradnatesln a;reat demand fur r-aponalWe poaltlona Klt'iML flLSu!.. s 5 erate. Tne aim la Elirliitlan education wttnoot any aectanan atMrit ''T'''", S S sons of miaUura and young men stadyin for tba BBiojstry are not cnar- j. S tuiuon- eeaa lor caiaKxcue. ' July 8 w. UurUatB .i.e. s uranmrramiuwmiiumiimiw a a a a a a a a a a a jj.jsl f ft m m f a a a a , A A.A. A.A'fisi- 4- 4't--44-4-a Littleton Female College f One of the moht prosperous M:hools in the South, with a hijjh t standard of scholarship, located at a very popular Summer uejri. and -with a lanre oatronase from hive btate axtciwiin? .ironi Jersey to Florida an Institution that i do'ufj; a great wik. ' We will take a limited number of pupils including . BoarcJftr4 full Uterary Tuition for 32.iO per term on conditioits made known on application to Kev. I. M. Rhodes, A. M.'i're., Littleton, N. C. it -i

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