Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Jan. 11, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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John B. Smbrri&v, .Editor and Fublis.ihies'. PUDLIOHBO TWIOI A WKKK. VOLUME XXXIV. UUiNUUKD, W. U.. MUJNDAY. JAJNUAKY 11. 1909. NUMHKR fS atffJafX A "WV - . "W .a""" AW aax AV aak a a aa mm mm - , aaaaaaa , . aaa-aaa . .- .. . 77 v.-jfrtnannswntfHiyjui. vW iwa..-- ..v--.gain. .-ra.awsiiit. t - t i T ' 1 1 ' - I- J -I ' ; I I , r W51 Fair, courteous treatment is depositors., whether their deposits are large or small. It is our desire that our reputation for justice and fair dealing should equal that for financial integrity and solidity. ' ' I CITIZENS BANK & TRUST COMPANY CONCORD, N. C. A.JONES YORKE, CH AS. B. WAGONER, President. - Cashier. M. L. MARSH, Vice President. r f- -- .. . Our Certificates of Deposit pay four per lull on demand r Farmers' We give, particular attention to the business of farmers. 4 . A checking account with a bank is a convenience no farmer should be without. ' I fS Our certificates of deposit bear 4jer cent. Interest. '" , Our commodious offices always at-the disposal of oar customers. We cordially invite the fanners to make this their Banking Home. The Concord National Bank ! Capital $100,000 - Surplus and Undivided - CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK Capital, Surplus .and Profits, $135,000.00'. RESOURCES,' OYER HAIF A MILLION DOLLARS. Conser nti t e-- iS u cces fii I Strong. A Bank for the people. All are welcome and assured of fair and courteous treatment. V Four per cent, interest paid on time certificates of de posit, i Safety Deposit Boxes for rent. 1 ; : : 1 .1 ', ..! . : : START IT RIGHT ! No better way Globe-Wernicke Book Case and Filing 25 LIBRARY PLANS) lunnimr tT A ailnouncement;hould intereat youC , . lection Tot beautiful etaloguefonjtiHu VehVe a flinuied number thee patron, but only on requesijniwTioivo Set iht filrt"announment WC WUI OiSW uww i(wm iae ulAeJiniiK:kl? U liopiw J " . -r: t lie'mAniifacturert are interested. tgy cSnhng'vilh Your books' and papers suffer. - Everything found in a Furni . i ture Store hwe have" at prices right.; Car Load Buyers. Disc punt Sayers. Price Hakers CASH OR The "Store that Satisfies" for 1909 will strive to do its full duty and merit a continuance of the good and increasing trade given . in ine past. . - - Wishing you a prosperous New Year, e are, - - . 'M -'.7.1 ': . Bespectfully, 1 t i " - ::. '711 n IIIMrl III IH I cosiness lien with one accord praise the methods employed by this bank for- the conduct of its business: always extended to our JOHN FOX, i Assistant Cashier. cent, interest, and are payable in without notice. Business. profits 30,000 i- J than buying a Cabinet. ORIGINAL . F Vl HIBWVT.VIH IMW JM am ! . twenry-nve repnnui. ooym u from.ao oim.v!W . book ,v1iicK uy j'" in the leading OctoW.tiwgaanes of 8U!VrUfc booki J - . J - - them CREDIT! - ."' . . . . w- n r y "VISITATION Of PROyiDENOV BIUmor Ban. . Men speak of the earthquake In taly, by which multitudes perished, ai "a visitation of Providence." If any calamity happens it is a visita tion of Providence or "the act of God." Men are very auick to attri bute evil to God,' but to claim the credit which is Rood to themselves. f the .country is prosperous it is the result of the tariff, the wisdom of the lawmakers or the energy and en terprise of the people. We never talk of prosperity as a "visitation of rovidence." But if evil befall the and, if there is war, pestilence or amine or death and destruction in casualties, then it is a "visitation of Providence." m Mr. John Wannamaker, the Phila delphia merchant, undertook .to con vince the Young Men's Christian Association that the - terrible earth quake in Italy was "a visitation of the Almighty for disregarding the aw of Mount Sinai." Among those who died in that dreadful calamity were thousands of infants, who did not know their right hands from the eft and had never heard of the law of Sinai. Did God visit death upon these for the sins of others? "And esus answering said unto them, Suppose ye that these Galileans were sinners above all the Galileans because they suffered such thingB? tell you. nay or those eighteen upon whom the tower in Siloam fell and slew them, think ye that they were sinners above all men .that dwelt in Jerusalem? I tell you, nay." That was a distinctly differ ent doctrine from- that which is taught by Mr. Wanamaker. Of the twelve , Apostlesx only one died a natural death, and he died after a ife which was a living death. AH the rest were done to death in a most cruel manner.. Was that a visitation of the Almighty because they had disregarded the. law of Mount Sinai? In the early days of Christianity thousands of devoted Christians were tortured and had trial of cruel mockings and scourg ings, were stored and sawn asunder or were thrown to the lions and torn to pieces while the pagans look ed on in security and enjoyment Decs Mr. ' Wai.niVsr Leva tliat all these things happened to those devoted people because they had dis regarded the law of Sinai? "There comes & time when God's patience ia exhausted," says Mr. Wanamaker. Who is he to limitations upon God's patience when we are told that His, mercy is everlasting? The truth is that the occurence of such calamities as that which has befallen Italy is a mystery. No human mind can fath om the purposes of the inscrutable rovidence no finite mind can measure or comprehend the Infinite: When these things come upon man kind there is nothing to do but to accept them with submission and in the belief that all things work to gether for good. A Wise Move. ' StatesTlll Landmark. The Rowan commissioners have made a wise move. They are build ing macadam roads in that county and the commissioners have wisely decided that it is poor business to build these expensive roads and eave them to wear in holes and wash away lor lacK or attention, xney have, therefore, established a repair gang, tne business, oi tne repair eanz being to go. over the roads al ready built and keep them in good condition. This repair gang is so outfitted that it can camp wherever night overtakes it. . , Of course a per manent repair gang is a necessary aoDurtenance f or any county en gaged in permanent, road building, but strange toBay, it is usual to per mit thousands of dollars of damage to permanent work before an effort is made to apply the proper remedy. The news leaked out Wednesday that a rather unusual robbery e- cured" Tuesday night when, the trunks of Miss Ashton, leading lady in the Raven company, which played at Charlotte, were broken open after. the players had boarded a Southern train there and jewels and a Paris gown representing over one mou- ii sands dollars in value were stolen. Owing tohe scarcity of birds in Guilford county the. citizens may ask the Legislature to prohibit the hun- ting of Birds for a period ef five years. THE TRUST PL'ZZIL ChartottoOUwiw. " i Governor Campbell, of Texas, says that before the end of the present year every trust willie run out of that State and that none of them will be allowed to compete for busi ness with individual concerns. This." says The Washington Post, is not exactly new, for some time ago the btandard Oil octopus was banished from Texas; Since then the Texas housekeeper bat paid more for oil than her neighbors of Arkansas or Louisiana." Here is a situation, and it presents the trust problem in its most complicated form. Certainly the Standard Oil is not one of the trusts which.-are "good," of which Mr. Roosevelt once said there are some, yet you chase it out of the State and pay more for your oil. The trust,, as Tne Post says, "would be the most beneficent of all industrial and com mercial expedients if it would put up with a reasonable profit; but it will not.' Regulation would be the remedy for those of their activities which are pernicious, but howi to regulate them 1 Governor Campbell says there can be no such thing j as regulation and that to destroy them is the only way. Destroy them and pay more for all the great varieties of stuff they produce? The first proposition sounds good; the second doesn't.: The practicable way of getting along withoutthem has not yet been figured out. To do this or else make them behave themselves are the problems for our statesmen to solve. That is what we hire them for, isn't it? to find out for us the things we can't find out for ourselves.- So Soon? Everybody'! Magazine." A judge in North Carolina was sentencing a big, loose ' jointed ne gro who had been convicted of mur during another negro. "George Early," his honor said, you have been found by twelve men tried and true to be guilty of murder in first degree, for having killed in cold bood, Moses Stack house, and it is the sentence of this court that on the tenth day of Aug giist tha sheriff of Polk county take you to a place near the county jail and there hang you by the neck until you are dead, dead, dead! And may God have mercy on your soul. Have you anything to say for yourself? ' ; The negro shifted from one foot to the other and twisted and un twisted the old felt hat he held in his hand. All eyes in the court room were upon him. Finally, rolling his eyes on the judge, he said: 7 "Look y'here, jedge, you all don't mean mis coming August, does you?" ' - t foot Path to Peace Tor 1909. fi Hanry van Dy. ji To be glad, of life, because it gives you the chance to love and . to work and to play and .to look up at tne stars; to De satisned with your possessions, but not, contented with yourself until you nave made the best of them; to despise nothing in the world except falsehood and meanness, and to fear nothing except cowardice; to De governed hy your admirations rather - than by your disgusts; to covet nothing that is your neighbor's except his kindness" of heart and gentleness of manners; to think seldom of your enemies, often of your friends, and everyday of Christ; and to spend as much time as you can, with body and with spirit in God's out-of-doors these are little guide-posts on the foot-path to peace There are other debts, too, that it would be wise to pay on these first "days of the year.- The folk who have helped us on the way, who are not to be reached with money, do we owe them nothing? You think every day that your wife is the kind est of women, the nearest right of any human soul. Do you tell her so? There is a pitiful story of an old woman in New England dying m tne arms or ner sen. nimseii a gray-hidred man. 'You've been good mother to me!' he cried. 'Oh, John, why did you never say it be fore?' she said. Our Puritan .and Scotch blood has made us stingy of praise and kindness, of the little words that help our neighbor on his way. This is a good time to count 1 up such debts." Saturday Evening Post. T Pilns at the waist, bade, frnt, or ride, art nearly sure proof of female trouble. Som other signs ar hadach. pressing down pains, Irregular functions, restless ness, cold limbs, nenronsness, etc" These pains may be alfayexk the system braced" and the womanly functi$as reslsteJtjy theiisof TA7 V 7 m a i -. .' - "- . iw Annlft HafMHon. . at.. u ftffr ttrre cunnc dowh mi wasti papol The high price of raw newspaper has had one good result It has in a measure abaUd the nuisance of the heavy Sunday newsDener. The Cir culation Manager, published in Chi cago, aaya that by limiting returns on Sunday Daners to S ner cent.. newspapers of New York City have saved over 90 tons of of paper each week, while two of the New York evening papers in abolishing returns not only secured a greater revenue from circulation, but reduced . the number of copies-printed by 60.000 day, thereby saving 240 tons of pa per per . week. The Chicago daily papers abottshed all returns In the city and country on morning, even ing and Sunday editions, thereby saving 9.3G0 tons annually. The Philadelphia papers have not only eliminated returns but have shown a tendency to economize on white stock by condensation of news mat ter. One of the Boston papers esti mated that the abolition of returns in that city would save the publishers over $400,000 annually. The biggest waste of white paper has been in the mistaken competi tion of the Northern Sunday papers as to which could get out the largest number . of pages, regardless of merit. The publishers have been called to their senses and the public is feeling the relief. What More Could She Expect? , : Old Mrs. Simmers was well-to-do. but parsimonious. She attended all church meetings regularly, but her contributions to the collection-plate would certainly have enriched no one. i One Sunday morning the old lady took her little grandson to church with her. The boy watched every thing with bright and hawk-like eyes and he took a deep interest in the discussion that followed at home a ter, during dinner. ' "How was the sermon?" asked Mrs. Simmere'a daughter. "Poor," said Grandma Simmers emphatically, "mighty poor." "But Grandma." said the little, boy interrupting her. quietly, "what could 7u expect for a penny?, Dog Held Prisoner In Rabbit Hole Ten Days. Ten days ago a young dog belong ing to James Ball of Delaware ac compained a crowd of boys into the woods. The dog was lost, and after a search of an hour, which failed to bring forth any trace of the canine, the boys returned to town. Tuesday the same boys took a trip to the woods and gave chase to a rabbit.' The rabbit was lost track of in the vicinity of a groundhog hole, and was supposed to have run into it The boys reached into the hole, and instead of pulling out the rabbit, produced "the lost pup. The dog had got into the hole and was unable to get out; but after it had several meals showed no ill effect from its ten days' Imprisonment. The fault of The Clock, ,-Pat and Mike were playing a game of cards In a saloon. Pat kept looking at the clock. Mike said: "And faith, what are you looking at the clock for?" "Every time that clock ticks,'? Pat replied, "J. D. Rockefeller, makes ten dollars." - Mike dropped his cards and jump ed on the table. "What In faith are you going to do?" asked Pat ' 1 "I'm going to stop the answered Mike. clock,' On leaving nls study, wmcn Is in the rear of the church, the pastor of a church In Brooklyn saw a little boy. a iriena or nis, talking to a stranger. ''What was he saying to you, Dick?" asked the divine as, tie came up to the youngster. "He just wanted to know whether Dr. Blank was the preacher of this church," "And what did you tell him?" "I told him," responded the lad. with dignity, "that you were the present encumbrance." The next annual meeting of the North Carolina Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, will be held In Charlotte Janary 12-13. Itoh enrad la 30 mmnMs by Wool ford's Sanitary Ixrttaa. Have falls. Sold lir K. 1. Marsh. 4rttglatr fee ml (Ckwto ' - - . .... i - &cosvffle! Wis.: writes: j,,Cardul saVed mo ft hs4 f ?fid fa hdn ASOUT Apptxwaiis. (naeat Sorcery n Oafy ttdbod.- Dnrp Weal Cart t ' Grape seeds and tight lacing as causes of appendicitis haw been eliminated by Dr. John D, Murphy, who is considered the very last word on the subject In Chicago, and per haps la .the United States, says a Chicago dispatch. 'No one has been able to discover the cause of the inflammation of the appendix." he amid.. "Some people charge It up to rheumatism; others to measles. There are persons who believe that overfed people get it; others that onderfed people are most liable, but no surgeon has ever dis covered the real cause, "Bat we do not know appendicitis in all of Its nature, and in the de struction that it produces. It is more common in summer than In winter; it is more common among men than among women, in the 'ratio of about four to one; it is more com mon among boys than among girl, so that the old Idea that tight lacing was the cause seems to be dissipated. It is something that we cannot run away from, because it is foond in all quarters of the globe. There are countries, perhaps, where they still call it inflammation of the bowels, but that is because they have no', recognized it as appendicitis. "There is no disease where the symptoms are more uniform, and it is one of the easiest diseases to diag nose; first there is the pain, then the nausea, the soreness due to local pressure, and lastly, the elevation oi the temperature. The appendix can float around in, a large space, and while it is generally on the right side, it has been found on the left side. There are times when the psin entirely disappears and the pa tient may still be on the lightning express to death. The sudden ces sation of pain are due to ruptures which allow a discharge into free cavities, temporarily relieving the nressure. Stirring around only al lows the food particles to further harass the inflamed tissue. Kest absolute rest is the nearest cure, aside from the knife. "The mortality rate with medical treatment alone is about 20 per cent , while it is less than one-fifth of one per cent under surgical treatment. if operated on in Its incipient stages. No medicine has ever been discov ered that will cause a cure." - Small Pef Cent of Army Applicants ; Accepted. The local recruiting station of the United States army at Ashville re ceived 'many app'i aits for enlist ment in the service during the year 1908, but of these many applicants only about 33 per cent, was accepted. The record shows that during the year 534 men- from this ; section of the State made application for en listment In the army - and that 175 were accepted, leaving a total oi aw persons rejected. Of this total num ber of applicants 88 were from the county of Madison. Out of the 88 from Madison 81 were accepted. The rejected applicants included 105 minors. 44 unable to read or write. 43 for general unfitness, 37 under weight, X impaired vision, and 116 for various other causes. - Strange Case of Telepathy. A curious case oftelepalhy has oc cured to a sailor on board the Italian battleship Regina Eleba. He was granted leave to search for girl in Messina to whom he was engaged to be married. After having sought for her during four days he returned to the shiD exhausted and fell into a deep sleep, during which he dreamed of his fiance saying to him, "I am alive: come, save me." The sailor waked, obtained fresh leave from the commander of the ship,' gather ed together several friends and went to the spot of which he had dreamed The nartv Denetrated the ruins or a house and found the girl uninjured. ' "Doeen't it make you nervons to be In the road when an automobile comes along at breakneck speed?" "Yes," answered the suburban dweller, "but I'd rather be in the road than in the machine." Wife I've got such a headache. I wish I could keep Johnnie out. of the house for an hour or two. Husband Why not go to the oor and tell him to "come in this in stant"? ; ' - - . - i meV It iS A'CTOOd medidni cxvicii oi eaoct wsi. T ft Km U Gnais SpntaaUy. Sn ft Debtee. Mrs. A. It &maJof IW Uoinr. Iowa, winner of the: woman a wtt!4 championship of tW U. S, A . aa one the p aixra at 4 rtwnt mif r t W inona. and jra her ciprrimc mi teaUroony a follows : "After 1 saw what I waa rralhr do. ing, I burned up ray whist board and irdi, and 1 ahould like to prV In every church to the women and tell them what card playing kl me to and will Wad them to. "I belonged to Chriat church, in Des Moines, and when 1 was moat active at the card table, I waa alao trying to-work In the church. My husband was on the board of truatrra and I waa 'rt thr bead of the churrh akk committee. "I looked about me in the church and saw that card play ing Was under mining our organization. ""The whUt and euchre craze was sweeping the women of the congregatidnr aixl the church was sinking because of their neglect The fever to play whiat acquired such a hold on me that I abandoned my church work : in fact quit attending service. "Finally. M r. Sims and I fell to discussing it, and we concluded that i my identity w ith the churchrand the card cluba of Dee Moines made my attitude ridiculous. I continued to play cards up to December 17ih. 006. I had spent years studying "hist from a scientific standpoint' I gave as much thought to ther came as a minister of a church could gfve to the Scriptures. , "Toward the cJoae of my card career I declared that I would feive up euchre and whist parties, but would never abandon the regulation game of whist On December 17th, astyear, I heard- Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman preach on 'Amuacroenta.' made up . my mind that I would never touch a card again. "The", card craze, as it prevails among the wpmen of . this country, is the most serious competitor the church has to-day. "It is eauaintr them home and church Interests. 1 have had letters from women in every leading city in the United States, in which they declared that the church and society women have gone mad over bridge whist and other games. Letters in a similar strain have come to me from Canada, Europe and Mexico. "It was when these messages be gan to pour in upon me that the hold cards have taken on civilized women fully dawned upon me; I want the women of the country to hear my experience. ' I want to con vince them, if I can.! that earrtnlav. ing and Christianity will not go to gether." J Always Keeps a Bottle In the Moune. "About ten day, before CbrUtmaa I Romy hand bart ao badly that I bad to Mop work right in the bnay tlma of tha year." aara Mr. Milton Wheeler. 2100 Morrla Ave.. Birmingham, Ala, 'At first I thonght I would have to have my band taken eff. but aomone told me to fret a bottle of 8 oan'a Linimen t and that would do the work. The liniment cured my hand atid I gladly reoommend It to every one." ; Mr. J. E.. Matthewa, proprietor 8 James Hotel, Oorninjr, Ark , aayi : "My finger waa greatly Inflamed from a ,flh ting, and doctors prononnoed It blood polaoning I used aereral application of SI oan'a Liniment and it cpred me all right. 1 will alwayi keep a bottle of Sloan's Liniment jn my hoase. Mr J. P. Eyana, of Mt Airy. .Gi aaya "After tK-log afflicted for three yeara with rbeamatum, I ned Sloan ' Liniment, and waa cored aonnd and well, and am glad to aay-1 haven't been troubled with rbenmatiam ainoe. My leg waa badly awollen from my bipto my knee. .One-half a bottle took the pain and swelling on t." Wanted Passengers to Congratulate New- w lyWeds. Industrial Sew. Znd. Passengers on train No, 36 yester day were given handbills reading as follows just after the train pulled out from Salisbury: "Passengers on this train will con fer a great favor by going up and congratulating Mr. and Mrs. 'Blank,'. the newly married couple You can tell them by the following description: The bride has a grey dress and gray bat and a smile on her face. Don't be bashful. Come One, come all." ' ' The trans-Atlantic passenger trav el during 1908, east and wet-bound shows a shrinkage of almost a million persons in comparison with the fig urea tor tne year 11, and was a- bout 400,000 less than in 1906.; Dur ing the year just closed the steam ship companies carried a total of 1, 530,161 passengers, of which 670,680 were west-bound, or incoming, and 8569,431 were outgoing or east bound. For the first time in a great many, years the outgoing' or east bound figures are in. excess of the west-bound or incoming. rrxa to cm iixztz. lliaard ttirv-a, newly nrwty t-rei-dctot'of the 1rgtftla arj Ilalpy UW tAimbrr I otajr. th lartrat run Ua of iu k'M in tKe wxU prrirt cheaprf famlrr and rw area in iU iurticn aa a rcaiiH ef th new ttrranli atkn, - i . lt ta par Intrtitk4i t'rhaivn UW coat of manu faiturin . aM ef courar. to r hea;Tcn ih et to eft aumrra ,prtrti'wiU-ly," a.) Mr, Htr. ; U1 tx t d thta. how. 9rr, at the dint of the ruuatry by rreklcaa t?r watef al Cambering method. We will utilWe aU the timWr w the mmnd we cut ever. We wtil not aim;iy j4ck out the ruWo tmn, leaving dewdwood anj bruh to fee)' forctt firr. We win clear larl an ' that inatead of tiring wt.'rlhWa wil-' derneaa after it ia et over U will I valuaKle for farming "purj. "We are tla hoping that a fur" ther reduction may 1 male in the coat of lumber to Amerkan ci. auntera by the taking off of the tarttT. The grvtter rt of our lanl ia in Lnaia anl thia would enahle u ring the Canadian lumtvr into the ?nlted Statea. a thing that tFie tariff practically prohiblta now." InoksBrijht (oc Hlntary. aumnr iw, ta . .. ' A. It. I'rlee. Fi., who waa ap- xjinted njaM-ial maater to hear, the repreacritatlona of the intereata eon- corned in the W hi Uiey -I'owrr Com pany, left last-night; for' New York, where a hearing will be held todayK Mr.; lMce expreaaed coniVdence. In the early adjustment of the Whit-' ney Company's troubles unleaa atme unf6re-en contingency ak. Tlt oppoaing intereata are getting rloaer together all the while an i it ia not unlikely that the year llr. will wit ness the delivery of "the j'jlce" to the territory wilhin the ' Whitney Company's bounda. "It's really distreasing to think,': said the wealthy Mr. Farraay, "that many very common ami Ignorant people will le admitted to heaven." "Well,", repM. Mr. CutUrgT "that needn't worry you." What Do They Cure! Tha ali"qtln iofun akd xn- criilritf I'r. l'! ry' two lillia nipcll- " cln. MiHnn M-.llrl Discovery a4 Favor) te rrvirrltHn." - T" anfr U u.ai t.uin , H"iicM DIkvivi-tt " t a wt i-tit .tlu'raiiv or jiwriflw. arl v.iac iiiicraUir and acta (ra-Ullr 'firl If in a cur, live way upon all tha nunuu lining tr tacea. as of Uia nat jaif. Uiroat. brooehlal tuU. stomach. UU at4 blaldca coring a larsa rwr fnt ft rstar rhal cac4 hth-r L" uIsasm affrU tl.s nasal paWte. tha n,-t, Ii7. t' ehta, stotaactrIss atanaai it'aX bowis(aa muvaaiyi t iw. tnrus or oihr-t pcl orgrirA Lrj la ttn fhrnlf fir "'--"'Ivt tf'irn 'T' arftyLi.rnt It Unfli-n i.jrrful InsffwV in tonlo and 'w-rvlwv For 'ra oat, over-workM women n tnattT h haa eauswl th brsk-liwn, - iti FrrXTlpUon 9 will ba fouift nvmi rfrtl la balldlng op tb trri.ih. rgult!g tha womanly funrtl.-w, suiluiig nt and bringing about a baUh, vigrfs , eondlUon ot.thn akow syttm. A took of par.tlriilr wr t ra om! giving tho firmof3? of Loth d1w im mtv QQOtloff whaV SfV'fa of ritiiefit trV kal authors. hm works ari r'ntrlul by phynteiana of all u rfi.l of t-f u aa guides In pmrrlMrig. y of h - . grenleat anUrlng lnu lha in'il"in' Tha worts of prais Uu wl n tb several lrgrllnu rntrrlng Ir.to -tr Fleroa's niilf1ns lv such wriu-rt li'ulI have mora w-ljfht thsn any arjurl w non profession! VtlmonUts, uch men anj writing fr th gu4sr of their medical brriLra and know abrfoof th-y spnak. lioth mdtdr ara non-aI.ho!l'. ikhv aocret. and conuln iio hartiiful forming druirs, llng rnp"l of f lyric attracts of t r.oi of rtiv. Airti-n nvMlclnat fonwt flsnu 'i'lwy sr , old by dnalrrs In wwllrlo. Yon en'l afford Vo awpt as a suUtltut for -t n tbess ml Icings of known conujsicni any ay ret iwt mm. - Dr. Mereo's leli-t. small. sigsr-ta; easy, to taka a candy, rf nlt sod ta vtorata stomach. aod. buwnis. . DR. W. C. HOUSTON, DENTIST. Oftr rrr Jakaww't trsg Stats, Kbu11c 'Fromm II. DR. H. C. HERRING, DENTIST, l bow ovsr tk sums o WhH- Murttw ftows OOWOOK DR. h S. LAFFERTY Oflice over Marsh's Irtj Store. CONCORD, H. O Prmctlcnan4 to tM n4 TbtMl . OSes Hoars : S . l- n - I p, m .m m. . MOWTOOMt irr. 4. tt cam MONTGOMERY & CR0WELL AtUry a4 Csslrs mi taw. jCONCOD. X.C t As pttXmtt wW pttrtum Us to CtUrrw haak; 4 adlftatfg OtIMta, tm 11m Smtnt 4 4 mm Omrta rf thm !Mtm m4 M lb t&m CmiK. (Jftr ta rhir HmMuig. j: parties dnirt U Icaxl mnmry tma Wav4f h wHir as or tlar It ta aay at Iba i mmxi4 fcaaks Urn mt mu4 w will immd M (a4 raai aataM aarartcy (ri oi cKara ta Iha 4rjHit. Ws auks Ukortca aaaailn W lH't ts ta4 eflerad aa MrarHy tor loao. Morragss lorcrkaatd wtthi Of MM ' Haary S. Adua rr.ak A'mt av. Jcroat. -Ta t. ktaaa attorasn ad Cogassicrs it Us, ' OONOOWO . oJ Prartka la all that Scala aad V. S. Can r. i ..ti m, t m rnjWiun tad aaarraL law PtmrtitM. fwntmm aataraaiad M Ifca arula- MaS Of cMatea. aSaaMaaraiora. maclo. amd rmarxfiaoa mim capactokr arad call a mm. ma w rciwcaaaa mm mt rw. lar aat baa4a - paaioi fca AaMrtca : aa tmtt mmr sTahaaMl caa-par tmmm aay a ajaa. eariiaa dawl( Ca laaa) aaw Cmm iaav r"' fTznri. -...- ..ua Lint (MtBin wiviim r--- ' - V ... .. 1 I - ..-.. ... . - . -.
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 11, 1909, edition 1
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