V 1 c ENTJ ML - IMTRR. H (. K GltAN THAM. Editor. Render Unto Caesar the Things that are Caelar's, Unto God, God's- $1.00 Per Year. In Advance. I I i J L (vol. in. ATLANTIC CQAST LINE. Wi'mington & Weldon Rail Road and Branches. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. TWAINS UUIXU KOUTH. Pat4 Feb. 61 '91. No. 131 No. t7 INo. 41 I rant Man Dally DallI Pally. ex Han Leave Welrfon Arr. Korky Mt,... P M 1 xe 1 44 1 M I U I Si A M 00 1 09 Arrive Tarboro...- 1 t II L-ave Tarboro .iV(; 1 -. I It 68 C 00 I Arrive Wllaon. Lcavw WlUnii Arrive Slma Arr Kajttvllle... i.eave 'olisroro. l.fnrf Wimw ... J.aw Magnolia.... -Arr. Wilmington- I PM I I .... "iLll1 J 7 00 I 7 40 I i 30 I f - 5 50 I ...... I 3 15 7 To " ' 8 SO"" 4 1 4 9 4 87 ' 8 40 t 44 00 t 55 11 as TRAINS QOIKQ WORTH. No. II Pally. No. 71 Dally. Ho. 40 Pally z Ham iea. Wilmington- 5 1.0 rm Majrnolla.... 7.ave Wtntw .rrlve ciolliilor- A M 13 3S 1 S4 "x"iT" A M t It II 57 11 11 13 OS r m 4 t 09 18 7 10 I.a. VayettTlll. ArrlTe gIiua ......... Arrive Wllaon t so 11 35 II 8ft laY WilBAB-, Arr. Roekr Mt lrrive Tartar. i ave Tabor... I I IS I I 4 01 I I M. 1 M II II 1 20 1 If I 4 I If ! ! i li lrrive WeMon ' I If I r at I 18 II I Pally exeept Sunday. Train en Reotland Nck Branca RoaS leave TTwldon 4 06 p in.. Halifax 4 18 p m. arrive at irntland If ek S IS p in. Qreenvll!e I 53 p m, Xlnaton 8 00 p m. Returning, leave Klnatom f 10 a ra. Grernvllle I IS a ra, Arrfvlnff at Hal ifax at 11 00 a m, Weldoo 11 IS a a, dally ox repl Sunday. f Local frlrM train leavee Weldon at II IS a Sa, ajrrtTlair Scotland Neck 1 OS am, Qa Title S3pm. Klnwton 7 40 p m. Returning-, leavea Ktnaton 7 SO a ra, Oreenvllle t SI a aa. Peotland Neck 3 30 p m. arrive Weldom 1,11 p ra.tUHy except Sunday. ' Trains on Koathern Plvlalon," Wllnon aa4 Tayettevllle Braneh leave Fajrettevllie T.M a. arrive Rowland 13,11 p. aa Returning leave Rowland Is IS p. aa. arrive Fayette- I tile S.1S p. m. Pally exeept rrnnday. Train on Midland NC Branch leares Oelda oro, N. C. dally exeept Monday, IN a xa; ar rive Smlthucld N C. 8 80 an. Returning navea Smlthfleld. N. C. f 30 a. ra. arrive loldal ro.N. C. I 30 a. m. I T-ialn on Naahvilla Branch leavea Rocky vCnunt st 1 15 p ra arrlTea NaahTlllo S IS p. in, tprlnjr Hope 8 10 p. a. Returning, leave flirlnjr Hope I 00 a. in. Naabvllle 8 55 a. m. vrrlve Rocky xonnt I-IS a. ra.! dally except Sunday. ! Train oa rllnton Branch lerves Waraaw for TIlntoM, dally except Sunday, at 8 00 p ra aad J 15 am. Returning, leave Clinton at 10 a n and 3 10 pin connecting at Wrraaw. with loa. 41, 40, i3 and 79, NonthTxtand train ou wllaon a Fayettevllle Iranch la No SI Northbound la No II. Dally ixcept Hunday. I Train Xo 37 Sooth and 14 North will ate? nly at Rocky uooat, wllaon Uoldsfcoro and :agnolla. Train No 78 raakeS clone conneetlon at feldon for all polnta North dally. All rail via tlchtnond and dally except Hunday via Rav .Itie. alao at Rooky Moont dally except Ian ay. with Norfolk aud Carolina for voffolk and 111 point North via Norfolk. Train leaves Tarboro. N. C. via Albemarle I Raleigh R R. dally except Sunday. 4 40 p ra nnday 3 pm; arrive at Wllllanaaton, N. C. 18 p in and 4 30 p m: Plymouth 8 30 p ra.. and 10 pm. Rtarnlng leave Plytaenth. N. C. ally except Sunday I 00 a ra, Monday I 00 a an rilllaraston 7 30 a m. 8 SI a m. Arrive at arlxiro, N. C. II 40 a m and 11 30 a m. r JOHN F. PIT1NS. Oem. 8at. R. KBNLY. General Manager T- M. BMMIR0jf.TriGf Manager LEE J. BEST, Attra)r-t4aw, DUNN. N. a. Will practioa in Harnett, aod ad- . WW A . lining Uuuniies. special iuibuii ven to collection of claims, May-l-UL W. K. MracHisow, Jonesboro, 2f . C. UJUllUlllUU L. B.wsari. LUllng ta, N. O. II V UUitliltl ATT0ENEYS-AT.LAT7 LILLIXGTON. !.N. C. iOffic fronting Court House. kpril-Sl-M. , A. FARMER, TT0aT 1HD COUKSOCS UU DUNN, HARNETT CO., THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1893, NO. S. DUNN, N. 0. Circuit : Harnett, Jehnston, Saap a aad Cumberland. i Collection a special I j. Prompt attention given to all bnsi- 3J placed in band. Ieh-31-l.2 ARP IS AILING, AND REAPS BOOKS TO FIND REMEDIES TO CUKE HEADACHES. I remember rading in Jostphns or somewhere else that King 6olu raon was the firat great bot&nWts, for he studied the properties and Tirtne of every plant from the fir tree to the hraop that springeth Qut of the wall and he knew all the herbs that were good for man for medicine. I wish tliat he had handed down his wisdaw so that wo poor suffering mortals would know what kind of bark or roots or herbs or Icayes to use when we get pun j and painfied. Majbe he did hand it down in the books that are lost, for the scriptures tell us that all the rest of the acts of Solo mon are written in books of Nathan, the Prophet. . and Alijah and Iddo, the seer. Maybe we will find those books some of theie days, for there is a railroad to Jerusalem now that the investigating yankee is digging away under the ruins of the temple. They hate recently found the stalls where be kept pi fine chariot hores. 1.400 of them, and which were driven by 700 bandseme young men, who had gold duit sprinkled in their hair every morning and it sparkled in the sunbeams and made them look dU vine as they circled around on dress parade, That's what Josephus says. Bat I am afraid the botany will come too late for me and I will bave to keep on experimenting until something kills or cures me. The trouble is that a sick man gets well he has taken so many different medi cines that he dosen't know what cured him. I had a mule that liked" to have died, and 1 gave him everything that the neighbors told me from lye soap and molasses to kernseno oil and lastly we rubbed him with with a rail abdominally and horizontally until the hair all came off and he got well bat our next sick mule died before we got to the rail and the mule doc tors are still in the dark. I've been reading a good deal of late in a stan dard booc on medicine and 1 found seventeen remedies (or beuHcrania and twentyscven for pertussis. One of these deseases is niuralgia head ache and the the other is whooping cough, but sometimes I forget which is tother vnd take the wrong medi cine. The headache belongs to me and the cough to the little orphan and the mantlepiece and the bureau is full of bottles and vials and cap sules and tumblers and spoons and the medicines have such curious names on the labels that I forget which is mine And which is the child's. My doctor has given me seven remedies and charged me for erere experiment, but my neighbors have given ne twentr-seven free gratis and I think I am a little bet ter considering, bat I can't tell who's ahead, mjr neighbors or the doctor. If it wasn't for toe intermissions I couldn't get along at all, but almost every day I have a lucid interyal of a few hours a.nd that keeps up my hopes. I have been taking horse radish and peppermint and terpen tine, not through my mouth, but through the olfactory openings just above, and experienced relief for a time, but it is a slow buiiness and wouldn't make a good perfume. I hare tried antiplrine aad several other antia and the girls bathe ay throbbing temples with camphor and I hart tried gentain for tha last three daya and now am on half rations of salt dissolved in a tnxnbler of water, which friend said was the favorite remedy of Major Campbell Wallace, ; who is nearly ninety years of age and there was no telling how long a man ; i "7 r wonld live if he would use It. Jy good female friend sent word? to string half a dozen nutmegs on; a black thread and tie them around lb throat. The word came to me , ami I bored holes In them with an'mwl and stringed them and went to bed with them on, but I found out ntxt niorn ing that the nutmeg business' waafon the whooping cough. Another' good neighbor sent word that another man told her that if I would' catch a roacb and shut it up in a little paper box my headache would go of wher) "flo Time to Read." four weekly papers each week if he the nacb gnawed out or died, Tiai wants to. It is because he has not in- reminds me of old Uncle Isara4.wht& remedy for rheumatism was 'to mash a lizard's tail and let the reptile Kay under the door si 11 until it died. An that reminds mc now how Jefghbo; Freeman bad two hound doe tha wo Idn't stay at home; so he cnr'. tailed their tails about three inched and buried the fragments in the gar4 den gate, and thej ' never roame away any more, .But the like of alt that don't cure hemieranian headacbfi nor pertuisian whooping coagh, anc to ray opinion both will haftobi) nursed until the weather settles do w4 and the east wind shifts-to the soutfcj and west and staya there. They have called mi to Brunswick to nec:nre and I am going where the salt es breeze will blow upon me gently; and I'm going to take the child and hot mnther and maybe we will all corns back rejuvenated and remunerated, j . But 1 believe in medicine jend In doctors. Wo are bound to have them. Everybody can't go to Bursa wick nor to the Hot Springs, bat the poorest people can boil down bark! and roots and sheep safron or aomev thing that will amuse tho pa'tlent uo til nature cures him, I tieliere thstl there is a remedy for almost , everyv disease except old age, and the dec-i tors are finding them out. Whooping cough ought to be cured in tweuty four hours and it will be when tbe germ theory of microbes and bacteria: is fully understood. So let the ex- perimeuting go on. Of course there;; will be victims, but there will; be dis covery.too. My wife and 1 nursed a boy in Florida for three longtj months and the doctors bills were $500, and the d rue gist's bill bad eighty-seven different prescriptions! and the boy got well. But tho ug li the doctors couldn't tell what .cured' him they found out a good manyi thinga that didn't, and that is- mak4 ing progress for the next case. But after all I believe that good nursing and sympathy than medicine, and home comforts save more sick people and l wisn tnat everydody uad as much of these as I have and the child. What can doctors or medicine do for the poor in the slums of .the great cities, where there are no good! clean beds, nor pure air, nor' happy voices, nor any of the comforts of life. If I didn't have these aud the bless 1 ed sunlight to shine through the win dow I think I would welcome death aa a fnend, But having these and We dislike very much to hear a laboring man say he dose'nt have time to read, because nine times out often we know lie utters a falsehood when he suys it, and nine . of ten of the men who have no time to read spend their time leafing on the streets or around the beer counter and billiard table. The cases' ar very rare, indeed, where a man has no time to read one or even three or terest enough in his own welfare to read and pott himself on the! events that .are transpiring for or against him. He is content to let others do his reading and thinking for him. The class of men that claim they do not have time to read are a curse to the community In which they live, Tbey have not minds of their own.and, being as ignorant as a Hottentot, they are used by the sharpers of their town and neighborhood to help carry out schemes to thwart ths will of the educated and respecred citizens. The man who dosen't have time to read is usually a loafer. The successful man has plenty of time to read and post himself on matters pertaining to his business, and that is one reason why he is successful. The educated laboring man finds plenty of time to read, and without neglecting-his work either. He is the man whom you will find at home evenings with bis family. The nail keg in the corner grocery is never kept warm by him while he listens, or tells smutty stories to an ignorant crowd of gaping loafers. He, who cannot find urn e toTe'Sd never find? time to be a man. but is always the tool of some man who does read Whenever we hear a man say he doesen't have have time to red one paper a week we always pity his wife and children to think they have such an indolent, ignorant husband and father. Headlight. ' Fled With Two Thosand and Four Hundred Dollars. Raleigh. N, C March 24. The Governor today ottered $200 reward fothe arrest of J. M, Benson, Treas urer of Harnett count), official infor mation haying been received that Benson had taken $2,400 of th coun ty funds and fled. Hie belief is that he has gone southward, perhaps to Mexico, or Texas, Greensboro Pa triot, We find the above appearing in the Patriot dated April the 5th, and beg leave to cot rect the same. Harnett county's Treasurer is not named Beu son nor have we hud a man by that name Treasurer since we have known the county. Our Treasurer seldom ever has $2,400 at a time in his banda and besides the expiring Treasurer and present encumbent is now here. Mr, A. L Byrd, the man who served us last term as Treasurer, lost some $700 to $800 last fall, bo you have been misinformed Bro, Wharton. The Billrille Banner. The primary election for postmas ter of BLlville will be held on Fri day morning next. The pay is $13 and seven stamps a year, and there aie exactly thirty-seven candidates. We recently wrote President Cleve land to the effect that we had named six babies after him. If that don't get us a foreign mission or a Georgia postofBce we will have to go back to splitting rails and chopping cotton. Even the rattlesnakes are moie fortunate than we are. for they all have buttons, while we are forced to fasten our one suspender with a rusty nail. Our dramatic club has gone to pieces. Every member wanted to be manager and play Che leading character, A new singing school has been es tablished in our midst. There are fifteen scholars and seventyfive m ...II t l ., Lu more i am ami cairn ana serene, i tj yoicef one dcgerTCgf and got a few more things to take yet. gU)a,d forfclg n mIgsionf and will then be able to tell maybe f. sometimes a man is candidate for what didn't xmre my headache. But offlce because he can't help it. It I feel that the lucid interval is pass Ee,, rana ih blood.-Atlan- wg wy 8uiu oust swp lor saw-fires-f;U Constitution. eni. lours in tne Donas oi nemi crania. Bill A or. cacxLEjrs sx:ici satx. Ths best Salve in Uis vurld fr Cuts, Bruises, tores. Ulors, , Salt Tbesca. Fever Sorea, Tetter. Cfca? ped Hands, Ckilblains Cerss. and all Skin Krc;tiena. aad pcsitivsly carts Piles, or na pay required. It is guar anteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money rs funded. Pries 35 essts per box. For saje by Harper & Hooi. That applicant for a postoffice who, f with his application, enelosed a $10 note to pay Mr. Cleveland for Ue Ltime be would have to devote to con'. fsidering bis case, was probaly from Kanifflf. The man was in downright earnest about it, but be hadn't been in the habit of aiklng fo r postolSces, and as this country had been under Republican management so long, he Remember that when S. Otho wil son'e lawyers moved to set aaido the plea of nolo contendere and to go into trial and give the whole facts to the public that judge Brown and So licitor Pou refused. The people want to know facts and these officers are responsible for suppressing them. The court ought to help The Cann casian to turn on' the light But for some reason the Solicitor did not want the light turned on in the Gid eon -Band business- - Do we - have Democratic and Republican "courts, or do we have courts of justice? Jm tice should be done and tba bottom facts should come out, even it hurts the Dcmocrrtic party. The Caucasian says Judge Brown and Solicitor Pou suppersscd the fat ts in the Wilson trialthat they wonld not turn on the light for fear It would hurt the Democratic party We think they ought to have let the facts come at any hazad. We dont think the ed itor of the Caucasian is any too anx- ions for all the fa ts to be investigated, be thinks its over with now and just wants to make capital. But if Solic itor Pou was to d"3 up ail tha fncis, in our opinion he would strike Mr, Butler's scent in the Band. Bpecixavn Csse. S. H. Clifford. New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with Neuralgia and Rheumatism, bis Stomach was disor dered, bis Liver was affected to an alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Elec tric Bitters cured him. Kdward Shepherd, Harrisburg, III., had a running sore n bis leg of eight years standing. Uusing three bottles of Electrie Bitters and seven boxes Bucklen's Arnica Salve, aad nis leg is sound and well. John Speaker, Catawba, O., had five large Ferer so res, on his leg, doctars said he was incurable. One bottle Elee trie Bitters and one box Bncklsn'a. Arnica Salve cured him entirely Sold by Harper & Hood Druggist. Fleming & Co. have ju4 received the nicest line of Trunks. Valise and Grip Sacks ever brought to Dunn. and ttey will ael! yui a leth-r V thought that was the ribt way to go Iter; for $.S). abont it .-ir. rrjcis Lrtlori von i. r you r-- buy. 1 1