THE Democratic Banner. : «iV* ■* ■ .. _ x. PITTMAIT, Ed itor. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Three Months Cents Six Months .....50 Cents One Year ~.••• ••••- " ' Sent by Mail. Payable In advance. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDMSDAY DEMOCRATIC BANXKK IS TIN ORIGINAL County. Union, subscriber will please take notice, . Entered according to postal regnla ttous at the postoffice at Dann, N. C., a second class matter. DUNN, Harnett County, N. C. DUNN, N. c., October 23,1901. A Saloon In Harnett. We are sorry indeed to hea that Harnett eounty is to havi & saloon at Angier. This towi ' - is a new place recently built a the southern terminus of th road running down from Ral eigh. The license for the sa loon was granted last Monday •by the bounty Commissioner ' v frh petition from people in An gier. We wonder if any man • who- professes Christ signed tha petition? It is to be hoped not We understand that Count; Commissioner E. F. Young o Dunn opposed the license. Hi did right. Angier has takei a step which means crime an sorrow and poverty for thosi who come under the deadly in fluence of the demtJn whiskey But, we are persuaded tha this saloon will enjoy life fo only a season. It will not sta; there. It was a bad day fo Angier when it was opened an they will see that it will be ; good day when it ii closed. W know none of thoM interested there in this matter, but we d know that a saloon is a curs • -anywhere and the town tha gives its sanction to it has com mitted a wrong against thos who dwell there and those wh trade there.—North' Carolini '•-'Baptist. We want to say Amen to wha the Baptist has said. The good people of Angie will find * they have made i serious mistake in allowing i bar to open in their little town The bar only invites crime an disaster to any community, ant it not only invites but italway: comes sooner or later. Th town or community that seeki to establish better trade, to in crease the valuation of the prop erty by the liquor traffic wil find th*fc it has made a mistak that 3v^^eJ uire many years t( We reap what w aiid"if we allow bar-room ■• 'fi£ our midst we may expect t( i';' reap crime and drunkards body's boys have got tc patronize the bar to make i profitable, and the questior each man should ask himself V ®*'will it-be my boy?'-' You say there was a liquoi distillery in.the town and thai you had just as well have tb( open bar. Well, you have twc evils now instead of one, and is that better? Many men will not drink corn whiskey, and they should be congratulated for their good judgment, while if the bar with all its fine wines and mixed drinks are in reach they will get drunk and disgrace . themselves and-spend money that ghbuTd be spent on their family. Plant bar-rooms in your town and reap drunkards •|s all there is in the whole mat ter. You say we are reaching out beyond our bounds to speak of the liquor traffic in Angier. This paper is published in the interest of the whole people of the county and when we see danger ahead for a community jfe-is our duty as a citizen to .warn them against it, and this we 3re going to do. If we should dq less we Would be unworthy of your support. We trust the p little town Of Angier will soon -■'-see its mistake and shut up the bar-room and drive the accursed distillery from their community. Harnett Standi First. ——— 9 •; /.v ii.' •/ At the Centennial in Phila delphia 1 , ftf 1876 : , the medal for the best bale of cotton on exhi bition was awarded to Mr. Daniel Stewart, of Harnett county. At the World's Fair in Chi cago in 1893, the medal for the best sample of corn on exhibi tion was awarded to Mr. Jacob C. Williams, of Harnett county. Having won firet place on these two great staples at the greatest exhibitions in the world, Harnett is ambitious to take both these medals at the Charleston Exposition and is _ going to send its best cotton and corn in the North Carolina Exhibit.— News and Observer, of Sunday. The above is a creditable onowing for our~ county. It i 8 be remembered that the two abovg oefifisioilS iflfciWefl te Were the- greatest, occasions known in the history of the United States and possibly in ■ the world. It is a high honor and compliment to our county to stand first in two of the ■ greatest products known to the | w r orld, cotton and corn. Our soil and climate has no equal in the world and it only re mains for the "world to take ' knowledge of this for Harnett ; to be thoroughly developed. There is much valuable farming land in the jcounty that needs 3 development and should home seekers come this way tlicy will fiud a hearty welcome, a social and congenial people. Now lgt us put forth a special effort to : hold the honor by sending a product to Charleston Expo sition that will take first medal. We can do it, and why not? j Working 24 Hours a Day -1 There's no rest for those tire less little workers —Dr. King's New Life Pills. Millions are always busy curing Torpid Liv er, Jaundice, Billiousness, Fe ver and Ague. They banish sick headache, drive out Mala ria. Never gripe or -weaken. Small, taste nice, work won ders. Try them. 25c at C. L. Wilson's. He Offends Southern People. \ President Roosevelt has made a serious mistake, and commit ted a grave offense against the southern people. It is not so much in his hav ing a "well behaved and well ed ucated negro like Booker Wash ington at his dinner table with his family, but it is the baneful ' effect in his position as presi -1 dent it will have on certain vicious negroes who seek social ' equality. 1 The example is a bad one. No good can come from it to the country, or to the negro race. President Roosevelt has made a senseless blunder and without reason. God set up the barrier be tween the races. No president of this or any other country can break it down. A dinner given by one man to another in the home and pri vacy of his family means that the guest or his son may woo and win the host's daughter. When the one man is a white man and the other black it means that there is but one more step to miscegenation—a sinful and wilful breaking of God's plain law. The man, no matter how high his position in power may be, who practices social equality between the white and black race, will never revive the sup port of the southeru people We cannot imagine anything more humiliating to the south ern people, and all other people as for that, than to have the Chief Executive of the nation to sit down at his table and dine with a negro. This must have been extremely humiliating to Mrs. Roosevelt and her chil dren. Nothing good can come out of thisj either to the Presi- i dent or to Booker Washington | an.d his race. It seems that the high Executive forgot himself, but we feel sure the white men | of the nation will not- forget him when they come to fill the President's chair the next elect tion. • SAYS ME WAS TORTURED. "I suffered such pain from corns I could hardly walk," writes H. Robinson, Hills borough, Ills., "but Bucklen's Arnica Salve completely cured them." Acts like magic on like magic on sprains, bruises, cuts, sores, scalds, burns, boils, ulcers. Perfect healer of skin diseases and piles. Cure guar teed by C. L. Wilson. 25c. Lane's Depository. The editor had occasion in the last few days to visit Mr. J. W. Lane's Buggy Depository, next door to his livery stables, and examine his new line of up-to-date and modern buggies. He has the most complete vari ety of styles and makes we have seen. One of the prettiest and most substantial buggies found in his mammoth stock is the Oxford buggy, manufactured bj one of the leading buggy concerns of North Carolina. He is offering these buggies at very close margin aud will sell for cash or on easy terms. You find embodied in this line all that is elegant and desirable; together with durability, which go together to give to the pub lic the article desired. It will be worth a trip to call and see his line of vehicles even if you do not care to buy. O^LjSTOXIIA.. Kama* _/f Kd ¥w Haw Always Bought Our Wail of Wve. We are prone, in seasons of prosperity to imagine that life will always be a pleasant jour ney midst sunshine, ilowers and plenty, that darkness, want and troubles will never be our por tion. Right there is where we slip a cog. The tide never came in that it did not recede, there never was a day tiiat was not followed by night, there never was a joy that was not the forerunner of a grief, and there never was a period of plenty and prosperity that was not followed-by an era of scarcity and depression. This is a law as unerring as the one that causes winter to follow summer, and why we do not recognize the one as forcibly as the other, is a matter that baf fles comprehension. For years upon years this section has enjoyed unpreceden ted prosperity, every industry has flourished and every indi vidual has prospered, yet one single short crop year knocks us all ''cata-wampuswe con template migrating to the poor house", we wear faces as long as the 22nd day of June and our general conversation would cast a gloom a njorgue. Of course we cannot raise profitable crops in a bad season, but should certainly be able to save enough in twelve or fifteen good years to tide over six months such as the present; the fact remains that we must do so, and is common sense to put as good a face on the mat ter as possible.. Let us hunt out the bright spots and talk about them, "let us help the fellow who is in slightly harder luck than our selves by words of cheer and acts of encouragement, let us make the best we can out of discourgaging conditions, and resolve in the future, not to go beyond our depth when we have good seasons under the vain lusion that hard times will nev er visit us again.—Mount Olive Advertiser. WANTED—Beef cattle and all the hides, both dry and green, in the country. Highest spot cash prices paid on deliv ery. Don't wait but come to see me. L. P. Jernigan, Dunn, N. C. To cure SICK HEADACHE, HABITUAL CONSTIPATION, and all diseases arising from In- j digestion. They will purify your blood and make your complexion I as FAIR AS A LILY. They are gelatin coated. PRICE 25 CENTS. I masssngill, MARKS & 1 I . .COMPAN Y, | p liiite % gf NEW GOODS ARRIVING EVERY DAY. @ \\ CALL AND SECURE A BARGAIN TO-DAY. Miss FlorEn.ee DUNK. M. * FANCY• GOODS. * o o The latest styles of the fall season of 1901 now exhibited, Call and see them. HOME ENTEPRISET We have opened up a Job Dye Shop . , and clothes renovating establish ment where we do all kinds of work oil clothing for Ladies Gent s, Misses and Children, such as ' Cleaning, Dying, Re All work guaranteed. Prompt attention given to work bv mail or express. Located 2ud door from Town Hall. - DUNN DYE WORKS, jDunn, N. C. Th& Starch For a Mori. Napoleon said, "1 have two hundred millions in my coffers, but I would give tliem all for Marshal Ney." Napoleon want ed a man when he said that. The great cry, since the world began, is "Give us a man." The scarcest thing in the world is a man, —a man who can accomplish something, a man of force, a man who has a definite purpose and knows how to fling his life out to it with all the weight of his being. Such a man is needed in every calling. This century calls loudly for men of brt>ad and liberal cul ture. This is a very practical age ; theories and theorists are not in demand. The cry is ever for a man who can produce re sults, a man possessing fact, practical ability and executive force. The Avorld wants men who are well balanced, and who are not cursed with some inherent defect or moral weakness which cripples their usefulness and neutralizes all their power. While specialists are in demand there is little hope for men who are one sided in their develop ment, and who have sent all the energies of their being into one narrow twig, so that all the other branches of their lives have withered and died. Men who do not take half view of things-men of completeness, and of large comprehensive ability,—are needed every where. The world wants men of com mon sense, who will not let a college education spoil them for a practical everyday life. It wants men who are educated all over whose hands are deft, whose eyes are alert and microscopic, and whose brains are keen and well devel oped.—Success. Business Proposition. Now is the time to protect your property with a nice fire policy that will get your money after the fire. For your policies call on J AS. A. TAYLOR & BRO. End of The World. Prof. Ludwig Maxienburger, from somewhere or other, says the earth has slid out of its or bit, and for that reason our summers will get hotter and our winters colder until the duece will be to pay. Dont get scared, brethren, but keep on paying your preacher and prin ter just like jou were going to stay here a long time. A soft answer sometimes comes hard. ♦ • Fame often consists of having yellow dogs and five-cent cigars named after you. | -*m | ie | ! !| . '—- >■ o i i alj 1 : TILL SHE FOUND THAT SHE HAD BOUGHT ||j £!jij HER TOILET ART!" LES, SOAPS, „• ETC , AT THE WRONG PLACE. *j! | There Is INTo Place I iT LISE THE CORNER I: DRUG store 10 ——To find the right article at the right.price. j]| •e >| Our expert prescription || r d j work is still the leading jj 0 : feature of our business and J ; nothing' new escapes our | » j| notice. 1 Yours and please, || ' AURIVlia©: EVER¥ ©A* ; Baucom Go's. )S GW vy. 77: YK QOC YK 3T/3 ota ya y/. y/oca yjr: xx y/; y/» coo LAPIES i If you want an Up-to-date J lal call at my store. We are receiving great quantities of e TRIMMED AND READY-TO-WEAR HATS, and if you find nothing in stock to please you, remember we can i- trim one on short notice. Dress Goods for the ladies in great variety. Call and see us. Yours to please, BAUCOM & GO. g. . r if i* iiirEl ! lii ******* }| V\ We desiro to inform the public that we are nowlll 1 jillocated in the NEW BRICK BUILDING RECENTLY/)) ); (/ERECTED BY MR. W. D. THORNTON '"ON EASTM ) | J BROAD STREET. We have plenty of room and ouell JJof the most complete lines of jj] J I f vmtxmw® I to select from to be found in the county. New goods ar 111 it*?*™* evei 7 oay We sell at a close margin // find V l6 most satisfactory way to do business /// Watch space and you will find it to your financial! I QUICK SALES—SMALL PROFITS Come\k Ijl to see us. * ))) Yours to please, fff I MBl FIIRKIimSB CO. J At Cost We are now offering the entire stock of Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes, Groceries and General Merchandise of the firm of RAG-LA ls!D & FUOUA^, LILLINGTON, N. C. RTSPOT COST ■ i We say cost and mean cost. Now is the time to secure c some number one bargains. The stock consist of a great variety r and it will pay you to come and see what bargans we are offer- V mg. The goods must go and now is the time.to buy before the c goods are picked over. Yours to please, ! ? Ragland & Fuquay, u XILLINGTON, N. C. |T. C. & Co' BEFORE BUYING ANYTHING IN # CLOTHING, 0 Gents' furnishings, liats, D r Goods and Notions. «• .• !| Shoes! Shoes! -We have an Up-To-Date line in Men's'fine goo,ls " From $l.OO SEE OUR LADIES' "Vicious $1.50," They are the best on the market for the money. bkfartmen' is Up-To-Date in every respect. Hay, Corn, Oats, and F Stuff always on hand in car lots at lowest possible prices. Gall on us before placing jour order. We guarantee sat faction. Yours to please, I T. C. )OUNS & CO. C. F. Pope is with us and will be glad to see and serrp h friends. - Reliabe Goods, eliabe Prifces. eliable Time. O 0 '• •: This you get at GAINEY & JORDAN'S. When you bi you want to purchase from a reliable firm and want reliab ■ goods. . .J .. Grainey & Jordan Are th« old reliable Jewelry firm and carry nothing in stock bi what is reliable, and goods that can be guaranteed. We do reliable repairing and will make; prices right. Give us your patronage and we will TREAT YOU RKillT. ALL MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. Thanking you for past patronage and soliciting a contii uance of the same, \] We are .."yours to serve, GAmiE¥ & eI®RBA!9. "" PHSLLIPino., 'Phone No. 24. f } • MOVED. • ou will now find Phillips & Co. in the* store fronting Luck now Square, next door to W. H. Blanchard. They carry ii stock at all times, best Flour, Meal, Sugar, Coffee, Green am Roasted, Syrups, Finest Maple, and Molasses. ©AKIHEB ©O#OS. Peaches, Apples, Corn, Beans and * Tomatoes.' Cannec Meats, Beef, Ham, Sausage, Salmon, etc. Preserves, Jellies, Teas, Chocolates of all kinds. Pickles ii kegs and in bottles. Condensed Milk, etc. -L • CAKES HN£> C^A&E^S. Ginger Snaps 5 ct s , )er pound. Orange Wafers 15 »« « Jelly Cakes 15" Oyster Crackers 5 « »« Best Soda Crackers 10 " " CAIMOIES. THE BEST OF ALL KINDS. Vegetables of all kinds. Butter and Cheese. Ice Cold Drinks. Tobacco from 25 to 60 cents. Baskets, the best for 5 cents. Fresh roasted peanuts al ways- on hand., When you want anything call on Phillips & Co. ■HINT iricf The store formerly occupied by W. D. Thornton but now by W. D. Thornton & Co. is as heretofore on a boom and his neff partner will doubtless add much life and push to their new and attractive stock which is daily arriving, both in price an quality. All we ask is to call and get our prices before buying elsewhere [and we will make somebody sit and sing, Just as I am without customers, when they ought to be waiting on a customer were it not for onr prices. We have an apology to make in connection with our goods but it is only on prices, they are so low we feel almost ashamed to quote them. Think of it, good bi'ogan ?' loe 97f, good shoe foj* the ladies Ladies dress goods so low that we will not astonish you by quoting prices here. Lips are whispering, ears are hearing, hands are painting, eyes are see ing the advantages of buying here. Come one and all and give us a call. Yours for business, W. D. THORNTON & CO.