' r - THE CONCORD TIMES. , m i Price ' - , , ,. . . " And Only ' 1 ' - ' '' ' l '. "" ' " ' - :-,-.-- )j Cubarrul . :o John B. SHBRRikV Editor and Publisher. ' - PUDU8HED TWIOE A WEEK. . . ll fiO a Ykan, Dv ir Ataii I like the x ar J VOLUME XXXIV. , . ; r ' CONCORD, N. 0. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 17, 1907. '" jj t CW' j -ija IL- g I f ARMERS' UNION FIXING, PWCtS. IbAD DBT COUtCTlNG AGtWCY HURlsl NO-SAIOO.N TO'VN. I MISSIONS. I" A RfAl fAKMtR. j l GRI4T SAlf m i - i I I) YOU EVER STOP TO THINK! -.'many opportunities tbat a 'banking , ,,,, tioii puts within your reach? your money. h von money without delay or red i- vou advice and assistance free of , i - yuu a place of safe deposit for even unw which, if persistently saved, ,11 eventually develop into a snug bal- ij.-sist you in placing your money iv it will be safely and profitably in- '-landing with the bank establishes ,ur credit in the community. These Things are Worth About! ggSgBMLfll"! " i ir -s - . We Have Just Received from the Potteries in Ohio the finest line of - .. . l wits m nra m :iiu i the people-of Concord and vicinity have ever had the opportunity of seeing. i . The Prices Axe Right ! I it will pay you to see us if you need any of the lowing 1M:iW -Bowls. Teas. Oblong Dishes, FlatDishes, Milk Pitchers, Round Dishes, Ewers, and Ba sins. Yours truly, The D. J. Bost Go The Farmers National Union met in annual convention in- Little Rock, j Ark., last week, adjourning Thurs day night. The total membership of about 1.500.000 was represented by 300 delegates or more, most of these attending from the South or bouth west. . - The absorbing topic was the fixing of minimum prices for crops, espe cially of cotton. Of tobacco but lit tle was said, ad the tobacco growers have1 not yet come into the Union in sufficient numbers to be able to con- l trol the price of their product. The btate Business Agents after a careful and long examination of the reports of correspondents from every cotton erowins: cotton, recommend ed 15 cents as the minimum price for j the present crop, and the report was ! adopted without a dissenting vote. Following is their report: we, the committee appointed to fix the minimum price for cotton, re port that the basis for middling shall be fifteen cents in September, with an added one-fourth of a cent for each month, beginning October I first." This means that the price in Octo ber will be 15!c, November 15ic, December laic, and January 16c, and that if the farmers by co-opera- Ition and by warehousing maintain I this price they will add from $200,- 900,000 to $250,000,000 to the wealth of the South over and above the i usual receipts of the crop. The Committee on Marketing and Warehousing reported a plan to es tablish warehouses all over the cot ton belt and sell direct to spinners, and the Committee on Education, with more study and more knowledge as the keynote to its report, urged the teaching of agriculture in the public schools and greater educa tional advantages for the rural com munities. The minimum price on grain were fixed as follows : No. . 2 wheat, $1 , corn, bOc. ; barley, buc. ; rye, $i ; pats, 35c. Thursday just before adjournment the Union took up the matter of cot ton seed and fixed the price for this season at a minimum of $20 a ton. Not a Confiding Nature. Mr. Lucas I don' like Farmer Jones. He's too 'spicious. Mr. Rastus What's he done now ? Mr. LucaacHe's crone and DUt a six-foot bahbwiah fence aroun' his hen coop. . Mamie-"! believe in -woman's rights." . . Gertie Then you think every woman should have a vote?" Mamie "No, but I think every woman should have a voter." Its Methods Hit the Dead Beat Hard and Causes Kim to Cough Violently. SUtetrllle Landmark. The Bad Debt Collection Agency is causing more or less of a stir in Statesville and those .who have been in the habit of paying when they got ready, and too f reauently not paying at all, are much perturbed. They. complain bitterly aeainst this new and unusual method which is disposed to make a man pay his just debts. whether he wants to or not. or stand exposed in the community. The mental aniruish on account of this new and unusual method of doing business is sufficient for several dam age suits. It is all right to eat a man's rations, wear his clothes, take his medicine, iead his newspaper, or otherwise use the product of the brains and labor of the other fellow for your comfort and convenience and let him suffer if anybody is to suffer. He may have to scrimp and economize to pay hit own bills, if he is honest, while you o are him, but that's all right. It doesn't break your rest. He may buy goods on 30 days' time, but if you pay him 12 months or five years he ought to be thankful for your business. He may have to pay his bills whenever they are due, pay his labor at the end of every week, but you can owe him for years and nev er give a moment's thought to how strained he may be for money. You can tell him a dozen lies about the payment, but if finally, in despera tion, he puts the screws on you you feel outraged. Your honor (7) is impugned and if you can do the man any harm you re going to do it Why ? Because he is trying to get what belongs to him and you have compelled him to force it out of you. The - whine abou t forcing people who have been unfortunate, etc.. is but a cloak. Not one business man in 100 will oppress a debtor who is really unfortunate. Ninety-nine per cent, of those who obtain credit usually get more consideration than they deserve. The method is for those who show no disposition to pay and make no effort to do it. Lvery body knows that and the talk about oppressing people deceives nobody. The Landmark holds no brief for any collecting acrency : it has no ac counts with them (but it may have), but it is submitting some general re marks on the general proposition which no honest man can gainsay And business men who have lost hundreds and thousands by dead beats are more or less amused and are pleased to note the alacrity to which people are responding to state ments who do not as a rule pay any attention to them. A luminous ISustatioa of the Prosperi ty of A Community Without Saloons. Bibltckl Kecvnler. It has come to be the last appeal of the liquor ron that we need the liquor business to give the. communi ty prosperity. Recently we paid, a visit to High Point, which was not only delightful in the sweetness of fellowship with the saints, but the marvelous revelation of the city's prosperity. With its sixty or more factories, all running in full blast and with healty prosperity, and its 12,000 people whose standard of liv ing must equal to the best found in any State, One lind3 a living protest against the plea for the necessity of the saloon to help a community or its business. ' We found, perhaps, the best equipped city schools in the State. A greater per cent, of the population live in their own homes than in any other manufacturing town it has been our privilege to know. There are but few idlers to be seen on the streets, and labor is made profitable to the employer and employe, because it is sober. Above all, the most striking advantage is the happy homes of the people which are protected from the ravages of the saloon. High I'omt has never had saloons. While it can boast of s erne of the State's leading business men, captains of industry, not one of them would consent for the city to have a saloon with a view to aid ing business. When the advocate of the saloon as a business enterprise for a community will bring out the record of a single place that has been more prosperous because of the saloon, or an argument that reasona bly favors it, it will be time enough to plead that it helps business. Cigarette fires Cost Gotham About $2,- 000,000 Each Year. New York, Sept. 15. A yearly chart has just been completed cover ing 6,357 fires in Manhattan and the Bronx, and calling attention to some interesting facts. It is estimated that fires started by carelessly dropped matches and cigarette cause New York city a loss of about S2,- 000,000 each year. The city has an average of over 25 fires every day, and fire losses in 12 months from all causes aggregate something like $10,000,000. Every time an alarm comes -in, whether it is false or not, the cost to the city is $50 for wear and tear of the fire apparatus. The city also pays out something like $500,000 for damage done to asphalt pavements by children s bonhresin the streets. The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits $29,000 . ur Business Solicited. Every Accommodation Exten ded Consistent with Sound Banking. i.. COLTRANE, President. X. D. COLTRANE, Cashier. JNO. P. ALLISON, Vice Pres. 9 e :vmammmmsmtm-cm"u SEABOARD VII lIIVE RAILWAY I THE EXPOSITION LINE TO NORFOLK 9 e c -i 4 S 0 (? o 0 ? . 9 ? 6 r. i JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION Hampton Roads, Norfolk, Va. I V 1 2(5 to November 27, 1907 : U SPECIAL RATES FROM CHARLOTTE. Hound trip season ticknts iais lujuml trip ft-day t ckets S , IU)uq1 trip 10 day tickets Uouud tnp coach excursion tickets 'm . . . . . TiiMnav there- bxcuraion sate soia o&yvrior "y","nr nr Parlor tea seven days ana enaoreeo'-noi nwu u oioiu, -tiier tickets go on sale April 19th nd continue until close of exposition. s from other points poiuts apply tq your nearest &earxaru flgem or irepresentotives named below. From the fields to the Factory, thence to over a million pleased customers-gpes Bailey Brothers' Tobaccos & & 'tM-xoelletl IPiussoiigror' Service VIA Seaboard Air Line Railway Watch for announcement of Improved Schedules. For information and literature, address O. HI. Q-JLTTIS, T. IP- A.. RAMSh, N. C, or J. F. MITCHELL, C. P. A., Raleigh, N, C. j ! BINGHAM ISCH00L J03 1908 KoynxpoldTom oTherhooU no, received. Viclou. boys expend jonjr as d,fvT!?d. H,n,clude No' better tobaccos made than those Manufactured by Bailet Bbotbem, Winston-Salem, N. C. NOT IN A TRUST. We hear a great deal tbe tlays about home ami foreign missionary Fork and a great deal is being- done along these lines, which U alright and proper. lluMhere w Kmething radically wrong in the practical operation of this work when a r& like that brought out in the court here last wvek U possible, in thi Christian land. We refer !to the Bristol girl who was a witness in court and looked to be 15 or 16 year old. She U the most pitifully ig norant, person, of that age, we ever saw on the witness stand. She aid she had never heard of God, dd not know what state or county she lives in. does not know how old the U. could not spell, read or even count. had never been m a church or school house. Yet Mrs. McLean an intel ligent woman, testified that the girl is not an idiot or imbecile, but did wok about the house and farm with ordinary intelligence. Now that such dense ignorance should exist in our own county is enough to bring shame to the face of every citizen and is evidence that the home missionary effort ,is defec tive in its application. The school committeemen of every township in the county should see to it that such cases as this one get the benefit of the public schools and if they cannot secure the attendance of such children they should report them to missionary socities of the different churches. An educated Chinaman would have just cause to criticize a religion ( that permits such a case to exist in' as enligtened a community as Cald well county. North Carolina. h mMH of tta Brain Brttaw ILrrK V TW lUtW TWtt. Falling in with - owns - " . i : -i. . thH( .1 his bttsincftgL IfU farm' cwruisu of urrm, and he laid he tl:irff Irvt IjiXc U an did not care o dl at w hundred i untii rirtlrt,' dollars an acre. lh main m.irv-v itU of strtw tr4 damn Into th crop is mtt potaUea. He ha trust11, ffn the tntrrmin14i plat iorrnaKg rrn lrx houM Ban Put on Liquor Sellers. Norfolk,-Va., Sept. 15. The great council of the United States Improved Order of Ked Men, in six tieth annual session here, this after noon adopted an amendment to the laws of the order barring from mem bership in the future all saloon keep ers and bartenders. This is not re troactive and does not affect the pres ent status of such members of the order. The great council rescinded all legislation enacted at the Nigara Falls session last year m relation to the substitution of the "jewel" for the "sash" and went back to the old form of regalia in its entirety. A proposition to admit past sach ems into memoersnip , oi me great council was defeated by a vote of 126 to 68 and only past great sachems as at present will be eligible in the fu ture. -' ' To Eat Horse in Montreal. Choice equine steaks, colt veal. horse Hamburger with onions and similar delicacies may soon be served at Montreal cafes, if present plans for the erection of a special abattoir for the slaughtering of horses are put into execution. Dr. Laberge. municipal health officer, favors the ! project, and declares there is no rea son wtiy-norse meat snouia not De placed on the market, especially since the price of beef is now so high Horse flesh is now universally used in France, and it is believed that the large French population in Montreal would serve to make the project suc icessful. If established this will be first horse abattoir in America. Southern lands. Southern r'arm Matiaiue. - , That a number of men of means have not established themselves upon estates in the South has been due principally to a lack of acquain tance with the advantages there in the shape of cheap but fertile lands. equable climates and opportunities for beautiful development. These, however, are beginning to be proper ly appreciated, but it will be a long pay before there could be anything like a crowding out of a small farmer by great land owners. Still, the possibility is not one to be viewed lghtly. It 13 a fact that the most prosperous and happy communities are those of the small but independ ent farmer. The growing worthless ness of the negro as a farm laborer in the South, and his many drawbacks as a tenant or owner of land, are bringing it to pass that .a greater and greater number of Southern armers are obliged to depend upon their own resources in working their and. Deserted to the negroes, the and of the South would steadily de generate. To maintain the white armers of that section in their place of independence and to bring the soil up to its full capabilities a large increase must take place in the body of white immigration, and the fact must be kept to -the front that $10.- 000 invested in productive farmine is worth more to the South than $100,000 invested in land to be occu pied salely for pleasure. j Difficult. A teacher in a certain Eastern school asked her class to draw a pic tufe of that-which they wished to be when they grew up. The pupils went diligently to work with paper and pencil, some drawing pictures of soldiers; policemen and hne Jadies etc They all worked hard but one little girl, who ' sat quietly holding her pad and pencil m hand. rne teacher, ooserving ner, asKea ; "Don't you know what you want to be when you grow up, Anna?" "Yes, I know," replied the little firl. ''J know I want to be married, ut I don't know how to draw it." - A Charmed life. Dunne a certain battle the colonel of an Irish regiment noticed that one of the men was extremely devoted to him and followed him everywhere. At length he remarked : "Well, my man, you have stuck by me well to day." ! it was me mother said to me, says she, 'Just you stick to the colonel. Patrick, me bohoy. and you'll De an roight Them colonels never gets hurted." Matrimony makes a man awfully restless a little while before the f pr ! ever alter. How a Dog Keeps Cool. Youth's Compaulon. Prof. E. L. Trouessart. of the Paris Museum of Natural History, in a recent lecture on animal heat, remariced that the dog. whose re spirations in repose number only 25 minute, may in running acquire m - a rate ox respiration as nign as Bo or 50 a minute. The effect of this acceleration favors the dissipation of animal heat by evaporation from the pulmonary vesicles. ine dogi per spires very little, or not at.all, by the skin, pulmonary taking the place of cutaneous transpiration, it is tms fact which enables the dog to pursue its game so long and persistently. Animals of the cat family, on the other hand, do not possess this pe culiarity, and for that reason tigers. panthers and lions lie in wait for their prey, but do not pursue it over long distances, lhe bird possesses pulmonary transpiration in a very high degree. Japan Won't Try IL . Washington, Sept. 14. That Ja pan will not make war upon the United States is an opinion of Tsao, editor of the South China Daily Jour nal. He said the Japanese states men are quite clever and know Ja pan could not carry on the struggle with the American nation. Japan is a poverty stricken country a3 com pared with the United States. She might seize the Phillippines ma hasty struggle but in the end the outcome would be victory tor the United States. ear rieven arret in rUt, and hopes to net fl.t) on the cron From two to three hundred dollar it raircnp. and the rric avrrarr fifty-five cc nti a buhei. The uota- oes are not carted off to town arv! thrown on the local market, but are ept until retSruary. rarcfu vrrtl and shipped to iKnnts North an.) South. Including the ahrinkajr arvl the loss by rotting, thi farmer loe about 'Si per cent. The potatue are not put in hills but in a hou auit. bly ventilated, where they can be ept without trouble. In addition to potatoes, this farmer rawe a lit tle cotton. ome corn (not for the market but for use), pea and hav. crop of broom corn w raided, arid small broom factory is run. Mer chants in Hickory gladly take the output of the factory, which U not so large as to interfere with the other work on the farm1. Consider able attention is paid to cantaloup and watermelons, and a neat um is realtzetTfrom these. I-aatjtprinjr. on 00 hills of tomatoes. $i;X) was real. ized. This patch of tomatoes barrlv occupied an eighth of an acre. The secret of successful farming, this gentleman told us, liesno in making oig money on one crop, out in mak ing little money on many little ones. t this particular time, while he weather, is dry. ho in busv makimr rick, which he will sell at a good rofit when he feels like it. He nuvs that everybody is busy all the time on his farm. There are no vacations. no "layinjr-by" times on that nlaec. Ie works long hours - as long as a merchant or a manufacturer. He makes every moment count and ev ery edge cut. His head is bothered precious little about who is going to be governor ; there is no money in that question to him. He is a far mer right, and if you want to know more about the matter write to J. L. ngold. Hickory. N. C. and when it rains he will answer you. Didn't See Nothin'. Three tired citizens a lawver. a doctor and a newspaper man sat in a back room recently in the light of the early dawn. On the table were many empty bottles and. a couple of packs of cards. As thev sat in si- ence a rat scurried across the hearth in the darkness beyond. The three men shifted their feet and looked at each other uneasily. After a lonir pause, the lawyer spoke : "I know what you fellows are thinking," he said, "you think I thought 1 saw a rat, but I didnV art? (MiuatcJ. The water b quit hallow at ftmt and you find a rare enjt)nrnt for a time in wrunrUn your tr about In the ml that forma in the bottom in pliot of ae. cuttorrl wrnd. Vo ar oUIfvd to wade t-ut for some dlatatxw before you experience the peculiar buoy an. cy of the lake, ttnrt. you feci your fret trying to wim out from under you. Vou find it mare and mort difficult to walk. You begin to float in pit of yourself. Then vou re h you are non-ainkable. ou can't sink ir you want to. Throw your self on your back or sit down or try to switrund you bob about like a nwkuu chair in a frehet. You feci a though you hail been turned to cork. You can't help looking at the phenomenon subjectively. You don't see that there is anything and fels like ary other bathing wateruntil you get some it In your eye or In your mouth. Then you wish you hadn't come. Wan water U sweet in corririson. In fact the chemist tell u it is eight time lea salty. You can't drown in the lake by inking, hut you can t suffocated to death, which is iust about as uncom fortable and undesirable. We found signs everywhere warning o against Ijeing too talkative or too frolicsome in the water. , When we came out we brought with us large deport of salt on our skin. As the water evaporated we found ourselves covered with white crystal. Only a strong shower-bath of frchh water or a good clothe brush cap put you into lit condition to dress. ' A Beast of a Husband. A dispatch from Madison, WU, says : After servings 1(5 year In the state's prison. Mr. W llhefmina Baehr is at liberty to-day by pardon of tho tlovernor. At the age of sixteen she married a widower named liachr be cause her parents told her to. Haehr is thirty years her senior, and the girl became, a household drudge. One night a lrveler, Michael Sell, stopped at the Haehr home for the night. Haehr, who wa a graining man, resolved to put Sell out of the way, and told Wilhelmina to pftlnon the food, and she did so, Sells dying the next day. Confronted with ar rest, Haehr blamed hi wife, and she was accused of the crime and pleaded guilty on the husband' ad vice and received a life sentence. Soon after he entered the penitenti ary her! husband killed himself, 1 riven to it by remorse for the act. REMEMBER For want of a nail the shoe was lost, For the want of a shoe the horse was lost. Li. i Li-1 You know the balances Saw Nothing That Equals Blowing Rock. Lenoir Topic. Mr. Moses H. Cone, who recently returned to his home at Blowing Rock from a trip around the world savs that in point of beauty oi seen erv he has not found a place that equals Blowing Rock. He said that the only locality that approachedjjur mountains was in Switzerland and these do not come up to the beauty and grandeur of the Blowing Rock region. What a noted summer re sort Blowing Rock will become when the macadam road is opened up ! "I have nothing but praise for our new minister." "Yes, so it seemed when the plate went aroumd' - "The Store That Satisfies for fear that for the want of a book that was lost for the want of the test book-case ever sold to the Stobc-?1 IEiastcBookcase Amer,can V Is the original and only per feet sectional bookcase made. The doors are non binding, dust-proof, operate on roller bearings, and posi tively cannot get out of order. Bases furnished with or without drawers.' Call and see them, or send for catalog with interior views showing them artistically arranged in library, parlor, den, hall, etc. No. 103 the catalogue to ask for. The Globe Wernicke The boy might lose a good deal of valuable time, pa tience and actual knowledge. We have the sole agency for the sale of this In dispensable piece of Furniture. Preachers, lawyers, doctors, farmers, mill men and everybody that needs a book-case should call and see our line of Globe Wernicke Units, Cabinets, Etc., Etc. Bell & Harris Furniture Comp'y. V