Newspapers / The Democratic Banner (Dunn, … / Feb. 18, 1892, edition 1 / Page 4
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A State Banquet Relic. Mrs. Harrison has made a number of most interesting discoveries within the past year, in regard to pieces of furniture and articles used in the state dining room, the result of her researches hav ing from time to time been noted through these columns. The latent thing in this line, and de cidedly one of more than usual interest to the public, is in regard to the gold bordered mirror like which has figured as the central ornament at countless numbers of tatc banquets. All that has heretofore been known in regard - it was that it had been in use for this pur pose far back in the eaily days of the Government when state banquets were of Jess frequent occurrence, though none the esi ceremonial affairs, than those of the present day. ' . FronJ papers containing undoubtedly reliable information it has now been as certained that the long mirror, with its beautiful gilt bronze openwork railing, cmbelished with rlgares,va3 purchased in France by the United State? Minister in accordance with an order to the effect from the tirst President of the Republic. Upon its arrival in this country the table ornament was taken to Philadelphia arid first used by General Washington on the occasion of a great state banquet at tha Presidential mansion in 1791. Wash ington Post. 3Iachine-lde Music. Harp-paying by machinery is one of the,. latest novelties. The harp is ar ' tanged so that the plane of it? strings is horizontal, the instrument lying on the table, after the fashion of a zither. Then, as regards the written music, the notation of the traditional stave has been abandoned, and sheets upon which are imprinted mysterious groups of num bers are used in its stead. When one of these sheets is olid into a frame made for the purpose the meaning of the figures is interpreted. Each of them falls under a string of the instrunjt, and by pickiug at tbem in numerical order with a bevelled pen cil of ivory the operator produces a tune. Time and phrasing are indicated by the spacing and alignment of the numbers, nor are the requirements of harmony forgotten When the melcdy of the air is ad judged insufficient one of the figures is accompanied by a letter, indicating that a button attached to the instrument, and bearing the same symbol, should be at this juncture pressed. This action, by bringing a small saw of ivory points into play, produces a cord suitable to the oc casion. Pall Mall Gazette. Wood 3Iosaic Industry. The wood mosaic industry is carried to great perfection in Frauce. The scale of colors is extremely rich, as no less than 12,600 different shades can be used, ,o that all descriptions of paintings can be faithfully reproduced in this way. The great advantage of this mosaio is that in case the colors should fade they can be restored to their original freshnesi by planing, because the libers of the wood arc entirely permeated with puiut. The mosaic is durably affixed to boards with the graiu at right angles, so that no atmospheric change can atlect'it. Chica go News. The salary of the French President is 180,000 a year. rs. Gleaveland Tells of Her Cure of Nervous Dyspepsia Mrs. A. B. Cieavelaud, of Milford, Mass., Is the sis ter of the Jjorcross Brothers, of Boston, the famous builders. Iu a, long auil interesting statement (which win be sent in full to any one who wishes it), Mrs. Cleavelanil says that a few years ago sho had a severe-form of nervous dyspepsia, the symptoms being Palpitation of tho Heart burning sensation iu the stomach, fainting spells, and an nwlul death-like ft-eling from which she often thought she should never recover. She was tired and languid all the time and did not dare to lie down for fear of a fainting spell. She had six diflereut physicians but none did her any good. One day, reading about Hood's Sarsaparilla she decided to try it. The fainting spells grew less, soon ceased wholly, her appetite returned, and has Increased Ftom 88 to 132 Pounds She has not been so well for 23 years, docs all hei household work easily. To Hood's Sarsaparilla She ascribes all her improvement and is ready to convince any one of the merit of this medicine. If you suffer similarly, try Hood's Sarsaparilla. lfood'H cure all Uver IHw. ! FRIEND" To Young Mothers : : ; Makes Child Birth Easy, Shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. JtooJc to "Mother' mailed FREE. 5 BRADF1ELD PECULATOR CO. 3 ATLANTA, GA. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Reasons why YOU SHOULD ORDER YOUR FROM T.W.WOOD & SONS RICHMOND, VA. GARDEN SEEDS. At 1.000 miles distance wo maloc It Just ' as easy for you to obtain Uie bent and , most improved Varieties and lat est noveMie.. 83 we UKI.lVI.ll POSTIMtli anrwhero ail Garden Bee1s at pit; and ounce rates, and give 2S fta, worth extra pkt. teeds for each f 1.00 wort a ordervd. We also have special low rates on fceeds in fonlK. Our GRASS, CLOVER, 4ind Field Seed trade is the largest In the Southern States most convincing I proof of our high-grade Seeds and rea- . son able prices. NO RISK IN LENDING MOJJEY through the , mails, and we guarantee the safe arrival or all orders tilled by us. Full Information and cultural directions of all Farm and Garden Croni is (riven In 1 our New Catalogue, which is the most In- I Btruo e e ver ismiwl. AI ailed free, bend for IU T.W.WOOD & SONS Seedsmen, RICHMOND, Va. EDS DYNAMITE. FREAKISH QUALITIES OP A DANGEROUS EXPL.OSIVK. it Has an Obstinate Way ot Taking Its Own Course While It. Kills a Man His lior&cs Are Unhurt. The recent nitro-glycerine or dynamite explosion in the office3 of Russell Sage at New York aroused much interest iu the Pennsylvania oil regions, which have without doubt, been the scene of more disasterous events of a similar character than any other section . of the world. Many a Bradford man, says a correspond ent of the New York Recorder, ha? been blown up while "shooting" or tor pedoing oil wells, and professional handtera of nitro-glycerine tell strange stories of the freaks performed br the dangerous explosive. As in the case of Russell Sage, one mm has often escape! from an explosion tlive when he seems to have no more chance of safety than others who were blorii to atom?. "It all depends on the direction the explosion takes," as James E. Gallagher, one of the best known authorities on dynamite and glycerine in the oil coun try, remarked to a crowd of producers. "One time the force of the explosion goas one way," Gallagher continue!, "and again it takes the opposite course fey no apparent reason. Do you re nember the strange incident when William II. Mc Ilenry and Alexander Carmen, of Brad ford, were blown to mince meat at A'ton, Pa,, not long ago, and their horses es caped alive? It was a very remarkable allair. The men were unloading their wagon near the oil well they were to shoot, when in some manner the explo sive was set off, and in the wink of an eye both men were literally torn to minute fragments and scattered tc the winds of heaven. "But although a round hole three feet deep and sixteen feet , in diameter was torn in the carta at the spot where the the unfortunate men stood, the horses attached to the wagon were practically unhurt. It their fright the3 had started to run at the time of the explosion, but were held twenty feet from the spot by the harness which caught against a stump. They were dazed and , listless and seemed to be deaf. But why did they escape annihilation, when their masters were not only killed, but as nearly destroyed as possible by the terrific ex plosion? Why, too, was it that several cans of nitro-glycerine standing near the horses were not exploded by the shock? Any man who answers these questions will have solved couundrums that have beeu puzzling handlers of dyni uite ani hitro glycerine for miny a year. "I lost a man myself at Oleaa, N. Y. several years ago," the big glycerine shooter coutinued, with just the fuintest quiver in his voice. "His name was Lew Hart, and he never knew what struck h4m. He was driving alonjr the roai in June, 1SS7, with a small load of nitro glycerine and had almost reached the fac tory where we were making glycerine ana dvnamite when in some maimer that wilL never be known an explosion oc tuned. Hart was hurie I thirteen rods from the spot where the blow-up took place, a deep hole was blown iu the road, and the wagon was literally demolished! but as in the explosion at Alton, the horses escaped comparatively uninjured and a few HecoaJs later galloped up to the factory door where wc stood vonder in what had happened. If the blow-up had occurred a few seconds later I would not be spinning you this yarn now. theory concerning these strange occurrences is that in both the accidents! have mentioned the force of the explo sion Aveut away from the horses, that is, that the expausiou of suddenly liberated sjases was not iu all directions at once, but that each explosion look a course ol its own. The men were killed because they were in the very storm centre, 'so ti speak, but the horses escaped because tley were several feet away. Then seems to be no goo! reason for such mani Testations, but any experienced handlci of dynamite or glycerine will confirm what I have said. "Some people think there is a greaf difference between nitro glycerine anc dynamite," coutiuued Gallagher, "but as a matter of fact dynamite is simplj nitro-glycerine and wood pulp (which if only fine sawdust) mixed. Nitro glycerin is formed by the action of nitro and sul phuric acids on sweet glycerine oil. But Avhile dynamite is only a mixture ol nitro-glycerine and sawdust, it looki entirely unlike glycerine and ite action is in some respects different. Glycerine ii a pale white liquid and about as thick 04 very rich milk. Dynamite, on the other hand, is a solid, and being principally compored of sawdust looks like sawdust. It will not go oil at -a shock like glycerine I and will burn harmlessly if it is not con fined. Dynamite is made in different grades. A low grade contains but little gly cerine and a great deal of wood pulp, but the more glycerine you pour into a given quantity of sawdust the higher trie grade becomes and the more daugerous jthe dynamite is. I suppose one could our so much glyceiine into th? sawdust that a blow from a hammer would ex plode the mass, but dynamite properly niad e may be thrown around with impu nity. Nitro-glycerine, however, de minds more respectful treatment. A very slight'shock or the toai of fire will exolode it instauter. Sometime?, how ever and here is another strange phase of the business a rery violent shock has been known to hare no effect. "Another peculiarity of nitro-glycer- incis that cold weather makes it peculi arly sensitive and most accidents happen in the wintertime. Still another strange thing about the explosive is the fact that when a man is blown up there i3 no bloo! visible anywhere. In many explosions that I have investigated the heat was so intense that the life blood of the victims seemed to have been consumed. I be lieve, to that in explosions of unusual force, where a large quantity of mtro ;lycerine or dynamite has been touched iff, not only the blood but also much of he flesh of the men killed is burned up. rhis peculiarity was particularly marked tna commented upon by the oil reigioa lewspapers at the time Doc. Haggerty ivas blown up at Pleasantville.Penn. This iccident, which was in some respects ne of the most remarkable nitro-glycer-ne explosions in the history of the oil ;ountry, occurred about three years ago. Many tons of the explosive, including .he big load on Haggerty s wagon acd the contents of a well-filled magazine, -entupin smoke and fire. The con mssion of the explosion was heard thirty r forty miles. But what I wish to call our attention to is the fact that Hagger ;y'sbody was so completely destroyed by he explosion that many people believed that he had not been killed at all, but lad caused the blow-up for the purpose f covering his flight from the country. Thi3 theory was not generally accepted, ind my idea is that ha was totally innihilated. A careful study of .he scene warranted the opinion that rlaggerty dropped a can near the wagon j ;hat the wagen load of glycerine went off, tnd that when the magazine followed an distant later, poor llaggerty's remains were caught in the intense heat gener ated by both explosions and every par ticle of him was either blown to noth tngntss or was burned up.'" On Board a Buccaneer. The customs and regulations mosl commonly observed on board a buccaneer re worth noting. Every pirate captain, doubtless, had his own set of rules; but there were certain traditional articles that seem to have been generally adopted. The captain had the state cabin, a double vote in elections, a double share in booty. On some vessels it was the captain who decided to what direction to sail in ; but this and other matters of moment were oftener settled w. Oy a vote of the company, the captain's vote counting for two. The officers had a share and a half, or a share and a .piarter, of all the plunder, and the sail or's one share each. Booty was divided ivith scrupulous care and marooning was the penalty of attempting to defraud the general compauy if only to the amount )f a gold piece or a dollar. Every man had a full vote in. every affair of import ance. Arms were always to be clean and fit for service, and desertion of the ship or .juarters in battle was punished with leatb. On Roberts's ship a man who was crippled in battle received -$800 out jf the common stock, and a proportion ite sum was awarded for lesser hurts. Lowther allowed $750 for the loss of a ?imb,and other captains instituted a sort f tariff of wounds which extended to ears, lingers and toes. In chase or battle the captain's power was absolute. He who first spied a sail, if she proved to oe a prize, wa3 entitled to the best pair jf pistols on board her, over and above ais dividend. These pistoh were greatly coveted, and a pair would sell for as oiuch as $150 from one pirate to another. In their own commonwealth the pirates are reported to have been severe upon the point of honor, and among Roberts's crew it was the practice to slit the ears 01 nose of any sailor found guilty of robbing his fellow. Such feeble interest as now attaches to what was once the formidable fame of the pirates is not even esthetic, it ii merely comic. No imaginative essayist discusses piracy as a fine art; but Paul Jones is resurrected as the hero of f musical burlesque. Poor Paul ! And he is almost the only one of the whole buccaneering race whose stoiy discovers a trace of the legendary gallantry of piracy. Paul, whose father had been head gardener to Lord Selkirk, plun dered the Selkirk mansion of its plate, which he subsequently retured in a par eel to Lady Selkirk, with, a letter oi polite apology. National Review. Early Modes or Writing. The earliest mode of writing was on bricks, tiles, oyster shells, stones, ivory, bark and leaves of tree3. Copper and brass plates were very early ia use and a bill of feoffment oa copper was some years since discovered in India, bearing date one hundred years before Christ. Leather was also used, as well as wooden tablets. Then the papyrus came into use, and about the eight century the papyrus was succeeded by parchment. Paper, however, is of great antiquity, especially among the Chinese, but the first paper mill in England was built in 1588 by a German at Dartford, in Kent. Nevertheless, it was neatly a century and a half namely, iu 1713, before Thoinas Watkins, a stationer, brought paper making to anything like perfection. The first approach to the pen wa3 the stylus, a kind of iron bodkin, but the Romans forbade its use oa account of its frequent and even fatal use in quarrels, and then it was made of bone. Sub sequently, reeds, pointed and split like pens, as in the present day, were used. National Publisher and Printer. THE SOLDIER'S LOT. 1TISNOTSOBADASIS GENERAL. LY SUPPOSED. IJe is Well Fed, Clothed, and Liodxed Able to Save Something His , Amusement Kecordol One Company. The army is a better thing foi the average man than is generally sup posed. While the pay $ 13 a month is small, it must be remembered that it is $13 a month over and above all expenses for food, clothes, lodging, hospital at tendance and education. The clothinsr allowance is so large, too, that every man i3 able save more or less of it ac cording to the care he take3 of his clothes, and some of them make a very considerable item of this. Whenever the the enlisted man re-enlists he receives an increase of pay, and he has the oppor tunity of becoming through efficiency a non-commissioned officer, with a still greater increase of pay. Moreover, if ho is ambitious and has orgets a fairly good education, he is afforded every help rather than hindered, as is popularly supposed, from becoming a commis sioned officer. , The army is to the enlisted man a home, an insurance company, and a bank. The Government permits him to draw interest on any sum of money he may deposit, and it is a tolerably safe institution. If he is injuted or used up through sickness, he is either nursed back to health or pensioned for life. If he grows old in the Government service he is retired on a pension precisely as an officer is. And after all, the work of a soldier is not particularly hard. That it is not a disagreeable one is attested by the fact that a great majority of the en listed men, and necessarily the better ones, re-enlist and practically spend their whole livei iu the army. The happiness and comtort of the soldier depend principally upon the com manding officer of the company to which he may be assigned. The company is a family, and good company commanders so regard it. The average soldier is a child from his very training. He must eat, sleep and work at a certain time named by another, and he is well fed and well clothed according to the ability of the captain or lieutenant who has charge of him. He cannot even buy a handkerchief without the permission of such an officer. If a man be drafted into a good com pany there is no reason in the world why he should not enjoy life to the utmost. He will be furnished an abundance of good clothes and will be taught to take a pride in keeping them in good con dition. He will be furnished with food, not only plentiful, but of the best quality and of sufficient variety. Out of his small pay an English soldier has to pay for his vegetables and any extra meat he may have. Our soldiers get more than they, can eat of everything that is fur nished, and are permitted to trade the surplus off for any. dainties from the commissary department that they may wish at Government contract price. Then, too, every compauy in the army has a compmy garden that supplies it with vegetables, and again the garden is a success according to the efforts of the company commander. Then there are ways in which a company makes money to supply- its mess with still greater dainties and its reading-room with literature, and often with billiard and pool tables. Beyond keeping himself and his ac coutrements clean, attending drills, and doing guard duty, the enlisted man has to take his turn every three or four days doing, the work of a laborer about the post. This is the crying shame of the army of to-day. Tho men aro not en listed a3 artisans nor as laborers, and they should not be expected tc do such work. It is worthy of notice that they do the work, nevertheless, very cheer fully. Some day, when the officers have agitated the matter enough, all this will be change 1, and the soldier will be expected to do nothing but actual mili tary duty. The soldier on the frontier has even more amusement than the officer. The writer, once a lieutenant of cavalry, ha3 many a time, when alone with a company in the field wished that he could sit down at the camp fire with the men and enjoyv tbeir jokes and share in their con versation. They have the opportunity of playing ali sorts of game3 and the lime to practise them, too. It is prob able that they have more society at a Government post than they would have at their horae3, and they usually have opportunities for sport in the way r ' hunting and fishing that would be envied by many a rich New Yorker. There are always post schools for the education ot the soldier, and there are always post libraries that contaiu a cer tain number of books to keep him busy reading. The writer strvei iu a company of cavalry iu which three mea had saved up considerably over $1000, and almost all the others sums less than that, down to $25. Half the company were men who were on their second, third, or fourth enlistment. They had a billiard table that was said to be the best one in Arizona, a garden that yielded a profit, from the sale of vegetables, of over $80 a month, besides furnishing the company table with every variety that could be asked for; a drove of forty or more hogs (very valuable live stock in the fai West), chickens, a milch cow, and a inul to ave the men from the harder part ol the company work. The company fund cf ready money amounted, at times when the writer had charge of it, to several hundreds of dollars. The men had a splendidly-equipped reading room and formed, altogether, aa exceptional company. The result of such a state of affairs wa3 the gratifying fact that only one man deserted from tuc company in years, while all the time there were dozens of applications from men in other companies to be transferred to this one whenever a vacancy occurred in it. It is an actual fact that the men had better food and a greater variety of it than any officers at the different posts where it was stationed while the writer was with it; and it is doubtful whether any men of the same class in the country were half as comforta ble and happy as those same men in that cavalry company. New York Times. A Human Cat. Willie Smitb, aged ten, of Hartford Cy, Ind., was two jears ago bitten by a pet cat. Recently he has been sub jected to peculiar paroxysms. Recently, while walking about the room, he was suddenly seized with an attack, and, with the agility and certainty of a cat, sprang upon the dining-room table and began to spit and scratch the wall and ceiling with all the viciousness of an en raged feline. Whenever persons would approach ho would prepare to spring upon them. Finally, by throwing blan kets over his head, he was subdued. Last night he had another paroxysm. He became totally oblivious to all around him except to an object attached to a string. He would lower it over the side of his face, and with the stealthiness of a cat he would gradually draw it upward until it would appear in view, then as quick as lightning he would pounce upon it and try to bite it. This he repeated several times. Then he would lick his handsand mew all the time" Evry ac tion, every move simulated a meSoer of the feline family. After tho paroxysm had in a measure subsided he curled him self up in bed as a. cat would in pre paring for a quiet nap, and, uttering the mew suggestive of kittens, went to sleep. This morning he is resting quietly and in the possession of ail his faculties. He can remember nothing that occurred while laboring under these attacks. It is not hydrophobia, hysteria or epilepsy, for many of the symptoms are wanting. His temperature remains normal, pulse slightly accelerated or quickened, liver and kidneys active, appetite good, di gestion perfect. During an interval be tween the paroxysms he is clear intel lectually, bright and cheerful. Doctor Ciouser, an old and reputable physician, says that in fifty years' practice he has seen nothing like the case. St. Louis Republic. A Bible in Ninety Volumes. A German lady imug in Manchester, England, possesses what is supposed to be the largest Bible, in one volume, in the world. It is an heirloom, 300 years old, with pages two feet long, and but little less in width, and at the head o each page is a line in red iuk which trans lated reads "This is a history." Another resident of the same city has c-otn piled, so to speak, a Bible iu ninety volumes, his additions to the text consisting of pictures and photographs which he has collected, to the number of nearly 10,- 000. Mechanical News. The catch of sea!s by the Victorie (British Columbia) fleet for 1831 was about fifty thousand skins, over nine thousand skins in excess of the catch 01 1890. . Pennsylvania's Department of Agri culture will urge Congress to provide a remedy for leprosy. Beware of Ointment for Catarrh That Contuin Mercury, As mercury will Burely destroy the sense of erne 11 and completely UeraDge the w hole sys tem when entering it through the mucous sur faces. Such articles should never be used ex cept on prescriptions from reputable, physi cians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the pood you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.,contains no mercury, and is taken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, 01o, by F. J. Cheney fc Co. f3F Sold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle. Over 300,000 orange trees were planted in Mexico last year by planters from Califor nia. Boschee's German Syrup is more successful iu the treatment of Con sumption than any other remedy prescribed. It has been tried under every variety of climate. In the bleak, bitter North, in damp New England, in the fickle Middle States, in the hot, moist vSouth everywhere.- It has been in demand by every nationality. It has beeu era ployed in every stage of Consump tion. In brief it has been used by millions and its the only true and reliable Consumption Remedy. 5 T App7 L-aun mlo eaca uortrll. 0Q000009 TySt,sTinyPi!IsQ Q enable the dynpeptic to eat whatever Q he irifilieK. Tliey cause the food toa- . sitnilate ami nonrinh tin? body, give R appf' ite and develop fles.lu I'ricr, 25 vents. Exact size shown in border. OOOQOOO0O "German Svrura" M Ii CATARRH Finger Tips of Idiots. Impressions of the finger tips of idiots have been found by Dr. d'Abundo to show very different markings from those of sane people. In a number of idiots the markings on the tips of all the fingers of each hand were identical, and in one idiot the tips of the thumbs had the same markings as those of the finger3. Thero was a noticeable smoothness of the finger tips in all the idiots. New York Jor" nal. The Oaly One Ever Printed. CAS TOC F1XD THE WORD? These Is a 3 inch display adreri isement in this paper, this week, which has no two words atixe except one word. The same is true of each new oneapparinif each week, from The Dr. Barter Medicine Co. This house places a "Crescent" on everything they make and pub lish. Look forit, send them the name of the word and they wilt return vou book, beacti- Fl'L L1THOOB1PHS OrSAMPLES FKEE. The trouble on the Mexican border con tinues. XlAsy persons are broken down from over work or fioneliold cares. Brown's Iron Bit ters rebai ds the system, aid digestion, re moves excess of bile, and cures malaria. A spendid tonic for women and children. ukak Caspar, y yonumr. a valuable vein of coal has been found just beneath the grass r cults fs TOOB blood i-oor? Take Beecham's Pills. Is vor liver out of order? Us Bet chain's t'ills. 2i cents a box. Tbe manufacture of beet sugar is attain ing large proportions in Nebraska. For Couuhs and Throat troubles use Brown's Bronchial, Thoches. "They stop an attack of my asthma cough very promptly." C Falch, Miamiville, Qhiu Natural, gas has been found near Salt Lake City, Utah. Ladies neelin a tonic, or children who want building up, t-hould take Brown's Iron Bitters, it is pleasant to take, cures Malaria, Indigestion, Bitio'isness and Liver Com plaints, makes the Blood rich and pure. If yoii would be correct in pronouncing Manitoba accent the last syllable. FITS stopped free by Dr." Kijne's G&BA.T Nerve Restorer. No tits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and S- trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, Oil Arch St., Phila.. Pa. s OItt ENJOYS Both the method and result wlum Syrup of Figs is taken ; it ia pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable, druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL LOUISVILLE, KY. HEW YORK. K.V. Kennedy's MedicalDiscovery Takes hold in this order: Bowels, Liver, Kidneys, Inside Skin, Outside Skin, rxfvtef erery thing before It that ought to be oat. irou know whether you need it or not. OoU toy every druggist, and manufactured by DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBUBY, MASS. c, w, mosBAW iv;.'-.-"". CfMRLOTYB, '. C". Ht-uJ for prii-fs and samples opsur i Mornhinn Habit Cured in IO - 1 to SO day. N pay till cured. Si DR. J. STEPHENS. Lebanon.Ohio. PATE MTSwiSiWf: 40-page baok free PBZVSXOIVS Dae mil HOLDIZRtt M disabled. 2 fee for locreM. 2B yeara mx Duieoee. Writ for Laws. A.W. HcOomjf icK Boarm. WiiniNroif, IX C A Cjwcxhmatx. O. DO YOU INTEND TO BUILD A fimiOPf') H o bur roar 8Mb. Doori, iIIJIJAE. i Blimds. Moulding. Bracketa, 1 1 Warn Baloaters, Newels, and all klada of Turned and Finished wood work from ua. We ara manufacturers and have tbe lanreet plant In tna Btate. Agents wanted In every Town and Ceuaty la the South. Price lists furnished. Try us. ( harhrtf Hind. Dr aid Blind Mfr.C)., Oor. tth and a Street. CnaaLom. K. C. PIANOS; EASY ..TERMS. However far away you live you can get a piano for a small sum down, balance in still smaller monthly payments. We send it on approval, to be returned if unsatisfactory, railway freights both ways at our expense. Methods fair and easy to understand. "We take all the risks. Write us. vers & Pond Piano Co. m mi ami tm hold by all dealer. COPYR'.OHT.lfcSI Hard to take the big, old-fashioned pill. 1Y pretty hard to have to take it, too. . You wouldn't, if you realized fully how it shocks and weakens the system. Luckily, you dorCt have to take it. - Dr. Pierces Pleasant Pellets are better. They're sensible. They do, mildly and gently, more than the ordinary -pill, with all its disturb ance. They regulate the liver, stomach and bowels, as well at thoroughly cleanse them. They're the original Little Liver Pills, purely' vegetable, perfectly harmless, the smallest and the easiest to take. One littlo Pellet for a gcntlo laxa-. tive three for a cathartic. Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Con stipation, Indigestion, Bilious At tacks, and all derangements of the Xiver, Stomach and Bowels are promptly and permanently cured. They're tho cheapest, too, for they're guaranteed to give satisfac tion, or-onr m ley u returnca. You paonly for. tho good you get. WOLLIi ifeiorr rrirr w. ,Slf. n ear. rnPr r siittiplo. lr. iJ5iS DYE. Editor, liulfil, N. . G COTTOPJ lay arte!! yesr Cottea JOfflSS a 5-Ton Cotton Scalo. If m Ss El hat rutivrcr irr KF1T. rr Unas adJra J03TE8 07 nNQIIAMTOjr, B1NGIIAMTON, N. Y. . RIPANS TABULESretmlntoJ 5. tbe stouuu'ii. liTt-r and bowels.2 lertnal. 11ms litit genera! family J raediriuo known for BiUousmKH)S CoDittlpation, VrspeasiB, Koul Breath, Heftiltu-he, Ik-art burn, sms cf ApiH'titij, Mental IVprration, Painful IHeeation, Plmpk-s. Sallow complexion, nrwi teeiinar, anu dress THE RIPA If S CH KM 1CAI, CO. JO Spruce St. .N.V.Z Areata W anted K1C1ITY per tent praBu J. M. II J t'ormtimptl ves and pcuplt) who have weak lunpsor Asth ma, BliouM use Piso'a Cure for Consumption. It has cared thooauDil. it ban not injur ed one. it. is not nan to take. It is the best couth syrup. Sold everywhere. 5c, "IT3 fe-aWiTtf il with f Mtes, fei!inel. end Pa'.ts Trhlcb stain the han'ifl, in In re the Iron, and burn off. The Rutins Sun frHove Polish U Brilliant, Odor teas. Durable, and the consumer pays for D Ua r glasn package with every purchase. GOLD MEDAL, PAHIS, 187& W. BAKER & C0.3 Breakfast Cocoa from which the excess of oil Las been removed, 1$ absolutely pure mn4 it is soluble. No Chemicals are used in Its tirenaration. Ik has more than three lime the strength of Cocoa mixed with Btarcli, Arrowroot or Bugar, and Is therefore far mora eco- nomicnt, coating hit than on centa cvp. Ill delicious, nour- 1 lnhine. strenstuening, easilt rtioSTED, aud admirably adapted for invalids ai well, as for persops in feoaltn. Sold by Grocers tTerywhw. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mais. LITTLE I FILLS ' .DO. HOT BirE BOS SICCST. Sara car for SICK If KAIV ACHJG. iropaiwl dKcertl,enu petion.torpifi la.nirt. Thyarou . vital organ', reroors nnu. HI- . 1 X"- ' rV usys and bladder. Coixjiv. . - V lil iouk nfervons lla g f -f TV order. KeUUUh sat S W W. ifcto ural l)AiL Ac iOBT. Beantify complexion by puriXyiii blood. I'CBIXT VarrAB!.s The dcM ! nirely adjnstc-d toiuit ease- otw pill eta sever twtoo much. Each vial . ttiti 2, tr tied in socket. like lead penciL JItiMiieFl umn's freak convenience. Taken air than upar. Sold vry frber& Ali genuuia foud bear'CrocrcU Bend t-ccirt stamp . Ton get S3 pair book with sampla. BR. BARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Loots. M. 8. N U. 7. Masonic Temple, . 1 83 Tremont St., Boston. Accept no aabatit . Evlly c li iWk0i J erery symptom or (Iwaso rerultintr from Impure -blood, or a failure liy the stontarlr, liver or intestinesT ? to perform their proner function. Persons irit n to! Z over-eating a rc benefited by taking a T A H I I. F after J Zmphmml Price, hr mail. I en-amtl : 1 bottleirw. Ad-Z t 1 (Wss "SffffPJPC mm II Si In LIU Ml ,11 LI
The Democratic Banner (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 18, 1892, edition 1
4
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