THE -. CONCORD TIMES,
Eh Twioe
the
Circulation
of any Paper
Iw
Published in
the County.
Cornea
Twioe Krery
Week and
thePrloe :
la Only
I
One Dollar j
a Tear.
John B. SherrHl, Editor und Owner.
PUBLISHED TWICE .A. V12eK.
$1.00 a rear, in jld rasca.
o-
YOLUME XXII.
CQJfCORD, N. C, JVttLY 2. 190B.
Number 89.
v
wT
Potash as Nec&saryasRain
The quality and quantity of the
cropa depend on a sufficiency of
Potasji
In the toll. Fertilizers which are
low in Potash will never produce
satisfactory results.
Every farmer ihould be familiar with the
proper proportions of ingredients that go to
auk. the best fertilizers for every kind of
, crop. W have published a series of books,
containina- the latest researches on this all
Important subject, which we will send free
if you ask. Writi sow while yoa think of
It to tha
OERMAlf KAU WOKES
Maw York S Hasia. Stmt. r
Atlanta, i.-tll'A boatsi Broaa street.
The r.lutal Benefit
fe Insurance Company
OF NEWARK, N. J.
.Leading
Annual
Dividend
' Company
of the
World.
r, It has an unrivalled rec
ord in the history ot
Life
Insurance,
and gives its Policy Holders a
Dollar's worth for every dollar
ot cost to them.
If you want the best poli
cy on the market, call on
Jno. K.Patterson, Agent,
CONCORD, N. C.
H. I. WOODH0U8K. MARTIN BOGBB,
President. Vice-President.
0. W. BWINK. W. H. GIBSON.
Cashier. Teller.
I ,1
Capita
Surplui
DepositLi
Total Beso
1
., N. C. Branch at Albemarle, N. C.
.$ 50,000.00
and Undivided Profits 80,000.00
850,000.00
IBS 435,000.00
Our pai
ngures, j
Msureot
preulatlon
Invite aeo
nlaased to a
tomers. bold
success, as Indicated above by
!Ulte gratifying, and we wish to
nenas ena cusTOniers 01 our ap-
tntflr patronage and cordially
tinuanceof the same. Should be
e a large number of new cus-
ourselves ready to esrve you
in any wy "mlstent wltb sound banking.
DIRECTORS.
, J- 'SlUSS.Kobert S. Young. L. J. Foil.
JEWELRY
DIAMONDS
YMTCIIts
and a
complete line,
of the
GENUINE
Tir..r7
11
lUllRmirinf
"$47
Rogers Bros."
Knlve. Forks,
Spoon, etc
Eves carefully examined and
properly fitted to the heat (Tie
of glasses. .r s
f W.C.CORRELL,Jewe er.
Safe Prompt Liberal
, THE
L.t
IIUVIIU II1IIIUI1HL Ulllllli
Capital Stock, - - . f 100,000
Stockholders' liability, 100,000
Surplus and undivided profits, 85,000
Asset, . . - - 860,000
Your Easiness Solicited
4 per cent It terent paid on time certificates
J M. ODRI.U President.
W. H LILLY, Vice President.
D. B. IX I I.THAI K. Owulor
L. D. IXiLTKANB, Asst Cashier.
J M. HBftDtilX Book-keeper.
eMirapTtrs stnolisim
ErOrtuYAL PILLS
ptfjlNiil es 4 Only ...
Iirr.. A'warr!iaM. I -twit ask lirilCTB.
ia HEtf and felei alli- Mr. amle4
wiUMwrtbhafi Take r. Hfmm
frn.wLXrm (!. It rati fM tMl lfaal
ti . Bay ef jomr I) rmjjirt. er end 4.
suud. ur PatrUf aHarw. TmiiwM!-
mm "Relief for L.a,1.r," Ul.er, by r
tmn Mskis. ,MMo TtwtitBMiala. Sold ay
Pnsrlata. ( kl-httr ( hrayjlal ,
mMmm isksusj. rillLa ra.
1 s
l-.i-ir-i WHt-rii ALL rt.SJ- tAtL.
ta tiro. NMfl dntrffima.
a!iu..;i
v-ti
n
OROVBB CLKTBLAND ON WO
niS'l CLVBI.
.
Ex President Qrover Cleveland has
an article on "Woman's Mission and
Woman's Clubs" in a current msga
sine. He says, in part:
"To those of ns who suffer periods
of social pessimism, but who, in the
midst of it all, cling to our faith in
the saving grace of simple and unadul
terated womanhood any discontent on
the part of woman with her ordained
lot, or a restless desire on her part to
be and to do something not within the
sphere of her appointed ministrations,
cannot appear otherwise than as perver
sions of a gift of God to the human
race.
"The restletsness and discontent to
which I have referred is most strongly
manifested in a movement which has
for a long time been on foot for secur
ing to women the right to vote and
otherwise participate in publio affairs.
Let it here be distinctly understood
that no sensible man has fears of injury
to the country on account of such par
ticipation. It ia its dangerous, under
mining effect on the characters of the
wives and mothers of our land that we
fear. This particular movement is so
aggressive and so extreme in its insis
tence that these whom it has fully en
listed may well be considered as incor
rigible. At a very recent meeting of
these radicals a high priestess of the
faith declared: 'No matter how bad
the crime a woman commits, if she
can't vote and is classed with idiots and
criminals and lunatics, she should not
be punished by the same laws as those
who vote obey.'
"This was said when advocating
united action on the part of the as
sembled body to prevent the execution
of a woman proved guilty of the de
liberate and aggravated murder of her
husband. The speaker is reported to
have further announced, as apparently
the keynote of her address, 'If we
could vote we'd be willing to be hanged.'
It is a thousand pities that all the
wives found in- such company cannot
sufficiently open their minds to see the
complete fitness of the homely defini
tion which describes a good wife as 'a
woman who loves her husband and her
country, with no desire to run either.'
"There is comfort in the reflection
that, even though these extremists may
not be amenable to reformation, there
is a fair prospect that their manifest
radicalism and their blunt avowal of
subverting purposes will effectively
warn again a dangerously wide accep
tances of their theories."
After considering the woman's club
as a weapon of retaliation upon man
for neglect of his home, and suggesting
that the retaliation may fall upon the
innocent as well as the guilty, Mr.
Cleveland says:
"It may safely be assumed that
among those who are most disturbed
by the growth of woman's clubs, the
sentiment is universal that man's neg
lect of woman is a dastardly offense,
and that the whipping post for wife
beaters would be a wholesome feature
of our criminal law."
He goes on: "I am persuaded that
without exaggeration of statement, we
may assume that there are woman's
clubs whose objects and intents are not
only harmful in a way that directly
menaces the integrity of our homes and
the benign disposition and character of
our wifehood and motherhood.
"I believe that it should be boldly
declared that the best and safest club
for a woman to patronize in her home."
The North Carolina Baptist says that
as the result of the revival in Wales a
lawyer gave up his position as attorney
for brewers, which paid him $10,000 a
year. This moves the Baptist to say
that this lawyer had "the right kind of
religion." Thereupon the Biblical Re
corder says it can name "two lawyers
who recently declined fees from the
liquor men one declining a fee of
$10,000, the other $5,000 each in
North Carolina."
Seeking refuge from a rainstorm in
the mouth of a big sewer, a numbeiafi
workmen employed at West Chester,
Pa., narrowly escaped death last week.
The storm broke upon a portion of the
town half a mile away, and before they
could escape the flood caught the men
and washed them out of the sewer.
Bfesr Caft for Cancer.
All surface cancers are now known to
be curable by Bucklen's Arnica Salve
Jas. Walters, of Duffield, Va , writes :
"I had a cancer on my lip for years that
seemed incurable, till Bucklen's Arnica
Salve Willed it, and now it is perfectly
well." Guaranteed cure for cnts and
burns. 25c at all drug stores.
Father (gruffiy): "Gat away from the
fire. Tommy. The weather isn't cold."
Tommy: "Well I ain't warming the
weather; I'm warmin' my hands." .
TNI WQBLBtHBD MAN.
gbju-lotte Observed
T$ere is a tribe of 80 Catawba Indians
located on a reservation of COO acres in
York county, S. C, near the town of
Fort Mill. The cbie of the tribe, Jim
Harris, made a pilgrimage to Columbia
recently to lay the troubles of his folks
before the Governor. It appears that
they have an annual appropriation of1
$1,500 from the State; it does not appear
that they receive anything from the
general govfrnment for support; and
the chief represents that they are on
the verge of starvation and he wants a
larger appropriation from the State,
either for the maintenance of his people
or to the enable them to go West and
settle with other Indians in the Indian
Territory. These Catawbas are good
Indians, and Chief Harris had the facts
with him vahen he told Governor Hey
ward that they had stood with the Amer
ican colonists against British aggression
and later wjth the South in the war be
tween the States. All that is well and
in acknowledgment of the facts South
Carolina would do well to help move
these people to Indian Territory. Eighty
of them, men, women and children,
cannot, even with accessories of hunt
ing and fishing, coax a living out of
600 acres' of land. She fact is that the
Indians are of no account. They won't
work; ttrey won't accept the methods
which white civilization suggests, and
they won't even learn the English lan
guage. In saying this we have in mind
particularly the Cherokees of western
North Carolina. They are no good.
They are retrogressing instead of advanc
ing. They are decreasing in number
that is to say the death-rate out-runs
the birth-rate and as if by intuition
the population is being further depleted
by the removal of some of them to the
West every year. All efforts to civilize
them have failed and will continue to
fail. It would be better if the general
government would take all the Indians
of the East in hand and move them to
the Indian Territory, or somewhere,
where they could hunt and fish and rub
off the thin veneer of civilization which
has been forced upon them, and be
wild again.
.
Give irioney to Poor Colleges of South
Gifts amounting in all to $250,000
will be made this year to small colleges
in the rural districts of Tennessee, Ken
tucky, North Carolina and West Vir
ginia. This announcement was made
by Dr. D. K. Pearsons, retired capital-
isr and benefactor of many small col
leges in the United States.
"I am not going to give to any rich
colleges," said Dr. Pearsons. "I have
a lot of colleges to choose from in dis
tributing the $250,000 that I have
decided to send down South. I am
going to pick out the very poorest and
most worthy and have the money ready
by May 1st."
Ten men were killed in the Conyg
collery of the Delaware and Hudson
Caal Company at 7 o'clock Wednesday
morning bjf the breaking of a rope car
riage which was being lowered. They
fell over 450 feet and were crushed un
der the ruins of the carriage at the bot
tom of the shaft.
CROPS FOR FORAGE.
Southern Farm iffigazine.
With the large number of crop, that
may be grown in the Southern States
suitable for making forage there is no
good reason why there ihould be any
scarcity in this particular. Stork peas,
so j a beans, velvet beans, clover, vetches,
aiapan clover, alfalfa and numerous
other' legumes may be successfully
grown in every Southern State. There
are also numerous true grasses that
grow with surprising luxuriance as
many certainly as 40 varieties that
have done well and may be utilized in
the making of forage crops. Among
these sorghum may be accounted cor,
of the most prolific in yield and most
valuable for forage. On good land that
is well cultivated fully 10 tons of forage,
the very best for cattle, may be pro
duced upon one acre. The greatest
objection to this plant for forage is that
freezes impair or totally destroy its
feeding value, but this danger may be
averted by putting up the sorghum in
silos properly built. No other plant is
at once so easily grown and that yields
such a large amunt of succulent and
nutritious forage for stock. It is good
for all kinds of stock, and for milch
cows it produces an abundant flow of
rich milk even during the stormy days
of winter. Pea hay is to be preferred
for sheep and it should be provided in
such abundance by the flock master
that his flock may at all times be able
to feed upon it. Ewes especially, giving
nourishment to young lambs, need it to
increase the flow of milk. It is to be
doubted if any other dry food is so
valuable to the sheep-breeder duiiog
the winter months as pea hay.
A CoDircMmss! Shoes.
An apt illustration of distinction
without a difference occurred recently
in a Washington shoe shop, according
to the story Congressman Sulzer tells on
one of bis colleagues.
Mr. Sulzer's friend, it seems, ha
been a great sufferer from rheumatism,
so that one foot has been affected by it
and has become a trifle smaller than
the other. He ordered his shoes made
accordingly. His directions were
obeyed, but when he visited the shop to
try them on he picked up the small
shoe first and attempted to get it on the
lareer foot.
'Look here' he exclaimed, in a
burst of petulance. "I told you to
make one shoe larger than the other.
Instead of that you have made one
smaller than the other."
'evert hi a 3 has his pr i c it," a
falSk doctrine.
Rheumatic Paine Quickly Relieved.
The excruciating pains characteristic
of rheumatism and sciatica are quickly
relieved by applying Chamberlain's Pain
Palm. The great pain relieving power
of the liniment has been the surprise
and delight of thousands of sufferers.
The qnick relief from pain which it
affords is alone worth many times its
cost. For sale by M. L. Marsh and D.
D. Johnson.
A woman has a great head to be able
to get into all the queer clothes she
wears without losing herself in them.
When it is a peekaboo shirt waist see
ing is believing.
Monroe Inquirer.
"The devil told God that Job bajj
been bought. The devil in this day
and time says that every man has his
price, that you can buy any man.
That is false. I would not say every
man has bis price. I would not make
that declaration anywhere, no not if I
were alone in a windowlesa. cellar at
midnight on the dark of the moon,
and if I did lay such a thing I would
fry to death in my own blushes."
The foregoing are some of the pointed
sayings of that original thinker and in
structive speaker, Dr. K. T. Vann, and
were said in a splendid" sermon in the
First Baptist Church last Sunday night.
That e truth forcibly put. The man
who ssys that all men can be bought
"takes the measure of his own small
soul and thinks the woftd no larger."
If you would hear that there is no tem
perance and that everybody drinks, go
into the barrooms; if you would hear
that there is no purity and no virtue,
go into the lazarettos where the moral
lepers herd and jrou will hear that
statement made. The dishonest man
accuses the world of dishonesty and
the unclean man accuses the world of
uncleanliness.
rnlldr.n Ought to Go Harefooted.
Greensboro Record.
People are getting so fashionable that
it will not do to let a little tot of a girl
go barefooted except around home or
in the back lot. They are sent to
school diked out in shoes and stockings,
and when they get sick and puny, as
they often do, parents wonder why their
children are not more robust and
healthy. Style and pride has much
to do with it. Turn them out bare
foot to school until frost comes; boys
and girls should practice it until they
are at least ten years old, but if a girl
of this sge should be seen on the streets
without shoes, some people would faint.
Yet a bars foot on God's ground is most
conducive to health.
Student Only a Rurden.
Ralph C. Roberts a student of the
University of Illinois, and a star foot
ball player, was killed in a railroad
accident last fall. His administrator
brought suit for 10,000. The railroad
moved that the suit be dismissed on
the ground that no evidence .had been
introduced to shov that any person
was depending upon Roberts for sup
port, and that Roberts, being a college
man was really an expense to bis
parents. Judge Wright, in the County
Court, decided to-day that the point
was well taken and dismissed the case
PLASTICO
PLmico
economical material for
tinting and decorating
walls, superior to kalso
mine and wall paper, and
much cheaper than paint.
PLaSTICO?.
tureastof other wall coat
ings, and none of their ttis
. advantages.
Packed in dry powder form,
in white and tints, ready
for use by adding cold
water. Full directions on
package. Any one can apply
it Sample card of beautiful
tints for the asking.
Antl-Kalaomlno Co.
etAio MPIBS. MICH.
For sale la Concord by the Yorke fc
Wadsworih Co.
For sale A good farm or family horse,
guaranteed to work anywhere, at a
bargain. M. F. Fun-, No. 91 Mill street.
Ap. 14 2t.
We have for sale another excellent
cottage on Spring street, with bath
room, etc. Price $2,415. See Jno. K.
Patterson & Oo.
Hi
18
prtisMa in navoV ft i-IaVivT rtail raft Vti rr ska.
UUk V MV UBS. Lt .SS U1..UW St-U.A Dl AsVlffjU fM
wet weather nays for dry." excerjt when
yon consider that
KELLXim
SURE CURE
FOR
INDIGESTION!
has paid, is paying, and will pay in
"JolrV Good Health" many times its
cost. So if you suffer with nervousness,
heart burn, soar stomach, nausea, Dines
and other symptoms of Indigestion, the
great destroyer of health and happiness,
and at the same time make a paying in
vestment, get a bottle of this wonder
ful preparation ; by waiting longer yon
necessitate more medicine and longer to
find a complete care.
Gibson Drug Store
Eiht-room dwelling for sale, on St.
Mary's street, including a store
house. Has frontage of 85 feet, and is
150 feet deep. Property rents lor f U a
month. Price only $850 cash. Jno. K.
Patterson & Co.
25 Pounds
of good, clean
BICE for $1.00
Arbuckle Coffee, 15c
per nound. All other
Groceries
Dry Goods
and Shoes
to suit the trade.
Highest Cash and
Barter Prices paid
, for Country Pro
duce. Sec us before selling your produce.
ill
All
1
Plane to Get Rich
are often frustrated by sadden break
down, due to dyspepsia or constipation.
Brace up and take Dr. King's New Life
Pills. They take out the materials which
are clogging your energies, and give yon
a new start. Care headache and dizzi
ness too. At all drag stores, 25c ; guar
anteed.
It is the man who talks most about
bis wine closet that goes home and
hunts through the cellar for a bottle of
beer.
1' I"' Vs.'"" in ni mr-aa. jtnea .'firri.. fn
v
let
A man', mark Is his Honor. It stands for him and
he stands for it It's the old Saxon way of signifying
good intentions.
The right to be protected in the exclusive use of a
trade nark has been long recognized by the common
law and enforced by the chancery court of England
and this country.
The Government puts its mark on a bond to give it
value.
The National Biscuit Company puts its trade mark
In red and white on each end of a package of biscuit,
crackers and wafers to distinguish these products and
to guarantee the quality, and it does.
To more clearly comprehend the real value of this
' trade mark, try packages of BUTTER THIN BISCUIT
and LEMON SNAPS.
NATIOJslAL BISCUIT COMBAlY
II
v J
Its
Trade Mark
Do you want to live where the climate is mild the year round
where labor is never oppressed by stress of weather, and where
animal vitality is never lost by mere conflict with cold?
Do you want to live in a region where the resources are more
varied than in any other equal area in the world, where the division
of great ranches affords a fine opportunity to get a small farm that
will assure you a competence?
Do you want to live where, with a minimum of labor, you can
grow profitable crops of grapes and small fruit, oranges, lemons,
olives, prunes and almonds, alfalfa and grain, where crops are sure,
business is good and capital easily finds profitable investment?
Then go to California, where both health and opportunity await
your coming.
The Chicago, Union Pacific and
North -Western Line
is the most direct route to the Pacific Coast, and there are two fast
through trains daily via this line, over the famous double-track
railway between Chicago and the Missouri River. One-way Colonist
-TN tickets are on sale daily, March I to May 15, at
"J 'P ) the rate of $33.00 from Chicago, with corre-
rj ) spondingly low rates from all points, give you
Vi V.' an unusual chance to make the trip.
These tickets are good on daily and personally conducted
excursions, on which a double berth in a Pullman tourist ;
sleeping car front Chicago costs only $7.00. Round-trip tickets
are always on sale from all points at reduced rates via the
Chicago & Northwestern, Union Pacific and
Southern Pacific Railways.
FILL IN THIS COUPON
AND MAIL IT TO-DAY.
"Ws4
W. B. KNISKERN,
P. T. M. C. & N.-W. Ry., Chicago, 111.
Please mail free to my address, California booklets, maps and full
particulars concerning rates and train atrvic.
tx caposipf)poaqaoapsicasosmca faftamaiwKfairevftwhrgapagaqapssvi
. - . ww" ""----"--.-- -----
An Opportunity!
Ta Get Furniture Cheap
We have purchased the entire stock
of Furniture of the late J. T.
Pounds. In this lot were a hun
dred plendid Oak Bed Steads, and
and while they last we have con
cluded to put a price on them that
will move them out in a hurry, and
you will have to hurry too, if you
want some of the bargains.
Iron tted
--a 1 BW Titawj
We are very proud of all our New Spring Stocks of Furniture and House Furniings. Our
prices are so fair that our trade is growing larger every day. Let us get better acquainted
this year. What say you ?