r NCORD Corned. Twice. Rich Week and Pri:e is Only One Doilar a Yenr. H The Times Covers Concord and Cabarrus Like the Dew. Joh.ni Yi. Sherrill, Editor and Publlqhar. Volume XXXIII. PUBLISHED TWICE A WEEK. CONCORD, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1906. yS .UMBER 84. CO TIMES. Sl OO A. VEAK, DUF - V ANCK. - .csV We Invite your account here, whether It be large or small. Safety for the funds of our de positors, promptness in all trans actions and unexcelled facilities for handling your business in every department of banking, is the basis upon which we ask you to become a depositor. rUi-zflfic Bank and Wfiy.a NATIONAL BANK is Best 1. A "National I'a-ik is under the supervision of the Uiiitctl States ( lovcrnment. 2 Laws governing National Hanks' are very strict. .'I They 'are required to submit to the government a sw'orn detailed statement FlVli TIMES a ear. 4- The stockholders are Ik !d responsible for DOUBLE th amount of their stock. This is for the benefit ot th depositors .". The capital stock is required to be paid in cash, and must be, he'd intact for the benefit of the depositors. 0 Trie Bank is ri quired each year to add to its surplus aefount before declaring dividends. This is tor the further security of the depositors. 7. A National Bank cannotioan more than 10 per cent, ofjiiis capital to one man or firm. Tfie Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits $26,000 I'o large amount required i. Vinol buiMs you up I' and keeps you up Our deljeious Cod Liver prepa ration wtthout oil. Better han old-fashioned cod liver oil 4fld emulsions to restore health foir old people, weak, run down persons, and ofter sickness, colds cot?ghs. bronchitis and all throat a'tjd lung trouble. Try itn our guarantee. Gfibsdh Drug Store. Have jou read the rules gov erning the picture conte-t at Fsust's Studio, in Thcj Times of March loih: No tickets count unless you have invested in Photos at Fousi'?, -Studio. Country People Solicited. Cotfne and eat with us. V: t,. NORMAN, , Proprietor Hotel Norm ; i ( QUASI As tli seasons change and proffer new mai ket-, ',. so do we. We (kirn to Keep Pace Hot I'iiuhes at all Ih.ii: d:iv or ni'lit, from live cent - up. The 'xcellcnt quality of our Si: Steam Bread does qot change like the rea sons, 24 bread checks i. Try a loaf and be convinced. City Bakery and Cafe For 8file!-two vacant lots, each 00x120 feet, Cm west side Allison street.uea Uil L 31 ))). Juo. K Pattns(i) 4- C III wmzii Trust Co. to start an account. J f Which Shall It Be Having tried all other rem- . . Y etnes, win you continue xo k sutler through false pride ? Don't Be Foolish Repeated Eye Headaches sap one's vitality and bring about a general nervous ! t break-down. Let Us Relieve Your f Headache by Eemov- ting ine uauso. Save your Kyes and Ner vous energy. I W. C. CORRELL TTTTTT TYT Y YYTTTYY YTTT YTY Casior-SIoas Company 3 4 r i r i I ..Groceries.. I 3 Staple and Fancy. All kinds of Fruit in season. 3 Country Produce t a Specialty. Dry Goods and Shoes Castor-Sloan Company YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY SAM JONES DISCUSSES DOWIE AND OTHER TOPICS OF INTEREST. Atlanta Journal. I am still circulating in the far west. This splendid Kansas town is situated in the Republican valley, and this is the land of alfalfa and some other things. The farmers are prosperous and the railroads are busy, and the merchants wear a pleasing smile which evidences the fact that they are not losing money I am sure I have traveled over the richest and most prosperous sections of the United States and Canada on this tour. I am sure that as these sec tions shall become thickly settled, and seasons remain and time and har vest shall come to them with the uni formity with which they have for the past few years. Then the wealth of these people will he beyond their dreams of today. The farmers of Indiana, Ohio, Illi nois, Iowa and Kansas are going to the northwest in droves and crowds. They sell their lands in the older states for one hundred dollars and more per acre and then they put out to the northwest and buy the best lands in the world at from ten to forty dollars an acre. North Dakota is as level as a die and as rich as the Delta of the Mississippi and as pro ductive as a Cuban cane field. This tour has a revelation to me, in many ways. If I were a young man I would put out for the north west and let the country grow up with me, and I would be at the grow ing by a wholesale majority. These people are hardy, strong and frugal. One man with the improved machine ry they have out here will cultivate lt" acres in wheat, or rather two men turn the land with six-horse gang men turning plows, and sow the Mheat with drills which sow twenty feet wide, and only in the harvest do they need any more help than tin two men on a--!(-aere farm, and they will make -Jo to :i0 bushels of the best wheat in the world per acre, and they are doing this very thing up there now, and getting rich at it. They only have to work on the farms about three months in the year, and the balance of their time they can be looking after stock and doing many things for which they are well paid. I was in St. Paul and Minneapolis part of two days. The Twin Cities are certainly feeling and enjoying the prosjn.'rity which has come to the northwest. Those immense flouring mills at Minneapolis right in the midst of the wheat belt look like they could feed the world. Our Georgia mills look like 15 cents beside the Washburn and Pittsburg mills. These mills make flour, but they make money for thousands of people, and they are in business to stay. The northwest farmers are great ad mirers of Jim Hill, the railroad king of the northwest. He is the king bee of the Great Northern, the Northern Pacific and the Burlington three of the greatest railroads in the world. He seems to treat the farmers along the line of his road fairly, charging them only 14 cents per hundred pounds freight, which is only about S cents per bushel on wheat. From the Dakota to St. Paul or Minneapplis, the fanners say that without competition and on his own motion, he has reduced the rates per hundred from 2,1 to 1 1 cents in the past few years. Then again, he up put cash prices for the best in all things the northwest farmer can raise and thus stimulates them to the best efforts in all lines of farming. If he is not the friend and ally of the farmer, they believe he is, and that makes it all the same. They have faith in Jim Hill as they call him. Springtime is coming out here in northwestern Kansas, but there is not a vestige of spring yet north of the Kansas line, except the warm weather of the past few days. No FACTS IN NATURE. Not Only Do We Get InpIratIon From Natar, Bat Health aa Well. For nooplo who are run-down an! nprv ous, who suffer from iinliK'tion or lys- fiepsia, headache, biliousness, or torpid Iver, coated tongue with bitter taste 1:1 the morning and piwr appetite, it be comes necessary to turn to some tonic nr Btrenpthenor which will a-viist Nature and help them to get on their feet and put the body into iu proper condition. It Is becoming moro and more apparent tlmt Nature's moat valuable healt'--giving agents are to be found ia f. rc.T plants and roots. Nearly forty years ayo, Dr. R.V. Pierce now consulting phvsician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., discovered that by scientifically extracting and combining certain meli, i nal principles from native roots, taken from our American forests, he could pro duce a medicine which was marvelously efficient in curing cases of blood disorder end liver and stomach trouble as well as many other chronic, or lingering ail ments. This concentrated extract of Nature's vitality he named "Golden Med ical Discovery." It purifies the Mood by putting the stomach and liver into nealthy condition, thereby helping the digestion and assimilation of food which feeds the blood. Thereby it cures weA stomach, Indigestion, torpid liver, or bil iousness, and kindred derangements. If you have coated tongue, with bitter or bad taste In the morning, frequent headaches, feel weak, easily tired, stitches or pain in side, back gives out easily and aches, lelching of gas, constipation, or Irregular bowels, feel flashes of heat al ternating with chilly 9ensationi or kin dred symptoms, thev point to derange ment of vour stoinacii, liver and kidneys, which the "Golden 'Medical Discovery" will correct more speedily and perma nently than any other known agenl. Con tains no alcohol or habrt-forming drugs. All its ingredients printed in plain Eng lish on wrapper. The sole motive for substitution Is to permit the dealer to make a little mora pro tit. He gains; you lose. Accept no sub stitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." Constipation causes and aggravates many serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One & laxative; two or three are cathartic. Krass or budding or trees, or fruits. The fields and trees still look like January. I suppose that down in dear old Georgia that the trees now are as green as the people (in Africa. ) I shall have one week in Kansas, thence into Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas and Arkansas; then home for two days. On the 2i)th of April I shall begin meetings in Ev ansville, Ind. I have been over the Harrfman lines a great deal, and I've never heard any one bragging on him, but I have heard many things said about his lines that doesn't belong in the Sunday School lessons) It is said that Jim Hill's roads are the biggest and best freight lines in the west, but that he doesn't care for passen ger traffic, and maybe there is some truth in that, for they say along the Burlington lines now that they side track all passenger trains for the freights, and I saw that done four times yesterday between Omaha and Hastings, Neb., and we lost nearly two hours in the game. Excell will lead the music and the Blacksmith Preacher, of Knoxville. Tenn., willrbe with us also. The memories of that awful rail road wreck hang to me, and when ever a train lunges or jumps around a little more than a smooth track would make it, I feel my hair rising and my flesh crawling. I suppose a fellow will get over it by and by. I was blocked out from my engage ment at Arapahoe, Neb., last nisrht by a bad freight wreck, but 1 did not kick, because I was glad it was not our train wrecked. On all sides we hear the question, "What about Dowie?" Well, the plain fact in the case is simply Dowie is insane. Dowie has been and is now one of the greatest personalities in the whole world. He claimed too much. He reminds me of the fellow in the saloon, who, having tanked up on mean liquor, remarked to the crowd in the saloon: "Gentlemen, I can whip any man in this saloon." He then took another drink and said: "Gentlemen, I can whip any man in this town." and still no response. He took another drink, and said: "Gen tlemen, I can whip any man in this country." And about that time a big fellow hauled away and knocked him down, and he got up and said: "Gentlemen, I suppose I took in too much territory the last challenge." Dowie claimed too much. I do not think Dowie was or is a bad man. He is more fool than knave. It is his friends that's doing him up. Dowie always held his own with his. enemies, but he owes his downfall to his friends. Old Job of old fought his enemies and whipped them, but when his friends jumped on him he cursed the day he was born. Poor old Dowie! He took in too much territory when he went off to Mexico. Broken in health and mind, and wounded in spirit and disappointed in his ambitions, he won't live long. I pity the poor old man. Yours truly, Sam P. Jones. Young Lady Victim of Unusual Rowdyism. Spencer, April 16. Miss Ida Shives, of Cabarrus county, who is visiting her sister, Mra. R. A. Sapp, in this place, was the victim on Sat urday night of a cowardly attack by unknown parties who threw a bottle into her room striking her in the neck, inflicting slight injuries and knocking a lamp from her hand. The; deed was committed at a late hour and followed by the arrest of Edward Kennedy and E- Weber, of Balti more, who were stopping at the boarding house of the Sapp family. The arrest was made on the charge of disorderly conduct, the two men having climbed upon a porch roof and threw a bucket of cold water through a window upon William Herri m, also of Baltimore, who was asleep in lied. The parties who made the at tack upon Miss Shives escaped. , All of the parties recently came to Spen cer from Baltimore and are strangers here. Hotel Refuses Bernhardt. Chicago, April 16. Though will ing to play in a tent, Sarah Bern hardt refuses to have her dogs shut up in the basement of a hntf Th Great Northern, instead of the Audi torium Annex, has, therefore, the honor of sheltering Ratanadajrriff and Fretillon. When the negotiations wpi- own ed by Mme. Bernhardt's representa tive tor the best suite in the Annex inquiry was made about the accom modations which would be offered the "divine one's" two rr animals The management of the hostelry neiu a conference and issued an ulti matum that the dogs would hays to be housed in the cellar, Mme. Bernhardt was informed of this decision, and replied that she could not be separated from her dogs, even if she had to lease a house. Ancient Sed Sprouts. A cable dispatch to the New York Sun from London savs; "In the course of a sermon last evening, Rev. Mr. Husband, rector of St. Michael's Chuch, Folkstone, said he had a remarkable illustration of the indestructibilty of life. A resi dent of Folkstone, he said, had many years ago received a present of two beans which had been taken from the coffin of an ancient Egyptian. . The beans were probably 2,000 or 3,000 years old. A few weeks ago this resident planted one of the beans, which, after the lapse of ages, ger minated and produced a plant. The plant was "shown on the altr. ' SOUTHERN METHODISTS MEET AT BIRMINGHAM IN MAY. Atlanta Journal. The thirteenth quadrennial session of the general conference of the Methodist Episcopal church, South, will convene in Birmingham, Ala., on May 'A. There are more than one million and six hundred thousands members in this division of the Wesleyan army. There are nearly seven thousand traveling preachers and five thousand in the local ranks. There are forty-six annual conferen- ce. which furnish the men who make up he general conference, each annual conference sending one ay and one clerical delegate for ery forty eight clerical members. There are five conferences in the system of 'Methodism the church conference, the quarterly confer ence, district conference, annual conference and the general confer ence, which is the only law making body in the church. The lay members are elected by the laymen and the clerical by the preachers. Paragraph 3o of the book of discipline says : "The ministers and laymen shali deliberate in one body, but upon a call of one fifth of the members the lay and clerical shall vote separately, and no measure shalrbe passed without the concurrence of a majority of both classes of representatives." The conference has full power to make rules and regulations for the church under certain restrictions. They cannot revoke, alter or change the twenty-five articles of religion ; they cannot do away with the epis copacy or destroy the plan of our itinerant general superintendency ; the cannot do away with the priv ilege Of -preachers or laymen of the right of a trial before a committee, or the right of an appeal. The bishops preside at all the sessions of the body and vote in the case of a tie. There are eleven members of the college of bishops, as follows : A. W. Wilson, J. C. Cranberry, W. W. Duncan, C. B. Galloway. E. R. Hendrix, J. S. Kev, O. P. Fitzgerald. W. A. Candler, II. C. Morrison, E. E. Hoss, A. C. Smith. As some of these are advanced in years, it is likely that the conference will elect two or three more bishops this time. The elections are all by ballot and there are no candidates and no elec tioneering for the placets to be filled. That is, there is supposed to be none. ( 'f course, a good many names are mentioned in connection with certain offices, but a good way to defeat a man would be to "boom" him. There has been a good deal of crit icism concerning promiscuous nom ination of men for the bishobric, coming sometimes from men in high places. It is quite probable that an effort will be made to bring about a change in the law regulating the stationing of preachers. Under the present law the bishop can't appoint a pastor to a church for longer than four consecutive years; The ' Methodists of the northern branch of the church have done away with the time limit, and there is a growing sentiment in favor of taking the same step in Southern Methodism. Some action may be taken to regulate the work of evangelists ia the bounds of the church. HOW JAl'S KEEP STliOMi, The Tidies Kentler Can I.eru Something of VIue from Thin Sach a thing as a weakling is hardly known iu Japan. The wonderful endur ance of the Japanese soldiers and sailors in the recent war has been the liiarvel of all nations. Both men and women are well, happy aud strong. Tire reason for this, so careful iuveeti gators tell us, is that the Japanese from childhood up know how to keep well through care of the digestive system If they have" trouble with indigestion, heartburn, wind on the stomach, loss of appetite, sleeplessness, headaches, rheu matic pains, back aches, or any of the other troubles caused by a weak stom- aoh they treat themselves with some of the principal remedies that compose Mi-o-na, a stomach remedy that has al ready a large sale in Concord at Gibson Drag Store. So uniformly successful has the rem edy been in curing all stomach troubles where it is used in accordance with the simple directions given with each box, that Gibson Drug Store give a signed guarantee with every ') ecu package to refund the money ;f Mi-o-ca fads to benefit. Ttsy take all the risk. If you have any stomach weakness, or nervous or fear that some articles of food will cause trouble and indigestion, here's the op portunity to get well without risking a oent. Those who use Mi-a na are able to eat anything digestible without fear of ill reanlta, Hon. Hannis Taylor, of Alabama, has declined, the offer of the Presi dent of a position on the American mission to the Pan-American Con gress, which is to meet at Rio Jane rio, Brazil, and the appointment has been offered by the President to ex Governor Ay cock, of North Caro lina. Hon. John S. Henderson, chair man, has called the Democratic com mittee of this congressional district to meet in Wilkesboro Wednesday, 25th, at 2 o'clock p. m. This com mittee will fix the time and place for the Democratic congressional convention. WOMAN COUNTERFEITER REFUSED ENTRANCE TO PENITENTIARY. "Look at Me," Said Mrs. Smoot, "and Tell Me if I Look Like a Member of a Counterfeit Gang." Atlanta Journal. Convicted of making and circula ting counterfeiting rive-dollar gold pieces and sentenced to serve twelve months, Mrs. Alice Smoot, 25, and pretty, Friday morning arrived in Atlanta in the custody of Deputy United States Marshal Millikan, and when carried to the federal prison was refused admittance, Warden Moyer notifying the deputy marshal that the Atlanta penitentiary did not take women prisoners. Mrs. Smoot was taken to police headquarters, where she will be kept until arrangements can be completed for her transportation to the peni tentiary at Nashville, Tenn. Both the woman and her husband, G. L. Smoot, were convicted on the same charge. The man was given two years and accompanied his wife and the marshal to Atlanta, where he was turned over to the federal prison authorities. Mrs. Smoot talked freely with a Journal man Friday morning, stat ing that at the time of her arrest on March 2-'!rd, she was engaged in so liciting funds for the building of a new Baptist church at Trap Hill, N. C. Her husband, who was a bridge foreman in West Virginia, was noti fied of his wife's troubles and hur ried to her, only to be met at the train by an officer and locked up on a similar charge. Mrs. Smoot d eclares that while she is guilty of passing the "queer," she did so unwittingly, and that she never manufactured the coin nor did her husband, it having been handed to her by a strange man at the en trance of the postoffice at Winston, X. -. She says she is of the opinion that the police were on the trail of the stranger, and that he gave her the package of money in order to get rid 01 it. At tne tria 01 the woman and her husband the impression seemed to prevail that thev were members of a shrewd gang of counterfeiters, and that the husband and his pals coined the gold pieces while the wo man circulated them. In discussing the charges against her Mrs. Smoot remarked : "I wish you would take a good look at me and tell me if you would be lieve that I am a member of a gang counterfeiters. I tell the truth when I declare that am a mountaineer, born and reared in the mountains of North Carolina. "It seems hard for us to have to bear punishment for a crime of which we are innocent. Since mv arrest and conviction I have become so dis couraged and disheartened that I would not care if they were to hang me, When asked to pose for a picture by the Journal photographer the young woman at first hesitated, say ing she was not dressed up enough. Finally she consented, saying as she took her seat : "No one will recognize me as the beautiful belle of Wilkes." On being questioned further Mrs. Smoot said : "That's what the newspapers all call me." Corsets Cause Dath. A cable dispatch to the New York Sun from London says : At an inquest mto the death of one Jane Sex, of Southwark. a phy sician who attended the woman tes tified today that he believed her death was caused by corsets. She wore two pairs of them, he said. He tound that her liver was nearly split in two, and he attributed her death to heart failure, which was accelerated by the pressure of the iver on the heart. Ten hours between Chicago and New York on trains onratd hv electricitv and makine- an averacrp 0 D - speed of 75 miles an hour is the plan or incorporators 01 the Chicago and rsew 1 ork t-lectnc Air Line Railroad. W. Lee Ezzelle, DENTIST. Prepared to do all classes of Dental Work in the most approved manner. Satisfaction guaranteed. Ottice over Correll's jewelry store. hi 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 m n ru 1 1 1 11 11 mm 11 1 111 1 111 1 mm 1 The Most Co. 1 We have our Warehouse 5 filled with Flour, Shipstuff, s I Meal, Com and Oats. Be I sure and get our prices be- 5 5 fore you buy. S Bring us your Butter, i Eggs, and Chickens. 3 Will give 3'ou the best market price. I DOVE-BOST COMPA'Y Shun 1 1 1 u uiruxfu iTrnrmnara uturoitul I DR. L. N. B TJRLEYSON I B Proffers his Profes- g sionai Services B H Calls promptly attended day B SIDEBOARD TALK. Sidehoitr.ls are not supposed to talk, but money "sure do," and we have made it talk in a Sideboard Deal to our customers' advantage. Solid Car Quartered Oak Sideboards bought on a forced sale. All Furniture has advanced. Sideboards, as long as this lasts tan and will be sold at a Discount of Ten per cent, from last year's prices... If you need a Sideboard all you have to do is to look the line over, and hear prices, and you will buv. Sideboarxs that would cost you at present prices $35.00 for only $27.50. $27.50 Sideboards, now - $22.50 $22.50 Sideboards, for - $17.50 and so on down the line. The store that satisfies is in it on Sideboards. ; -.: 1$ AWN Iljn an mnvJ guaranteed to fit, for SEIi & W - -THE m m m DAYVAULT COMPANY CASH Cash Counts and the people are beginning to find it out. We have but little to say in this issue exeept Guano Talk. i t t t We M, 250 hi c: Ih&io to for Cash Oily, and propose to .sell it to the farmers at a price that will give you some thing to think about. 1 i The Dayvault Company ! Five Hundred Bushels of Seed Irish Potatoes, at prices never before heard of in Concord. f p. ,V: - Hi M - adjustable,willfitany window, put up and only $3.00 STOieiE b mm u. i 1 11 t 11 t 11 11 11 c II I II t II x