Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / March 8, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE CONCORD TIMES; John B. Shbrrim, Editor and Publlsarior. PUBLISHED TWIOK A WEEK. VOLUME XXXIV. CONCORD, N. C MONDAY. MARCH 8. 1909. P0UIICS IN TENNtSSfL AN0THER ISIE POST. Y.H.CA. NOTES. MONEY TALKS. war on mouse -ruts cax NT Squ&r Deal j r I1AO a Tbab, mm P i B'P Is to handle any-business entrusted to us in such a fair and liberal manner as to make the customer's relation with this bank satisfac tory and profitable. RESOURCES, 0200,000.00 CITIZENS BANK & TRUST COMPANY CONCORD, 'N. C. A.JONES YORKE,- President. M. L. MARSH, Vice President. CHAS. B. WAGONER, Cashier. JOHN FOX, j Assistant Cashier. Farmers' Business. We Rive particular attention to the business of farmers. A checking account with a bank is a convenience no farmer should be without. Our certificates of deposit bear 4 per cent, interest. . Our commodious offices always at the disposal of our customers. We cordially invite the farmers to make this their Banking Home. The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits (30,000 , MM nnmMIMM We extend a cordial invitation to Farmers to call and get a copy of our I FARMER'S ALMANAC for 1909. containing list of county) ofticers'for North Carolina and other interesting and useful information. Gotten out especially for our farmer friends. We have handed out a number, but have a few hundred 6till on hand. Call and get one. CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK Capital $96,000.00 Surplus and Profits $40,000.00 Assets over half a million dollars. -H. I. WOODHOUSE, Pres. C. W. SWINK, Cashier. . . HEADQUARTERS FOR SOUTHERNERS IN NEW YORK CITY. BROADWAY CENTRAL HOTEL Broadway and Third Streets, New York City. Only New York Hotel Making a Specialty of the American Plan. D ATCC (Americtn Plan, $2.60 Up. ... . KA1 HO European Plan. $1.00 Up. Our Table is the Foundation of Our Enormous Business. Send for Comprehensive Map of New York, Free. DAN. C. WEBB, Proprietor, of Charleston, S. C v - a m 2 c FERIIaIXMS; We have In our warehouses at CONCORD AND (ANNAPOLIS a large stock ot Fertilizers, consisting of All Grades of Ammoniated Goods, Acid Phosphate, Germsn Kainit, Cotton Seed Meal; also Nitrate of So- p.. da and Muriate of Potash. See us before buying, and we will save you money. WHITE-MORRISON-FLOVE CO., Agents for Simpkins' ProHfic Cotton Seed. Mr 4 T. H, Feltoa In Atlanta Journal. The history of Duncan Cooper throws light on the politics of Ten nessee for the last twenty years, and the people who throng the court house in Nashville to listen to the testimony, which is certainly convict ing, the men who assassinated ex Senator Carmack are brought face to face with the deeds of certain men who have used their political offices to rule or ruin everything in front of them. The criminal court of Nashville may save the necks of the assassins, but their escape will undoubtedly be credited to the influ ence of certain men in high office who are tarred with the same stick Tennessee is a great State, but it has been afflicted with glaring im posture, in the persons and acts of a number of its prominent officials. - Many of our readers will recall a Justice Snod grass, who sat on the bench to shoot at his enemies. The defaulting State Treasurer who robbed the treasury of Tennes see of large sums of money, in con junction with this Duncan Cooper, now on trial before the criminal court, will not be overlooked in the story of Tennessee's affliction and humiliation. But fiction is outdone-routclassed in the story of Cooper's connection with Tennessee politics, which has culminated in the assassination of ex-Senator Carmack, as the possible way to curb Carmack s pen (and take his life), in the opinion of this hoary and disreputable politician, who is desperate and deadly in hate. So violent and so tyrannical have been his methods that he has finally shoved his only son into the dark shadow of the gallows to carry out his foul plans. I am sorry for the son because he has been brought up under the in fiuence of a father who had no re spect for the presence of a nice young lady and poured out such filthy abuse of Carmack before he started out to kill him that she could not repeat the obscenity when called as a witness against him. tie is a self-confessed gambler, and a notor ious embezzler, when occupying i seat as chancery judge to whom had been committed money belonging to widows and orphans, as shown by court records. When Tennessee was robbed by Treasurer Polk of many thousands this same Cooper was exploiting silver mine down in Mexico with money furnished by Polk as his ac tive partner. We have read of mor phine fiends, who scarred continu ously their own bodies with hypoder mic injections until the entire epi dermis was tattooed and disfigured, but here is a man who has had the run of the governor's office in Ten nessee for the past year who scarred with evil deeds, evil thoughts and murderous intents, and yet has gone unscathed and defiant until haled be fore the criminal court for conspir acy to murder ex-Senator Carmack. Backed by official influence, he conferred with Tennessee's chief ex ecutive before he went forth to kill, and he was in no wise deterred by the presence of Mrs. Eastman, when he cauzht up with his intended vic tim, and saw bis own son do the murderous ! deed, conspiring with his own parent, also armed, to Kill. What a sight for men and angels to look upon! To show the extent o: this wretched man s infatuation and degradation and dishonesty he made public boast on his oath that he do nated over a thorsand dollars to a poor Confederate soldier a Bhort time ago and yet was forced by his own counsel to go back and again testify on oath . that the donation was less than hfty dollars, inis cloak of Confederate sympathy, so often abused and misused, was at tempted to be applied by this man, (catching at straws) to influence the jury to save his neck. It goes without saying tnat len- nessee. under ner present trouDie, will either repudiate the entire gang of conspirators or receive the public scorn and contumely that her imbe cility and impotency will merit. Values His Honesty at $100. Mrs. J. R. Dunn, a Harlem resident. . . t t 1 m on ner way to tne uncom rust Company Monday to make a deposit. lost a DanK dook containing $nu. She advertised her loss, offering in definitelv "a reward." Tuesdav $10 of the money and the book was returned to the trust com nanv with a note savins:: 1 suppose mis money was luai, by a wealthy person, and I am keeping $100 as a reward ior my honesty." If you'd be dubbed a handsome girl, And win a handsome Knight, The secret here I do impart, Take Hollister's Rocky Mountain T a at night. Gibson Drug Store. H. C. CbiirtUa Adrocata. t'h. To-day marks the passing of an- other mile post in our National his tory. Mr. Theodore Kooseveit. or New York, having completed his term as President of the United States, steps aside, and Mr. William H. Taft, of Ohio, assumes the obli gations of Chief Executive of the most powerful nation on the face of the earth. The brief history of the United States, as an independent na tion, makes a thrilling story, and one cannot give it thoughtful study without becoming convinced that a wonderful providence is manifest in t all. From the year 177b, when our independence was formally de clared, till 1789. when George Wash ington was inaugurated as the Jirs1 President, there were many stormy ) scenes, but these were the birth throes of a great nation. From Washington to Taft there have been many upheavals, social and otner wise, but out of them all we have come stronger and better prepared to work out a great destiny as a na tion. With all our enlargement as a na tion, however, there has come greater responsibilities and every day of progress makes our relation to all other nations more and more delicate. Social and political prob lems become more and more compli cated, and there is nothing that can give us hope for the future but a continued reliance upon the provi dential guidance that has brought U3 into so large a place as a nation, as we could not have come into this in heritance without the guidance and goodness of Almighty God, neither can we expect to maintain our place of influence and power without the continuance of His leadership. It is not so much our form of gov ernment as the predominant forces of righteousness that . has made us great as a nation. The circuit rider and other ministers of have done more to exalt our nation than the statesman or politician. Without the moral influence of these men it would have been impossible to have shaped the policy of the state so as to have made this country the refuge of the oppressed, and the abiding place of prosperity. Let the devout everywhere to-day pray that the mantle of wisdom and discretion may fall upon Mr. Taft and that the God of nations may guide him to an administration of peace and happiness. The Superintendent of the Street Railways at Nashville, Tenn., has written stating that "rnce the or ganization of the Y. M. C A. for street railway men. accidents have decreased 37 per cent., th? employes are in a better frame of mind to take up the daily work, the Associa tion has given to them a better con ception of what life means to man kind, and the moral character of the conductors and motormen has ad vanced." When the Y. M. C. A. at Pine Bluff, Ark., set out to secure $10,000 to pay off a debt on its building, the Cotton Belt Railroad Company gave $2,000. The Jewish Rabbi and the leading Protestant pastor worked side by ide in the Citizens' Commit tee soliciticg funds. It was a "still hunt campaign," as not a word ap peared in the newspapers about it until the work was completed and more than $12,000 in pledges taken. More than $23,200 was expended for improvements on the building last year. . On tne occasion of laying the corner-stone of the Tampa, Ela., build ing Hon. W. J. Bryan said: "I might say that, merely as a business investment, it would pay men not Christians to subscribe . for the Young Men's Christian Associa tion for in proportion as you can improve the moral standard of your people you make your property more safe, and you reduce the expense of your courts in enforcing the criminal law. 1 1 believe the institution could be justified on the low basis of dollars and cents without any regard to the spiritual significance of it. It is cheaper to save men from crime than to Dunish criminals after they have become such, and the cost of this institution is saving your young men from crime and your community from the expense of prosecution of criminals this saving would justify the gospel 1 the expenditure for the building and the cost of running it. Cbarttv a4 CailArva That it doc. And U talks to Southern people as loud a to our brethern in the North. hen we were poor we spent our time abu ing tne tar n!. Now we abuse It only in spots. Louitana wants her sugar protected, and the lumber in terests are clamoring for th-r share. We formerly berated the trusts literally flayed them alive. Now we speak softly about them and then turn pale when they threat en to leave ua. Of course we still pour out vials of wrath agasnst the Standard Company and old John D. tockefeller. for be lives In New York and his company have small holdings in North Carolina, but we have changed our attitude towards the American Tobacco Co., and all because the Dukes are spending money freely in Durham town j and at other place. The Duke are also about to swipe every ounce of water power in the State which means that UUc lavtUrtaXtf U U Art Adnt Aftats it tlx S?xtJ tf Do. Preparation for a war of ts.tr r j mmUon to the cumman boa' f t Try the Money-Back Cure For Indigestion. Nine times in ten stomach derange ments are responsible for sallow com plexion, dull eyes and thin body. It is the stomach that supplies nour ishing blood to the muscles, the nerves, and eMn If the stomach is healthy, plenty of nutritious matter will be ab sorbed by the blood. If it is not healthy, the food will ferment, and undigested, will pass along through 'the bowels, furnishing bo little nutriotious matter that the blood' becomes impoverished, and the glow of health vanishes. If you suffer from nervousness, sick headache, belching of gas, sour taste in the mouth, - heaviness after eating, or any other miserable stomach distur bance, you need Mi-o-na, and the sooner you get it the quicker you will be healthier and happier. It will relieve any distressed stomach condition almost immediately. It will cure tf used according to directions. Gibson Drug Store sells it for 50 cents a large box, and they think enough of it to guarantee it to cue indigestion. ! Churches Too Plentiful: "American religion" was the sub iect of a forceful sermon delivered last Sunday night at the First Baptist church in Washington by its new pastor. Rev. J. B. Clayton. "Church attendance in America is falling off. There are too many churches, declared Mr. Clayton 'Only for the soundest reasons should more, than one church be established in a community which has a small population and is finan cially t weak. The world needs the vitalizing influence of churches whose membership includes men stroner in the community: men who looks upon religion, not as a senti mental theory of life, but as a great force in the regeneration of society. and in the reform of social and legislative abuses." Mr. Clayton pointed out that the ideal of Christ was a universal re ligion as a permanent force in human conduct, and that he attached far less importance to church worship than to an everyday religious quality. It is to be hoped that the next fool who perpetrates the fake mar riage joke will not announce, as the latest one did, that the bride had just met the groom. Love at first sight and marriage at first are two different matters. It is not compli mentary to the alleged bride (leav ing the alleged groom out of ac count) to say that she would marry a -man upon first acquaintance. Charlotte Observer. Lame Shoulder. Whether resulting from a sprain or from rheumatic pains, there is nothing so good for a lame shoulder as Chamber Iain's Liniment. Apply it freely and rub the parts vigorously at each applica tion and a quick cure is certain. For Bale by All Druggists. , t - "To Hodgenville: Greetings," says the Louisville Courier-Journal. Yes; so say we. Where -have you been so long, Hodgenville, anyway ? - Drunkards May Not Wed. Springfield, 111., Dispatch. 4 Young men who frequent saloons will not be permitted to enter the matrimonial relations in Illinois if bill introduced into the House be en acted into law. and it probably wil Dass. The bill was introduced by Repre sentative Groves and amends the marriaee laws of the State by de claring an habitual drunkard incapa ble of contracting marriage and de fining an "habitual drunkard" to be a person who becomes intoxicated twice a year. The bill provides also that applicants for marriage licenses shall make affidavit that they have not been intoxicated twice m the preceding year. " " Hear Death In Big Pond. It was a thrilling experience Ic Mrs. Ida Soper to face death. "For yean a severe lung trouble gave me intense suffering," she writes, "and several times, nearly caused my death. All remedies failed and doctors said I was incurable. ThenDr King's New Dis covery brought quick relief and a cure so permanent that I have not been troubled in twelve years." Mrs. Soper lives in Big Pond, Pa. It works won ders in : coughs and colds, sore lungs, hemorrhages, la grippe, asthma, croup, whooping cough and all bronchial af fections. 50c and 1-00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by All Druggists. Some conception of the expensive ness of war may be gathered when it is known that it costs as much money to fire a 12-inch gun as an l editor makes in two years. or'urvhoid r " as it u caJWJ hi Dr. L. O. liuard. I'r4td Slatr Kntomol t, are Leirur mw ia Florida, llaard Hatco. Jr., f Nw York, came on recently to confrr with Dr. Joseph Y. Poller, 5ui Commwsiorwr of Health, in regard to th inauguration of the fly war, and Dr. Porter ha bavted rutr with instruction for dealing with the fly nuUance. Potr depicting in vivid U!ut ra tions the habiu of the house tf and its proclivltie for gathering and dis seminating dbcase germs are brtrg scattered brodct throughout Ox State. The unuually warm weath er this spring has started the fly on his rampage earlier than usual. Atlanta w-ll uke up the warfare. and dark Howell, of the Atlanta a. . rs-a U t It. TUim t 2Wial Thia f4 itj la AaMTtcaa fnrvaorti. NKit,ti tbey will ultimately get the factories Constitution, says: "Atlanta will t too, and the statesmen who were trained to abuse trusts say in a whisper "be careful or you will in- jure the business interests, i we istened to a speech in the benate, ast week, of remarkable pungency and power. It was by Senator Lock- art of Anson county on this very Question. He warned the Legisla- ture azainst the evil day and pointed out that the craven cowardice of the Kentucky Legislature compelled the night riders to bring the American Tobacco Company to its knees: ' and he urged' the Senate to remember what had been promised the people on every stump in North Carolina; but the business interests now dominate the situation, since the election is over, and the very men so violent thr.ee or four months ago, are gentle as cooing doves to-day. Money has spoken, nave you ever noticed how completely a man's at titude changes when he rises in the scale of prosperity? We happen to think of a man who at one time would have all but laid down his life for the "dear peopul," but who hav ine struck luck and made $10,000 on his truck farm has grown wonder fully conservative, and thinks first of the moneyed classes and after ward of the common folks whom he formerly adored. Money is talking to our Southern people as it never talked before. We are all alike and the best of us listen to its -soothing song, "Tired is foolishness," Doctor. Says Chicago Bemflr tired is foolish." lhis is the latest enunciation of Dr. Sheldon Leavitt. in charge of the Immanuel Baptist Psycotherapy class at Lhi cairo. "When I am tired I tell myself that I am rested, the instructor says, "and then I am. This universal energy reservoir we live in is always full. We have a feed pipe where we pay it out, but there's a bigger supply pipe where It will enter faster if we onlv think it along. "You will hnd some patients who don't seem to be able to walk alone The only way to do with them is to get them up on the edge 01 the nest and the push 'em over, just as the old bird does. Force them to try it alone." ; . Simple Remedy for L Grippe. La erinpe oouRbs are dangerous as tbey frequently develop into pneumonia. Foley's Honey and Tar not only stoi the cough but heals and strengthens the lungs so that no serious results need be feared. The genuine Foley 's Honey and Tar contains no harmful drugs and is in a vellow cacki.tr a. Refuse substi tutes. Oibscn Dm g Store. made the cleanest and moat health ful city in the South." Savannah has al.o entered the fight and will begin by renaming the district known as "Sand-fly Park." A campaign airairut the fly has al been instituted in Ixmlxana un der the leadership of Mrs. Bernard Titche, of New Orlean. As a part of the general campaign against flics Dr. W. C. Woodward. Health Ollicer of Washington, will cause the prosecution of atable keep ers who fail to register at his office. The object of the registration is to insure the supervision of the stable by sanitary inspectors. At Asheville. N. C. rule have been formulated and put into oper ation. In fact all the Southern States are up in arms against the pest. The line of battle will ad vance northward as the temperature rises. The mode of warfare will be to destroy their breeding places. The war on house flies was begun in New lork last spring when ppecial committee of the Merchant' Association, headed by Edward H. Hatch, Jr., in a report to Dr. Daniel D. Jackson, of the Brooklyn Water Department, condemned the fly as menace to the public health. The American Civic Association and-the National Muncipal League are pledged to aid in the anti-fly crusade It would not be a bad thing to have Concord included in this effort to get, rid of these dangerou pest. Let us get some of the rosters and put one in every family, so that people may understand what the house fly is bringing into the houc what he is depositing on the bread in the meat, and in the milk, when he lights on them at meal time, ' and at other times. Let us investigate the stables, which are the breeding places of this innocent looking in sect, but which bring sickness and death to so many of his victims. Editor Times. 1 I- at4 t'U rr. IVmllniHi l fa atarvt-wra. ttn,i r-wJ uri. BkiBUMia. at (Itiilli. htihn 4 tka ) 1 ot 1: wrek.ii, W l-Ule ttm "- la IKk.iit it tUfa tl will 1 wi4 uil. iMr-i r. I J If tU t tr t Ja. ei tila Ui!t 1 ha lOt ra ! IWO Or IhfM lin A l a !lk 1 it Kd Catarrh Umdj. flh th -,rh r.i J traaiotatii gtrt.ir cur u aaca. j CttlaL 4 r.t m1 S.i'lt ti i ti. .4 from tv-LU. niiiti i. ui i it im . laM w RMwltrina atil fc. V lt i M" otUlt, rhnmiP .nVl fc.K If It U tit Inwt tulh n. Ik ri im iiim Electric Laundry! iUar Citv Hull. City office : Opposite SL Cloud Motel. Quick service, best quality1 of work. Colhr, CufTand Flat Work unexcelled. W. S. BIKGHAU - Manager ac. i. IXcpoLvts ixnd That Sottlcia It. 1'frp jr. t cjtuily It Saved His Leg. "All thought I'd lose my leg." wnt J. A. Swenson, Watertown, Wis. -Ten years of eczema, that 15 doctors could not cure, bad at last laid me up. Then Bdcklen's Arnica Salve cured it sound aud well." Infallible for kin eruptions, eczema, salt rheum, boils, favor soroa, burns, scalds, cats and piles. 25o at All Draggiets. Cowan' 1'iK'umoiwa tion rrreat bccatu- it i a of merit and will do all cUittird for it. Ileitis rxtcrna! it cannt form the drug 'habit. Cont itiuiug. its curative agciit in a vrlmlc of uickl)-, 1 ougca. It fiv ia lln- fr'itn liih- jirrti ut anim.il fitt, it p ru -irate scatter inll immat mil and Hon and rctiuce lever. intant relief in croup, cold, orc throat, md pain uii. Abol-utc prf est authority. Unit it English Spavin Liniment. removes Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses ; also Blood Spavins, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Ring Bone, Stifles, Sprains, Swollen Throats, Coughs, eto. Save $50 by use of one bottle. A wonderful Blemish cure. Sold by M. Lu Marsh, druggist. t Attention is being called to the fact that the farm uplift commission worked without compensation. But think of the freth eggs they got while visitinc: the farms of the na tion. " ; No married man should advocate a tax on bachelors. That would be confes&inflr an envious spirit that .s no compliment to his wife. Don't wait until your blood is Im poverished and you are sick and ailing, but take Holliat r's Rocky Mountain Tea now. It will positivJy drive out all winter imDurities. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Gibson Drug Store. TRUSTEE'S SALE. Uv virtue of authority re ted in me by Deed In Trust, or Mortnatfe, xrutei j Mattie Spencer Smith and husband, Wright Smith, on the Irtlb day of April, 1901, which MortRaK" or IKd in TruU ia duly recorded In Uook No. 10, 1K ivi of tne reeord of Mortjrajrea for Cabarrus county. I will 4-U at public auction at the court houne door In Concotd. N. C, on the 5tH day of April, lynw, to the hlph est bidder for casli, one house and lot, situate in Ward i, 01 the City of loncorrt, on the south nide of Chestnut street, be tween the lota now occupied by Usury Mom on one side, and Uan ilanro. on the other side, said lot being Oil feet front and run ni rig hack MJ feet rrom said f'hcutnut atreet. and is described In the . . . . . . . r . . 1 11.111. deed by Jonn . uiic ici um iiiuiiie Spencer Smith, as follows : LAinz in tnai parv ui wwii iuu.h Love Town, beginning at the nortweat corner 01 Henry .ioiw iot on ldcsidoi ntreet. and runs with Cheataut atreet Vt feet to a stake ; then s lJ reel 10 a siaae then n 8 e 0 feet to a stake Henry Moss ronuir: then with him V) feet to the be- crinnintr. Said deeds being recorded in Wrd of Lfc-eds No. S3, naze 204. Title to eaid proirty Is supported to be irood. but the nurchaaer only take such title as I am authorized 10 convey onacr said mortgage ird da Thia8r iy or March. VJ. J. L. C'ltOVv KLL, Trustee. Are we going to have the battle of Santiago fought over again by the friends of the would-be-vice-ad mirals ? ' 'A spring tonio that makes rich, red blood. Brings strength, health and hap piness to the whole family. Nothing equals Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea as a snrinsr rr fzalator. 85 cent. Oib- I son Drug Store. Sale of Land. G. W. Le. a nder power of sale cum- MMM ouTiiERN Agriculturist . NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE. J For 40 Years the Most Instructive and Entertaining . Pflnir for Southern Farm Families., f 50 Cents a Year. One Copy Free, j t t t 1 t For . Woman's Eye Wftmdn'a tmiihlf3 venr often occur regularly at a certain time every month. Be cause this may have been so all your life, Is no reason 'why It should continue. Many thousands of women, who had previously suffered from troubles similar to yours, due to disorder ofthe womanly organs, have found welcome rellej or cure to that wonderfully successful medicine for women, Win of ardii Mrt- Leota Forte, of Toledo. H. writes: "I am vH pbastjd vlth tha rawlia of oatag Cardut ! faavj tak thrfta bottlea and am now perfectly weH frw from pala and hav gained 23 pounds m velghi l.mnT HP I CTTtn WrtUtott.yfbrafnatcwals IlKlIC U3ALCI 1CK vk. describe yoor nraqMaaa Ja asa. aaaratMy wm t Ladies Advtaory DpU The Onftsnonta Medtdas Co mjBtratcfl Boofc fot WoMsi aa4ra4ywQlas wala mm, n MsdkaiAeV I. tfie nnderstftned and hv Tirtue of the i.inil fn mortmain; or deed at trust ex ..ntd tn me tT C. K. DaTTau'ton the 3rd day ot January, ivu, ana recoraea in me otlice of Kenister of Ieds for Cabarrus county. Stat of North Carolina. In Rec ord of Mortaea No." !, pafcea 430 and ol. will Mell at public auction. lor caan. at the court houne door in aaid tounty, on Saturday, the 3rd day of April. llJW. at 1 0 clock p. m. tne tract 01 iana ucrniu . . - A I ... tnt. in saiu moni4c u " " lows: On the waters of Irlh IJufTalo Creek, adjoining the landu or Aaa iwtl .nd nthrrn. lietcinnlnir at a stone. Boat's corner, and runs a 10 w 117 polea to a ' n and cerner of aaid Ikt; then S tl MVmU ia hiekorv. lirewer's corner : r--- - - , ' t 1.-1 thru n 74 e Of ooiea 10 a p. o.. .rmorr tnni n a a m huwikhwi-: rmnked b. o.. LiUker's corner; then n ( e 53!i ooles to a r. o., LiUker's comer; then n & w w poiea m a p. . iui"i, v stone. Littles corner; men a Dew nn 61 w 62 poles to the beginning, containing 63 acres, more or less. Title supposed to oe rooq. irauwiiuuij inrli title mm I hare aa trustee! or niort- I . . t j. ,.m wr. inm 111 IS tue Situ uaj vi itunwi, '. G. W.XKE, Mortaee or Tnutees rld newspapers for sale oflice at the folio ctnU ; 1J0 for 15 I cents per ICO, at Ta Times tng prices: Zo ior a cents; v) pr more, VJ nd cure pncumnu m t Pla ges, l or burns it rcJios tu- jram and heals at once. I "or rbiimj. iim, sprains, bruiw. sorr, ihiik u-' lar sores and stiffin-s', it iivr quick relief. Tlies tiiletnent art verified by thousands f JciUts by users. A trial ltt!e wil! run ince. tnce acutoinrr, always a ciiU m- cr. 1 ou cannot n:!jni 10 nK imi tations in the face f rtun pneumonia, (iowan's i iti a t la by itfcclf. 'I'licrr are n jut gwds. -Your money lj.st 1 if. J as ilirefted wit liouP-leKU t. r! by all druit, from $1 to 3c. t't look art-r eptrlnji suWrlj.t id t secure hew buainr by nn-n f 'I methods ununually rntlrr; tmtjjttn erinanent ; 1 refVr -one wnii ejMfrrt ut would consider any afsli-st wnli (tool natural us!l Aral ion-; -Ury fl.. eotnin.lii( trnon, an-frrfn-i4. It. . ra""k. Itoom VfZ. Surras Majialue llldrf.. j " York. . i W Tanted Sn-e Ma.'siri" V 1)1. vrflrM tit a n.aii In (''mrdi I Do you want to K' to C !!' t can heln you. Vr hae Ii t go by mafiS of our jisn liui-lris can help yo throuirh eoni W rit lo-d ,or lull Information rrjrn: Ing our offer of a fra a-holarjp In any H-htjol or niWfif. Ablrr. lhtm-tK J. Sh'rtork. 2W8I York City. 71 l7ant-d-rTrut worty man v I or woman In each county lo ltp,riiw, rr--iTB ordf-rs and tfiinut buiii" fr w York Mall ()rt-r iloaw. l" kly; poaitlon tierman-nt ; no tnvratment r xuired. rrevlous etpri iiriw toft -"'-tial to enirjlnij. r) time alul!. Enclose a-lf addr".aj;d enrrloi for full particular. Addr. flarks l'o.,Vii hol sale Itept.. 100 I'Ark A p.. Snw urk. 11 Wood's Garden Seed. Always Dated. Full size Paper, two for 5c. 21 varieties W'atermelon and U varieties CantcloujKS, by the pound. Onion Seti, white and yellow. QEDS02T DBUG STOnS or rent 7-room cottage. tath, near btia- Intern part of torn Jno. K. Patterson. Ha r lnwie part of town: I13- Per month. tf Remember we girt a year'asuterlMioo frr to the Southern AM-rtculttirl.i ta all aibo pay ia advance for Tn a Ti 1 .J . 4
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 8, 1909, edition 1
1
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