ma ij rtsAfiJ m&fr msw Hi CivC WM M r i ! m in VOL V LINCOLNTON, N. C, FRIDAY, APR. 8, 1892. NO. 49 Professional Cards. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Offara his professional serviceto 'he citizens of Lincolnton and surroun- ding country. Oflice at his reai dence adjoining Lincolnton Hotel. All calls promptly attended to. Aug. 7, 1891 y J. W.SAIN.M. D., lias located at Lincolnton and of fers his services as physician to the citizens ot Lincolnton and surround iug country. Will bo found at night at the ress ideoce of B. C. Wood March 27, 1891 ly . Bartlett Shipp, ATTORNEY AT LAW, LINCOLNTON, N. C. Jan. 9, 1891. ly. Finley & Wetmore, ATTYS. AT LAW, LINCOLNTON, N. C Will practice in Lincoln and surrounding counties. All business put into our hands will be promptly atten ded to. April 18, 1890. ly. Dr. W. .A PRESSLEY, SURGEON DENTIST. Terms CASH. OFFICE IN COBB BUILDING, MAIN ST., LINCOLNTON, N. C July 11, 1890. ly tf..lj -ItHiUttlW DENTIST. LINCOLNTON, N. C. Cocaine used for painless ex tracting teeth. "With thirty years experience. Satisfaction iven in all operations Terms C&Bh and moderate. Jan 23 '91 lv GO TO BARBER SHOP. Newly fitted up. Work away& neatly done. Customers politely waited upon. Everything pertain log to the tonsorial art is done according to latest styles. Henry Taylor, Barber. J. D. Moors, President. L. L. Jenkins, Cashier. No. 4377. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF GAST0NIA, N. C. Capital $50,000 Surplus J Average Deposits 4U,uuu COMMENCED BUSINESS AUGUSTS 1890. Solicits Accounts of Individuals, Firms and Corporations, interest Paid on Time Deposits. Guarantee to Patrons Every Accommodation Consistent with Conservative Banking. BANKING HOURS 0 a. m. to 3 p. m. Dec 11 '91 l " '-'-'vV-i VWfcS 'hT-Vn-nriny w-v-"-V- for Infante and Children. 'Catori is bo well adapted to children tht t recommend it u ruperior to any prescription fexown to me." FI. A. Akchxk, M. D., Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. T. "The use of 'Castoria is bo universal and its merits bo well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are tbe Intelligent families who do not keep CastoriA wituin easy reach." Cablos Martth, D.D., New $ork City, Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. Th CvnxvM. Itch on human and norees and all sn; mals curfid in 30 minutes by Woolforos r'anitiry Lotion. This cover fail?. .Sole by J M. Lawing Druggkt Lincolnton, N C HAPPY HOOSIERS. Wm. Timmons, Postmaster of Idaviile, Ind., writes : "Electric Hitters ha9 done more for me than all other medicines com bined, lor that bjid feeiine arisinsr from Kidney and Liver trouble." John Leslie, farmer and stockman, tt same place, savs: 'rind fc.lectric IJitfers to be the best K:d- n"v and Liver medicine, made me fel lik' a new man." J W Gardner, hardware merchant, same town, says : Electric Bit ters is just the thing lor a man who is all run down and don't care whether he lives or dies ; he found new strength, good ap petite and felt just like he had a new lease on life. Only 50 cents a bottle, at Dr. J M Lawing's Drug Store. Tli e Collar' Hi o iia I D kt r i cl s . 1. Beauford, Uamden, Carteret, Chowan, Ourrdnck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Martin, Pamlico, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyr rell and Wasinngion. 2. Bertie, Edgecombe, Greene, Qalifay, Lenoir, North pton, War ren, Wilson aud Wayne. 3- Bladen, Cumberland, Duplin, Craven, Harnett, Jones, Moore, On slow and Sampson. 4, Franklin, Nasb, Johnston, Chatham, Randolph, Wake and Vance. 5. Granville, Person, Durham, Orange, Alamance, Caswell, Rock--ingham, Guilford aud Stokes. G. Anson, Brunswick, Columbus, Mecklenburg, New Hanover, Pen der, Richmond, Robeson and Union. 7. Cabarrus, Davidson, Davie, Iredell, Montgomery, Rowan, Stan ley, Yadkin, Liucoln and Catawba. 8. Alleghany, Ashe, Burke, Cald well, Cleveland, Gaston, Mitchell, Watauga, Wilkes, Alexander, For syth and Surry. 0, Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywook, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell, Macon, Madi son, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Tran sylvania aud Yaucy. Birgo I wish you wonM try some alcohol on this coat and see if you can get some of the spots out. Mrs. Bingo There isn't auy aK cohol left, but you might breath on it. Clothier and Furnisher. GUARANTEED CURE. We authorize our advertised druggist to sell you Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption, coughs and colds, upou this condition: It you are afflicted with La Grippe and will use this remedy according to directions, giving it a fair trial, and ex perience no benefit, you may return the bottle and have your money refunded. We make thi3 offer because of the wonderful success of It. King's New Discovery dur ing last season's epidemic. Have heard of no case in which it failed. Try it. Trial bottles free at J. M. Lawing's drugstore. Large size 50c and $1 00. Caatorl cures Colic, Oonotfpatioo, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, friiia Worm, gives sleep, and promote oi- WitEouttojurious medication. " For several years I have recommended your Castoria, ' and shall 1 ways jxjntinue to do so as it has invariably produced beneficial results." Edwin F. Pardb. M. D., "The Winthrop," 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City. Ctamt, 77 M uk rat Strmt, Niw York. The Bnby. The little tottering baby feet, With faltering steps and slow, With pattering echoes soft and sweet, Into mv heart they go . They also go in grimy plays, In muddy pools and dusts ways, Then through the house in trackful maze They wander to and fro. lDe baby hand3 that ?,asP my neck With touches dear to me Are the same hands that smash and wreck The inkstand foul to see ; They pound the mirror with a cane, They rend the manuscript in twain, Widespread destruction they ordain In wasteful jubilee, Th a dreamy, murm'ring baby voice That coos its little tune, That makes my listening heart rejoice Like birds in leafy June, Can wake at midnight dark and still, And all the air with howling fill That splits the air with echoes shrill Like cornets out of tune. K. J. Burdette. New York Ledger. A MODERN EVANGE LINE. BY GEOEGE FREDERIC PARSONS. iTflEN crcam8lanee8 seemed fiXlt comPe tne separation of WS John Llrtck anil his young fj wife Mollie, neither of them believed that the parting would be for a long time. John had found what looked like a good opening in Nevada, and as he had apparently exhausted his luck at the East, his wife did not oppose his determina tion to follow the advice of Horace Greeley. Mollie waa to go to her parents, who had a livelihood on a somewhat stony Connecticut farm, and both fully expeeted that in a year at most Jack would be in a po-, sitiou to send tor her and they would be able to make a home on tbePacific slope, They parted in 1855, and the war had brokou out, been fought to the bitter end, and concluded, before they met again. Theie was nothing much out of the common in this experience. Tbe case of John Black is a thoroughly typical one. He was what is called a good fellow which geuerally means a self-indulgent fellow. He was excellent "company," sociable gay, bright and attractive. Iu a mining towp sach a man naturally and almost inevitably gravitates to the saloon. It is tbe only stage upon which he can exhibit himself. Thnre all his entertainiug qualities shine brightest. There he finds con genial souls. There, too, heacquiies h?bits which are fatal to success in life. John Black was full of good reso lutions, and he loved bis pretty Mol lie perhaps as well as such a man can love anything besides the grati acation of his appetites. No one would have said that he was vicious or without principle. He was not a :iard drinker. He did not care much or cards. He bad not tbe gambler's emperament; only the foundation of his character was selfishness,and ibis defect was in itself sufficient to determine his destiny. Present en joyment always outweighed future iDenefits of every kind with him, and the consequence was that he lived lor the hour and from hand to mouth. At fit st be devoted himself to business. He was employed in a general store and there was plentv of work. Presently, an opportunity offered to secure an interest' in the store, and as he had saved a little money he was able to take ad van t aj-e of it. Then the speculating mania began to spread, and the whole coast was flooded with the stock of problematical mining prop, erties, of which nineteenths had uot been opened. John Black did uot go deeply into such investmentp,but just enough to absoib his legitimate earnings and so keep him from ad vancing. In fact, he never did get any farther. At the end of the fit 5 ear he was barely holding his own, and conld send his wifeuothing but hopes and imaginings At the end ot the second year his moderate in vestments had forced him to part with his interest in the store and to go clerking again. At the end ot the third year he had turned his back oh trade aud was embarked in the precarious occapation of pros pecting. Then he wrote that Ne vada was 4kpeteriug ouf,,? and he thought of goiug to California. There was plenty gold yet in the high Sierra, he said, and a man might light upon a bonanza if he kept his eves open and understood the lay of ti e country. Soon after the War "began ; ami from that time John Black ceased to writ?, while Mollie had enough to thiuk of in other direction. In quick succession, her parents died. The farm was motgaged, and she could uot manage it herself, so i-be let it go, and looked about for some way of earning her living. She had a cousin in one of the departments at Washington, and he invited her to pay him a visit. While at the capital, sho was thrown among peo pie connected with the government and the, army, and beiu smart and intelligent, she pushed her way un til she interested influential persons and in the end obtained employ ment in the secret service. What her duties were at this time it wouM not bo easy to say, but, probably, she did a little scouting, a little spy ing, and so foith. She never ob taiued any prominence or notoriety, and was never taken prisoner, or,so far as is known,even suspected. She had a very pleasant, frank address, and her comely face prepossessed the Confederates and helped her greatly. During thi period, Mol'ie naturally toughened a good deal, She learned to take care of herself for one thing. She learned not to be afraid of violence, wound!, or even death. She could ride or drive between the lines without fearing the lawless guerrillas who infested such neutral ground. It was au ex citing and fascinating lifr, and she followed it with some enthusiasm, taking pride in her craft and cool ness. Through all, however, Mollie Black, who loved her husband, and who had far more chaiacter than he, looked forward to reunion with him, and to that end economized in every possible way. Women do this much oftener than men. They are more unselfish and more self-sacri ficing. They are not prone to self indulgence, and not seldom ihey are very persevering and patient, Mollie worked and paved steadily until the end of the War, when she found herself in possession of a sum of money small in itself, but large enough, she thought, to tak9 her to the Pacific coosr, find her Jack, and secure for both of them a new be ginning at something. She had iieard nothing from her husband for tour years cow, and could not be cure that his silence was not that of death. But she never admitted to herself that this could be possible; lor did she not love him, and had f,he not been waiting all these years lor him, and was it not logically necessary that she should find him and that they should resume their old broken life ? So Mollie made tier preparations, gathered what in formation she could, and set out for California by the Isthmus route. Meanwhile, John Black had been oiog steadily downward. He was not one of those colossal aggrega tions of egoism that achieve tbe most impressive material successes. , The true moneymaker, though oft en selfish to the core, has the sagac ity to perceive that hiseuds can on ly be gained by resolute self repress sion and sacrifice in the early stag es of his career. He works Inces santly, denies himself, refuses all indulgence, bends all his energies to tbe furtherance of his main purpose. Men like Johu Black, on the other hand, are too weak to put thera selves uuder auy such discipline. They,, like savages, are uninfluenced by the possibilities of the future. The present alone iuterests and moves them. So Johu Black grew feebler and less stable every month, aud though feverishly eager for fors tune, could not endure any steady toil or submit to any monotonous duty. Little by little the veneer of civilization was wearing off him, and the in&tiucts and tendencies ot savagery were asserting themselves. Already he had tir. d ot the life of a prospecter. Already he had habit uated himself to leafing about the bar-rooms and to playing cards in working hours, without shame. Sometimes, too, hedranK more than j was good for himself,and he no Ion- ger felt degraded in bis own eyes when he came out of a debauch. He bad fallen far and was near the oot torn: Mollie Black, arrived at San Fran sisc, was not long in realiz'ng that it would bi quite useicas for her to stay in the big city Her husband might be there, but even if so, s ie could never hope to find him in that crowd. However, she had one of those inexplicable impressions which come to women alone, and this im pression told her that Jack was in the interior in the nountains some where. Before yeilding altogether to this inner voico, however, she spent some time iu making itiqui ries,and by judiciously following his tracts up to the point at which he had la.st bfeii heard from, she saiuK ed information which at least seeiu ed to make it certain that he had gone to California hi 1SGI. It seemed probable that he had atayed for a time in the high Sier ra. He might even have taken up a elawn rn that region ; though, if be had done that, and had made a bare living, there was no reason whj' he should have stopped writing to her. It may be thought strauge that Mcllie did not suspect Jack of in lis delity to her, but somehow such a suspicion did not enter her bead. Perhaps her knowledge of his char acter assured her on that point. Per haps the depth aud strength of her affection cast out fe;r. However it was, jealousy never apiuoaehed her and iu all the imaginings with which she sought to explain her I husband's silence, some misfortune occurred to him, and preventing him from writing, was invariably the loyal conclusion reached. As the term of his silence lengthened, moreover, her faith did not decline. Only she said to her own heart how great the misfortune must have been which sealed his lips so long. But a time came when Mollie Black felt that she must no longer delay the opening of her quest. Iu truth she bad shrunk from it a lit tle, not having, after all, full and perfect faith in her own intentions. What if she were uuable to find Jack? What if, notwithstanding all interior reassurrnces, news of his death should encounter her f She did not often jield to such dark thoughts, but when they came they stimulated, while making her trem ble, and as she was a woman of action, she resolved to put away all hesitation. She did not attempt to deceive bergelt as to the difficutlies o;: the quest. She even foresaw the possibility that Jack might have changed his name. She knew that this was frequently done on the Pacific coast, particularly when a en had got nto trouble of one k nd .or another, and if he had re sorted to such a disguise, it would b i doubly hard to trace him. Then, again, she could not conceal form herself that, in going about asking for and describing him, she migh5 be doing him an ill tarn ; for though she would not allow even to herself the possibility that be might have fallen under the ban of the law, it was entirely snpposable that he might have got into some mining difficulties which would require concealment for a time. All these considerations necesitated the great est tact and cantiou in the prosecc t on of her search. Nevertheless, she waa not dismay ed or discouraged. With maps of the region before her, she planned a series of tours through the mining counties ; aud being careful to dress in the most unpretentious and re tiring way she set oui, sometime- riding in the local stages, sometimes hiring a buggy, putting up at wretched mountaiu tavern1!, endur ing all manner of discomforts and piivatious, scorched by the eun and half-smothered by the red dust; exposed sometimes to the insults of drunken men, still oftener embar rassed by the effusive and houest hospitality of miners who looked upon the fairfaced traveller with a sort of rough, chivalrous rapture. For weeks and months the quest weut on, and all this time nothing was learned. The descriptions of Jack seemed to be the description of so many other people. Dozens ; of fa's elewa were put in her hands, : -nd when she had followed them up J and discovered th. ir illusiveness, she would feel desperately tired. Yet sho did uot give way ; did not complain much even when alone; was buoyed up with the hope and expectation of years bygone; and pressed forward upon the weary j fearch with a courage and persis tence uot always paralleled among meu. It was a tiying and a pro tracted ordeal. Even the purely physical features of the situation wore full of anoyance a d vexation. Want of sleep, want of fit food, want of comfortable conveyances, espec ially want of woman's companion ship, exposure to all kinds ot weath er, everything seemed combined to render her undertaking as hard as possible. Three months had passed since sh began to explore the mountain counties, and she had come upon no definite track. The keen air ol autumn had succeeded the summer boat, but no ram had yet fallen, wheu one day Alollie took her place as an inside passenger ou the htage which ran through Gold Hill ami stopped at a number of suialhr mining campM or villages. The road was rough and hilly, the scenery scarred ami rendered unsightly l. the ravages of hydraulic' mining, which had cut down the red blutl's, torn away the surface soil and left huge gaps and .depressions all ars ounii. The road wound among gorges and. over hills, up which tho passnngers toiled on foot, while the cteakiug stage dragged after the panting horses, its leathern cut tings flapping as it rolled 1'iom side J to side. The one woman p.isseucrer. Mollie herself, was privileged to re main on board ; and as she was fat igued from her incessant journeying, she was glad to beep her seat. The stage, after slowly surmounting a steep hill, slid with lurches down into a narrow valley, down the mid dle of which a small stream ran, crossed by a wooden bridge. A lew Irtcs made a shade at the entrance to the bridge, and in the declining day somewhat darkened tbelittl valley. As the driver, walking his horsts, er tered the shadow of the trees, a hoarte voice was heard shouting: "Halt ! Throw up your hands 1" and tbe horses were instantly brought to a standsti 1. Peering anxiously ir m the windows, the passengers saw a figure so disguised with gun u.y sacks as to be unrecognizable, hclding a double-barrel shot-gun upon the driver. The experieuce was not untamilear to most of the passengers, and it had become a part of the unwrhten code in these re?ious to offer uo resistance to "road-ageots." In tbe first place th-3 robbers always had ":he drop" on the driver and pas.vengers. In the second place, it was understood that the robbers "meant business,'' and would "shoot to kill'' with un fa ling promptitude i; their orders w ;re not instantly obeyed. So when there was no special express mes senger with the stage, the command, "Throw down that box ! ' referring to Wells, Fargo & Co.'s express box was responded to as a matter of course; ami wheu the passengers were ordered to step oat and stand in a line witn their hands up, no one thought of remonstrating, as a rule. Besides, even when only one "road-ageut" was visible, it was impossible to tell how many more might, be hidden in the bush with guns leveled on the stage, and so in the present instauce the opera tion ot stage robbery proceeded smootbiy. When all the male pas sengers bad alighted, however, Mol lie Black waited a moment, and as the robber seemed to think he had every bady before him, she conclud ed to stay where she was. H r de sire to escape plondes was naturally great, tor she had with her tbe larger part of her . little capital. Now, to protect herself in her wan derings, she had always carried a pistol, which weapon she had learn ed to use with sufficient dexterity during her experience as a scout. It now occurred to her that, her presence being evidently unknown to the highwayman, an opportunity otTered to turn the tables on him. If he was really alone and she could bring him down, the stage would be saved, and it did uot occur to her that the experiment was particular ly dangerous. The roadagent was busily occupied iu taking up invol untary contributions from the so bersfaced row of disgusted passeng ers, whea a puff of white smoke floated from one of the stage-win dows, an echoing crash was heard, and the robber clapped ono hand to his back, half turned, staggered and fell at full length. Instantly, tho scene changed. The motionless line of victims broke up. The dropped gnu of the prostrate rob ber was seized and pointed at hia own head, and pi epar.it ions were being made to bind hitn and place tiim in tbe nte for conveyance to the- nearest jail, when the heroine ot the adventure stepped out ot the stage and app cached the. group clustered around the wounded mau. 'Where did I hit him V was her first quest ion. Then her womanly instincts came to tho surface, and as her eye cought the reddened glass, she shivered, turned pale, aud knelt, beside th conquered high wa.Vf.inan, who lay bieathing pain a fully. His face was still covered wiib bis rude mask of sacking. ;,Tako ofl that thing and give him air ! ' she cried. Strangely enough, nobody hud thought ot this before. They removed the mask, !isclusinjJ it face that had been handsome, but was now worn and distor ted by die. sipation and pain. Mollie glanced at it, first indifferently, then with an air of atari led surprise and dialing an air of horror. Ah sho g:zed, all the color died from her c Peeks, The man lay ineauwhiln with closed eyes, his breath coming, more heavily every moment. Suds denly, a voice, so full of agony that all who heard it shuddered, was heard, in a strained whisper: "Joan Black !" And the dying man opened his eyes. '.Mollie, is that yon V he murruui ed, faiutly, and without showing much surprise or emotion, for at tho verge of the great transition one is past all thar, and then, too, the dy in: have vi3ious which confuse their notions of the real aud the ideal; At that supreme moment, it may have seemed natural to him that Mollie, of whom, through all his weakness and moral decay, he had ahrays thought lovingly, should be at. his side. He did not know who balshotLim. But Mollie could not; keep the secret. ' Oh, John," she sobbed, "it was I who did it !'' Whether John Black was capable of grasping her meactng, it is, per-b-Jps, impossible to say, but he nod de l feebly, is. though he nnderstcod all.aLu as though being shot by his wile was jut us natural as tho rest, and whispering: "Kiss rne, Mollie!'' he managed to raie nn arm and drop it over her su uider. She Btooped and kissed him. moaning tbe while. As she drew her linger ing lips away, that ashen pallor known so well to all who have watch ed by the beilsid-s of the dying stole ever his face,and his band slid heavily from her neck. The pas- sengers, who stood around, deeply moved, raised Moll.e to her feet, as one of them drew a covering over the white, placid face. As she look ed np. the gathering night dropped its dark folds over the little valley and over his life. Her search was at an end. She had found her hus band. As an exchange very truly says, a little common sense and practical experience in business teaches a man that it takes pork, potatoes, or other produce, a full dollar's worth to get a dollar, whether that dollar be duj out of the bowls of the earth in shape of gold, or whether it is a representative dol lar printed by Uncle Sam. If a man has 1,000 bushels of No. 1 hard wheat, be can get SCO hard dollars for it at the present prices, without paying any interest on the money, but the man who don't have the wheat or any equivalent, can't bor row the money, no matter bow much money per capita there may be iu circulation; nor could be get it if the government printed it by the cord and loaned it at 2 per cent. You can't get something for uoth ing unless yoa beat your creditors. '