Newspapers / The Democratic Banner (Dunn, … / March 17, 1892, edition 1 / Page 4
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TToo 1 With a Mirror Polisli . - In Germany, wood with a mirror pol ish is coming into'use for ornamental purposes in piace of metal. The wood is first submitted to a bath of caustic nlkah for two or tbree days at a tempera ture of about 175 degrees Fah., then dipped into hydrosulpwate of calcium for twenty-four to twenty-nine hours, after which a concentrated solution of sulphui is added. After another dip in an ace tate of lead solution, at about ten de grees, a shiniDg metallic surface is given by polishing, when dry, with lead, tin or zinc. 9100 Reward. 8100. The readers of this iaper will be pleased to learn that there i? fit least one dreaued disease that fioitn- linn len able to rure in all its "tagep. and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure i the only iii i ve cure naw known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh bcintj a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Mali's Catarrh Cure Is taken in ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous siirfarcH of 1h system, t hereby de stroying '.lie foundation of the disease, and Kivinc the patient strenicth by bnildinK up the constitution arid n-i-tit'S nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that theyorfer One Hun dred Dollars for any case t hat it fails to cur. end for list of testimonials. Addresa F. J. Cheney A- Co., Tolr5o, O. 3T" Sold by PrugKNt. 75c. Sweden an 1 Norway are prepirin to en ter the (reriraa ani-protect:o'itst letu?. The Only On Ever Printed. CAN you ns'D TBI woud? These Is a 3 Inch display advertisement ia this paper, this week, which has no two words iliKe except one word. Tne same is true of each new one appearing each week, from The Dr. Marter Medicine Co. This house places a "Crescent" on everything they makennd pub lish. Iak for it, send thern the name of the word and they will return you ivok, bkacti- IXL LITHOGRAPHS Or SAMPLES FHKE. ' Natttrai. gas has been found near Salt Lake City, Utah. The FniiionM Hot Sriun of. rkn nas, "The CnrUbiid of Ani'-iica." Solid through trains from t. Iuis. Klegm.t Hoteis.Jjublime Mountain S-eiorv.. An an year round Health and Pleasure Uesort. W. E. lioy.t, G. t. P. Agent, &'! Broadway. New York. ;mAKUfiir, Wyoming, a valuable Tela of coal has been found just beneath thegra.ss rnnra .Maw persons are broken do.vti fnmiovvr work or l-ou-e'iold caes. Hrnwn's Iron Bit ters rel.nj d-i tin syslem, nil-. dit?etion, ie move cxci'sh "1 ibiie. aiid cures malaria. A ependid tunji- for 'wTmien and children. Tn grip Is spreading throughout the K:.st. m Ojjicvr A. il. liraley of the Fall Kiver Police, Is highly Kratilied with II.mmI's Sarsaparilla. He was badly run down, bad no appetite, what he did eat caused distress and he felt Tired all the Time A few trtHI s tif Hood's Sarsaparilla effected a mnr velous ehanso. The ilistress in the stomach is en tirely xone, he feels 1 Ve a new man and can eat an y thliiK with ord-tiine r.-llsh. For all of which he thanks ami cordMally reeomiiiends Hood's Sarsa parilla. It is very iinj'ort uit that la the mouths of inarch Apri! SHay The olofKl should e thoroughly purified and the sys tem Ik? (dvcn st'-emrlh to wit Ustaiid the d-'iilitatiag effect of the ehan se.ison. For this purpose Hood's Sjirsaparil'a possesses pi-uliar nietiieinal powers and it is the Best Spring Medicine . The follow intr. just received, demonstrates its wonderful Mood purif.t in ; powers: "C I. Hood .V Co., bowcil. Mass. "(JeiitScni.'ii: I have had sail rlictim foranum berof years, and for ln ast year one of myites, from the kure down. :a- ln-en broken out very badly. I t ok tlood medicine for a loni; I sine w itil no (rood results, and v; s at one tine- oMicd to Walk With Crutches I flnnli" cuieiiidej to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, ana Ix-forc 1 had taken one liottle the improvt ini-nt was so marked that I continued until I had taken three Wittier. and am now tu tt r than I have been in years. The In (In hum tit inn lias ::11 left my h k and it is rntirely lualed. 1 have ha I such bem'tlt from Hood's Sarsaparilla that 1 concluded to write this voluutary statement." F. J. Tempi.k, HidKeway, Mich. Hood's Pi IN cure all Liver Ills. Advice to "Women If you would protect yourself from Painful, Profuse, Scanty, Suppressed or Irregular Men struation you must use BRADFIELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR Cartirsttxlb, April 28, 1880. This Trill certify that two members of my Immediate family, after having suffered for year a from Icuxlrual Irregularity, being t reated without benefit by physicians, were at length completely cured by one bottle of Bradflcld female Ilejrulator. Iu effect la truly wonderful. J. W. Strang a. Book to " WOMAN " mailed FREE, which contain valuable Information ou all female diseases. BRA DF! ELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA, GA. TOJt 8A.ZE BY 4JUi HBUQQISI& Ely's Cream Balm gncRiiV critr.s COLD m HEAD Apply Balm Into each nostril. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N.Y. KANSAS FARMS3B hu rood prices. Farms sale at bargains. List free. tns. k. v oi IjI.k 1 j Oaborne. Kna. oooooooooo A torpil liver is the source of dyspep- sla. sick healach-e, const ipat ion. iles, bilious fever, chills aud jaundice. siSS'sTinu Pills0 have a specific effect on the liver, re-J e toring it to healthy action. 25ct. OOOOOOOOOO JT. Consumptives and people who have weak lanes or Asth ma, ehoald use Plsos Cnre f or ConsampUon. It has eared thaasaeds. ft has not Injur ed one. It Is not bad to take. It is the best cough syrup? 8oW erert where. C5. mmmmm. Y 7 busO&V IVORY MINES. A MARVKLOUS DISCOVERY IN ALASKA. , TtiU of Pre-Glacial Monster Al most Insurmountable Obstacles Uncounteretl in Seeking the Treasures ol Ivory. 7T- GENTLE from Ala UX. (Washini yr" GENTLEMAX recently returnea Iaska gives a Tacoma gton) News reporter the following account of a dis covery made by himself that is of the most fabulous -richness. He is a miner of life-Ion experience, aofd had gone to Alaska for the purpose of making a pros pecting tour in the goH fields. After a perilous trip down the Yukon River he was taken ill at a native village on the ri'ht bank of the river called, in the native tongup, as nearly as Latin char acters will reproduce the sounds, Kwa tjuihuileete. The party with whom Mr. Anderson was traveling stayed with hirrt several days, but as his illness seemed to be incurable and the native villagers seemed disposed to tieat him with the greatest charity and consideration, he urged his companions to push on before the season got too far ad vanced and leave him behind. This, at last, they consented to do and he was left alone .with only the natives to solace him. In this situation he soon came to know their lauguage well, and he pays the highest possible tribute to their char acter, saving they are as a, rule pure minded, charitable and forgiving. Two faults they never forgive lying and stealing both being punishable by death. Murder they never do, war nor its kindred, the family quarrel, is never known. It was while lying thus an ob ject of charity among them that he first observed the profusion of ivory orna ments worn by the people. Ivory was used for the adornment of the totem poles. The raven at the top had an ivory beak and the eyes" of the historic figures beneath were of ivory. Ivory was inlaid in every conceivable form upon the poles. It abounded every where, liude spoons and drinking cup3 fashioned of ivory were iu daily use in almost ever- household. His curiosity was aroused to know the source of this wonderful supply of ivory, and he questioned the people and they told him that at several davs' do"- sled" ing to the northward would, after pass ing through innumerable daujers, bring him to an immense ivory mine. At any r.tte that is the conclusion he came to, for they gave him to understand that to reach it he must dig. An ancestor of the present tribe had gone thither and brought back large quantities of ivory, but had told such terrible tales of hard ship that but few since have cared to journey thither in search, of the precious and useful material. A totem had been ejected to this ancestor 'and when he had recovered sufficiently to. venture abroad they showed it to him. It was a magnificent piece of handi work, betraying the instincts of art in the rude mini of the savage, and as they translated its nieauing to him he saw that the totem was not a mere idle form of worship, but a -historic record. Each figure along its rudely carved length bore some relation to a historic event. One of these figures was a little,sqautting man, with fearfully dilated eyes and monstrous mouth and an elongated nose that was fearful to behold. This nose he reconizd at once as the tusk of some pre-glacial ivory-bearing mammal. Having sevn thi, the source of the ivory supply became at once apparent to him. Evidently these people had come upon the remains of a mam moth and had despoiled it, and hence had arisen the belief in the "ivory mines'' of their ancestor. But, as lie thought more upon the matter, the explanation was not eutirely satisfactory, because of the great quantity of ivory. 'ot one tusk or fifty could have sup plied all that they had, "and which, ac cording to traditicn, had been traded to other tribes for women and for nV and to white men for Hour. The more he thought on it the more lie became . con vinced that there must be so ne truth in the story of the ancestor digging aud securing iVory and uncovering such fab ulous quantities of it. Constant thought begot a desire to see this wonderful de posit. Perhaps he could secure iutact a complete skeleton of one of these pro digious pre-glacial animals. He pro posed to the leading men a journey to the mines. They were unwilling at first, but, well knowing its value as an urticle of trade among the tribes an I seeing the eagerness of the white, they came to realize the enormous value of su;h a find and at last were persuaded. Many days were spent in preparation for the journey. Fisa an I am nuaition iu plenty were stored upon the sledges preparatory to miking the journey. At last all was ready, and with an a0'eJ man who had once made, the jo-.irnev thither as a guidt, and A.nJersua him self as chief, the? st trteJ eirly.in August of last year. After t wo weeks of most perilous jour neying, during which they had passed within the Arc.ic circle, they reached the spot. Tuere is no: space to detail the incidents of the passage, but it is enough to say that it was male up of Gangers .and penlods eucounten with bears and difficult crossing of seams aud rifts and hammocks in the ice and snow. At last they arrived at the foot of a mouataiu, as near as Aidsrsou cm esti mate, about twenty-live miles from th Yukon River by the most direct route. Here the ancient guide called a halt, aDd parties were told off to prospect about in search of the spot. Anderson wpnt with the ancient, and it was their good fortune upon the second day to come upon the spot. . They had just mounted a big hum mock to take a survey of surroundings, "when directly in front of them a large square depression caught the old man' gaze and he cried "Hal-kwa-seel' There it is V The descent was quickly made and Anderson was not long in discovering that the depression was a large square hole that had been dugout and was now partially filled with snow, packed hard and solid as ice. It did not take long to have the exploring party upon the scene acd hard at work. In the course of several days the depression had been cleaned out and what a marvelous sight was then before them. Hundreds yes, thousands of tusks lay, white and gleaming with frost, be fore them. Numberless skeletons of gi. gantic beasts were scattered about the place. Bones were strewn about as though some mighty vulture or carrion beast had been feeding there. Closer in spection revealed to Anderson the real truth. Evidently two mighty herds of these giant elephants had done battle here aud these were the slain. The bones lay in picturesque heaps. In many cases the tusk3 of one were buried within the SKeieton of another, telling plainly how both had died. It must have been a mighty battle. There is enough ivory here to load a ship, he thinks, and how much more if more digging is done, no one can telL But how to get the ivory to market is a question. At best the present expendi tion can carry away no more chan a ton or two while here are many hundreds of tons, enough to load a ship. At last the expedition is ready to return, and does return to the village, passing through the same hardships as in going and Anderson determined to make his way back to civilization in order to organize an expedition to the ivory mines ol Alaska. A Sketch of Recsnt Ejdytian History. Egypt has been a dependency of Turkey since tin year 1517, at? which time, as the result of a series ' of wars that had been waged since the days of Constantine III., it fell into the hand3 of Seliml., who had vanquished Touman Bey and made it a Turkish province govi crned by a pasha. His rule contiuued, though not without frequent and violent rebellion on the part of the matnelukes, that kept the country in great distrac tion, until the invasion of Napoleon in 1798. The results of his campaign, wrhich terminated in the famous battle of the pyramids, where the great gen e.al leinindcd his soldiers that forty cen turies were looking down upon them are too well known to need repeating here. Suffice it to cay that three years later England joined with Turkey, drove the French from Egypt and again restored it to the control of the Ottoman Porte. After this the country sank back into its old condition of lethargy and decay. The advent of Mohamned Ali m 1805 changed the apparent order of things considerably. Among the first of his act3 he proceeded to kill off the mame lukes in a wholesale and shocking man ner, to raise a standing army, improve the old methods of irrigation, and to in troduce many features of European civ ilization. He was a man of keen intel ligence, with considerable ability as a ruler and skilled ia military science. Moreover, he wa3 both- ambitions and aggressive, and at one time came very near ascending the throne of Turkey himself, but the quadruple alliance of 1810 interfered with his plans and com pelled him to limit his power to the pashalik of Egypt. Mohammed Ali died in 1859, and was succeeded by Abbas Pasha, his grandson, who wa3 in turn replaced by Said Pasha in 1851. Chi cago Post. Te Young Men. Young men are often at a loss to know the best mauner of spending their leisure houre. A few suggestions on this point maybe of service. "Evil comnanic ions corrupt good maimers," aud in like "manner good associations exert a most beneficial influence. The society of a refined and intelligent lady-should always be desired. If you have a true woman for a friend,' you have iu her a rich treasure iiieed. Seek her society whenever practical, not nec essarily as a lover, but an earnest friend and companion. No matter if her con versation does not sparkle with wit, or exhibit profound culture and erudition. No matter if you are acquainted with all her home amusements, and know 'all her songs by heart." In her presence you will lose all relish for vicious pleas ures, and receive mental and moral im provement. Detroit Free Press. fenn Use J to Shake This Chestnut Tree. There is a tiaut chestnut tree growing at Center Ridge, Buck County, Penn.f near the Delaware Itiver. The 'trunk measures nineteen feet in circumference, and the tree still yields an annual crop of chestnuts. It is said that in primeval days the Iudiaas would gather under its brauches on a hot summer's day to eujoy a cool breeze from the Delaware hard by. It is also related that William Peun once gathered cuestuuts from it. New O leans Picayune. The city pf Chicago has four hundred, fhujehes. A BIG CROW ROOST. WHKRB THE BIRDS MAKE THEIR HUME IN THE "WINTER. They Leave in ibe Morning For Feeding Grounds and. Return at M-hr, Makin- the Hills Black With Their .Numbers. VERY winter Arlington Ceme tery becomes one of the most -L noted crow roosts in the United States, and one of the largest on the Atlantic coast, and while nearly all are accustomed to look at it from one point of view the resting place of the nation's dead a visit paid at dusk, and from an entirely different point of view, will, I trust, prove interesting to some. Within the pa3t few year3 much has been written concerning this notorious cornpuller; but until recently little or nothing has appeared pertaining to the roosting piace of one of oar commonest birds. It has been my pleasure to visit two rookeries and to observe closely the birds composing it, both at the roost, where they congregate at night to seek rest and protection in each other's com pany, and many miles away from it, and under nearly all circumstances. The first of these is situated about two miles east of Syracuse, N. Y., in a locality known as "Tamarack Swamp." This swamp, once extensive, has been cut down to a narrow strip, not exceeding six hundred yards in width by one and a half miles long, hemmed in on the north and south by hills, and has be come what is known as a dry swamp, composed of maples, pines, beech, birch, tamarack and oaks. Midway in this strip is a stretch of young pines, averaging twelve feet in height, and this, spot, in preference to the more densely wooded portion, has been chosen as the winter home of the crows. Arlington is too well known to require any description. A visit to these roosts in the daytime is extremely interesting, but one paid at dusk, when the birds are coming in, is not only interesting, but exciting. Shortly after the first break of day the vast throng of black bestirs itself. First a loud cjlamor betokens that the birds are awake; then, with a shake or two, they launch forth in quest of the morning's breakfast. r j Leaving singly, in pairs, by dozens and in flocks of hundreds and thousands, each gro ip wing3 its way to where the pre vious day's meals were secured or starts in search of new feeding grounds. A drive through the surrounding country will now give a glimpse of their daily life throughout the winter. Any where and everywhere they may be seen in search of that which sustains life, but with the usual frozen condition of the ground this as a rule is difficult to ob tain. Along the river aud streams they may be seen walking on the ice in search of a possible dead fish or a stray mussel, breaking through the frozen structure itself where not too thick in order to get at the soft, unfrozen mud beneath, and in many places the surface for a consid erable area resembles the land more than the ice, from the quantities of this mate riarthrown out. Here they of course secure considerable vegetable matter, mingled with an occasional shell fish, but the supply is poor at best and they generally have a hard scrape of it through the wiuter. Up to about 3 o'clock the birds are busy feeding, and the passer-by would hardly believe that within an hour, or even less, these same birds will be miles away, and in company with tens of thousands of their fellows. About this time an inclination to move is manifested by a few, who fly a.vay just over the tree tops calling loudly, as if to induce the rest who still tarry to follow. These too soon depart and by 4 o'iock or half-past the sky is fille 1 with the host en route for the rendezvous. An idea can best be gained now of the countless numbers that nightly resort to this place, for although it is obviously impossible to attain anything like ac curacy as to the numbers, we know that at any given station hundreds and thou sands pass over our heads, until it seems as if every crow in the country was pass ing before our eyes; but a station in an exactly opposite direction the next day will reveal a like number, and another the next day the same, until every point of the compass ha3 been covered. As they return every night in the same direc tion1 it will of course be evident that the same flock are not observed twice and what an enormous throng must be gathered together at the rookery. Having now traced our birds through their daily wanderings it is iu order tc visit the roost at nightfalL and watch them come in. We must be there be fore dusk, and have but to take our stand in the center of the place, close beside some tree, in order to avoid observation. At about 5 o'cloc'c they began to arrive, singly and in flocks, tarrying at times at some neighboring feeding ground, bul some seekiag the vicinity of the roo3t Strangely eno.ig'i, instead of repairing at once totheir night's resting place, they gather in immense multitudes ox. the surrounding hills. Coming, as thej do, from all parts of the country, the number increases until the fields, the trees' and the pices are covered with them. Long after the sun has set they continue to arrive. The noise is deafening, and when at times th?y rise and circle about in the air it seems as if the very heavens were about to fall. As darkness settle a few of the bolder ones entei thv io st, these are followed by small bujcaes cf fifty or a hun dred and these in turn by others interspersed with stragglers. Suddenly with a noise as of a mighty hurricane, a vast host arises and makes a dive for the roo3t. This is closely folio .vel by an other, and another, an! still another.un til nally, the numbers on the hillsides bem to show some signs of thinning out. As the darkness deepens they co jio in any way; pell mell, brushing past the face, almost flying against us and alight ing on the first branch they strike against. Every tree and bush is packed with them, and still they continue to pour down, finding a roosting place somewhere and adding clamor to the deafening babel al ready existing. Finally all appear to have arrived and are Jbusy settling 'themselves for th the night. Utter now but so much as a syllable and the entire army with renewed cries and in direst confusion takes flight and seeks another part of the wool only to repeat the same performance. Wash ington Star. Can HoraesTalk? 5 i Andrew J. Ogilvie writes as follows from Tamala, Shark Bay, Western Aus tralia, to the Londoa Spectator: I have read with interest your article3 on the instinct of cattle. That cattle and horses can communicate intelligence to each other, and are endowed with a .certain amount of reasoning faculty, the following facts are pretty coa clusive proof. I once purchased a sta tion on which a large number of cattle and horses had gone wild. To get the cattle in, I fenced the permanent water (a distance of twenty miles), leaving trap3 at intervals.. At first this answered all right; but soon the cattle became ex ceedingly cautious about entering the traps, waiting outside for two ov three nights before going in, and, if they could smell a man or his, tracks, not going in at all. At last they adopted 'a plan which beat me. A mob would . come to the trap -gate, and one would go in and drink, and corre out; and then another would do the same, and go on, till all had watered. They had evidently arrived at the conclusion that I would not catch one and frighten all the others ' away. To get in the wild horses, 600 of which were running on a large plain (about 2000 acres), I erected a stock yard with a gradually widening lane in a hollow wheie it could not easily be seen, and by stationing horsemen at in tervals on the plain galloped the wild horses in. My first hunt (whic'i tasted for some days) was successful, the wild horses heading toward the mouth of the lane without much difficulty, but, of course, some escaped by charging back at the stock-yard gate and in other ways. . My second hunt, about a month later, was a failure; every mob of horses oa ;the plain seemed to know where the yard was and would not, heal that way. This seems to sho .v that the horses that escaped from the first hunt told all the others where the stock-vard was." The K nq ef Instruments. 'fhe violin is justly considered the king of instruments, writes Walter Dm rosch, the New York conductor. To play any instru nent well enough to bo a member of a grand orchestra requires a great deal of study aud long practice. You cannot give a direct answer to the question, how long will it take to be come a skilful performer on any partic ular instrument. It depeads entirely oa the man, just as at school one boy will learn his lesson in half the time it will take another boy to pet form the same task. Most violinists bagin to study and " practice when the are mere children and keep hard at work until they have become of age. Even after they have become professional musicians they are always practicing. The violin, above all other instruments, require the greatest amount of practice to keep one, as the saying is, "in proper trim." Whea the New York Symphony Orchestra is not booked to appear in any other town the members rehearse every day at the music hall, when they travel their rehearsals are not so frequent because the pro gramme is olten the same for several towns in succession. St. Louis Repub lic. A Scientist's Courtship. An interesting story is told about the late Sir George Airy, the famous as tronomer, and his courtship. By reason of his timidity he seemed doomed to be a bachelor for life. But fortune favored him, and he drifted into matrimony in an unexpected way. An intimate friend remarked to him one day: "Have you ever observed Miss 's eyes? They have the property of double refraction." "Dear me, that is very odd," he ex claimed. "I should like to see that; do you think I might venture to call?" And call he did, add begged permission to examine the young lady's eyes. Tho novelty of the situation may have fas cinated him. At any rate he begged the privilege of a second call to look at the eyes in a clearer light. The problem grew so interesting that he at length came tothe conclusion to make it a life study. The boldness born of scientific curiosity enabled him ultimately to pro pose. . He was accepted, and the strange courtship ended in a happy marriage. Chicago Post. Hot Peebi.s for Soaked thoes. A recent method sujj jested of drying shoes that have become wet by rain is to heat so ne s nail p-ibbles in a pan and ia-. sert them into the shoe. It is said they do the work quickly, without in auy way mjuring the leather. New York Jour Asiatic Plagues. It is probable that the famines ol which the world at large has known least those in China and Asia Minor have been the most terrible in their con sequences, and .that next to them in horror should be written those of India. Of the latter that of 1837-38 killed above 800,000, andia 1860-61 even greater numbers perkhed. In 1865-65 above 1,000,000 are said to have died of hunger,and the hunger plague in Bengal and Ori and the . Raj poo tana famine p 1868-69 killed a million and a half. In 1874 a great "famine was caused in Bengal by drouth, and, the famine of 1877 in Bombay, Madras, Mysore aud other provinces is said to have had 600, 000 victims. New-York Press. . 1 1 have In my employ a man who has been a victim of periodic headaches for years, has tried all kinds of trealmonr, and I have tried variou remedies o:i hiui. Your Bradycrotin helps him more than anything ever iiid.' O. 1). Kingsley, M.D-. White Plaids, N. Y. 30 eta The GermanReichstAz'appropriated 1250, the Chicago World' Fair. 000 for Beecham's Pills cure sick headac he, d-order.-d liver aad act like magic oa the vital organs. For tale by all druggists. IxjxrKNZA Is interfering with the success of the season at French and Italian winter resorts. For Throat Diseases, Coughs, Colds, etc., effectual relief ia found in th.9 use of "Brown's Bronchial Troches." Prioe 25 cts. Sold only in boxes. FiK RcT fires, heating the earth white, hav been found near the eurfaco neir Warrena burc Mo.- . Ladies nee-iin? a tonic, or cnlldren who want building up, should take Brown's Iron Bitters. It ia pleasant to take, cures Malaria, Indigestion, Bilio isness anl Liver Com plaints, makes the Blood rich and pure. If you would be correct In pronouncing Manitoba accent the last syllable. .. FITS stopped free by Dr. Klot's . Gbbat Nkrve Restorer. No fits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial boitl tra. Dr. Kline. 831 Arch SL. Phil Pa, s E1V.TOYS Both the method and resijlta fhen Syrup of Figs ia taken ; it ia pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidney-, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is th 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 moat healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and hare made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figa is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by all leading rug 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 C(L SAM FRANCISCO. CAL isumruE, xy hew ronx. k.v. Justice of the Peace, George Wil kinsou, of Lowville, Murray Co., Miuu., makes a deposition concert!-, ing a severe cold. Listen to it. "In the Spring of 18S8, through ex posure T contracted a very severe cold that settled on my lungs. 'This was accompanied by excessive night sweats. One bottle of Boschee's German Syrup broke up the cold, night sweats, and all and left me in a good, healthy condition. I can give German Syrup my most earnest commendatiou." a Kennedy's MedicalDiscovery Takes hold in this order : Bowels, Liver, Kidneys, Inside Skin, Outside Skin, OriTlng everything before It that ontrnt to be out You know whether you need it or not. 8ol! by every druggist, and manufactured by DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBURyt MASS. KING COTTON Buy or sell your Cotton on JQHES 5-Ton Cotton Scale. NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST. For terms address JONES OP BIKGHAHTOff, B INGH AMTOX. N. Y. "German Sypud" ffTa fr ftfi I 71 Irnmw mm mvmmm tiiimi m. ii 1 1 ii Bi. 9ld by mil dealers. HP Ml COPY Rl OUT 1891 Wound tip the man or woman who's "run down." Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery sets'' the wheels going. It starts the torpid liver into health ful action, purifies and enriches the blood, cleanses, repairs, and strength ens the system, aud restores health and vigor. As an appetizing, re storative tonic, it sets at work all the processes of digestion and nu trition, and builds up flesh and strength. For all scrofulous humors and blood - taints, and even Consump tion (or Lung -scrofula), if taken in time, it's a positive remedy. Unlike the savsaparillas, which claim to be good for the blood in March, April, and May, " Golden Medical Discovery " works equally well, at all seasons. Unlike other blood-purifiers, too, it's guaranteed to benefit or cure, in every case, or your money is re turned. . On these terms, it's the cheapest. You pay only for the food you get. But it's tire listz or it couldn't be sold so. P AT TSiVr.Y,'? : - . , 4Q Pftgeboxk Ire fSfiP A MON A MONTH" for 3 Bright Young M. n ..r s in e.n-h county. At.irev r. . iV CO., IMiiln., I'll. wall papers: The best and '!iiappt -I.uv I miy 111 I'.!. Kill s;nu-.ii-nt fur 1 tin.! t Thou. J. Myers, 1210 Mn rkft t.. riiila:. I'al Ttaoi p Bivsioiva-Duf ui mhjui rsi U13UltU. J. IPC 1UI 11JV.I l'U.'r. -Jl y t'iirs f x- Sons. Wahhinoton. I). C. it Cincinnati, o. DO YOU INTEND TO BUILD A HOUSE? If so buy your Saeh. Door..' Blind, Mouldings. Hrackrtu, Balusters. Newels, and all klniis of Turned and Finished wood work from us. We re manufacturers and have the largest plant in tha State. Agents wanted In every Town ami Couuty ia the South. Price llsts.lurnished. Try us. CbarUilf Haithi Door and Iliir.il flltt. Co., "or. tth and A Street. Charlotte. N. r. RIPANS TABULES regular? tne 8tomacii, liver ami U)cl,: purifw the blood, are safe and cf Z r ectual. The beet, freneral family Z medicine known' for Biliouenejw.A Constipation, Dyspepsia, Foul Breath, Headache, lfeartourn, Loiw a of Appetite, MoDtal In-pi-eniion.a Painful Digestion, Bimples, Hallow PnrrmlTinn Tirprf Kwlino and every symptom or disease resulting from impure Accnta it anted ; . I(. II I 1 in r cnl - -.rout, '.....to..., .etc.. .? DO NOT BE DECEIVED with Tastes, Kiiamels, and Bainttwbich stain (fie nanus, injure the iron, ana ourn on. The Rising Sun Stove Polish Is Brilliant, Odor less. Durable, and the consumer pays lor no tin or glass package with every purchase. bicb Pv&tjo ? : n,um "wi i ii rinifc Decide that after trying ..the' IVERS & POND. You can try them; we'll tell you what dealer can show them to you, or we'll send on approval at our own -expense. Write for in formation. Iver 9 &; Por)l Piano Conipany, Boston. COLD MEDAL, PAKIS, W. BAKER & COM Breakfast Cocoa from which the eicets of oil has been removed. It absolutely pure anS it ia soluble. No Chemicals are used in its preparation. It has more than thre thnt tht ttrenglh of Cocon ni'ied with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is therefore far me re rco l Domical, costing les t tli'in on cent a cup. Itlsileliclou.rio.ur- , 1 lahlncr. strenethenire, zami.y ' nta, mmmr anrl .lmt.V.Itr' ..nt.l fr.r ( 1 1 . . i n'l as well as for persons in health. ' Sold'br Grocers everywhere. W.BAKER & CO., Dorchester. JJais RELIEVES all Stomach Distress. REMOVES Naurec, Eecso of Fnllaes Congestion, Pain. REVIVES Faiuno ENERGY. RESTORES Normal Circulation, and Warms to Tox Tips. tt. HAITEB fcUBICINS CO.. ti. Udl. 8 N U 11 ili Accept no aubatif m 9 z Dtooa, ora latif.re Dy me Moran. uver or inmunT ! to perform their proper functions. Pi-rsons riven to J over-eating are benefited bv talring a T A li I ' 1. F after 7 Xeacbmeal. Price, by mail. 1 PToe2: i bftlf l-"c. Ad J S drcsa THE K 1 PAN'S CHE MI.AJ. CO.,!0Epriie St.. N.Y.J m iMat'i1 vammtmmumati-f rum-' jwujhs jhu W njAii I" "I"11 nfmm in inn mi tu f in iUJ i mi i &v ii nrrn r
The Democratic Banner (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 17, 1892, edition 1
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