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vol.:viii. UNCOLNTON, N. C, FRIDAY, OCT. 7, 1894. NO. 24. 4;3S!0fl0JP33 . niojj "!! I.I H'l in BlO.nS T)HT Ml-j i 'MliUI'j JI ' JUpt-'II ' JO IMJIIO HUM .II '"jiKiK jo -,t.vi.. -ajjj jo en BEL WOOD INSTITUTE Prepares boys lor tin; Jsjopomoro ;!;lss :l; 'j'tini I y Colhr; and girls lor the enior C':i nt (Jroen-boro IVniah: College. Kxcellunt advantages in liu vUi(Iv of vocal ami instrumental .MUSIC Ti roc.-J. irnf :i ix-t.iou. s i;.-! u. !! k 'k. (?. Cll.it AM l!l;ilt li'. IM.-1 ( (( .r : I..! '.. r!u.i it'ul fuifion in J'jii liti rouif-e ?7 ') lo-j.h. !i'i t,.m f iMlS Alt,". P" ( J.tt;!0.Mle. giv'!)e U,!r t I M-M i,);..;. ;ii Tiv V n in 's a n p . C H A R O T T E COLLEGE Of MUSIC AND ART. IS-. SOUTH TiJYON SCHOOL mil MUSICAL TRAINING . . fv . IN ThF Southern Stales. THE MUST IMPKOYFD EUROPEAN METHODS Many fr e antaneti. Modem L-tuj. mie. s buiiih: ony t . ; tl- i . . ' jialivo to.i iu rs ' ' IOA!iI)IN(l Aeconinuid.i! if us for unn rcsis1'pt la'.) Shitit C- i - l'.!illiiip. Kh rv i!uli i it tii v( -ui i r. -' --i,i s i ; f.. in : i'AlNTINd, : l)liA ViN(j, htu I IM M !''!) N . i ' italo'.Uf .mi ppii:aiion. .m m Hd.!;.--; (WlibS ( A :'.' 7 A ".' fi,;-rfr,r e. 'm,.andre ws : : '.n.. .-v .. .. v Win.'. -';.- M ' 'Jctnil 1 Valors in Oak Parlor '. Suits of siv , f.ro, '2i r, to 2(M Tl HlDiiHUAUDS irons .K'.iia .... -;7.".o EXTEliSIOS TABLES Ohin;i Closets sir, f)a 1 . on. -. 0' f if U-r ClIaMH r . r Easels and icture s;i -o ",' St."") (Hi, Music 1 . l:s ..it 1 s; l, nt, 1.50 to lL'.tUi !a v -oi v W.U.U ():-k O.ih'is, So na t M). ()Jt!aiis, lo sl.iO n:. !'iH:n" SJL'.rIM to JSoo.no. Tli is is a .iireat sale and yon lnako a LTcat .mistake if yon l'ail to take . advaitage of it ALL letters jiroujptly answer ed; ri :i dhcc 'or particu lars,, . . 10 ;ioi 18 "V0a Tr-ttle St, CHARLOTTE, JY" (7. Jan. !(, isi. m ut .i t,., in.... ... ,..7L. .IIuc; .). K 'IiOij . '!ii..u(i ...j pil unnvui 3m jo pajna sba njj osikIojiooi3 ; j. joHnoKojfjAi 1 u i v i a ti o H.aniv jo I Professional Cards. !j. w.sain.m.d., I lias !iv!tc- !: :':!';: art! of fess his s'rvi!.- .s j!ivs:ci:i'i io th j ciljvii ; i L'li'';);-!:' ii .! !!! smj lOUl'd iU cu:! : ! v. ! e..:1.; " " !""I,in' ! March 7, '.) lv DENTAL NOTICE. !'. A. V. AVxa?-. .- r v. ill l- a his oiri.ro at L!?o' ;', .lua', Aw jjis, ().,' oi-o'. 1 ( r, Fib i uai 5 Apr i'. S ;i ( sa Mt. 'S0H3, .lu!y. S ; u ::!:. r N nlfcl ,1 ana ?r.V, M arr-5 r a:' M ' v. ! at!5 ra -ti ;a'o. Who has noUuneivu tins laisery -t'.-uisi'd lv 1 1 1 o in tho stomacn which an inactive f shnrgisli liver failed to cany THE Ptff.VrNT!- ro CURE. IS -jtf liquid or j-owdov, whieli gives (Uiick action to the liver and carries oil' the Lile hy :i mild move ment of the bowels. It is no pur gative or griping medicine, but purely vegetable. Many people take "pills more take Simmons Liver Regulator. "I lmvp been a victim to niliousncus foe years, ;uul xx'iWr trying Viu i.xi rom'lk iny onlv success Vii in tlic uso of Sim mons 1ivt-r IU ul:tor, wliich never failed to relieve v. 1 speak not of myself, alone, but my whole family." J. M. FlI.U man, iSclm.i, A l;t. IIhh our 7. Stump in rl on wrapper. J. II. ZKILIN & CO., l'luhuUlphi., Pa. J Caveats, aivl Tr.i.ie-Marks r btnir.c i, ?n.i all Tat- J cnt business conilucteii ft-r MoorsTl Fees, i 'Our Office is Opposite U. S Patent office J $ ana wc ciin severe pnient in less nine tlun those remoir from Washington. ... . . Send moilcl, drawing or photo., with descnp- Jtion. We advise, if raientable or not, tree of 5 t cbarjrc. Our fee not due till patent is secured. A Pamphlet "How to Obtain I'atcnts, with J cost of ' same in the U. S. and lorcign countries 5 sent free. Address, riDD DiTtNT Office. Washington. D. C M O K I Y A n w s: s: ltuiiKr S,rIi Anwuf r. ,1 Uy lh I.MHiiH ami Smhi1Ih of oar Texlle I lrl SjrxcuRe, N. Y. C iuif-r. THE QUESTION'S. Better in which particular t Whose factories will it set to vork ? It will not increase t!ie demand for labor at lnunH. It will not start a snodo now factory at home. THK ansWkrs. Tne following exhitiir. is a sam ple of the uniform replies to the aboye questions made bv the in dustrial enterprisers of the coiintrv The following items relate wholly to the revival of business in the texilo industry, as reported main ly by the Tex ile World, a trade publication: The Providence Worsted Mills, Providence, It. I., are now running to full capacity and on full time, and have orders ahead for a period of two months. The woolen mill at Niantie, . 1 is soon to be operated after a shut down of several years, it has hecn leased for the manufacture of yarns. The Gregory Woolen Mil!,Wick- toru, li l, which is now running on full time, is crowded Vith or ders tor new goods, The Stonewall Cotton Mills Company, Stonewall, Mass., is put ting in new machinery. The Ruddy Thread Company Worchestvr, Masa., will end a KW) by 50 ieet dye house, two stories with boiler house attached,. Bliss, Taft $ Co., of Norwich, Conn., woolen waste manufactur- ers, have arranged io loeaio a branch otlico at Niagara Falls. The now Dilling Cotton Mills, Kings Mountain, N. C, will lie in operation in about two or three weeks. The Baltic Mills Company, iai- tield, N II, has enlarged its plant. The East Pond Manufacturing Company, Newport, Me., is to add ten more looms to the woolen mills, which will give an" nut put of one-third more capacilv than now The Nemadji Woolen Mills, a n 3 w corporation at superior, is.f is capitalized at sfL'0,0(M) The machinery of the iiivers-ide Woolen Company at Lebanon, . II, is being increased, At a recent meeting of the stock holders of the Modonu l-otton Mills, Gastonia, N C, it was decid- 1 A . x - -A 1 -.,.1 eu io pui in ii none .mi.-, ,.imi 'A (MX) more spindles. Hurst A: Kogers, manuiVictiirers of tapestry carpets at Philadelphia contemplate putting in additional looms. The erection of a cotton mill is ctaitemiiaie(i m iiiumi, "u. The Hartwell Woolen Mill, Old Town, Me, will be improved and new machinery added. An addi tion 20x12 and another story are being built. The Lowell, Mass.. Machine Shop has orders on hand tor '.(' ring spinning frames from the Tremont and Suffolk, and one for like machinery for the Duffle Mills? of Fall River. Enlargements are being made to Rhodes Brothers' factory at Aston Mill, Pa. The Edgemount Company, of Omaha, Neb., is building a woolen mill at Edgomount, Neb., and will begin producing in three months. The Linden Manufacturing Com pany, Davidson, N C, is making plans for enlarging its mills by the addition of more looms and other machinery. A movement is in progress at Tocoa, Ga, indoised by the city council, to build a .f2fK)XK0 cotton factory. Foreign capital will be interested. A company has been organized aioauh. , t t f net nre woolen eoods. A A Jra- Boise is president; M A Scheldrup secretary, and C M bpraigue, trea surer. , ",J UIU uig j 1,1111 tttJiBwraiown Pa U Wagley is about to utart a small knot goody plant at Hanni bal, Mo. A new company has been incor T . -r . . ,1 i. T .1, fwiuvchj at uamesviiie, Ua., to manufacture knit underwear. They commenced manufacturing Sep- lemoer 1st. The hosiery mills are reported as about to be built at Readinsr and Wonielsdorf, Pa, Tliu Nnareth Mjfacturing Company of Nazareth iV, has let the contract for additional bujld lugs. " Tlie filobe Knitting Mills, Nor ristown, Pa, have completed a three-story addition, and new ma chinery is neingput in and will be in operation in a fevi days. The Nonotuek Silk company in tends building an addition to its mill at Hartford, M ass. I he woolen mill at East Lyon, j H I which has been idle for sever al years, has been leased to Alfred Purdick and Georgo Law ion, who will manufacture yarns. It is un derstood that thev have orders ahead for ;t year and that they will start up the mill as soon a possi ble. The Pineville Cotton Mills. 7 Pineville, N C, have been sold to Stephen A Jenks, of Pawtucket, R I. The mills will be doubled in size. Th3 (Jiobe' Mill, Clark & Co., proprietors, Augusta Ga., manu facturers of yarns have lately put in forty looms, and will manufac ture drills, sheeting, etc. They expect to commence operation in thres weeks. The woolen mills at Nmntic, RI are soon to be operated, after a shutdown of seveinl years,. Albert Purdick and Georgo Law ton have loased i he mills to manufacture varus. A new mill, the Tuchapahaw, is being l)Uilt noar Welford, S C It will be five stories high, HOA feet long and 100 feet wide, with a ca eaciU of 30,000 spindles. Nearly all the stock (.f 100,000) in the new Melrose Cotton Mill, at Raleigh, N. C, has been taken,and the work on the factory will prob. ably commence this fall. The new addition now being built to the Odell Manufacturing Company's mill. Concord, N C, is to be a cloth and slasher building, 1 wo stories high, rr.o0 feet. Fif y four Whitin looms will be put in and 1,800 more spindles for manufacturing white (doth. About. $25,000 a re being expend "d by the Kilburn Knitting Ma chine Company in enlarging its plant at Martinsburg, W Va., and erecting o dyeing plant. The Forsyth Dyeing Company of New Haven, Conn., is adding knitting machinory for the manu facture of hosiery. Kelly Sc Elser is the name of the! new concern running a knitting mill rt Wakegeld street, German town, Pa. The Roxford Knitting Company manufacturers ot men's and wo men's underwear, has been incor porated at Philadelphia, with a loot.; til ctnV r,f krfT)t A movement for the establish ment of a knitting mill at Madi son, Ga., has been inaugurated. A proposition from Colonel Becker of Snapping Shoals, for the remov al of his plant will probably be ac cepted. The Patent Knitting Mdl is a new concern just started in Tow anda, l'a. J Taylor, of No 835 Arch street. Philadelphia, reports the sales of knitting machinery to James A Parr, of Amsterdam. N Y ; A Boyle A: ro; John Meir, of Valdese, N 0 ; .Joseph W Durbin ; the Patent Knitting Mill of Towanda, Pa; the Forsyth Dyeing Company. of New Haven, Conn., Kelly and Elser, of Germantown, Pa., and Pfeiffer's ., Mill of Riverside, N. J The Star Knitting Company and II Strausse Knitting Works, Chi - J ertz er A- li.. .. .... ... i...:i e... . livdick RiitoMi.it .V L,;4:.. ma chines for ladies' and men's ribbed underwear. iur. james a i'arr is starting a new mill at AmaUrdam, sNT. Y. for the manufacture or hosiery uTiug w Larlmorr, phjiieal auector of Y. M. CL A.JIfca Motneis ,ow V B. M opnoieutiouily Blra to athletea, gyanasti. hiov- OU8I8, toot hall plavera aud ti, profeffftion in geuernl tor biuit, fliua ftml dislaoatkiDH; alo tor earauaau and atiffuew of thtj luuaolea. When applied before the part become swollen it will efjeot a cute ia oue half the time usually requir- u. ror iale bv Dr. w nm00 Druggest. Whr ut VKolaileH. While invention has produced many substances which in part re place wood and other orgauio ma terials, the fact remains hat man is to-day almost aa dependent for hi comfort and very life on the uegetable world as were bis ances tors in more primitive times. The anatomists have had long disputes as to man's place in the scale of food consumption, whether he is properly omnivorous or not Whether carnivorous or vegetarian, his food derives its ultimate origin m the wonderful chemical decom positions and syntheses effected by the vegetable kingdom. The high est triumphs of synthetic chemis- try have not yet succeeded in pro ducing his food from the chemical elements. The production ot self-support ing aquaria, consistinn of tanks of water in which plant life and fish life are so exactly balanced tnat there ia a miniature eelf-support- iner world within the four glass plates, has been a favorite scienti fic amusement with many. On our globe we see a s;m.iliar thing in the relations of the animal and vegetable kingdoms. Unfortun ately, man is not content with ex terminating wild animals; he is not satisfied with utilizing for himself all vogetable nature, but he exterminates most recklessly the forests whose leaves are taking care of his own vitiated respiratory products. Tho earth oontaina plant ana at- imal life, each one taking care of the products of tho life of the oth er kind. The animal expires car bon dioxide gas, the product of the combination of oxygen of the air with the carbon of the body. In a plantless globe this gas would con stantly increase in the atmosphere to the eventual deterioration of the air; but the plant life disposes of this product, separates, the carbon from the oxygen, and still more wonderful, effects oue of the most difficult of syntheses, aud uuitea the carbon with hydrogen, produc ing vegetable substanou or differ ent kinds. The purification of the air by plants, owing to the enor mous volume at the atmosphere and its relatively slow contamina tion, is of secondary importance to the productou of plant sub stance. On the oroducts of Tege tation man depends for neary ev erything, for food, raiment, and heat. Not content with reckless deforestation, he draws upon the accumulated stores of the pre ceeding geological eras, and in burning coal, probably petroleum and natural gas, U drawing upon the remains of the vegetation of the carboniferous and other ages. Plants by their vital power effect two specially difficult chemical ac tions the decomposition of car bon dioxide gas, and then combine the seperated carbon with hydro gen' Absolutely no practical way of doing these thing9 has been as yet found by man. It is only by a laboratory experiment that either of these two reaction! is carried out. It may be said that every steam engine depends for its fuel on decomposed carbon dioxide gas and every petroleum lamp repre- sents the utilization of the decom cage, navrt put in a full line of Nye position and subsequent eynthasia which we have spoken of. In tho matter of food, man is still more dependant on the vegetable world. Very few artificially produced food product have ever been made.and these few may have their origin traced to gome vegetadle product. The glucose factories use a product of vegetation as the base of their operations. Until we succeed in bringing chemistry to a point of yerfectioa hardlv dreamed of hv the most visionarv, man will con tinue to depend upon the soil for his very life. He my selfishly ioei tnat all this ia of interest only ror subsequent generations, but to every enlightened mind the reck leea' waste of vegetable resources among which may be included coal, petroleum, and natural gas,is highly repugnant. Wben a SXmii U niicoew. Let a man in business le thor oughly fitted for the position he occupies, alert to every opportuni ty and embracing it to its fullest possibility, with his methods fixed on honorable principles, and he is a successful maul writes Edward W Bok m the October Ladies' Home Journal. It doesn't matter whether he makes one thousand dollars or a hundred thousand dol- ars. Ile makes a success of his position. He carries to a success ful termination that which it has been given him to do, be that great or small. If the work he does.and loes well, is up to his limitations he is a success. If he does not work up to his capacity, then he fails, just as he fails, too, if he at tempts to go beyond his mental or physical limit. There is just as much danger on one side of man's limit line as there is on the other. The very realization of one's ca pacity is a sign of success. SPECIMEN OASES. C. H. Clifford, New Cesel, Wis., was troubled with neuralgia and rlioumHt'sm Lii stomach was disordered, his liver whs affected to a alarming degn e, Hieiite fell away, and he was lerriMy reduced in flesh and strength. Three hollies of elecs trie titters cured hini. Edward Sbepherd, Harri.sburg, 111. Lad running sore on bis leg ot eight enrs' standing Used throe botiles -f Electric bitters aad seven boxes of Buck lea's arni ca ealvft, and Lis leg is -ound and well John Speaker, Catawla, , bud tie largo fever sores on bu let?, dcto4 inid lie whs incurable. Oue bottli t e'ctric bitters and one lx ot huclen's Arnica Salvo cured him entirely. botdaiJ. Lawing's Drugstore. (law lbtt nrpliiH ua Made Away with Ity I lie Republican. The Democratic congressional campaign committee has issued an interesting statement showing the manner in which the Republicans made away with the enormous sur plus in the Treasury turned over to them by the Democratic admin istration in 18S9. A comparison of the debt statement issued March 1, 1889, with that issued by the Treasury March 1, 1S93, when all the items included in the latter aa available funds are added to the former, shows that Mr. Cleveland's first administration left a surplus of $330,348,916.12 in the Treasury. This enormous sum was not nam ed in the statement of 18S9 for the reason that at that time the Dem ocrats did not include the gold re serve, the subsidiary coin and oth er funds in their statement of a vailable cash in the Treasury. The Republicans, however, after squan dering in three years $47,997,807.32 in paying a piemiumon bonds and wasting money in other directions found it necessary in order to make i favorable statement of the con dition of the Treasury to revise the methods of accounting, and added the gold reserve, the subsidiary coin and other moneys held for the redemption of notes to the statement of available cash. If the same form of statement used by the Democrats had been re tained, it would have shown that there was not a dollar of available cash in the Treasury. The statement goe9 on to show that from Juiv 1, 1891, to the close of the Harrison administration the Treasury was practically bank rupt. The last statement issued in 1893 places the net cash balance at 24,123,0S7.SS and of this am ount $11,497,839.74 was subsidiary coin. The Republican adminis tration had started with Hundreds of millions and wound up with dimes and nickels. The jieed fa r an issuance of bonds was apparent long before the close of the admin istration, but Mr. Harrison pre ferred turning over a bankrupt Treasury to his ' successor rather than call attention to the misman agement which had brought about suoh disastrous results." In summing up tho differences in the financial management of the two adminiafral ions the state ment shows that, including the gold reserve, the democrats turned over to Harrison $330.34S.!U(;.12 as available cash, while four years later the Republicans turned over to the Democrats but 1G2,493,20 78. having reduced the so-called Hurplus $107,030,728.31. The pan- ie of 1893 whs. th .iinwnt hows, clearly attributed to the condition of tho Treasury and the Meet upon the public credit of Republican extravagance. Land mark. Mm O Moieer J&litor of . Sunbeam. Stdigmau, Mo., who nan - ed (Jrover Cleveland for Um.IW- idency m Nov., 1882. while lit, Mayor of Buhalo. N. Y., ih mtiioet- BHfic in hiN praise of Chaiiiherlain'a Colic, Cholera and Dlairl ui Rem edy. He Niyn; "1 have ued if.Jor ihe p8l fiv jeaiu and rounder, it. the bent preparation of the kiiuijn market. It is as mLhiI ua .miwui Hid roffee in Hum section. It is an aiticle of merit and should be, bf?ed in evry household. For mthi . hy Dr. W-.-I . Grouse Vfjamut CTarrylng UorllileH Men. I ask not that a girl in lov;.w;!i i' young fellow should weihaei point, writes Edward W. dioL i . the October Ladies' Home Journal Women were not created tint tv wa v tnd love is not conducing to thai sort of all-around, open-eyed. -rare and prudence. But one thing. I-do isk of her: Ifsho marries a worth less fellow who has no business ability with her eyes open, she must not complain afterward if she finds that all the other grace -of manhood areas uaught. in the ong run, before that one great in ompettney in a man. An incom petent business man is only a shade better than a morallv deb- dent man, but only a shade. care not what a young man eari s when he agks a girl to marry him if it is only five dollar a e ': so long as.ho has a sinceie Iom for his work and an honorable i.- termination to succeed in it. Ti; live dollars p?r week will soon grow into fifty dollars. OurloiiH Things In Till SIuk Mrs. J. S. Miller has a beautiful silk ouilt. one sauare of which represents four generations. Tie oldiest piece in the squarj was ut out. of a dress worn by rtie wife a Moravian minister 124 years ag Mr. W. P. Ormsby's children ai the youngest members of the loi generations represented. Winston Sentinel. : A farmer in Sefferson town sir.; not far from Boon's mill, got u early Sunday morning last and :'- ter cutting up a lot of wood for t' good wife, took his horse and we: to o field in the rear of the planta tion and went to ploughing. He might have put" in all da but his wife went over to a neij bor's about 9 o'clock to ascerta if she could send a message town. When told it was Sunday, (' made a bee line for the field-at 1 brought the husband home in hurry. - Both had lost a day and were sure that it wa9 Saturday. Hh neighbors had fun with him all the afternoon. Greensboro lie-cord.
The Lincoln Courier (Lincolnton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 7, 1894, edition 1
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