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A' CONCORD H John B. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. PUBLISHED TAVICE WEEK. 0 a Fear, in Advance. Volume XXI. Concord, N. c, .March 18, 1904. NUMBER 56. r Potash is removed in large quantities from the soil by the growing of crops and selling them from the farm. Unless the Potash be restored to the soil, good crops can not con tinue. We have print ed a lit tie biK)k containing valu able facts gath ered f r o m the records of accur ate experiments in recla im i n g soils, and we will be glad to send a copy free o charge to any farmer who will write fox it. GERMAN KALI WORKS. "w York -8 Naawtau street, r Atlanta. Ja.U S So. Itroad St. Cabarrus Savings Bank, Concord and Albemarle, N. C. CAPITAL, $50,000.00. Knrplti and undivided profit, - i2,ODO.OO. Resources Over $300,000. General Banking Business Transacted. Ac counts of Individual, firms and corporations solicited. We cordially Invite Every Man, Woman and Child who wishes to "lay by something for a rain day," to open a Savlnjrs Account with us. per cent. Interest paid op s tvlngs deposits and time certificates OFFICERS. I). F. CANNON, H . I WOODHorSK. President. ashler MARTIN ItOOKK, C. W. SWINK, Vlce-Rrenldflnt. Teller. M. J. Corl J. C. Wadsworth. w. v. Flowe IJ. I.. McC'onnaughpy I R. L. MrConnaiyrhey. Jlaniurer. Livery, Sale and Feed Stables Win keep on hand at all times Horses and Mules for sale for cash or credit. Our livery will have good road horses and as nice line ot Carriages and Landeaus us can be found In this part of the country. Jan 1'. . ISTOTIOIE I We have opened A Fine Confectionery. Homemade and all Rinds of Candies. Lowney,Chocolates and Bon Hons. Also a nice line of Cali fornia and Florida Fruits. Qlympia Candy Works Phore 27Q. Jan. 2. 18 S. Union St., Concord. N. C THE Concord National Bank. With the latest approved form of boohs and every facility for handling accounts, ot ters a nrst-class service to the pumic. Capital, Profit, Individual responsibility of Shareholders, Keep Your Account - $50,000 22,000 50.00C WITH US Interest paid as arreed. Liberal accommo dation to all our customers. ' J M. ODELI., President, D. II. COLTKANE. Cashier. O . O. Richmond. Thos. W. Smith. G, G. RICHMOND & CO. 1882 1904. GENERAL INSURANCE OFFICE. Carrying all lines of business. Companies all sound alter Bal timore fire We thank you for past favors, and ask a continnance of your business. Rear room City Hall. Buggy Bargains Four new and sev eral second-hand Buggies for sale cheap. Also one mule and three horses for sale. Frank B. McKinne. Feb. 5. 7ZT?V7,T7""TI1V,' UUKtS WHtKt ALL tLSt 1AILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Ue In time. Bold by drugKlnts. WD Cg-feMgM'ffiia'iMgr STA KTLIIVG TEACHINGS OF &IOR .11 ON CHURCH. "That kingdom of God ia an order of government established by Divine authority. "It is the only legal government that can exist in any part of the universe. "All other governments are illegal and unauthorized. "God has made all beings and worlds, has the supreme right to govern them by His own laws and by officers of his own appointment. "Any people attempting to give to themeelves, by laws of their own mak ing' and by officers of their own ap pointment, are in direct rebellion against the kingdom of God. All em perors; kings, princes, presidents, lords aDd ruler9 have acted without authority. ' Not one of them was called or an notated kiDg or a prince by the God of heaven. "Not one of them has received his office or appointment of Him. "Not one of them has received any communication whatever from the rightful Sovereign, the King. "Their authority is all assumed; it has originated in man. 'Their laws are not from the greAt Lw Giver, but the production of their own governments. . Their foundations were laid in re bellion and the whole euperstucture from tiret to last is a heterogenous mass of discord and direct opposition to the kingdom of God, which is the only true government which should be re cognized on earth or in heaven. "The kingdom of God is a theo cracy. That is what the Mormon church be lieves. That is what its eiders teach. That is what one of its apostles a pre decessor of the office now held by Sen ator Reed Smoot has written out, had printed and circulated for the instruc tion and edification of the faithful. Evidence of that fact was introduced in the Smoot investigation case at Washington recently. It came like "a bolt from the blue" to the members of the senate committee on privileges and elections. Senator Overman, of North Carolina, was responsible for it. "I hold in my hand," 8id he, "a book that is entitled a 'Series of Pamph lets on the Doctrines of the Gospel," by the late Elder Orrin Piatt, one of the twelve apostles to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. "The title page 6tates that it ia print ed 'at the Juvenile Instruction office, Salt Lake City.' "On pages 41 and 42 under the chap ter headed "The Kingdom of God, I read the words," and he read the sen tences quoted above. Members of the committee looked startled into one another's faces. The incident was the most sensa tional revelation of the day. It lent great weight to the constantly accumu lating evidence that Senator Smoot is interwoven in a political and social fab ric that is a menace to government, to society and to an order of civilization that rests upon the principle of mono gamy. It leaked out that Mormons are cir culating Orrin Piatt's book throughout the country and they are defending aa the protestants will prove the principles of ecclesiastical and seculargovernment set forth in Pratt's "Doctrines of the Gospel." The question now is, "Does Senator 3 noot sanction Pratt's teachings, and if he does sanction them and is an apostle of the church responsible for them, by what process of reasoning can he serve with intelligent loyalty the government of the United States?" Forcible and Precise. New York Sun. Mr. Bryan has formulated this reply to the inconvenient question as to whether he will bolt the St. Louis ticket next summer in case theconven tion fails to reaffirm the Kansas City platform : ' You had better ask that question of those who are trying to drag the party back to where it was between 1892 and 18M." As a nhrase descriptive of those I 1 e nocrats who now want to re-organ ize the party for victory, Mr. Bryan's i .vention strikes us as accurate and felicitous. "Those who ate trying to drag the party back to where it was between 1892 and 1896." Between 1892 and 1896 the Democ racy was in the White House. TI11t Is Life t In the last analysis nobody knows, bat we do know that it is under strict law. Abuse that law even sli(?hty, pain results. Irregular living means derange ment of the organs, resulting in consti pation, headache or liver trouble. Dr. King's New Life Pills quickly re-adjusts this. It's Keutle, yet thorough. Only 2i cutu at all drug tor. THE RUNNING HORSKS FOR THE REPUBLICAN INO.T1IN A TION IN "DE ATE." States vi He Cor. Charlotte News. Linney, Blackburn and Price are the big running horses in the race for the Republican nomination to oppose the Democratic candidate for the seat in the Congressional hall to represent the people in "de ate." The bulwarks of the day are fighting strenuously for the nomination. Each has strong reasons to believe that he will be elected. Be hind these gentlemen comes Samuel Marshall, of Surry, the probable dark horse. It's either Linney or a compro mise for Price. Its either Blackburn or nobody with the Blackburn con stituents. This status of affairs in the party line of the Republicans was as certained by the correspondent from some of the leading Republicans in the eighth. Mr. Linney said, a few nights ago, when he was in Statesville, "I will tell you, I was Bure I had a chance for the nomination until today. I received word through letters and friends that I would get the nomination unless my nomination over the rest and the bitter fight between myself and Blackburn would bring about discord in the party linep. Then Mr. Price would be nomi nated and would make a very formid able and capable candidate, a man of intelligence both in his profession and from a literary standpoint." He also stated that Mr. Price's friends,, neither his nor Mr. Marshall's, would hurl their strength at any stage of the game to Blackburn. "Wehaveit in for a man who tries to dictate the party affairs. Occasionally you hear McNeill's name mentioned as a good man.. Then on the back of it you hear it said that he can't carry his own county. The fight from the beginning to end," said a prominent Republican, "is to defeat Blackburn." The fight is a most ani mated and bitter one between the can didates and none of them are sparing midnight oil or ceaseless toil to down the other. Last week ex Congressman Linney was up in north Iredell work ing among the voters who in a day or so hold a primary to select and instruct delegates to the district convention. He said there was no interest there. Mr. Linney has been very active is hie campaign for the past few weeks. It is his intent on to canvass the entire district. Mr Price was in Concord last week and it is known that he put in some good work coercing his strength. From the Slum to the Farm. There have been effort made to re move the population from the conges ted districts of the cities to the farming districts, and many societies already exist which have that purpose in view. A new one has just been organized by Chicago millionaires, which is intended to be national in scope and to undertake the work on a large scale. It is called the Field and Wcrshope Society. The first move of the new society will be to get land from the Unitec7 States Govern ment. That is the crux of the scheme. The society will then move such fami lies as give promise of success from the congested districts to new settlements, expecting the railways to give them free transportation. The society will take care of the settlers until they can sup port themselves, expecting the settlers to reimburse the society later. A Favorite Remedy for Babies. Its pleasant taste and prompt cures have made Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy a favorite with the mothers of small children. It quickly cures their coughs and colds and prevents any danger of pneumonia or other serious conse quences. It not only cures croup, but when given as soon as the croupy cough appears will prevent the attack. For sale by M. L. Marsh. Wheat. Newton Enterprise. If the farmers had wheat to sell now they would be aa much in the swim as if they had cotton. It now costs $1.30 a bushel to put down Western wheat in Newton. But the Hessian tly! It has hit this county just at most inop portune time. The war in the East will make wheat and Hour very dear for a year and perhaps two or three. Russia, next to the United State?, is the greatest wheat-growing country in the world, and Manchuria and Korea which will be overrun with great armiet this year are also great wheat countries. Manchuria furnishes the greatest part of China with flour. At the new town of Harbin, where the Russian army is concentrating, there are two great roller mills, and they have been getting wheat at 35 cents a bushel. The stopping of wheat growing there will make fancv prices in this country. If troubled with weak digestion, belch i ii? or sour stomach, use Chamberlain's o Stomach and Liver tablets and you will get quick relief. For sale by M. L Marsh. A PHANTOM PHAKE Fairbrother's Everything. And now comes the Shoemaker's Journal and assures us that child labor makes criminals. It says abolish child labor and the penitentiaries will soon be empty. This is what-we have been looking for and waiting for. We had heard that wbiskey caused most all the crime; it has been said that idleness was the main cause of. most of it. Gambling has been held up to scorn because it made otherwise honest men steal but now we get it that child labor is the cause of it all. This may be true and if it ia, there is hope. It has alwayB seemed to us that there was a great deal of maudlin rant and rot about this child labor business. Of course, it is Irue that some children know no childhood they are early put to the treadmill work but there is no evidence yet "in that honest labor ever started a child. towards the penitentiary. No child should be compelled to work ten or twelve hours a day and no child would be compelled to thus labor were it not for parents who not only permit it but force it. All this fal de rol about child labor makes some people who have investigated tired. You will generally discover that when a child labors all of its life that its earnings have gone to help support an indolent mother or a drunken father. The old codgers who loaf around cot ton mill towns with no visible means of support except to carry meals to the "chiltent" are worthless and weari some. Organixed labor these days objects to "child labor" lx cause it does not want to see and when it can help it will not allow apprentices. This is why the Shoemaker's Journal is talking so bravely against the "evils 0 child labor." Were the hundreds of idle kids who loaf around towns smoking cigarettes and planning mischief put at work, the chances are they would make better and more useful citizens when they reach maturity. BIhop Potter's Sncgfwlon. Among the many instances of the inimitable wit c Bishop Henry C. Pot ter ii one tJirt&M- hisiierltbetn in print, but is too good to be lost, says the Indianapolis News : A widower, in his great bereavement, had expressed his feelings by having engraved on the tombstone of his wife the line : "My light has gone out!" As he was about to marry again, he asked the Bishop's advjice as to whether or not he should have the inscription erased, as it seemed ;at variance with the then existing conditions. "Oh, no!" said the Bishop; "I wouldn't have it takn off; just put under it : 'I have struck another match!' " One Thing That You Cannot (.Ire Away. Monroe Journal. "There's one thing you can't give away," said a gentleman the other day. "You can't give away coffinsi. I tried it once. As a joke I went out and said to every darke I met, "Well, boys, you know we all have to die, and then we'll need coffins. Now, I'm giving a coffin to every man who wants one, and all he has to do is to put it away and keep it till he needs it.' Many of them Baid that was a good thing, and they would take 'em. I said alright, that I'd have them shipped to them right away. In a few days every one of those darkies returned and said, 'Please don't send me dat coffin, it makes me feel too curus.' " Inflammatory Rheumatism ' 1 : I William Shaffer, a brakeman of Den nison, Ohio, was confined to his bed for several weeks with inflammatory rheu matism. "I used many remedies," he says. "Finally I sent to McCaw's drag store for a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm, at which time I was uuable to use hand or foot, and in one week's time was able to go to work us happy as a clam. For sale by M. L. Marsh. The Countercheck Quarrelsome. Two little negro boys were having a difference of opinion. One was talk ing with great volubility, while the other was listening. The speaker was pouring into his companion's ears all the vials of his wrath in his characteris tic language of his race. Finally he seemed to have exhausted himself, aod paused for breath. Said the listener, "Is you done?" "Yes, I is done," replied the first speaker. "Well, den," said his companion, "all dem t'ings you say I is, you is." Bueklen's Arntea Salve. Has world-wide fame for marvelous cures. It surpasses any other salve, lo tion, ointment or balm for cuts, corns burns, boils, sores, felons, ulcers, tetter salt rheum, fever 6ores, chapped hands skin eruptions ; infallible for piles. Cure guaranteed. Only 35 cents at all drug ltTM. corroN will stay high. So Say Hie New York Commission ITI en. A well known dry goods commission house, J. H. Lane & Co., is reported to have refused last week to contract for sale of cotton goods on the basis of any- less than 17 cents a pound for cotton. Inquiry among other men interested in manufactured cotton develops the fact that they all take practically the same view. Une is quoted tnus: "Raw cotton is now 16 cents a pound. The raw cotton of the present crop has gone from 10 cents to 17 cents, and al though just now it is down a cent chances are that it will rise to 17 cents and go still higher. "The crisis will be passed by the mid dle of My. Meantime there is no earthly way of forecasting the outlook. If the speculative bull cotton pool can keep up the price until that time the mills will accomodate themselves to the situation. They will absorb the sup ply for manufacturing purposes, and the public the consumers will have to pay the advanced prices for the fin ished products. "Cottoa duck is now 22 cents a pound. It as well as all fabrics from print yarns have advanced 30 to 85 per cent, in eighteen months. Fine leached shirting?, muslins, and under wear fabrics have gone up 20 per cent. Fine yarn light weight fabrics, such as India linens and Victoria lawns, have advanced comparatively little. "The statistical position of raw cot tcn is the strongest of record. There are spindles enough to handle 11,000, 000 bales. There are only 10,000,000 bales in sight. Receipts of raw cotton are dwindling daily. "In from thirty to sixty days the mills will le entirely out of their pres ent supply of raw cotton, the cost of which ha ar?raged them 14 cents a pound. The new crop does Dot come in until September next. Tnere is no reserve stock of manufactured goods. "The whole south has been raked as with a fine tooth comb for raw cotton. There is no more to be had. The mills and selling agents have had men out in carriages, visitiug every plantation, call ing at every farmer's house " Tp Morphine From Doctor's Orders. Habit Worse Than the Disease. Dr. Miles Nervine Cured Me. When the nervous system has been shat tered by the use of deadly drugs there is nothing to equal Dr. Miles' Nervine in restor ing it to health and normal activity. "I feel so gTateful for what Dr. Miles' Re storative Nervine has done for me that I must tell it for that part of humanity that suffers as I have. During the three years I suffered from nervous prostration I found no relief eiccpt when doctors gave morphine. To get rid of suffering I took morphine my self as it was the only thing that would give ease, and now you, who point with scorn at morphine using, how could you, when in such agony, knowing it about the only thing that would give relief, resist it? I knew it was a terrible habit and I knew of its deadly grasp, but I never fully realized its signifi cance until I had used it a number of months. Oh, the misery of being addicted to such a habit I resolved then and there to quit it and resolved. I would never be a slave to any such demon. About this time 1 happened to notice Dr.Miles' Restorative Nervine adver tised and ordered a bottle. After using five bottles I can truthfully say I am cured of using morphine. Now. however much per sons may doubt it, God is my witness I am cured. This testimonial is unsolicited but I feel it my duty to give it for the benefit of the suffering." Mattik Phillips, Prescott, Ark All druggists sell and guarantee first bot tle Dr. Mites' Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles Medical Co, Elkhart, Ind. 33IG STOCK -OF FURNITURE that must be sold in thirty days. My landlord is going to over haul my building, beginning April 1st, and this necessitates me to dispose of my stock of Furniture at once. Now, this is a grand opportunity for those who are expecting to buy. Will vou avail vourself of this excel lent opportunity. This is for you to decide. A big line of COOK STOVES! at ray old popular prices. If vou need any gheet Tin or Iron, or Tin Smithing, I am here to serve 3rou. 'Phone 163. Gbas. H, Shall, Low-Price Man MOTHER TRADE C6IT PRICES We have bought out the entire stock of Stoves, Piping, and Cooking Vessels of the Dry-Heath-Miller Co. For the spot cash and no charging, we will sell for the next three weeks, commencing ESDAY, MARCH 15th, Stoves, Ranges, Bed Room Suits, Side Boards, Rockers, Lace Curtains, Foot Hats, Flower Pots, Pictures, Hat Racks, Water Sets, Odd Parlor Chairs, Lounges, Car riages, Go-Carts, Baskets, etc. Space -will not allow us to mention more CALL AND SEE OS BEFORE THE RUSH. Yours to & Harm Store 'Phone i. One Car Load, Re car load Virginia car Feed Oats, one one-halt car load Grade Guanos and We wish to say to ourg has one out of the Gu; , 1 r and Eel! RECEIVED R cured the agency lor th BLOOD AND BON Ka firs t car load cf the al are full and we want yo t barrels before the rise 1 Lines We Haye save you money on Flo , n Concord. "WHITE- & FLO A Miss There has been a ransl' heretofore, but the ( puny umc 111 fctiiu. and now offers the public Furniture at prices you would never have thought of had we not opened up in your town. CONCORD FURNITURE STORE, Opposite St. Cloud Hotel. 11 1 111 1111 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 m 1 ii 1 1 ii 1 it 1 1 11 111 siirirtf n in vtiti trti rr 1 G-arden Seeds. 1 EE r 3- s Buists'Tr: Medal Garden Seeds, Canteloupe and Water- 5 E nitl -eeds lor market gardeners and truckers. s Buist's . iern Snow Flake Corn, Puist's Selected Gold- s 1 en Den- Corn, Red Clover, Alfalfa or Lucerne Clo- S vtr, ' ' hard Grass, Timothy, Herd or Red Top, g 1 Hlr. Grass, Millet, Johnson Grass, Dwarf 2 g 1-ex Rape, Sorghums, and all Field g Seeds adapted to our climate. 5 We ha . : only high grade Seeds, which are always S cheapest t" "he consumer. Lawn Grass Seed and Pure g Bone Meal r enriching lawns. Oyster Shell for poultry 1 E and Intern onal Poultry Powder and Stock Remedies. j I Fetzer's Drug Store - Concord, N. C 104 Please, hmim Go, Residence 'Phone 90. MAY! WEAR ... in on every train. We went north early to ptomers at very nenrlv we a Grand Lino 'ikes, Oxfords, Galatan - v SlMn iinea up tnat spacer
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
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March 18, 1904, edition 1
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