Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Feb. 4, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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f. " ; " -" -" s"SSsssMsMsMSsasSsWMMMSsMSMM ' k-MMHHHHMMIMHMKM 1 ilVlKo 1 rv H Jhn B Shbrriu, Editor and Publisher. PUDLIOHCD TWICC Ai WBCK. 1 CO YssJkSa, Dw is Volume XXXIV. CONCORD, N. 0 TUESDAY) FEBRUARY. 4, 1908 NuMotn 02 OTIhxo .TOIL: lc!1 D:ato IL-iillkics ttlhiQ - EDoot. ETTTTJ GONGORD THE REFORMATORY. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE CITIZENS BANK and TRUST COMPANY ' . . i- made in response-to. the government call at ' close of business December' 3rd, 1907. RESOCBCE3. Loan and Discounts SUM IS 03 Furniture and Fixtures 4,520.78 Caah 00 haod and du from banks ' M.190.21 iw, 110.00 LIABILITY. Capital Stock Undivided Earning Deposits Rediscounts . 130,000.00 3,355.08 135.801.M 15,900.00 $lio,lin.60 in We solicit Your banking business. Our increase growth and patronage during the past year make ua better prepared than ever to take care of the interests of our customers . . - - r . It you are not already a patron of this bank, we extend to you our invitation to become one. lord of tlrootorsi s C. O. Oillon W. A. Bost B. L. Umberger A. N. Tames N. P. Yorke M. L. Marsh -Paul P. Stallings W. W. Morrison Cans. McDonald W. D. Pemberton Gro. L. Patterson A. Jones Yorke IL L. Parks -Chas. B. Wagoner J. Lee Crowell, Attorney. -A TOMES YORKE. President. CHAS. B. WAGONER. Cashier. II. L. PARKS Vice President. I0HN .FOX, Assistant Cas-hietL Citizens Bank- and Trust Company. KEEP7 PROHIBITION OUT Of P0UTK1 Sews Tobacco I Tobacco ! We have just received 1000 pounds of Tagless Tobacco that we are go ing to sell to the farmers at wholesale price, $2.75 PER BOX. The D. ;J- Bost Go. Opposite the Court House and Gibson Mill. The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits $29,000 Your Business Solicited. . Every 1 Accommodation Exten-. ded Consistent with Sound Banking. 1 1 1 . . D. B. COLTRANE, President. . L. D. COLTRANE, Cashier. JNO. P. ALLISON, Vice Pres. ikkkkkkt kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk SOUTHERN RAl hWAY Operating over 7,000 Miles of Railway. Quick'Route to all Points, North, South, East and Weft. Through Trains between Principal Cities and Resorts!. Affording First-class Accommodations. 1 Elegant Sleeping Cars on all Through Trains, Dining, Club 1 and Observation Cars. i For Speed, Comfort and Courteous-Employees, travel the southern Kan way. ! Rates. Schedules, and other Information furnisbed by addressing the undersigned. Hsrdwlck, Pas. Traffic manager, 1 w. n. xayiee, u. r I Washington, D. C. R. L. Vernon, T. P. A., Charlotte, IT. C. 1kkkkkkkkkkkkkkHkkktkkk 1 via s. H. Wedding Invitations ! ! Printed or Engraved in the -; Very Latest Style. r j W wish to ear that we can tarnish the most beautiful. -Wedding Invitations, nrintMl or mirraTea. that . can be produced. Call and see onr complete une of samples. , , r, - " ' Prices: Engra Ted, $9.00 for first CO printed, $2.60 for first 60. ! The Times Printing Office, ' Concord. N. C aboard Interchangeable Mileage . Books.' 1 The Seaboard has tflaoed n sale I. one mil- In ir..i.i.v.M.i,u iMMiks for f2 "o. -Hum" mi month-. omi nnlv for irsl In Sirtn fur filln-t Ml tlia fiklliiwillV rOAilS ! taboKro. lr Line Knw. Southwn Rail Udlc roast Llnf Carolina and NoriV veslortl. Ahurdeen and Asheboro, Norfolk and Bouttwsrn. (Beaufort IM vision). Danrliw west rn. C H. OAT11B, Tr.TeinnrseerA,en..C K. L Craven & Sons i . . -1 wHI hiiy all your cant and wronght Iron steel, brass copper and old rubber. Wll pay you In Cash or Smith Coal. Force Triscuit Egg-O-See Wheat Hearts Rolled Oats Rice Flakes Korn Flakes Grape Nuts Shredded Wheat Cream Oat Meal Cream of Wheat ' - ' Royal Seal Oats ' Quaker Hominy Toasted Corn Flakes . Flake Celery Food Ferndell Oat Flakes- Granola Mixed Grains Ferndell Hominy Grits DOVE-B08T CO , Fhone 21. Pure Food Good, , iffy Tii"" ' TnyrrrLH NOTICE. Newi and Obeerrer. I The fact that the State of North Carolina is soon to have a Reforma tory, known as the Stonewall Jack son Manual Training' and Industrial School." is a source of gratification to hundreds of people of the State, who believe that our Boys need a chance. been announced, located this institu tion in Cabarrus county, and within two miles of Concord. The donation consists of two hundred and twenty seven acres of land and some cash. The site follows the railroad for nearly one mile, and -is elevated. This reporter learns from those who have seen it that the site is an ideal one. In addition to this, the trustees have secured an additional sixty- three acre tract. This will give ample ground : besides it removes the possibility of having any too-near objectionable neighbors. It will be pleasant' news, through not unexpected, to those most inter ested, that the institution is in the mtdst of loyal friends. The children of one school in Concord have f or- niahed Supt. Walter Thompson's office with a handsome roller-top desk and other necessary office fur niture. The ladies of Concord re- centlv srave a second rendition of the operetta, "The National Flower, and raised funds to purchase standard typewriter for Mr. Thomp son's office. These necessary things have been thrown in as good meas ure, on the cart of Concord. A reporter saw in the city yesterday Mr. J P. Cook of Concord who is chairman of the Board. He was haoDy. He had just received a tele gram from Superintendent Thomp son stating that the deeds to the site had been delivered, and were being registered. For a month or more one-difficulty after another had arisen in securing a good and sumcient title; the trouble was chiefly due to the fact that some of the heirs to the property live in different, far-off States. Except for this delay, the work would haveN been further ad vanced.- - - . But the delay hasx been .worth while. But the State became the owner of valuable property; and thus far. not one cent of the State's appropriation has been touched. ; Mr. Cook tells the reporter that a civil engineer has i been secured to make at once a complete map of the grounds: also a scheme for the streets, pavements, sewer lines and location of buildings. This work is expected to be completed in sixty days, at which time the Board 01 Trustees will meet to receive the engineer's report and pass upon it. In the meantime, Superintendent Thompson will spend a time at Glen Mills, Pa., and Louiavill, Ky.. where two most excellent institutions; are located. The ; information to be gathered by an actual presence from day to day in these institutions will be invaluable to Mr. Thompson, who Mr. Cook tells us is enthusiastic, and has thrown into the work the powers of a strong body, a vigorous mind and a big heart. some donated material is now on the ground and other donations are expected. It is now no longer theory or a long-drawn-out hope; for when the weather opens in the spring, active constructive opera tions on the Training School wil begin. Mr. Cook believes that there is no reason why the work may not be sufficiently advanced to admit probably twenty-five boys as early as September. Then the development will go on gradually and constantly in keeping with the nature of the school, and ulways with respect to general scheme to be completely worked out and planned at the be ginning: for the trustees contended and properly so that they are build ing for the future and for per manency. . 'It will be recalled by those ' who have kept up with this matter since the beginning, that the board Trustees is composed as follows : J. P. Cook, chairman. Concord; H. Tucker, vice-chairman, Asheville H. A. Koyster, M. D., secretary Raleigh; Caesar Cone, treasurer; Greensboro; D. B. Coltrane, Concord J. J. Blair Wilmington. R. O. Ev erett Durham; Mrs. M. A. Jackson, Charlotte ; Mrs. A. L. Coble, States ville ; Mrs. I. W. Faison, Charlotte ; Mrs. G. P. Erwin, Morganton ; Mrs. W. N. Reynolds, Winston ; Mrs. W. H. S. Burgwyn, Weldon ; Mrs. H. Y. Cooper, Henderson ; Miss Easdale Shaw, Rockingham. The personnel of this Board "of Trustees is such as to give assurance to the State that it will be a working board, for it is composed of loyal North Carolina men and women who are giving freely of - their time and talents so as to make a chance for boys who otherwise might go in the drift-weed. - It is , a board which means business and which has al ready demonstrated its fitness for the work before it. TUXttUOStS AND CItANllNlSl sxzzxm osamNt?. rECIS KOUNG 001 U3. aad Observer. ' One of the strongest and happiest speeches made In the coure of the debate on the prohibition measure in the House yesterday was that iot Representative R. P. Price, of Rock ingham, who appealed lor a pohtical f in the determination of what onrht to he voted on as a moral as nnnvxi trt a. rjolitkal Question.' Mr. Pr& nut Btroniriv the opinion of fimt men of both parties when he declared that the effort to maxe po litical capital out of prohibition was not only ill-advised but would be. In the lonir run, disastrous w ear who undertake to foster it. In the hour when vthe sentiment of the btate nas crystalized upon the submission and determination of this vital question bv the people, he declared that no party either should, or could afford to seek to maxe an issue out ui u for partisan advantage. In this crisis be declared there ought to.be a political armistice. ... When Mr. nice, aiier conciuutng his speech, left the house for a mo ment, be was met oy air. cowman, Rpnuhliean. of Mitchell, who con gratulated him on what he had said and stated that he and other Repub licans in his county and section would vote on the merits of the prohibition question when it was presented with- out reference to any political signm cance that it might have. The incident . is significant and it points a principle that has been dem onstrated in the past, and, we take it. will azain prove itself in the fu ture. What has prohibition got to do' with politics? The fact that it happens to be proposed at this junc ture by the Democratic party that has lent itself to temperance meas ures imposes no obligation on a Dem ocrat to vote for it as a partisan measure ; at the same time it holds out no hope of partisan success to a Republican to vote against it. Ane matter is one of moral significance, to be determined by the majority of the voters of the State, The people will so consider it, and whoever hopes for political advantage! bjr opposing it on that ground is doomed to disap pointment. That this is true is proven " by the support that the measure has from such .Democrats ex-Governor Jarvis and Senator j Simmons, and from such Republi cans a3 Judge Pritchard, ex-Judge Robinson and Mr. Bowman. Ibese men, fundamentally differing on nearly every political question, are together on this moral question. They are together because they are wise enough to see that there is no politics in it. v r : In 1881, when, the prohibition act of the Legislature was put to a vote of the people, some Republicans ra the State sought, under the leader ship of Dr. Mott, to . gain political power, by opposing the measure. Although prohibition failed at that time by a large majority they failed in their effort, that was made over the protest of many wiser Republi cans. The people although at that time against the prohibition proposi tionsaw the shallowness of this course" and rebuked it. . If any such attempt is made this year, the peo ple will again rebuke those who seek to make political : capital put of a mOral question. In the interest of a wise determin ation of a question productive of constant differences and agitation, it is to be hoped that when they come to vote the people will refrain from considering the proposition in its po litical aspects and that every voter in the State whatever his party- will on that occasion vote his convic tions regardless of party expediency or political hope. The question .at issue is not one that is political. It is not one that is the partisan meas ure of any party. It is a vote to de termine what the people think upon a matter that vitally concerns them selves, to whatever party they be long, or wherever in the State, they live. B3toore Sua. At a meeting of school officials, teachers and parrots at McCoy Hall recently emphasis was laid by speakers on the necessity of training children to habits of cleanliness, in order to prevent, or minimise Infection with tuberculosis. Investigators affirm that most, if not all, tuberculoaU in fections enter the body in childhood. It may be eight or ten Tears before the effects of infection manifest themselves, but the germ of the disease is planted in early youth. It bides its time and "gets in its work with disastrous, results when the body is weakened by "undue exer tion, fatigue, privation, dissipation, or illness.? It is incumbent accord ingly upon parents and teachers to prevent infection, if possible, by in culcating habits of cleanliness and by providing noninfectious condition in the home and school, Dut, 11 in fection cannot be averted, to prevent development of the disease by xeep-' ing children well nourished, strong and healthy. A well-nourished and robust person is proof against in fection, provided the strength be kept, by careful regimen, up to the proper mark. ; Much discourse upon health pre cautions in the interest of children is useless because vague and im practical, but Dr. Jacobs went into details with alist of "don'ts." The necessity-of keeping the hands of children clean a difficult task was insisted upon. Then they are taught to wipe their feet on the doormat, to deep their fingers and pencils out of their mouths, to avoid spitting on the floor, etc In spite of all pre cautions infection - is possible in crowded schoolrooms . containing children coming from , insanitary homes. It is, however, gratifying to learn from Dr. Buckler, who was one of the speakers, that cases of tuberculosis are not numerous in the schools of Baltimore. His ex amination of 20,000 pupils within the last 12 months revealed, he said but three cases. , . Wtrertn Mam. The movement agitating more re ligious observance of the Sabbath, which was started here recently, is the subject of much comment now. Of course, this Is a step toward the betterment of civic moral, but there are aUo tome phases of the question that cannot be adjusted uniea the scope of the association is rokj na tional. . . ! j This is the matter relative: to run ning trains. Suppose Stalest Ule really desired that no trains should run through their yards, hut that Asheville and Salisbury did desire it. It would be necessary for the trains to come through here to satisfy the majority. If the trains were forbid to run- on Sunday this, of course, would stop the Sunday newspapers, which is another, thing the agitators want stopped. ! I The principal thing, though, is to put a stop to selling merchandise on Sunday. This is the best feature of the agitation. A man has ! just as much right to open his store and sell pianos and beef steak and hair I The prk f !iiryr Wcomh rbesprr. .Farty of the comntoliurs of hie were marked d-nra ia (hporm ber, twenty-one r aJrmnnrd is ptk. while forty -Ave remained un er artjred. The lUrmlnchan Af liersU Mjn that Nihm rrour are ctififtidefied it Is irrn that uftly breed' stuffs and tuikhng materials were advanced last month ; fruit and chemk-aU remained urtchanvd, while live stork, provisions, hides and leather. tciUW. metals, coal and cuke. 0!, naval stores and mis cellanecua all sold at lower priors mre groups out of thirteen. The general levrl of values is rsMdlv fall- ing. and it U nearly down la that of the year but it is still far above the low level record of July I. l.tsO, whkh was the lowt of the Ut six. teen years. Fifty-seven commodit ies are now lower than they were one year ago, ana thirty-one are higher, while eighteen are un changed. The trend is unmistak ably downward, and if the deprecia- mm a . . 110ns 01 January ana february are brushes and cabbage as they have to I equal to those of November and l sen toDacco ana annas. 1 ne a men cm people have simply developed the drinking and smoking habit to such an extent that! it takes seven dsys in the week to satisfy it. 1 This does not apply to this city, however. There Is better order here than in any other town of this size in the State. Not a single druggist here sells drinks on Sunday, and this is about the only city in the State where they do not. The Sabbath is generally observed here by all the citizens, and seldom, if ever, is this peaceful condition ruffled. Relative to the agitation we might say that cember even the retail markets will show what the trend is. 1 1 taller, however, respond slowly to falling prices, whereas no class of merchants acts more quickly on increases in priceJ "The articles that were marked up in January were wheat, com. oats, rye, flour. lie sheep, butter, cheese, macktrel. coffee, sugar, beans, peas, apples, jute, flax, re fined petroleum, cotton seed oil, lime, brick and cotton seed." To Endorse Mr. Moore. Statesville already has the local tea- j cnwiotM uinrmer. Word from BVer Williams. ! "I has seen de po' man on his knees, hollerin' mightily ter de Lawd, an' I has seen dat same man git rich." an wen dey said ter him: Am t you de man what been cainm 1 sr 1 a s 1 1 1 s 1 1 a on de Lawa so: ne nor nis neaa high, an' say, 'WhoL me? Go 'long man: you dunno what you talkm 'bout. 4 r Damaged by aa Automobile. "Billville balloon . made a great record all things considered in the recent race," says the Banner, "but got, home badly disfigured, having been run into by a wild automobile which was trying to play leapfrog with a telegraph pole. While up in the elements we saw some of the politicians of the country, but they looked smaller than ever to us. The sheriff, pf the county, who has an airship of his own, thought we were about to leave for the next world, and headed us off, after a high chase in mid-air, But we are safe at home again, where the dreams in the val ley are preferable to the thunder of the hills." - !- . Man in Casket Ready for Burial Found ; - to be Alive: Roeky Mouul Echo. ' In a letter received by a friend in this city information is given that near-Hamlinton last week a Mr. Gurganus who was ill with pneu monia and who was thought to be. dead, narrowly escaped being buried alive. The body had been prepared for burial and had been placed in the coffin, when sounds as if cough ing were heard coming therefrom. Upon opening the casket the man was found to be alive, and at last accounts was on the road to recovery. : He Thought Me Stopped the Paper. 1 It is said an acquaintance met Hor ace Greely one day. and said: Mr. "Have you?" said the editor, "Well that's too bad," and he went his way. The next morning Mr. Greely met his subscriber again, and said: "I thought you had stopped the Trib une?" "Sol did." r'Then there must be some mis take." said Mr. Greeley, for I just come from the office and the presses .a -as were running, tne cierics were as busy as ever ."the compositors were hard at work, the business was going on the same as yesterday and the day before." i "Oh!" ejaculated, the subcriber, "I didn't , mean that I had stopped th paper;T stopped only my copy of it, because I didn't like your editor ials." ' ' - ! "Pshaw!" retorted Mr. Greeley, "It wasn't worth taking iip my time to tell me Such a trifle as that. , My dear sir, if you expect to control the utterance of the Tribune by the purchase of one copy a day or if you think to find any newspaper or mag azine worth reading that will never express convictions at right angles with your own, you are, doomed to disappointment." i Mrs. Gregory and Her Son May Have Killed the Old Man. ' Charlotte Obserrer. i There have been no developments tending to clear up the case of Zeke Gregory, who was killed near David son about ten days ago.' The old a m a mm SS woman, his wire, wno is in xaecxien- burg jail charged with being impli cated in the -killing, is nearly 70 years old. A stick with which she is alleged to have struck him was found with blood on it, and it was stated that a blow from this stick would be sufficient to cause death. The man's head had three wounds, two on one side and one on the other. According to the evidence both Dave Gregory and his mother beat the old man when he came across the "dare" line. L 1 The defendants will presumably be tried at the next term of court, which opens February 10th. tures Of the agitation, and that we cannot obtain national features until the entire country agrees to them. Saved the Train But Lost His Own life. Wesley Jarrett, a white man about 35 years old, an employe of a section force on the Western road, was killed by west-bound passenger train No. 11 Monday afternoon, at a mile post 101, a short distance west of Marion. The section force had the track jacked up and when they heard the passenger train approaching they tried to remove the jack, fearing it would wreck the train. ' The jack was fast and could not be moved. As the train drew nearer all the men except Jarrett fled for safety.. The latter continued to pull at the jack and he managed to get it out of the way of the train, but at the cost of his life, for just as he succeeded in- moving it-the train struck, him, crushing-his head and killing him instantly. - Whether the jack would have caused a wreck had it not been moved is possibly a matter of doubt, but Jarrett evidently believed it would and in his frantic efforts to save the train he sacrificed his life. In view of the circumstances the railroad company should provide for Jarrett's family without waiting to be asked, for his action probably saved many lives as well as a great monetary loss to the company. A fatality seemed to pursue i Jar retf 8 family. He is survived by a wife and stepson. Some time; ago his father met a violent death in the McDowell furniture factory at Ma rion, his brother was killed by a train at Marion and his wife's first husband was killed by a train The famers and friends generally of Mr. C. C. Moore in Charlotte and Mecklenburg county will be asked to assemble at some early date to gi his candidacy for the office of Com misbioner of Agriculture official en dorsement. Mr. Moore has just re tained from a trip to Raleigh and other points throughout the State and in conversation with an Observer man yesterday he stated that he was encouraged over his prospects. The planters of North Carolina are en thusiastically in his favor and many prominent and - influential business men are ready any time to give him what backfng they can. An official endorement from his home county; however, is thought by many of his friends to be the proper way to show him their appreciation and give him a good send-off. Log Cabin Philosophy. : Ef yon gft de rlieumatism, an can't cut yo' capers, don't fp whar a Georgy riddle is in full tune. . ; De growhn er some folks don t amount ter nuthin'. Hit's lake de thunder what makes all de fuss at ter de lightin' done an' got dar and 'tended ter business. 1Iowcome dat de; folks what 'sl was singing', "Heaven is my home." sends fer de doctor w'en de think de time come ter do dar? ' Janes Crr2i a hardy aJ perVnd far IrsvWe. left rl?ttttan Ust Monday fc l tKtnhvt w kt tf Canada. hU dratir iiio Wlft 4 teto the Ant cirrie. Cursl Km ecu red a rwtrsrt foe emrryinf th -mail to tbe few tiered tnhaUtAr.u of Ihno northern wilds. AdiLae ; ef l.;J tnOes will be traveled before he resrhes the end of his Jocrory at rct Mcl,hrrsM. ro the Ualeru Hirer. With the cicrptk! f th f ttt 1) miles, wheei the feur will be ui the entire trip U1 he made by d trains, the. driver r-rartn' relays of fresh dics at puu!VT rn route. At times the thrfmofneter will be J degree below wr, and fVrre Uu tardsare frequent In that dtnrt during the winter months, har.fr r of all kinds will be met every mil of the arduous )oanry, a4, if hi tory repeats itself, he will ke at least one third mail matter before his task is half over. Cornwall snll be unable to pe--k . sucVient food for the lontf trial, and will have to rely on his nrte fr his daily meaL The dogs w ill twtfvi on tallow and rVah. At night the hardy mail man ill erect a canvas ; shelter, make tea from snow-water, and after a frugal meal, from which brvsd and other luxuries will be excluded, he tui! creep into his sleeping bag. IVspttethe great distance, there -are only II rtoJTWrs taren Athabasca landing and Fort Mc pherson, and In order to arcumm dste settlers, who In many caars would have travel hundreds of miles to secure their mall, the carrier is empowered to .deliver precious' letters to them. The weight of each letter is restricted to one ounce. Bb&ful SWa. Michael Callahan, a section boss far the Southern lUulroad in the little town of Ludlow, Ky., hss a keen Gaelic wit. One warm afternoon, while walking' along the- reilrosvt track., lie found a section hand placidly sleeping beside the rails. Calahan looked disgustedly at the delinquent for a minute and then re marked: "Slape on, ye lazy spalpeen, slsie on, fur as long as you slat you've got a Job, but when you wake up you ain t got none." He Knew. A charmingTwell-presrrvetl widow had been successfully courted by a physician. The wed Jing day was ap proaching, and she thought It was time the children should know they were 13 have a new father. Calling one of them to her, she said : : "George, I am going to do some thing before long that T wish to talk about with you. "What is It, ma?" asked the boy. VI am intending to marry l)r. Jones In a few days, and" "Bully for ma I Does ir Jones know It f Bachelor Seal's Sad Life. Everything in Season And this is tho Season for Stock-Taking. Bet on Governor Glenn's Death. Koanoke. Vs., Dlspateb, S7th S. ... ! ' Much excitement was created in a hotel at Bluefield last night when a man from Ohio offered to bet $1,000 to $10 that Governor Glenn, of North Carolina would be assassinated be fore next Christmas because of the stand he has taken in the fight against the railroads. There were no takers. The man claims he had no information that would lead him to believe that a plot had been laid to kill Governor Glenn. ' Governor Glenn has been notified of the man's bet that the executive i would not live till next Christmas. What we 6et Back. Clereland Leader. - It is estimated that! American girls who have married foreign titles have taken $160,000,000 out of the country. From this, of course, must be deducted -about $1,600 which comes back when our women New York Tress. . TMa oVin ma'iA tVu fnw-ioi- - A UIO OCatlJa , , va a a "came from a young seal bachelor, a youth ignorant of love and of life." . t . "How do you know?" the woman asked. - ! "By its fineness, its perfection," he replied. "The pile, you -will note, is like close-cut velvet. Only bache lor seal skins have such a pile. "The bachelor seal," he went on, "has a rather sad life. The big bull seals in the seal islands have each a household of fifteen or twenty wives, but the young bachelors must herd by themselves. ; Let one of them at tempt to marry and straightway a bull slays him. Not till he is big enough to fight and conquer a bull not till he is fourteen or fifteen years old can he know the delight of set tling down in a home of his own. He is not like the human bachelor, the favorite of the chorus girls, the reveller in all sorts of club luxuries, but he leads a hard, ascetic, celibate life, only in the end, as like as not. to make a woman a fine coat, j All the fine coats, I repeat, are made from the unhappy bachelor seals." Use the Panic to Avoid Paying Debts. Washsw Enterprise. ' The panic is a thing of the past in this community, except with the fel low who is going around with a pocket full of money and giving j his creditors the high dodge, as ' he thinks, by talking hard times. But creditors have spotted all such cattle and may have an' opportunity in the future to remind them of their mean ness. Some of , the fellows could make Ananias ashamed of himself when it comes to formulating an I ex cuse for not paying their bills, i Double blessings are all right un less they cjome in. the guise of twins. I get their divorces. High school graduates who start out to set the world on Are soon ; discover that there are a lot of fire engines on duty. The Store that Satisfies I will balance up from Fel-ruarj 14th to 30th. Our stock of. I. i : Furniture and Housefurnishings 'i1' - ' amounting to twenty thousand dollars or more U lor Kale. Cash is tasier counted and iust at pnnent more to l de- j , ' sired than goods. i - - If You XTeed the Goods as Sad as "We Need the Money come in and let't reason together, anil see if we can't make it I profitable for all concerned to exchange. li. Tro-atorY 1 Lot 0:iS5S. house on Frapslin Aranoe At a bargain. Jao. &. TV , HI. .-n partners of ths partnership of S Wldenhouse, hereby notify all haring claims against saia parn "W. ths underslpcned. as surviring ouiima oc 1 persons artnership to exhibit tbe same to us within twelve months from this date and all persons ow ing said firm are expected to mass prompt ttiemenc. . Th,s January . C. SHINN,V , J. L. SHINN. Jan. 8 4w. Surriv Ing Partners. wr 40 acres near r km ml lea from Concord. f K trea Two-story dwel Good ouOiulldinas. - Pr Brafford'a mill Fine orchard ! ne. new lee SISSD sask. jiiLo: MM I L J-20 You naturally would prefer to treat yourself at home, for any foim of female -trouble, wouldn'tyou?" Well, it can be done. No reason why you should not be able to relieve or cure your, suffering, as thousands of other women have done, by proper use of the Cardui Home Treatment, ' Begin by taking the well-known female tonic For sale at all drug stores joe Moorhead, of Archibald, !. T., writes: My wife had suffered for years from femato traTsv On your advice, I gave her the Cardui Home Treatment, and now she hardly suffers at aS. Sold by drugsta. - iTTIlTf IttT ff rill'tlTa WrttedrSaftaecaaVealMliM a ttahJBocfc tarW-mm u S? pm liKllsvUJ A LCI lUi, gyrogi We Have the Goods All Kinds and Prices Tin? let is not too good, and we hire thsrother kind also. are bound to please you; Cofe and We Bet BELL'S UARRiS FUMTHEI! CO P. S. If yon hare an account with us lone wai doe, Ukt thw iM a gwiUi reminds. Wa ean use tha montj. . . V fsiUrsoo aTbo, jao, K. FSttsrson Co.
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
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Feb. 4, 1908, edition 1
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