r "N Cornea Twice Eve ry Weak and the Price la Only One Dollar Haa Twice the delation of any Paper Ever PublisbOin the County. John B. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. PUBLISHED TWICE jK WIffEK. $1.00 a Tear, in Advance. a Tear. Volume XXII. Concord, N. c, October 11. 19Q. Number 30. THE CONCORD - TIMES, Closing Out Gash Sale In order to convert our entire stock of goods into the cash we will sell .A.T COST from now until our stock of goods is entirely dis posed of. We have a good line of .. SHOES .. also a general line of HeaY? and Fancy Groceries, Store fixtures included in this sale. Now is your chance to get some rare bargains. Everything ...Strictly Cash on Delivery,.. If you you owe us anything please let as have it at once. Respectfully, Riggers Brothers, Oct. 7-lm. ioo BUSHELS SEED RYE $1.00 Per BUSHEL... 20 Bushels Seed 65 Cents per Bushel F. B. McKINNE THE Concord National Bank. Concord, N. C, July 5th, 1004. This bank haa lust passed the sixteenth .nninersary, and each one of these sixteen years has added to Its strength, thus proving that It Is worthy the confluence ol Its pa trons and the general public. Paid in Capital - $50,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits - - - 36,000 Shareholders Liability 50,000 With the above as a base for confidence and an unusually large amount of assets In proportion to liabilities as a guarantee of conservative management, we Invite your business. Interest paid as agreed. J. M. ODELL, President, D. B. OOLTKANB. Cashier. ALL FOR 04.75. K lbs. Granulated Sugar re tail, at 60, 2S lbs good rice retails Xo t lbs Sweepstakes Tobacco retails 43o 18 lbs Laundry Soap at 6c 18 lbs good Baking Soda l.dSforl.on 8.18 for 1.(10 t.W for 1 .80 for M .00 for .46 7.08 for .76 A lot of other goods at prices that will tickle you. Come and see. - J. V. BURLEYSON, Forest Hill, Concord, K. C, McOlll Street, No. 7. Agents for Monumental Ilronze. Cheaper than marble and is everlasting. ROYAL Poultry Mixture rheDestintheWorld It keeps poultry healthy and makes them lay. FOR SALE BT J. A. Honeycntt & Company, GIBSON MILL. CAPITAL $50,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits, $23,000.00. Removed to new office in the Morris Building nearly opposite the PostofEce. CALL TO SEE US D. F. CANNON. H.I. OodWdsr, wv Cashier president. MARTIN BOG Kit, Vice-President. 1 W HWIN K Teller. O.O. Rlohmona. Thos. W. Smith. G. G. RICHMOND & CO. 1882 1 90P GEM ill! Off ICE. Carrying all lines of business. Companies all sound alter Bal timore fire. We thank you for past favors, and ask a continuance of your business. q Rear room City Hall. Clisls ,.iir Ail UN- rAtlS. tlktUKli .syrup, im v- i to time. fcm r nriitfg'M CAIIlNtIK A Remedy That No One Is Afraid To Take, Dr. Thacher'a Liver and Blood Syrup has been used in thouaaStta of homes for Gfty-two years with perfect confidence and the most remarkable results.) I The great success of this remedy is due to the fact that its formula (which con sists of Buchu, Hydrangea, Mandrake, Yellow Dock, Dandelion, Sarsaparilla, Gentian, Senna and Iodide of Potassium) has been freely published. Doctors and Druggists everywhere do not hesitate to recommend a preparation which they know contains the best known remedies for correcting all irreg ularities of the Liver, Kidneys or Blood, and the diseases caused by the failure of these functions to perform their proper work. , Thousands of sick one. to whom life has been a burden have written grateful letters that others might profit by their experience. Blooming Gaovs, Tax., Nov. 18. 1901 Z'was suffering terribly with indigestion ana kidney trouble and aent to my druggist fos something to relieve me. As he sent me a package of Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood 6yrup I concluded to try it, and now I am deeply grateful to my druggist aa well as to you. I had been a sufferer from these things and a general run-down condition for ten vears, and had only received temfe lueB: IVWsfi other medicines. But aftei using not quite two packages of your Liver and Blood Syrup I feel as stout and hearty as 1 ever did in my life, and 1 am satisfied that I am entirely cured. X feel no symptoms whatever of kidney trouble, and my digestion is aa good aa any living man s. I can now eat whatever 1 choose. I never had any remedy give me such quick and permanent relief, and I can not put a cor rect estimate on the value your medicine has been to me. I would not take any amount of money for it. Very gratefully yours J.C.BROWN. If you noed m mrdleino wWrt to-day for a from lamplo bottto and "Dr. XhacHer' Urntth Book." Give lymploml for mdrieo. Wo Bimplu cm yo to try It at our toy ponmo. We know what it wilt do, ror sale hu all lruogi.to two iMS BO Mali and 91.00. XBACHMM MEDICI9B CO., Chattanooga, Xonn. INTERESTING YALUES IN REAL ESTATE. M About 140 acres in No. 1 1 township, adjoining lands of W. O. Nesbitt, J. P, Cook and others. Has two-story, seven room dwelling, double barn and out buildings, lias 50 acres unable ana do timber. Good for cotton and corn. A bargain at $4,000. About lOG'a acres in No. 4 township, known as the old Daniel Castor place. Has six-room dwelling, good double barn, wheat house, corn crib, spring house, smith shop, and splendid orchid. Has CO acres tillable, and 6 timber, balance growing up in young pine. Price only $1,155. About 45 acres, near Concord, tue w. L. M'senheimer farm. Has two-Btory dwelling, double barn, and outbuildings. Tillable, 20 acres, 10 acres pasture. Well adapted to cotton and corn. This is fine vale at $5,000. 107 acres in No. 10 township, lb an ITC. 138 acres in No. 10 township, at $6 an f-n" - Jno. K. Patterson & Co. Dr. Davis' Chill-Killer Theorisnal Chill Killer of Dr. Davis is guaran teed to kill chills or mon ey refunded. This is not an experiment, but a certainty. At least a hundred chill victiiris in and around Con cord (people you know) have been cured as a tonic notning in the market is superior. Tiy it. won Drug Store WORLD'S FAIR April 25 ! iM.mb.r 30, 1904 Exouraloa Tloktrts Bold Dill? mmmm Tlckats. Maty Day Tickets aa Fsttissjjpay Tasks THROUQH PULLMAN SLEEPERS CAPB DINING CARS AW UIUYW v THE Norfolk ts. Wssttn Railway Offer) to vlautora to tn. Ltulslua Ptrtkau ExiHtei StOUl, lfO. Excrarstost Tlokts CINCINNATI, OHIO, CM COLUMBUS. OHIO. Pallas ta at.. airs kwa tax abava gars Rates, csnaatos, aa aeUlttsaaJ I Dm torataswal bm aaallf tie. s A gaate at taw Cseasaay. ar W. B. Berlfl, M. P. Bran. On'l rasawatar I. Trav. raa. Agt. SjOANOKB. THOINIA. For Over Sixty fears. Mrs. Wmuvl Soornnio Stcp nas Been naMl fnrnvftr Q rears br mltlkMia of nxtti- ers for their children while teething, with perfect success, itsxnnes me cnim. p,i- th uii ma stl-va all twin: cures wind colic, and I. the beat remedy for Diarrhoea. It win relieve tne poor ntu. aunew d lately. Sold by Drua-gtat. in every part or the world. rwenty-Ove centa a bottle. .Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Wineiow's Bootiung syrap, ' mad take no other am 4. are eavatsej Seals' as la tawer ick " EVERY PENNY DRAWN BY CON FEDERATE SOLDIERS WAI AUTISOKI JF.D BY DIHOi CBAT1C LEGISLATION. Not l peDny has ever been appropri ated to the old soldiers of North Caro Un except by authority of Democratic legislation. In 1885 the first pension law was passed by the Democratic legislature, appropriating $30,000 for certain1 classes of disabled Confederate soldieqgj and that law Mia been amended by Demo cratic legislatures until to-day the ap propriation amounts to $200,000 annu ally and froJi 1885 until now the Con federate pensioners have received $1,658,000.00. For the totally blind and totally disc abled Confederate soldiers the Demo cratic legislature pawed a law allowing them $120 a year. That class received last year $11,280, and they have re ceived in all $99,345 .00. The soldiers' home was organized by the Democratic legislature of 1891, and there was expended that year $2,250. That has gradually increased from year to year until this year the appropria tion amounts to $15,000. There has been paid to the soldiers home since its organization $130,500. In the light of these facts we cannot understand why the Republican plat form should persist in stating that the Republican party favors liberal pensions to the Confederate soldiers. It is true that there is a certain class of Confeder ate soldiers to whom the Republican leaders and their J "'ty have been very liberal in giving pe-j2Paa but it is to those Confederate eoldiefc who, in the time of their country's need, de serted the Confederate army and its cause and entered the Union army. They are now permitted to draw pen sions under federal authority, and it is a little peculiar that this legislation was mainly promote.! by a late Republican senator from this State. The fact is the Republican party in North Carolina cares nothing for the Confederate sol dier because the Republican party in this State waa organized upon what was known as the Union sentiment, and for that reason the Republican party has been strongest in those sec tions of the State where there were a great many Union soldiers. Why the Japs Are strong;. Medical Record. The Japanese are allowed to be among the very strongest people on earth. They are strong mentally and physically, and yet practically they eat no meat at all. The diet which enables them to develop such hardy frames and such well-balanced and keen brains consists almost wholly of rioe, steamed or boiled, while the better-to-do add to this Spartan fare fish, eggs, vegetables and fruit. For beverages they use weak tea, without sugar or milk, and pure water, alooholio stimulant being but rarely indulged in. Water is im bibed in what we should consider prodigious quantities to an English man, indeed, the drinking of so much water would be regarded as madness. rhe average Japanese individual swal lows about a gallon daily in divided doses. The Japanese recognize the beneficial effect of flushing the system through the medium of the kidneys, and they also cleanse the exterior of their bodies to an extent undreamed of in Europe or America. Another and perhaps this is the usage on which the Jspanese lay the greatest stress is that deep, habitual, forcitaie inhalation of fresh air is an essential for the acquisition of strength, and this method is sedulously practiced until it becomes part of their nature. Tsie Stlngleat tUmm mad His Homey afarshvllle Home. A few years ago there was a man living in the western part of Union county of whom it was said that he was so stingy that he wouldn't turn loose a piece of money without turning his bead away or shutting his eyes so that he could not see the money leave his hand, when he bought anything at the store or paid a debt. "I thought I was the stint-jn man in the neighbor hood of Matthews when I waa merchan dising there," said Mr. L. Medlin, "until that old man came into my store one day and bought something When he got out bis pocketbook he turned his back to me and fished tatt his coin and reached back behind to band me the tnoney-Obuldn't look at it aa he parted with it" That man piled up a lot of money. When his time came to die he couldn't carry it with him and left it to his children who proceeded to take charge of it and in three or four years they scattered it and there's nothing left of the estate. Heller Tkaa Pills. The question haa been asked in what way are Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver liver Tablets superior to the ordi nary cathartic and liver pills? Our an swer is they are easier and more pleas ant to take and their effect is so gentle and so agreeable that one hardly realizes that it is produced br a medicine. Then they not only move the bowels bat im prove tho appetite and aid the digestion. For sale at 25 cents per bofle at if. L. A, CBSIDBltCB ABTY CFIBIT, Tata People Do Not Now Fly at Each Other's Throat aa They Dial Charity and Children. We are having better times than we used to have, brethren. There is less meanness in politic than in former times. Men are more tolerant and for bearing, ad less passionate and furious than they were 25 years ago. lhe lead ers were never mad at each other, but they inflamed tht people, and neighbor turned against neighbor, and friend against friend. For about two months previous to the elections the relations between Democrats and Republicans were considerably strained, and a fight or two in the neighborhood was no uncommon occurrence. Then the newspapers furnished the channel for all sorts of billingsgate and abuse, and to accept either side was to believe the other a set of cut-throats and scoun drels. Now, there is another state of affairs entirely. The orator who is obliged to go back to '68 for his blood and thunder fails to draw, and the man who stands before the people with clear- cut argument upon the living issues of the day, is the man the people stay with. The paper whose correspondents tell the truth, no matter whom it hurts, is the paper the people want to read, and that olasa of newspaper work will grow more and more popular as the sun rises in the heavens. We hail this better day. We are better party men than ever because we are better citizens. We cherish the ssme principles we UBed to go crazy over, but we have learned that reason is a better weapon than passion. We are still partisans, if you please, but a man can be a partisan without being a fool. Quite a number of us still believe that Billie Bryan is everlastingly right; others of us think that Judge Parker has blazsd the way, while others- of us pin our faith to Roosevelt, but ny are all neighbors and friends, and are not going to allow apy rjoUticiaft.J. h .war whoop and feathers to fool us to strife and discord again. And we are going to train our children into the sane and sober truth that the difference between the two parties, though wide and deep, is a difference between two opposing ideas not candidates. What the Walls Law Does. The following virtues are claimed without fear of contradiction for Watts set: the (1) It is admirably adapted to condi tions in North Carolina. In all the his tory of legislation on this difficult sub ject no set haa been drawn that equals this act in this respect. It prnc-stds directly out of the developments of the last twenty years and may be pointed to as a straight result of the constitu tional amendment. (a) It is considerate of the farmer and fruit producer, causing him no loss, (b) It protects the farmer's borne. (c) It follows up and makes complete the work of the rural school and church, ridding them of the baleful influences of the cross-roads barroom and the secluded distillery. (2) It gives the federal government the assistance of the state and county officers in dealing with illicit distilleries; and it brings the legal distilleries into the light and control of organized and policed communities. (3) It gives our organized communi tie the privilege under fair and juet conditions of treating the drink prob- in any one of the three recognized ways of treating it, thus putting our people in a fair way to solve this difficult ques tion. P.a.ma Canal Errors According to the Iron Age the maps and records of the rrench engineers who had charge of the Panama canal are full of errors and Chief Engineer Wallace has set a number of American engineers to work overhauling the French documents and checking np their errors. "A number of test bor ings," says the Age, "have shown the French records to be worthless, and considerable anxiety has been caused by the discovery that while the French records of borings showed solid rock in Certain sections of the canal at a depth of 100 to 125 feet the boriugs made by AmericarfWengineers have developed nothing but sand and clay. All topo graphical work covering territory more than a few rods from the axis of t canal has been fou)d to be so defectiv aa in koVhollv misleading, while the calculations of t French engineers of the tunneQpg to be done are found to be more than two miles in excess of the actual work. In buying the canal line, along srith the maps of it, the Government bought a pig in a poke and a good m.ny surprises are doubt less in store foi u. BllauJeraj.aSlas. Lawson HuUo, Doc! Glad to see you back! Did yoit kill anything T Dr. Carter (with .dignity) I don't know what yon mesu. I have just re turned from New York, where I was called to perform an fmportant surgical operation. . Lawson Great ffcott! I thought you'd been out in this Adirondacks on a hunting trip. A celebrated author"Qrw Scott" 5 THE HAHIN0 SEASON. Atlanta Journal. The summer haa gone; the colleges are in full swing. Part of the boys are out on the campus, exercising their lungs with a fearful jargon, that ends m"Kaw, raw, raw! Uughty-flve!" and the rest of them are down in the grove or meeting in asm abandoned barn, studying what new specie of torture can be inflicted on the new fellows, whose crime consist in being new. The hazing season has opened. It is too early to tell just what the trend of this particular branch of education will be. It is a matter that requires study and thought. Anybody can lock a vic tim in atefrigerator car and ship him, blindfolded and handcuffed, to New York. Amateur would descend to such little inconveniences a ducking in the pond, or painting the victim till he looked like an animated barber pole. In Indiana the sophomore painted a freshman black and threw him into the river, but such a trivial hoax will never ba sanctioned by the Amalgamated Order of Hazers. All these things are to hazing what a peaceful game of pin- ochile is to prize fighting tame, utterly and stupidly tame. . It might be recommended to these gentlemen that they study the history of Italy during the early centuries, and also take a run through the doings of the Spanish inquisition. Then we shall have something worth while. Captain Charles King defends hazing, declaring that it has man-making quali ties. In the old country there are men who are satisfied that it is necessary to beat a woman in order to make her a good wife. They, and Mr. King, are agrs behind the times in this matter of "necessary" brutality. It is good law, and wisdom as well, that every American citizen shall keep his hands off every other American citizen, in school or out, so long as that citizen is minding his own business and molesting no one. - . . The Euapeakable Peebles Charlotte News. He is at it again, punishing people who have dared to criticise bis injudi cial temperament and rulings.- Mr, James R. Rod well, of Warren county was the latest example. Mr. Rod well had some connection with the Warren Record, which, with every other paper in North Carolina, with practical una nimity, had criticised the Judge. Mr. Rodwell, however, made an affidavit that be was not responsible for the edi torial that had given offense to Judge Peebles; and as there was a vacancy in the Clerkship of the Court, got the endorsement of all the lawyers at the bar, of this political persuasion, and of practically all the leading Democrats of the county for the place. Judge Peebles appointed another man and gave out the written statement that he did so because Mr. Rodwell had de faulted as sheriff and his bondsmen had beeu obliged to make good. The only basis for this charge was that Mr. Rodwell was given a little time to make good his collections of the taxes as sheriff. He paid the county every oent, and his bondsmen paid nothing, It is about time for Judge Peebles to subside into innocuous inconspicuous- ness. Every time he does anything startling, people remsxnber all about him and, in the language of the street, that is a plenty. What Do Yon Believe t Raleigh Post. If you believe in honest, economical and efficient administration, If you believe in low taxes, If you are opposed to tax-fed monop olies, If you favor real reciprocity in inter national bade, If you are burdened by the high prices that result from Republican policies, ' If you do not want to pay higher taxes to meet ship subsidies, If you believe in the preservation of thconstitutional and legal checks and safeguards against official usurpation, If you want the rascals in high places who have betrayed the people's trust discovered and punished, If you would deal fairly with the Filipinos, If you are opposed to unnecessary foreign wars and needless increases of the army and navy, If you believe that national prosjser- ity is the God-given reward of industry intelligently applied nnder beneficient oonditiusy of soil and climate, and not the result of legislation favors unjustly accorded to special classe4atndustrie or occupation Vote for Judge Parker I 1st Flsiaaelal Troable. Daily Kennebec Journal. "Why is Harkins rushing arjuud so excitedly?" "Why, he says his baby is financially embarrassed." Get out! How could a baby be finan cially embarrassed f "Oh, (wallowed a cent, you know." If troubled with a weak digestion try Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They will do yon good. For sals by It. I Marsh. WREN 18 SUCCESS A FAILURE. Orison Bwett Harden In Buocess. When yi do not overtop your voca tion; when you are not greater as a man than as a lawyer, a merchant, a physician, or a scientist When you are not a cleaner, finer, larger man on account of your life work. When you have lost on your way up to your fortune your self-respect, your courage, your self-control, or any other quality of manhood. When it has made conscience an ac cuser, and shut the sunlight out of your life. When the attainment of your ambi tion hag blighted the aspirations and crushed the hopes of others. When your highest brain Culls have been crowded out ofbusiness by greed. When all sympathy has been crushed out of your nature by your selfish de votion to your vocation. When you plead that you never had time to cultivate your friendship, po liteness, or good manners. When you have lived a double life and practiced double-dealing. When it brings you no message of culture, education, travel, or of oppor tunities to help others. When it dwarfs, cramps, or inter feres with another's rights; when it blinds you to the interests of the man at the other end of the bargain. When there is a dishonest or a de ceitful dollar in your possession; when your fortune spells the ruin of widows and orphans, or the crushing of the opportunities of others. When the hunger for more money, more land, more houses and bonds has grown to be your dominant passion. Jndg-a Parker on He Hair. October Suocess. Judge Alton Brooks Parker, the Dem ocratic candidate for President, was re cently chatting with an auburn-baired visitor on his veranda at Rosemont, New Vorl. ATurHy, the conversation turned to the subject of red hair, trbiob is a characteristic of the Parker family. "When I was your age," said the judge to his guest, "my hair was redder than yours it was fiery red, in fact, and, in consequence, my fighting in stincts were over-developed while I was in school. In the country district where I learned my 'three R's,' it happened that I was the only red haired youth. When I first attended school the boys had a good deal of fun shout ing 'sorrer and 'red-top.' It never failed to rouse my fighting blood, and I lived a strenuous life." "But you wouldn't have changed the color of your hair, would you?" asked the visitor, blandly. "No, indeed," said the judge; "red hair is all right. My daughter has it and my little grandson there is as red as he can be. They say it is a sign of high temper, but it ia also a sign of nu merouB excelent qualities." "We've had two red-haired Presi dents," said the visitor, "Jefferson and Jackson, and they were both Demo orats." "That's true," said the Judge, "and don't you think it's about time we had a third T" Practical mathematics. A teacher in a Texas public Bchool received the following letter: "Bir: Will you in future give my son easier some to do at nites ? This is what he's brought hoam two or three nites bak: 'If fore gallins of bere will fill thirty to pint bottles, how many pints and half bottles will nine gallins of bere fill?' Well, we tried and could make nothin' of it at all, and my boy cried and laughed and sed he didn't dare to go bak in the mornin' without doin' it. So I had to go and buy nine gallin keg of bere, which I could ill afford to do, and then we went and borrowed a lot of wine andbrandy bot tles. We fill them, and my boy put the number down for an auswer. don't know whether it is right or not, as we spilt soiBe while doin' it. P. 9. Please let the next some be in wa ter, aa I am not able to buy more bere." Worse for lha-Jralae ol the Fi alAr Raleigh Visitor, , Just what any town want with a street carnival ia a problem hard to solve. There is only one redeeming thing connected with it No town ever wants it but once. A town is not only poorer when the aggregation of sorry men and women, big snakes, fortune teller and fakirs are gone, but the moral of the people are worse by their presence. Satlaractlon. It is always a source of satisfaction to know of a remedy that can always be re lied on in emergencies and when acci dents occur, snch a remedy is Elliott's Emulsified Oil Liniment. It is the most serviceable Accident and Emergency Liniment ever produced, and ia jnst as satisfactory in all cases where a Lini ment is required. D. D. Johnson. . Mrs. Nodd The cook refuses to get up earlier than 7. Todd Ask her if she won't do it for a couple of days, until I can rearrange my basins. Brooklyn Life. - Coulda't Do Wlthonl II. Here is a story that illustrates the estimate the German citizen place on aauerkraut as a food staple. A German was speaking last fall about the high price of cabbage. "I tell you, dese kabbages is awful igh dis year," he said; "me and me vife put up six, seven, eight barrels of sauerkraut every year but ve can't dis yfear. Dem kab bages dey cost too much." "You put up some sauerkraut, didn't you, Chris?" he waa aeked. "Oh, yes two or three barrels just to haf in de house in case of sickness. ' "Yes," said Henpeck, "the thing that impressed me most in Egypt was the mummy of one of the ancient queens." "What was remarkable about it?" "The fact that they could make her dry up and stay that way." Holly Springs, Miss., March 34, 1903. While building railroads in Tennea.ee some twelve years ago a number of hand, contracted fever and various forms ol blood and skin diseases. I carried 6. S. S. in my commissary and gav it to my handl with most gratifying results. I can recom mend S. & S. as tha finest preparation for Malaria, chills snd fever, as well as all blood and skin diseases. W.I. McGowan . I suffered greatly from Boils, which would break out on different parts of my body. I saw S. S. S. advertised and after using about three bottles I was Cured, snd for the last three years have had no trouble whatever. A. W. ZCBXB, 217 Read St, Evangville, Ind. I began using your S. S. S. probably ten years ago for Malaria and blood troubles, and it proved so good that I have con tinued ever since using it as a family remedy. It is a pleasure for me to recom mend S. S. S. for the benefit of others who are needing a first rate blood purifier, tonic and cure for Malaria. Arkansas City, Ark. C. C. HKM1NOWAT. Boils, abscesses, sores, dark or yellow splotches and debility are some of the avmntwna rt t V, ! . mi ur. V, a A i mam u S. S. S . ennnteracti and removes from the hlw3 nil w:mH ties and poisons and builds np the entire system. It is guaranteed a pure ly vegetable rei dy. Write form leal advice or any special informa- flie Swift Speolflo Company, Atlanta, 8a. REV'S ERMIFUGE Is the same good, old-fashioned medicine that has saved tlie lives of little children for the fast 60 years. It ts a med icine made to cure. It has never been known to fail. If your child is sick get a bot tle of FREY'S VERMIFUGE A FINE TONIC FOR CHILDREN Do not take a substitute. If ft our druggist does not keep send twenty-live cents in stamps to 33. cto m. ITTtlUY Baltimore, ltid. and a bottle will be mailed you. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. DR. H. C. HERRING. DENTIST, Is now on the ground floor of theL,!taker uuiimng. coxfcoar. itv o. Dr. W. C. Houston Surgeon (tftrnrtX Dcnllst. CONCORD, H. O. Is prepared to do all kinds of dental work In tue most approved manner. Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone H Office 'Phone IS. L. T. HARTSELL, ittoraey-at-Law, CONCORD, NORTH OAlOUHa. Promnt attention aiven to all bnalnaaa. Office in Morris building, opposite the court nouae. DBS, LILLY & WALKER, offer their professional services to the citi zens of Concord and surrounding countrv. Calls promptly attended day or nhrht. r J, MONTGOM1BT, J. LSI OBOWBU - MONTGOMERY & CftOWELL, Attorneys and Coanselors-at-Laf , OONOOBD, If. O. As partners, will practice law in Cabarrns. Stanly and adjoining counties, in the Supe rior btiu pupreme uiuru q i ine oinM ana ID the Federal Courts. Office Id court house. Parties desiring to lend money can leave It wit ti or place it in Concord National Bank for fjfc and we will tend It on srood real es tate security free of charge to the depositor. " o uinv mivuku r xttiiiiucsvion oi Clue to tin ih uneris security lor loans. Mortgages foreclosed without expense to Henry B. Adams. Frank Armfleld. Thos. J. Jerome. . Tola D. Mane iim, km, irmfisld & Vmess, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, CONCORD, N. C. Practice fn all the fltaf an TT a r... Promnt attention vlven tn general law nractlra. Puranm inhmHiai in the settlement of estates, administrators, eXeCUtOn. and Vn.rdt.ni mrm MnjM.l.llv i vited to call on ua, as we represent one of the uuam uunuing companies in America: In fact we will jo any kind of a bond cheaper than any one else. Parties deal ring to lend monev can leave it with ua or deposit It In Concord National Bank, and we will lend It on approved secu- iij i ui t-o.oj. to tne lenaer. Continued and painstaking attention will be given, at a reasonable prioe. to all legal business. Trtbuneoffloi. Office In new HnrrHi Rnnitlfia n..n.i.i.. a Lies About the Iride Jnn WedontbelieveiknockinK. hence we're not going to say a wordSTKut the otlier fellows; but in simple aelMefense we propose to absolutely refute the malicious statements circulated by the 8t. Louis hotel and boarding house fraternity re. garding the ability of the Inside Inn to care for tha crowds who daily seek Its hospitable roof. We, therefore, make the following statements in all honesty and good faith, and are prepared to "make good" on each and every one of them : 1. The Inside Inn is able, at all times, to com fortably accommodate all who come, at whatever rates they wish to pay; S. The enOrmOUH SlAanif annH.rfluinlT,mant of the Inside Inn with its ,7 bed-rooms, and Its Immense dining halls seating over 2,50a people at a single meal absolutely precludes overcrowd ing or discomfort; J. The fact that the Inside Inn is situated upon a beautiful eminence and surrounded by a nat ural forest makes it the coolest and most deUiibU lul spot in all St. Louis; 4. The convenience, enmtnrt. otiA wnnnm. it staying right inside the grounds has been appre ciated by all, and the management spares no Mains 10 mane the sojourn of en and ev kuwmi uiurvugmy enjovaoie in every way, a. of the pleasant memories of t1---j-iaf " ruir; a. The rates are very reasonable, ranging from S1..10 to C5.00 ner dav. Kiirollean. and S3.n0tn 7.00 American plan including dally admission to the grounds. For further details or reservations apply to The Inside Iun, World's Fair Grounds, St. Louis. We want to buy your produce and will give you 5Uc per dozen lor eggs. 10c to 25c for chickens. 65 to 80 cents for Irish Pota toes. , 50 to 60 cents for sweet pota toes. 1 to lVc per pound for cab bage. 10 to 15c per pound for butter. 40 to 60c per bushel for apples. 75 to 90c for Onions. We have recently added, a line of Dry Goods and Notions and can give you most anything you want in exchange for your pro duce. D. J. BOST tc CO. Tax Notice. The tax books are now In my hands, and your tax Is due since the Oret day of Septem ber. All special license taxes are due since the first day of June, and all owing these spe cial taxes should come In at once aud pay without further notice. All parties who owe special school tax: will notify me when they come In to pay their State and county tax, so there will be no confusion. All who live In these special school districts are supposed to know better than myselt when they are due a special school tax. Sept. 23-tf. J. 7. HARRIS, j mm . Notice Land Sale. By virtue of an execution Issued from the , Superior Court of Cabarrus county in favor of Mary 0. Badgett. Sr.,plamtltf, and against The Llppard Yarn Mill and others, defend ants, as Sheriff of said county I have levied on that real estate situate lu the Town of Concord, N. C, known aa The Llppard Yam Mill, containing about four acres, together with the building and fixtures, moctilnery and appurtenances of said mill, bald land Is on Keed street and adjoins the lands of It. F. Phlfer and It. T Llppard. Said property will be sold to the highest bidder for cash at the court house duor In Concord, N. C, on Monday, the "lh day of November, WW, at 12 o'clock, M. JAS. F. HARRIS, Sept. 30. Sheriff Cabarrus County. . Wanted. Special representative In this coontv arid adjoining territories to represent and adver- ' Use an old established business bouse of solid financial standinir. Salary, tfcil weeklv with expenses, paid ech Monday by check direct irom neaaquarters. Expenses aavanceu; position permanent. We turnlnb everything. Address. THB COLUMBIA. ttH) Monon Build Id- lUK. tJmcaKO. ill aept. au c. A Splendid Little Farm at a Bargain. 32 acres of land 2Vi miles west of Con cord on macadamized Poplar Tent road, in nigu state 01 cultivation with good four-room dwelling, splendid frame Darn 30x50 feet, well finished np with stalls and bin at a cost of $300. Splendid young bearing orchard, well, 2 springs, 6 acres timber, 4 acres pasture, crop of 190467 bushels oats and rye, 150 bosh- els corn and 10 bales cotton. Jno. K. Patterson d Co. CONCORD, N. C. Administrator's Notice. Having anallfled as the administrator nt Noah Hathcock. deceased, all persons owing; aald estate are hereby notified that they ' must make prompt payment, and all persona having claims against aald estate must pre sent them to the undersigned, duly authen- tlcated. on or before the lit b day of Septem- ber. iwjn, or tins notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. M. J HATHCOCK. lilnilnlilnMt Sept. , 1901. By Montgomery CroweU, Arty's. Superior .curt, E.hns t:::'.7. ...!- Ti 1 1 r, . nat.iao " ui hi. .01 , rutiiiiin, vs. Jesse Hurlocker, Defendant. The defendant above-named la hnrwhr ma. titled that the plaintiff above-named has In stituted an action against him for divorce from the bonds of matrimony, returnable to the next term of the buoerlor Court of Ca barrus county at the court bouse In Concord to be held on the fourth Monday of October, it being the 84th day of October, when and where the defendant can attend, and answer and demiu to the complaint which baa been Died In tBls action, and if he fail to do so Judgment will be reSMered granting the relief demanded In the complaint. Sept. 90, 1904. Clerk Superior Court. For Sale or Rent. One four-room bouse to rent for S3nnnt month, and one three-room house for t?V) per month. Will sell either or both of Uum nooses at a reasonable price. Aiprr to J. a. BUSHMILL, for sale, one-half pine. V, oak, six miles from Con cord on Mt. Pleasant road. Fine Falto for Sale. 102 acres Mill Hill, with sokudid S- room dwelling, painted, nearly new. with large porch in front and sides. C.ood orchard, good well water, doulilc barn and out building.. In a splendid c im munity convenitAK to churches and schools, 25 acres timber, 12 acre pas ture. 92,250; one-hall cash, balance m 12 months. Jno. K. Patterson & Co. Cotton Mill Stock For Sale We offer for sale the following- mill stocks) In shares In Qitamn Mill. s abarea In Kindi.y Cotton Mill. thares Kindle? Mill atock. JNO. K. PATTERSON si COi S3 CORDS WOOD

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