W , jr- XI 1
n i n
VOL. VIII.
UNOObNTON. N. 0., FRIDAY, JULY. G, 1894,
NO. 11
I W,V,I SiiWVv
gOXOMOMOMOMOMOBOMOMOMOBOXOOaOrOaOsoOrOfJO-.OOOaGsrO
44 I here's No
H
Such Word as
o
x
o
ft
FAIL"
o
S Jf READ THIS.
8 June 2d, iSq-?.
a poise in my family for eighteen (9
g months for Xenraia, CoJs, i
O Rheumatism, Constipation, Ner- 'k
O wusness, etc., and it has never
g failed in any cave to cure." v
g Rev. J. K. Fant, S
M w High Point. G)
Oi:00000000000OOBOCObCi0CaoaoecOaOoS
BELWOOD
Prepares boys for the Jopoinore . :
girls for the ftenior Qhit ;il (.'nyu'.i.w,-..
College. Excellent atlvanta:' i:
.study of vocal and in.sl inn, ei-tal
MUSIC.
Thrroiigh Jiihtiuclinn. J i.m mci mi, in
(omnif iciai Antlum-tic. and (Tmih-ih
Hoard and tuition in Jviyl.idi coute ?7o p. i
Opfns An. 2. For Cttalnj'iu, i v 1 1 1 1 a s i n.i'.iin i . ,
MET, flkP.TAOT, m,)
Professional Cards. I
J.' W.SAIN.M.D.,
liiii located t'. Liiicoiutoii and ot
fera hid .seivie.tis h.i pliy-sieian li. the.
eUrenaot Lincolntou and surioand
ing rnuiiiiy.
Will le. tituud at night at the Lin
COhiloii Hotel.
March L'7, ISO I lv
aiilihut hi itT-rwf Tnnv-ii.iTT HMi-rfinrjVfri.r"n-ff-'
DENTAL NOTICE-
Dr. A. W. A'fcXttiidtr will he ai
Li! office at Lincoln! on, .1 one, An-
piibt, 0 :toi.e-, Deccinher, F h- I
luitr.v and April. Will t e in alt.
floH", July, iicpttmbu-, Ndv inher,
Januaiy, Mm eh and M-iy.
Pa'ionae f;tl;citcd. 'IViitts ; j!i
find ni ilciaiH
E. M. ANDREWS
"Who'c-tile'and aotail Dealers in
Oak IJeilroixiii smte
Ot teli piect-s, !:oai ?20f to SMO 00.
Parlor Suits
of fV ucis, fK.Pi 5 , to 2(M.oii
SIDKHOAIIDS
from Sin.OO i
EXTENSIONS TABLES
lion $4.oo i' jfio.oo.
China Closets
815 00 to 545 00.
Renter lallq?
?1 .on to Sa.OO.
Easels and Picture's
$3.00 to $2tt 00.
COCCITESaml LOUXGES
'7.rn to -"J45.00.
M.usic r.id:s and Cab'nets, l.nO
to csoo.no.
This is a great sale mid yon
make a great mistake if you
fail to take advantage oi' it
ALL letters promptly answer
ed. rite at once f.r particu
lars. 1C an I 18 West. J rails St,
CHARLOTTE, X-C
Jan. 26, ISO 4.
to $12.00. Revolting Book Cses g H K 0Mi
and Roll Top Iks and fll-'e -pf fil fj M m fSjVl'
Ciaus, 83 (Ml to 40-00. Organs, pgJ tlll m N
$5')(M) to $1 50.0:1. Pl.inos -.2. CO ; 5b&wX&--
"'tu.- wJn. si i.:,. r.iiK"'
Air?isierG of tlje
GOSPEL
speak out for us. Tin cc words 8
of commendation fnra one of 2
the i;i..st romirw nt L'-aptit Di-
vim -. of the Sr::.; y..lU s!.onlj
In-hove :ind npprcr Lite. Cn-
suit with i.-s ,y mail. In forma- o
tion book mailed tree, g
ATLANTIC ELECTRCP05SE CO., g
INS
i
ie'iil
- fi J-
'- " !(
n
Whoh. li.
-eaus;e 1 1
wliieh an
l Mlliei'. (1 ilil.
y liie in the
inactive or
mi. eiy
!' 'iiiaeh
liver failed to e.n rv 'ii.
THE PREVENTION AND CURE IS
E-.,
liquid
or povtier, win
i iz i 'eS
quick action to tin.
iver and
Carries oil the hii
meat of the Low..-'
gative or yrij'inu
purely vegetal''-,
take pilkj niwiv
Liver le-:rulator.
i'V a mil' l inove--.
It. i- if -nr-
medi.-iii.-, hut
MaiiY people
take iininOliH
"I Lave ! , :, ;
ytars, ainl a iter
jay ouiv u. irs
lauiis l.iv. i Ki -.
t reliov.-
illllllC, I U I III v'
31A, S. Una. 'Vl
i i. i i'n t'. Uilii.u- li. ss fur
tr.viu .iiiuii-i l. iih-iI ii'-i
.1 in Hit' use if Sllu
uhii.'i. w hu h iifwr lallt'il
I -ik not ..f iiivst-lf,
ll.lU' III ill 1 1 s .
Has oar . S!:t;-.ii in l td .-a wrapper.
J. li. zrn i; & ot , i'!..u,dcii.ha. Pi.
9
x j-.
Ivxchaagc ay
..1 thiiif -r something
less Vcihic.
j3'.
Give up one insur.un
P"
and
take another. Alwctvs j i-nieaiber that
;ai old policy is of llir renter iutiinsie
value than a nev i..
Let the pre:.; una en
lapse even f-r a .ir..
loresre the events uf I
may not Lc p.:.s-ii--!i f i
another policy if tho e:
dropped.
mY policy
Yu can't
.orrow. It
you to get
rent oiie is
9 J
Consider any other 1. vv.i of insurance
until you h ive thoroughly i:iui
gatcd the; plan-; a: il policies of the
KOUITARLK 1.11 I'. You will per
ceive their :ul van tae.es at once.
V. J. RODDL.V, iM.iiiacr,
For theCarilinas. Rock MUI,S. C.
Jcnt bnsiiK'-sriMiMU. u.l La-MoorRATi Fees.
'Our Orrioc n o- rcrr. u. -- patfnt OmcEj
':md wc oil! sc no idiml 1.1 1. n;uc t!MU ll.Obc
- rni..: fr,,n. '.'-.vlniii-;im.
Semi mo.lel. i!i:svinK or 'li--0. uu ue -rrip-
'tiun. Wc a.lvir.e, it I'licn-itle or noi.ncs oi;,
JclarfC Ourfcv-nctttuetillpa'itisscriircd.
' A Pamphlet, "Slow tot .'..ta.al' tune?, Willi
'cost ot same in the U. S. feuJ Kre.;;ii countries
Jscntiice. A-rc ,
1 A e- WrB' Tff
' c! li.SPO Fl f, t-
; wr" " ' '
J opp. PATCNTO.-r.cc. wiNr.70H.o.c. f
-
Hi-iM. i' ivm i-iom-m r-.-.v',. !!
l.i.l 'ilt or . , I. in -r. Iuii': :u,l hi- nit - li -
f from hoi--, b! i -'-'vi-s. iiri.. s tiir.ts
:WU riV st.ti,-. snrHinf. ml
iwollrn U.roHt--, r.wi'n ; !-. Mtvo -t- " i
use ot on-' i-otti' ';( rrv.nt-.i tin inot
wonderful bU'iiUh cure o it l:iiOwn. Sold
by.I.M- Lawing Dni!:i;itInc"lnton N C.
i ri . nr rv-i r-t--v :.j -4 ft- w t m
Subsenhe tor ihe COURIER-
JU;vis i (;ot;i:is.
! Mr. IT id. nt, I dili!;o at this
: 1 a t hour ..j the evening 1" part i !
; ip:do in tlii di-'-us-ioii.vt't 1 .-hall
i ak the indulgence of the S..-iiat-tor
a f'v hutments while I express
i soii:.- thoughts in fasoL jf this M's
J ti-ni ot taxai i n.
i I believe, sir, since the days of
j Horace to the pre-.eiit, in poetry
and pnw, 'y in.ii - - nial--.it
has I.M'ij ;-U;- that -11 .-v.eet l(.
I
Idle lor oli.' :-; eolllitlV." l'alh 'y
N'ics haVel.eeil Ololiouiieed lllmll
those who have died lor th.ir
country; monuments have? heen
elected to them, ami their memory
held sacred : hut I have ne-. r yet
Jc ard it s;ti
i- Weet to
ly anyloly that it
taxed for one's coim
ins ti he duty that
ll.-i feel at liheltv t t
tiv
Tliat
evade if jiossil.ly. .Men will l;o io
war at their country's rail, and
risk and sacrifice- their live:-.: hut
when it. comes to meeting this duty
and ohliiiat ion of national taxa
tion the.v and theii property am
ready to hide away.
The question that we are now
iscussiiiu it siiiiolv and oure v a
I . . 1 .
j ipi. t ion t taxat ion. There is, as
e. i v S.-nator knows, a certain
amount, of money to he laised for
t 'a- suii!a t of t he National (Jov
ei nnieiit, and 1 lti'lieVe i.'in:!i year,
las time lolls on, tne amount to he
raised increases rat her than dimin
ishes. Win-re and how shall that
J money he raised is the quest ion,
I The Senator from Ohio says put
I the hurd.ii n sutrar. The Sena
tors from New England say put it
on manufactured jMods. The .Sen
ator from New York, 1 helieve,
would say put at h-at a reasona
ble poitioii of it upon the cutis
and collars that the poor people
w ear.
Mr. President, my i-n-a i- that,
in imposing those burdens of taxa
tion, the heaviest burdens .-hould
be put upon those best able to
bear them, and the least burdens
upon those least able to bear them.
It vou arc eoimr to make any dis
tinction in imposing these burdens
upon any class of our people. those
who strive and toil in the shop
and in the held, the H) j or cent of
people who, the Senator from New
York says, own neither real nor
person -nl property P say if any
class of our people are to be fav
ored in our svstein of taxation, it
Joes seem to. llie that 1 ll Oiioht
' i- 11 i ' " 4-1
to be the lavored class, because ot
their inability to bear the burded.
Then thty ought to he the favored
class, because I believe it is this .S0
per cent of people in this country,
who have leen delving in the- mine
and woikiiiii in the shop and in
jt he field, on the farm and in the
I factory, who are creating the
(wealth of the country. I know
jwhen the honor of cur country is
i threatened it is from this per
cent of people without property
that the soldiers will come which
i-s to defend the lienor and the
glory of the country. So, 1 say, if
anv class of our fellow-citizens
are to be favored, it does seem to
me tliat they ought t- be the fa-
i ..v. . .
' ' lca-- ,. , ,
Put we are tout that tins propo -
. .
Mill 11 I lUA 1 I'.U r3 13 (1 LLllUliai
. ... . . i .
proposition. l win auiint uiai iii
has been made
has been made
sectional, and it
',
sectional l.'V one
lit tie section of our common conn-
.
trv. it is ireni oic seciion ot out
country from wliich we see this
opposition come, and I can prop
erly describe that section by say
ing that it lies east of the Allegha
ny Mountains and north of the
Potomac River. I do not mean to
sav that evei v man in that terri-
T. 1 . i , . t i
j uJ.y 4,tpOSeil lotlllS prOpOSll 1011
, - -
j( paK mcoUies, lio!" do IhleailtO
s;lv v eVervbody outside Oi that
' L ,' , r
territory is tavoring this propoM-
. - , . .
tion : but 1 sav that the advocates
- .
f tj t ,n,i,0sition living within
! , ' ,. wi,
i that territory are lew, and the op-
t , .
. lv.isition i" tar as 1 know, ot peo -
j ' Hvin outside of that terntory
is feeble. All the great newspa-
,,. f hnt. territorv are thunder-
Tlie Senator from
ing against it.
N--w York, as the mouthpiece of
t hat s.-nt im.Mit, occupied hour.-of
the t i 1 1 1 of this Senate thunderin:
.-loms
That section of the country, Mr.
Pit siil-nt, occupies a unique ami
peculiar position, It embraced, I
believe, only about 0 per cent of
our entire territory, and yet it
contains per cent, of all the
wealth of this entire country. It
end races 47 per cent of all the
banking capital of this country;
and I heard the .Senator from Mas
aeinisetls tell us that in his own
State even the laborers, the com
mon laboring people, had in the
s ivings banks hundreds of mil
lions of dollars. How comes it
that this little section of our coun
try, embracing only ahont 0 per
cent of the area of our country,
has within it sc much of the wealth
and so much jf the capital of this
count rv?
1 -want to give the people living
in that territory credit for being
intelligent, economical, industri
ous, full of energy, full of jterse
veranee, and setting up a helpful
and proper example to the balance
of the country in these respects.
Yet they are no more industrious
and hard-working than the people
of other sections. But it comes
about, in my opinion, because
they have enjoyed in a peculiar
deirree the advantages of class leg
islation. With a great tariff wall
behind them, tln-v have sent their
manufactured products out over
all this great country of ours, all
the merchants of the country have
been instrumental ingathering up
here and there, little by little it
may be, hut for thirty years under
this legislation thev have been
gathering and bringing this wealth
home into their territory,
Mr. IIOAPv. Will the Senator
allow me to ask him a question?
Mr. JAKVI8. Certainly.
Mr. IIOAPv. I ask the Senator
whether, during all that time,
North Carolina has not had great
er advantages for doing the same
thing?
Mr. JATtYTS. No, sir.
Mr. HOAR. They have raised
the cotton close at hand, they have
their streams and their abundant
water power, and they are very
much nearer iron and coal than
w e are. What advantage have we
had that they have not had.
Mr. JAKVIS. Mr. President, I
shall answer that question very
..... .
rietly. We were complete wrecks
at the close of the war. You had
your spkndid factories then open
and in progress. In natural ad-
vantages North Carolina, and!
( ieorgia, and Alabama are not only
equal but are far superior to Mas
sachusetts and the other New Eng
land states. The day may come
by and by when North Carolina,
and Georgia, and the other South
ern States, and the Western States
will bo the equal of those other
States in prosperity and in prop-
ei":. 1 trust that it soon may
c jme.
T ... A .. AT,- PrAilant tnl-Q
T, ' , . ,
from .New r.ugianu ui ew iu;iv
1 , - 7i .
one dollar ot their prosperity or
j rob them of one ray of their glory;
i , , , i-
but what I stand here and ask for
1 , - , ,. , , .1 I
is tliat the people who are thus
I'livtiinrilch- sirimted find have
, ' , , , - .
! these great accumulated tortunes
" . . c
Ule..l hear their inst nronortions ot
' , , , ., ,
! the burdens ot the Government,
under whose laws they have been
able to accumulate these great for
tunes. Mr. HOAR. Will the Senator
allow me? 1 do not wish to in-
Iterrupt the Senator s argument,
and I shall endeavor not to do so
; il ii .1 1 1 1
fio-ani i
I ' , ,.nrTO , -i .i t fKr.
jlr. J.liO IO. x vcuu iuvii
,
Senator.
-
! Mr HOAR. The Senator cited
.
-.vine either I or mv colleague or
j - ,tfUifk
both of us sa d about the $4U0,0U0,
i . '
in the savings bank ot Jlasa-
j - .
k'llllst'll
These $400,000,000 are
i f 1 o.-rim-i.ir.mcitftrt:
M-' FPertv ot 10,00 depositors,
.... 4K.,....l..iit I have nnr the
fractions. So tney represent de-
posits of 3G0 apiece by the de-
poitors. They ;ire t the great
fortfies of which tin' S-nat it
speaks. The farmers of this income-tax
provision have respected
th .'tiggest ion mad.' by my col
league and my-t It, because they
propose to exempt incoin. s under
.fo,(H) when the.v are not in cor
porate hands, and I think the
committee themselves have agreed
to exe.iipt the savings hanks whele
they are banks nr. rely of deposit.
So the argument which the Sen-
at..r is making of this accumula-j
tion id" . 4(.H,tK IJMM by the work
ing people of Massachusetts. 1. lV.o,
(XX i of them having lOO apiece in
the saving banks, is an argument
which nobody is now adhering to.
unless the Seaator still adheres to
it.
Mr. dAJtVlS. Jiut here is the
fact ; The Senator himself admits
that he lives in a country and in a
section which is so fortunately
situated, and which has had the
enjoy meid. of a jwculiar kind of
legislation, Ihat the laborers of
that State alone have a bank ac
count ot .S4(K),(KHI,(HI().
Mr. President, in the section of
country from which I come not
only the laborers have no bank ac
count, but if the farmers at Un
did of the year '-an possibly get
both ends together tln-v are pecu
liirly fortunate; yet on every
proposition which has been made
here during the progress of this
bill to take some of the burdens
from those people of North Caio-
llina and the other agricultural
States who have no bank account,
and to leave in their pockets, a lit
tle of the money w hich has been
gathered up year hy year, and
month by month, and day by day,
and which has been carried into
the banks of New England, the
Senator has stood here with all his
might and energy and fought.
Mr. President, it has been my
fortune to stand upon the deck of
a great ship as it ascended the
great Amazon River. When we
enter the river, looking far to the
south, no land could be seen, look
ing far to the north no land c-u;d
be seen; yet if you pursued it o,
000 mil.H up you came to the
source of that great river. All
along for o,000 miles on the east
ern slope of the Andes, in Peru
and Brazil and Bolivia little
streams were coming up from the
mountain sides and from the earth
that flowed on and on, each con
verging and directing its course to
the- other, until by and by they
united in the waters of that great
! river and formed a areat sea upon
which the navies of the civilized
world might meet, maneuver, and
light, out their battles and have
room to spare.
So, for twenty live years, North
Carolina, and South Carolina and
and all tho Southern States and
al) the Wesiorn States have been
flowing their money steadily for
the purchase of manufactured
'oods from this favored territory.
On and on the stream has flowed,
until we see in this little corner of
jour great country, having onl
. . ,
about b per cent of its at ea. nearly
, , 1.,4..,1 ,,.,,,
one-ii a n 01 iucai.i.uiiiui(ii'u ci n
of the country.
When we come and ask our
friends in that section to tear
down, or at least to lower this
wall of protection, eo that the peo
ple living iu other sections may
have their goods cheaper, they say
nay' vhen we come and ask
them to unloose the tight, strings
of the money purse, they say
'nav:'' when we cme and ask
j
them to shoulder a fair protection
of Ihe burdens of taxation, they
say "nay;"' when we come and ask
the Senators representing that
section to take from the farmer
Mud the laborer some of the bur
dens of taxation and put it upon
the accumulated wealth of the
country the Senator from New
York rises in his plac3 arid says,
that is an iniquitous proposition;
it is an inquisitorial propositi n. I
Mr. President, it may be inquis
itorial, or it mav not. I under-
take to say that it will never be
i:i pii-iforial to tho-e who honest,
iy coinplv with tie- lave. If there
is anv inquisition instituted, it
w ill only le for those who seek t
evade the law; and I submit that
they are entitled to the sympa
thies of tin? Sen.it e.
Ah; but, says tin Senator from
New York, this is undemocratic,
and he warns us that we are in
corporating into the pending bill
a provision which will sound the
death knell of the Democratic
party. Mr. President, after titty
eight years of life in that part,
and after thirty year of laithful
service in that party, I undertake
to say that if it ha' no higher mis
sion than at the bow at the foot
stool ami worship at the shrine of
the accumulated wealth of this
country, the sooner it dies the bet
ter. Applause in the galleries, j
The Vice-President rapped with
his gavel.
Mr. .1 A BY IS. Mr. President, as
1 understand Democracy it means
sympathy with the struggling
people of thi country; as 1 under
stand Democracy if undertakes to
protect the property of the coun
try; but at the same lime it goes
out into the highways and into
the byways, and puts its great
arms around tin- laboring people
who create the wealth of the coun
try, and undertakes to lift them
up into a higher and a better life.
I thank (iod, for one, that the
I einocratic party to-day is in the
hands of those who have the cour
age to some of the burdens from
the people and put. them upon the
accumulated wealth of tne coun
try, and instead of this bill sound
.i .ii ii i- i i .
mg tne death Kiieii oi me demo
cratic party, I beb ive it is but the
first step onward to a higher pros
perity and a more glorious career.
If it shall only have the courage
to move farther on the line which
has been selected, I beleive, in
stead of four Republican friends
in 181)7 seeing a Republican Pres
ident inaugurated, that the stand
ard of Democracy will be advanced
still higher. and, thar. our
banners will again lloat over the
House of Representatives, the
Senate, and the White House when
the next President shall bo inau
gurated. THK OISroVKRY SAVED HH LIKE.
Mr. i Caitlouett,, DrtirUt, Beaver
vil'e HI., sejs : -'T t Ui- Kifig N'iwDii
nVery I owe my l;fe W.s t.itcn with
Ln j rippe and tnc-ii all tlie il.siciani l.r
uiin U-ut, tut o! rut avail an i w9 giva n
in an.i to' ' I eouM n-t livo tUvin Df
Kiiil's Ne Disc 'Very in my store 1 sent
for h nettle Hf.il t.epraii iti use ani from th
lir-t d;s ' I CiTHu t ;et better, an t alter
n ins; three bottles ws up ar.d about agiln
It is wortn it? weight in Hold. We won't
keep store without it." Get a free trial at.
J M Lawiog'i Drug ft r
IIol Walter Well-
Herald: The people at the
Vance Mills are talking about a
well that is giving them hot water
This well was dug while the mill
was being built and last year the
water from it was used for drink
ing purposes it being cold and pure.
This year, up to about three weeks
ago, when the city water was ob
tained, the well was used to sup
ply water to the engine at the
null. After commencing the use
of the city water the pipes were
taken from the welb Saturday
'the mill operatives decided to use
the well again for drinking pur
poses and sent a man out to ciean
it out. He found the water hot
and alter drawing it all out the
bottom of the well was so uncom
fortable thit he could stay down
there only a few minutes. Mon
day thewater was again drawn
out and was found as hot as before
It was then tilled to the top with
city water and h.ft until yesterday
when it was drawn otf for the
third time and thoroughly cleaned
out. The man who went
down in the well says the bot
tom was hot and the vein supply
ing it with water was to hot that
he could barely put lies feet in it.
After about four feet ot water had
run into the well yesterday after
noon the water was again tested
and was feund hot still. The Her-
ld- mfnrmant savs lie drew a
bucket of water from the well
hims df and that it was too hot to
keep his hand in it comfort
ably. It is, in his opinion, as
warm, or warmer, than the water
at Wot Springs, which lie had test
ed. No one can account for this
i-hange in the well. Another pe
culiarity noted about it is that
while heretofore the win ran east
and w st tin water now comes into
the well from the south.
binu vill I.((4r.
l'n. v oi K!i u Miss (iirlie Nixon
is Mck with t vphoi ! lever.
li'-v. ('oluinbii- iv. ;niedy who is
blind, i visiting hi- Ur.. Rev. J.
J. Kennedy. lie preached at
I'nity and (.' astania ( J ro e churcn
s, Sunday 2 1 insj .
Fine rain fell t h is evening which
was much m-eiled. Com on sandy
loam is doing well, but on clay
hinds "not much good.'
Mrs. iK-reus II agar has been
teas-ting In-r family on white head
cabbage. Hers i the first home
rai.scd cabbage we have heard of
this M-ason.
Cephas and Iain llagar, of Ha
g.-rst young sons of Henry llagar
lab-Iy deceased, report a cotton
bloom dune iNi. They seem to be
imbued with the working proctiv.
ity of lln ir father. Such boys
never become tramps, mr com
plain of "hard limes." Never did
we ever know a boy of this elans
leaking a iii:m who charge- their
failure to make a living with little
work, to the (btvermeiit.; financial
policy.
Would it not be tin- better pol
icy to avoid ra-.li declarations as
regards ( 'jiiididate and w hat shall
be required of them. While o
beh iv- tin democracy will be pur
fectly satilied should (Jen. Ran
som succoed himselt, It is no se
cret that he has a strong opponont
in Senator Jiirvis. Viewing t e
situation in tin-light of two strong
contestants would others not be
equally ju-titied in saying that,
tin y would require the candidate
for the legislature to support Jar
vis. 1'ntil the Primaries are held
is it not enough to require the
candidate for the legislature to
fctami square upon the Chicago
Platform. Who are to represent
Lincoln county in the Legislature?
Who do tie- democracy propose
sending to the Senate and House
is a question tliat should be con.
side-red by every voter now. We
have no patience with that class
ot worthy voters who say nothing
till the nominations are made, tmd
then go around saying that wilj
vole the ticket but don't want to.
Now is the time to kick at a pros
pective candidate. let every d m
ocrat attend the primaries and
there express the pre fy ranee for
all the candidates. And it will
let be very hard for thein to con
cede the majority th j right to
name the r-ey.-ral candidates. Ob
servation teacher, us 1 li it it i
those w ho -tay away from the pri
maries who do the mot grumb
linn after the nominations nv:
in uie.
Lincoln ( 'ounty has some fin
Legislative timber. lets "trot k
out, and u'ive it an airing.
Yours truly,
liiu. Shanks,
1twe.sviile, N. C. June 20, ItUi.
Chamois skins are not denv.; I
from the chamois, as many pf;Op ;
suppose, but aie the f! e-di side of
sheep-kin. Th.-skii.s are soil e
m limewater and in a solution .
-ulphurie acid. Fish oil is poi i
ed over the-m ami they are ca. -fully
washed in a solution of
potash. Fx-
W1i-n P-i! ' was sif.-k, we gave Lr Castoria.
W h-n sr.; vrxi a Chil'l, ls cried f ir Castoria.
When she became Miss, f-be clung to Castoria.
iVLea she La i Children, the gave them Castor: x.
fOK IHSI'M'SI.
Eliri'tiuii, u "t sti.:ecb diforders, use
BHUVV,' IllOX 1J1TTKRS
AfilffalT'V?po K tl per bottle Genuine l.-:
Vde-iua.i v ' nu attd red line on wrtipf-w