THE CONCORD TIMES John 13. Shbrhhv Editor and Fiatllrs. PUBUBHED.TWIOS A -"si! VOLUME XXXV. CONCORD, N C THURSDAYAUGUST 5. 1909. if NUMI1KR U. I I TIIE Citizens Bank and Trust Company OF CONCORD, N. C. Has grown into the strength that Comes from faithful a ml efficient service to a progressiva community. With resources of iwohundred thou- I LATE COMERS. B0AKXNG-SCH00LS. sand dollars, and with every facility for handling your business wellf we invite your patronage. A.JONES YORKE, President. M. L. MARSH, Vice President. CHAS. B. WAGONER, Cashier. JOHN FOX, Assistant Cashier. Those Not Punctual at Quirdi Have Bad Habit Contributor to Charity and Children. I have been for a number of yean watching the late comers at church. They are a good people but have cul tivated a bad habit, and tneir exam ple is hurtful to the preacher and people. I used to notice a mother who came with her little girl ten minutes late at every service. She was the subject of much criticism. The people used to Bay "it was her fine clothes she wanted to display. She invariably took a high seat. Re cently I have worshipped in several different places and have noticed the late comers. How beautifully dress ed they were! The back seats were not conspicuous enough, and to the front the beautiful clothes came and rested on the front benches. To be sure the virion was beautiful to be hold. I did wish that they had come earlier and sat right in front of me. I love to see pretty clothing; beauti ful garments. I believe in trim mings. Let us make everything beautiful, but let it be subordinate to and a companion of beautiful habits and character. How these distract the attention of the people! How conspicuous it makes the. late comers, and how troublesome to usher sometimes. runctuauty is a great habit ifr is essential to success. The late comers r THE ONE SURE WAY to have money is to save it. The one 6ure way to Bave it is by depositing it in a responsible bank. You will then be ex empt from the annoyance of having it burn holes in your pockets, and aside from the fact that your money will be Bafe from theft, the habit of saving tends to the establishment -of thrift, economy;1 discipline and a general understanding of .business principals essential to your bucccss. To those wishing to establish relations with a safe, strong bank, we heartily extend our services. The Concord National Bank Capital, $100,000.00 Surplus, $30,000.00 THE CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK Concord, IM. C. Capital, $100,000.00 Surplus and Profits, $40,000.00 STRONG A BANK SAFE BANK A SUCC1 FUL BANK Solicits Accounts of Farmers, Merchants, Laborers, Corporations. Five Hundred New Accounts Wanted. Four per cent, inter est paid on Time Certificates. Safety Deposit Boxes for rent. 533 YOUNG MAN We have been watching you all the Spring and we know what" you want: CLOTHES THAT ARE BUILT FOR YOU ALONE. We have them fashioned.for your Spring taste by the highest grade tailors in this country. The suits are not UNCLE'S or FATHER'S style, but YOURS, and they express just that air of Smartness that appeals to you. We have sold the best men of this county for five years. Ask them. Why not you ? BROWNS-CANNON CO., Shop of Quality Clothes. Cfcrtty and Children. Considerable noise has been made about some statements in the VJOQ catalogue of the Oak Ridge Institute. We are pleased with those state ments. Here is one of them: a boy needs to get away from his mother's apron-strings. His father's wealth, good name, social position. avail nothing here; his standing among his fellows depends on him self. He makes his own name, tie writes his own pedigree. The board ing school is a true democracy. Here your boy learns to be a man. That is sound sense. It is better for a fifteen-year-old bov to go away from home, if a good boarding school is selected for him. He tries his wings in this new realm and learns to fly. He cannot learn to fly at home. If he goes from his mother's apron-strings" straight to college, he labors at a disadvantage. He needs the discipline and training of the boarding-school as a prepara tion for his college course. It is the way to get the "fresh" off a raw boy. This is precisely why there will always be a broad and fertile field for the academy. It supplies the important link between the public school, or the State high school, and the college. There is a gap there that the State cannot nil. The private or denominational academy bridges this chasm. Aside irom tne Drerjaration in text-books lor the with their beautiful feathers ought college course, the thing so vigorous- ly empnasizea in toe wan. iuukc catalogue is no less important. The academy develops manliness by teaching a boy to fight his own battles, and being a democracy with out pets and favorites the poor boy stands the same chance with the boy whose parents have money or in fluence or both. Some fainthearted folks fear that the State will finally overwhelm our whole educational system. There is no cause for alarm for the academy has a work Deiore it that the State school cannot do, and one thing is, it can make a boy a man. to come earner and give others a longer vision of their beauty. The church is a good place to behold beautiful visions. Sometimes the young lady who comes late makes it very disagreeable for the beauty she has finally- discovered. He is an ugly and bashful boy, and 'the vision of red cheeks, bitten hps and frown ing brow makes him more con spicuous than the beautiful dresses. In such cases the young man should be considered. The young lady who can thus - display her beau's home liness to gratify her own vanity will fail later on to consider him in the serious matters of home life, and the result win be the making of a balking horse or a kicking mule, lbe late comers are on the increase in every place. Time was when the performer during the week and the preacher on Sunday never waited. but on the minute service began, Now it seems that performers, preachers and people are all in the mad race for the last place in the gathering audience. Twice I have seen prominent people get inth door to hear the benediction. The matter of coming in late is a sad commentary on the worships of all our churches. 13 To Prosecute Bleachers of flour. The Cocaine Horror. Kewiuid Obnrrer. "Every Day Life" prints an awful story of the dangers of cocaine, par ticularly among negroes, in Jays, when this writer visited New Urleans he was told that though the city was full of saloons many negroes had quit drinking whiskey and contracted the cocaine habit. It is worse than whis- agitating to prevent its sale. Judge Dickson, of Vicksburg, Miss., is quoted as saying a man who deliberately puts cocaine into a negro is more dangerous than he who would inoculate a dog with hydrophobia. The deadlv diue arouses every evil Federal prosecution prepared by passion, gives the negro superhuman forty inspectors now in the held are soon to be filed for violation of the recent bleached flour decision of Secretary Wilson in the case of the Alsop Process Company of St. Louis, "We are going to seize all shipments of bleached flour 'in interstate com merce," said the Secretary, "and to that end our inspectors are at work The suits will be brought in several states." Mr. Wilson is particularly anxious to assist the spring wheat millers of the Northwest, who were the first to notify him that they had discontinued flour bleaching. These millers complained to the Agricul tural Department that, while they had complied with the department's demanded, other millers were ; still marketing the bleached product Their Old Black 'Mammy." Slier City Grit. A striking illustration in which the negro of the best class is held by the white people of this State was shown last Thursday in Weldon when an old colfired "mammy" was buried by her white friends. This old colored wo man had nursed and cared for the children of a prominent physician of Weldon and had served the family faithfullv for fifty years, and by her fidelity and uprigh living had won for herself the high regard of her white friends. So when she died. she was tenderly laid away by this doctor in his family square in the white cemetery, for though her face was black, she was to his family their old black mammy and as such she received the best burial they could give. - . . GOT ENOUGH Of OKUMWA. Tttf ICit fOX UYNG-CY. r . sxhsq msu tmr f Greeasbort llaa Grm As Accoaat Mis Experience Out There. An excellent citizen of Greensboro who, on account of the going out of business of the firm which had em ployed him at a good salary for sev eral years, but lost his job. found it impossible to secure any other posi tion here at present sufficiently re mumerative to support his family. Two weeks ago be planked down $28 50 for a ticket to Oklahoma City in search of a good thing in that well advertised section. He returned lat night, his ticket coming back costing $32.50. This gentleman says that it was not only fearfully hot out there, the thermometer often standing at 108. but he says that for every sal aried position to be filled thereat least tweDty capable men scrambling for the place. He is an expert in a certain line of work not having so much competition, and yet he says after ten days' desperate effort he was able to get the promise of a po sition to begin August first, but the salary, at prices there for food and rents and other expenses, would noth ing like have supported his family. He was glad, however, to take any thing, hoping of course, to get pr motion in wages and position, but he admitted the outlook was mighty gloomy. , Determined to do the best he could, yet in despair, he was wait ing to get his job, when he got a teiegram from Greensboro offering him a position, and he hurriedly ac cepted it by wire, leaving the West ern El Dorado in three hours. When he asked for release from his offered position there, it was granted, the manager : of the firm stating that there were 47 names of first-class men on their accepted list 01 ap plicants for the same place. The re turned citizen is simply exuberant with delight at the prospect of be ing able to remain and work in North Carolina, and represents a large class of good men who are thronging the new country in the vain hope of getting a better show ing in the battle of life than they think they are getting at home. He says that while all incoming trains are now- crowded, those going out are also full of people trying to get away, h He exhibited an Oklahoma news paper, which bad seven solid pages of real estate for sale advertise ments and stated that real estate dealers and hot air promoters were simply swarming all over that coun- T chief mistake in, laying-by the! crops Is in allowing the time or tte year instead of the condition of the soil and crops to determine when cultivation shall cease. To sav moisture and to keen down the meed and grata are the objects in cultivation. If the crops are suf fering from lack of moisture or from weeds, why stop cultivation as long as the crops are growing! The man who cultivates with the plow is usually an advocate of lay. ing-by early. Cultivation u expen sive, and late in the season usually injures the crops by breaking too many roots. The man who cultH has Icaa W. Gttn Bt lrm f Trader Mart fmpmty Cftt. Jiihn W. Ut. the f.ancirr. H ncrrU f irr in tvn & l:. publkan.'Ubehuu'iL returned a .f ctfifxl frv trader aftr iKfw crwnth htril It wa kfirr a dtvui,n of rtnm. cial ctriiiort abrvaj that Mr. Gate approached tf. (rtv trvJe quOon Though hdui not mrntioa l'lrakicM I ail at any tirr. he Dialed hjRurlf on record a be in in fatr of 1K very -provisions m the rw tarsi! schedu! that Taft advocate, name !,..'rve 'urnt-rr, frr ttl. oU and hdtand wool. IU alo atmrtvi vates shallow and cheaply finds it I of an American hin subsidy. ;gy and at that time leaders wervUryrind had agents all through the strength, and destroys his sense of fear. Yet the steamboat negro and the levee negro will not work with out it. So the levee contractor makes his camp look like a cross section of hell, but he gets dirt moved." Charles W. Collins and John Day, who composed the Currier Commission to investigate the cocaine habit, say that it has been found to be the American curse as opium is the curse of China hemp in I India, the worst victims being the negroes. They say "Cocaine now ranks with whiskey as the chief pro vocation of rape and its consequent lynching bee in the South." 800 Autos Licensed. Just" 800 automobiles have thus far been registered and licensed in North Carolina by the Secretary of State under the new automobile act passed by the last Legislature. These 800 licenses have yielded $4,uuu reve nue, of which the State gets $1,600 and the counties in which the ma chines are located $2,400 for public road improvement. Ihe Secretary of State has no way of ascertaining just what per cent, of the motor ve hicles remain unlicensed, put is un derstood that there are quite a num ber of them in various sections of the State. Sheriff and police are nnder instructions to arrest all ma chines that are operated without the registration number being displayed EXTRAORDINARY HAIR TONIC. mountain regions of the South in ducing men to "invest" and to move out West, if they had any money at all. He also stated that the Okla homa people were not seeking North ern and Western settlers except big capitalists, openly asserting that they wanted their population bunt up chiefly with "good American South ern stock." profitable to continue cultivating as long as weeds are troublesome or the crop is suffering from lack of mois ture. We know of no other reason for stopping shallow cultivation, ex cept that the crops have completed their growth, or are free of grass and weeds and have an abundance of moisture. It may pay to stop deep cultiva tion before any of the above condi tions are reached: or It may pay to cultivate deeply when the destruc tion of the roots will do less Injury than the presence of weeds and grass. It is a matter of methods, and con dition of soil and of the crops and not one of the season of the year. nor number of cultivations already given. President Tatt Wins a Notable Victory. IUlllinore Sun. President Taft has won a notable victory over the reactionary elements of his party in Congress. He has achieved this triumph by a combina tion of tact, firmness and moral courage which reflect high credit upon his ability and determination as a leader. Yesterday morning Mr. Taft notified the Republican mem bers of the joint conference commit tee on the Tariff bill that he would not recede from his demands, on be half of the people, for a reduction of the duties on lumber, gloves, hosi ery, leather and leather goods. He warned the conferees that if the re ductions for which he contends were not embodied in the conference re port he would appeal, over the heads of the committee, to the House and Senate direct, and that if this appeal failed he would disapprove the bill when it was sent to him. Yesterday afternoon the conferees conceded the demands of Mr. Taft. They re- plized that the President is a man of his word, that there would be no tariff legislation at this session of Congress unless it was legislation which Mr. Taft, acting on behalf of the whole country as the President of all the people, could approve. "All my life I have tm-n l.Vrw.K. Hcan." Mr. Gate aatd. "but now I am drifting toward free trmA. If we are to be a great manufacturing country -if our manufactures, al ready Ervat. ar to grow grrater, we must have an open workshop and a chc.net' to ret th raw mril free. . "General Hancock w Ln.rk1 i when he Mid that the 'tariff wa. largely a local iMue. but it really is SO. lyHk at the South Tw to be frt-c trader. Now ttw n clamoring for protection for en nr- thing they produce. Why. in rnv own State of Texas they want tn- tection for rice, for cotton and pret ty nearly everyting elne within the borders of the State. Doewi't that prove it ? Two year ago I said that Ameri cans were going to betrin to wear their old clothes, and thev have been doing it. They have been staying at home and saving their money, and the bark debits how it. Now, I tell you that we are going to have four years of the greatest prosperity and industrial development that thin country has ever een. There will be abundance of investment after the passage of the tariff act." There is one thing to which we are pleased to call attention, and that is the pre-eminent ability of the college presidents of our denominational schools for boys. Henry Louis Smith JohnC. Kilgo. William L. Potest! Come on, State, and name your men Charity and Children. Peoplfi with chronic bronchitis, asth ma and lat) troabl, will And great rs lief and comfort in Foley's Honey and Tar, and can avoid utTerlng by ton maooiug to take it atonoe. Otbaoo Drag Store. tt-Gsteraa tmM f (atrsd f ftsvatn titnruam ( i! f raav W. 1i!y th drrxr f rvnaMfv4 rat la (VkrU, TW mother ha to t prarticai r!wti t tf ti. er a tt iMr4t tr man lhf!ea-v U rfe rjU!, aM it w a wuttian't jrreatt tr When aruman arrk rer it ! a c real ra lamtty rt t,!y foe he r. bat f r th tnen wrU, "Hi tfe aftd dausMer i nn "141. tW. as do the maturity of rmet l loloradA. I bHk-rv tnfnrn aatjt la V0U tnlhout IW retT.tuhty mhtch the prmWe entail. al t axTv that the f rarwhwe fttumM t f raatol them, but I da hut lJv that 0 vote is gJ for Ihrm. txr thrtr pmU-tie," Such wa the etrinfem er-re id by the lv. Dr. Henry A. Hafhtel, ei roveroor i f llr4o, u of the four atatea in htch wttmrtt bare a rttfht to vote. i4ntlnulcg the s grertor aaia: "Chivalry was the motive that prompted equal franchuv In tkra- 10 and the women leirWlor have been suffered to put furth their rlajm out of deference to their art. There have been few ho did rwt demand the mt alurd and unrea sonable laws. The only trouble about the women tegt!alor U that they will not lUten to argument - ni woman mill. Ic doe not appeal to them." Wfeyfort at a Wtod-Brokca none. Mr. Cicero Qine telU of a common occurrence thst U known to very few people. It ia that a yourg cult. when foaled, has something In it mouth aliout 3il inches, rewmbling melt. That his mother railed hu attention to this when he was about If year old. and ahe further atated that If thia wan removed the animal ould not te wind-broken. Mr. Qine showed thia matter to Jailor Killian, who ia a witnet to the aame fact. Ileanka ff any other person has ever heard of this bit of hom ology before. k Svtfrttioa. Orniioro Krd. While educating the people, -how' would it do to educate aorne of the younger act so that they will not talk in church ? We teach them how to cook and to do varioua other things and it doe look like they might be taught how to keep still for an hur in church. NEW CROP HAVE YOU A CANNERY? THE PORTABLE IDEAL HOME CANNERY latest improved, most up-to-date and lowest-priced fanning Outfit made, its are many and unsurpassed. The furnace is of special design, easily carried N Hip h 1,. ...... i.. Th. Kiior mav h naiul either on stove or furnace. Ihe boiler is H.ftric weld.seamlefis-leahless. Capacity from 400 to 600 cans or glass jarsperday. Vc furnish with each Cannery the ngnming an-uapper, iin xix rienced neersons to do uccessful and rapid canning. Price of Cannery and all necessary fixtures $9.50 for canning - " " (.11:,rnf,i tnr a rPRra. Ten davs's free trial. If not as represented money 1 li' crfullv refunded. For further information write us for catalogue. HOME CANNERY CO., Department H, Hickory- N. C. June 28. HORNER MILITARY SCHOOL. J. C. HORNER, Principal, Oxford, N. C :n Sftical, Scien. inc. and Eoglssh Courses. Prepares for 'college, 'XV AcS mm, a. ra.lenilea Military tralnin develops pr. mpt obedience and "'r f6- ?"f . v M years old. with experienced teachers. Cadets dine with the vrineikuaMmvtm M family. 8w"ur the culture of borne life. Cultivates and educates. Modern buildings. lri. ct sanitation, wholesome fare, no crowding, lleet moral, nl,e""1' ''"L!, idaTclT "alnlnK hhady lawn, athletic park, one-quarter mil running tracs. J reBvJ,dal1' -iat -, helpful environment. In the soe'al atmosphere or towu noted for ovtr a century as an educational cen er. HOME ENDORSEMENT. Hundreds ot Concord Citizens Can Tell You All About It. Home endorsement, the public expres gion of Concord people, should be evidence beyond dispute for every Concord reader Surely the experience of friends and neigh bors, cheerfully given by them, will carry ore weitrht . than the utterances of strangers residing in faraway places. Read the following: Mrs. L. S. Bonds, 140 W. Depot Street Concord, N. C, says: "Doan's Kidney Pills, procured at Gibson Drug Store, benefited me in every way and I do not hesitate to enaorse them. I suffered from a constant, dull pain in the small of my back, accompanied by miserable head aches and various other symptons which showed that my kidneys were disordered, Doan's Kidney Pills went directly to the root of my complaint and I had taken them but a short time when they entirely disposed of my kidney trouble." For sale- by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster- Milbnrn (3o , Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States Remember the name Doan's and take no other. It Won't Grow Hair on Bald Heads. Tinlike all other hair restorers, Parisian Sap-fi won t errow hair on bald heads. Neither will it grow hair on china eggs, door knobs or hitching posts. One claim is about as sensible as the other. If vour head is bald and vou want to - -cover it with hair, get a wig. Parisian Sage, the quick-acting hair re- juvenator, is of no use to bald headed peo ple ; but for people who have thin hair, falling hair and dandruff, and where the bald spot is just beginning to show, there is nothing in this wide world that will give such satisfactory results as Parisian Sage, Parisian Sage is guaranteed by Gibson Drug Store to drive out dandruff and stop falling hair in two weeks or money back. It stops itching scalp in two days, and keeos the scalD cool and free from odors & . in warm weather. There is nothing on earth that will quickly turn dull, faded hair into lustrous and luxuriant hair as Parisian Sage. Try a bottle of Parisian Sage at Gibson Drug Store's risk. Use it for a week, and you will have no use for the ordinary tonics. Parisian Sage is delightfully per fumed, free from grease and stickiness, and a laree bottle costs but 50 cents. The girl with the Auburn hair is on every bot tie. - Turnip Seed! ALL VARIETIES 40 cents per pound. Gibson Drag Store. CALL AND SEE HE when in Concord any Saturday. Up stairs oppositi court house. J. Van Lindley Fruit Trees j are the best All stock two years old and first-class. I want your orders. J. A. HENNETT. I June 2-i 5 and 10c Store 8-nuart white-lined Preserve Ket tle............... ....5UC io-quart white enameled and blue Water pail ..50e io-quart Dish Pan 45c io-quart Tin Milk Pail ..15c Biscuit Pans .......f Oc'and 15c Complete Lamps 25c Glassware and China. hnrrua nnrl atartpA a oniric fire in the I stdvetoget supper, forgetting thef5 anH l(J-CJent OlOre. money. When the odor ol burning j paper was detected, she opened the I , n noon t find rho hov fallen ro nWM Next door Cannon & fretzer Co. and the psner money destroyed. rti i .it except one of the $20 denomination ..CLINE BROTHERS.. some pa.iers were legiDie aitnougn badly scorched. Mont Amoena Seminary. Lutheran Visitor. Prospects for tne next session are good. Professor Miller has just re turned from a somewhat extended visit in South Carolina and Georgia, and reports quite a number of new students. Indications are that all the rooms will be taken before the opening in September. A number of changes and improvements are be ing made in the seminary plant and its equipment. A well about one hundred feet deep has been bored through solid rock, which affords an abundant supply of water. All sur face water, to a depth of fifty feet from the surface, is shut out by a packing of cement around the pipe Some changes are being made in the interior of the buildings, which will add much to the convenience of stu dents and will be conducive to better sanitation. One new member h- 8 recently been added to the already efficient faculty, Miss Rosalie Smith, a recent graduate of the State Nor mal. of Greensboro, who comes with excellent recommendations. Miss Smith will have charge of the School of Expression. The old pianos have been replaced with splendid new ones five new Haines Bros.' instru ments. A complete renovation is being made, and everything is being put in fine shaps for the opening of next session, on September 9. When Mrs. James Williams, of Kewanee, 111., left her home to go to the woods for a day's outing Thursday, she placed the family strong box containing cash and notes to the value of si.UOO in the cook stove oven. She was lat in reaching Tin lay vault k Cash Store. Have some very special things to offer you this week. A look will convince you that they can serve you to your advantage. Will Quote You Prices in the Store. 1 OUR LINE OF E3TO 23 Competition this year between the colleges is fierce and sharp. Owing to the taxes our people are compell ed to pay the State colleges are able to invade the territory of the denom inational schools and offer our child ren inducements that the latter can not offer. It is pretty tough, though. that we are obliged to furnish the cudcrel to crack our own heads. Charity and Children. For indigestion and all stomach trouble take Foley's Orino Laxative ai it stimulates the stomach and liver and Men's and Women's Oxfords. We have a few doren pairs of Men's and Women's Oxfords which we will sell at I a Sacrifice. Come in and let as serre you while thej last. Trunks and Suit Cases. School days will soon be here again. We are ready to supply your waaU ia Trunks and Salt Cases, at your owt prices. CLINE BROTHERS. regulates the bowels and will poaitiTely IsltInS earU beautifully printed , , I V Th a Tim eh office at SO cents for 50, cure naDirnai I Drug Store. constipation. Gibson The Tim k office at 50 cents for 50. "35 cents for 100. or is hard to equal ; in fact we have not seen, their equal in style, qual ity and price. No "Cheap John but good goods at right prices. 3,000 Pair Pants ! 59c to $5.98. Compare 59c with $1.00 Pants, 15.98 with S10 ones. A. S. Day vault call your attention to a ware house full of Mowers Rake, li Harrow, Harrows, Buggies. Iet us how you. Drag The Dayvault Co. i r r I : If sm KtS .,wsy.' J '-