Newspapers / The Democratic Banner (Dunn, … / Sept. 14, 1898, edition 1 / Page 4
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Oeavtr 1 Bled Deep Clean blood means a. clean skin. So tbeauty without it. Cascareta, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- i,nrities from the body. Begin to-day to lanish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Casearets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Every woman knows that she talks too much, but what she doesn't know is a rem edy for it So. 37 I.yon & Co' "Pick Leaf Smoking Tottcco fctands untivalled for purity and flavor. Male from the purest, ripest and sweetest Tobacco. It will please you. Try" it Five hundred trading vessels leave the Thames daily for all parts of the world. ICo-To-Bae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c. SI. Ail druggists. "When a man Anally succeeds in gettltfg his past life" asleep he is always afraid some ono Will come along and wake it up. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails tocuro. 25c. The fact that Nero was a fiddler inslead of n cornet player must have been some satis faction to the Romans. i Edneate Tout Bowels With Casearets. fTandv nathartle. cure constipation forever. tOc, 25c. If C. C. C. fall, druggists refund money. A matinee girl says that it's a poor vil lain who does'nt attempt to kiss the heroine when he has' a good opportunity. crofySa "Taints the Jjlood of millions, and sooner or later may break, out in hip disease, running sores or some more complicated form. To care scrofula or prevent It, thoroughly purify your blood with Hood's SarsapariUa, which has a continu ally growing record of wonderful cures. 9g Sarsa- parilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $5. Hood's Pills cure indigestion, biliousness. Time Not So Lfon. i "Lrord Brougham used to tell," "says the Birmingham Tost, "how he had conversed -with an eye-wituess of the execution of Charles I., and, as the for mer did not die until 1SGS, this repre sented a space of 219 years, with only one life between. Within the last few years there was to be met in London u gentleman whose grandfather had told him of a talk he once had with an oiu uevonsnire lauorer wuo nau seen, when a child, the landing of William of Orange In Torbay. The writer of these lines has met at dinner one who had talked with a hostess of Dr. Johnson, in the person of Mrs. David Garrlck; while Mr. Gladstone's earlier memories Include nn interview with Hannah 1 T v 1. . -s More, who was the great lexicogra pher's flatterer and friend, and an ac quaintanceship with Thomas GrenvIIle, who, not far from 120 years ago, ar ranged the terms of separation between this country and the United States." MRS. LUCY GOODWIN Suffered four years with female -troubles. She now writes to Mrs. Pinkham of her complete recovery. Eead her letter: Deab Mrs. Pixkham: I wish you to publish what Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound, Sanative Wash and Liver Pills have done for me. I suffered for four years I with womb ! trouble. My doctor said I had falling of the womb. I also suffered with . nervous prostration, .faint, all-gone feelingi, palpita tion of the heart, bearing-down sensa tion and painful menstruation. I could not stand but a few minutes at a time. When I commenced taking your med icine I could not sit up half a day, but before I had used half a bottle I was up and helped about my work. I have taken three bottles of Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound and used one package of Sanative Wash, and am cured of all my troubles. I feel like a new woman. I can do all kinds of houseAvork and feel stronger than I ever did in my life. I noAV Aveigh 131 14 pounds. Before using your medicine I weighed only 108 pounds. Surely it is the grandest medicineifor AA-eak woman that eATer was, andmy advice to all who are suffering from any female trouble is to try it at once and be "well. Your medicine has proven a blessing to me, and I cannot praise it enough. Mrs. Lucr Goodwin, llolkr. W. Va- "I have used, your valuable CASCA IlETS and find them perfect. Couldn't do without them. I have used them for some time for indigestion and biliousness and am now com pletely cured. Recommend them, to every one. Once tried, you will never be without them In the family." Edw. A. Marx, Albany, N. Y. "Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 2ac. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. .,. Sterile Hrd, Cmpur, Cklc.jro, Moatrr!, Krw Tort. 321 HOaTOaBAG Sold and guaranteed by alldrug liVJ" I U-UAW gists to CXKJE Tobacco Habit. Hirer Bank Protection TV tuiteg. From Great Britain comes a call, for a method of preventing the current of a river from wearing away the banks. The claim Is set forth that the present system is unsatisfactory because, whila the banks may be strengthened, noth ing is done to deflect-the current from weak points nor to diminish its'force. DON'T BE FOOLED , . Into hnying a "clp-lrp." "mtke-ahift" buggj.on which bl profits are made. Trj a '-ROCK niLI.," -A Utile Higher In Pric. Bui ' o little higher you can't afford to ran the rUk. He our arein in j our town. He will ell you at lowest figures. If not write u. We'll see that too are treated rlg'iu ROCK Will BUGGY CO., Rock Hill.S. C. Mood 0) 2) ffrSyi CANDY . . ATAOe MARK MOISTtREDS 11 SETTLED I CI. Novel Proceedings in a Yadkin County Court. BIG JUDGMENTS FOR LUSK. Charlotte Church to Celebrate its Twenty Fifth Anniversary with a Silver Jublilee. Young Girl Gets Her Hand Mutilated. A rather unique case was i heard be fore a magistrate in Yadkin county re cently. A man named Tlios. Davis avore out a peace warrant fcr his wife, but when the hour arrived for the trial the wife remarked to the justice: "Let me see if he loves me still," at the tame time laying her arm around Tom's neck. The husband gave way and thereupon in the presence of the court exclaimed: "Lula, we have no money to pay the cost; I will give my pistols to the justice if you will give yours to the deputy shenft to pay the costs." Lula agreed, the pistols were handed over, the case was dismissed and now the two hearts are again beating as one. A Silver Jubilee. The Second Preabyteriaa church will be 25 years old on the 22nd of October. Th'e idea has occurred to several of the charter members of the church to have a silver jubilee, in commemoration of the day. The plans are in embryo yet, but will assume definite form shortly. There will be a regular programme of exercises, which will be made as interesting as possible, concluding in the evening With a reception in the annex. Every one who attends will be expected to give a piece of silver, any amount from a dime to a dollar, the whole sum thus obtained to be appropriated for the mission work of the church, in this city. Charlotte Observer. A Rainbow at Night. The phenomenon of a rainbow by night was witnessed in Charlotte one night recently about 9 o'clock. The moon was shining brightly and- the skies were clear, except in the west, whore there were masses of i what are commonly ' known as thunder-head clouds. The rainbow followed a dis play of sheet lightning. It was dis tinct .and perfect in all features, the colors being easily diecernible. It waa a very -beautiful as well as rare sight. The rainbow was visible for about five minutes. Charlotte Observer. To Tax the Bonds. Dr. Abbott, of the railroad commis sion, has been co-operating with Col. Hinsdale in the work of showing that the Raleigh & Gaston has $1,200,000 of bonds of other corporations, which it bought eome five years ago. As a result of this' development the bonds will be put on ihe tax list. Wake county has put them on. So has the city of Kaleigh. The city went further and claimed back taxes on them since 1893. Hand Mutilated. Miss Annie Warner, a young girl who works at the Gingham Mill, in Charlotte, got her hand caught in the spinning frame and eo badly mutilated that the thumb and fore finger bad to be cut off; also a part of tbe palm of the hand. But for the quickness of Mr. J. T. White, : who was at work close by, in stopping the frame, she would have lost her whole hand. Brothers Fight. J Alexander and Springs Conrad, brothers; living in the western part of Wilkes county, became engaged in a warm controversy recently : over the building of a new road. The discus sion endeiT in a big fight The first named brother knocked the latter down, got on him and beat his head with a rock, inflicting serious injuries. A Freak of Nature, j Juliana Eamsh, a double-faced negro girl, was the show of tho day in Cotton Town recently. She had two noses; her eyes are located on the side of her head, and between them Jis; a large growth of some kind; her mouth is in two parts, and altogether she is a freak of nature. Charlotte Observer. Big Judgments for Lusk. Colonel V. S. Lusk, as receiver for the First National bank of Asheville, obtained judgments at the recent ses sion of tho superior court held at Ashe ville, aggregating 8110,173 against the following cbfendant -: J. E. Dickerson, $11,600; W. W. Rollins, $3,200; M. C. Penland, $5,000; R. R. Rawls, $1,000; W. E. Breesp, $47,000; W. H. Pen landf $30,000; Dr. G. W. Fletcher, $1,000; Rollins & Breese, $4,373. Craven Memorial Hall. The contract for building Craven Hall, the building to be erected at Trinity College in memory i of Dr. Braxton Craven, the first president of the college, hts been awarded to Mr. N. Ittner, of Charlotte, for $11,345. - Many Prospectors Coming. Dr. Ramsey, secretary of the Agri cultural Department, says that unless the people who write letters from tho North and West tell falsehoods there will be many "prospectors" coming to North Carolina this year. W. R. Casey has been .acquitted' in the Wilkes county court for the mur der of Nick Bryan in that county sev eral months ago. Electric Plants for Mills. ' Mr. O. F. Asbury, of the D. A. Tompkins Company, of Charlotte, is putting in a 500-electric light plant in tho Nantucket Mills, at Spray, and a 250-ligh't plant at the Proximity Mills, Greenville, S. C. Bradstreet's Latest, j Bradstreet has issued a new direc tory in which, according to "the pres ent estim-ted population," Charlotte is quoted at 23,000; 'Wilmington at 23,000, and Raleigh at 15,000. Dr. J. A. Wilcox, independent Re publican candidate for congress in the Eighth District, died at his home in Elkin of Typhoid fever. Archibald Henderson, son : of Hon. John S. Henderson, of Salisbury, has been elected tutor in mathematics at the State University. , Prof. 0. S. Mebane, the superintend ent of Publio Instruction, hopes to have many needed reforms enacted into the Slate school law by the next General Assembly, which meets in January. Judge Spencer B. Adarrfs was nom inated for Congress by the Republicans in the Fifth District & Graham, COTTON MILL CONSTRUCTION. Closing Half of tbe Year Will Eclipse the Record of the First Half. The closing half of 1898 promises to beat the record of the first six months in the erection of New cotton Mills in North Carolina. The most important of these prospective mills is one to be built at McAdenville. At Chapel Hill a company is forming to build a spin ning mill. In addition, a dozen or more leading mill companies have re cently decided to largely increase the capacity, of their plants, j The building of knitUng and hosiery mills are keep ing pace with record of cotton spinning and weaving mills, and many mills have increased tneir capital stock and en larged the capacity of their plants with in a month. Fifth District Revenue Collections. Cashier Gilmer Brenitzer, of Collec tor Hawkins' office, reports the follow ing collections in the fifth district for the month of August: Tobacco, $104, 494.31; spirits, $87,160.42; cigars, $1, 193.05; cigarettes, $1,400.00; snufl, 15c; special tax, $2,465.17; documentary, $3,290.81; proprietary, $493.67; miscel laneous, $18,661.37. Total, $169,158.95. These amounts were collected at the various offices as follows: Winston, $405,895.70; Statesville, $29,707.75; Asheville, $29,861.13; Mt. Airy, $3, 694.37. ! Oid Citizen and His Decendants. Thomas Thompson recently celebrat ed his 88th birthday'with his children, grandchildren and great grandchildren at his home near Saxapahaw, Alamance county. He has 7 children, 19 grand children and 28 great grand children. There were present 7 child ren, 19 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren. : Out of Funds. ; Superintendent William C. Stronach, of tho Soldiers' Home, says he is en tirely out of funds, and will need ct least $600 to carry it to the end of the fiscal vear, November 30th. Mrs. Jo seph B. Batchelor, at Raleigh, is the president of the board, of lady mana ajei B, and he has requested her to make an appeal to the people of the State for aid. Sold Twenty Million Feet. Mr. R. S. Fimple, of Littleton, has recently sold 20,000,000 feet standing timber of the North Carolina pine vari ety to Wakefield, Va., Lumbermen who will at once begin the erection of a saw mill on the property with a daily ca pacity of 30, 000 feet. The timber 'is only a few miles from Littleton, and known as the Long property. - Statesville Sells Her Bonds. The sale of the $52, 000 worth of bonds voted last year to enable Statesville to put in a system of water-works and sewerage haB finally been accomplish ed. The bonds were bought by F. M. Stafford & Co., and the whole lot were recently sent to the Metropolitan Na tional "Bank, of Chicago, where they were to be delivered. ay- Stunned by Lightning. During a terrific storm which visited Back Creek, Mecklenburg county, Mrs. W. C. Davis was stunned by lightning. She was knocked off the door step and was some time in recovering from the effects of the shock and fall. Branning's New Railroad. The Branning Manufacturing Com pany, at Edenton, N. C, have com pleted and will open up for general freight and passenger business the Wellington & Powersville Railroad be tween Windsor and Ahoski, a distance of 83 miles. ' An Aged Woman Killed. Mrs. Sallie Smith, aged 73 years, was struck by a train recently! while cross ing the Southern Railway near Pear son's bridge. Her injuries were so severe that she died a short time after the accident occurred. ! FtOtir Mill at Weldon. Contracts have been made and signed for a flour mill at Weldon of a capacity of 100 barrels daily, and work will soon begin. The mill will buy and grind the best wheat only. j Pensions to Tar Heels. In his annual report Pension Com missioner H. Clay Evans states that for the fiscal year ended June 30th, 1898, $561,292 was paid! .to 21,064 pensioners in North Carolina. Railroad Improvement. By the middle of October 15 miles of the Cape Fear and Northern Railroad, from Raleigh, via. Cary and Holly Springs, towards the great long-leaf pine forests of Harnett will be in oper ation: By that time the Raliegh and Cape Fear Railroad, which is striking south from Raleigh into the same great timber belt, will have 16 miles fin ished. " ' Stung to Death by Bees. John Reid, an aged citizen of Bun cpmbe, living on Bull creek, near the Asheville Farm school, was stung to death by bees recently. j Tar Heel Notes. Mr. Tom Shaw was showings in Cotton Town at Charlotte, recent ly, a stalk of 'cotton." from Mr. Tom Hoover's place, which had 26 bolls on it all of which had been ruined by the boll worm. The Aberdeen & West End Railroad is building an extension from Troy to Mt. Gilead, 14 miles, and the work is being pusped so rapidly that in 30 days it will be completed. The Presbyterian College at Char lotte has opened its fall session. Raleigh now has six public schools two for white and four for negro chil dren. It will soon have! a third for white children. The site ha3 been pur chased. At Pilot Mountain Absalom Moore, a tobacco broker q Fayetteville, droi ped dead in the office of Rodman Bros, while making a deal for a large lot of tobacco. j An old colored woman was killed in her house near Roxboro ! recently by lightning. She had made a bed on the floor and was on that when she was killed. Several car loads of new mill ma chinery recently arrived at the Odell Mills, Concord, consisting of cards, tappers, clubbers and speeders. The new steel bridge across the South Yadkin river,, which is one of the finest and strongest in the South, has been completed. Luther Shoemaker, white, was bound over to court at Charlotte by 'Squirt Maxwell in the sum of $0i for embez zlement j There are now 1,560 voting precinct in North Carolina. The increase in the past four years is some 40Q It is believed that cotton mill report A for this year will show an increase of IVI III -1 , ' rn. CUBAN PINEAPPLES. Ncthliig Is Easier of CuUivatloa or Requires ' Less Capital. Nowhere on tbe globe do plneabples thrive -as in eastern Cuba, where the conditions of soil and climate bring "the golden apples of Hesperides"jlto absolute perfection, yet the pineapple Industry has neverhad much atten tion in this section. Here is a chance for the enterprising Yankee. A tract of unoccupied land, extending as far as one can see, may be bought for a few dollars and turned Into a fruit farm, the virgin soil of unparalleled richness being capable of producing every tropical growth. Shipping facil ities are already established at Bara coa, and several small ports, and if the land touches the Yumiri or some other river so much the better for Its owner. Until one has seen the golden glory of a pineapple plantation he can think of no more attractive sight than a sugar-cane field, glistening pale yel low under the torid sun and billow ing in the gentle breeze like a wind swept sea. But even more fascinating is a field of pines, each great -'apple" guarded by. a circle of glittering, sharp edged bayonets. In Florida the pine apple leaf is so sharply serrated that the thought of getting around among them suggests a field of torture. Evo lution seems to have progressed fur ther in. Cuba, for on the older and more carefully cultivated plantations the saw-teeth that edge the long, point ed leaves have mainly disappeared. ..Before the war It was the sight of a lifetime to go out to Marianao, a suburb of Havana, and there drive through an estate which had 80,000 pineapple plants in full bearing. Over in Nassau they call the pine planta tions "groves" and "orchards," as if they were trees. Whether groves, or fields the plant is about the same, pro ducing'one of the most luclous and popular fruits known to man, for which there is a constant and ample demand. Like most things worth hav ing in this troubled life, the golden "pines" are not easy to get at. A very short stroll among the stinging leaves will, lead you to sympathize with the New Yorker who, after a visit to Marianao,. said: "You do not mind the first 2,000 or 3,000 sticks and prods from the needle points of the bayonet leaves as you cross a field, but after a while your tortured cutis can en dure no more and your remarks about the pineapple crop are likely to be prejudiced by present soreness. How much nices it would be if the 'apples' really did grow in 'orchards,' and you could send a colored boy up the trees to shake down a few, and then you could sit down in the shade and eat them!" A, plant produces only one pine at a time; The fruit thrusts itself upward in the middle of a mas of long, narrow and sharp-arched leaves, spreading forth from a central stalk, precisely like those of the Agave Americana, or ""century" plant, with which every body is familiar. The stem is perhaps eighteen inches to two feet high. The same plant, produces a second apple, and a third, and so on through several bearings, after which a new plant must be started from the "slip." Nothing is easier of cultivation or re quires less capital and previous ex perience, and few crops bring in great er returns. Woman's Heroism. From the Register- Gazette, liockford, III. During the civil war nearly as much hero ism was shown by the women of our nation is by the bravo soldiers. Manya woman, weeping for her dead son, bound up tho wounds of his sufferine comrades, rejoicing r in tneir renewed stren g t h, -J U I cveu wuuo orrowiujf 'ortheono who was sjoDe. At that time was laid the foun dation for On the Battlefield. famed or ganization known as the Woman's Relief Corps, whose aid to the soldier of to-day, lighting against the world for a living, is no less notable than the heroism of the early '60's. One of the most earnest members of the corps at Byron, 111., is Mrs. James Hoase weart, but illness once put a stop, to her active work. A year or so ago, when she was nearlng fifty yews of age, tbe time when women must be most careful of their strength, Mrs. House weart was taken seriously ill. The family physician told her that she had reached a critical period of her life, and must be very careful. His prescriptions and treatment did not benefit her, and other treatment proved un availing. At last Dr. "Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People were brought to her notice, with Indisputable evidence that they were help ful in cases such as hers, and with renewed hope she tried the remedy. Last March she took the tlrst box of the pills, which gave much relief. She was determined to be cured, and kept on with the medicine, until now eight boxes have been consumed, and she feels like a new woman, Mrs. Houseweart said: "I have taken only eight boxes, but I have been improv ing since I took the first dose. I do not believe I could have lived without tbe pills. They certainly bavie done me more good than any physician or any medicine I have ever tried." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold in boxes (never in loose bulk) at 50-cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. The White' Woraan?' In some parts of Germany, particu larly in Bohemia, some most extraordi nary tales are reported of the "white woman." This celebrated ghost is sup posed to represent a woman of very modest appearance, excessively tall, and her dress entirely white. She is never seen without a very long veil reaching nearly to her ankles, and which is of such an impervious nature that no person has ever been able to obtain a glimpse of her features. On one single occasion, however, it is re ported that she condescended to lift up ber veil, when such a blaze of beauty burst upon the astonished beholder that he was actually rooted to the spot for a considerable time. The lady never leaves her subterranean or her celestial abode but for the charitable purpose of -informing an Individual of ap proaching death. Thus It is very com mon to say In some parts of Germany "the white woman" has visited Ahlin, meaning thereby that all hopes are vanished of a recovery, and there are not a few in that country who pay lit tle or no attention to the declaration of the physician respecting the immediate1 dissolution of the patient until it has been ascertained whether the white woman has xiald her f or ebodini. visit. SPEAKER REEefSEPiGftAMS. No Man Now n Public Life Utters Better Ones. There Is more public Interest In the occasional philosophical remarks of speaker Thomas B. Reed of Maine than In those of any other American statesman, says the Springfield (Mass.) Republican. This Is because the Amer ican people- recognize in him one of the" most intellectual men in public life, as well as the wittiest and brightest, Wherefoye we cull from Mr. Reed's re cent address, in Philadelphia on "Ste phen GIrard" the following sayings: "No progress which did not lift all ever lifted any." "We must all move, but we must all keep together." "The generation In which he lives can seldom understand the really great man. We live for to-day and he lives for a day after to-day." "Were this the proper time, I could show that wars-and wars ought to be banished forever from the face of the earth: that pestilences and the time is coming when they will be no more; that persecutions 5nd inquisitions and liberty of thought is the richest pearl of life that all these wars,' pf stllences and persecutions were but helps to the unity of mankind." "If the lofty and the learned do not lift us up, we dra them down." "The overruling Providence, of which we talk so much and know so little." In these sentences' orie finds the epl gramatlc quality that is so characteris tic of Mr. Reed's mode of expression. The sayings that will live longest, how ever, are those that are tipped with a flashing wit. Thus the third quotation about the great man, while well said, Is not uncommon inits brilliancy, but when Mr. Reed remarked, with this same idea in mind, yet from a different point of view: "A statesman is a poli tician who is dead," he gave the world what has already become a classic and will live as long as the most mordant sayings of Voltaire. Some one should take pains to collect Mr. Reed's epi grams, witticisms and retorts as they have been uttered during the . past twenty-five years. It is a significant fact that a colony of English-speaking people, Instead of abandoning their native tongue and embracing that of their adopted na tionality, invariably adhere to the,lr own language and eventually color that of the people with whom they are brought into contact. It is also signifi cant that English Is the only language which is now showing rapid growth. Most of the other tongues are slowly dying. Boat Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take Nb-Tc-Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 60o or tl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York Gourage is responsible for fewer attempts at performing dangerous feats than lack of common sense. To Cure Constipation Forever Take Casearets Candy Cathartic. 10c or Ko, If C C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. There are said to be quite 200,000,000 cop ies of the Bible scattered throughout the world. . Julius Hines & Son, the well-known deal ers in furniture, carpets, etc., of Baltimore, Md.j have issued their new catalogues, which are now ?e id y for delivery, and will be sent free for the asking. The furniture catalogue contains 163 pages, and is replete with every thing necessary to make homo comfortable and beautiful. Everything is faithfully illus trated, so that purchases can be made as eas ily as though the goods were before you. Prices are such as nave made this house fa mous throughout the length and breadth of this country. The carpet oatalogue Is really a work of art, being litaoxraphed lrom hand painted plates, from which carpets can be easily and satisfactorily selected. Designs and colors are faithfully shown, the whole thinglmaking a valuable work of art. In both catalogues are testimonials from satisfied purchasers from every part of the country, together with referenoe as to reliability nd honesty, of which any house might well be 1 1 " T 1 1 . i . pruuu, uuu wmcu gives ausoiuie assurance or satisfactory dealings at all times. Fertilizing for Strawberries. Nitrate of soda is a valuable fertilizer for strawberries and raspberries, and should be applied with powdered phos phate of lime. Thl3 application to strawberries will sometinfes treble the yield. The berries are larger in size, handsomer in color, mdre solid and finer in flavor. Ordinary manure will not produce such results, as it is not converted into plant food until after the demand of the fruit. Nitrate of soda and powdered phosphate of jae are assimilated by the plant at once, and appropriated at a cost of less than $10 per acre, using 400 pounds pf the mixture which contains the three In gredients considered necessary to use for feeding plants; nitrogen, phosphoric acid and an alkali. Meehan's Monthly. Some men are so fixed that they have no use for a moving van. 22 ' THE EXCaiENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill witn which it is manufactured, by scientific processes known to the Caxi'fobsia Fig Svbtjp Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine yrup of Figs is manufactured by the Califorxia Fio Stkup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by o"ther par ties. The high standing of he Cali fobsia Fig Sikcp Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makejs the name of the Ckmpany a guaranty of the excellence ot its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the fcidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it "does not gripe nor nauseate In order o get its beneficial enectsVplease renieinber the name of the Company CAUFORlilA FIG SYRUP CO. i SAN FRiN CISCO, CL Xour attention, 3Idam 1 Ton see iere a Conch and a Combination Bookcase. They re apeclfcena taken from oar new 160-page furniture Catalogue, which contains the most couiprehensi v CollecUon of eoodfl to make home comfortable afid hpin beandfol ertr gotten together by Kbrfal man. dar lady, ia 6 feet Jl In ches lopg, t feet Slpches wide, beauti fully uphols tered In 1m- ported iv.lour or 'corduroy, and ""W" 13.95. u yon can ouj iuc iv. --fiL- ilO, w don't know our buslnes. ,rv,. E and writing desk 1 made of ter sawed oak or blfch, nn 1 Mahogany.' with beveled plate mirror, 12 infhes x JO lo ctaes, Inches hiffh and 87 In ches wide, polished like a piano; and the price,- (8.75. A real (15 article . You must rememoer our 11 - ' around the world. Sota State or Tenitory In this country but what has received car loads of our goods at those prices hich none can equal. It you Inquire among your neigh bors yoa will more than likely find wipeone who haa been delighted with thlr dealings with us. We refer to National Banks all over the country as td pur reliability end faif deal ing. We want you to have our 1?"" P" alone, because It is a liberal fdpcalor in household necessities, and we want yon to hare our 10-colbred Lithographed Carpet Cat alogue, which shows designs and colors as perfectly as though you had the carpet on the floor of your honje. Both, these catalogues are yours for the asking, and you willknow more about such thinrs after reading It care fully. A4dj8 (exactiy as below) JTJUUS HINES & SON, Dept.3lO Baltimore, Md. Shakespeare in F rench. A story is told of three French boy3 who were studying a volume of Shakespeare in their own tongue, their task being to render portions of it into English. When they came to Ham let's famous soliloquy, "To "be or not to be," their respective translations were as follows: 1. "To was or not to am." ' ' 2. "To were or is to not." 3. "To should or not fa will." Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as tbey cannot reach tbe diseased portion of the ear. There U only one way to cure deafness, and thatisiby constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of tbe mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hear! nsr. and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will bo destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten ara caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by -Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. ,". . F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Drugarif-ts, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. J. M. DeLacy writes: "l can assure jm tht in no single Instance has DR. MOJ rEl'T'S TEETniSA (TEETHING POW DERS) proved a failure. We have tried soothing remedies and everything known to us and "old women," and Teethisa is pre eminently a success and blessinj to mothers and children." Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after flrst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatl se f rea Dr. R. H. Kmne, Ltd.. 931 Arch St . Phila. Pa. II. H. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. Seertheir liberal offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. I believe Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my boy's life last summer. Mrra Allie Douglass, Le Roy, Mich., Oct., 20, 1894. Mrs. WJnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reducing inflama tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 2-jc. abott3. TASTELESS P fHIfjfl 0 Jo IFTa LI L!iL!i TE j t . 1 1.. IS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE 50 cts. . '. Galatia, Ills., Nov. 10, 1895. Paris Medicine Co., St. Louts, Mo. Gentlemen: We sold lust year, 600 bottles of GROVB'8 TASTKLKSS CHILLi TONIC and have bought three grons already this year. In all or ex perience of 14 years, in the drug buHiness. bnve never sold an article that gave rucn universal sati taction aa your Tonic. Yours truly, ABNEV. CARS Sc. CO. BIG MONEY Li Fiaej STRAWBERRIES For gardener or field grower. Oar fre publication lull how to maka iu Largent Stock Strawberry Plants In tbe World. Standard varieties 1 1.96 per l.OOO. Fane Varieties Delivered Free Anywhere. C0XTI5EST1L PLAIT CO;, Bos ptrawoerry wpeclausta. KIXX&fXL, K. 0. WILL IT CURE RISINGS? YES. I Have Been Selling Mrs. Joa Person's Rejnedy for the p&st five years, bare found it to be a good seller and have never had a single customer to say anything aalnU it, but all speak of it in highest terms. I tried it myself, also my wife and child, for risings, and found immediate relief. I takepieasare in recommending It.- Respectfully, E. C Haskell. Aulander, N. C, May 22, 18&7. 64 IQ Cash With order buys this QQiV Auto.Self Cocklnar Nickel Pla ted Rabber Handled 6 Shot Revol ver.82 or SS C. V. or send 30c. A will sblp CO. TJ. $3.99 and allow exami nation. Klre Arms Co. Wlnston.N.C. --PATENTS-- Procured on cosh, or easy instalnsents.VOwXS k BUKXH, Patent Attorneys, 237 Broadway, K, Y. The Bsst BOOK WAR BEAtrriTTJi.1. bound and sumpt- Tjously illaitratedf price 2), free to anybody sending two annual subsrriptions at tl each to the Overland Monthly. SA: IliAKClSCO. Sample Overland, 6c. ".yZX Thompson's Eyo Water I. orderinc coods or making enquiries of ad vrrttsers it will be to your advantage to men- tion this paper." ' 7 6o. 37 will airt-L. fT.HZ"1 WASTETJ-Case of bad health that E I PA-R B tll no benefit Bend t eta to Kipans Chemical Co.. NcwYork. for 18 samples and 1000 testimonials t O f E9 O f kew dIbCdvmvT -TL- -7 . . -T"T T .1"' tv'w ana cures .V .floick relief and cur.'wot - - m- . n - - -w. bkwb rr.ia.aasi r I In tlmA c, . . "to youga Bvmr. Tiuh iiJ tt I7D uu ii n n. n. JL 1VJ-I14 r The Keeley Institute, - For the care of the Liquor, Opium, " Cocaine and other drug addictions. Nerve Exhaustion and tbe Tobacco Habit. The most attractive "and beautifully located Keeley Institute in the country Write for their illustrated hand-book The New Man." Addres?, The Keeley Institute, GREENSBORO, HORTH CAROLINA. Oldest Artillery Company. It Is claimed for the Washington Ar tillery of New Orleans, La., which wan organized in 184G, that It is the oldest artillery organization in the Unitotl States. It was the first in the South to tender its services to the Govern ment in the war. with Mexico, and ou the day after acceptance it was ready. It now is composed of fire batteries, with a total membership of about C50 men. . MlB.VnlGHVSS .r86a3-.ro, N. ti wiA'. HAKOSl ORGANS We are the largest dealers in the State and we are now offering some SPECIAL Inducements. .. . a Y-1 i. rt.UtAmt. nn 1 niu jor uui liaison '-"'""n- Terms. : ' mim iw - ' r CHARLOTTE, - NORTH CAROLINA. I . III. H 111 111 Tl aJi THE COUPER f.lARBLE WORKS. ESTABLISHED 1818. 150-163 Bank St., Norfolk, Va. Monuments. Gravestones, Cemetery x. uraT-Kto btlA flranltfl. Law prices quoted on work delivered st :..nntt.lntliss'nnh)i. When writ. ing please etate age or deceased and limit as to price. or a rn in en O feWEST o 1 o n Crq ft3 CVttHAM ft.C, f. (Vloney in Chicken S I"or 'i5c. In stamps wo send a 1 ' PAGE BOOK glTlng tbe cxperlencj of a practical Poultry ilalser ivc an amateur, Out a man working lor dollars and ceuts duriu t-i I years, it teacnes now to ueuxs land Cure Dlsoaxos; k'ooil tor En also for Kattenlnz: which Fowls t fcave for Urcedlnx; everything re quisite for profitable Poultry ral lux. HOOK FIJIJI.ISUlMi CO. 131 Leo d arU Htroot, New York. EDUCATIONAL. i ... - OSBORNE'S Anstistn., Ga Actual basinss Ntii a booss. oliort tuos, Cbsap board- Ssnd for caUlow S30 Buys a six months' scholarship, before Oct. I. Write at once to CHARLOTTE COMMERCIAL COL LEGE, CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA. Send for Catalogue of COLUMBIA FEMALE COLLEGE and see what is being done to educate women on a curriculum equal to best mnlo colleji't In the beautiful capital of South Caroliun. Modera appointments. Able Facultr of Spec ialists. Term. low. OpcDS Sept. 88. JOIIX A. UICi:, A. HI., D. D Pres. 6uLluJwlw'''''U''M'"giinirnninninnimiiiumtiuiiii"l E oo tl n nnir YOU A iLA YW7 SBf m U W W UOOB ? not nssthebwrt msrhlnxry i varid sars tisoe and strengtb. I as I OIY1ML.I.&T &AW9 g enable one man to do the work ten could do in meoiaway. uar Miilertrle fireolar rnws Battle Creek and feel r-Feed liran ; are vf 1st th best encrl ; purpose t rrn haws srr i roiran. oena tor iwwnif : tiToUstalofrtiaand price ' T-JR ISaws. knn j der tMlters, FeeA .Hills, i f' orn Shellers, lloot Cutters and Itorae Powers. 8MALLEY MFQ. COM Manitowoc, Wis. gEEO WHEAT FOR JALE! From the greatest crop ever grown In th couth. 'I hree varieties: Fnlcaeter. a bearde l wheatj Red May and White Clausen, bot'i smooth or beardles. Wheat is now verv 1 re i froja cockle feed and broken grain, belntc fur superior to the usual run of seed whev. Ws Will, however, reclean the wheat when de sired, taking out almost ever cockle peed ati'1 pieces of broken grain as well as any inferior grain there may be in it. Wheat as it now it price 1.00 per bushel, recleaned wheat SI 1 per bushel. Thee prices are both on car m Charlotte, Including acks. Each sack con tains two bushels, tend in your orler nt once If you wish to secure the bestseed" whea'. on the market. Terms : Cash with order. Charlotte Oil 6l Fertilizer Co., or Fred Oliver, CIIAKLOTTK, N. (' i " -- . w ' . J And Tery LOW HICES. Large stock. A'm PIPK, VAI.WK and FITTING. K OINE8, BOII.KltH, MILLS and It Iil'AH;s- Lombard Iron Works & SuddIv Co,, AUGUSTA, GA. WW drilling wells forhoS farm. Oitv and UIa-e La La Water Works. Facto Hctf aC"T tTS fTJ 3 h- 1 L I - - I J BSSJSBBBBBSJSBBBBBSBBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSSBSVBSlSSSSSSllSSlSlBBBSSBBlSlBSlBk F SBBBBSS. K w "V lW IU- -v JlA 70 HQ -- Wit la. III UUP ries, ice rwnin, -;.. cries. Irrigation. Coal a Mineral Prospecting. ,OIl Gas. etc. Latest and Us?cq years experience. R 1 u WUAT YOU WANT. LOOf.'lS & NYMAH. Tiffln.0h omeming ii&e ten muis in ioao. X : -' )
The Democratic Banner (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 14, 1898, edition 1
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