Covrm ' Concc J ami -Cabarrus. Like the Dew, John B. Sherrill, Eklltor and Publisher. PUBLISHED TWICE A W t OO a. Vkar. Dua m Advahcm t Year. Volume XXXIII. CONCORD, N. C, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1907. NUMOER CO j: i 9 . I 1 L : ljj As Well as large -ones are welcome here you need not wait until your business has as sumed great proportions before opening an account'; do eo to-day. , Our patrons regardless of the amount of; business done, receive every courtesy in all matters of business entrusted to us and there is nothing in safe banking we cannot perform. Come in and talk it over with us. Citizens Bank and Trust Company To the Farmers ! We have bought a large lot of r TOBACCO and will make you a wholesale., price by the box. " Buffalo Bill at $2.75 per box. Tagless - at 02.75 per box! "i -i This Tobacco is worth $4.00 per box in a retail way. - We also have a large lot of FRESH 100 Mackerel in a tub, which we will sell in a tub- at $3.25 a tub. Call and see us and bring your produce. The D. j. Bost Co. 2 3. Why a NATIONAL BANK is Best AVNational Bank 'is tinder the supervision of the United States Government. Laws governing National Banks are very strict. They are required to submit to the government a sworn detailed statement FIVE TIMES a year The stockholders are held responsible for DOUBLE the amount of their stock. This is for the benefit of the depositors The capital stock is required to be. paid in cash, and must be held intact for the benefit of the depositors. The Bank is required each year to add to its surplus account before declaring dividends. This i9 tor the further security of the depositors. A National Bank cannot loan more than 10 per cent, of its capital to one man or firm. , The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits $26,000 I No large amount required to start an account. - I ..iy.ti)ltl V Do You Know What It Does? The I Keeley Cure It relieves a yers n of all desire for strong drink or rtrugs, restores his nervous sys tem io its normal condition, and rein states a man to his home and business. For full particulars, address, THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, GREENSBORO, N C. A KING OF K0ONSHIRERS DEAD. Believed to Eat. Sold More Contraband Liquor Than Any One Man Who Ever Lived in Eia Section. - B. Oliver Jenkins died at Chase City, Va., last week, after an illness of about four hours. He was a na tive of York county; S. C, and there is little doubt of the fact that he made and sold more contraband whiskey than did any single indi vidual who has ever lived in that section. He was about 58 years of age at the time of his death, and was actively engaged in the making and selling of whiskey for a period of not less than forty years. For a number of years after the war he lived on a valuable farm, which he owned near Clover,' and which now belongs to his estate, and ma'de liquor and sold it all over that section of the country in defiance of the laws of the United States. Numerous ef forts were made by the revenue offi ce . to catch and punish him, but with little success. Along about 1883 his traffic be came unbearable to the good people of that section, and he was waited upon by a committee composed of representative citizens, who informed him that he must either discontinue the sale and manufacture of whiskey entirely or leave the state. Jenkins knew the men who gave him the ultimatum and very correctly con cluded that they meant every word they said,' and, .therefore, decided to leave. He moved into Cleveland county, N. C., and finally settled near Grover, erecting an enormous plant, part of which was in North and part in South Carolina, the state line running through his property. This outfit was operated under the auspices of the United States Gov ernment, but it is said that no op portunity to evade the law was allowed to escape. . He continued the business with more or less interruption from the Government authorities until the passage of the Watts law in North Carolina a few years ago, and owing to the fact that that law forbids the operation- of a distillery outside of an incorporated town of less than a certain size; and that he could not get a site in Cherokee county that was two or more miles distant from a church or public school, he finally abandoned the work in which he had been engaged so long and attempted- to content himself with more re- specranie ana legitimate occiipa- 10ns, such as farming, merchandis ing and buying and selling cotton. About two years ago he became interested in timber lands in Vir ginia and as a result invested heavily in that state and about a year ago moved there with his family. He was eminently successful as an ac cumulator of property, and it is estimated that at the time of his death he was worth in the neighbor hood of . $200,000.. He was twice married, and leaves a widow and nine children, six by his first wife and three by his last. Jenkins was an illiterate man, but was looked upon as being a genius as a money-maker by his friends and associates, and as being strictly hon est in all his dealings except where he came in contact with Uncle Sam in the manufacture of whiskey, and then he considered it his. inalienable right to defeat the law. A little girl about 4 years old, was coming with her father from the ba- kery, where he had purchased a small oaf of bread. When about half way borne tne little gin looKea up ner ather and said: "Papa. I'll carry the bread if you'll carry me." Ill 10 Sell Your FVivui. Buy a Frm, Buy a City Lot. See JNOe K. PATTERSON & COMPAQ, The Live Real Estete Agtnts, Concord, N. C. TEX LOIfDOJt LIBXL LAW. Xews and Obaerw. The attempt to repeal or amend the London libel law ought not to succeed. The law was passed by the unanimous vote of both branches of the General Assembly 6ix years ago, after it had been discussed and carefully .considered for two whole years by the public. It has not caused any man injured by any pub lication to be denied full redress and gives no special privilege to any newspaper. As construed by the Supreme Court in the case of Osborne vs. Leach the law does not deny both actual damages and damages due to mental anguish caused by the pub lication. It is a moderate and iust measure of protection to editors who in the hurry of printing the news may be imposed upon, but even then it is ho protection from actual dam ages incurred, including mental an guish. It merely opens the way for an honest editor to make correction and to be free from vindictive dam ages. A full hearing on the pending bill to repeal or amend the law was given by Judge Winbone.'s Judiciary Committee last week and after hear ing the argument pro and con, an unfavorable report was made upon the bill, the vote standing 6 or 7 for an unfavorable report to 2 for a favorable report. That ought really to settle the matter, for the commit tee heard full argument and their unfavorable report is a righteous re port, worthy of full endorsement at the hands of the House. At a meeting of the executive com mittee of the North Carolina Press Association held in Raleigh yester day it was unanimously resolved to be the sense of the meeting that no legislation amending or repealing the London libel law ought to be enacted. That action is entitled and will no doubt receive the considera tion that it deserves by the members of the General Assembly. It is not only the editors who are interested in preserving the very moderate libel law on our statute but it is a law in the interest of the public for a free press that is not at the mercy, of a vindictive person who will accept no ample and retractive apology for an unintentional error. - The London libel law should stand untouched. . UHSATISPACTORY CROP. Thaw Killed White When Hypnotized! So Valet Says. Ixndon, February 22. The South Wales Echo, of Cardiff, publishes a remarkable story told by a man who asserts that for five years until Oc tober; 1905, he was valet and confi dential servant of -Harry Thaw. The man's name is James Morley, and he is a Scandinavian by birth. He asserts that he is in possession of evidence which, if given before the court, would have the effect of obtaining Mr. Thaw's acquittal. His employer was, he says, on friendly terms with a certain Frenchman, who used to hypnotize Mr. Thaw, at first for diversion and afterwards for set purposes. Ultimately the French man had complete and unbounded hypnotic power over Mr. Thaw. Stanford White, the murdered architect, quarreled with the French man over an actress. Mr. White accused the Frenchman of being an impostor, masquerading under a bo gus title. This aroused the French man's bitter hate, and Morley says that he holds letters proving the murderous passion which the for eigner harbored against Mr. White. Morley declares that Thaw was the unconscious tool of the Frenchman, and committed the murder of Mr. White under hypnotic influence. . Conditions Warrant Planters in Holding Beat Grade for a Good Price. The closing days of harvesting the cotton crop of liM)6-7 reveal unusual conditions. The crop U admitted to be next to the largest ever gathered, but the scarcity of- desirable grades is giving no end of trouble to the broker who sold to the manufacturer for monthly delivery. Coupled with this scarcity is the disposition of the grower to hold back such choice grades as the brok ers would much rather see come for ward. The combinationjs develop ing a condition that is not at all sat isfactory to the manufacturer. The 1906-7 crop is the , most unsat isfactory crop ever grown unsatis factory to the producer because of such poor quality he could not real ize above 9 cents per' pound for the bulk of the crop ; unsatisfactory to he broker because he cannot get the grades he contracted to deliver ; un satisfactory to the manufacturer be cause the cotton delivered to him will not measure up to the standard of the requirements of his mill.- And now the broker is begging to be released from his contract, saying the storm is the cause of it all. These same brokers sold contracts last spring believing that the farmer would be compelled to sell the crop around 8 cent basis middling. So Mr. Broker et his pegs to make a big profit off the farmer. Now he should take his medicine like a man. In fret he will have to do so. because the farmers who now hold the good grade cotton have no notion of turn ing loose. North Carolina farmers are urged to study the cotton situation, hold stiff what is on hand until you are offered your price, reduce the acre age 10 per cent, from last year, and if any broker comes around trying to buy your 1907 crop before you have it gathered, sick your dog on him and run him out of your county. Uur cotton association is. gjrowing fast. Are you helping it to grow? 1 C. C. MOORE, . Pres. N. C. Div. S. C. A. Charlotte, N. C, Feb. 20, 1907. Two Years of Litigation Over a Hound Val ued at Five Dollars. . After a legal battle extending oyer two and a half years the ownership of a speckled hound dog was settled by a jury in the Superior Court at Wadesboro last week. , The fight was between Mr. Henderson Davis and D. B. Dunn, a well known col ored man, both of Burnsville town ship. The dog is hardly worth $oat the outside, but Dunn, by the time he pays his lawyers and the cost of the several proceedings will probably be out considerably more than a hun dred dollars. , Prooi of Merit. Plasters during is unimpeacha- superiority and most skeptical The proof of the merits of a plas ter is the cure it effects, and the vol untary, testimonials of those who have used Allcock's the past sixty years ble evidence of their should convince the Self-praise is no recommendation, but certificates from those who have used them are. Allcock's are the original and gen uine porous plasters and have never been equaled by those who have sought to trade upon their reputa tion by making plasters with holes in them. Avoid substitutes as you would counterfeit money, Time will tell but gossips manage to tell it first. it )) Ml W II fffllK it if , .rilEiV j fctVtf '. :. ? - -.ri.Jl?v- TO GUARD "SHIPS against the unseen dangers at tea, the United States Government maintarns lighthouses. To guard your home against the un seen dangers of food products, the Govern ment has enacted a pure food law. The ' law compels the manufacturers of baking jxjwder to print th ingredients on the label of each can. : The Government has rtiade the label your protection so that you can avyi aaj- iead. it carefully, if it does not say pure cream of wfar ..vux' ft back and Sap pfauniy, P017DER ROYAL is a pure, creasl i of txtar baking powder a pure product of grapes aids the -esuon adds to the health- fulness of food. . XVC8T CHILD SgQCU) WORK. A Cotton Mul Mas Thinks TVst IU Wave I SMtisBeaUhaaa AbMt Cteld Labor Scattac4. A CbarSvtte Otorvr. Yesterday a cotton mill man of this city was shown the article hich is printed below, from The Chicago Inter-Ocean, on the subject of child labor. He read the story with much interest und said it began to look as though the wave of sentiment that has been going over the country against child labor had reached its maximum, and would soon begin to recede. "In the recewdon back ward." he continued, "it may go further than it ought to go. Hap pily, however, the cotton mill men themselves were conducting move ments of betterment before this wave set in and these have been going on throughout the agitation. Happily also the cotton milt- men will not abate in any degree this work of betterment after the professional re formers have expended their ener gies."' L; The article from The Chicago Inter-Ocean reads as follows: "I am in favor of child, labor! Every child ought to work everyday in his life. Child idleness is worse than child labor. When the boy is given no chance to accomplish any thing is it any wonder that he takes to the reading of blood and thunder stories and attempts to practice the acts of villainy he reads about? Is it any wonder that we are a nation of grafters? Four hours of school and j four hours of work alternating will ! make every child self-sustaining af ter the age of 10." -With this declaration William E. Watt, principal of the Graham school, yesterday afternoon delivered an ad dress at the meeting of the Rouse Woman's Club, formerly the Anna B. Holmes club, in the clubrooms at Thirty-first street and Fifth avenue, in which he declared that child idle ness is one of the greatest curses of the nation. - ! "With a peculiarly devilish intelli gence society and the laws have pre vented the boys from getting work that really is work," he said J "He may run messages and sit on a bench with a crowd of vitiated youths larger than himself. He soon absorbs their vices and quits work. It is a miracle that all of them do not go down to perdition right there. But there is such good stuff in our boys that they have, in spite of the follv of their elders, a real desire to be come reputable citizens. This strong desire saves some. Others go to ruin. .-.-! "Those who have legislated against child labor have done a great thing. ihey nave saved some thousands of children from degradation and decay Dy tne operation of their laws, but they have permitted many thousands more to come up m enforced idleness where their bodies have been permit ted to rest and grow, but where their minds and souls have been pois oned to a degree that makes the wrong to the laboring children pale into insignihcance by the contrast hiVery child ought to work every aayoi nis me. ne is born into a world which requires work, and he ought not to be permitted t6 form habits of idleness and shirking Child idleness is worse than child la bor. ! "Knowing this, we brinor our chil dren up in enforced idleness. We fill our houses with furniture and f rang ibie things that the children must not get against nor handle. We leave no work in the house which they can do. We force them to feel mat tney are oi no present use in the world, but a great source of an noyance. They must be dressed by othersf their hair must receive slavish attention. It is grown long and viciously curled if possible. Their dresses are made to button in the back to prevent any child's helping himself into his clothes. "Coming up in idleness, the child is compelled to seek unnatural and secret means of gratifying the de sire to accomplish something. So lying and cheating are carried on in and out oi school, cruelty is prac ticed, depredations are committed against life and property in the streets near home, peddlers are as saulted, helpless animals are tortured and in most neighborhoods the adults admit to you with lamentations that the children about there are as f ul of the very devil as they can stick. Is it any wonder that we are a nation of grafters? We have been subject ed to years of training in the devil's shop, where these things are con cocted." i - - Loaff Jy tb King! is the popular cry throughout Eaiopean conn trie s ; while In America, the cry of the present day ia "Long lire Dr. Kin?' New Dwoovery, King of Throat and Lung Remedies I"; of which Mn. Jul Ryder Paine, Truro, Maas., says: ''It never fail to give immediate relief and to quickly cure a cough or cold." Mra Paine a opinion ia ahaxed by a majority of the inhabitants of this country. New Discovery cores weak lungs and sore throats after U other remedies have failed ; and for coughs and colds it's the only sore core. I Guaranteed by all Druggists. 50o and $1.00. Trial bottle free... .-"i' The state legislature of "Oregon has passed a compulsory pass bill which makes it obligatory on the part of the railroads to furnish free transportation to state and district J officers and ; to county judges and sheriffs. The bill has gone to the governor for signature but what his action will be is problematical. TBI CHILD LABOR E1LL So well doc th rtropaaed child labor law recently agree! upon fill the requirements of tabor conditions in this State that the few agitator who are yet urtKatun! art hard put to it for argument. Nobody has th interests of mil! childnrn more at heart than Mr. J. W. Iluy. editor of The Biblical Jcorder. and Mr. Clan-nee II. I'oe, editor of The. Iro pessive Farmer. We havo copird Mr. I Ui ley's endorsement of the bill. In this week's iu of The Progres sive Farmer, Mr. Foe says: "A splendid result of the spirit of goodwill and co-operation is shown in lito agrwment concluded between the organized manufacturers of the State and th North Carolina Antt Child Labor Committee This agree ment contemplate the exclusion from the mill of children under thirteen years of age. provides that no child under fourteen shall work ater than 10 o'clock at night, and also include a compulsory school aw for children under fourteen years of age. A feature of the com pulsory school law proposal which is calculated to give it great practical working value is. that mills should not be allowed to employ any child over thirteen years of age who has not attended school at least four months during the preceding twelve." The opposition to the bill is nar- rowfd dun to a una! I eVriet:! that would W atfsl .th rtotHng -S t of a law that would iwrv?uiy cr.r ? the hated nuU .cwrtr: TV proposed bt is entirv-l Is t.t h i to th children and the ru'l onttr to suit themj but U'wiil rae lH rn dorwmcnt tt all the c'r.rr r minded ropf In the Sta'.e. SWSf"SJ. IT r".-.ri... nU r4al AUfaM"Law i ft t The atrkt cwrwtructun that h& been placed upon the artU-pa&a J rx vUion of the railrua) rate law y thf interstate commem? cmmiun em tinue a uroc of vimp!aml irt: Thany quarter. The ctmm4n hat been bombarded from U aide. One correspondent of the nmmi. ion, who did not ien himr(f. drxp ped Into rhjnx.' fashioning h: t tul. ution after a well ' known rg, a follows : H.ri4 Ytwi4 a 4 hU Hiul mi r-rB. Thd Idlcman man does not-know what It U to enjov ret. for he vx not earned it, Ilard work, more over, tend t only to gi u rest for ths body; but, what U even more Important, peace to the rnlnd. If we have done our bet wo can rct In peace.Lord AfVctury. ' I Many a deaf person has sound opinions. pZp "MtlN - Wsi iff 1 1 DoKt Suffer eull rilht lon$ from toothoLchc neurtlcjios. or rheumatism t - t, 5 sC s Liiviiivei kills the pain quiots the nerves exnd induces sleep At eJl defers. Price 25c 50c b1.00 Dr Ecrl S.SIorv, Bosfor,Msi.U.S.A.- V V s -i 3 8lotc AvrnklccCoiTjbmalior) LLA311U DIvvAjL Any ULW Ths only combination permitting a$ much or as little book space as wanted and additions to that space as desired. The Desk Unit can be, combiner! ith'any number of Book Units in unlimited variet , it. For home library or profcfiorui squalled for utility, corivenlcnruv, ! and see it, or cut this o jt a;i J ; c- u ot arranseme office it's un beauty. Call lor catalogue No. 103 containing full infonn.it' . i. lJ-t;lfWv!'lfr''.';-: O, SB I Professors, Lawyerk, Debtors. you like the com bin Scholars, do ation ? "The Store that Satis6es" would like to i eason the case with you. Come in and we will do jovt good. tillS fill A r