H 11100111 VOL IV. LINCOLNTON, N. C, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1890. NO. 2 A Legal Fee. "I have stolen a coat aaid a man to a lawyer, "and 1 want you to do Und rue. Think you can prove me innocent ?"' "Ob ! yes, we can prove that you were a h nuked miles away when the coat was stolen, aud that the pro&tcution is malicious.'' "How much will you charge 1,J "What feort of a coat is it f" "First rate never been worn." "Well, I won't charge you any thing juHt give me the coat." jLondon Tut Biti. --. . DlHOouruxtiiic. "Pretty tad soil for a garden, isn't it V said the potato vine. 'I should think it was," said the ODion, "I'm losing strength every day, and I never had much to be gin with. I d-ui't get along worth a scent." "1 can't get ahead here," said the cabbage. "I'm goiug to leave.'' "I know I can't get 'Jong at all," said tbe cucnmlier. "-Nor I," cried the asparagus. "I don't get 'long or tall." "This place isn't fit for a berry ing ground,' said the strawberry; "but here comes the sun to dry up, all of you-" LktroiC Free Press. - JLove Laugh at Party Llues. The future husband of Miss Win nit Davis ia state's rights Democrat. Keally it makes very little difference - what bis politic may be so long as he is h gentleman and loves "the fair daughter of the confederacy.'' Jefferson Davis was an ardent Dem ocrat, aud ran away with the daugh ter of old Zaobary Taylor, the great Whig soldier. Love laughs at pol itics. Augusta Chronicle. 3a"by O arriajges J JESatoy Carriages! S3 ITo-v SJtlyes. I made the largest purchase in Baby Carriages this season 1 ever be fore made at any one time. I did it because I could buy them at so much less price from tbe maker. I buy from the maker only. I am sel ling Carriages from 10 to 20 per cent cheaper than I sold the same Oars riages for last season. Prices tell. I can sell you a large Rattan body Carriage with wire wheels and upholstered seat at $7.50. I have them at 810.00, S15.00, $25.00 aud $30.00. No child should be allowed to walk when you can buy one at such a price. I get up a complete liue of pho tos that I will be glad to send to any one, with very lowest prices. . M. ANDREWS, Piano, Organ and Furniture Dealer, Charlotte, N. C. D. W. ROBINSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Lmcolnton, N. C. Practices in this and surround ing counties. AUo in State and Federal Courts. r5""Xext door to the Racket. Oc 4t , 1SS9. ly. L-1, WITHERSPOON. ATTORNEY AT LAW, NEWTON, N. C. Pi&cjicts in the Courts of Cataw ba, Lincoln, aud adjoining conuties. A on to Loan on unproved farm? in Catawba and Lincoln counties ir sums of $300 and upwards, on Ion time aud easy terms. Will meet clients at the Alexauder House, in Lincoiuton, on second and fourt Moudays iu ea'h month. Aug. 2, IKS' I. tf. K HACIHE.WIS. Log.LumberYard & GitV Trucks i " KTpgr brake; Proud ot the Jtelalinnatilp. "Oh, Mr. Duseuberry," cr'ed her little brother "I'm so glad you are goiug to be kin to me." "Ah, Johnny, is that so!" be gasped, a look of happiness flitting over his face. "How did yoa know ? Come hern and sit on my lap and tell me all you have heard.'' "Sister's other feller came here last night," began the boy, after he was safely in the arms of the young man. devouring a quarter's worth of candy, "and I heard them talk ing 'bout you.?' "What dirt they eay V "He was mad,'' replied the terror, "cause sis goes with you so much " "And what was her reply to him!" continued the young man, the look of happiness spreading farther across his features. "She said," began the youth again, "that he needu't get mad 'cause you come to see her, as you was a soft snap and saving him lots of money that would go to fixin' up their boose after they were mar ried.' The look of contempt on the young man's face gave way to the pallor of despair as he gasped: "Well, how is that going to make me kin to you '' "Oh, went oc the boy, "I'm com iu' to that now. She aaid that when you proposed to her ehe would be a sister to you, aud won t that make you my brother f ' As the child p;cked himself off the floor ho beheld the form of the young mau Hit through the front d oor , At I a n ta Constitution . Piedmont Seminary, MALE AND FEMALE. LINCOLNTON, N. C- An English, Classical, Mathematical aud Commercial School. It is thorough and practical in its work and methods. It does not assume to itself tbe claims of a Col lege, but is thoronghly Academic. Location healthy, and of easy access by railroad. Penmanship and Busi mess Department in charge of Prof. G. P. Jones. Spring Term of 1890 begins the bth of January. Lj For Circulars, (c, send to I). MA 'Vt. THOMPSON, Principal, Lincolnton, N. C. Jan. 3, 1890. "'" T Lapies Chaise. r f N I oaMBrauiUBiscmi FISH BR5S YfAGSH GS RACINE,WIS. From New York Ledger. JJJ.JL ULVLjIYU kjLaJ LvLj J. T VADSLEiNE VIXTON' DAHLGREX. Alan Alexander and I were fast friends. I am a New Yoik man, born and bred iu that worhi'a commercial metropolis ; but Alan was a Ken tuckian, sent as a student to Col una b!a University. We were chums and inseparable. I knew ttiat he was the only son of a widow, and that he had a .sis cer whom he had enthusiastically assured me "was a mighty fine growth ot the blue grass region.'' I had also heard him say that he had inherited "hundreds of broad acres and a stock farm such as only old Kentuck could boast of." Yet these were merely incidental remarks of his, scarcely noted at the time he made them, but rather recalled by me during the terrible strain of later yean, when every& thing connected with this man, whom 1 had held near and dear as a brother, became ot awful import to me ; when each tone, look and word of his tortured me by day and haunted me by night. Aud I, too, had secured a close grip on Alan's big and true heart. Cursed be the siu-couceived hem that tore us thus rudely apart. Yet must I lovingly linger , for some brief space, as a fond woman might in fancy, over those pleasant honrs of comradeship we spent together. Alan was a typical son of the South ; so brave, that he never knew what fear meant ; so on the aieit to resent an affront, that he stood ready charged like an elec tric battery, to knock down what- , ever touched him the wrong way. Quick of wit, quick of temper and full of fire, yet withal as endearing as be was aggressive. I was, in a measure, his opposite; and out of this unceasing novelty of contrast grew tbe charm of our intercourse. My nature is rather phlegmatic, and usually I hold my temper well under control; but I have deep pas sions when fully aroused, and wield a powerful arm, with bunches of knotted muscles standing out like whipcords, with a strength that had heen fully trained by an expert, so as to enable me to strike a well directed, stunning blow. Why was not this death-dealing arm withered to its socket at my birth, rather thau bave been the instrumeut of such prolonged tor ture in after life 1 But what man, through all his days, stands ex empt from sin-fraught moments, when from out tbe seething abyss of the senses there suddenly flashes forth an unchained fury ? j If such passionless mau there be, ! let him alone condemn me. I hate to tell the story. I loate to think of that tempestuous hour; and yet, perchance, some youug fellow, as light of heart as we were, may, iu tbe coming, be the wiser. I am a mau of means, aud that disastrous day I had unexpectedly received a very large sum of money; so, of course, I must needs have Alau come with me to my rooms and make merry over my good for tune with a popping of champagne coiks. The too heady wine did its mischievous work, and at the eud of oue fatal hour we two were in violent quarrel. There was oue unfortunate sub ject upon which we bitterly differed, about which we had hitherto tacitly agreed to disagree. But uow iu the excitement of our partial inebiiatiou, our amicable understanding was forgotten aud the demon of discord took posses sion of us. We were of the North and the Sontb, and it was a score of years ago when our dispute would nat urally evoke the lurking diaboliah of fraternal hatred. Alan could be cynical and cntting upon provocation, and he had a way, when displeased, peculiar to himself, of closely compressing his lips with a sneering expression that was perfectly exasperating. And Uow, tbe danger signal of his firm set underjaw betokened mischief 89 he biased forth the old taunts. My angry retort infuriated him the more, and, with maddened im pulse and rapid movement, he thrust his hand into his hip pocket, from which he drew a long-pointed jack-kuife, which, with a sudden lunge, grazed my side. In part sobered up by my narrow escape, but totally enraged, I sprang upon him with furious force, as he stood half dazed at his own wild act, and, hitting right out, I knocked him down. He struck the floor heavily heavily, falling backward, stunned aud senseless. The effort and its frightful result instantly restored my scattered senses. I stood appalled before the wreck my violence had made. The blood oozed slowly from a small darkiuh cnt back of the ear, theu turned into a black coaguluui. "My God !" I horaely murmured, "I bave killed him," and as the hor rid thought forced itself upon me, my bead seemed to grow of an im mense size, as if about to burst. I felt dizzy, as one might feel who unexpectedly stands on the verge of a tremendous precipice. A confusion of blurring motes swam before my burning eyes, and a sickening nausea overcame me. Sinking on my knees beside his inanimate body, I feebly stretched forth my now trembling hands, seeking to support the prostrate form In vain ; I could not. An oppressive incubus, a paralyzed sense of weight grew upon me as an invincible barrier arose between us. I dared not touch so much as a bair of his head. What ! I, his murderer, defile that rigid form 1 flow passing fair to look upon he was in death! How I yearned, with tenfold of the old friendliness, to clasp him to my wildly pulsing heart. "Oh, Alan," I groaned, "how cruel not to have killed me oat right, and thus have spared me the commission of this hideous crime!" What a hollow, mocking sound my voice had ! How sepulchral ! What right had 1 to breathe, any. how, having robbed my twin soul ot the breath of life ? With the msane inconsequence of vehement giief, I bared my offend' ing right arm and held it upward, tracing with compressiug finger the swollen course of its rigid muscles that had once beeu a source ot manly pride. But now, euadderingly and with derisive imprecations, I beheld, in all its brawny length, the semblance of a brute force to which the supes rior part of nay being must heuce forth forever submit. . Worse than Mazeppa'a riven tor ture was to be my torment, for in the doom of this etreual conflict I was adjudged to rend myself asunder. "Oue hour ago, one brief hour, aud wealth, honor, the esteem of men, the regard of women, friend ship, yes," I moaned, "even his friendship were all mine to cherish-'' But now what was I ? An out cast, a hunted criminal a some thing cursed of God. I was polluted with murder. The agony of hell was mwronght into this one word of awful meaning. Each separate letter was branded through and through my quivering soul with a deep, fierce horning. Thus was I tossed to and fro in the seething vortex of unavailing remorse. All this while it might have been au eternity, for how can time meas ure the transports of despair my dead lay extended before me, a rigid corpse. Then there crept over me a be numing change, as if of the slimy coldness of some venomous serpent trailing ovei me its poisonous length and under its depressing influence a chill fear overcame me. A shrink ing dread of the felon's fate uu nerved me, as my imagination was confronted with the horror of filling a murderer's grave, and my hitherto unsullied name basely defiled. But an instinct of self-preservation dragged me out of the abasement of tbis despondency, and yielding to this urgent cry of nature, I arose, turned away from the gruesome dead, and heartily prepared myself for flight, thrusting away over my burning breast the ratal pacage of moue.y now needed for my wander ing existence. Thus I fled forth from those once cheery rooms now tilled with des olation, into the outer darkness, au abject, hunted outcast. I dared not attempt to cros3 the ocean in one of tbe mail steamers, but took a haphazard passage that very night in a merchant vessel just leaving the docks.' Week after week we tossed hither and thither, one day resting be calmed, another spurred ouward by favoring winds, but in sunshine or storm it was all the same to me. The tragedy of my life had set me afloat upon a never-ending, aim. leas drifting. Thus I circled the globe from clime to clime, from continent to continent, and yet tindiug no oasis of rest for my weary feet. And in this dreary circling of the world, I shunned manking, courting, yet dreading solitude. Thus five years had spent their course iu these restless chauges, wherein succeeding days and re volving months were alike unnoted. I called myself Dr. Tristam whem ever a name was needed, yet might have forgotten the uses of language iu tbe vast desert of loneliness I traversed. Wherever I went, I was indiffer ent to danger, but I seemed to bear a charmed life: Amid the malarial swamps of the tropics, the parched simoom of Syria's sandy plains, rr the freezing blasts of the North Pole, the pangs of remorse that 1 endured made all climatic change alike indifferent. Did I look back upon the past ? I dared not. At last, with lapse of time, oame now and then, at rare intervals, a sort of temporary effacement of tbis woe ; and in these periods of bless ed relief, as one in tbe lull of a great pain, an interest in things around me reawakened. I was blessed with one of these alleviating rest pites, when I found myself iu that charming, pleasure-seeking resort, Baden-Baden. Hitherto I had avoided, as far as possible, every place where Ameri cans congregate, but now, yielding to an ardent, desire to once moie meet ray compatriots, I remained iu this beautiful spot. Never since my calamity had its garden-encircled villa9 been so attractive to me. Oue day as I was listlessly prom enading iu a garden of the Trink halle, my attention was vividly ar rested by a voice. 'Uncle,' said a lovely woman, Mhis is indeed a most charming place ; yet I shall be glad to leave it, aud get back to dear old Kentuck.' 'Old Kentuck !' Oh God of Heav en ( what a thrill in those two fa miliar words, and iu the very tone of that voice ! Had the dead re-embodied, aud Alan spoken? Involnntarily I started forward, and as I did so, the movement at tracted tbe notice of the fair girl, and our eyes met. They were Alan's eves ! Over come by emotion, I hastened away, seeking refuge midst ihe somber shadows ot the near ranges of the Black Forest, whose darksome pines weae iu nniscn with the gloom of my sad destiny. There I wrestled with my remorseless fate in mortal anguish. Such was the distress caused by our first meeting. Yet the recounter rekindled in my suffering heart an irresistible desiie for human sympathy. Had hope, pboeQix-lik1, arisen from the ashes of the past ? Whence came this sacred, new and strong emotion f This longing to bear again the semblance of that voice hushed by my brutal blow to accents of earth ; thin yearning to look again into eyes that I had cru elly closed to scenes of earth. These fancies became for me irre pressible. At last I yielded to an uncontrollable fascination- I forgot myself and dut on the outer man ner of the mau I once bad been. I introduced myself as Dr. Tris tam to Colonel Preston, the uncle of the woman I sought to know, aud with that cordial, social intercourse that often exists among Americans travelling abroad, I ingratiated my. self so fully in his good graces, as to secure me the coveted introduc tion to hia niece, Annette Preston. The .swirl of the uuboped-for happiuess must, quite have upset my reason, for never was man so madly in love as 1 became with that dear, inuooeut girl, whose every trick of tone, look and manner gave me back my Alan. A thousand aud a thousand times I would have shouted iu her ear, 'Ahm ' Yet, in her sweet presence, I would not have my dead quickeu. For here was Alan, ineffably more refined, more interesting, and oh I how. Immeasurably more beloved. At times, I had wild moments when left to myself, when I ques tioned the ancient ones of mystic faith ; and in my mighty yearning that Alan might in Home form re suscitate, I was fain to believe in a transmigration of souls. Had some pitying angel accepted my long suffering iu atouement of an unpremeditated and momentary sin by materializing my lost friend 1 God grant, yet God forbid, groaned I. This is a woman'd pure spirit 1 adore. But in my wildest moments ot ex altation, the double happiness of friend restored and love reciprocat ed never occurred to me. Nor was I exempt from moods of bitterness when I reproached Alan with a sort of hatred ; he, whose rash act. had involved me in so much misery. Waa not his lunge murderous aud made at me first V I asked my self. 'Would not any tribuual of justice exonerate au act of selr-des fense When one sit as judge and jury upon one's self, the circle of specious sophistry is soon completed. So one bright morning, having argued myself iuto a qumsi state of assumed innoceuce, I sought An nette Preston, and told her of my love, of that one only ail. absorbing emotion that had taken possession of me. Was it honorable when I knew by tbe unexplained magnetism ot a mntual affection that she was mine? Yes, she was mine. And now, iu that supreme mo meat of con teased happiness, raine the sharpest pang I had yet Lome, for when I would have clasped this sweet confiding being to my blight ed heart; when I would have sealed upon her dear lips the pacred be, trothal kiss, looming up out of tbe blacknens of the hi ieous past, my dread secret once more confronted me and t-tnoit as an adamantine wall of separation. With a despair past all conceiva ble angnisb, I yielded to my inexor able fatfl ; and out of my hbeer dea peration came the strength for the confession. 'Annette,' I said, I am a wretch to have won your love- You may never be mine. You alone have my dread secret. 1 ain a murderer ' And at that moment of killing pain, I wouid Lave tied fottb, as five years before I had done, into the outer daikneas of a pitiless wold. Divivning my thought, with im stant but gentle force, she detained me, clasping my blood-stained bands within tbe pure pressure of her own, whimpering to me with Alan's voice as she did so : 'Dear, my heart, tbis is not so.' Oh ! sublime faith of woman 1 I could but regard her with an im ploring gaz, but 1 dared not take advantage of that angelio confid ence, for I knew myself to be guilty. Tell me the story the exact, the whole etory,' she pleaded, with gen tle persistence. Ob ! what a blessed relief to my lonely heart was that enforced con fessiou. For five terrible years had this secret tortured me ; an ever glutted vulture feeding pu my life blood and never sated. 'Annette,' I said, 'thanks be to God that you are merciful as good, you shall not be deceived. I will tell you all, and having made at least this act of reparation, I can tbe bet ter endure the misery of my fate. Tbe future, iu the light of this hour, can never be as blinding black as has been the past.' In the first place, Annette, my name of Doctor Tristam is assumed to hide my crime. My true name is Marcus Westmore.' She uttered a cry and sprang to her feet ; theu, clasping her hand closely together hs if seeking to con trol herself, resumed her seat. Ah,' said I hopelessly, I kuw it must come to tbis. You have heard of me as a murderer.' No, no, no,' she vehemently e4 claimed, 'not so. Go on.' I paused iu atouisbiuent. Her eyes sparkled, her cheeki were aglow, her lips parted as if she must speak, but the whole expression was one of unbounded, overwhelming joy. 'Sweet angel !' I murmured, 4how can 1 tell you tbat you are th coun terpart of the friend whoe life I took. Yea, you are his very other self ; but, oh, how far transcend ing ' What was my painsd amazttusut to hear a rippling, joyful laugh as her sole response. 'The shock has been too great; it has crazed her,' I thought, with anguifth, as 1 reproached mjssif with the rash selfishness tbat had added a new sorrow to my hsavj load. 'Annette,' I continued, 4I must go ou. I had a dear friendoh, how dear ! Alau Alexander.' At the mention of tbis us me she ciapped her bauds, laughed aud cried. 'Crazed! crazed !' thought I; 'and my monstrous act the cause.' 'Goon,' she cried. Be quick; tell all." Annette,' I answered, 'my poor dear, tbe story ia soon told. Alan was invited to my rooms to make merry with me over some tnouey gains. We drank too freely. We foolishly quarreled He first made a ludge at me, hen Annette, how can I tell you all I struck him a blow that killed hi-i. Need I ny it 1 Since then I am a wanderer.' 'And is that all ' iie exclaimed. 'The Lord be praignl, doar Maics.' I was speechless wi.Ij the horror of this. This unseemly j . v was, iu deed, the very perfection of madness. 'Dear Marcus,' she repeated ajrain, takiug my hauil. 'Hehippy. I havi thought from the first, it must be you, so minutely had Alan des -ribi ed you, but the name puzzldd me. Be at easa, for Alan whs only stunned, not muideied. He still lives to innutii your Ioms, never ceasing to reproach himself tor that thrust. 'lie is uiy in v mother' sou and we both love you, Marcue.' And now rauif my turn to be crazed, as utfeiiug a great cry of raptnrous joy, I pressed her to my" blissful heart, with exclamationsof : 'Saved I Saved ! Glory be to tbe good Gol ! Saved1 through you, wj love, my life. uy wife !' Tluipplerew. Looking in the familiar face of one's watch, it seems strsnge that the almost universal pocket com panion of our dav should have been unknown at the time of tbe Pkefor raation. The most aucietit extaut specimen of the article was "built" iu 1541. It is now in the posses sion of an English baronet It is a clumsy concern, about the size of a dessert plate. Clocks came in about tbe middle of the thirteenth century, and took the place of the simple instruments tbat measured time by the runuing ot sand and the trickling of water. Before these, tbe bourn were marked on bright day, by the shadows cast by the sun, and guessed at by night and when the sun was ob- scured by clouds. At what a rate the mechanic arts have progressed siuce Demostheues teqnested that the clepsydra (or water-drippicg time measurer) might be stopped, iu order that be mightcontinue bia oration ! For be it remarked that the prudent Greeks timed their ora torn, thereby escaping the modern bore of being talked at bv speechi fiers who match their tongue3 against old Cbronoe. Five hundred year btc& the old scytbeman's strides were but im-. perfectly noted. Now wi have an agent that beats him in a fair race, traversing distances in a few sec oods which it takes bim hours to plod over So we go. New York Ledger.