Newspapers / The Lincoln Courier (Lincolnton, … / July 12, 1895, edition 1 / Page 1
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ft Mi 9 3D VOL IX. LIN00LNT0N, N. C, FRIDAY, JULY 12. 1895. NO 11 IBf,iiifrt What 3 Catoria 13 Dr. Samuel Pitchers prescription for Infanta and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute ' for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. jt Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' U6e by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishuess. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures i TMarrhoea and "Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Catoriu assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas torla is the Children's Panacea tho Mother's Friend Castoria. "Oustoria. U aa excellent medicine for chil drvn. Mothers hare repeatedly told me of iU jowl tStftt upoQ tktlr children." Dr. G. C. Osgood, Lowell, Mass. " Gloria la the best remedy for children of yiUzh I am acquainted. I hope the day is not lardUUDt when mothers will consider the real fcu rest of their children, and use Castoria in stead of the various quack nostrums which aro destroy their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful aiiits down their throats, thereby sending Uein to premature graves.1' Pa. J. F. Kin chi lob, Conway, Ark. The Centaur Company, T7 Murray Street, New York City. JUDGE WALTER CLARK S USES AND ENDORSES THE TRAOC JfABK. Cure when all clao falls." North Carolina Supremo Conrt. WALTER CLARK, associate Justice. Raleioh, N. C, Jan. 26, i We Jrnve found the Electropoise very valuable l clutiy for children. I got one last May, ana I am sure 1 i huve iiavuil three times Us cost already In doctors' and 3 I drug more ims. rrom my experience wuu n, I j 4 gcxvatlon, 1 tlon, 1 can safely recommand It. Your truly. Do YouSMoKE? ! HAVE vou SmOKED? j "Old Red House" SmOKING TOBACCO i MILD & SWEET- I Try it once. Ask for it. THEN YOU WILL DEMAND IT. Nice pipe and bent stem given .with each 2 oz. sack for 5 cents. Merchants Do yon wish a quick seller? If so write for sample of ''OLD RED HOUSE" -raokiDg Tobacco Manufactured by 1 I ff 5l j HILLSBORQ N- C ' We also have a good line of chew .In tobacco. Write for samples and i factory prices. 3m. ; "7i ' -DENTALNOTICE, j Di. A. W, Alexander will be a jfcU office at Lmcolnton, June, Au ,8ct, October, December, Feb- i Tun' otiI I . 11 rrriii l lf ou4 4Jiil. Will UQ 1U iHoIly, jUV September, November, January, March and May. j Patronage solicited. Terms cash Uoa gjosJerate Exhausted Soils d are made to produce larger and better crops by the Q- use of Fertilizers rich 4 .... . vvnteiorour "Farmers Ouide, a 142-page uiusrxaica dook. av is brim full of useful informatfon for farmers. It will be sent free, and will make and save you money. Address, GERMAN KALI WORKS. o Nasuiu Street, Nw York- Or w-Arr frt is J Castoria. " C9toria Is s weB adapted to childrea that I recommend It aa superior to any prescription known to nie." H. A. Archxr, II. D., Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. " Our physicians in tho children's deparv ment have spoken highly of their experi ence in their outside practice with Castoria. and although we only have among our medical supplies what is known as regular products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon It." United Hospital and Dispkmsabt, Boston, Mass. Alum C. Smith, Pres., "8 Investigation Invited.. 1S94. I espe- J BOOK FREE. Electrolibration Co., 349 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW ORK. 83 tun uu W H Nelson, who is he drug business at Kingville, 1 has bo much confidence in Ch terlaiu's Oolic, Cholera and Diar a Rem edy that he warrants every bottle and offers to refund the money to any customer who is not satisfied atter using it. Mr, Nelson takes no risk in doing this because the rem edy is a certain cure for the diseas es for which it is mtendad and he knows it. It is for sale by Dr. W L Grouse, Druggist, IVotliiiiK" But Sleeves. Nothing but sleeves ; the young man grieves Over a proepect dim. Last night to his dear one he tried to propose, But the words so swet on his white lips froze, For ah ! she seemed to him Nothing but sleeyes. Nothing but sleeves ; the young man grieves Over a blighted lite. Though his love may be painfully strong and fast Warranted for six months to last ftow can. he haye a wife Nothing but sleeves ? Chamberlain's is the best of all. Vincent J Bark, oi Danbuiy, Iowa, has need Chamberlain's Cough Bern edy whenever in need of a medicine for cougba and colds, for the past five years and says : "It always helps me out. It anyone asks me what kind of cough medicine I nse, I reply, Chamberlain's that is the best or all. 25 and 50o bottles for 'sale by Dr W L Orouse Druggist in Potash. o 3 . i l 1- T A rt rn cJT rT5vO GOOD 3IOTHKHS. Hjiiii .3 ouch Wiiyn 'X'lioy are oiti Greatest Force. The greatest force in this coun try is a first-class mother. She lives longer aud stronger than any other character, for she mutilates her life by tho number of her chil dren. A prohibition mother who raises ten children ought to be e qual to ten prohibitionists. The Christian mother Mho raises ten children ought to be epual to ten Christians. The Democratic moth er who raises ten children ought to be equal to ten Democrats, and so on. In a few years each of these ten children becomes the father or mother cf a home, and each in turn live in their children the lives of their mother, and it will be but a short time until a first-class mother will be hundred times what she is. Mrs. Wesley was as much great er than one man as all her children combined were greater than one man. She has truly lived with and worked in Charles and John as she lived with and worked in her own body. If the women of this country will begin to hold children-raising conventions and get every mother in the fJnited States to join, pledging herself to raise a sober, Christian gentleman, it will be but a few years until the old drunkards and liars and thieves and whoremongers will die off, and the sons of these good mothers will take their places. I think we can breed up to a reform quicker than we can vote up to it for alter all we must depend upon our good breeding ior our good voting. A genuinely patriotic woman cannot do a better thing for this government than to multiply her self by one-half a dozen boys. I am sorry the genuine female wom an is to be extinct. I am sorry the whole thing is tending toward the man. Enough of the race is wearing breeches now. We need more men, but we have male ma terial enough to make our men if some fellow could invent a process for turning male things into men- If the whole world turns to men the thing will be very monotonous It the women are going to wear trousers and ride astride and hold office and make stump speeches and stand up in street cars, and be bankers and clerks, telegraph op erators and railroad conductors, policemen and politicians, where are our mothers going to come from? God has called women by nature to be the mothers of the race ; to be the housekeepers. It is a diffi cult thing for a woman to be a home keeper and an office-keeper ; to take care ot a babe and a bank ; of children and campaigns; of cradles and candidates; ot boys and ballots; of patches and plat forms. I am heartily in favor of woma'ns work in woman's sphere, and I believe in the enlargement of woman's sphere to the extreme Jfiovidential limit. I would not take from the plat-. form such women ha Miss Frances WUlard. I believe she is as truly a heavenapp minted instrument for the dissemination of right princi ples as any preacher in the coun try ; but 1 stand for the home and believe that anything that makes a draft upon the home is hurtful to our nation. I believe there are women who can work and ought to work in almost every sphere of life. The providential relations are such that when they occupy public work their private work ! does not suffer. I But the danger facing thi3 coun try is the tendency of our women , to reiire from womanhood. Our home life is becoming very rotten at this point. It seems that women ! prefer to be anything or evcry I thin? rather than the mother of a large-family of children, and, in (my judgment there is no higher ana nobler sphere. The children of this country ar6 being raised by this class ot people least compe tent to raise children. The edu cated and the wealthy and the higher classes of our people who are in condition to givo the best possible chances to children are tho very people wno have no chil dren. When we go on the residence streets, where tne stone mansions and the marble palaces are the pride of the city, we find here and there a child, but when we take the back streets of the cities among the poor classes, the yards are full of ragged, dirty urchins. The old proverb : 44 A fool for luck and a poor man for children', seems to be in full force. If the next generation of our children is to come from the lower and more ignorant classes wre will find our reformation a slow process. We are reforming at the top and de forming at the bottom, and as fast as our reformed die off their places are being taken by the deformed, and we have got an endless pro cess ahead of us. Marriage is becoming a mer chandise, cluba are substituted for homes, wives are becoming society ladies, children are unavoidable nuisances and destruction of life a habit. The few children who en ter the home are turned over to milk bottles and nurses in baby hood, fashionable colleges in youth and are given over to society,dress and amusement in young man hood and young womanhood. In stead of reading the Bible and saying their prayers at night the girls plait their hair in shucks for bangs and the boys plait their toes tor the toothpick shoes, and both go to sleep with a dime novel un der their pillow and a fiteen cent head on top of it. The old daddy is up to his chin in business and the mother in name up to her eyes in society and the children are swallowed in idle ness and feeding on dreams and dime novels and the whole thing is hurried toward the gate where humanity runs out. They have not sense enough to bo good. The brains have all run down into rheir feet and hands and all they can do is to play progressive euch re and dance. A few first-class mothers would head off this whole gang turn'all our dudes and dudeens into men and women. I haye no objection to women suffrage, but the woman who raises four boys for God and the right multiplies her vote by four. I am in favor of a woman being anything she wants to be ex cept the father of a family of chil dren, but my judgment is that the biggest thing a woman can be is a first class wife and mother. I would rater have been the mother of the Wesleys, or of Wash ington or Garfield, than to have been chairman of every political convention since the war, or presi dent of society's Four Hundred for'a life time. If I couid mother this country I would not be uneasy about our laws. The boy who has been properly mothered will never feel the pxessue of the civil law. The fewer homes we have the more prisons we need. When a boy sings: "Where is my careless mother to-day," the mother must sing : "Where is my wandering boy tonight." When I see a mother on the train with a sweet babe in the arms of a negro nurse and a poodle in her lap, I think the dog and the baby both need a mother. The secular press occa sionally pokes fun at the careless mother. Here is a characteristic poem on the twentieth century home : "Rocfc-a bye, my baby, mamma is gone Out to a caucus and will not be back till morn She wore your father's trousers, She looked so awful queer : Rock-a-bye baby, your father is still here.,? I heard some one sing at a bote some weeks ago a companion to ' ''After the ball." This is the sub stance of the little song: A socie ty mother had left a sick baby to go to a ball and on her return had found tho baby pale in death, "af ther the ball " What a picture of the moral condition of this country mothers have left their homes for society and moral death has aston ished them. A drunken son and gambler and debauchee "after the bail." Sam P. Joxes. SScionoe 31ttle tlve Him Otti- Ile IN ot Otti'e Dny tle K-ileiAoe of I Ii Do votion. "George," said the yong woman regretfully, but with determina tion, "your remarks pain me, but I am no weak creature who gives way to her feelings upon slight provocation. That is not the modern girl's method ; she is train ed in a defferent school, Ae 1 understand it, you have decided to break the engagement." He bowed his head to signif y that see was right. "All is over between us, accord ing to your statement. We can neven be to each ether what we had hoped. There are obstacles and all that :" "Yes, he replied slowly. uThat is it." "Here in this room, in which you proposed, and in which we have spent so many happy hours you tell me that, she said in a business-like way. "Have you thought of the possible cost?'' He merely chrugged his shoul ders. "Suppsed I should sue for breach of promise? she suggested. He laughed at that. "You wouldn't have a word in my hand-writting,' he said. "Possibly not," she replied, with a glance toward the corner of the room, out 1 nave sometning better than that." She took him by the hand and led him to the corner. "Will you listen if I star t it ?" she asked. "Has it a a," he began. "It has been here all the time," she said coldly. For a moment he hesitated, hen he turned to her and ex claimed fervently: "Mary forget what I have just said. I was thoughtless, foolish ! would not lose you for tne world Be mine!" And when he left that evening she laughed softly to herself and said : "I told father I'd land him sure if he'd only buy me a phono graph." Chicago Times-Herald. How 2?lllAilAll Her It isn't often that a neglected wife punishes a truant husband as one did in this city last night. A jauntily dressed girl of the period and a dashing young fellow were taking a street ride with apparent enjoyment when suddely the young man's wife got on the car She took a seat just in the rear of her husband and the girl he was riding with. About thejtime they were 'spoon- iest the wife lent f orward,dropped the baby in the husband's arms saying "There, you lazy good-for-nothing loafer, here's your baby take it." He took it, saying, "You lade, you begrudged me a little spin on the car.s Take your baby and leave the car.' The passen gers applauded the plucky wife, tne jaunty girl turned pale, and left the car at the first crossing. A few more such plucky actions actions would bejdeserved punish ment to married truants in this city. Ex. a HOUSEHOLD TREASURE D W Faller. C&naioharie, N Y, ays thai he always keeps Dr King's New Dis cover m tne nouse ana m iamuy uu - ays touud the very best results follow its r. tht hn would cot be without it. il ruble. G A T)ykeman Droeeist, CattkilL. N Y, says ihat Dr King's Hew Dishovery ie undouably the beat rnutrh remedy; that he ha used it in his family lor eight years, and it has nerer fAtlfta to do all that is claimed for it. Why not Uy a remedy so looe tried and tested. Trial bottle free at J it lowing Drug i Sfcre Reg-alar size 50c aud. l,w Whut f!lMUe unci In ew- The New York World says: At a recent sale of well-brvd trotting horses in this State throe-year-olds were sold as low as $4 apiece, and the highest price secured for any was $75. At the?e prices it does not pay to raise horses and the breeders who made the sale did so to get out of a business no longer profitable. Their case is but one of many. The horse is bsing rapidly super seded. Cable traction, trolleys and other mechanical devices are greatly reducing the demand for draught horse service not only in large cities but in small towns and even upon country roads in all well-populated regions. The time cannot be far off when cable or electricrailroads will be- j gin to carry freight as well as pas sengers, thus doing away with drays, trucks and country wagons to a very large extent. The bicycle is taking the place of the saddle-horse with all but the rich who like horseback exer cise and can indulge in it as a lux ury. The recent exhibitions of horse less carriages in France indicate that our victorias, broughams and cabs will presently be driven with out hore-ss, and when all these im provements are perfected it is not unlikely that we shall come at last to the Chinese custom of exclud ing horses entirely from the streets of cities. Even on farms the steam thresher and the like are reducing the need of horses to a minimum. BEFORE 1 could get relief from a most horri ble blood disease, I had SDent hundreds : of dollars TRYING various remedies and physicians, none of which did me : any good. My fineer nails came off. and my hair came out, leaving me penectiy Daia. 1 then went to HOT SPRINGS Hoping to be cured by this celebrated treatment, but very soon became disgusted, and decided to TRY 1 he effect was truly wonderful. 1 commenced to re cover after taking i the first bottle, and by the time 1 had ! taken twelve bottles 1 was entirely cured cured by S. S. S. when the world-renowned ; not apnngs nad railed. WM. S. LOOMIS. Shreveport. U. Our Book on the DUeaa and lti Treatment mailed free to any address. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, G. Tempei'imce I;;u.lojvi. The temperance society of Odes sa, Russia, has published in its Listok the following Ten Com mandments: 1. Thou shalt try to lead a so ber life. 2. Thou shalt not treat the fellows with spirituous drinks. 3. Thou shalt not rent any part of thy house, thy store or shoy as a place tor the sale of spirituous drinks. 4. Thou shalt not trade in spir ituous drinks. 5. Tnoushalt not engage in manufacture of intonicating li quor and wine of any kind. C. Thou shalt preach against drunkenness. 7. Thou shalt persuade all thy friends and acquaintances to join the temperance society. 8 Thou shalt never repeat or circulate an opinion in favor of ths drinking of intoxicating bever ages. 9. Thou shalt do all that is in tny power to prevent others drink ing intoxicating beverages. Thou shalt watch the doings of those who trade in spirituous drinks and promptly report to the authorities any of the actions by which they criminate themselves before the law. The Templar. Wbea Ba7 wj gfefc. we gave her Cartorla When she ma a ChUVshe cried for Castoria Whes she became Kiss, she chm to Cattorla. Whea she bad CfcflSrea. she gare them Castortr IF TOUB BACK Or yon ere all worn out, really good lbr notk- tai, it la general debility. Try . BROir2i'it IROX H1TTXMM. It WCI cure yen, cleanse toot 11t; a&4 grrt iSaodsBoad&a. ltttutuelcy lot Sound Money. The democratic convention of Ivy. in Louisville nominated P. W. Hardiu for governor. Hardin la a silver man. He accepts the nomi nation on a gold or sound money platform. Hardin is a good man. and personally very popular,hsnc his nomination in spite ot his free silver proclivities. Blackburn was defeated for committee-man oa resolutions and ulattorm from his own district, tht, seventh. It is thought he will be defeated for res olution to U. S. JSenate. The fol lowing is an extract from the plat form aa accepted. "First : The Democracy of Ken tucky, in convention assembled, congratulate the country upon th repeal of the McKinley taritT law and udoii the evidences we have on every hand of returning prosperi ty under the operations of reduced aud equalized tariff taxations; and we denounce and fraught with danger and disaster the threat of our Republican adversaries to re establish a protective tariff and to re-inaugurate a policy of unequal taxation, which, in connection with general misgovernment by the Re-, publican party, culminated in the business panic of 1893. "Second : The Democratic par ty, which has always stood for the seperation of Church and State,for the sake aiiko of civil and religious fresdom, does not hesitate to con demn all efforts to create a distinc tion among citizens because of differences in faith, a repugnant to an enlightened age and to the instincts of American freemen. "Thiid: We re-affirm without qualfication the principles and pol icies declared by the national Dem ocratic platform of 1892 and de clare that our present national Democratic administration is en titled to the thanks of the party for its honest, courageous and statesman-like management cf public-affairs ; and we express our undimished confidence in the Dem ocracy and patriotism of President Grover Cleveland and his distin guished co-adviser and secretary, John G. Carlisle of Kentucky,0 . The fourth and fifth sections re late to State politics. Ex. A Baa State of AfTalrci. The people of tbe South are be ing deceived in the purchase o imitation medicines. It's poor con solation to a sick man to be told that the medicine offered him cer tainly wont do him any harm tVrong; it will do great harm. It allows tbe disease to progress in stead of stopping it, and this la most dangerous because the disease will soon be beyond cure. This Is the best resaon why you should be sure to get the right medicine. Dont risk your health la trying auy o! tbe many Liver Medicines which h7e sprung op in tbe South to be sola in place of Simmons Liver Regulator put op by J fl Zeilin & Co., with the Red Z on every package, this was tbe medicine of your fathers, and they lived long. Have nothing to do with anything else, or any drag gist oc dealer who would persuade you that the many imitations under diiferent names are just ai good It's not true. The people who bay them heap op their miseries. Be ware 1 Iditorifil rliilooTJiy A man who has never had the toothache does not know tne real pleasure there is in not having il. West Union (Iowa) Gazette. The great question, after all, is this : Will the new woman be re sponsible for the old man's debts? Boston Transcript. A young man has an abundanc of principle if he can say to his sweetheart: "I can't afford it." Cincinatti Tribune. Some . people use one hand to stop the devil with while they shake his paw with the other. Atlanta Constitution. It is better to lock the stable door after the horse is stolen than not to lock it at all. It may save the cow .-Truth.
The Lincoln Courier (Lincolnton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 12, 1895, edition 1
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