' J. ...... :-..'ViI: VOL. VIII. LINCOLNTON, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPT. 28, 1894, NO. 23. II Tbat'a what Mr. K.fS. Plorfk, of King's Mountain, Live Th e writes to na of tha Eli-ctropoLie. lie was cured of Nervous Prostration, Obstinate V Electropolse." Indigestion and Lung Trouble. IIKTTKK UKT OKI. A book of lotor- inatlun ;wid testimonials froaa STorUi CtMak'm Iw-st ltlien U mailed frea to aay allrtiM BELWOOD INSTITUTE Prepare boys tor the Sopomore Class at 'frmity College girls for the Senior Class at Greensboro Fomale College. Excellent advantages in the study of vocal and instrumental , MUdlC. Thorough Iiiatructiou. J Ht i m.tin,, in Hook keeping. Cu.ntnHirtl Arithmetic, atnl Commercial Uw. ' m I i tuition iti K'llihh ooute 87.00 per timnt.li. Fall term rj. -ii. An. For CMtalour, (givm,! fall luformnhoi. mblia, C H A R OTTE COLLEGE Of MUSIC AND ART. 18 SOUTH TRY ON ST.. SCHOOL FOR VuslijAL TRAINING lfl THE Southern States. THE MOST 1MPH0VE1) EUROPEAN METHODS Many free advantages. Modem Laufcuagrt taught only by native teacberN BOAUDINO Arc oaunodationa tor non resident lady Students in College Buildiug. Every modern couvenicuee. Mpeoial course in PAINTING, DRAWING, and KLOCUTION. Catalogues seut on application. Call on or addreHH OA RL S OA ER 7 NER. Director. All! 1, 18'M E..M. ANDREWS :-c .Vholeftle"and Retail Dealers' in "Oak Bedroom emits O' il i: jef-O'S, 1 1 OH! go" O" C UW-OO. i It ml A .. UJ1 rli A A 'farlor. . suits of .v f'.'IU 22 ft1, tl. 200 00 S1DBB0AKDS fr'. SlO.OO i.. ?75.0 -EXTENSIONS TABLES 1U) M ?l (HI !( jj 10 00 4;iiiiia Closets 1.1 0 io 845 00. pettier 1W 1.0ijro $3.00t Easeis andictuFe'3 oti to rooo. CO '( Ul ES and LOUNGES T.Vl io$451K, Musi- !. I:s ,iint Cab:nntH, 8160 ' t-- $12.00. K'ovolving B.iuk OaH y.n-1 Tip Deka and .ffl e C:ih is, ." 00 l i4000. Orj;au, $0 00 to $l.r0.O'K riauo. S225 0O to r.iio.on. This is a great sale and you make a ureat mistake if you .fail to take advantage of it. ALL letters promptly answer ed. W rite at once fur particu lars. iE AKIHEWSi 10 ami J 8 Wgatlprio 8t CHdRLOTTE.NQ Jan. 20, 1804. I prl it very highly is tha trtb- Of Rev. J. C. ROWS- of Vrxir, R wa cured of Muscular RheoinaVfem ul effect of La Grippe. Correspondence Invited, aaredalij iron Despairing Invalids. Cures wfcea all else falU." ATLANTIC ELEOTROPOI8E CO, 67 and Professional Cards. J. W.SAIN.M.D., Han located at Lincolntou and of fers his services as physician to the citizens ot Lineolutdn aud surround ing country. Will bo tound at night at the Lin coln ton Hotel. March 27, 1891 lv DENTAL NOTICE. Di. A. W. Alexander will be a bis office at Lincolntou, June, Au post, October December, Feb ruary and April. Will he in Mt. flolly, July, September, November, Janutry, March ami May. Pa'ion.ige solicited. Ti rma cash and rja'dre. The Old Friend .nd ftp best friend, that never fails you, ia Simmons Liver Begu lator, (the Red Z) that's what vqu, near at me mention 01 mia excellent Liver medicine, and people should not be persuaded that anything else will do. It ia the Jving of Liver Medi- tinea; ia better than pills, and takea the place of Quinine and Calomel. It acta directly oa the. Liver, Kidneys and Bowels and givea new life to the whole aya tern. This ia the medicine you want. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in rowder to te taken dry or made into a tea. " REVERT PACKAOKft 0 tbe Z Stamp In red on wrappwy l. II. ZKIXJN h CO.. PblldelphU,V. Cveftts, andTrJe-Mrks obuined, wd all Pat ent busnesa coaducted for MootRATt Frt- Oun OPHCf is Ofpositc U. 8, PTCHT uid we can secure patent in less Umo tnaa taose remote irom iiwukiuu. tion. m pAMfHLCT. now lavaum cost mom ia the U. S. and fereiga countries seat free. Address, C.A.SHOW&CO. MIHil The llcl TlituK to do. N Y Herald. And let us consider one auother to provoke unto love and to good WOrks. HEBREWS, x, 24. The man who thinks only of himself and is forgetful ot his ob ligations to others doesn't count for mnch either in this world or the next. A purely selfish man who wants everything and gives nothing.lives in the suburbs of purgatory and will not have far to go when He dies. To recognize your rights and ig nore your duties is to. pursue a a policy which angels deplore and devils rejoice at. God can use a man to the best advantage when the soul which is prone to selfishness evicts its tenant and makes room for the oc cupancy of heavenly visitants. The man who seeks for this world's goods exclusively, whose chief possession is a bank accountf will find himself out of place in heaven, a stranger in a strange land. , Money is a good thing to work for, but it isn't the only thiug.nor the(best thing. It is not well to despise money, but you should remember that while it will buy neither character nor happiness. Unless you gen erously share it with those who are unfortunate it will make you narrow and mean. The most pitiful spectacle that eye ever looked upon is the man who has more than he knows what to do with, but refuses to eive his surplus to keep the wolf away from the door across the street. ' The noblest men are those who give, not those who keep, and there is more satisfaction in 86eing a poor man's child eat bread which you have furnished than in sitting at your own table when plenty a bounds, if you ignore the poor man's children and let them go j hungry True religion is a very simple matter. You can get along with out doing good to your fellow crea tures who need your help. The world is full of sorrow and struggles, Tears fall like showers and sighs fill the air as when the wind sweeps through a forest of pines. Those who suffer aie part of the family to which you belong. You have no right to be iudiffer ent. To be negleoted is a crime If vou can lend a helping hand,but refuse to do it on the ground that you wish to use both hands for yourself, you lose an opportunity which Providence has presented. and you will have difficulty in ex plaining your conduct when the hour (f reckoning comes. Doing good to others is the best way to get a blessing for vourself. You will find the strongest proofs that the religion you believe in is from Uod if you will oase study ing the theology which is in books and devote an equal time to God's poor in your neighborhood. When a man gives cheer to an other's the angels mysteriously put cheer heart into his own. It is right and proper to pray. Miiy,U8 this day ur daily bread,' but Qod asks a price for his answer and that you shall give some one else a share of the bread He gives to you. If you are - suffering from an af flictiou what will you do ? How shall you seee relief ? Bv asking Qod to lighten vour burden ? No ; by doing what you can to lighten the burden of some equally troub led soul. If you bring a smile to the trembling lips of another, vpu. will sood discover a, aUe is aJigh.tfoMj Pttyu.rW UP:kea butterfly on a flower. Would you increase your faith? Would you dissipate your doubts ? Would you convince yourself tfea.' life is very well worth living, even when the shadows throw their gloom on your path ? Then visit those who are wearily plodding along, hopeless and friendless- You getting yourself and saying a kind ly word to some poor creature who would think ha was in heavenly surroundings if he lived under your roof and enjoyed your ad vantages. When you are in the presence ot the Lord, who was ;IIimself poor and oppressed, and , who so lonely that he knelt, in Gethsemaue to ask for help, iou will be poorly if you have nothing better to sav than that you accepted all the creeds of the Church and keDt yourself unspotted from the world. But ou will be well off if you can assure Him that you will, keep some one else unspotted from the world at great pains and sacrifice. Love God, love your neighbor, obey tne command,. "Feed my lambs," and you will get a resi dence in the new Jerusalem. You may be worth a million but. if you have done nothing to make the world better you will die a begpar. You may be counted among the poor, but if you have been a broth er to your fellow men a group ot angels gather about your bed and usher you with- songs into the presence of Him who said : 4,The first shall be last, and the last first.' No one yet loved God acceptably who did not love his children. . There is no room in the house not built with hands for a soul that has not made some sacrifice others. If you love your kind and mani fest that love by generous deeds it will be but a step from your grave to Heaven. Irving W, Larimore, pbysioal director of Y. M. O. A., Des Moinen, Iowa, be can conscientiously ecommend Ohamberlain'rt Pain B.tlm to athletes, gymnasts, bicy clists, loot ball pJayeis and the profession in general tor bruines, sprains and dislocation also tor Boronees and si iff o ess of tte muscles. When applied before the parts become swollen it will effect a cure n one half the time usually require ed. For Bale by Dr. V? L. Grouse Druegest. . The Hudson Ulver. The Hudson River, as we call it, along the western shore of the is land of Manhattan, is now a ma jestic estuary rather than a river, and is deep enough for all the uses of great ships. But its present bottom is formed s of the rock wreckage of an earlier day, which has largely filled up a chasm once several hundred feet deep, through which the old liver ran. So colossal was the sheet of ice which came sweeping down from the northwest over the top of the Palisades in the ice age that this ancient chasm of the Hudson Riv er a veritable canon once changed its course no whit; for the direction of the. grooves and scratches seen everywhere on the exposed surface of the Palisades, and pointing obliquely across the river's course, run in the same di rection as do those on the rocks over which the city stands. It not infrequently happens that steamers and ships bound for New York, when not quite certain of their whereabouts as they approach the coast, are compelled to seek what help they can by consulting the nearest land, which, under these renditions, is the sea bottom. The sea bottom along ihe coast has be in bo often and so carefully 4,lelt" that we know a great plateau extends out beyond te coaat line tor sorflo. eighty or ninety miles, where t suddenly falja off into the great dePft8 of the Atlantic. The place on which New York stands wast it is believed, once much higher than it ia now, and was separated from the Noith Atlant ic border by some eighty or ninety miles of, low seacoast land, now submerged, and forming this great continental plateau. Indeed, the New Jersey and adjacent coast is still einkine at the rate of a few inches in a century. For us t-day the Hudson River ends southward where it enters New York Harbor. But a chan nel, starting ten miles southeast of Bandy Hook, and in a general way continuing the line of the Hudson runs across the submerged con tinental plateau, where finally, af ter widening and deepening to form a tremendous submarine chasm, it abruptly ends where the plateau falls off into the deep sea. This chasm near the end of the submerged channel is, if we may believe the story of the plummet, twenty-five miles long, a mile and a quarter wide, and in places two thousand feet in vortical depth be low its submerged edges, them selves far beneath the ocean's sur face. This ''drowned river" is proba bly the old channel of what we call the Hudson Rivor, alonjj which a part of the melting glacier sent its flood during and at the cbse of the Age of Ice. And so at last rounded and emoothed rock surfaces, where once sharp crags towered aloft; glacial grooves and scratchos on every hand; erratic bowlders,great and small, cumbering the ground ; a typhal rocking stone delicately poised by vanished forces long ago; a terminal moraine so great that it forms picturesquo land scape features visible many miles away these are some of the re cords of the great Ice Age which ono may spell out in a holiday stroll about New York T. Mitch, oil Prudden, M. 1)., Harper's Mag azine. Scratch ' a Republican' on the back and he will say, "Well, I am not much of party man; I'll vote with the people." Scratch a Peo ple's Party man and he will 6ay: "I'm not for party now; I'm for the man." The principles they held heretofore are all thrown to the winds. Anything now to get their combination in oflice Is there any just reason for turning Durham county, the Congressional district or the State over to such a crowd who would rather vote for men than principles? We do do not see any. Therefore it is the duty of all Democrats to stand together and maintain their prin ciples. Elect evry man on the Democratic ticket, from township constable up. Durham Sun. Johu G Manger Kditor of the Sunbeam. Slignan, M, who uam ed Grower Cleveland tor tha Pres idency in Nov., J882. while he was Mayor of Buflato, N. T., in iuthnsi i8tic in bin praise of Chamberlain's Colie, Cholera and Diairbcei Rem edy. He say!; "1 have used it tor the past five y ears consider it tbe best pieparation oi the kind in maiket. It is as staple as fugat and coffee id Ibis section. It is an article of merit and should be ued in eviy household.. For nale by Dr. W. I . Grouse Druggist Rev. O. II. Martin says that he is called of God to run for Con gress on the Populist ticket and wo learn from good authority announces from his pulpit that he is a Populist candidate. Shame upon the man who so desecrates his holy oflice. He deserves the condemnation of all good men- He uses the pulpit in churches dedicated to the worship of God, as platlorm from which to an nounce hia candidacy. If any thing can be meaner than that we would like to now what it is. Doubtless Mr. Martin hears ring ing in his own ears the' denuncia tory utterances of Him who with scourge in hand drove from Israel's ancient sancturary those who profaned that holy piace. He who would profane God s holy sanctuary for the purpose of ob taining for himself a paltry honor would for the sake of money, place or power trample under foot every principle of honor, would break every promise made to his people and wallow in any slum of I turpitude , Monroe Inquirer. IVorlli Oitrollim for Jool KuadM. The State of North Carolina seems to be thoroughly alive to the subject of good roads, ae is shown by the convention recently 4 held in Charlotte. No less than twenty-seven of the principal cpun- ties were represented by delega tions, and the discussions were earnest and to the point. An in teresting feature was the compari son of the cost of ancient and modern road-making, with the figures in favor of the latter moile. A number of roads have been re built by convict labor in the vicin ity of Charlotte, and the menders of tho convention who drove over them found them as level and as firmly surfaced as city streets. It was shown that tho convicts could be provided at an expense of twenty-one cents per day, which paid for the guards, for board, cloth ing, shelter and medical attend ance. Tho actual cost of titty con victs working on the roads for thirty days was $315, while for or dinary labor the same number of men would require $975 in wagso at least, making a difference of $G60 in favor supervisors stated that the convicts actually perform ed 25 per cent, more work in tli3 same time. The benefit of good roads in sav ing of horse-power ami time in hauling crops t' market was dwelt upon, and it was shown that one horse could often haul four times the load on a macadamized road that he could on an ordinary dirt highwTuv. (Jood'roads, according to some speakers, improved tin social relations of neighborhoods, increased the church attendance and were a benefit in many other ways. Resolutions were adonted in favor of a road law and urging all commercial bodies and road supervisions to co-operate with the Good Roads Association in its efforts. A delegation of North Carolina people is now visiting Northern cities to gather information about road-making. They will examine Pennsylvania- ami New York high ways. Man'f Record. Mr. Rutler, on going over to the Republican party, has agreed to give, as his initiation free, the Pep ulist vote of the State, to the Rexmblicans. Butler is gone. He has deserted the Populists as treacherously as he did the Dem ocrats. He undertook to sell De mocracy on the 18th of May, 1SU2. but he couldn't deliver the goods In 1894 he undertook to give Pop ulism o the Republicans in ex change for a seat m the Unib-d States Senate Can he deliver the goods this time? There are good and honest men in the Populist party. They are there from the best ot motives. Will they en dorse this base action of their traitorous master, and submit to it like slaves? Clinton Demo crat. Poisoned LOOD la s source of much suffering. Tbe system sboild be thoroughly cleansed of sil Impurities, and the blood kept in a healthy condition. IS. S. S. removes . CHRONIC SORES . Ulcers, etc., purifies the 61ood, and builds up the general health. It U without an equal Ira F. S tiles, of Palmer, Kan., says: "My foot and left to my knee wan a running sore for two years, and physi cians said It could not be cured. After taking fifteen small boitlt-s of S. S. S there la Dot a sore on my limbs, and I hare a new lease on life. I am seventy seven years old, and have had my are renewed at least twenty years by the use of OmrTr d oa BUm4 fcn4 j fckla PIMM nallad ttm to ur a4drM. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta, (ia. Our CJriiiMtum. Not half enough has ever been written or said in praise of grand mothers. All the sweet, tender in cense offered to mother can be duplicated upon the altar of erandmotherhood, for are not the grandmothers just mothers after all mothers ot their own children and Iheir children' children, their : hearu getting larger and larger with love as the new generation of babies comes along, their eyes brightening with bliss of an extra joyous motherhood and their arms even more ready than in the daya gone by to carry tno little restless human burden, their hands more willing to bind up briar-scratehed tinkers and their lips more anxious to kiss away the tars and smooth out the frowns. It is the memory of mistakes in their own child-raNmg that makes them doubly tender with the little one who now lisps tleir name? It is because the little child that nes tles in their arms to-day brings Uack in memory those days when another baby lay then a baby who to-day answers b the name of mother ? Who can solve the problem of the great love that causes them to forget the weight of their years and makes them willing to work and endure with all the ardor of youth? Kvery day we see it. exemplified, and tho children are the first, to recognize and profit by it. What father ami mother refuse, grandma will be al most certain to grant. When lit tle feet stumble graudma'a ready hand is there to steady the (alter ing steps; when little hearts grieve grandma's caress heals the wound. How many youthful mothers are saved a world of sorrowful respon sibility by being able to call upon an older head for advice, in being reassured by a loving yet. experi ences! woman, who has raised a family herself and w ho knows how to cope' .with every ailment, from whooping cough to colie caused bv licking the red paint oil a wooden monkey. How sale she feels b leave baby in those hands, know ing full well no harm will com nigh its little curly head so Inn; as grandma is bv. Grandmoih t . ire great institutions, bless them ! and what, a l"ss is that, child's who has never known what it is to be loved scolded ami spoiled by its mother's mother. K . III W DIS-'UVKIIV SAVbli HIS Mh'K. Mr. ti C;iillii"tlft, l)ren'nt, ll'iivfr- villv III., stys : To Dr Kini;- Nw Oi i I'oV'ry I owe my life. Whs taken witli Lh npp nntj tried all t-i 111 vsk-ihuh lie- iuii s hImmi'.. tmt of no nvml fiD'l w- i;iv ip and lo''l I could r t hv Having l) Kinirs New Divcvery in mv Morn 1 p"t for n boiile Hf.d i.eiin it" nin and from tit- tirt los" t'OHHii t Ufl better, hii I alt r o; ini; thrrc 'mi ties ws up Mint air tit aga it i worth lU weight in eold. W wo' t ke stor! witliout it." (Jet a lr-p trinl t J M Lawiug' D'u "t r' That old iiiaxnii 4 Jtis easier to pull down than to build up, and to destroy than to preserve,'' should not be lost to the inenioi y. Demagogues have succeeded ad mirably in fearing down ami 1:1 the mad whirling sweep of revolu tion have been l'Mided a men .t threat talejit, but when they In v. attempted to rebuild they have made sad and miserable lairun -. The visionary politician can tell o lnaguaue eloouent and poetic o: the changes that should be mad . he can tell old systems that sha! be '-hanged, of land marks, lad'- with age. that should be remove, but when it cornea to n buildii. those systems and replacing the land marks their schemes vani- nto thin air. We are more in resged with this idea when we hm; ranky policiaus coinancing thm the irovernment should inircha- iiir magnificent railroad systei mil transport freight free and p. sengersata half a cent per mi. . and demagogues demanding tl. ' all taxes shall be raised by a dire . tax on real estate. I t such ii" i assume the control of our count and this good government, whi t has been established by the exj rience of the ages, by the om-: shadowing providenoe of (Jod no J by the most profound wisdom ' men would become as the thinr? that were, and front such visioi ary minds no other government, worth the name, could be evolved. ....OIF Reeling atonic, or :oildren who w ant nl: . ine up. should take DHOWN S llt UlTTEKS. It is pleasaut to take, cures Malaria In. SetiUou. liiaouiUtsa Mil liver CQUbioluUk will find yoursell stronger by for j