. N b. Shbrrim, Sdltor and Fubllh ' " ' : T " " ; ;j ' - ! iT" .rr-T-;r.r:r yfr555 VOLUME XXXIV. CONCORD. N. O. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 8. 1008. Numocr 20 5 r i 3 r TOXSOSUlRtfOSa W SPWTAXSIRG. a 'R7l KITCI1IN IN THE WEST. THE DEAD-BEAT REfOK&ERS. V-mT i ' VW - - r- - . . i . - ! : ft rra. Worth Looking Into. All men who have lro8erous, but all hank accounts. bank accounts are not prosperous meu have The beginning of the prosperity of moat men has leeu a bank account, i 1 T The connection between prosperity and a bank account is worth looking into. If you decide for a bank account, bank will welcome you as a customer. this CITIZENS BANK & TRUST COMPANY .JONES YOKKE, President. CIIAS. B. WAGONER, Cashier. M. L MAUSH. Vr-c President. JOHN FOX. : Assiatant Cashier, WE WANT TO BUY YOUR PRODUCE WE WILL GIVE YOU THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICES FOR IT. YW will buy your Butter all summer. crocks or some other vessel Pack it up in This saves printing, and i j nst as good for us to handle. We will pay you 12V ( cnts a pound for itv Jt ,3 ? Highest prices paid for Chickens, Eggs Beeswax. and The D. J. Bost Co. ! THE CASH GROCERS. i News and Obwrver.' Hon. W. W. Kitchin. Democratic nominee for Governor, has begun the eampaigm in Western North Caro lina, and he is now beyond the Blue mage preaching thepure gopeI of Democracy txTgreat audiences. 1 hat the addretaes will be brilliant and convincing ones are thing abso lutely certain, for Mr. Kitchin is a speaker of the greatest ability: his reasoning is logical, and he is the candidate of a party that has given to North Larohna a model govern ment and enabled it to go forward unnamperea in a career oi progress ami prosperity. 1 he Republican party has been banking its hopes of success, upoxua misconceived idea that the Democ racy of North Carolina is a party di yided into factions, and that follow ing the honest rivalry for nomina tions at the hands of the Democracy those who met with defeat would sulk in their tents and be discordant elements. But Locke Craig in the West has shown how false is the hope of the Radicals, and Ashley Home in me .a8t is loyai ana entnusiastic; as was expected. Democracy is not di vided, and as Mr. Kitchin continues his western trip the Republicans will hnd no consolation in the great crowds and the enthusiasm which will greet this able exponent of Democratic principles. I And why should not the people support with greatest enthusiasm the Democratic platform and the Democratic nominees. In the plat form is set out the pledges of a party which has never deceived the people, but which has always stood for the best and highest interests of the State, a party that has lead in all that tends to progress- and prosper ity, a party which has freed the State from negro domination and placed ltj in the hands oi the Anglo-Saxons. North Carolinians are not forgetful, and as they scrutinize the lives of the Democratic nominees they will find that these are men who have ever been true to the State and to the people, the foes of special inter ests and the - champions of all that goes for the betterment of the peo ple. ... -. In this contest the West and the East are united, and theV stand to gether for the success of Democracy. Mr. Kitchin-is presenting the cause of the people to the people and they are hearing him gladly. It is the cause of good government which is being presented by Mr. Kitchin, and as his campaign tour continues it will be seen that again this year there will be a rousing big majority for the Democratic ticket. North Caro Una is not going to return to the nightmare of Radical-Fusionism, and the State is insured four more years of good government under the di rection of William Walton Kitchin and his associates on the Democratic ticket. - "" j ' . Mr. Kitchin will arouse the great est enthusiasm by his speeches, and all who want to bear the issues dis cussed should not fail to hear the addresses of the next Governor of North Carolina. V. C ChrtatUa AdYoct. ram on Jet wo. . or the National i"y t M?uncu ox ocarunburg. m Child-Labor Committee says; "The reference to barber" eon tains fif- labor or children enters into the re- S n ;ncetions, and salutary results The new ordinance passed by the union taMKUMrs uiur. lauons between employer ami em ploye; and into the genera) question or the condition of labor with which the Federal Bureau of Lalxr deals. but this very fact is anomalous and deplorable. .There should be no' such thing as child labor, and w hile it exists it should have the serious attention of the government, not as1 a normal condition to be investigated and regulated like adult labor In mines and factories, but as an ab normal and temporary condition to be eliminated as speedily as possible.'?-. .We regret thai lhejulvoeatrs of reform should have taken this ex treme position. If one is to form habits of industry and become the master of any sort of skilled labor, he must be trained to this in child hood. Instead of ti-ying to eliminate labor altogether, let their hours of labor be shortened and let the con ditions under which they work be made as nearly ideal as possible. It might puncture the wind-bag of these reformers if they were re quired to show that thev have anv other means of a livelihood than that of crying for reform While there are many reforms needed, there never has been a time wheiS the world needed greater care and discriminating judgment in deal ing with such matters. So many absurdities are advocated bv men and women who have become victims ofa sort of mania tor reforming things, and besides this it has come to pass that the veriest dead-beat can jump astride some hobby of re form and get his living by fleecing -he public. Unfortunately, it is hard for the public to .discriminate. The sincre advocate of a rational re form should be . encouraged and helped, the dead-beat should be mounted and put on the roads. i! C dis- Vermont As An index. Newi and Observer. Vermont, the first of the States to hold an election during a Presi dential election year, has acted. It 13 a rock-ribbed Remiblican State,-and the jcontest was on the State tickets, but without any out side help the plucky Democracy has reduced the Kepublican majority ana plurality of 1904. That the trend is towards Democ racy, and that this has been shown by a decrease in the Republican votcf in mat btate it is only neceessary to read the hgures. for while the Re publican vote felt off 8 per cent., the Democrats lost only 2 per cent. caseq on uie Vermont vote tne Democracy has a right to feel an in creasing confidence that it is going to win in the national contest this year. The party is united and there is a determination on the part of every man to do his duty. The party in every State has a right to feel an increased enthusiam over the result in Vermont. i are looked for from its rigorous en forcement. To "numerate the fif teen! rules adopted requires pace, but the importance of the sabieet demands that they be printed, and tney fallow:' 1. The floor of the shop must be washed or scoured at least twice a week and mooned or sweDt once a day,' - 2. Cold nd hot water mu.t be in- plied. , 3. The cut-off hair must be at once removed J .' 4. The head-rest must !c covered for each customer with, a fre&Ii nap kin of paper or linen. ' 5. The emuloVees must wear clean. longj upper garments or coats of ight color. ; ' 6. .The barber must wash his hands with' warm water before attending to a customer. : 7 JThe lather from the razors must be removed with paper. s o. i Alum or magnesia can be used only by being kept in a powder box. y. bponges, powder puffs, mag nesia and styptics in lumps or sticks. ana i revolving brushes are pro- niDiteu. i . r - . . 10, bcizzors. brushes and 'combs. as well as the hair cutting machines and I razors, must ; be cleaned with boiling water or other antiseDtic solution, after each separate use thereof.- . j 11. The bowls and sha vine brushes must be cleaned each time after hav ing been used with boiling water. it. No customer shall have applied to his face any towel or cloth that has already been used upon another customer. in kf I a I'm i.j. imo one snan ne shaved who is suffering from a visible skin disease 14. All violations of this ordinance snau ne pumsnabie by a line not ex ceeding one hundred dollars, or by imprisonment not; exceeding thirty days, or by revocation of license. 15. All ordinances or parts of or dinances in conflict with this ordi nance are hereby repealed. uone ana raunea m uouncil as sembled , this 10th day of August- j v A. M. Law, Mayor Pro Tern. iJ. T. Hudson, City Clerk. CVU 10 itwtoutsin liooKSGOoo io tot. fiisrsoimiL Farmers' 1 Business. We nive particular attention to the business ot tarmers. lin king account with a hank. is a convenience no farmer should be 1 1 in. ut. i I ! .i Mir i t i lifieates of deposit bear 4 per cent, interest. j i ur oiunioiiious offices always at the disposal of our customers. Wr ciiulially invite the farmers to make this their Banking Home. The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits $50,000 idtt A ft A A A : SOUTHERN RAILWAY ! Operating over 7,000 Miles of Railway. iick Route to all Points, North, bouth, tast and West. I IirOUgU 1 rulUS UCIWCCU X tiuw auu. iwsuu, Aflbrdinj? First-class Accommodations. Inrant Sleeping Cars on all Through Trains, Diuing, Club and Observation Cars. r Si eed, Comfort and Courteous Employees, travel via 1 the Southern Railway. rut.scbdul, and other InformaUon luruisnea oy aaoressing me unaeraignna. M Hard wick. Pas. Traffic Manager, Waahlnjton, D. C. R. L. Vernon, TP. A., Charlottt, K. C. W. H. Tayloe, G. P. A. t i i - : THE DAVIS WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS tfjddenite, N. C. - The Vermont Election. ! Charlotte Observer. ' Va& result of J the Vermont State election, always held two months ahead of the presidential election, is regarded as an important forecast not that it is not well understood that the State is going Republican but the Republican loss or gain is considered as significant of popular Ithoueht-the country over. In the result of the election of , Tuesday there is no comfort for the Republi cans. They sustainea a loss oi eigni per cent, in the popular vote while the Democratic loss was but two cent.; and -there is no State in the Union in which there is so little en couragement to Democrats to turn out and vote as in Vermont, where the cause of this noble band of mar tyrs is always hopeless. There is nothing of discouragement in the Vermont election for Democrats the country over. . a! remarkable phenomenon happen ed in New Hope township Wayne county, Saturday, says the Golds- boro Headlight. The 15-months-oid daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Hines went to sleep with her hair of light flaxen! color and when she awoke, within a half hour, the hair had changed to auburn. No one is able to account for this ... extreme change. . 1 - - " ' j;" Fairbrother's Everything : '.'The Democratic newspapers of the coun try are raising a campaign fund in dollar doses Of course thi3 a slow wav. but it is a sure way, and when a man gets a dollar in the enterprise he mav rustle that much narqer to prove that he didn't play his coin on a dead card. Issues Injunction While He is Shaved, A lawyer had a client in Oklahoma last Wednesday whose land was about to be sold. He .wanted an injunction issued until the case would be tried. . The lawyer hunted all over the court house for Judge Van Leaven. ancLfinally found him in a barber shop. - His honor's face was smeared with lather and the barber was busy. The lawyer ' stopped the barber long eriought, to introduce himself to Judge Van Leaven, and then, as the barber went on with the shaving, the lawyer argued his case- - - The judge listened to his state ment and then announced his willing ness to issue the restraining order The barber raised the judge in his chair long enough for him ? to sign the injunction order. . The New Railroad. Charlotte Chronicle. '. '. ' The Carolina.. ClinchfieUl & Ohio Ray road Company had arranged to open regular passenger traffic on that section of its new line between Ma rion and Johnston City, to-morrow, but the the flood conditions of the past week interfered with the plans. First' pasenger train between the points named will bej-tfh on Monday, September 7. The Chronicle is cal culating! to have a representative on the first tram, wholexpects to give its readers some points from time to time, about :this new., road, the opening of which so much to Charlotte. It is the most important railroad development for this section of the 55outh since the war. Per haps one reason why it has - not at tracted more attention from the peo ple of this section is because it has not asked any money subscription or bond voting. Many of the proposed railroads make the most xuss over this feature of the business, but the Chnraiheld road has jnade none at all. The first thing Charlotte knows, it is going to be on an air line pas senger and freight route to Cincin nati. Some Political Comment. I Raleigh News and Observer. Republican nominee J. Elwood Cox has a free railroad- pass, one from the Southern Railway, and he can travel around some, it was said to be a "Class A" pass, but Mr5. D pass, pass, and Cox says it is a "Class Whatever : its kind, it is a he rides free. : With Cy. Thompson and J. M. Mewborne as two of its nominee, the Radical ticket has its old-time Fusion smell which so sickened North Caro lina. . - ' ' 7 With a shuttle trust or is it a bobbin trust? of his own J. Elwood Cox is the sortbf nominee the Re publicans need, as it is a party of the trusts,, by the trusts, for the trustsr The whole world stops and heeds the man with a new idea and a will I to back it. ; ' New York Unions for Bryan. - . . . " The Central Federated Union which is the central organization of the labor -unions of New York city affiliated with the American Federa tion of Labor, indorsed a resolution adopted by the Elevator Constructors and Millwrights Union, after a Jong debate last Monday night, this re solution reads as follows: 1"At a special meeting held August 27. 1908, it was resolved that we pledge our support to the president of the American Federation of Labor and the executive board of the same by our votes to defeat the Republican party, I which ''has been responsible for the drastic action taken against labor's just demands. "We pledge, further, our support to William Jennings Bryan and the Democratic party in the coming ejection for protecting organized labor by inserting in their platform a labor recommendation and pledging its support to the same."! ; . Siid He Wodi Vale it Kufca Were Nwmaatrd. KJitor Walter A. IlilJebrarJ, edi tor f the Cmnboro : lrlutrial New.- the only Ipul4ican daily pa- Ctr in the State. nte the following tter under date of July 2. lints. only a few weeks lfore thr !rub- lican Plate eonvmtKm : Greensboro. N. C July 22. Mr. a A, Reynolds, Winrton. N. C. Dear Sir -Upon my return here after spending-; Sunday in Aheville. 1 fpund a letter from you suggenting! the uidrmi of nommaliog J. tJwoud Cox for Governor. It is very rare in fact, it ha Uen only bnc or twice in my whole life. 1 believe, that I have "allovced my i leraunal feelings to enter into my nej"stper I- . t I . . I L J it to be mentally impossible to lay aside my prejudice against J. KJ wood Cox. If either you or any ether stockholder should insist upon the publication of a letter urging his nomination,! 1 suppose I would print it, but if heed should be given to the advice and he should ! be nominated. somebody else would have to write the editorials supporting him. When I came to ureensboro it was not the understanding that the duty of financing this business, which I found in horrible shape, should de volve upon me. I- have, however, done a good part of this work, thus relieving the stockholders and direc tors. Shortly after 1 came here I was told that J. Elwood Cox would help us, as he had frequently prom ised to do so. I made a trip to High Point, and he told me that he would give us one hundred dollars for stock. This Was about the tenth of December. He said if I would draw on him on the 15th he would honor the draft, but that if 1 could wait until the first of the year he would appreciate it. Hisv relative, Snow, also promised to help us out on the first of the year. 1 went to High Point again about the second or third of January, and was astonished, upon walking into the bank owned by Cox, to be told by him that he did not have time to talk to me. As he re turned to his - private office, I re marked I was not after an audience out alter a check, but he made no audible reply. He knew that if I got near him he could not decently get around keeping that promise, so he indecently closed the door in my face, and after cooling my heels on the outside of the bank for an hour or so I caught the first train back to Greensboro. Cox had Jbroken both his engagement and his promise, couched in terms as definite as the Erglish language could make it. When he broke that promise, and 1 got my snubbing, I was not working in my own interest, but in the inter est of the only Republican daily pa per published in this State, and I do not mind in putting it, in black and white that if LI wood Cox should be nominated for Governor I would vote for Kitchin, for, whereas,-1 have al ways regarded Kitchin as a good deal of an anarchist, I have always found him to be a gentleman in his rela tions With his fellowman. Cox told me he was not asking any favors of the Republican party, but he lied about that, because he got his nephew appointed postmaster of High Point, when every Republican in the State knows that the office should have gone to W. F. Ragan. Cox . got this appointment through false pretenses. He led the Republi can leaders to believe that with his money he expected to aid the party and this paper. But whether or not he has in the past asked favors of the party, he 'is hot after some fa vors right now, and I propose to make it my chief end in life to see that he does not get them. Very truly yours, W. A. HlLDEBRAKD. I also got a frost from Snow. Ddt- CaL Docifry li?ts ftoU ptMtucftvjy CoL IL c; Dockerv. of fetm- ham. who U hrr allrtiJici thr For mer Cutivcotiua, UrA tip Ua meeting jpwterday afiemouo with one of hb alunchauarw narrmUvra. . Col, Dockery Urte4 off by aUn how many of the farmer prernt bad ever Had Uack make to relieve ihrtreowtof the milk. On receiv ing crYer answer to hi question, he rvUtecrhi peculiar csperiettce. lie had notked hi rows coming in every afternoon without any nulk. This I mysterious duappearance of the milk continued for aeveraj day and no explanation eouU be given by lh Ivy attending the cow. The boy was given a ahotgun and told to shoot; the first man or beast that atuuii uiv m man or ikw uwidh rvanvy. ney are y' even looked crouvejed at hi eatlK J creditor; thry haee a inoart, But that afternoon the cow came in dry as on previous afternoon. Mr Dockery became alarmed by the state of affair and determined tc find out for himself the cause of the lack of milk. In accordance with hi determination, he himself went down to the nature and stayed with the cows all day and nothing happen ed to arouM hi suspicion until the cow j went into the river to take their I afternoon draught. When they went into the water their bag were full, and when they earn out the milk had, disappeared, lie re membered seeing quite a ruwle in the water when the cow waded In, so he had an idea what wa happen ing, it -V': I Next day he hung some Ash hook to each of the cow's bag and aat down by the river to await result. The cow waded in. the usual ruatle accompanying their entrance, and when the had finished drinking it was with great difficulty that they came out of; the water. To the sur prise of everybody around, about a dozen huge! eels were hanging to each cow. fThe convention stamped ed and a motion to adjourn was passed by acclamation. tahksfwrrh at Ttftwk. Kama. here he haMkvl the W.k oit and the ruaraatee rrl 4 the u--tk Mr. Itryaa trtr! u t r Mr- wrure lh I twUvl State gwnrvn metit rratrr the ti t tf penZe rcurlty thru It ntrvtu m-rj t nalktfi) tnk. altlxMieh It ran r mine the bank at any tin: the State require aeevrtty when it dcit money to a batik; the count r rr quire erurity and the city rtuinr eeurtty; even the Uank rr-ja.rr curity f rora the elScii w ho t.atvll money. Why houkt the ortr be left to take ht chancra? "Not only it the deutor wlthtnjt protection, tnit the eetty given to nation. Stte, county end city bwn hU aecunty. They are rrrfrrml fare m the gilt edgvd and the dVt itor must ret along the lt he ran. Why are the interrU of detitor thus brglected 1 Now that sounds good to u. If the bank will guarantee dtut. then the poatal aavtngi ttank when need not htmm arul if dVptnutt are guaranteed then there wtilneter be a run on the hank. To aecure an end like thi a man ran wvll afTd to vote the democratic tkket he cauex thousand and hutxlrel of thoutand of peo(4e have suilerrd miarry untold becauae eutaKantlal banks have gone under over night. Bryan U handing out the real thing in this campaign-and the bank guarantee I going to be one of hi. strongest plank. Thousand of men will vote for a man who talk like that, a against a man like 1 sft who make vport of the tropoMUon. An Old time Weather Prophet. Monro Ecairw. A few! Weeks ago Mr. San ford Smith, of Lanes Creek township, told us that there would be rain enough to Hood all low land before the summer was over, for the bugs, which burrow in the earth, the little things which make hole in the ground and live in them knew by instinct, of otherwise, what was coming and had left the doors or their habitation wide open so they could get out. In dry season the openings to these home of the litte burrowing folks are closed, so the older people who know about such things tell Jis. 1 faUl Questioning. I Judge Have you been arrested before? j ! PriaonerNo, air. r Judge Have you been in this court before?; j Prisoner No sir. .Judge Are you certain? Prisoner I am, sir. S Judge Your face looks familiar. Where have I seen it before, ; Prisoner I'm the bartender in the saloon across the way. BcCeves Bry.a Wfll Be Ikitrd. Mr. R.S. Ueinhardt. of UncoTn. ton, passed through Newton Sunday returning from a trip to Nrw York. We asked him whatpcople in New York had to say about politic. He replied that New York u sure to gn Democratic and everybody tt talked with believe that Bryan will be elec ted, unlee there la a big change in the drift of thing betworn now and election. Mr. iteinhardt has also been in California and the North western States, where he found iro- ple wild over Hryan and the Demo cratic party. He thinks there is go ing to be a landslide in the West for. Democracy. Among the men be talked with was Governor Johnson, of Minnesota, one of Um most prvnt- , inent figure now in Kolitioa. lie' says he i confident of Bryan's' elec l'on ' Nary a One. 7 ItiUburo tUourt. ' The Republican papers had a good deal to aay after our last Democratic State convention about the ungrate fut treatment of the Confederate veteran in Um; nomination made. While it i true that only two Con-, federate veteran were nominated by the Democratic State convention (Hon. B. F. Dixon and Major W. A. Graham), pray tell us how many did the Republican Slate convention nominate? He Tipped Her. A Canny Cabby. Cabman (with exaggerated polite ness) "Would you mind walking the other way and not passing the horse?" Stout Lady (who has just paid the but finally wrote: minimum fare) WhyT I Ihy lire may nothing vex Cabman "Because if 'e see wot 1 Thy year be not a few? 'e s been carrying for a shilling e II ave a fit." Some year ago a smart young wo man, who delighted to tease an awkward contrary lad who tat next to her at a boarding bouse table asked him to write in her avltograph album. He blushed and stammered it- And at thy final exit May the devil mii hi due! -Jolonel Walter ilenry, who can make the iving s English thrill a tombstone in a deserted grave yard. said once upon a time that there was nothing this side of hell or the other side of hell, or in hell, as dirty and damnable as the pool of politics, and you can find today ten thousand victims iwho will say that it is true In business; in the social swim; in church affairs the man who wins success must go prepared to walk belly deep in filth and slime thrown at him by those who ars envious and jealous.-Every thing. The latest story on Mr. John D. Rockefeller runs as follows: Hear ing that a family near one of hi palatial homes wns in financial dis tress he paid them a visit, lie was told that there was a mortgage of $900 on the cottage and it was about to be sold for the debt. The deacon then generously proposed to furnish one dollar for the relief of the fam ily if they would raise the-other I eight hundred and ninety-nine?- Charity and Children. Then ! The big Ellerbe Springs "Automo bile Meet",-first planned for Sept. 9th and 10th, i has been postponed until Sept: 23rd. and 24th. This delay has been necessitated account of the excessive rains high water, and the damage to roads panic gets settled Gov. Glennhas named September 7 as labor day, and calls oh all people who labor to take a day oft. Well, the trouble is so many people who want to labor have been taking sev eral days off here of late and the cn chances are they win continue . to and .take days off until thU Roosevelt down and disap- and destruction of bridges. pears. Everything. v: V OI'P.N. We are better prepared than ever to serve you. 11 .,;., aUW nn Annex of 30 more nice Sine'e Rooms and suck as Sewerage, Hot and Ek"ct ric 'I'M-, willi sundry smaller improvements. WV now have all modern conveniences, ' ISatba. Ivkrtric Liftlita, plenty of nice rooms, nicely furnished. Bell and Inde l" n.lrnt Phime connections. Two daily mail trains each wa? and all lor a M' "U rate True, j . . Our place is one mile north of Hiddenite, N. C. on Southern Railroad i".ni Charlotte to Taylorsvillei change from Salisbury at Statesville.' Kales for July' and August, 1 to $9 per week; $22 to $33per month. For further information write for Illustrated Booklet to-- - DAVIS BROS . Owner, and Proprietor., Hiddenite, N. C. TsT"" , ... .x , ., ii .. - What Is medicine for? To cure you, if-slck. you say. . But one medicine will not cure every kind of sickness, because different medicines act on different parts of the body. One medicine goes to the liver, another to the spine, Wine of Cardui to tha womanly organs. So that Is why (3LTia.fi. iiae of Gar has proven so" efficacious in most cases of womanly disease. , Try It. Mn Wm Titmer. of Bartonvillft. 13 . writes: "I suffered for years with female disease without relief. My back and head would hurt me. and I suffered agony with bearlng-doro pains. I took Wino of Cardui and nov I am in good health." Sold everywhere, ta $1.00 bottles. WRITE US A LETTER V yM see Udkl Writs today for s trst copy of yafsable 6Hfi nastrate Boo for women. Advfce. descritw your sysnttna. Uii ava. aaa n wm do tern m Addreat Ladte. AdviMvy Dct Th Cluttaooot Molkine Co.. ChaMWMM Charlotte Observer: "The nomi nation of Col. Paul B. Means by Ca barrus Democrat for the State Sen ate is ail excellent thing in itself and a pleasing token of increased har mony among the Democrats or North Carolina. With Messrs. 11. Neil Pharr. of Mecklenburg, and Paul B. Means, of Caburrus, as representa tives in the State Senate, the Mecklenburg-Cabarrus district wilt have done honor to itself and to the legis lative office. There are seven different candi dates for President this year, nomi nated by seven different parties. They are Will ism J. Bryan, Demo crat: William H. Taft. Republican; Kugene V. Debs, bocialist; Thomas E.: Watson, Populist: E. W. Chaftn, Prohibitionist; T. S. Hisgen. Inde pendent League; and Moorie R. Preston, Socialist Labor, who is in the penitentiary for murder and has as his proxy August Gillhaus. Mr. J Elwood Cox, the Republican nominee for Governor, is not a speak er and he announced before be let Charlotte last week than he will make no speeches during the canv jjpaign. He will, conduct hi canv ten to newspapers and to individual, and will in a few day make public his views on public matters. Would you appear wise? keep your mouth shut. Making Good. Tbrs a i- wjr tf ma It in- Uuttng fr1fila Ukm "Makiiif n1, mI Ik FlrriVa tttmlU'tlM -U -lti.iirf th, and iblr ftiri, afu-r mr iltn t dftcauea tit ptiptiiarlt). am bDbrrMt by tb tuidrl u( ibiHj.aiMli. 'luy Lata "ntsl mm1 sim! I Ley Late ml toad druukarxJ. A loud, boDi, a4tiar dai nm lr( o of known po(npo.iUou ! Or. Hkcr'a tiwfaWa Ma41csl IHatvcry. It ttill rtijyy an tu iniM al, wttlf rriut of U,m urDr- tion tbat bsvs com into pn-nur-iif lu lb esrltor p-rtl of lu popularity sa ' t'ittm til lh board arid ara orrr luora heard of. Tbre nmtl4 s"ttM rraaun tor this lon--tiiM oojiolarilj and thai I to to fuurtd la lu auiNK-lor mrriu. Mn otx-s iIvmi s fair Uial for woaa toaiark, -or for Uvsr aud blood affx-Ucrta. lu um rtor euratlva quality are book nmKnt; bfocw IV ha aarvUnd snd grown l -r ttlar favor, whtla nutm of U-w m-nurUju srUcla ha wiiimnij flat-4 i uUi favor for s oriaf oorlod sod Ibea Ua as svoa forsotben. ror s torpid livrr with ft attendant IndiRisUoo. dypDis. fc-a4a-ii, r baoa diulnoaa. foif tresis. baity roatMt toncu. will) oil W taU. loaaof ao-tlt. with dlatrsas ilwr ratliig, rwruui and dbility. itotbtn U m rl a It. PlercVa iiMn Mdi-l iMvovrrr. lt"a as butKMa. Hitsr-dral ih1u-imi wttb ail Its lofrsdirau printed ou bottlwrarjt-r (IO BHCTfl, D h'jr u-pfu. L,ukjlHi(. thrfor tUrn't imr i a ulxXUutr vl. at tbs dealer may ytr-WAy anat a hub gr proflL lntmi on four right tu bats wnai yoa rail ror. lion't buy Or. Fatrcr'a Fsvwrtts Prsacr tm eipcun It U prova s cora all. Is only sdrlad for woioan' tfrcttl ail menta. It raak woo-o tronf utml alek ema wHI. Lea advrrti-d than some proparstioa aold for lik pnr)M-, IU telling rursuv trio attll naidlain lu dokIUoo fa U front rank. .Lmi It Stood over two dorado a?n. A an In Ig'jraUag toaie and uercihefn rr Im It Is uiwvj'ialMl, It won't aff tl r who want imnatt, tor tbrre it but s tiop Of alrobol In It. Dr. PWrca'a FVaaaat sVHrts. tl. isrt-i-nrU LltUs Urrr ItiK allbongti ILn fcrt pill of lh-ir kind In m nark-t. tll U-J. sod whouori trtw ar e afu-rward la fa ror. Esay U take aa fjr-l-oa Ut -tbre a dos. Hack itmttatfl tut tcr ) SgltuUcd. ft ssaasaaWBssMasjssBi

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