Newspapers / The Democratic Banner (Dunn, … / Oct. 20, 1892, edition 1 / Page 4
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JM BRICE. HOW INGOT METAL. IS TURNEI INTO COIN GOLD. i ' i The Various Interesting Proceuec at the United States Assay Of ficc Scales of Marvelous Delicacy. BOUT 9 o'clock in the morning two men entered the Mitchell Building, in Third etreet, 8t.; Louis, and cettin? into the elevator mounted to the sixth floor and went straight to the rooms of the United States Assay Office. One of them carried in his hand a bundle the size of a thin brick, wrapped in paper.1 He laid it down on the counter in the office and slowly unwrapped the bundle. It was a gold brick. The clerk took the bullion, and stepping across the floor placed it in one of the pans of a large pair of scales. Then he closed the office windows and placed some weights in the other. When it balanced nicely he went to his desk, took out a blank form, aud wrote to th effect that 400 ounces of gold bullion had been received from the St. Louis. Smelting and Refining Works at the United States Assay Office, to b9 assayed; This was signed by E. C. Jewett, tha assajer in charge, and the men wenf away. This is the first step the Govern ment takes toward obtaining precious metal for coining purposes. It is extremely interesting to follow this process of assaying through all the ttep6 until the value of the gold is de termined and the Government's check given for it. , While Clerk Rex was filling out the receipt Mr. Jewett explained the mar velous delicacy of the scales. Their weighing capacity is 5000 ounces, and it is possible to indicate by thetn the dif-; ference in weight of one grain. To il lustrate, so that this may be easily grasped, two heavy men could be placed iu one of the pans, and by moving a pin from the coat of one of them the balance would be changed. Still, it would be difficult to obtain the exact weight of the men owing to the constant change in the men's bodies by perspiration and other causes. After the bullion's weight was de tercnined on by these scales, it was taken to the furnsce room and placed in a black-lead crucible. This was set on a fire brick resting on a grate and a fire built around it. The fuel used is a mix ture o( anthracite coal and charcoal. After anolar's melting, during which time it was frequently 6tirred with a plumbago poker, to which gold doe? not cling, a sample of the metal was dipped out with an ordinary clay pipe and poured into a small mold. The assay is made from this, as it takes I so much longer for the larger quantity "to cool. A piece of the sample was cut off, pounded, and then rolled through a roller of tool steel, looking something like a clothes wringer, to make it thin. When this was done, Herman, the Ger man who aids the assayer in his work, handed the thin golden strip to him, and then went back to the furnace room to pour out the molten thousands into the big mold. Mr. Jewett cut the strip into small pieces, and then, forming little lead cornucopias of uniform weight, dropped into two of them 500 ruilligraais ione- th of an ounce) of accurately- ;d gold to be assayed. Into two he puts the same quautity of ab solutely pure gold. Enough silver was then added to make the proportion of silver to gold two to one, as this propor tion is necessary in order that the gold should separate from the silver when boiled in ujtric acid. There is in all gold a certain amount of silver, and it is owing to its presence and certain other foreign substances that the color of gold varies. The idea that gold found in California or Australia is of such a color because found' there is a mistaken one. After the silver had been added the leaden cornucopias were squeezed up and each cne placed in what is called a cupel. A cupel is a little cup made oi sheep bones burned to ashes, ground fine, moistened and molded into a mold an inch long, an inch in diameter, with a cup-shaped depression at one erid. The cupels were placed in a small furnace with a temperature of about 1100 de grees centigrade, and when heated to a white heat the little metal chunks wert laid by the aid of tongs, one in each cupel. They melted, sputtered and bubbled, and theu began to grow smaller. In about tea minutes they were taken out and all the lead and foreign s -bstances had been absorbed by the cupel, leaving only the noble metals in UUe round balls. When thess were boiled in nitric acid the silver passed into nitrate of silver and ths gold was 'eft in its pure state. By this was found the ratio of pure gold in the bullion. Tbe weighings of pure gold are used m a check to any peculiar conditions of heat, etc. The a6ayer know the con stitution, weight, and specific gravity of the pure gold used. When it is weighed after -he heating process, if it has changed its weight it is fair to suppose that it is owing to the conditions of heat or strength of acid, rnd that the same influences have been at work on the assay gold. By allowing for this in the assaj gold a true result is reached. The next step was to find the weight of the gold and silver together. The lead cornucopias were again rilled with cert n weights ol the pure and assay gold, but no silver added. When melted A GOLD fixfetu Hp others 'n tne cupels the base metal disappeared as before, and the gold and silver were lef . together. By subtracting from the weight of gold and silver the weight of the gold, the exact weight of the aflTer was obtained. Of course the propor tion is usually very small. If the amount is not sufficient to pay for extracting,, the Government does not pay for it, and charges nothing for extraction. The entire amount of gold in the bal lon is found by multiplying its weight by the proportion of thm cold. This is erfaced to standard or coin gold by mur aplying this amount by ten and dividing ij nine, as standard gold is only ninety per cent, fine, and the depositor is paid iy the Government $8.69 per ounce of standard metal, equal to $20.37 for fine fold. The assay fee is one-eighth of ne per cent, of the total value of fine jold, the melting fee is $1, and the alloy charge about one cent on $100, and after this is deducted the assayer hands a check o the owner of the goldv The entirf: ime occupied by this complicated operr lion was from 9 a. m. until 1 p. m., onry four hours. St. Lous Republic The Ctndir. According to Humboldt, the massiri Pinions of the bird enable it to soar over ill the Summits of the Andes, to circle for hours in those regions of low pres sure, and thence on a sudden to descend to the seashore, thus passing rapidlj through all gradations of climate. From Professor Orton is quoted the statement that the condor ' 'can dart in an instant from the dome of Chimboraza to the ultry coast of the Pacific." Such decla rations appear to have aroused no suspt cion in the mind even of Mr. Bowdle; Sharp, for he writes in 1883: "All ob- ervers agree that, when seen in a wild state, the flight of the condor is truly majestic, and it is capable of ascending to an irau-use height, at which a m could not Iktathe on account of thenar efaction oi the air a state of things which does not seem to affect the con dor, who is often lost to sight amid thi clouds." This agreement of observers is nov broken as far as concerns Mr. Whymper. He weakens the authority of Professoj Orton's statement by remarking that thi Pkcific is at least 120 miles distant from the dome of Chimborazo, so that t traverse the interval in an instant is tf fly at the rate of 432,000 miles an hour, which would cover the distance from the earth to the moon and back in sixty-sis minutes. The flashing of such a flight no human eye could follow ; still less could it identify, over a course of ever twice sixty miles, the bird which started with the bird which arrived. As a mat ter of fact, it is said the condors seldom or never descend to the seashore ix Ecuador, though they undoubtedly d so elsewhere ; while, so far from surpass ing man in the heights that they attain, Mr. Whymper, who had repeated oppor tunities of observing them sailing to and fro, not above but far below his snow girt encampments, was persuaded that their habitual range did not rise above 16,000 feet. He ingeniously explains the oeular delusion which has probably imposed on other observers. Edinburgh Review. The Moment to Yawn. In certain affections of the throat, such as acute pharyngitis, catarrh of the eustachian tube, with pain in the ear, a Swiss confrere says that he obtains ex cellent results from making the patients yawn several times a day. It produces, it seems, almost instantaneous relief, the symptoms rapidly subside and the ear ache disappears. Frequently the affec tion i cut short by this novel treatment Yawning produces, as every one knows, a considerable distension of the muscle3 of the pharynx, constituting a kind of massage, and unde this influeacB the cartilaginous portion of the eustachian tube contracts, expelling into the pharynx the mucosities there collected. According to M. Naegeli yawning is much more efficacious for affection of the than the methods of Valsalva Politzer, and is more rational than the insufnition of air, which is often difficult to perform properly. Medical Record. InicuUtlng Cattle in Africa. During our midday halt, writes an Afx can traveler, we had all our oxen inoculated with the virus of the lung sickness, for that fatal malady was then raging in Khama's country. Our wagons were placed side by side, and with an ingenious contrivance of thongs our conductor and driver managed to fasten the plunging animals by the horas, while string steeped in the virus was passed with a needle Jthrough their tails. Some times after this process the tails swell and fall off, ind up country a tailless ox his a value peculiarly his own. It it always rather a sickly time for the poor beasts, but as we lost only two out of hirty-six from this disease we voted the cmedy successful. Fortnightly Review. The Ughteet Metal. "Some people seem to think that alum inum is the lightest metal in the world," .said a gentleman who dealt in all the fancy articles now made of that com modity, "but that is a mistake. The specific weight of magnesium is only one-third of that of aluminum, and if even more hard and durable. It is not as useful, however, as it catches fire very easily, even at the open hearth. It is not destined1 to crowd the popularity of aluminum, although up to a short time ago it was even the cheaper of the two." Cincinnati Commercial. THE CHOLERA. FORMER VISITATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES. Ravages of the Pestilence la New Torkand Other Cities Super stltious Fancies and Queer Remedies. E'ARLT in the year 1832, just ten years after the New Yorkers k. had had their last dose of yel low fever, a case of cholera ap peared in Boffalo. Just how the disease developed is not recorded, further than that it is supposed to have been brought into the country from Canada. Condi tions all through the country must - have been exceedingly ripe f or "it-at .all events, it spread with frightf nl rap d ty. A peculiarity of its dissemination was that it skipped here and there over wide stretches of territory, leaving the inter vening country untouched and then go ing back apparently and filling in the vacant spaces. Hardly a village or ham let escaped it, and many people living isolated in farm-houses and apparently out of all possibility of contact with in fected regions, were stricken down and swept away with appalling swiftness. In Buffalo, where it first appeared, the mortality was frightful. Following the courses of the large rivers and the more beaten tracks of travel it leaped from city to city in eccentric zig-zags, appear ing simultaneously in many widely re mote communities. It was on the 27th of June that the first ease was developed in r New York, and within the sixty days following as many as 3400 persons had been laid low by it. This was at the rate of nearly sixty deaths a day for the entire period, a record which, considering the small population of the city at the time, was star tlingly heavy. At Albany the cholera appeared on the eame day it did in New York, while Philadelphia escaped for nearly two' months after New Yorkers were dying like flies. 'But the immunity was only temporary. When Philadel phia at last was stricken her old evil for tune in the matter of pestilence asserted itself. The ravages of the disease were frightful, over a thousand persons dying within a few weeks. Baltimore and Washington were attacked- soon after Philadelphia, and in each of these cities about a thousand people were laid in their grave. In Cincinnati it appeared in July, became epidemic in September and lurked in the city all .winter, re appearing in the summer of the next year, 1833. But it was the South, and par ticularly the cities of St. Louis and New Orleans, which suffered the most from this particular visitation. f The negroes, who enjoy a certain immunity from yellow fever, seem to be peculiarly susceptible to cholera, and the havoc wrought among the poor slaves was something awful. . Strangely enough the New England States on this occasion escaped almcst scot free from the disease. Only a few cases occurred in all the six - New Eng land States, and these were confined to Connecticut, Rhode Island and Mas sachusetts. Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont did not have a single case. . The next and decidedly the worst visita tion from cholera New York has had occurred in 1849. The disease on that occasion appeared first in New Orleans in midwinter. Its ravages during all the winter months in the Crescent City were so heavy that at one time it seemed as though the entire population of some wards would be exterminated. la the spring it worked slowly north, and by midsummer it held New York in a dead ly grip, the first case having occurred in the month of May. In the week ending July 21, more than seven hundred death? from cholera occurred in New York City. The mortality in this city during the week was greater than had ever been known in any city in the conntry, the deaths from all diseases numbering over one thousand four hundred, figures which show that the conditions which were favorable to the development of cholera are also favorable to the development of other diseases as well. As many people, in fact, died in New York that week from other diseases as died from cholera, a frightful mortality considering the then comparatively small population. In each of the cities of St. Louis and Cincinnati that summer and fall six thousand people died of cholera, and in Boston, six hundred. In August the pestilence had assumed such awful pro portions that the President by procla mation set aside the third day of that month as a day of special fasting and prayer to God. The scenes and the terrible effect upon human nature which these seasons of, plague bring about are graphically de scribed by the historians of the time. There was, to begin with, general, stampede on the part of all who could: get away. Then among those who were! forced to remain there arose such a consternation as amounted to a very "renzyv All sorts of fantastic supersti tions were developed. No quackery was so absurd, no fetich so silly that t did not have thousands of supporters. Many people shut themselves up in their bouses and lived with drawn curtains and closed blinds. Those who were forced to go out of doors walked in the middle of the streets to avoid passing elose to houses in which there might be either the sick or the dead. Intimate rieads barely nodded to one another, and as they patel trisl to rnanruvre so as to get to the wicdwfrd of-the other. Shaking hands ws so utterly tabooed th-.t a man would start back in very horror at a mere advance towards that ceremony. All sorts of patent nostrums and dangerous quack compounds were consumed hy the gallon. Doubtless many lost their lives by these frantic efforts to ward off the dreaded pesti 1 nee. What was known as "Four Thieves Vinegar" was in great demand. 4 'Four Thievo' Vinegar" was supposed to be a soveruign remedy used by four thieves, who, during the prevalence of the pestilence la Handles, once upon a Ime, were wont to go into the city,, rhich thousands had fled, and help themselves to booty in the deserted louses. People who were camped in ihe vicinity of the pest ridden city saw; the thieves going and coming with their booty, and marveled at their immunity, rom the disease. At last one of them as caught, and on promise that his life vculd be spared revealed the secret of "Four Thieves Vinegar," which he said te and his comrades had always carried rith them and inhaled when at their Sheiving work in the city. Just what ihis rubbish is is probably now unknown but in the pestilence time it was in great! rogue. The smoke of tobacco was also eounted a preventative, and women and tven little children went around with sigars in their mouths. . Men would un der no circumstances let a barber touch their hair or their beard all actual con tact of one person with another was as far as possible avoided. Churches, t libraries, schools and all places of public interest were closed, and people went ibout holding to their noses sponges sat urated with vinegar "Four Thieves Vinegar" if possible and camphor. Other people chewed garlio and even carried it in their shoes, while still others' pinned their faith to tarred rope, which was cut into bits and carried in their pockets or tied around their necks. The most shocking insensibility towards the dead prevailed, as well as, in many instances, of the ties of blood and kindred. The corpses of the most respectable people were hustled uncere moniously away, husbands fled from dy ing wives and wives from dying hus bands and children from dying parents. Money lost its potency. Even the wealthiest often were left unable to get anybody to supply their wants or nurse them in their illness. With the poor the suffering was even greater and the neg lect more painful. But all this, it should be remembered, was nearly half a century ago, and the progress in sanitary science in that inter val has been proportionate with the pro gress in everything else. Such scenes of pestilence, however, as occurred in those days may now be believed to be Well-nigh impossible. New York World. FUN. The man who is hard up can't very veil come down. A berry-picker generally gets what he an and cans what he gets. Texas Siftage-. About the hardest crop to raise on a arm nowadays, is the boys in the fam ly.. Puck. The letter that never came was not a lun. Those always arrive on time. Jomerville Journal. She "Do you notice how rapidly the sity is growing?" He "Yes, indeed; I jwe twice as many people as I did a year go." Brooklyn Life. "Here's an illuminated missal for fou," remarked the;' wife of a book-col-tector, as she threw a lighted lamp at her husbind's head, Puck. Every man who takes part in your pro cession expects in return that you will some day blow a horn in the band in his procession. The Waterbury. Young Man "Well, sir, I've just sjone into the real estate bu3tnei3 in the city. Old Punster "Ah, indeed? Then you have lots to learn." Detroit Free Press. "You borrowed a fiver of me the other day, you know." "Ya-as." "I'd like to have it back if you can " "But, my deah boy, I've spent it." Indian apolis Journal. It's seldom th same divinity that shapes both our ends ; for the D. D. who christened us is very likely to die before he has a chance to preach our funeral termons. Judge. . "Was Wigley born a mute or k it the result of illness!" "Neither one; he bad seven sisters and the time never came when he could try to form a word." Chicago Inter-Ocean. Doctor "Well, my dear sir, you will have to give up all head work." Pa tient "Then I shall have to go a-begging, doctor." Doctor "Indeei. Then, pray what are you!" Patient "A hair dresser." ElDia. Willie had been watching the demoli tion of a house near his home with great interest. Then he said: "Papa, I think Til be an unbuilder when I gow up. Tearing down houses must be lots of fun." Harper's Bazar. AGrewseme Uasfem. A London paper is authority for the statement that the ancient tower of the church of St. Sepulchre, opposite the end of Newgate street, has now been restored. It is stated that in the old days, when criminals were carried to execution at Newgate, it was the custom for theclerg at St. Sepulchre's to wait for their ar rival and present them with a flower. He Sanea at tne Karaies. Italian soldiers used to be trained, i is said, to look aa fierce as possible, s as to terrify their foes by the facci feroce; but Lieutenant fl. Cricbto Browne," of her Majesty's service, dorm his recent dangerous journey across th Veldts of South Africa, found that smile was far more potent than the fierce frown to subdue the savage breast. B relates ho V one day a swarm of wih Africans came upon his little band an filled his soul with "an inward sinking,' butheeaya: "I knew that my safet depended on my maintaining externa coolness, and so I remained imperturba ble until I distinguished immediately ii front of me, to the right, an Induna o Ring-kop (leaders among the Matabel wear a black ring on the head who wa particularly violent in his objurgation and on him I fixed my eye and - smiled When I first smiled on this Ring-koj Matabele he was the picture of. savag rage; as I went on smiling he mollified and as I smiled again and again hebrok into a hoarse laugh. , It was jf hoars laugh, but I think 1 never heard a jolliei one, and immediately I foUowedvup mj advantage." The savages were soon sr pacified that they were willing" to d. anything to oblige the Lieutenant an 'his party. New Orleans Picayune. A MootdTjustioit. Why some seals sink and are lost after being shot and others float, is a mooied question not likely"; soon to bs decided. Wnere they are struck oi whether they have much or little blub ber, all of which have been .urged to ac count for tbe anomaly, seems to hart little or no influence. It has been often observed that a seal falling, head dowt on being shot wjili come up and float while if the head is up he; sinks and losf. It may be that in' the latter case he more readily fills. With weak seat or pups it has been seen that they, too are often not recovered. Of those thai are killed, discarding Dups. the chancet - seem to be about equal as to whethei they will sink or float. Sometimes t considerable interval elapses before th dead body rises to the surface and hasb or carelessness may loose it. The great damage to the sealing industry lies un doubtedly in the indiscriminate killing which lays low so many cows on theii way to the . islands, heavy with young, whereby two lives are lost. It is impos sible to distinguish the female in thi water, and she would not be spared werr it possible to do so. Detroit Free Press The Horrible Hari Karl Though Japan is a mild-mannered country its people have a little way ol executing each Other for offenses most mild in American eyes. The least little peccadillo will get a man hari-karied. This operation is quick and simple. There are three judges to sit against thi accused, and if his sentence is death, thi executioner is immediately ready to sevei head and body with his sharp steel, bu if the doomed man will have the bravery to rip himself to pieces, his soul wii gain the highest place in nirvana, sinc self-murder is censidered the noblest ol mortal deeds. Atlanta Constitution Thai's What Brought ths Factories. Cheap fuel and low freights are the neces sities of manufacturing. Two fuel-oil pipe lines, four railroads, one a complete belt line, give Griffith these advantages aljd brought her four factories' as soon as the town was laid out by Jay A. Dveiggins & Co. Chicago News. Coal sold for $9 a- toa in Hartford, Conn., in 1S28. Train Leaded With Stove Fellah. Last week Messrs. Morse Bros'., propYietors of the well known Rising Sun More Polish, filled orders from two dastomers fa the West for twenty-three cars loads of stove polish. As the shipment to these two houses was 820CJ nil m v t . W i . t r", luus- e immense easiness none by this firm is a monument to the industry and high grade of goods for which they hare earned a reputation at home and abroad. - When a fly lights on a piece of sticky paper he realizes that he is better off. -Binghamton Leader. Whet Natar Heeds assistance it may be best to render It promptly, but one should remember to use even the most perfeet remedies only when seeded. The best and most simple and gentl remedy Is the Syrup of Figs manufactured by Ike California Fig Syrup Cfc. Every man's Ideal woman is one wno would believe he caught whales in the river if he told her so. Atchison Globe. 'The Only One Ever Printed. CAN TO0 FIND TBI WORD? These is a 3 inch display adrenisement in this paper, this w eek, which has no two words alin e except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week, from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house plaoes a ,Crescent" on everything they make and pub lish. Look for it. send them the name of the word and they will return you book, biattti- FCX LITHOGRAPHS Or SAMPLES TRIE. Cl-ristianity was introduced into Jai.&u In 1549. Ir your Back Aches, or you are all worn out, good for nothing, it is general debility! Brown s Iron Bitters w.ll cure you, make you strong, cleanse your lirer, and give a good ap petitetones the nerres. Tot a full crop on the farn commend us to the old hen. Lowell Courier. Oca Old Reliable Et water cures weak or Inflamed eyes, or granulated lMs withont naln. 2 cent. John It. Picks Orng Co.. Biistol. Va. In a corn-husking contest in Australia the .winner husked 500 ears in 29 min utes and 10 seconds. Conductor E. D. Loomis, Detroit, Mich., says: "The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is wonderful." Write him about it. Sold by Druggists, ?5c. No Chinese has been naturalized ror thirteen years. - Who cotters wtth his lirer, consipa Hon. bi ious ills, poor blood or dizeine-s take Beecham's Pills. Of druggists. & cent. There were 1500 railroad accileats b New Jersey last year. , LBOW? Iron fitters cures Dyspepsia, Ma larfa. Biliousness and General Debi ityTGires Strength, aids Digestion, tone the nerves create appetite. The best tonic for Jursing Mothers, weak women and children. It doesnt take a bit of meanness out of a rascal to polish hi w. Ram's Horn. If afflicted with sore eyes as Dt.Imac Tfconm. op's Ere-water.Drwgglsta aell at gp-per bottlo Swellings In tHmneektOT GmU trm caused ma terrible suffering, and I spent aa enormous amount o f money for medicines. In rain. I began to take Hood's Sanararula and in a few weeks 1 found the swelling very much sr.. i - rcdnMd. ana I MnM Br rath trUh JPereef J.wbJca I had not dona for years. I continued with JVwrf Bmrmmpmrilln and am XVrrn )ittu ttred." Mrs. J. Bioei ow, Freramt, Mich. ITood'M Pitta cura liver flla, con Upationi biliousness, Jaundlce.mlak btadacha, 26c, The most one-edW ? Staytes. In thi former countrj United States. n . word. this ia -prooaoiy - . duel, bo coroa uB r;z- dent. when tne - -trVnitei IStes whYchns the rough eie. btates , nther country n-M.fi from aim"0" - . mentsiroia . , . 9nd the eousmi of the popuiauou w , , f wh ifoccurs. An eye-maker Ihat there are 336,000 persons th onlj one eye in the Republic. In Ptop001 to thJ population, there are more one eyed people in Paterson, N. Y., than" any other town in America or any othei country. Apart from eyes lost in duel or rowdy fights, the great majority o artificial eyes are used by workmen, e ... .v. orrA in iron foundries pecuuiy wioc eug-i, where many eyes are put out by thi rparS which fly about in all direction. It is a yj o , woman having a glass eye. Yaakej Biaae. There fs a sien on the entrance to a emetery at North Wales, Montgomery bounty, Penn., whica reaas: -w nittance excejpt on DU3iness. LESSENS PAIH IHSURES SAFETY to LIFE of MOTHER ana uiiilu. My wife, after havingpsed Mother' Friend, passed through the ordeal wrtfc little pain, vras stronger f.ne ,no than in aweek after the birth of her former child. J. J: McOoldsick, Beans Sta., Tenn. Mnher' Friend robbed pain of Its terror arfdlnortenea lloor. 1 have the healthiest child I ever saw. Cochran. Ga. ji rvs. jj. u. nt by eipress. ch.rees prepaid, en receipt of price, ft So boRfe. Book "To ftothers" mailed frr 8RAOFIELD REGULATOR CO., For Hie by all Druggists. ATLANTA. OA. AUfifU Flower 9 "I have been afflicted with bilious- nessand constipation for fifteen years and first one and then another prep aration was stiererested to me and tried, but to no purpose. A friend recommended August Slower ana words cannot describe the admira tion in which I hold it. It has given me a new lease of life, which before was a burden. Its eood qualities and wonderful merits should be made known to evervone suffering: with dyspepsia and biliousness." Jesse Barker. Printer Humboldt, Kas TURELY a vegetable compound, I ' rade entirely of roots ana herbs JL gathered from the forests of Georgia, and has been used by millions of people with the best results. It CUBES All manner of Blood diseases, from the pestiferous little boil on your nose to the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh and SKIN'OlpiCER Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed tree. Swift Specific Co.. Atlanta. Ga. Ask your doctor what hap pens to cod-liver oil when it gets inside of you. He will say it is shaken and broken up into tiny drops, becomes an emulsion ; there are other changes, but this is the first. He will tell you also that it is economy to take the oil broken up, as it is in Scott's Emulsion, rather than bur den yourself with this work. You skip the taste too. Let us send you an inter esting book on CAREFUL LIV ING ; free. Scott & Bowke, Chemists, t3j South th Aveaua. New York. , ' Your druggi.t keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver ea all druggists everywhere do. $t. 3 E0noMl8f AJR vonKivor.iEH Tteo'a Kemedy for Catarrh Is the "ir"-! m-m-rL. I, v-nemoem. Bold by drngglsu or gent by mall. 0& B.T. Haxelttee, Warrtn, JT St I . . J 1 -- j.. ig;J i. :ii;aM':; . .-i.&fesaiawatw I II I I n r u 2 .Wi jei ataTn4 deT falae pretences. i lS SSflSSSS ! II mk rim v m. V I ----m i Bewed;53.30r,olleeandFarffl- I I 8aa X V ensS'i.SO Fine Calf ; Mi!!!1 BE DECEIVED I tbe hands, injure the iron, and burn of stlia less. Durable, and the consumer ravs iu at glass package with every jmrctu.se. I AUltOyour own homes, address inclnr)n LmUsDORA P. HOYT. frou t h BeSS 1? ' J1Z1 8mall. Guaranteed to cure Bilious Attacks. By hottle. Price 25c. For sale by drugeists. Picture "7, IT. 70" and sample dose free. J, f. SMITH & CO., Proprietors. Afiv rOflfc LUXURIES LEflKSYiLLE BUNKElf Housekeepers 54 $-5. Carolina's rrtf lb 4 lb n ex a rwr nair. Le.svuic rah ki and Black '2 5c, 40c. and OOc. 1 -p r ar 1 Kcil Gray, 3 l-c. . Brown. 40s. a yard; verylJt(yyi Wool Yarn, all colors. 5c. a tannk. if jour doavi does not ketip these poods order of J . . sctyji Sc CO.. Special Selling Agts., l.i ecnsbni , , " XWomanTas erv little desire to enjoy the pleastu-pg of urn ta entirelv unfitted for ths cares of honkwnir.. any ordinary duties, if afflicted with 01 SICK HEADACHE DAY AFTER DAY and vet there are few diseases that rw.i Fromptly to proper medical treatment, it u tijL ore of the utmost Importanre that a reliable rocicrt. should always be at hand. During a periM of jnPr9 than SIKTY YEARS theie has been no Instance reported where g(w cases have not been permaaently and PROMPTLY CURED BY the use of a single box of the genuine and mt', celebrated DR. G. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS j which may be procured at any Drug Storp. or' win mailed to any address on the receipt of r cntj m postage stamps. Purchasers of these Pills should be careful to pro cure the genuine article. There are several counter feits on the market, well calculated to deophn Th genuine Dr. C. McLane's Celebrated Liver Tilt? art manufactured only by FLEMING BROTHERS CO., .Pittsburgh, Pa. 55 THE 4 ONLY TRUE n. - - - III i S5' Will purify BIOOD, rejrulalc KIDNEYS, remove LIVER disorder, build 6trcn?tl!. renew appetite- restore iseaHli and vlgorof youth. Dyspepsia, Indigestion , that tired feel- lna absolutely era'Sioaiei. Mina nr'.gntcnea, oram power increases, bones, nerves, mus cles, receive new force. Buffering from complaints re- culiar to their sex , ueine it. ccd rose bloom ou cheeks, beautifies Complexion. Bold everywhere. All genuine goods bear "Crescent. " Bend us 2 cent stamp for 32-rw pamphlet. OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis, M, 3 N U 43 IF CKEN$ YOU WANT Y3 A '7r T H B I B THEM TO A JL WAT ven If you merely keep Ueem as a diversion. Ia ler to handle FottIs Judiciously, jron must knot something about them. To meet tbls want wasrt selling a book riving the experience fin! 4 K ( a practical poultry raiser forVWiliy C99t twenty-flva years. It wag wrlttea by a man who rat all his mind, and time, and znoBey to isaktBi vur east of Chicken raising not as a paatlae. bnt u business and If you will profit bykU twtaty-flM raws' work, you oaa save natay CVVaii aaauil " RnUini Chicken." and malt tout Fowls esjn, dollars for r1 point Is, that you must be able to detect trouble J the Poultry Yard as soon as It app-rs, and Ino how to remedy It. This look will tea, H j on It tei:a how to dotect and csr dXase: o I3 ' rss breed i ehnnlA 1 Bent postpaid for twenty- Book Publishing House, 135 LgQSAltP ST.. ii. Y.CHT nd tlfo for fat tenia;; whlca fowl flv cenU la or 34 Jf!SSn a3e, flexible, more comfortable, fstyiisa 1 M4 quxabla than my nrh rv. mi &t ths erica. "mu.iuii auier anoe ever soia m naliVy., u pJNo. runde with two cornpi" wht5S'S?5ly ' too ouulde edgo (ns ehown in cut), . ucn easily rip, uv ne only one bo:o c " JJAPfnw strip of leather on the edge, and when onca wwa through are worthless. wnen worn through can be repaired aa many u.-r.e neoeaaary, asthey will sever rip or loosen f rom the u ppr' ?lTchafr8 ot 'outwear desiring to ecf t ibibwiuiu cocsiaer tne superior Of these shoes, and not be Influenced to buy cheao welt shoes sold at --'' N caving enly appearance to comment A an c frinn Cult. IM3 13 Best Dor-W'i of the same Wa idard of merit- standard e
The Democratic Banner (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 20, 1892, edition 1
4
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