ftfiififllif T VOL IX. LINCOLNTON. N. (!.. FRIDAY, JUNE 14. 1895. .NO.T What is Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants uud Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It in a harmless Mibstitute lor Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. U is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays fevcrishncss. Castoria prevents . vomiting Sour Curd, euros Diarrhoea nud Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and llatulcncy. Castorbi assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas toria U the Children's Panacea the Mother's Friend. Castori Ctt. " Ca.storl J. 1st ti;i exct llc-nt medicine f.r chil dren. M. .tKt i a have repeatedly told n.o of its jruod effect i.piju ihclr chiltirtu. L,j. Q. C. Osoonn, Lowell, Ma.-s. ' Castoria U the li.-.t remciy for chiMnsn of vt.kh I o.m acquainted. I Lope tho day ii i.ot jr Jir-tant v. hen mothers wil 1 consider the real L.urvit of tlmir children, and uso Castoru in :iu.l i f the vai iousiiuack nostrums which arc Ji stroj Inj their loved ones, by forcinjopiiim, t:.rihinc, soothing syrup and other hurtful b.f;ti.ts Jon thi-ir throuts, thereby sudiu Ucaj tu premature graves " Du. J. F. Kin-chloe, Cuuway, Ark. The Ceataur Company, T7 Murray Street, New Yoxk City. 1 JUDGE WALTER CLARK' I "Cures when aii Nnrih Cnioliiiu Suptfciiic Ccari. W. lIEii Ci AKK, assolI.vtk Jt:sTirE. RALi.ian C, Jan. 2S. We hav( finniil the Eloctrnpoiso vtry valuable . cluily tor ci.il'iri'ii. i got one last ilay.and 1 am I i.;;.p sa.ii h ee ilines Its Cf-t already in doctors' r.nrt t . .I. iir tiv tils. Fr m mv x'ripr.ce with it, nn J ob- i -,i i. I car. f. I c ummcua ic. t I V..ui truly, WLTtu Clark. gxWV V V Bo YOU SMOKE? s;7- ': HAVE vou SmOKED? "WiLIi Y-DII SM353S ? "Old Red House"' SmOKiNG TOBACCO ; MILD & SWEET- Tiy it t in e. isk for if. HI UN iOU WILL DEMAND IT. Nice pipe and beat stem given uh each l' . z. fa k tot 5 cents. V Merchants Do you wnli a quick seller ? H so write for temple of 'OLD RED HOUSE" Siiokirjg Tonatco M tnulactnied by JWWijfJtOp. flILLSBOKO M- C. A also have a good line of chew luj: tobacco. Write for samples and fa;tuy pijcea. 3m. Whiie in Topeka last AJrcD-,- E T ; barker, a mrouiiuenf, newspaper uin ot li vCcne. Kan., was taken wiaU cbtilera moibu9 very eeverely. The night rleik at the hotel where lie wan ctt.ppln happeiiMt to have a bottle or Chambei bun's Uol'c, (Jhol- Htid D'urrl'of a Rpniedy and "gave hlrn three do ea which relieved JiQi aod be thinks saved his life. Evtry f-imiiy should keep this iem in their iiorae at all time-. No "ne can till bow soon u may l I'mied. u Cot,ts lmt ft tnfle and .miJj be the means of saving mnch . suiting and pertapa the life of jome metnber.of the family. 25 and cent bottles for eale by Dr W h Crouae, Druggist. Castoria. " Castoria U so well adapted to children that I recommend it u-j superior to any prescription kiio u to me.'1 II. A. Archer, M. D., Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. "Our physii.ii.nj iu the children's depart ment have spokeu highly of their experi ence in their outside practice with Castorii. and although wo o.ly Lava among -;;r medical supplied what is known ad regular producu, yet we are freo to confess that tha merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upou it." United Hospital ant Dispensary, Boston, Mass A h en C. Smith, Pre s , USES AND EN00RSE5 THE i tlv: fall.-." - investigation ' inVlteo 1-31. ospe- ; sura I l BOOK FREE. Electrolibration Co., 343 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW vork. 83 V V ft P rof e sso n al Cards. DENTAL NOTICE. Di. A. V4 Alexander vnfill a tus office at Liucolatoo, June, w gust, Octobers December, Feb tuary and April. Will in Mr. flolly, Ju'y, beptembpr, Novetr ber, Jiinuity, March aud May. Patronage solicited. Terms Cisli aud moderate Ji Dad Condition to a great calamity threatening thThe prisoner paused a few seconds, people of the South. Thete mj ground for this fear. In no sec; tion of the country ia tbero greater ueed for Liver Medicines than m the South, and this has encouraged unset upuiouj persons to take rt vantsigeof people' misery and effer them all eorts of stuff as a cure all lor Liver tronblep. Their crime ie g'eater besause they rausr, bavw aeoo'Jiplicf s te be'p them in thij nefarious wok. Their preparations aiefod to i he dtugjits at a low price. And the big profit to tbe drugaist. ts thn road by which tbey reach the public. Drugets of hih houor will not be a party to uco an outrage, Beware of any oealer who :ells jou that any Liver Medi cs .no is just, the jsame, or as good as Simmons Lier Regulator, put up ly J. H. Zeilin Co, You know it by the R-d Z ou tbe package, These prFperaiinns ate not the same t,oi as cood, Stick to the Old Fnend, Your health and life t-hould be woitb something to you ELKCTRIO "BITTERS. This remedv is becoming so well known and s popular as to need no special men tion. AU who "have used Electric Bitters sing the fame song of prai?e. A purer medicine does not eiist and it 19 guaran teed to d.i all that isclaimpd. Electric Btter9 will cure all diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will remove Pimples, Boils, Salt Kheura ana other ancctions caused t-y iinpure blod. Will drive Malaria from the system and prevent as well as cure all Malarinl levirs. For euro of Headache, Constipation and IndiseHion try Electric Bitters Entire satisfaction guaranteed, or money refunded. Price 60 cents 'and fl.00 per bottle at A. S. Lce'a Drue Store. ForMalaria, Liver Trou ble, or Indigestion, use BROWN'S IRON BITTERS II 1 11 GHKAT DK-rSTltOYEH. .A. rI""oiiill Chnrge. '"'Prisoner at the bar, have you anything to say why sentence ot death shall not be passed upon! von'" i A eolemn hush fell over the ; chowed court room, and eVerv ! j person waited in almost breath le s expectation for an answer to l. ie judge's question? j ill the prisoner answer? Is there nothing that will make him show some sign of emotion? Will he maintain the cold indif ferent attitude he lias shown through the long trial, even lo th place of execution? Such were the question that passed through the minds of those .who had followed the case from day to day. The judge still waited in digni fied silence. Not a whisper was heard anv- i where, and the situation had be come painfully oppressive when jthe prisoner was seen to move Ibis head was raised, his hands were. clanched, and the blood had rush e I into his pale, care-worn face his teith were firmly set, and into hia haggard eyes earn 3 a flash of light. Suddenly he arose to his feet and in a low, firm but distinct voice said : "I have! Your honor, you have 'ask -id me a question, and I now ask, a? the last favor on eartti, that you will not intenupt my answer until I. am through. "I stand here before this bar convicted of the willful murder of my wife. Truthful witnesses have testified to the fact that I was a loafer, a drunkard and a wretch ; that I returned from one of my long debauches and fired the fatal shot that killed the wife I had sworn to love, cherish and protect. While I have no rememberence of committing the fearful, cowardly and inhuman deed, 1 have no right to complain or comdemn the ver dict of twelve good men who have acted as jurors in this case, for their verdict is in accordance with the evidence. "But, may it please the court, 1 wish to show the court that I am not alone responsible for the mur der ot my wife?" This startling statement creat ed a tremendous sensation. The judge leaned over the desk, the lawyers wheeled around and faced the prisoner; the jurors looked at each other in amazement, while the spectators could hardly sup and then continued 111 the same firm, distinct voice: I repent, your honor, that I am not the only one guilty of the murder of my wife. The judge on this bench, the jury in the box ihe lawyers within this bar, and moe" of toe witnesses, including the pastor of the old church, are also guilty before Almighty God? land will have to appear with me before hi3 judgment throne, where we oil shall be righteously judged. " If twenty men conspire to gether for the murder of one per son, ihe law power of this land willl arrest the twenty, and each will be tried, convicted and execu ted for the whole murder, and no onetwentieth of tho crime. "I have been made a drunkard by law. If it had not been for le. gahzed saloons ot my town I never would have become a drunkard ; my wife would not have been murdered; I would not be here nowr, ready to be hurled in to eter nity. Had it not been for the human traps set out wit" the con sent of the government, I would nave wen a wwr umn, mui.c- . , trious workman, a tender tather, loving Husband. But today ny home is destroyed, my wife mur dered, my little children Go'd bless and care for them cast on the mercy of a cold and a cruel 'world, while I am to be murdered by the strong arms of the State. 'Fcr one year our townwa9 with" out a salooni. For one year I wiu a sober man. For one vear mv J wife ami children were. surprenielv happy, and our little home a per- I'-ct paranise. ' u.0w remonstrance against reopening Ihe M,,M11'8 " ' ouri town- The iiama ,',f one-half of this jury can be found todfy on the petition certifying to the good moral char acter (?)of the niniseller, and falsely saying that the sale of li quor wag 'necessarv' in our town. The prosecuting attorney in this case was the one w!k so eloquent ly pleaded v ith th s court for the licences, and the judge who sits on I his bencli, and who asked meifj I had anything to say b f ore sen- j tance of death was passed upon me. granted the license' The impassioned words of the prisoner fell like coals of fire upon the bear's of ihos present, and many of the spectators and some of I he lawyers were'moved to tears- Ane Jue Inftae a motion as it to stoP "' further speech on the pait ot the prisoner, when the speaker hastily said: 4,Nol No! your honor, do not close my lips; I am nearly through, and they are the last words 1 shall evr utter on earth. 1 began my downward career at a saloom bar legalized and pro. iected by the voters of this com mon wealth which has raceived annually a part of the blood mon ey from the poor, del udod victims. Afler the State had made me a drunkard and a murderer, I am taken before another bar the bar ot justice(?) My the same power of law thaj legalized the first bar,and now the law power will conduct me to the place of execution and hasten my soul into eternity. I shall appear before another bar the judgment bar ' of God, and there you who have legalized the traffic will have to appear with me. Think you that Ihe Great Judge will nold me the poor weak helpless victim of your trafiiic alone responsible for the murder of my wife ? Nay; I, in mv drunken, frenzied irresponsible condition have murdered one, but you have deliberately murdered your thousands Lnd the murder mills are in full operation to-day with .your consent. " All of you know in your hearts that these words of mine are not the ravings of an unsound mind, but God Almighty's truth, The liquor traffic of this nation h re sponsible . for nearly all the mur ders, bloodshed, riots, poverty miserj', wretchedness and woe. Tc breaks up thousands of happy homes evpry year, sends the hus band and father to prison or to the gallows, and drives countleo3 mothers aud 'little children into the world to suffer and die. It furnishes nearly all the criminal business ot this and every other court, and blasts every communi ty it touches. ' You legalized the saloons that made me a drunkard and a mur derer, and yon are guilty with me before Gad and man for the mur der of my wife. 'Your honor, I am done. I am now ready to receive my sentence and be led forth to the place of ex ecution, and murdered according lo the laws of this State, You will close by asking the Lord to have mercy on my sou). I will close by solemnly asking God to open your blind eyes to the truth, to your individual responsibility, so that you will cease to give your support to thi-j hell-born traffic Ex. A LL FREE. , L . L.. . . Tlr ir ,., n 1 in ps wnn nave t a" l. - ajDisC0Very knoW lt, value, and toe who , J hnve not, have now tne opfwriuiu. m it Fro-. Oh'I on ihe aflveiifea uruKiv -nrl iet a Trial B tile Free Send youi namo and adores lo H, E. Ruckkn & o.. Chicaso, nnd pet a amrJe box or jjr King's Life PiUs Fre, 113 wll as a copy of Guide to Health and House! old Instructor, Free All ci which it guar anteed to do you good and costjounoth ing. J M Lawing, Druggist. FOR SOUND MOiW Mil. C?.4IKl.I4.F. AT COV. IJ TOX The loll) I 1(1- 10 1 free t lltT. (Continue I from ltit firf, ) But, suppose thechaii n mnd and that the business affair of t'le country haw bewn finllv ad justed to tho now standard, what will be the effect on our domestic trade? The prices of all things! will be nominally increased that is to say, it will require a greater number ol dollars to purchase a given amount of any commodity than it required before. There ap pears to be a. singular delusion in the minds of some upon this sub ject. Many good people appear to think that in some mysterious j mannar, which no one has yet at tempted to explain, the govern ment, by legislation or otherwise, can increase the price of Ine things they have to ?ell without! increasing the prices of the things they have t" buy. If I here is any financial necromancy by which the ono-sided increase ot pi ices can be accomplished, our free coinage friends ought to explain it to the people. The plain, every dav common sense view of this subject is the only correct one. If prices are increased solelv on account of' an increase in the volume of circu lation, or n account of a deprecia tion of the currency, without any change in the relation between the supply and demand of the commo dities to be exchanged, the in crease in prices will necessarily af fect, all things alike. If, therefore the farmer or planter receives a greater number of dollars for his crop of cotton or wheat, he w ill be compelled to pay a corresponding ly greater number of dollars for his agricultural implemtnts, for his clothing, and, in short, for every thing he purchases. Consequent ly, his profit, if he has any, will bear about the same relation to his expenditures that it bears now that is to say, if he now makes a profit of 10 per cent, he will make a profit of no moie than 10 per cent. then. Now it is out of the clear profits of his business that he must pay debts, and it therefore remains to be seen how much benefit he would ultimately derive from a nominal increase in the prices of commodities. He cannot control the prices of the commodities produced by him to the same extent that other pro ducers can control the prices of theirs, and it may be that the prices ot the things he is compelled to buy will be increased iu much greater proportion than the prices of the things he has to sell, aud if so, he will be a loser instead of a gainer by the change. It is contended, however, that prices ot commodities have fallen since 1873, aud that this reduction of orices has made it more difficult to pay debts now than it was iben- It is true that the prices of some, things have fallen, but it is equal ly true that the prices of some things have increased. It is not true, however, that our people owe any debts contracted as far back as 1S73, but it may be that some of our great corporations which is sued bonds before that date still owe them, but they have all been resunded at a low rate ot interest, so that our free coinage friends need not be disturbed on their ac count. The fundamental proposi tion of the advocates of tree coin age is that all values are measured and all prices are fixed and regu lated by the amount of redemp tion money in the country, and that the amount of paper currency or credit money, as it is sometime called, such as bank notes, govern ment noies, and other circulating media, exert no influence on the values or prices of commodities Having dogmatically asserted this principle, they proceed without further argument to the conclusiot that the legal demonetization ot silver of 1S73 and the legal estab lishment of the gold standard of value at that time ar the causes of the alleged in the prices of the commodities of this country, and thn, upon the tnery that hiiih price for tho necessaries of lit woiild le a blessing to the jK-opln, they appeal to the consumers ot agricuttur.il an. I mnnufaet ured product to unite with them m th" Hurt to secure the free ami 111 -limited coinage of all the il,er that the owners of bullion iiuy se (proper to present at the mints Even if we should admit the truth of their fiit proposition, tln-ir conclusion that thudemonetijatiiui of silver reduced price i founded upon the assumption of n fact which cannot be established The ! have wholly failed to allege, much less to prove, that silver actually constituted any part of there demption money in use or iu exis tence in this country before or at the time of that legislation. If it did not, then it is clear that its le gal demonetization did not and could not, in fact, reduce the am ount of such money in this coun try, and therefore cannot have re duced juices. It is well known personally to every gentleman in this audience who wh old enough to know what was transpiring in 1373 that there was not a dollar of silver in circulotion at that date. The assumption upon which the argument is based iu diametrally opposed to the historical and offi cial fact. The only metallic or re demption money in use here at that time was gold, which amount, ed to only $135,0H,000, including what the government w as using, whereas we now have about $625, 000,000 in gold, and 397,;525rt73 in full legal tender silver, besides about $77,000,000 in subsidiary silver coin. If therefore, prices have fallen since 1873, the decline has taken place in spits of the fact that oiu full legal tender metallic money has been increased until it now amounts to more than seven times as much as it did at that date, and consequently the alleged decline in prices must be attribut ed to some other cause than the demonetization of silver. These tacts prove not only that the de monetization of silver did not re duce the amount of redemption mcney in this country, but they I prove also that the fundamental uroDcsition of tho advocates of free coinagG is erioneous and prices are not Oxed or regulated by the am- ount of redemption money alone, for, if so, prices should have in creased since 1873. Substantially, the whole argu ment for free coinage, so far as it is addressed "to the lnnest people of the country, is based upon this flimsy foundation, upon an erron eous principle and a false assump tion of fact3. That the amount of money in circulation, or available for circulation, has moro or lss influence upon the prices cf com modities is not disputed by any body, but it is not the amount of metallic or redemption money alone that exerts this influence. If all other conditions remain the same, if the relations between sup ply and demand are unchanged, if the cost of production, transporta tion and financial exchanges are stable, an increase 01 decrease of the currency in circulation, or a vailable for circulation, will, to a certain extent, increase or decrease prices, as the case may be; but by the termslmoney" and "currency," in the connection, I mean every element that enters into and is u tilized in the complicated processes of buying and selling in the mark ets for products and the merean ile exchanges, whether it be gold. ilver, bank notes, United States aotes, checks, bills, or other forms .f credit, written or unwritted. J red it or confidence is an element ) far greater importance in fixing r upholding prices than the mere ltncunt of actual mon y in use, or ivaiiable for use; and, in fact, about 95 per cut. of the entire business of the Country ia trans acted without tin actual use of metallic money, r its paper rep resehtatives; and as to metallic money itself, whi ther in gold or silver, it i i.ot used to the extent f more tliHii 1 ptr cent.'in our hnsiness t r iin'ictions. In view of hese fact, which are as wella t:iblishcd n any oilier facts rfilat jtnj to our ci mim rcial and finan cial operation?, how absurd it is to contend that 1 ricei are fixed by the amount of ilmt particular kind of curivncv which d.Hj- not consti tute mor.; than one hundredth part of ihe whole. Im the broadest and nio-t comprehensive -ense the business capncil y and personal in tegrity of each individual consti tute a pa it of ihe tleclive curren cy t li e community in vhich ho lives, because these characteristics enable him to become a purchaser of commodities it h i to sell, al thoiih, at the tiin, no may have neither money nor property, ('red it is a purchasing power, and thi man who posses it competes in the uiitikets with the man who possess actual monev, and contributes as much as they do to the mainten ance of prices. To assort that prices are tixed by tho amount of redemption money alone is equiva lent to the assertion that it all thy silver dollars, subsidiary silver coin, silver coin, silver certificates. United States notes, Treasury notes, national bank notes, and every other form of credit were de stroyed, leaving nothing but tho ioM, prices would remain the same as they now are a proposition so preposterous upon its face that 1 presume no man with any reaard for his reputation would venture to make it except in a disguised form. (Coniiuui l on Li-t page.) i)r SK Scott, lilue Ridge, Har lison O., .Mo, savi : "For whoop nr co ch t fa :inlr-i iaii.' Ooilgb Remedy is excellent.'' liy inline it f el ihe disease is depiive i ol a. I d ninous ccn-r qu-Mices, Tone i noilii gei in pivu.g ihe itemed? to t'um, an it contains nothing inju-lion-. 13 met 51 rent ttotties tor siie by D W L Oroii-e Druggist. Blood and Skin Diseases Always R R R Cured. D DD- BOTANIC BLOOD BALIU never falls to cure all manner of Blood and Skin dis eases. It i tne great Southern building up and purifying Remedy, urd cures all manner of skin and blood diseases. As a building up tonic it U without a rival, and absolutely beyond comparison with any other similar remedy ever offered to the public. It is a panacea for all ills resulting from Impure blood, or an impoverished condition of tho human system. A single bottia will demon strate its paramount virtues. (57Scnd for free book of Wonderful Cure. Price, $1.00 per large bottle; $5 oo for six bottles. For sale by druggists; if not scad to us, and medicine will be sent freight prepaid oa receipt ci price. Address BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Qa. I have two little grandclilldr ;u wbo are teething this dot sammer weather and are troubled with bow el eompiaiotv 1 give them Cham- erlaiu's Colic, Cholera aud Diar-tbof-a Rerrjrdy and it acts 1 k charm. I eirneslfy recommeOd it for cb ldren with bcwel trouble. I a9 myself taki n with a severe at tack cf tiloody ibix, w th craopa and pa:D8 in rov s omacb, ooe-tblrd f h t.otile of this remedy cored an Within twenty four hoars I as OQC ' tied nod doing my tue work. Wife. V. L. DuiKiiMn. Bnaqri, lli-k'MMii 0 T. nn- For sale ty Dr w Ij (.'iie, D'nvgi. insrouY of tbe l vst leg islature. B;i one. Cnty t-n Onts. A ma', attractive pamphlet 160 pipe-, with ornamental over, d voted to the record f the last Leg ist tint , (. worst I egiMUore, save, hat ol 1808, ever assembled in the Slate. This twKik elvea its teoud plainly and trn hfally. It gUcs facts and names and is thoroughly rtlia' le. It bat teen prepared by some of the beat. Dem crath writers in tlu 'State, Fvery patriot, every dllz o and every Democrat sboold bav a copy Price 10 eta pr copy, i oat paiii. Lower prices by the hundtea. It not on sa'e at Bookstore or drug store, address : E M UZZELL, ' Printer aDd Binder, Ealeigb, N. O-