Newspapers / The Lincoln Courier (Lincolnton, … / April 13, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Lincoln Courier (Lincolnton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
J4 ' v ', ', RfT X7 - - . - mmmi to. ffl . WW M'; It VOL. VII, . Professional Cards. J. W.SAIN. M.D., tlas louated -it Liucolritou aad of fers bis SHrviceH a a physiciaa to the citUeatof fjncojtitoh'aijd snrroatd lug country., ''- Will be toand at night' at the Lin co'atoQ Hotel. March 27, 1291 . ly dentist. Teeth extracted without I pain by the use of an anaesthe tic applied t. the jjuriH. Po. i i . lively u.stros all ,sii.-.r ofpani; and ran n.i alr.-r trouble. ! Iguaruiit.-. t, ive r-utisfae-1 tiori or no :li,ti.'.-. j f.iill IV. .in y..n soliJted. I Aug. 4, li9 i iy. I CJO loT " i Newly ntte.t Mn. Work M W l' waited iip.m. Km ytbiug pertain Log to tbe rounonut art js ManJ according to latest Ntvltts. V IIL.NHV 'I'AYLou lS-- i llt4 tn r.uui?.r. u;. i r.uige-1 ui.d nil hiii- ' UiaU tifre-t in v.ti u,uut'ci t.y - Vv'uoUarrts vtsaiiwiy L.aion i,i3 ncvbr fails. rJc.ic Ai. Luwint- ii tiViist Linrolnton. IN ngliu bj.avjQ. Ln.iif.eju r-i;..;vfes ail j ttrd, salt (.f alijtK-ovl Uicir.i u.d tltticUt; es'from hu.w, Li . .t :-, ivir,;., . uite.i.liiiiH Sweeney, nn.'-u.n-., tiUfJ, sprains, ail MTOlIca lhrt:;.t. rji.us etc. - .:uve $50 fcy u?e of cai3 rcttio ' W'rr'ftiU;d thy rocs; woodertui Kicmi-h cite ;v-f i uewn. Sold ty J. M. L- w j r 1 ) r u i s t Li n col r. t on i C E. Mi ANDREWS 'Vbo1c;:ilc snd Kcuxil Dealers " a Oak Bedroom suits q' ten piccts, tioa. 8-0.00 to $15' 00. j. Farlor Suits! of i x rt5". f-om 22 $0. to 2(J'0.00. SIDEB(.AKDS ! ttoaj S1U.0O i..' S75.W EXTENSIONS TABLES Ohiiia Closbts sloOu to 15 00. ??1,00 to -$5.00 ' " . . Easels and Pictures ' ' 0 'o r2( CO, COUCHES and LOUNGES ?7 50 ui Jlo.t, ' ilu1c rai-ts au.l Crtb'net, 1.50 to 12.00 Revolving Book Cues' and Hull Top Dske and office Ch&r8,85oi t. -jlO 00. OrgAii-, $50 00 to 150.00. Piano, Si 35 00 to csoo 00. This is h groat sale and you make a ureat mistake if you fiiil to take advantage of it Ai.. latere promptly answer- j ed. U uto at om e for particu- j laxs. - j .. . . . . - : 10 un i 18 Wfjt 1 roe rat, ' " CHARLOTTE. X- C in- 26, 19. EUGKLENVi AKNIC- ? ALV Tbe bet Silva in the w.,rld for ruts and bruise, sores, a!t. i eum. fever ?ans, t&t gr.ch'ipped .hand-', rhilblaina, corns, and U "etin eru; lions, hr.,t po-ir. Vely t ure .FiliBSj.nx oo pay required. It is guaraxteed tjgifo perfect stisfaction,or money refua ei. Price 25 cents prr box. For talc tj J U Lwir:. Pvhfeio.san nd rnar....Lijt Wtea Bby ma sick, -we go her Castorla. When ah was a Child, sha cried for Castoria. WVn ahe became Miss, she clun;r to Castona. Wbea had Chil'lrcc, she give them Owtorta. ILIOUSNESS Who has not suffered this misery -rcauaed by bile in tLe stomach which an inactive or - sluggish liver failed to carry off. THS KkEVtNTION AND CURS IS . liquid or powder, which gives quick actiori to the liver and ci t ie-j oil tLc bile by a. mild move ment of the bowels. It l-i rio pur gative or giiping medir ine, but purely. vegetable. - Many people take .pllls 1 iore take fiimmons Liver Regulator. "I Lave been a Victim to Rlljnsneas for luy nnlyjiucceHS wuo la trie use oi titu- ' - .-naii-PiciuoPw Hr our 2 Stamp in red ua vrrapper. ill Y'fiNTiUH j revo'UtloBizrd N'TiOit I the world duric L9 )at fcaif enury Not ieat amona Ue bonder? of icfcr.tiva progress ts m melbcd Hnl system ot wurk that cnn.bs f.erormfii an oer the country without secretin,? thii ?orku fiOiu tLe.r homfcp. i-&y hb- ral; tiny ca cur. do the work, either sex, ycuijtr cr old; i-a special atihty required 'JupitKi not neuie'-: ycjii aro started free. Cut this cut and return to us and wc will cn.i you tr-.'b, sornctb;E2 great "alu ml irrpci iaa-o to you., that will start you 'n bu;nos'. v. u;cu viii br: n j you in more iKne; r:t i:t tv;;vy. than anytbi-g el?3 ia th worid. G:.t.d ouriit ice. AJdrvw !: v . vtiuta. Main". Don't I Exchange agoad thingfor something of less value. t Gitc up oae insumsce policy and trJaz 'rc other." Always rec:c:ber that an old policy is of far gTCP.ter-iatriasic : value than a new one. 9 t Let the premium oa ycur policy lapse e'ven'for'a day. Voa can's foresee the events of to-morrow. It "may not'ba possible for you to get ua other pclicy, if the presQat-ocs is dropped. " . Consider any other form of insurance until you have thoroughly investi gated the plans and policies-' of the EQUITABLE LIFE:. . .You will per ceive their vantages at.once. W. j, RODDEY, Manager, ... Fwr tL CcroUoiu. Rock M HI , S. C. . i Caveats, and Tr&ds-MArts ocuincd, ai all Pat- i 1 era tusi&S cctductea for Wooirat Fees. J azid we ca sewure pateat in less Use Uuui Utasc ftic Orr:-P is OBPCSiTS U. S . PATCKT OFF7CE Seed HiOdei. drawiaz or tboto.. wita dscriiv tica. Wciidvi3e, M -patentable cr not, frcs of ccxu-ge. Cur tza zut aue tm patent is secured. A Pampmlct, "nowuuDUia raicsu, ' wild sst bt suae in ths U. 3. &d forciza coustries seat free. Address, C.A.SNOW&CO. OPP. PA7I.iT CrFiSE. Wasn.riSTor. D. C. 'WAlLttlO.lllnULIYluiASr S COPYRIGHTS. V CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT f For a rrOmrt answer and an honest opinion, writ to j on, writ to CnrnmanldA. iniflN w vu.. who nnv naa naanr nity experience in me pu.-i;: ousmess. vomn Va4 strictly conflduou a. AHandbooK oa strictly cocfidocu il. A Handbook of Ia formation coccerrua2 Patents and how to ob. tain ttaem scat ftee. Also a catalogue of a&cbao- ical and scient'.dc books sent free. Ptaents taken through Xiunn ft Co.- reccir Atnericao. and : tfid Dttiic with- cut cot to toe inventor. Tnu solenoid japr, issued weetly. eieantiy tiiustrated. au bf i ia largest circulation of anf scienttflc work in las ftorid. $3 a rear. Sampio copias sent free. copies, -5 cants, tveu sua.Lex contuius to tirui nlas. ta cbiurs, ac4 ptiotorrapha of Buiiainz niif.iin. mor.tajv. aua T2iT. 13 u- coues. w.tn pla, taolira tuuaera to shsv &h j of new latest desufts atl secus woutrocts. Atfore& G U A R AJS T E E D C LT R E " We auvhorire our aiert".d druzai?t in sell you' Dr. Kind's iitw ' Di?coVv-rr fai consumption, coughs ani roli-" upu teas condition. It you are afflicted vith La Grippe and will use this remedy kcjcrdis to direction?, givi.'.g :t a fair tuhl. r.d fX perience no benefit,, you may return tbe tottis and Lavs y,ar mosey ielanued. "VV'e make this effer be-aa'e cf the wonderful success of 1 r. Ein s New Discovery dur ing last season's epidemic Have hesrd ot no case in which it failed. Try it. Ttisi bottles free at J. M. Lawir's drugstore. Large size 5Qc and $1 00. a D D Don LINC0LNT0N...N- C, FRIDAY, APR. 13, 1894. SAM JOjiES OJT LAWYERS. The Famous Franse list Scores tbe Fcttllotfgerg neatilr. TLia article I propoie.to'duvote to tho student, of Blackitone, Greenliut and Story. : " The laryer w quit an impor tant factor in tbe. body politic, in the businesa and commercial world.'; He has his place, his work and, sometimea, I am sorry to aay, he hai a destination. The mora) character of a lawyer will largtly determine hie practice as a lawyer, for "every book from Blacks. nr t.- tb ln?t Supreme , , . . , . , Jul and broadening to tho mind, hat.;v.r may b. crooked or uru.-j HablH ixi a lawyer, he CdrtaiiJy , vi " , does not' Lxnbibe. it from his book.-, . , . . , but hr gats it altogether frr.m his ra,tj. Ira. ice. . In the practice oi Ltw, s.lti.n - r.e,s and dogmatism play their parts. A priu,oly lu wyer, cul- tured m his proie'srion and nure .. j. me-aarsev, amiu. ine jaunier i his morals. r stands f,ext tuai.i, , -v " ..Tl. .1 all the spectators m tile court m preacher in moral influence hi tho community where hbr eido: but I tbd dirty littie pettifogger, vhJ will d;. anything that the devil or j u diriy client wants done for rive I dollars, and then orier as an ex- j easy for the conteinptable mean-1 naC3, the fact that he did it as au ! aitorr.ey ana not as a man, makes my sometimes wcndsr'if, v-hen he strikes the iires of the lower pit, he will . say to hi i fri2i:cU-: " "I am 'here us an attor ney and not as a man," In tho practices ct lav,-, as in all other professions, the best and tee' wisest in all ages who have prac ticed in this profession have given cast and character to it on the oLe side, while the littie and the mean a'nd the selfish have made the pre? j-fession the butt of a thousand jokes .ana immeasurable ridicule. If a lawyer loves and - honors . his. pro fession, his profession .will cnoble and honor him. The little fellow, is in it for its fees, and oriiy it's fees, dishonors his profession and his practice and his profession dis honors him. A Biackstone, a Cheat, an Ers- ikine, a Pitt, a Marshall, a Jay or a Webster would have honored any profession, and with such lives and charpJcterr . .as theirs they would havs made any profession hener them. Many onr little petti foggers of tn-day. standing by these great men, remind me of a rat terrier standing by - an ele phant. SVv have constitutional lawyers and lawyers running on the by laws. Vi'n have jury lawyers, case i lawyers, supreme court-lawyers, lawyers who know law and lawyer? who do not know any law and nev er will knofl- it whether they see it in a hook or znest it in the road. This profession is fed and fes tered by either the selfishness, prejudice- or dishonesty of olients Fraud, rascality, deception, od in fact .everything from petit larceny to the millionaire who steals a j system of railroads, furnish client?. age ior his honorable profession. " Honest ms-n may differ and dis pute and become clients. A man may kill his neighbor in selt:de fensa and become a client. There are two sides to every issue before the courts prosecutor and.delend ant, or, in civil suits, plaicrtirf and defendant, In all criminal cases, the man is either guilty or inno cent. The lawyer for tb.3 prosecu tion declares h& is guilty, the law yer for the defense maintains his innocence. A suit in ths civiJ courts is eith-ti- the result ox paesiuxi. prtjudica cr. dishonesty. ' Si 'we see th&t this hon&rabje profession hy association with clients, unless thay are absolutely impvTvicua to surroundings, mast take on rnciv or less of the spirit cf their clients. Perhaps the most contemptidie lawyer in all the list is he who wouid discount the truth lrouht out in the testimony and villify and abuse an honest wit-A ne3. A case in point : . - An-honest old n?gro was prose outed before the -courts for shoot ing a dog. His lawyer asked him : "Uncle Tom, you aay you shot this dog in self defense, did you?" "No, sir,' boas,? he replied, 44I shot him in the leg and he jumped the fenae." - He would lse tru to the facta if found . guilty by the jury. The lawyer repeated the same question several timea to another negroVand then asked him again: "Jim, what kind of a dog did you eay that was?" "Boss, I dbnetold you five times it was a yaller dog." "But I mean," said the Jawyer, vrhnt was the charactpr d thf d.g: what woe he gMd turr .Me L,. fuJ. anvthix hxi, lxKWt hcrt rabhiUj he l , t . A w w.ttldnt stand gnard: he inst , , v . n ,k - A A lay?d tat all tbe time, and dat a ! k T -., , i . ! what matte t.ht;ni call him what j made th-m rill him what thf-v i Ud;, hQt they caU ; him?., Lawr ,it . Thw p,tti. j q pr,,tetd cantiouslv with i L ' i -3 . .. L' - room. . Ths profession seems overciowd cd. I believe there are more half Carved lawyers in tbe average town in -this country than any other class. Their eagerness for practice and their direful want of fee3 I sometimes thins adds many casss to the dockets in our City, County and Circuit courts. The lawyer who stays by his bocks and never seeks a case and attends to the casvs brought to.'him wen ana never. tat:ce a caa case. :si the lawyer who has come .to slay. I have sever seen any reason' lor less conscience and mrai recti tude ;n the practice cf. law than in any other profession. X-man, who would do- 3 thirr-and . say a thing as a lawyer "wrien he wouldn't do or Bay tho game thing as a mac intist either be amatr of loose mor als or else he can fieperate the law yer from the man better "than I h'rve ever ben able to d. As long as rr.en fight and fuss; dillcrsnd:'. 'dicker, this profession will. find wcrk to do. Hfaily, if the dvil were to die aome night? thD'prahir's and lawyers would wake up' the nxt mornicg out f a job... The.-preacher is trying to keey men out of the penitentiary ; the lawyer is trying to put them in, and by the time humanity pays the. preacher, and settles with the lawyer one of the clients is lying fiat of his back with the cow's horns in hie hands and tho other one' is at tho other end of the ;bw, fiat of his back with, the'tail inhis hands, while the lawyer sits quiet ly on the stuol and milks the- cow. Horns apd tail for the clients, 'cow and milk for the lawery! . An old lawyc when dying, dic tating his will to a fellow lawyer said: "In the name of God, Amen : I, John Smith, dying sane in my right mind,, make this my last will and testament. I heiehv'give and bequeath all that I die vested cf to the fools of my country. Tho law yer writing the will said to him : ''What ? Your mind is .wavering." "Why?" said the dying lawyer: ':Why, the id&A r.f you giving all your property to foci 3." 'Oio" said the dying lawyer,. T am clothed and in my right mind I got aU.. this, pxop&rty . from ths fools and ought I net to give it back to them &s I can .uss ; it no more?" : Thsre seems to be no and to the making of laws. Thsr sesms to be no uniform rule by which law can be construed. Men diiler on facte, judges dixior on law, and a lawyer can construe it either way ; but hi construction vi law ox course depends upon which side cf the case he represents. Our jurisprudence, our jury sys tem, our .practicing lawyers fre quently make a man recaii the o'ld saying, that God know all tha 'Id saying, that God knows all things except what the verdict of a jury may be. 0nmiscienc9 Himseii :s at a loss to determine tne intricate process by which facts are reached and verdict attained. As in all other professions, the moat'dogmatic and uncontrollable oneg ft re those who know the least Ignorance and assumption are the potent factors in the life of a jackass, whether he have four legs or two; "whether he brays lor feed or brays for food, whelher he be burnt by whiakey or a plain hay burner. Locomatiye engine ar coal burners ; a mule is a plum hay barnp-r. Some lawyers' heads are made lor the same purpou that a donJEey's head is made tor just to hang his ears on, and if he were to dispose jof his ears h would have no further use for hi h- ad. . . I doit mrim t.i say thiit law ers a?t-rage up badiy, Thre ur many i.obte nn m thu-i pr..j'.-r-ei .n h.-irst and true, whil.s tn-n- uritru.-.. P.o.ill thi th'irn.rt'-r i th'i man drtr.rinines the character of his professiortal life. An hi.it est man is an honest lawye r, a di--honcst lawyer c&nnot be an honest man. ' The collectiiig lawyer i- mor dreaded by deiiriquciiT .iedttonr tlidn cholrn Lr smollpox. soon as a iawyer make a char acter as a good collector he is lull of business, and seems to have to go and torment his neighbors be-, tura their time. They art mor.e to! be dreaded and genneraliy more despised than til'mcst - any other class ct prcitssi'js, unless it be book agents and .writers of news-! p i er articles, su-h as myselt; Tt"has fce?n many years since I mihg'led wiin lawyers m the court house, but I still micgie 'with their clients and mcny are their tales of woe which come to me. and sometimes a tale of pleasure toid by seme man who had employed a .faithful, true lawyer who stood by his rights and charged for his services only what was -right. ' It is really amusing when a d irty client turns over a dirty easy to a dirty lawyer and .n dirty ' lawyc r does the dirty work and the dirty client refuses to pay the dirty fee; then to hear them curse and damn each other; each willing to go to the regions below if they cor." but be allowed tho privilege of . piling chunks one upon the other. One parting word to his profes sion:. 20 man honors, respects and reverses the true and faithful lawyer in his profession more than the writer of this article. 2io - living-man-has a prcfounder con tempt and deeper disgust for the insolent, ignorant, contemptible little pettifogger than myself. I bid all true, intelligent and hon est' God-speed in their work, and join hands with them in the effort to protect society honor and vir tue .i - To the good lawyer I say : "Here -is my hand:" to the others I 'say :- ;FLx for my foot." Sax P. Joe?. VVrt put togtither a few notes. President Winston; of the Tniver sity, has a cclumn article in the Raleigh Eiblical RsecJU;R in be- "half cf the. venerable, 'useful, fa mous and high grade institution over which he so ably pissids Judg'a.P-obert Winston has com pleted his highly appreciated se ries it numbered twenty-eight in tns same Baptist, paper, which he called "Talks en Law?' They have been copied a good deal and the'hgal profession has appreciat ed them. The Judge is a Baptist and Dr. Winton is an EpUcapal ian, and brothsrs.-Piesident Tay lor, of Wake Forest College, begins in a long article, his criticism upon . . . . , 1 1 cently announcad in the Messzx- j 0R;was educated at Wales; r crest Cciiege; but he uv?d and died ij Methodist, and was born in North Carolina. His successor. Judge Bright, is also a Methodist. Mts - tL t.' - " IF TCV2S HACK A CUTS, 0,7 e fij ,jK7sotiia ic. tt is zczcnl i -Mty Ttt 1 ' m.tmAtjmxius. ' tne States furnishing aid to f timber but the cutting has gone University. Cheif Justice Lea,cfcn every ,Vj except Sundays, Tenneisse, whess death was r-, vith um 4 t0 r; haada just the Bob Penk'H Letter. In Heaven's namo how many of the Bogus family are there? Eli with his unprovoke uncalled for attact rist appears, and I sup pose Benny sen. will come to the rescue next. Judging from the sound ol Bi'imy Jun's. article he must be laboring under some nas al disease as he must to have written it through his nose. Por ignorant Backer ily doed hia mother know he hj outf 'Phut uncle Bob h;is been recently in listed in Pharoah'6 army is like every other assertion made, by Benny Jun., false in the nrsr de gre. Pbftroah led hiown forces tor a tifii i-tjsii'iii'd and put PtdLip hi i-.tiuma.'i 1 ; ik t lhe Philip that baptized 1 lie Kuiuich. but the Philip that will duck Beony in the 1-iWtoiit , just ;ntered It v d ie t! J.run a leadeio that they, know what all this war M wtuvts and li.ht of quills originated lioin a id 1 will make t'te statornent as lre as possible, iu 17C Phil il Caiider then iu Liuroln County now the Panhandle of ijHoton entered i?ti acre.-- i lsnd iiiinoi says his son iienrv entered 63 acres ifi the east aide and 17 acred on the t'outh side. The said lands was conveyed by will to Henry Candler who sold the lands to Da vid Aderholdt an innocent non- est farmer, running outside tne ii rants and inclosing a tonidcra- ibic amount of l-nd bclonguig to heirs of Pcier Dollingcr ct b This hind was recently sold by the heirs at law oi' David Adcrhohit and said to be purchased by tne socalled Bogus Brothers, who now now say the enly trouble tliey have to r'c a ; h the de siredl point is.- when the land v; as first surveyed that two outs on the third lino were lost. This secured -J'J yer.rs'ago some lime during tiiis year aud how it is that the loosing of these two outs have -just come to light is the mystery unless one of the -liin-bearers sfroke for the eternal world and s.ud we lost two outs on the thirdline of Philip Can sefs entry, which is. not probable. The ii')0 acres the acres and 17 acres sum up -0 acre and the boundry sold by the Aderholdt heirs i said to contain 31 S acres. Is it a hard matter to see there is something wrong ' I think not My opinion is, and has been, than dl th s trouble originated with Henry Cansler practicing a fraud on David Aderholt an innocent man. Canslor tried long and hard to sell the land but could mt till bo jfriirk otifi iirp.orant of , the circumstance?. Dellinger's 1 heir's say to the Bogus Brothers run out all your grants each sep arate and if it includes ours we will squat fit once, but instead of this oiler them 10 acres of their own h.nd to quit them. Bous Brothers have entered suit against, the Dellinj:ers for possession.' Benny Bogus Junv say "Bob Peak'' engineered into court, and also another oDe in Lincoln Coun ty which assertion is as fai-o as it broad. Th i records in Liucolnton will show tbe entry of the 200 acre tiact but I am unprepared to assert that it will show the 33 cr I 17 acres entrv though both of these entries are conceded to them Sdch distinction of timber has never been seen in this section by our oldest people r.s has been on the Dellir.gar land claimed by the Bous Brs. tince they bought it. There was a rertraining order This is one cf the .-uits that little made at Dallas to etop cutting same. The Delliegea heirs have 1 aU lhe sympathy and the Bogus Bros" share all the censure cf the lood people of the neighborhood. I Vv'ho has removed the land mark ? i. . . 1 tnmk the above explains, lam iciro it- tc not tho 7pllir.T-r bpiri j fcr tt v .re crji7 sastainine thee. Bogus Bros, r.re net only trespas- NO. 51. sing on the Bellingers but other also on the northern botmdry. They may retch the climax tome-time- Public servants ' abn sing the pubhe. Ton may taJbe tap your bed and walk .after this storm is over. Yes ! by the wa Mrs. Peak says it is not' afe to leave other thun sul eggs oat side the he use while the inrrf grants infest tb foreit. Ika'C bother the littie PeaL till foa, get thxoujjji with Bob. will bo enough lor you and ir iot)ks cf ardly for two oUiers 10 .iti-n uJj one bat trot out uxttlher JiogiW viz Benny sen. 1 want k io him in uniform Bennj jun aiy amen to Uri letter. fra- rv rain..U me cf a .r.Kvi dea.'on whi Wii al wuyt siyiuamen ut Church ' and oiten at th wroiy Time wa& criticised and Droaisad to topiit, but agiiu at church lh preacher .-ttiJ. the -wickett shall b turned into hell with ill the n- tions that forget G.4 itd he nid amen, again at u venture. BoB lE.Ut. Cherrrulle, S. C., April 29 1L Trial Awful TfllMvo IU1I. WitV. to Republican hiubaiid "John, thM Wilson bill that t suv s much about in the Republican, papers must be a t&rrible thing is! what they say is trut. What it anyhow ? Husband "Oh, t a law ggfc tvu up by the confounded Deao crais to burst up the country." ':But John, how can it do that?" "Well. I don't j ut exactly kn 3 w. I but that's what itVs going to d bo -aiTt-e the Republican papers aa s'J. '. ' . 'T suppose that settles it, but X read the other day that it would "be a good thing for neatly every body but the rich, ind that every body would get clothing and ever so many other things n great deul cheaper." . ... .... "Oh, that'" a black Democratic lie:" . - "But I read ' it in arx indejfer dent paper, I believe they ctzll it." "I don't care. It's a lie. They'rj going to burse everything, ctfLXX- know it " "John, aren't there.more demo crats than Republicans in tho country?" "Well, ahem 1 Yes, .1 brieve so." "Well, it hardly seerm liJbcJgr they would ruin-thexruelvee, does it!" : "No. But, hang it aU. Maria, don't ask foolish questions." "Aren't'Democrats interested iu the prosperity of the country ? Don't they own property aud and haven't they wiv'j9 and ohil drexi to care for ? Tell me, wnich sid are Mr. Carnegie and all tho rkh pople on?"J "Oh, they're again3 the bill." "Well, then, I beleive it will dq pretty safe to say that it will bo a good thing for plain common people like us. It cari't makt things worse, anyhow.' We've struggled and savid fr years and. are just about" where wawere when we started. Yovr wages ha vj ben, reduced singe the McKiniey bill was passed and we carvC liv tu cheaply as wo did tn years ago, and-" "Hash up, Xarku. and go Vj bl. You wenen mAk- a- tir.d " Little Johxiy( striking in. "Pa, did the WiU'n b'Ji mr.V tn. diphtheria br:-ak oui h.z 7" "No, you Little monkey. If yott ask anvth:r t' l question tat I'll paddii you !' "Well. Tommy ToddJei, whc. father is a Repubiic'cn, tid it did. Did ' r'i A anothr-r T'.rri. C; b.i, both of (you." Ex. CURE AV riKAii.CliJ:. L a remedy tea &jj icrm 'A BMdact73 e trie Bittern ha prove! V N the verj b'St it effect! a p-rmoenttcraidtJtie mo-t dr-adeJ ijiVi'.a&l jck telAcbe yield to l inifuencs V7e urea all who rg cffi.cted to procure bett'e. &sA fcjfc thi3 remedy a fair trial, in c.t ot hab ituitl constipation Electric Bi tcj cures hj giving the rlcd tn" Vo tb bowili. wl fw c.tses resist tbe u3e of tbi medicine, try it onoe. Lae battles osiy 60 cmU at J X Lawlngs Dreg Stor.
The Lincoln Courier (Lincolnton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 13, 1894, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75