i j - i VOL. VUI. Professional Cards. J. W.SAIN, M.D., Uas located sti LinuolntouauU of fers his services as pliysiciqu to the citlseusol Lincoln ton and auiroand ing country.. . Will be found at night at the Lin colnfon Hotel. March 27, 1891 1? .DENTIST. LINCOLNTON, N. C Teeth extracted without pfliu by the use of 'an anaesthe tic applied to the gums. Pos tively destroys all sense of pain and ciiti-e no affcr tri;ll: I guarantee to give satixfar tion or no charge. A call from you soli J ted. Aug 4, 1S1:5 jy. Knglirh Sj.avin Liniment removes all Larl, soil or ( :ill..u-cl Uimp9 and l mi.sh from ho'-n hl.xxl spavins, ( urls, M'nt. awotiiicy, riii.; stifle, sprit i us, all j-fjillpn thpUV, roughs etc. Saye :0 lV uji ul ojh' i ;j,L! Warraptud the most JtrOiiderliil ll--tih cure ever known. Sold by J. M Lnwjng OrustisiLincolnton N C ' E. M. ANDREWS "Wlio'c'nle Hnd I?etftil Dealers in tr ten p'f-oes, iio nilOO to SliOOO- Parlor Suits of x r.i. (v. fi'iii V21.r ti. 200.(111. s x t 'i ' r-.'s, i Mni NI1)K1H)AKI)'S fr.m 10 00 r 7.U0 EXTENSIONS TABLES pom VI 0 Sf-0.0il. Cliina Closets .slf) 0(1 lo SJ5 00. pettier nrtal! i mi to 8..o(. Easels and Picture1 ;(); io 2oo, COUCHES and LOUXGES 7 .r(l i. !? 45.00, Muvr isn-Ls ami C;;b;iie!., $1 5 tp$12."0. hVvoUing Cisi-rt ami lioll T' D'sks iiud fll OUaiiH, $5.00 l !?-J(M)i). Oi'H -inn, $50 00 to Sl.r0.0'. Piano-', ? 'J5 00 to' 88(H) 00. This is a great sale and yon make a great mistake if yon fail to lake advantage of it. 4LL letter? promptly answer ed. rite at once fur particu lars. 22, m AKIDIRIIiWS Hi and Itf W eil Tr ulo Bt, CHARLOTTE, .Y. (J Jau. '26, ISifl. BUOKl.KN.'LS AKNIL'A SA LVK T)g best-S.ilvo in tha world for 'cuts and traUes, sore., i-alt rioum, feyer sores, tet er, JuappeJ h m Is, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, anj, "positively cure Files, or no pay required,-It is guarai lord Jo z i vo perf""t sHtisffi'lioD,or money rofu. Hi. erice 25 cenii pr box : for n!e l .'. JJ' Lawins. ..r-vb"si,,bin und-r'liaMiif.ciyl Scientific (HOME CVHl-)- imple (FOB DISVASE). OR DISh afe Y (WITUOVT MEDICIHE.) Bure. fcAA AAAAAAAAAAA ILIOUSNESS Who has not suffered this misery caused by bile in the Htomach which an inactive or sluggish liver failed to carry olF. THE PREVENTION AND CURE IS ! liquid or powder, 'which gives quick action to the liver and carries off the bile by a mild move ment of the bowels. It is no pur gative or griping medicine, but purely vegetable. Many people lake pills more take Simmons Liver Regulator. "I have been a victim to Biliousness for years, imd alter trying various remedied my only Hiieeess was in the use of Him mons Liver Isolator, whieh never failed to relieve me. 1 s..:,k not of mvaeir. alone, but tny vliol? family." J. f i,-lt MAN.Hehna, Ah... f - Has our 7. Stamp In red on wrapper. J. 11. ZK1L1N ft CO., rhiiadclhia, Pa. I T.7k'NTaN j bas revolutionized I i V ENTION I the wor'4 during the last Lalf erntury. Not least among tbe wonders of inventive progress is a method and 8YMem ! work tbat cmi be performed tll over the eo"itry without separating the win k r.- fr. id their homs. Pf.y lib "ral; any one ''an do the work; f iihr V'-untc or old; no special ability required' Capital not needed; you ure star two free Cut this out and return t us and wc wilj send you Jree., something of great valu and importance, to you, that will start you in business, whit !? will -bring you in inW ra. riey ri-lit n way, than hnytbing-else ir tue world (Jrand outlil . fra'-Addr True -fe , uu't;i. Miooe The following letter from the happy holder of a" Tontine Policy, gives a few facts and figures, in which there is profit able food for thought: Cor.UMniA.S. C.. Dec. 22. 1892. Mr. V. J. ItoniiKY, Manager, Itoik Hill, fc. C Iikaii yie.: 1 am hi reeeipt of your favor of tli -ith iitst., ciicltitiiiit? check lor (2T0UJ' la pityinfiit of '1'i'iitiiio livilcti(l on policy No, on my life in the, Kquituble Lilt) Astiur uiieu MocU-li'. I ma ili-MMei will) the results on my policy niul can rt'comi'it'iul (he KqiiituMo to any w'kina J.it' 1 ii'-uruiH' uh a naf anil reliahla company; one I hat iincts its claims promptly anil lit I ti 1m ilH contnu'ts to the letter. Yours very truly, W. S. Porn. I,ife insurance under the Tontine Plan of the EQUITABLE LIFE is an investment, not an expense. The returns mature during life, as well as after death. If you are a single man you owe it to yourself. If you are are a married man you owe it to your family. The time to act is now. Interesting par- ticularscanbehadhy addressing W. J. RODDEY, Manager, Department of the Carolines, ROCK HILL, S. C. J Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, nd all Fat- J $ ent business conducted for Moot rati Fees. 'Our Office is Opposite U. S. Patent Qrnczt 5 ami we can scire patent ia 1ibS time liian those J JrtiU.,t? lrotu Washington. ' ? Send model, drawing or photo, with descrip-f Jtioa. We advise, if patentable or not, tree of i charge. Our fee nt due till patent is secured. A Pamphlet, 'How'to Obtain I'attnts,' with 5 cost of same i,i the U, ,8. aud toreign countries sent free. Address, c. Opp. Patent Qffioe. Wassmington, D. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorla. When she was a Child, she crie.1 for Castoria.'- -When she became JILss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castorla ITHAOC I and i Figures I . 1 " " Cures w hen all else falls. T v . " Testimony of Mr. M.UOLINE, OF HICKORY, N. C. " My wife has-used the, Electropoise for Asthma and Bronchitis, and is in"! better health than for twenty years? , WRITE JS. We send all information and testi monials FREE, ATLANTIC ELECTROPOISE CO., :'S2 Washington, D . C. A A A A A AAA Ar WV LINCOLNTON, N. C., FRIDAY, Atlanta Journal , . I propose to devote a little space to the Brother' in Black. In the line of "character sketches," there is no more faithful subject thun lie. Bord, hied and buttered among thy colored brethren, I know them as they are, and no man can know the negro unless he has been ac quainted with them from his in fancy up. I learned-much about the negro in my childhood days from my old black mammy and the little negro children that played with us day after day. Superstition is unborn with the negro, hence he is a very religious character. I don't say lhat many of them are nious. for 21 111:111 mil bo very religious and not much pious, and voiy pious without much religion. .The negro has a conscience. It does not hurt him so much when he does a wrong, but it lashes and paints him when he gets caught in I wrongdoing. To, iustrate: A good old negro preacher one Sunday morning was preaching on ihe eternal punisjiat pf the wicked and. in he midst of his fervent and feryid sermon, he said ; "Brethren, no longer than last night, some negro came and stole tha last two chickens me and my old woman had. believe that negro is in his house this minute, and I hereby and hereon consign him to everlasting punishment, and the decree has gone forth." Early next morning, one of his parishioners came to his, front door with two. chickens in his hand and said; ''Parson, here is your chickens." "Dem aint my chickens,child," said the parson. "I knows they ain't," 'said the parishioner, "your chickens was eat up 'fore do 'cree went forth, and last night after . went to bud my conscience hurt me so J could not sleep a wink until I went over to Mars Bob Proctor's and got two more in the place of them. Hero, pasture, take these chickens and take that crtu back." Of course he left the parson with a conscience void of otVence. The negro's superstitions make him an easy prey to deception in religious circles. I was preaching once' at Trenton,Tenn., when t litre cam to my room a kindly looking old negro preacher, well along in years. He introduced himself as "Uncle Ben' a Methodist. preach er, and said : ' "Brother Jones, a friend told me to come and give you my Ku Kliis experience, and said you would be interested in that." 'Lt us have it, Brother Ben," I said to him. "Well," he said, "It was shortly after the war, just about the time I went to preaching. I was pastor of a circuit in this county, preach ing to four churches, ' I was at Oak Grove chu'ch when the ku klux notified- me to desist from preaching the gospel. . I sent them word that the message of the Lord I was upon me and I must preach and I keep on preaching. They sent 'me word, again . to de sist; but I Wd them like St. Paul. I' counts jiiot my life dear irftto my &ef. So ppe flight dowirat Oak Grove church, L had preached one of the most- -powerfulest kind of a sermon in this dis.trac ted meeting and there was a - whole heap of mourners coming to the altar, and ! at. about 10 o'clock I said, 'While we sing-the next hymn the officers fof this church will raise the i mourners.' They .were "dead I i mourner s. Dead mourners 1" I exclaimed Yes: sir'; tKey were "dead uournr . -era-,-and when, they triedjVraise i u.;V -wv" tViorn liri in f hp J ! middle and their heels anddieadj trying to lead- him, in trying to wV,. "Thor i-orfl Hftnd 'coTiiure him with fodder, but all of I U'JIU IIUU UU1IIJ. iuvj . , Ln.l -tMit tliof imj crimp Vw"ldf at j . uuu awuv niuw wiiv 2 I . .. ....... 1 j the door holloed 'ku-klux V Fore God, every mourner raise their self and fhey 3h1I ran out of the church and the Jiu-khix Htood in the door and bowed at thnm as they ran out. TJieni ku-klux had horns, oud wherali the people was out of the church de ku-klux took me into de woods and boat mo mighty nr to death. 1 told them they just-as wfll finish the old man, but they 'lowed if I preached any moro they wouid finish me. "So don I went np to Sister Brown's and just as I come in the house, while the moon was shining Sister Brown's gal seed me coming. Sir was one of the dead mourners, and she 'lowd". " 'Ma, ma.: ma, yon comes Uncle Ben!" "Old Sister grown she jumped out in the yard . and just holloed and danced and said 'hallalnjah ! I ki mwed. Uncle Ben, if you wTere a servant of the Lord you would be a Daniel in the lion's den, and they couldn't hurt you.' "I said, 'Thev dkh though. They beat me might na' to death k And tell you, Brother Jones, from dat day $o dig i never had any confidence in dead mourners neyer has, Iwid-f roni dat day to disl" A triend in Van Buren, Ark., gave an incident . characteristic of the darkey's. superstition and phi losophy combined, lie said; "Over in. the, Valley of the Ar kansas, where the fearful cyclones do then ruinous - work so of two negroes were plowing in Iheir cot ton, when a cyclone, with its fear ful force, passed near then "al most twisting their shirts off their backs and frightening them nearly to death. When it passed, the two darkies took out thejr mules and led "them 'or, towards the house, each two much frightened to say a word to. the other. On the way to the house, they passed their cornfield, which was in the immediate track of the cyclone, and as they looked over the wreck and ruin of their corn, stranded and torn to. pieces and destroyed, thoy both stopped and looked; Still frightened, they looked at each other and looken at the great field of corn which the, cyclone had riddled. Thou one speaking to the other, said, 'Jim, des look at that corn, or rather look at that place, where the corn once was. Jimyoa take that man thjycaU Mar's God up on one side aitd down the oth er apd he does nearly as much harm as he does good." The darkey is a philosopher in giving consolation to the desolate. During the late cold snap, with its biting wind and killing frost, de vastating fruit fields, and berries and gardens, the old boss knew that havic had been played with all the fruit and. he wouldn't go out to see it, but sent old,,Uncle Tony. By and by, Uncle Tony came in to report, and the boss said; ':IIow.is it, Uncle.Tony?" . "A clean sweep, a clean sweep, boss. . The old boss hung his head in silent despaii, and with a deep groan he thought over the ruin of his prospects. The old darkey, in deepest spmpathy with him, said : ',Boss,T's got d is consolation to offer you." - "What coasolation have you to give me, Ucle Tony!" 4'I think, its gineral boss." . The negro is "a philosopher in she management of the mule. The negro and 'a .mule work better to gether than , any forces I know. $o.d made the negro and man in yeiited the mule. : God's creation aijd man's invention in this case goes hand in hand.. - . The good old colored man was driving his time-worn mule along a level sandy,, rad whey the- old mule took the sulks and wouidn'i ! go backward or forward, right or ! lef t ; The old darkey exhausted ! nil his resources in whipninsr in , rj. 'ovoll' Finally, completely e- . ik j iun. hausted he raked up a big pile of leaves and trash under the mule MAY. 25, 1894. and set them on fire. When tin fire blazad np under the old mule the mule moved up just four feW and stopped the bod of the old darkey's buggy over the fir- nidi: it was burned all except the irons To have killed that mule then would have been a clear case of justifiable mulicide. Tiie negro is a weather nronhet When he sees the sun drawing wa ter he knows its "gwine to rain " When his corns hurt him ho knows th.-re is going to bo a rh-aijv in the weather. When he sees the hogs toting wfraw and leaves he knows its "gwine to turn cold." When his joints ache he knows that we are going to have a spell of weather, Those latter day extreme biiz zards we have he lays to the weathor bureau. He says we never did have these awful times out of seasen like we have had sinoe they started these weather bureaus. When the ice factory was start ed in my town a few years ago, we had a late spring and the darkies said : "Lessen dey stop that ice facto ry, there won't be no more seed tim and harvest in this country Our 'taters is gwine to be jrost bitten in July, and corn, by reas on of the cold season, won't never get knee high, and if deni white folks with their inventions of weather bureaus and ice factories, are gwine to fix this country so no negro can live in it." But, all in all, the negro is a good citizen, a 'kindly neighbor, a forbearing, forgiving fellow. A friend askd mc the other day if I didn't believe all negroes would steal, I said : ''No, 1 don't believe all the white folks will steal that would steal, and I do sometimes think that if the negro owned the prop erty as we white folks do, and the negrDes Were to hire us at tiie same wages we now pay, we would have stolen all the negro had long ago.'' A gentleman from Yanke? Doo dle asked me the other day if I didn't think there was a great dif ference between the instincts of a negro aud a white man. I said : "No, th-3 negro differs from the white man more in his out-stinks, perhaps, than in any other way.' All in all, the negro is growing in intelligence, frugality, anil good citizenship. I wish him well. Yours truly, Sam P. Joxes. They all Testier To tta Efficacy of the World-Renowned Swift's Specific. Tho old tlmo simple remedy from the Georgia ewampa aud field has gone forth to the antipodes. astonishing the skeptical and ennfniindhiir tha thi-orlea if those who Oepend solely on tho VI physician's BkllL There Is no blood ".lnt nrhth ltHnnani.timmullift.il eradicate. Poisons outwardly absorbed or tho result of vile diseases from within all yield to tbU potent but simple remedy. It Is an unequaled tonic, builds np the old and feeble, cures all diseases arising from Impure blood or weakened vitality. Bend for a treatise. Examine the proof. Books on " Blood and Skin Diseases " Dialled free. ' IrugaUi9 Sell It. SWIFT SPECIFIC C0o Drawer 3, Atlanta, C. My daughter,, when you note that the man who wants to marry you is just too awfully anxious to learn whether you. can bake a loaf of bread or wash a shirt with Chi nese detexterity, before you close the negotiation do you just fly around and ascertain whether that man is either willing or able to earn enough flour to make a bis cuit and it he has paid for the shirt hejvanta you to wash. Nine times out of ten, daughter, the man who only wants to marry a house-keeper can be kept more economically in the workhouse than he can in your father's house R. J. iSriRDETTE. Many Persons are T.roten : lowi from overwork or hcowbold cares. Urowns Iron .Hitters retold the rjrJtem, fids diersnon. re-Trim c ?xt ?s of Lil, ixid cures msUri. , Get tLe c"n;5n. . Subscribe lor tbe Coueieb. 1 I '!. McCluro In . or 1 It Una North Carolina i.s now single from the other reconstructed .States in having attained, solely by the etforts of her own people, a higher degree of general pros perity tliau she ever before at tained in her history. She has a more prosperous and thrifty people tocay than at any period of the past, and thero is more capital employed and less Uebt, State and individual, thaa at any time in the last century. North Carol.ua has fewer foreign ers and more 'completely homo geneous population thaji anyother State of the Union. Sinco the rescue of the State from the tempest of profligacy that swept over it after the war, taxes steadily diminisned, and the schools have increased until they roller education . to every child i'-i this commonwealth.' regardless 'color. Her legitimate debt is steadily reduced ; her treasury has a large ments of credit; her public im provement have kept pace with the growing wants of her people; her authority reflects the pride of the State in its stainlesa integrity, and thrift and content are the common blessing of her people. When it is considered that surplus, her humane institutions, conducted with equal care and outlay for both races, are monu ments ot credit ; her public im provements have kept pace with the growing wants of her people; her authority reflects the pride of the State in its stainless integiitv and thrift and content are the common blessing of her people. When it is considered that North Carolina has every impor tant mineral within her borders, from gold to iron : that she has every variety of crops, from wheat to cotton ; that every variety of climate, from the sunny southern coasts to the chills ot the highest peak of the Appalachian range; that she has water-power enough in a single-river to spin and weave the whole cotton of the South, and that her lands are nearly as cheap and her climate better than the West when these facts are weighed in the scale of intelli gence, the momentous meaning of a new Smth, may be understood in the North as it is now under stood in the Carolinas. A. K. Mc Clure, in Philadelphia Timks. Snap KholH. Many a vain young mtn has striven to raise himself in society by his boot straps. While one man is paying for his whistle another is whistling for his pay. The man who does not care for the gojd opinion of others has no self-respect. The heiress marries in order to husband her resources. When a man begins to no down hill he is almost sure to ttrike the ceiling. It takes adverse circumstances to develope man's staying quali ties. See what woman has . accom plished under adverse circum stances and with only one rib to start on. A suspicious whisper sometimes grows to be a heartrending scream Dallas, Tex., News. Aim! Mill Tliey Come. It now seems to be generally admitted that the Richmond and Danville railroad shops will be moved from Manchester, Va., to this city, within the next two or thne months. The shops will l.e located on the company's lands north -of the city, and the plant will be an enormous one, employ ing several hundred workmen and increasing the city'e population more than a thousand. -The ex penditure in building the shops will be somewhere near $1,000,000, and the weekly pay roll will a- NO. 5, mount to about 50,000 which will powerfully stimulate- the bewneaj interest of the city. Hut Charlotte' futon li tha railroad shop Hue U not io tew thero. For eeveval jert, tha Chester and Lenoir Railroad (.v has been accti-dnmed to aett'ting considerable work to tke 11 ec&teA burg Irou Works (A. m .this cttf. They have been bo well ttaati with tho wok done JJtSiesfcot here that they have practically decided to m&ka the Wilke. iron Works Company t&elr regular re pair shop and will aem! all of their work here. Thia will ha a big lift and will necessitate au in crease in the force of handa iu tie shops. Engine No. 833, of tho Chester and Lenoir road is now iu the shop undergoing mi entire ov er-hauling The work being done on this engine is of a high claas, and it will cause, the railroad com pany to decide definitely in favor ot the Charlotte hops. Chah- i.ottk News. Blood and sua Diseases Always RRR Cured, DDD- DOT1NIO BLOOO BAL.BX never UUa to cure all maimer of Blool aaitl Skla Un eases. It Is tha great Bo u Uxor u building uj and purifying Kerned y , aud cures all manaer of skin aud blood dimsise. As a buliJlag up tonic It U without a rival, aad absolutely beyond oomparlaoo with aay other aUailar remedy ever oSerad to the public. It Ut panacea for all Ills reaultlog from Impure blood, or an Impoverished condition of tho human system. A single botUe will demoa strate its paramount vktuea. (TSend for free book of Wonderful Carat. Price. $1.00 per large betUa; $5.00 for MM bottles. For sale by drugziats; If not send to us, arid medicine will be sent freigbt prepaid on receipt of price. Addreaa BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Qa. To Kill lo tn to staff. S. J. Hinsdale writes to tho ed itor of the Fayettoville Observer and gives the following remedy for destroying potato bugs. It i simple and inexpensive and worth trying. Mr. Hinsdale says: I have used for several years au infusion of Quassia on my potato vines to kill tho bugs, with satis faction. The Qussia tree is a na tive of Jamaica, it is not poison ous and the wood is used in medi cine as a tonic. It can be obtain ed of the druggists at about thix- tv cents per pound. The follow ing is my method for preparing the infusion. Roil one pound of ground Quas sia or Quassia chips, in three or four gallons of water for two hours. Place a strainer of cotton eloth over the open head of a bar rel, pour on it the decoction of Qaussia, then add about fifteen gallons of water, pouring it through the strainer in order to , i .11 fil. .1 it. - C 4 u .. extract, an o; tue Htieiiutu 01 Quassia. Sprinkle the vines with this, in dry weather, using a very line sprinkler. A coarse eprinkler wastes the infusion. Merely wet ting the leaves is -juflicient. Re peat the sprinkling after a few days. The first application Will kill nearly all of the full grown bugs, and the next about all the. new crop of young ones'. Two or three sprinklings will be 6ufficieat. This infusion is no doubt good to destroy bugs and lice in gree 1 houses and on rose bushes. A rubber sprinkler is convenient tu us in the green house as well a on potato vines. GUARANTEED CUBK. Wa authorize our advertised draegist to sell you Dr. King's New DiiC,verj for consumption, coughs ana coias. up-u uu condition. It you are afflicted wltft La Orif.pe and will use this remedy according to diiections, giviog it a fair trial, and ex perience no benefit, you may return the Nettle and hue your money refunded. "We thia nffer r.eoauee of the wonderful success of 1 r. King s New Diacovery dur ing last season's epidemic nave neara or d case in which it taikd. Try it Trial lottle tree at J. M. Lawing's drugstore. Large size 50c and $1 00. Greatness stands upon a preci pice, and if prosperity carries a man ever, so little beyond his poiso it overbears and dashes him to pieces. Seneca. IV YOUR HACK ACJTES. Or yoa are all worn oat, really good foffiofia mg, tt la general debOtty. Try BliOfry.H litON ttlTTMKM. 1 It will cure yen, cleanse your lives, an4 (tT a anod fcMMta