f M y^- -.'i ■ MF/ Bines. - Rup. 1 handle BUGGIES of all makes in ear load lots, andean SAVE YOU MONEY. Den t buy until you have seen me. 1 can fit you up with st:l Manual Harness. Sell for cash or on time. J. W. L.AIME, DUNN, N. C. THE NORTH CA ROLINA SIAIE MM AM) JMIMKIiL COLLEGE. LITERARY Annual expenses $1 CO to $140; for non (1 ASSICAL residents of the State $lOO. Faculty of £( IENTIFIC 30 numbers. Practice and Observation COMMERCIAL School of about 2fo pupils. To secure board INDUSTRIAL in the dormitories all tree-tuition applica- PEDAGCGICAL tions should l.e made before July loth. M I'SICAL Session o] ens September li>tli. (' rrtspomUr.ee invited i'i in those desiring cc in) (tent tear hers and stenographers. For catalogue and oilier inioimation address President Chariks D. Molvkk, Greensboro, N. 0. A. B. HAKOI.n. M. F. HATCHER. Harold & Hatcher, —ATTORN FA'S AT LAW,— DUNN, N. Practice wherever service re quired. Prompt attention to all business. Collections a specialty Office over DEMO CRATIC BANNER. Edw'tu! V.Pt.u, K. 11. Brooks. Pou Si Brooks, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, SMITHFIKLD, N. C. Claims collected. Estates set ti'd. Practice in Johnston and adjoining counties. K. S. SMITH. E. BARNES. SMITH & BARNES, . Attorneya-Gt-L(iw, DUNN, - - - N. c. l'n.cluc in all »l»e court- of il>e State. | l'icini't attention n> all business I entrusted. CTV.ee in tl>e oll PO.-t Ctlice Building. | I). 11. NCL.FAN. F j McLean & Clifford, DUNN, : : : : N. C. iffctT otfioe over J. J. Wade's Store. \v. A. STEWART. II- GODWIN SIEWAIT k GODWffl, Attorneys sod Counscllors-at-Uw, DUNN, N. 0. Will practice in State and Federal Court? but not for fun. W E- Murchiscm, , JONESBOBO. N. C. Practices Law in Harnett, Moore »nd other counties, but not for k iun. Feb. 20-1 y. 11 EM We offer unsurpassed advan tages, auel loan money on easy terms We will extend every accommodation consistent with conservative banking. L. J. BEST, President. J. W. PURDIE, Cashier. mmm as® farmers m, din, ic. CAPITAL STOCK .$20,000. Every accommodation olfered to the public. E. F. You NO, President. V. L. STEPHENS, Cashier. CA.STOR.IA. p.tari tho ll* Kind You Haw Always Boagf4 j ■■ . Vol. 11. Using Love Powders. We taki' the following from the Smithfield Herald: : Superstition is fast giving I away before the light of civiliza tion. The writer remembers when a noted conjure doctor hived and flourished in this I country. People came Jifty and 1 sevcntv-five miles to see him. lie made a fortune in this way. A person having decided he was ••tricked'* or conjured or had a ••spell pui on him," the next thing was a trip to see the con jure doctor, lie was expected to take tlii> '"spell" oil' and in most cases it was to be put back on the person who started it. ('sing love powders is anoth er idea that prevailed and does to some extent yet. If a girl was infatuated or led astray by >ome worthless fellow, or if a girl was married to some fellow far below her station she was ex cused by herself, or her parents! or her friends, and sometimes by all of them on the ground that the fellow used love pow ders. Below we give a letter receiv ed by one of our druggists which shows that this idea still prevails: June 10th, 1901. Dear Sir: k 'I will write you a few; lines to let you know that I want some of your love pow ders as I am an alright boy you may trust me I will be under the bond yes I'm alright. send it in Saturday to If not why not I'm alright. I want a 2~>c package of love powder I will send you the mon ey right straight as soon as I receive the stuff. Send direc tions with it. yours truly, Read it in His Newspaper. George Schaub, a well known German citizen of New Lebanon, Ohio, is a constant reader of the Dayton Volkzeitung. He knows that this paper aims to adver tise only the best in its columns, I and when he saw Chamber lain's Pain Balm advertised therein for lame back, he did not hesitate in buying a bottle of it for his wife, who for eight weeks had suffered with the most terrible pain in her back ! and could get no relief. He says: "After using the Pain j Balm for a few days my wife ! said to me, 'I feel as though \ born anew,' and before using i the entire contents of the bottle the unbearable pains had en tirely vanished and she could again take up her household duties." He is very thankful and hopes that all suffering likewise will hear of her won derful recovery. This valuable 1 liniment is for sale by Hood & ' Grantham. i > o DUNN FOUNDRY, MACHINE AND MKT AI. WORKS. 10000 feet of floor spate coveted with brand r.ew and j on ierous machinery and fixtures for all kinds of machine'ai.d nit.il woil ing. FARQUHAR'S CENTER CRANK A JAN. "SHE SS k HUMMER." AVe are agents for the above Engine and all otlur styles of tlu-ir Engines and Boilers from 4 to 000 horse power, also for FARO I HAR Saw Mills, Threshing Machinery and Threshing Engines. \ou can t attord not to get the Farquhar machinery. It is the best. The Farquhar Co. has been almost a "Ilouse-liold Won! lor half a century. They are one of the largest ma chine builders in the world. They have facilities unequaled in this country. GET OUR PRICES AMD CATALOGUE. Building Irons, Store b routs, etc. Ail kinds of plow ami other eastings. Boiler patch steel. All kinds of Steam and Machine fittings continual!',- on hand. fl n TOBACCO F blJi'S. ~•'' ! " t .> h»s, everything right, Freights equalized with other [} points. We buy all the cad iron we can get. See us about II" , Ji _ R'-sjieetfu-ly Yours, II ill :L Ml KAY ITU CO., iH NX, N. C. Guarding Against the Future. The young man liatl married! tlie rich main's daughter, and wasn't killing himself with j work to support her. One day! ihe father called him to talk to him. "Look here," he said em phatically, "why don't you go ; to work?" "I don't have to," the son-in-l law replied with a brazen ef-' froutery. "Well, you will have to." "Why will 1?" "Because, sir, I can't live al ways to support you." "But you will leave us some thing?" "Not much, I won't. There' won't be anything to leave." "Great jupiter, you don't mean to tell me that you havej nothing?" "That's about it." The son-in-law devoted him-j self to profound thought for sev eral seconds. "I have a suggestion to of fer," he said in a bu-mess-like ! manner. ',What is it?" asked the old gent. "Well, I suggest that you, take out, say a $lOO,OOO life in-: surance on yourself to save wear and tear on my mind, —Stray Stories. The Arkansas Senate has passed by a vote of 14 to 1 a bill making it unlawful for any per son in that State to drink any intoxicating liquor as a bever age unless he shall first obtain a license as a dram drinker. The license fee is fixed at $5 ii year and the penalty for violations of the law is $l5 fine or impris onment for thirty days. How to Avoid Trouble Now is the time to provide yourself and family with a bot tle of Chamberiain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It is almost certain to be needed before the summer is over, and if procured now may save you a trip to town in the night or in your busiest season. It is everywhere admitted to be the most successful medicine in use for bowel complaints, both for children and adults. No family can afford to be without it. For gftte by Hood & Grantham, DUIMIM, IM. C. JUNE, 26 1901, For Woman Suffrage. I | An ordinance proposing the regulation of woman sullrage, j was introduced in the Constiiu ! tional convention here to-day j by Mr. Craig. >f Dallas county, i The resolution, which caused .considerable debate, provides that all women who arepermit ; led to vote must be over twenty ; years of nge; must be able to 'read and write; the husband : must pay $5 in taxes or must have earned $i»00 tlie year pre ceding. If single the woman must pay s•"> in taxes, or have earned $3OO the year preceding. Divorced women, excepting i these granted a decree on the ! ground of adultery cannot vole. —Montgomery, Ala., dispatch, loth. Bs Careful When You Speak. How carefully we should speak! Our words may not be weighty and eloquent, but, as j they pass, they influence for i good or for evil those who are j ! about. It is said that some) iyears ago a distinguished gen-: tleman invited Lord Tennyson, Mr. Gladstone and Cardinal i Manning to utter in his phono graph some brief message to the world, which was not to be re peated until after their death, j Some two years after Cardlina Manning's death it was found that his words were these: "I hope that no words of mine, written or spoken in my life, will be found to have done harm to my fellow-men when I am dead."—Ex. It Dazzles The World- No discovery in medicine has ever created one quarter of the excitement that has been caused by Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. It's severest tests have been on hopeless vic tims of Consumption, Pneumo nia, Hemorrhage, Pleurisy and Bronchitis, thousands of whom it has restored to perfect health. [ For coughs, colds, asthma, t croup, hay fever, hoarseness ; and whooping cough it is the > quickest, surest cure in the , world. It is sold by C. L. Wil • son who guarantees satisfaction r or refund money. Large bot r ties 50c and $l.OO. Trial bottles '.free. "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good Dunns Latest En -i ! terprise. A Canning Fuclory. CAPACITY 1000 CANS PKR DAY. I buy peaches and tomatoes. 1 sell tin cans and pack fruits to order. 1 use water, steam and syrup of sugar and pack fruits free from adulteration. Bring your peaches to me and I will! save you money, labor, time and cost of glass jars. Fiuits prop erly packed in tin cans retain their original flavor. This is I lost in glass jars. Deliver your peaches to me! well assorted. "Pre-sos" in j boxes to themselves holding one j bushel each. 4 'Cluarstones" in: boxes holding one bushel each. Gather your peaches when just ripe. Let them be uniform in size and ripeness. Such peaches will bring good prices if they have any size. 1 shall employ none but neat packers and guarantee satisfac tion in prices, cleanliness and quality. You lose no fruits in tin cans. I teach you how to use the same tin can for any number of years. The tin can will not freeze or break and can be iilled any number of times during the same season. All ladies who are interested in canned fruits and catchup are invited to visit the factory. Factory located near Main Street, East Dunn. June 18 th 1901, G. I. SMITH, Proprietor. Strikes a ICit'll Find. "I was troubled for several years with chronic indigestion and nervous debility," writes F. J. Green, of Lancaster, N. 11., "No remedy helped me un til I began using Electric Bit ters, which did me more good than all the medicines I ever used. They have also kept my wife in excellent health for years. She says Electric Bitters are just splendid for female troub les ; that they are a grand tonic and invigorator for weak, run (down women. No other medi cine can take its place in our i family." Try them. Only 50c. j Satisfaction guaranteed by C. L. i Wilson. Was It Lincoln? Was He the Author j iOR WAS IT PKKHAI'S ANOTHKI;' ; Quite sin animated discussion lias recently sprung up in liter ary circles concerning l the ::u -thorship of tin l sentiment which President Lincoln used in hi f.imous Gettysburg address, when he said: "Government, of the people, for the people and hy the people shall not from the earth." Thomas Cooper, Daniel Webster and Theodore Parker are each cred ited with having used language to this effect on public occa sions. Some one writing in The Boston Transcript throws Sight upon the subject, as fol lows : "To the Editor of The Tran script— At the meeting yester day of the Massachusetts His torical Society Dr. S. A. Green read a paper on Lincoln's Get tysburg oration. Of course he quoted the now famous words —'the government of the peo ple, for the people and by the people, shall not peiish from the earth.' He said that similar definitions of democracy had been uttered by Thomas Cooper in 1794, by Webster in 1830 and Theodore Parker in 1850 ; but he thought it utterly un likely that Mr. Lincoln had ev er read or heard of either of these three similar expres sions." The simple facts are just these : "Mr. Lincoln was a great ad- j nnrer of Theodore Parker and | read his books, lectures and ser-; moiis constantly, so this formu la of words was probably very familiar to him, for these exact i words were coined by Mr. Par-: ker. "Many years ago the origin of these words was questioned | and discussed by the press, ! which prompted Charles \V. Slack, owner of the Boston Commonwealth, who was a close friend and ardent supporter of! Mr. Parker, to ascertain and: print the facts. They can bej found in the files of The Com monwealth. As a great scholar Mr Parker well knew that this j thought as to the true definition 1 of the word democracy had been uttered many times, but the j wording, he thought, might be I improved; so it dwelt in his mind for a long time—till the; proper form of words suddenly dawned on him, when he went to a friend and cried out: 'Eu reka, Eureka, Eureka!' and read to him these words : "The true definition of democracy is, 'a government of the people, for the people, by the people.'" These words satisfied him and all the world since, Mr. Lincoln adopted them and sent them around the world immortalized, i Mr. Parker's gift of terse, com pact expression, coupled with his great moral earnestness, his high principles, his great moral courage, enabled him to fill Mu-j sic hail with listeners every! Sunday so long as he lived. His j fame was so great that it used j to be said that most of the busi ness men who came to Boston on business from all over the country managed, when they could, to be here on Sunday to listen to Theodore Parker. "I think many may like to know this bit of history of the famous words."—The Sunny South. Call at Hood & Grantham's drug store and get a free sam ple of Chamberlain's Stomach aud Liver Tablets. They are an elegant physic. They also improve the appetite, strength en the digestion and regulate the liver and bowels. They are easy to take and pleasant in effect. We are informed that Mrs Carrie Nation is to visit Little- j ton at the coming session of the Woman's Temperance Union of: the State. We do not know | what that is to mean to the sa loons of the State. We can get along in North Carolina with-' out Mrs. Nation's hatchet and we can also get along without j the hundreds of saloons in the State —and they are fast grow ing less. Twenty years ago they were scattered all over the State, in towns and at cross roads, but they are being push ed off and to stay. We are heartily in sympathy with the good women who are working so hard to get rid of the saloon that causes so much woe and sorrow to womankind.—N. C. Baptist. SPRING SEASON R. G. TAYLOR,, II IIMHIIE tunnsi. OF DUNN, N. (!., Announces that he is d»-iern;ineu In do more I n-itics ibis i vear than ever before. He has ihe goods nnd wnnu -he' ensio i mers to buy them. Prices are lower than over. |W , V crv i DOLLAR he will give you TWO DOLLARS worth . v |. 0 He has determined to sell his stock of coeds at .1, ,> T ; iri,«r | for Cash or on Credit. ' * ,mer He can aceommodate von to credit on reasonable terms. Be sure and see him. CLOTHING-. CLOTH IMC. CLOTHING-. You can get what you want in this Jim*. We h;n- the larg est selection in the country and can fit- any size Prices made to please the customer. His stock is being added to daily ami von will find SHOES! SHOES! ir>oo Pairs of Ladies and Mens arid Children Shoes. Ladies Kid Shoes, Ladies Yicis, I/ulies Oxford-. Ladies Slippers, La dies Shoes I'or every day w;w\ Ladi's KIIOPS M i;«l isiipper* from ' T4 4 * per pair up to so.'2r>. MLNS SH«)KS! Ca!j", Smooth Calf, Box Calf, Yicis, Dongolas, Russetr*, 'fans, 1 l>ny Shoes for sh|\ ! vice, Brogans. Kids. ftovs Shoes, Chi dtvr.s S s. Shirts, Collars, ilosierv. NV-e!-w-ar, fiats. I Cloves, Handkerchiefs, Fancy Hose, I'm'rivli.t!#, Valise*: SjWeli? ! els, Trunks. NOTIONS! Everything in tiiis line. Nothing i.i't out. Embroidery | Laces, Braids, Hamburg and Sw;>- Embroidery and 1 us?nion. Kid Cloves, Corsets, Hoisery, Tow. 1-, Damask-;. Napkin--. lings Carpets, Matting, Bed Spreads, Counterpanes. In IV-ess Trim ming there is a complete slock. Pearl Button?, Cilt HUMOUS, Silver Buttons, Siik Parasols, jii> fanch >t and newest styles. GROCERIES. •100 Bags of Fiour, 'Jn Bags of Colli •, |f, Barrels of Sugar, | Rice, Tea, Tobacco, Snulf. Lye. Potash. M»hi*se«, Snb. Bacon, Corn, Meal, Oats, Bran. Mill Feed, Farm Tools. Ilnrj-e Cor Jars. Bridles, Plows, Fertilizers, Gi;ano. Ka .;t. Phospha'r.-. Guano Distributors. Cotton Planters, Lime, Cement, PlaMer i'arris, Hail' and Builder's Material. UNDERTAKERS. In this line there is a complete line i' Buria! 'b-uls. From the smallest to the iai'gost Coiiiit. From the eije»i ■-« CofiJn to the Handsomest Casket. Burial Ruins for m n wwim-n. A Handsome llearse is kepi with this stock and '» sent out when needed. R» G.TAYL-'li, / A Wonderful Invention. j j j They cure dandruff, lmir fali ing, headache -tc , yet co-is the same as an ordinary comb —Dr.j White's Electric Comb. The; only patented Comb in the; world. People, everywhere it has been introduced, are v.ild with delight. You simply comb your hair each day and the comb does the re-t. This wonderful comb is simply iin-j breakable and is made so that it j is absolutely impos.-ible to break or cut the hair. Sold on a written guarantee to give per fect satisfaction in every respect. Send stamps for one. Ladies', size 50c. Gents' size 35c.; Live men and women wanted everywhere to introduce this article. Sells on "right. Agents are wild with success (See | want column of this paper.) Address D. N. ROSE, General i Mgr., Decatur, 111. i 1 CASTORS A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought i No. 24 "You ran i"ool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time; but you can't fool all the people all the time." WE DON'T want you fooled any of the time. Low priced paint will always fool you. It may look well when first put on but will not last. It costs as much to put on a poor paint aa it does a good one. THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS are made to fool no one. They are honest Paints for honest peo ple. They cover most, lock best, wear longest, are most enrnomv cal, and always full measure. SOI.D BY Duuu Hardware & Furni.iire Co Subscribe to THK L LNN£K I and get the home new a. 1