Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / July 17, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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, .,m u Shkrri-, Eklltor and. Publish. was tn vAa, VOLUME XXXIV. CONCORD, N. TR I DAY. J U LY 17. 1808. Number 5 . PUDLIOHBD TWICE A WCKK. U . t lo ! a aa-swaa. ' . , 1,1 .' : . ; i 4 1 - " "" " r 0 r 4 to The ! Citizens Bank and Trust Company I conducting a legitimate commercial banking liurfitieas in the . city of Concord, North Carolina, knows that it can. meet the re ijuireiueuts of a most discriminating public. Its strong Board of Directors gives to it ttaudiug Becond to no bank injjthe country ,! and its courteous and obliging officers makes business transacted with it a pleasure. 3) THE FARMERS' UNION. IT IS A TCSE f OJt EUIDISG. , JONES YORKE, President. M. L. MARSH, Vice President. CHAS. B WAGONER, Cashier. JOHN FOX, ! Assistant Cashier. DIRECTORS. Ofo. L. Pat'crson C. O. Gilloo Paul P. Stalling N. F. Yorke M. L. Marsh W. YY. Morrison Y. L. Pemberton Chat. McDonald W. A. Bost B.L. Umberger ! A N.James A. ones Yorke Cbas. B. Wagoner T. L. Crowell.Atfy II II Coffee! Coffee I ' ' ' - i When you wfvnt to buy uood Coffee cKessIp, dotvH fixl! to come and ee us. fT , 1 1) pounds Good Coffee fori . . Fancy Roasted Coffee, per pound. . . . , . . Our Leader Coffee. ( )ur Special. .......... A 5-lb can thp.t sells for $1.00 every whee. $1 00 12VaC ...14c . . .15c ;..88c The D. J I Bost C 6. THE CASH GROCERS. Our Home. The growth of the Farmers' Union has no parallel In the history of the world. It marks the beginning or a rew era in agricultural life. If it is a fact that "in a multitude ox coun sel there is wisdom" the educational influence of an organization that can enroll over two million farmers as members within a short period of five years, is destined to be far reaching in its effect and elevating in its tendency. It is a noticeable fact that many farmers who were never interested in the Farmers' Al liance are becoming enthusiastic and loyal members of-the Farmers Union. While it is an educational organiza tion it does not mean that it is mere ly a negative force. It is pre-eminently a business organization and as such it must take positive , action to produce tangible results. In j its business transactions it proceeds with discretion and; shows no dispo sition to be in any great haste to put into action its plans. To change en vironments that are detrimental to the great agricultural interests it will require time. 10 carry to ma turity plans that) will change the course of history as it relates to agricultural conditions will require heroic work, wise leadership and practical judgment, and those who have joined the Union seem to fully realize this fact. They know, some thing of the obstacles that are to be overcome, and knowing this, it gives them the nerve and the patience that it takes to win. ' j There will be a lot of public meet ings in the organized counties of North Carolina during the next two months. It is the purpose of the of ficials to conduct a kind of educa tional campaign during the leisure summer months, and the meetings will be made as pleasant, and enter taining as possible. " ! North Carolina is the last State in the cotton belt to go into the Farm ers Union, butthe organization in this State is growing) very rapicfly. and by the end of the first year it will be found as active as it is in the older organized States. , .. There will be a called meeting of the State Farmers' Union at Lincoln ton on Thursday, August 6th, to elect delegates to the national meet ing which convenes at Fort Worth, Tex., September 3rd. A IZLUONAIft MUSfiANDUAN. Ktw and Observer. If there ever was a time for build ing houses in which lumber is used now is the time, and those who study the conditions of the lumber marke realize that this is the truth. This condition is brought about b . the slump in the lumber market, u. tome instances there being a drop 01 from $30 a thousand even as low as $5 a thousand, and such a conditio! says in plain terms to those who ex pect to build. "Get at it now evetj if you have to borrow the mone) with which to do it? ! That now is the season for build-i ttrs Raw George W. VtaderbOt Main fnaPy. Broadway Magazine. At Biltmore. in North Carolina. George W. VanderbQt has spent over $2,000,000 in creating the greatest es tate in America. lie has torn down a mountain, built a great castle and owns seventeen square miles of "9untain country. These miles, iwever. are under the must careful Iti ration, either as farming, grsz g or timber lands. t The owner of Biltimore has the acuity of picking the right man for ing is clearly I seen here in Raleigh i the right work. He induced a "book where the contract price for houses is way below that of a year or six months ago. (As the material is cheaper the houses can be erected for less money and this being done, and in some places lumber dealers in order to have a market for their products are joining in with large land-owners in erecting buildings for rent, as these can now be built at figures way within those of a short time ago. If such arrangements as the3e can be made it is safe to advise farmer" from Louisiana to come in to the Carolina mountains and take charge of the , fields, flocks and nerds. ! That waa eleven years ago. and until Arthur S. Wheeler began riding up and down the hills and through the bottoms he had never known of agriculture, except from the printed page. He tested the soil of the few little worn-out plan tations on the estate, he examined the hillsides. He brought into pUy his knowledge of -fertilizing the lUDSTONt UttI DtHTS SI0UAO1 ,,r J, ,. I - I; - Tbt UU Jofca Better ftiditiftaUiatrr Abort SSftO far HtfrtpbobU Specific wludirUsSivcdimUvts. CW.H.HaaiUlkm. -1 t have been thmking today." said a citizen yesterday, "about the won derful record i of the ttuOer mad stoneand its 1134 limes sticking to dog bites, and of all that number not a tingle ease of hydrophobia wf de veloped. It Isi beyond common Be lief." . - i . .:- - : H "I can tell you boys something about that stone." said Col. Tlx H. Gaither. who was one f the party addressed, "but what's the ue? VaiiM on tu-wrUk m.nA fftrevL it all . 'Never mind about that tast part." said the ttrst spokesman. "I am interested in the stone and where it came from, so go on ana leu us wnat ou know." I "I don't believe there is anything in it," broke in the dtnibter, 'llt's all stuff talk about a rock keeping off hydrophobia! Bosh!" ! "But you keep still and let Col. Gaither tell us," said the first man. "To begin with." said Col. uaith- on to DU'omiic xiorr. m nntaiux ikmi. all who are going busy right now. i Especially is this so in view of the fact that it is not known at what time conditions may change again and the market advance. It is the statement of builders that such favorable conditions for the man who is going to build may not occur again in many years, : and the man who desires to have his own home should act at once. I There is an abundance of lumber yards anxious to nil orders, as the longer it stands on the yards the greater is the depreciation, and the general expression is that building now is cheaper by fifteen per cent than it was this time last year, a condition brought by the general depression in business and the sus pension of building operations on a large scale. This gives to the home builder his opportunity and if he is wise he will grasp it at once and not delay, for at any time the advance in prices may begin. . . ; .. . , to build to get I earth., bf crop rotation, of the fodder er. "Old John Butler was a reckless. Profitable Farming on Four Acres. Monroe Enquirer. " " Mr. WE. Funderburk, of Monroe, made on his farm, two miles south of town. 576i bushels of oats, 285 bushels being reaped from four acres I of land. On the same four acre field Mr. Funderburk made last year $248 20 worth of cotton and cotton seed, at an expense of $81.60, or a net nrofit of $ltb.UU. line oais just threshed, the Apler variety, are worth 75 cents per Dusrei or more. but at 75 cents per busnef tne crop is worth $213.75 and was made at a cost of $29, making a net profit of $184.75, to say nothing of the straw which is worth several aonars. rar. Funderburk has sown the four-acre patch in peas. I What Socialism Stands for Charlotte Observer, " " ' t : A Socialist " organizer ; has been norating in Newton and from all ac counts, he took a rank : hold on the subject. The Newton Enterprise re ports him as saying that Socialism means that the factories.' railroads and other big enterprises shall be owned collectively by the whole peo ple who will manage them and share in the profits. In answer to a ques tion he said Socialists did not con- and grain which might grow here. and especially of the live stock which might thrive and yield a profit. He decided that high grade -Jersey cat tle would pay in milk and butter, also hogs and poultry, and that the product of the soil should be first for their benefit So the bare hills became pastures and Iota for the swine to range, ample shelter being, of course, provided. The poultry farm was stocked with record egg layers of high degree, also pigeons, for squabs are profitable. Modem incubators hatched chickens by the hundreds. Everything, however, was conducted on strictly business lines. Each Jersey had her own stall and , a page in the dairy record. Every time she is milked the num ber of quarts she , gives , are marked on the record, as is also the butter test the quantity of butter which the cream would make. All the ensilage and other fodder she eats ia a day are debited against her. When a hen in the poultry house wants to contribute to the egg fund she enters a "trap" nest by; which she shuts a gate which keeps j her a prisoner until the poultry jkeeper finds her. He looks at the number on the feather band around her neck, takes the egg and then releases her. Each hen has also a j record page according to her number, and number of eggs she lays in a month or year or her life are noted on the books at the farm office. . a Seventy-five farm hands are need ed for all purposes, including the milking, which is done by hand. The harrum-scarum, take-all-the -chances, kind of a fellow. Right after the war, and about the-year 1SG9 he had a jewelry -store in the room now occupied by the Biltrite shoe store. One day there came from somewhere in the mountains an old man wearing home-spun jeans clothes, with gal luses made of clotha hard looking; but smart old fellow, and he had come all the way to Charlotte to ell the madstone. "Butler was one of the first he showed it to, and it caught his eye on sight, and he wanted it bad; hut the old man wanted a pile of money for it-so much that he and Butler could not trade. The old man had it carefully wrapped in half-dozen or In looks, at that time, it was about mt be the party first. the size of an egg. and looked like i The tVrmocratk party f th UmUfd States face the coming circ- tu ith the bnsMfst of jrwrcu for victory, diirtvkr.? vpem a dtrr mtnatioo of all tVmncraU t stand to the party. arl laym aakW all paai di'TTrror Xv unite aa a tiartao niou whole In the dcterminatKio to auWed.' ;' j ' With ryan arl Kern and the tJatform utn which these go to the country here is every chance for tumr-M and the news comes from the various sections U that the country ia turning W the IVmncratic trty as the grest hope of all the pvcpk a it tarU Tr the peop arvi their Men and paper who hare atocal in oppotton to Mr. Bryan are awlnjf ing inolirn', and out of th Great West . comes an increaaing demand for his election. Ill wwdora and statesmanship are such that there . i combined tnlhim. and the platform which he endorses in eiplmt terms that which rwans lor the ut in terests of alt the tjoopW, and the advancement of this great country. : Writing concerning the mmiinati" n of Mr. Bryahr the WUmingUn Ii- jtch has the following to say: "William" Jennings Bryan, of Ne braska, for Preaident, No matter what have been our Opinions, and howfdividel we have bren. the great Democratic family mut 1 re-united Those of us w ho didn't want him for the nominee' must bow td the will of the majority and must he content to but party! above personal feeling and above the man lfcaue. while Mr. Hryan, in the opinion or many Democrats may not have been the best man. to head tlie ticlTet, yet there was no division of opinion al4ut the Democratic jarty being the i best party to administer tne affairs of this country. Hence. irom ine , narrowest. vi'wpoini u u ine party I ne ryrwrtw wtr (VII. lUy. of C.arMtc, im a tr of rwr.j eafl.pat4,?!.r.g fof i nvKiiirtwKi by tfc ltbirma Mat C3riVrrUui aa It radAat fo Labor t mtr.irr. fe tard greatly Ukmt lU-raiU'kmfta wt are rwt awtiraoi to having iHim. nationt fvr tie fwm avmft aftrr. lwn th fact that rc Xhm era of Uar!!(fn aM twcr rok moat carddstr for Stat lU-jh-Itcan tvimlriaiira hav t t "draft, ed." this trtvtlul but rartic t arrklng of a tv.Ttinatnn by Ihe Meckk-nhurt man t adutmct rivr. ty, whkh the HrjaUw-atva htuhsy apprwevat. -r IHuatratire f thw arrrcrtatltxi. th following is apnto; Ijarly tn the nwrntne. n mnj tiai lU-publicmn hrre hal girn tht corrrftxtrKWnt h gwm at the nanra of candtdatrs who would le lrlod to run for the State ofKm. Ilu "state" waa as follows; tVivcrnor. Wwond Cox. of GutlfoM; lirutim- ant-tlovrmcr, I. M. M or Win, vf laquotank: Sretary of State. J. J. Jenktna. of Chatham: Tr-a.tifrr, J, H: Wcddingtoo. of Mcrkkmurf ; Auditor, George TritchaM. i-f Mitr h- ell; Attorney iVrH-raJ. A. II. ItW. of lUiman. SuprrinUTHlrnt ItiMIc Instruclkm. J, J Unit. tf Hun coml; (rjrtiin Ommiwionrr, W. K. Talley, f Kandolph; Commia- ' aionrr of Agricilture, A. J. Mj, of Ilt; ltor l.mimiwoftfr, S. K. Vance, of Forsyth; l4rt.r. W. 1 Bynum, Jr., of tluilfwnl; Frank Bco bow. of Macon. ForCkrf. Fifth district, endorse Jhn W. Fnc. of Forsyth, wha may run as an lrWv pendent busintas man's ramlidate. An hour later the latv mak r called up this chritniclpf m tt 4wne and the following conversa tion was had. "HctKt. Jojnrr: Say. wish you'd take Sam Varwv'a nam downolf of that tieket for Labor CxmmisHioncr ami put 0. M. lUy, of . Mecklenburg, un. He's her asking for It. and he ought to lc rewarded for his pluck, and ticaidca he's a first claM fellow." The slate roakr's attention was called to the omtailnn of a candidate for Ctmmlidoner ot Agriculture and he said if hia advice waa followM no nomination for this the would te made. aj that Charlie Cotton Moore would be encouraged to finht It out with Major Graham and Ml th farmers how he was hoo-dwoed out will I f it. . Ef? I IUtia tn tlp. UML fllftl IP l a ra Mav a i m. mm . 4rm mm tMWT, brrr ttUy t Mr. fomnlotp nuinincr ihplnnrla and farms. As to how the change from private creamery has such a mechanical sys- J jewelry.- IlEiSBW BEJAOTI-'Office of Comptroller of lie Currency, , 1 Washington, D.C:, May 26, 1908. ' to Dublic ownership of all the many factories and railroads can be made, he said he did not know, but that will be determined when they elect a President and take charge of the government. But he suggested four plans by which this could be be done.- First bv building publicly- owned factories and railroads and running the others out of business; second, by fixing the hours and price of labor so that the private owners would have to quit business; .The 'axiom that a burnt cm ia third under tne rignt oi enineni dreads the fire does not apply in the domain, as the right of way of rail- case of the ioonsn uouia , woman, roaas is secureu, or m uium wuiua, ,hn nftpr freeing herse f. as the re- by conhscation; iourtn oy seizure. a series of shells placed one upon top of another, the outer one being broken in, and looking,- for the break, like a broken place in a hard boiled egg, except for color." j :" Where did the old min say he found it?" asked the first spokesman, huttinc io asrain. ,1 I i "I was just about to tell you that it came from the stomach of a deer. and this same old man claimed to have killed the deer himsblf," isaid Col. Gaither. "but -1 am getting away from the story. As I said Butler and the man could hot trade, so Butler came to me saying he could not trade with the 'd -d old ras cal,' and asked me to come to his store and trade the old man out of the stone, giving him cash and Well, to make a long story gets control no one man can run it and the iWhiocratic party is greatly preferable to hold the reins of gov ernment. That is the vital question at issue arid all former Democrats should stick by the party and those Republicans, who nave long been aware of the fact that the alTaira of the government could, y to say the least, be improved and who as loyal citizens desire a Charge for the better. mut swell the ranks so that victory will ,be forthcoming next November, ilt will then be as much their victory as ours, and they be benefited just as much as we in seeing and feeling the country I i-4n hn.nno' itiat stnvrrunt tem that in It three men! prepare Uhort, for we wrestled back and more . prosiierous. The platform adopted at I)onver well sets forth the many acts of violrece that have been done tp the country by the Re publican party, and one alone, the a a supreme, iron-nana ruie oi rpeaiter Fish, former president of the Illinois Central railroad, saya this: "la my opinion it is harder for jieraona who hive received an income of ii0.(s0 a year to come down to live on t'K' XK) a year basis, than for a man who over 1,000 quarts of milk I daily in forth fora time, before we could Cannon, should be sufhcient to show h w been earning fl.'i a bottles, in butter and in ic cream, agree on what would satisfy the that the jcountry neecls a change.,, ul(om himtit.t to livi the yield of the cows ranging from eight to fifteen quarts or more a day. The Asheville people who boast of having a Vanderbflt for a milkman have to pay 11 cents a quart as it comes from the shiny yellow wagons bearing the sign, "Biltmore Dairy," and jthink it cheap. ' '!.i: Get to; Farmine : There Never Was . - Better Time ! Cotton Journal. - : The trend of thought in nearly ev- ws a ' a a M T a . a I man; l nnaiiy lanaea it ior Quuer, and the old man went away happy, with a good sum of money and sev eral fine looking- gold watches and fancy chains, in all between $500 and $800 worth of stutf, and by the terms of the private trade between -Butler and 1. 1 was the gainer by $100 or more for getting the stone. You see Butler wanted it. "From Butler the stone went to the late Dr. Dennis O'Donohue, who heired about all of Butler's estate and from Dr. O'Donohue I do not The latter! unless the United States! is to be turned into a monarchy. j "Rah for the Democratic .party and Bryan!'', witk to ac. ng on iiua week. The secret of happ the secret going. incss is to keep From Cherry-Blossom Land. suit of a long struggle, from Bom as one robber takes the property of ery avocation now is based on life m recall who got it, but have heard wi.ro.. h utiiifactorT'evldence presented' to the undersigned, It 1 a, lieu mau. to O0 Ban' ?, cUy f ' l'-eu mioe io Pr J."? Carouna. haa couuplied with all the provia- ' M,:4..r?i ',ee to enable NationalPBanking. Aamiatrpn. to .U.W.WH J . t.-inl loelr corporaie exisieui-e uu iw v-. r.r- 'w therefore, t, Thomas P. kane, Deputy and Acting Comptroller ., ; i (Se.l) T.P.KANE. ' ,.'',w ' Drpnl;.nd Acting Comptroller cl the Curteotj. ! . . ; x . TTfTT l 1 TVT TTl 7 TT -XTaT 7 Operating over 7,000 Miles of Railway. j ni,ick Route to all Points, North, South, East and West fbrouRb Trains between Principal Cities and Resorts. Affording. First-class Accommoaauuus. . leeant Sleeping Cars on all Through Trains, Dining, Club and Observation Cars. , . ! .r Speed, Comfort and Courteous Employees, travel via the Soutnern Railway. , schedules, and other Information turuUhed by addreaalng the undersigned. ( j irdwick, Pat. Traffic Manatr, w- Q' ' A 1 1 Wsaalntton, u. i. L. Varnaa, T. P. A. , Charlotta, If . C. HHHHr S S S SW . a Bardwick, S HE DAVIS WHITE SULPHUR S SPRINGS ! Hiddenite, N. C. Ho r.atP anp. vesterdav hung m with another and worse besotted member of the same degenerate family. Whatever may come to her she has relinquished in advance any claim upon public sympatny. inar- lotte Observer. If a man can take eight or nine Knnrirprl Hplpca'tes and make them do things they did not' want to do he should certainly be big enougn for president.-f Durham Herald A Bold Step. To overcome the well-grounded! and reasonable objections of the more intel ligent to the use of secret, medicinal com twunds. Dr. E.V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., some time ago, decided to make a bold departure from the usual course pursued by the makers ot putrup medicines ior ao mestic use, and, so has published broad rast and onGnTv to the whole world, a full and compWe list of all the Ingredients entArlnir inW4,he cQmDositIonof his widely celebrated iijdldes. Thus he has taken his nnmenrts o&trons and patients Jnto his full bnMfenCe. Thus too he has re- movediiisymeaicines iruiu uuuug owci nostrmrof doubtful merits, and made thprnUftemcdlea of Known Composition. na3 snown most. stTiimiY.- ... ot only does the wrapper of erery bottle Of lr. Pierce's GolUen MeUlcal discovery, uie famous medicine for weak atoiaach. pla liver or biliousness and all catarrhal diseases wherever located, have printed upon It. in Vlain Knglish, a full and complete list ot all fh lnirrMiient3 CODQDOSlng it, but a small molt has-been compueu irou uuukivu. ks.Cf all the amereni Burner- ing practitioners of medicine, enaorsma jn mi Ztrongut ponOjle terms, each and every incre ment coniaineu ui ur. .v.o . nn. of thesa little books will bp mailed free to any one sendinr address on jiostal eard oi by letter, to Dr. U..V. Pierce. Buff a o. N. Y, another, bv seizing his pistol and getting the drop on him. I The follow is namea r uis. won der if i he is gentleman who took part in water-works rucus in Char lotte some time ago r ' . i Thinks Her Son The Messiah, j Assertini? that her six-year-old gin, Charles Goodsall. was the Mes siah, his mother, Mrs. Grace Good sail, of New York, brandec him for 1 fe on the forehead and th roat with a red hot iron. The child early Sat urday from the religion crazed wo man and both : were taken to the Belleviie Hospital, where the mother tnld the no! ice and hospital authon tips that she bad branded the boy whom she believed to be the long- looked for Messiah, so that he would be known, marked and distinct irom others in life. The police charge that the woman also tried to kill her mother, with whom she lived, and herself. The little boy. though, ter ribly burned, will recover. Ihe two women were placed in the Psicpatk ward of observation. thilt lie is pnt -uraio. to subje Viruik - been Standard medical wor schools of practice, containing very numer ous extracts from the -writing of leadini practitioners ot medicine, endorsing in Mil Warning to Republicans. Greensboro Record. '? - Tt ia noised abroad that the two nrwial detectives employed by Char- r . . . . .... . . : ' lotte to ierret oui puna iigers nwue ! out over 200 cases during tne -con wpntinn alone, i not countirg those made since that time. II tney sue ceed n convicting any great number of these, the Republicans wbo are to I moot there in Autrust. naa better or der in a couole of car loads from outside the State. v the countrv. People who have hitherto had an aversion to country life because of the trials, privations and almost hopeless efforts to suc ceed there, are now full of enthusi asm and becoming possessed of a strong desire to farm. This attrac tion is being aroused because of the fact that agriculture is once more getting oh its feet, and will in tne future demand and receive its share in the profits made from the weaitn it creates. Naturally . there is no place so attractive to the average human being as the country. - If the time has come, and we oe- ieve it has. when satisfactory profits can be made once again by Southern farmers, so that independence and righteous prosperity win oe conspic uous m the country, tne trena oi thought and travel will be -away from the towns and cities ana paca again to the farm. Discontent will be displaced by peaceiui sausi ac tion 1 We confidently believe that the tide has turned for better and happier days for the men who pro vide the food and raiment for the world's. population, and that the cot ton growers of the soutn especially for all the years to come will enjoy a degree of prosperity unknown on the farm for tne past iniriy years. NOW OFKS. Hot and Iridc- We are better prepared than ever to serve you. . . . . . a . uii nAf r wa miivic nuuuia T- ii j vine audra an annex oi - a . lus with suudry stiialler improvemenrs. U- ii LArn conveniences, such as Sewerage, I liaths.; 1 . ; - ' ., . . . . . .' ,rm nicelv furnished. Bell and i. ri un i.itf nil. nicua wa ' i.ilrnt I'lmne connections li'.lrtiite Prke. . L v. t- u Ti;.1.Vnile. N. C. on Southern ..... . i ...I -r....i rhanee from Salisbury SI HCIAL KATESforjnne,$3to$7 oerweek; $18 to $26 per month. l ..r further information write for Illustrated Booklet to Owners sod Proprietori, Hiddenite, N. C. Two daily mail trains each way and ali tor a Railroad Statesville. t DAVIS BROS.,; i U, ------- . ,,,,1- book It will be learned that Dr. Pierce's med icines contain no alcohol, narcotics, mineral agents or other poisonous or Injurious agents and that they are made from native, medici nal roots of great value: also that some ot the roost valuable ingredients contained In lr Pierce's Favorite Prescription for weak, nervous, over-worked. rundown." nervous and debilitated women. were"employedi long years ago. by the Indians for similar ailments affecting their squaws. In 1 'act. one of tbe most valuable medicinal plants entering Into the composition of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre r:.intinr limwD to the Indians as Squaw-Weed." Our knowledge of the uses of not a few of our most valuable native, me dicinal plants was gained from the Indians. . As made up by improved and exact pro cesses, the Favorite Prescription " Is a most, efficient remedy for regulating all the wom anly functions, correcting displacements, as prolapsus, anteversion and retorversion. overcoming painful periods, toning up th nerves and bringing about a perfect stata of health. Sold by all dealers ui maiin-iiw that one of the physicians in the city now has it. "But I forgot to tell you about John Butler taking the stone north with him and having the rough parts of it cut awav reducing the size! of what it originally was. It is a won derful stone and never wears out.f Thus the writer secured some his tory about one of the strangest things in existence-a stone that iex- tracts poisons, and with the record of 1134 successful applications. VlHW OI I1IH IS undatlon for Dai th. Such phil- I couia wen i hi our American Ants as Weather Prophets. As to the Taxing of Dogs. Statesivlle Landmark. . . ' ; ' In the township of French Broad, a rural precinct in the county of Buncombe, dogs to the value of 1 1, 300 have been returned for taxation according to the veracious Asheville Citizen. This sudden zeal to place the canine tribe on the tax lists is not entirely due to a virtuous desire to render unto Caesar the things that Caesar but is due to the fact that an untaxed dog is not property and not entitled to the protection of the law. while a doe on the tax list ia nronertv same as a cow or horse and he who molests the tax-paid dog does so at his peril. AH these years a few people here and there have cried aloud for a dog tax, but. the politician, having before his eyes the rear oi me one-ganus tf would he interesting to know the number of escapes irom tne! j State penitentiary, the penitentiary farms and convict camps, within the past six months, say, and tne numper of convicts recapiureu. ienumuci of escapes has been so numerons re-1 I cently as to cause one to wonaer u nn investicration should be made, Statesville Landmark. .. . a a indicated bv the latest govern ment report, the prospects are ior onhatantiallv increased yields over last vear in all the principal crops. including corn, cotton, spring wui. i winter wheat ana oats. Trihiinp. . I RIWSVS - .i : - .. . t . moothAr Trnnheh afford voter, the PTOUd possessor oi ii .. (fimnnn tn tho ppvpmp of I doers and one hog. is always dis.-reet' .u .moii animgla When vou cro I lv silent when ft dog tax is mentioned out on a soring morning and find in the Legislature, and each attempt i-i ..nto Huaiiv eno-ao-ed in clearincr I to lew I a tax on dogs nas tailed out their nests and dragging the Now the people who usually have to a ,i Ufa Af Aowh tn ihe nnrfafelset the pace for the politicians, are ,o ha onre; that nn matter how I nuttinsr the dogs on the tax lists oi Jlourlv it is there will be no rain that their own accord, for reasons afore- day j and tne prooaonuies T Is S proverb of Cherry Hloswn Innd that a heaitny uina-n i tna basis of all strength. Uood nature al0 rconlt(i as of great ImporV anct. The Japaiietw as a pwopie are rw markaUe ,for their health, anduraiica. patience and skill. They hava a syt-iu of physical training which Is universally used. It In called the Jiu Jluu, and by tills they regulate diet, bathing, clothing, breathing.! muscular de velopment and boxing. They hava a phlloscphy that goodj hnmor is fol lowed by gtvid health. They try, io hanUh wor riia. and believe that a Cheerful good I o streng osophy iuIomUhI people. IM e are apt to im Uh serltwa. They have many aay Ing in Japan similar to our own. ,une is mat "a 5 woman U' as old as she looks." bat a Japanese woniaii's face Is usually aa unwrlnktrtl as a baby's. ; Although! tha Japan women do not usually have the i well "developed fagiir of; our Amwlcao blnen, yet tney ao not ai her wrinkles trom wbrry nor suffer as do our American women. What Uj iit that makes our American! women ofun pale, sall faced, with 5ark circles under the eve, and ' very often nM St forty-tjve when thny liould be in their primer rt moretMuth:rn climates like Japan the women Five cioserto nature they live simpK homely Uvea and do not worry because they cannot dreas as travagantiy as tneir neighbor. They aat wholesome fojd and do not 'practice high living. To keep young a woman keen neaitny ana ahoc4 fur L trtdlaMl. I bio foods disturb Ui tnarh. tha Ulf Ail - 1'Um , laiardiug dh-a. Th lrain Is crowdl. does not g-t lK-alUiful groth. and Ui undevalupd woman aa ach'tnl t plunge into aMial dlipatiri, followed only km rioaelr by tha taking up ot wifely dutl and rejnlt.iiIUs Uf wards a hnnband who has only ix.tl.l her tjeanUfui face. Tha r.n.n stiffnr lug trom iitiUiiiHKl fH-rviiii wvart twa, wakefulnr hpdri and batk a-he. nxxl the advka of a ihialelan cf tha largest ipetlauoa In iL La m are for several days of good "weather. If. however,! you see tne an is about the middle of a spring or sum mer afternoon hurrying back to the nests and a sentinel trotting out in every direction looking up stragglers and urging them to go nome as Boon as they can get there, you may figure on a rain that af ternoon of night." When the last of the wanderers is found the picket . hurries in and the nest is securely sealed from the inside to keep out the. water. - It is seldom that ants are taken, by sur- 1 prise by the approach of a shower. . said. By" and by all dogs will be . a s aia a .ia taxed, as tney snouid nave peen ai alone, but the so-called leaders and representatives of the peoble wil deserve no credit for it. f ' waa Ar , A Calif ornlan's Luck. The. tackiest day. of my life; when I bought a box of Bocklen's nice Salve ;" writes Charles P. Bundahn of Tracy, California i "Two 2V;. boxes enredrae of an annoying case of itching piles, which had troubled me for years and that yielded to no other treatment. Sold under guarantee at all druggists. - V t mf . . fry vrVmri y'vj j t ... . r rreguianues wni arable eistenoe." fead them to a mia- f Women suffer In rlrlhood fmra back' kehe. soliie-a-he and headarhea, fol- Snwed hv i irretfularitiea. uainfal or dh Kreeableg land as a result dbteaaes of the iwamanlv organs are mora common than nr mirt but a niurairtaa In active prac- I tlce eonld supprate. It ia often tha result I .f data of sHrlhood naaaed la over- I cr&wded j public schools, er woraa, In a dUrtrrred therefrom by baahfiili-!. arl ao ar viany yonnger onwii, sto. wouHXt, and we sh'rfjW advise Uie U write at one to l n. met, n wm treat thMr correpnnd-rK as strict if eonndentlal, atxl gte tbem aa Hi" i. gent medical oplnn wHhont eU After long et perience in the treatment of womanly diaeaaHS. Dr. Piece svolvr.1 a vegeunio tonic ana correruv he eaill lit. Meree's tavorlU freaXf.p- tlon. Tbta Is a purely vrgeUWa prH aration. without a barucM OI aurol.. eonulned in IU ... Hacked op by over a inrra of a rn tnry of remarkable and uniform cure, a record such aa no other remedy fr ti.e dlseaies and weakness peefjT women aver atUinM. the priTpA b.t and makers of Ir. FV-rea'a Fsvortte l'r arrlptloD now r folly warraotd in offering to pay laO to legal money of lh United State rr any caaa of Is-ucvr-rbe. female Uraknesa. or galling 'f Wr.nh which ther cannot enre. A i mi rixriif iwn aim is run down with the I Women, anch aa Dr. K. V. Itarre. pains and ins wnicn come penoaicauy j oi iuus . " j.. -IinAii v(.mn-V'ind ia Al veara to I dealrinr Uh alvtce of a phTSurian is her looks, wrinkles develop, and the worn-1 an really suffers untold agony. There Is do real nwtl .ior tuts ii sae win pracucai right living, recognize her bodily needs. hygiene allot wuien anowieage obtain fron some reliable med ical book like Dr. Pierce's Common Smim Medical Adviser, whkh can be bad by sending him thirty-one cent for the cloth- hound vu am. or twentr-one eeiiw hv tha oaper bound. Dr. Ii. V. Pierce, who la the founder and medical director of the Invalids1 Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, New York, says, "there la no reason why women should suffer if they will tafcei the proper means to curs those tea ther ask is a they their fair and reasonable UlaJ el of cure. J
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 17, 1908, edition 1
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