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- - - n , ' , , ' ' , .:-zr. z. , ' - ; - ! - ;. Sliorrill, Kditor and Publisher. PUBLISHED TWICE A. WEEK. I CO t Ywir, Advnnc. VOLUME 34. CONCORD, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER. I, 1908. Number 27. 1 THE BANK THAT ACCOMMODATES. 1 1 'Hi's bank aims to jjfive you good ser vice. - We cash out-of-town checks for you r-l'iinu!Ii you drafts for sending money ;iway: give you your money inanydenom in.tlion desired. We will provide you with darks if you have an account with us. We ;hv always glad to advise and assist in mon ey matters. Make your deposits with this I. a nk, which makes a point of good treat ment of its depositors. Our accommoda tions are adequate to every banking need. V endeavor to make our service as nearly I'ci fict as possible. Let this be an invitation to do your banking business with this bank. CITIZENS BANK & TRUST COMPANY A. JONES YORKE, President. M. L. MARSH, - Vice President. CIIAS. B. WAGONER, Cashier. I0IIN FOX. Assistant Cashier. WE WANT TO BUY YOUR PRODUCE WE WILL 6IYE YOU THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICES FOR IT V will buy your Butter all summer. Pack it up in T.n-ks or some other vessel. This saves printing, and i- jtt pood for us to handle. We will pay yon 12M 1 1 Tits a pound for it. .' a Highest prices paid for Chickens, Eggs and Beeswax. The D. J. Bost Co. THE CASH GROCERS. Farmers' Business. W - uive particular attention to the business oflarmers. dm-king account with a bank is a convenience no farmer shouldbe v " ir c rtiticatcs of deposit bear 4 per cent, interest. ' u- . inmodious offices always at the disposal of our customers. 4 ' ... .lially invite the farmers to mate this their Banting Home. The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits 530,000 I i 1 1 ri)t JANE CABLE GEORGE BARR McCUTCHEON. Aether f "Bevwfy el Gnaterk." Copyright. IX. by Dod4. UmI Company. ,1 CHAPTER XXI. AVID r CABLE lost no time In hurrying away from Chicago with his wife and Jane. They were whisked westward In his private car on the second day aft er the Bansemer exposure. Broken spir ited. Jane acquiesced In all their plans. She seemed as one in a stupoivcom prehending yet unresponslvetothe pain that enveloped her. . . "I can't see any one that I know here,", she Bald listlessly. "Oh, the thought of what they are saying!" Thei did not tell her that Graydon had enlisted as a private soldier in the United States army. Jane only knew that she loved him and that the bar sinister existed. Cable's devotion, to' her was beauti ful. He could not have been more ten der had she been his own daughter instead of his wife's imposition. Jane was 111 In; Pasadena for many weeks.. Her depressed condition made her recovery doubtful. It was plain to two persons, at least, that she did not care whether sue, lived or died. The physicians were rjuzzled, but no expla nation was offered by the Cables. It was not . until certain Chicago sojourn ers generously spread the news that the cause of he$ breakdown became apparent to the good doctors. Before many days the girl who sat wan. and distrait upon thef flower shaded piazza was an object of curiosity to fashion able Pasadena.' 'As soon as she . was strong enough to endure the trip the hunted trio forsook Pasadena and fled northward. ! San Francisco iafforded relief in pri vacy. Jane's spirits began to revive. There had not been nor was there ever to be any mention of that terrible-night and its revelations. What she may have felt and suffered in se cret could only be conjectured by those who loved her. iBansemer's name was never uttered; His fate remained un known to her. The faraway, unhappy look in her eyes proved to them that Graydon was never out of her thoughts. David Cable was In Chicago when Mrs. Cable received word from her sister, once Kate Coleman, that she soon would reach San Francisco with her husband, bound for' the Philip pines. Kate was the wife of a West Pointer who had achieved the rank of colonel hi the volunteers by virtue of political necessity. His regiment had been ordered to the islands, and she was accompanying him with their daughter, a girl of sixteen. t ' Colonel Harbin had seen pleasant service at the eastern posts, where his wife had attained a certain kind of social distinction in the army fast set She was not especially enamored of the prospect ahead of her In the Phil ippines. But the new colonel was a strict disciplinarian on and off the field. He expected to be a brigadier general if fortune and favoritism su; ported him long enough. Mrs. Harbin could never be anything more than a private in the ranks, so far as his es timation of distinction waaconcerned. weeks before salliag. Oae of th Un tenant wa a Chicago boy and an ac quaintance of Graydon Bansemer. It was from him that Jane learned that ner sweetheart was a soldier In the service, doubtless now la Luzon. A vttk before the Balling a Colonel Harbla's transport Jane suddenly an nounced that aha had bat one desire on earth, and that was to yo to Ma nila with her aunt. She did not pre sent her plea with the usual claim that she wanted to be of service tb her country. She was not asking to go out as a heroine of the ordinary -type. Instead she simply announced" that she wanted to go as a temporary member of Colonel Harbin's family, to-endore their hardships and to enjoy their en thusiasms. Mrs. Cable recognized the true motive, however. ) Her pleadings were in vain, j The Harbins had lucklessly urged Jane to join them wTe!greTOSer " back and forth acroso the continent, and David Cable came on to present his feeble objections. When the great transport sailed away, Jane Cable was one of her pas sengers, the ward of the regiment. - "It's Just for a little while, dad," she said wistfully at the dock; "4 few months. I'll think of you every minute Tm away." The' blood of the man In the service was calling to her. The ocean was be tween them. The longing to be near him, to tread the same soil, had con quered In the eternal battle of- love, After all, no matter how the end was attained, she was a creature of life, brought Into the world to love and to be loved. She put the past behind her and began to build a new future a future in which the adoration otj Gray don Bansemer was the foundation. The hope that makes all human; aver-, ages was at the work of reconstruc tion; youth was the builder. The months of destruction had not left a hopeless ruin as the heritage of dead Impulses. The world grew brighter as the ship forged westward. Bach daV sent warmer blood - into her, veins and deeper light Into her eyes. The new life was not Inspired by the longing to of fate: and she often found herself tb aiuain amv and uwa tra the wondering how this r,rU of true art eerret vt him pahoa. rpiMdty tocracy would conduct ' himself If he 1 PCar was ten mLVs off among the discovered that, after all, she was only rocky foothills whSrh guarded the pea) a foundling. through the nouetatn. As usual. It was Lieutenant Bray who made I Bansemer was one of the scoot, lie Inquiries at geoeral headquarters and aualcbad his rattocM with th 'others found, after considerable trouble, that and went forth eagerly to court the Graydon Banse riser's company was in danger and excitement that was rcaro- the north, subject to the requirements Ileed, For days they bad had xx txat of Young, chief of scoots. ling worthy the name. Ambfas every Irksome were the lazy summer I where, TtUaeee peopled only by woo months for Jane. She tired of the at-leu and children, treacherous peaceful tenttons of men: she sickened with I nees on every side. This had been longing and anxiety. Day after day I their encounter an occasional ride she prayed that the troops In the I shot from the rice fields, a crackle of north might be relieved. She watched I guns fsr ahead, a prisoner or two who for the order that would call for their had not been quick enough In trena- retonrfrom the wet lands above. Sick- forming himself from combatant to ness was prevslent among the fighting friend, that was sH. Now there seem- corps; the wet season had undermined ed to be real fighting ahead. the health of many. Constant news I Pilsr was known to have many men came down to Manila of the minor ea I good soldiers all of them. The native gagements, and she looked st every I scout gave, dose and accurate dlrec rcport for news of Graydon. Colonel I tlous as to his position. It remained Harbin occasionally had private ad- for Council's men to draw htm oat u vices from the north. She heard of possible. Captain 'Groce and the re Oraydon's bravery more than once and malnder of his eager company did not glowed with pride. Down In her tired. I march until long after the scouts anxious heart she was wondering if it were possible for her to go to the front in, any capacity. At last with October came the wan ing of the rainy - season. November brought active fighting. A general movement of the troops was directed against Agulnaldo." In his prime as a leader he controlled the north, and his capture was imperative. Lawton and were on their precarious way. Two hours after the party of eleven left the village a Mauser bullet from a clump of trees fsr to the right cut through the hat of one of ,the scouts who wss some distance In advance or his fellows. As he saw the scoot stoop to pick up his bat Rogers turned to the man nearest him and remarked: They'll ret him sure as sbootln Young began operations on the right, some day If he hikes along In that fool McArthur on the center, with Whea- way." ton pushing forward on the extreme It was no new experience for the left. The insurgents fell back from scouts to find the quarry gone when Tarlac. There were many big fights at they reached ihe place where they ex San Jacinto and other places now fa- pected to find him. Pilar's own scouts mous in history. . nad found that the ambuscsde was The Red Cross society held forth at destined to fall of Its punse. and the Malolos, reaching gradually Into the wily leader drew back Into the more country north. Sick and wounded men accessible country. The scouting party came Into the hospitals daily and In flid not come In sight of the little larger numbers tuan one would have brown soldiers. Before noon they were supposed. The villages, or barrios, all tar up in the hills, everywhere met by along the , line of advance saw their the physical assurance that the enemy convents turned Into hospitals. As fast was not far ahead of them. Behind as possible the nurses were hurried up them came Captain Groce and his men to them. Men and women in this noble and the) two correspondents, service did heroic, faithful work both Amieos along" the mountain road be his wife, but to see him again and for the white and the brown men who I gave Information that was not worth . . J SOUTHERN RAlliWAY Operating over 7,000 Miles of Railway. Route to all Points, North, South, East and West. ueb Trains between Principal Lities and Kesorts. Ailoruing rirst-ciass Attuuiuiuuauuua. B uit Sleeping Cars on all Through Trains, Dining, Club and Observation Cars. J . 1 i -need, Comfort and Courteous Employees, travel via the Southern Railway. i schedules, and other information furnished by addressing the undersigned. S'h Hirdwick, Pas. Traffic Manager, j W. H. Tayloe, G. P. A., Washington, D. C. R. L. Vernon, T. P. A., Charlotte, N. C. AAaaaaaa to comfort him. She would jbe no man's wife. I , . At last one hot, , soft morning Jn early July the great transport Slipped past Corregidor and turned Its nose across Manila bay, past Cavite, to ward the anchorage which ended the long -voyage. The city of Manila lay stretched out before them Manila, the new American capital. The troops were marched off to quar ters, and the Harbins, with Jane Ca ble, repaired at once to the .Orlente, where they were jto llvejwior to tak ing a house In Ertmita or ban Miguel, The campaign was not being pushed vigorously at this time. "It was the rainy season. Desultory fighting was going on' between the troops and the insurgents. There were numerous scouting and exploring expeditions into the enemy's country. A week elapsed before Jane could find the opportunity to make Inquiries concerning the whereabouts of Gray don Bansemer. Her thoughts had been of nothing else; her eagerness had been tempered by the diffidence of the OTerzealous. She and pretty Ethel Harbin had made life endurable for the gay young officers who came oyer on the ship. The pretty wives of cer tain 'captains and lieutenants had small scope for their blandishments at close range. Flirtations were hard to manage in space so small. The two girls were therefore In a state of siege most of the time. The-abject follow ing fell away perceptibly when the broader field of action on shore gave their married sisters a chance to ma neuver with some degree of security. A faithful few remained in train, how ever. Ethel Harbin, like the ingenue hi the play, had each finger .clumsily but tightly wrapped with a breathing uniform of blue. It must be admitted In shame,' however, that she changed His daughter, Ethel, had, ttf means of I the bandages often and without con no uncertain favoritism, advanced a science or ceremony, few points ahead of her mother and might have ranked as sergeant in the i family corps. , ; Mrs. Harbin played cards, drank highballs, flirted with the younger ofli cers, got talked about with pleasing emphasis and was as happy as any subordinate could be. They had not even thought .of such a thing as di vorce, and the whole army wondered and expressed disgust. The army's appetite for scandal is surpassed only by Its bravery in war. It is even hinted that the latter Is welcomed as a loophole for the former. War brings peace. - . ' The arrival of the Harbins and a staff of. gay ! young cadets fresh from the bankB of the Hudson put new life into the recluses. The regiment was to remain at the Presidio for several "went down. From the field hosnltals the men were taken to the convents and treated until they were able to be moved to Manila. Further north fled Agulnaldo and the Filipinos. . Wheaton was ordered havlngJ A deserted village showed signs of the passsge, snd finally there was proof ahead that Pilar had stop ped to give battle. He had reached his vantage ground. Connell and his men drew back and waited. Nightfall to cut off his retreat; Young was killed; J came and with it the spiteful crack of Cunningham took charge of the scouts! the Mauser rifle. A brawny trooper who scoured the country. Parties of toppled over with a great hole In his ten to fifteen picked men fell out In head. Pilar's pickets could see like advance of the main body, seeking to cats In the night The native scout develop the enemy and his defenses. I reported that the big village of Con These brave fellows attracted the hld- cepclon was not far ahead; Pilar's men den : fire of ambush, exposed them-1 were making their stand before this selves to all the treacheries of war-1 rather Important stronghold. fare and afterward were mustered out with a kind word from the department They were the men who' tested the ter ritory. It was with one of these scouting parties that Graydon Ban semer ventured far into the enemy's country early in November. "Well get a scrap that is a scrap. boys, said Connell exultlngly. "These fellows are going to put up a fight at last They're like bees up yonder. We've got to fall back on the com pany, ir we aon i, iney u cnew us up before the little captain can get to us." Too well did the men know the belll- XW apey rtd tbe tsea4 rtda. raptsta Irw ge another edr. Th forv&slVoa to rrpl attack was snade ta sa Lbrrrditwy abort efaY of Us Thnre u t disorder, bo rafela. The little edWr n as m4 ss if mo dnraa prJv Hu-aiij, n! Watt ta yr nearetr Thy h1 I wsft. fYaca sU sides a fe"rd slMMiUac. fUtag wrre ruahlag on the Utti s)sre. -Here thy sr: New. ibn. Hoy. Voile? srtw vo'Vy rang 4t. The fommst of the vumf fell 1st thetr fvrt Uatxf to Ltnl was the jficfctlag. The hayoorts lunard with desdlj ef- . ferl. but serowd powetlras 1o throat tha bun back oo tt4f. V shot, barked, atabbtd sod rleUtod a-h oth er. It wss a whirl of opltfilBf as4 descending rifles and boloa. FU'rre uaths vied with tb shrieks of tnt wwiodM for euprwnacy. The grunt of tarn who slaughter, the gaps of the victims b the steel went btne. were heard on all sMea. At time the soldiers con'-d not r on sr rount of the sweat sod blood poorta from their face. The very sir wss foul from tbe steam from the tlvtng and the desd They could nt treathe A sort of rt!2 oterjtaeml them, snd they only kt-pt tbetr feet, by jrs Ollng with the cniuy, To IlaOM'ttjer It Manned thst all hU life be h.id Ueu doing nothing but wsrding tff sud dellTertng blow. Fighting. side by side wlth.U'irT, h saw, with hornr, thst the inildler's rifle had tvn torn frtn hts ha tula and thst be had.no weaHn to defend himself, but liefore be could se Jut how It hsprehed this Individual rtuii bat hsd.slteml Its aspect lingers. bad gfabtd tbe J Filipino's gun and doing, the clubbing. With rruewed srfit'Ksurtemer finlahel with tt Inyo not his own asaallant snd saw tbe man fall on top of poor Adstns snd Relandcr. Suddenly there was an eiultsnt yell from the enemy. lustluctlvely lUuae merknew that one side of the squsre had given way. Qnlckly turning. b rushed to give his ski snd jud In tltue caught the arm of a naUve about to slaoh him with a huge knife. With tbe two gripped bands high In tbe air struggling for mastery the adverssrles became separated ablt from tbe rent of the chaotic mass of friend and fu, swaying out to one side of the plaia and under the walls of a convent Bansemer was facing It snd Just at tbe moment that be felt bis strength giving way and could see a grlu of triumph on the fiendish face there came a flash and a reiurt and hU ad versary Ml st bis fevt Glancing up to ascertain who bad fired the shot thnt bad saved bin life, be thought be saw a figure disappearing from one of tbe windows. The Incident acted as an lupplratlon. (Jntherlng together s few men, he reached Ihe captain's side snd communicated his plan. The opportu nity was not to be lout. Groce gave so order; Cnue!P repeated It Then in terpreting a tetni'orary lull ta tbe'tuur- . - temperament of the big Irishman herons struggle as their vantageAbe CHAPTER XXII. REGORIO DEL PILAR, the picturesque Filipino leader, about whom so much has been written in praise by the war cor respondents, was leading his men back into the danger fields, inviting the Amoricnn nnrsuers - into every trap H n 111 i r iniiii w . ' I UMivk'w a' - Jane's admirers were in love with which his crafty brain could devise. her. She was not the sort -to Inspire I o -VsVtissc4svpgnsira i?OSJJSsMI ( DAVIS WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS Hiddenite, N. C. .V Ol I-K. We nre better prepared than ever to serve you. n- added an Annex of 30 mr Te nice Single Rooms and Electric - uvh sundry Miialler improvements. ' i'w have all modern conveniences, such as Sewerage, Hot and i;..ths. , - ' ' trie Lights, plenty of nice rooms, nicely furnished. Bell and Inde ' l'hone connections Two daily mail trains each way and all lor a ' ' I'rke. " . ' '"-v. "t i-1 ice is one mile' north of Hiddenite, N. C, on Southern Railroad ' I' irlotte to Taylorsville; change from Salisbury at Statesville. ' ' for July and August, $7 to $9 per week; $22 to $33 per month. r further information write f r I'lustrated Booklet to - Laundry! Electric Rear City Hall. City office : Opposite St. CIoucl Hotel. Quick service, best quality of work. Collar, Cuff and Flat Work unexcelled. W. S. BINGHAM - Manager Aug. 4. ... 600" When the great transport sailed away, Jaxe Cable was one of her passengers. idle fancies. In any event; it looked a long time to these chaps before they could get back to the States, and she was worth while. : Perhaps her most devoted admirer was Lieutenant Bray. Good looking and coming from ah excellent southern family, he was a great favorite with all. Jane liked him better than any of Captain Groce. with a company of in fantry, was following him closely and doggedly into the fastnesses far to the north. Village after village was dev astated by the white troops, always a few hours after the wily Pilar had evacuated. Amigos laughed in their deceptive sleeves at the Americans and misdirected them with impunity. In eight cases out of ten the amlgo wore arms underneath his garment of friend ship and slew in the daEk whenever opportunity arose. Graydon Bansemer was one of this doughty, eager com pany which blazed the way Into the hills. Close behind came the bigger and stronger forces, with guns and horse, and the hospital corps. It was the hunt of death for Agulnaldo and Pilar. Shortly after daybreak one morning a slim, black "figure crept out from among the trees and gave the counter sign ta, the challenging sentry. He was soon on his way to the captain's headquarters bearing news of impor tance. The brown skinned scout had traveled all night over a hazardous routeand he was, more than welcome. He brought news that Pilars men were off to the east and the north, well intrenched and prepared to fall upon the Americans whep they advanced blindly Into the trap laid for them. The newspaper men pricked up their ears and at once looked to a box of carrier pigeons which formed a most lmoortant Dart of their pilgrimage. A fight was at hand, doubtless an impor tant, meeting of the clashing forces. The whole army was waiting for intel ligence of Pilar waiting . with little cose to think of grumbling at such a com mand, yet It was with a certain reluc tance which invariably accompanies a backward step that the men retired to meet the advancing company. Young Bansemer in his khaki uni form was not tbe immaculate, debon naire man of the drawing room. Serv ice, though short, had been hard and grueling... His face was even hand somer wjlth its' rugged lines and set features. He was thinner and brown er; his eyes were clearer and a darker gray; his hair seemed thicker and fairer than before; his figure more erect and sinewy. The wistful look In his eyes seemed to betray hunger for action; his ever ready eagerness to be on the move told of his strength and of his weakness. -He had the lean, active bearing of the panther and the restless daring of that lithe animal. No man in the company bad stood fire as valiantly as he. He courted the whiz of the bullet, scoffed at the rig ors of Ihe march and instinctively was a good shot with the rifle. He bore no grudge against the department at home; he had no grievance. The officers recognized In him a man of parts, a man of station far above the position which he had chosen in the army. He was a source of mys tery to the men of his own rank in the line the plowboys, the teamsters, the roustabouts and the ne'er-do-wells who had gone Into tbe army from choice or discretion. At first they had called him tbe "dude" and had laughed at his white hands and clean Jaws. His Indifference to their taunts annoyed them. One day he knocked down the biggest bully of the lot and walked away without even waiting to - see whether he would arise after the blow. I nTIT TJfl DAT 0 X T 17 T the rest. She would have liked him ugence 01 mar-waning . APPIiKS rl)K SALK M sffll better had. he been able to resist less anxiety than that which attached UUJ I VII UlimJ J u. , . . - v frnm itseif to the pursuit of Agulnaldo. men, with a cheer and dragging the field piute, broke for the-bulldlng and by bayoneting a-nd.clubblng the Insur gents out of theway accomplished the. dash with 'si Ighf loss. The soldiers hurled themselves against the stoutly barred door. It fell with a crash. Guards were stationed and all open ings and windows uauunL Singularly enough, these defensive actions seetu ed at least temporarily uu necessary, for the watchers poerlug out of the win dows reported that the dead alone oc cupied the recent field of battla. Not a single Filipino was to be seen on tbe plaza. Every village bas Its convent or bar rios. Generally Kpeaklng. their size corresponds in a certain .ratio with the population. But, this particular build ing was an exception. Dimly lighted, it gave the Impression of ranking la size with many of those In far larger villages.. Immediately the thought came to the Invaders that tbe church might have sheltered the Insurgent leaders. Agulnaldo or Pilar might have directed tbe attack from insldo these walls. Orders were given to search every corner and crevice to ferret out concealed foes. A rear win dow was open, proving that flight could have Uen by that means of egress." Bansemer was almost posi tive that the bullet which had killed his assailant had come from one of the upper windows, but whether from friend or foe was undeterminable. Were they not In a cunningly planned trap of some kind? Considerably perplexed Bansemer decided to keep on his guard He was ruthlessly searching the chancel when a deep groan caught his attention. Presently, as he paused to listen, a He simply glared at the next man who dark fif'r? toward him from a chaffed. It was enough. The com- rec?8 .th.e. altar Tbe fl5h?f pany held him in a new respect that 11STOI b, nae " m Every night before he lay down to sleep. In the rice field or the barrios. he took from his pocket a leather case and gazed at the small portrait It shel tered. 1 No one had been . permitted to see him In bis devotions,- for that was what he called these sacred moments. His lean face, full of fierce energy all day long, softened as bis eyes 'de voured the dainty miniature. . "Halt! Who goes there?" - f A shot rang out in the stillness of the night. - It was answered at once by another closer in. More shots fol lowed, gradually increasing to a fusil lade as the scouts and pickets came running back. Men sprang up from frame forward upon the slight, almost Indistinguishable figure.. There was a short struggle, and before his com rade could reach him bis adversary was safely pinned to the floor. A moment later the torches in tbe hands of his friends were burning brightly above the figure of his csptive a slen der boy who choked with terror and rage. "Who are you. my young friend?" asked - Bansemer, holding the boy at arm's length. to n oowrnrtra. 3 By the barrel. In large or small lots. Address, i j. E. HALL, WfttiaWiWic PggOqOgOgOPOgOgOgO,5'Og090 ' Aug. 25-lm Box 247. Waynesville, N. C. DAVIS BROS , Owner, and Proprietors, H'lddeflite, N. C. a tendency to boast of the stock from which he had sprung. The knowledge of her disadvantages In life, the con trast between their respective posl- tlons, all tended to emphasize the Irony Very Close in Indiana. Indiana for Taft by from 6.000 to the grounds but even as they did so to 10,0000 Governorship much in another volley reached them, and three doubt. That . is the Republican men dropped with a groan and lay estimate. atirt Tho .larm snnnMwl Hour from Indiana for Rrvan hv 10.000 to 15.- nell with a picked squad to reconnolter.1 the bugle and echoed back from the 000 -Marshall sure to be elected. They scurried ofT In advance of the surrounding hills. A sharp command I That is the Democratic view of the company, with instructions to locate' came from the throat of the sergeant situation. Itself to the pursuit of Agulnaldo. Captain Groce ordered Sergeant Con- 'iu-
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
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Oct. 1, 1908, edition 1
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