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it ' ' ' : . HAHNETT AND ' j -OUMBEKLANB O Awn JOHNSTON SAMPSON 'PliOVK ALL THINGS; Hui.D f'AaT I'M AT WHICH . IS UUOD." VOL. VII. DUNNCN. G., MAY 25, 1898. NO. 19. H ill II1Y Off 10 DHL Admiral Dewey Stirs Up the Rus ' sian Bear OREGON'S SPLENDID RECORD. Naval Activity at Cadiz--Will Wel come Old Glory Kaiser's Interest iu Manila. A dispatch from Washington; dated :Uay2i, states: The news event of the day at tho navy department was the dispatch of the order to the Monterey to proceed to Manila to reinforce Admiral Dewey. The Monterey is a tower of strength in herself and her addition to Admiral Dewey's force, together with the dispatch of thousands of troops to Manila, is ample evidence thut the administration has assumed no .-huli-hearted attitude toward the Phil ippines question and is determined to to take mo chance of disposition until t-neh time as ' the United States itself has- arranged for the dispo sition of tho islands. The Mon terey is probably the most formidable monitor in tho world, yet she combines with, the enormous offensive and de- Ml JAPAN . . Y fiOlC KONG' y - I. Wlere Hostilities This Ma-3 is not drawn on a fens-ivo qualities of the monitor type a fou worthiness that is almost phe nomenal. Deivpy Stirs Up Russia. The public and the press of St.-Petersburg are evincing great interest in the future of the Philippine Islands. Much hostility is manifested toward any fscherr.oby which the United States, heat I'ritaiu, or Germany, individual ly or jointljT, aro to have possession of the islauds, and some; of the newspa pers urgo the Kussian'lgovernment to endeavor to obtain from Spain a loase of some of the Philippine Islands in or der that thoy may serve as a Bussian ;jood base in the Pacific. . . - SANTIAGO u t-V.---- Orcgon's Splendid Record. Tho navr department is proud of the record made by the Oregon from an engineering point of view. There ports to the department from the ship show that she doos not need five cents worth of repairs to her machinery after her 13,003 miles continuous run. The record is said never to have been equalled since the building of the first More Money Needed. Secretary Alger has sent to the Sec retary of the Treasury for transmission to Congress supplemental estimates of .appropriations aggregating $88,G38,840 required by the War Department for the support of the regular and volun teer armies of the United States for the last six months of the fiscal year end ir.g June 30 '1899, in addition to the amounts appropriated in the Acts of March 15 and May 4, 1898. Not a Failure. The Gussie expedition did not fail entirely. Two native Cuban scouts were landed west of Havana, on the second day out. Spanish guerrillas had been assigned to the duty of patrolling tho shore. A boat from the Gussie-landed twenty men. They had hardly set foot upon shore,,, before a furious volley was fired at them by the guerillas, who were concealed in thickets on the crest of the low hills. The American party advanced, were halted when iu range and the order "Fire!" was given. They fired as one man, sending three volleys at the guerillas, who scattered like chaff be fore the wind. ' Fiye of them were killed, including a captain. April Exports and Imports. The aggregate of the exports and im ports of the United States during the month of April, 1898, was as follows: Domestic merchandise exported, $98, 1 ;?), ;!'.j3 ; imports, $55,923,058, of which 1,410,783 was free of duty. As com pared with April, 1897, the gain in ex ports wa3 about $22,000,000, and a loss m imports of about $45,000,000. The exports of gold during April last amounted to $1,319,384 and the im ports to $32,788,074. The exports of silver during April aggregated $4,040, 301, and the inmorts amounted to $544,002. 1 ;ff V BATTLESHIP iron warship. The Buflalo, which comes with the Oregon from Brazil, is to be overhauled at Newport News, furnished with armor, given a good battery of 5-inch guns and altogether made, a very effective and modern cruiser. This will take about two months. Naval Activity at Cadiz. Captain Strong, of tho brigatine En ergy, which arrived at St. John's, N. F. , on the 22d, with a cargo of salt from Cadiz, reports that -when he left Cadiz a fornightago, tho greatest activity pre vailed in the naval arsenal there. Tho -TP UNITED STATES V A.-C VP " MOdfOLK 0 CALVCSTOH wf - ,y P wi.1V k VESA Vs. ' --.j. VV v.s C "N- V. --it JJ ; , S Between Spain and the United States are .Likely to Occur. scale, the onlj object Leitis to I ring out clearly the leading points of interest. two Hamburg-American liners, Colum bia and Norman uia, purchased to be used as 'auxiliary cruisers, and now named the Bapido and Patria, were be ing rapidly armored, and the warships refitting iu tho harbor were loading stores and ammunition. WTilI Welcome Old Glory. The people of the East Indies welcome the impending occupation of tho Philippine Islauds by Americans, ac cording to A. " Dittmar, tho manu facturer and tobacco grower of Singa pore. A material improvement in trade is expected, he says, following the advent of the American flag. DE CUBA. Kaiser's Interest In Manila. Advices from Manilla say the situa tion there has improved. Captain Au gusti, it is added, has regulated the price of provisions. It is also reported from Manila that the foreign colonists have sent the Captain General expres sions of sympathy with Spain. This is markedly the case .with the German colony, and the action of the Germans The Charleston Off. The United States cruiser Char leston passed through the Golden Gate at 8:20 on the morning of the 22d after having been anchored in the stream all night. She adjusted her compasses at an early hour and passed up the bay through Eaccoon Straits and passed the docks on the northern frontage of the city. Every steam vessel in the harbor blew au revoir to Capt. Glass and his crew. One Expedition Gone. A special to the Record, from Macon, Ga., says: Unless some accident has befallen the United States transport Florida, there are now United States volunteer troops on the island of Cuba. From accurate information obtained it can be stated as a fact that "the first expedition toward Cutym soil has start ed and the outlook is for a successful trip. " Will Graut No 3Iore Permits. Secretary Long will grant no more permits to vessels of any nation to en ter Havana. Officers commanding blockaders have been opposed to the former policy and united in a formal protest against allowing information to be carried to Havana under their guns. Senor Leon Declines. Senor Leon j Castillo, Spanish am bassador to France, who has been ten dered the Foreign Office portfolio in the reconstructed cabinet of Senor Sa" gasta, has replied to Senor Sagasta de" clining to accept. Ordered to Tampa. The First Regiment of North Caro lina volunteers have been ordered to Tampa. It has fifty officers and 932 nliitcd mtn. OREGON. is said to be due to orders received the German Consul from Berlin. by May Retaliate. It is confidently asserted -that Con gress will not vote a cent for tho Paris exposition. This action is taken on account of the manifest unfriendline3 of the people of France toward the people of the United States. While the French government has done noth ing openly to aid Spain it is known that country has its moral and secret support. If tho United States declines' to make an exhibit at the Paris exposi tion and Americans boycott the exhibi- Hoi, Ll550h Imp? 5TTHCMAS tion it will be the : severest blow that could bo given the enterprise. IKAT1I OF EDWARD BIIiA3f Died at His Home in Chicopee Falls A Sketch of His Career. Edward Bellamy, author andhumani tavian, tlied at his home in Chicopee Falls on the morning of the 22d, in the forty-ninth jrear of his age. Mr. Bel lamy has been in feeble ,health ever since he finished his "Equality," eight months ago. He was born at Chicopee Falls, March 20th, 1850, and was the third son of Bev. R. K. Bellamy, for thirty five years the pastor of the Baptist Church at Chicopee. 'After finishing a course at Union College, he completed his education by a year of European travel and study. By the close study of law he was, at 21 years of age, admitted to the bar of Hampden county, Mass. From the lat ter position he went into journalism, finally . in co-partnership with his brother, C. J. .Bellamy, starting The Springfield Daily News. It was in 1888 that his famous book,- Looking Backward, was published, the. sale of which up to the present time is over 450,000 copies in America, and probab y over half a million copies have been told in England and other foreign countries. Looking Backward ha3 been translated into German, French, Russian, Italian, Arabic, Bulgarian and several other languages. On December 20, 1591, Mr. Bellamy issued the first number of The New Nation, a paper destined to become the most quoted and influential political or revolutionary journal in the world. He leaves a widow and two children, besides two brothers, Charles J. Bellamy,- editor of The Springfield Daily News. . and Frederick Bellamy, of Brooklyn, N. Y. Fast Passenger Crashes Into a Milita ry Train. The train conveying the First Mis souri infantry from Chattanooga to Chickamauga park was wrecked in a collision at Rossville station on the morning of the 21st. Five privates were killed and twelve injured. To Meet in Denver, Col. The eleventh annual convention of State Railroad Commissioner will be held in Denver, Col., on the second Tuesday in August, 1899. Censorship Over the Senate. President McKinley on the 19th es tablished a censorship over the cabinet. Hereafter only Secretary Long and Secretary Alger will be cognizant of war secrets. More Spanish Plants. A dispatch to the Star from Montreal says Senor Poly y Bernabehas eeeured, by cable, a coal depot near St. Pierre, Miquellon, the French colony ofl the south coast of New Foundland, at which the Cadiz squadron will coal previous to attacking the Atlantic seaboard of the United States. Swelling the Insurgent Ranks. Gustavo Aranguereri, a brother "of the late Cuban insurgent general, Nestor Arangueren, on the 22d receiv ed letters from Havanna, . via Vera Cruez, dated May 7, stating that Gen eral Blanco's orders impressing all Cubans in the Spanish army has had the effect of driving many "in the in surgent ranks. The Situation at Sumter. The smallpox situation is much more encouraging and the board of health and the physicians, who hare been working together to stamp out the epidemic, are encouraged to think that the disease is under control and that there will be no widespread epidemic. A Famous Violinist Dead, A special from San Francisco. Cal., says Eudardo Remenyi, the Hungarian violinist, dropped dead at the Orpheum ffheatra whiU performing. 11 If 5: ,ttA . C.Y' lv 7; 1 CA0I7 y 1- p isVi Sni-Hw 1 -k. W LflSF SIX 1118. The Troops Found to be Lacking in Equipment . BOMBARDMENT-OF SANTIAGO. The French Authorities Permit the Harvard to Remain In St. Pierre Un til Her Repairs Are Made. It is beginning to be realized that the shortcomings of our military service are so many that delays are inevitable and that much work will be necessary to put the nation in official fighting shape. Every day brings forth some weak spot that has to be strengthened, or some hidden defect, such as the dis covery at this late moment that every regular army officer who accepted a volunteer appointment would forfeit his commission in the regulars and eo become liable to be left out of the ser vice entirely at the end of the war. Few officers cared to risk their future in that way, so a rush was made toward Congress to secure the necessary legis lation. Again, it was found that the equipment of the army, small as it is compared with the graat army of the civil w ar, is sadly lacking. Nearly a month after the formal declaration of war the War Department has purchas ed a number of shelter tents and it has just secured the hammocks that ex perts say are essential to existence in Cuba.. These preparations involve de lay and no positive start has yet been made toward its goal by the army of occupation. Probably it is this fact, rather than any unreadiness on the part of the navy that causes the campaign to drag in its inception. To maintain the army of 200,000 men for six months will cost $30,000,000, ac cording to estimates prepared by Paymaster-General Stanton, and the lead ing officials are beginning to fear that hostilities may run along beyond this period. The reason is the growing con viction on the part of some of the of ficers that they must not reckon on any substantial assistance .from the Cuban rebels in this campaign, and moreover muat meet the Spaniards in Cuba in their strongest sphere, that of the de fensive. Naval authorities are relieved of a good deal of embarrassment by tho con cent of French authorities at Mar tinique to allow the scouting vessel Harvard to remain in St. Pierre until her repairs are completed. It was sup posed fat first that she would be allow ed only seven days stay, and at the end of that time would be forced out to risk attack at the hands of some ambushed Spanish cruiser or torpedo boat. '- Work on the three monitors Maho pao Canonictis and Manhattan at League Island has advanced so far that the Department expects to have them in service within a week or two. The report that came from Madrid of the bombardment of Santiago received some credence, inasmuch as it seemed to show that General Greeley, the chief signal officer, has set in, motion the machinery of the navy to carry out his declared purpose of cutting the ca bles that afford the last connection be tween Havana and the outside world, and thus isolate Blanco. It is not be lieved that the bombardment amounted to anything more than this. Judge Advocate General Lemly completed the circular - defining the chief characteristics of the 10 torpedo boat destroyers and 11 torpedo boats provided for by Congress, in tho pres ent naval appropriation bill. The de stroyers are to be of larger type than any vessel of that kind we now have in service, about 400 tons," but the tor pedo boats will be about the size of the average boat now in use, namely, about 150 tons. . A Spanish Spy. A man was arrested at Marion, N. C. , on the 19th, who is thought to be a Spaniard and a Spanish spy. He left Florida some days ago. On the 18th a watchman caught a man tampering with the switch lock at the O. R. & C. junction. It is thought his intention was to wreck the train that' carried the United States troops which passed about 10 o'clock on the night of the 18th. Fired on by the Forts. Two American warships, whose names were not discernable from the shore, appeared off Santiago de Cuba Thursday, while, the steamer Adula, which has arrived from that port with refugees, was in the har bor. They approachedand drew the fire of the batteries at the harbor en trance. It is not certain whether the warships replied to the fire. Alleged French Prophecy. The Figaro has a peculiar passage extracted from , the Comte de Buest's book, entitled "The Last of the Na poleons," which appeared in 1870. After blaming Europe for remaining Bimple spectators of France's oppres sion in 1870, the Count says: "Europe entire will suddenly see the American Eagle, after haying ravished the 'Queen of the Antilles' from Spain, begin to meddle with her affairs and weigh doWn with redoubtable heaviness the monarchical destinies of little old Europe. " - This prophecy, written twenty-eight years ago, which seems so likely to be fulfilled, is attracting much attention tonight, , Military Appointments. The Senate confirmed the following army nominations; To be assistant adjutant-general, with, the rank of major, John A. Logan, Jr., of Illinois; to be assistant adjutant-general with rank of captain, Jos. B. Foraker, of Ohio; to be inspector-general, with rank of major Russell B. Harrison, of Indiana; to be assistant quartermaster, with rank of captain, Wm. . K. Alexander, of Vir ginia? Ambrose E. Gonzales, of South Carolina; to be commissary of subsis tence, with rank of captain, John H. Earle, of South Carolina. A DECISION Which Means Much to the Business People of North Carolina. The people of North Carolina, espe cially those resident in that section of the State traversed by the Cape Fear tnd Yadkin Valley Railway, must re ceive with great satisfaction the recent decision of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, for the Fourth Cir cuit, in the case of Charles Adolphe Low and others vs. William II. Blackford and others, which affirms the decision of Judge Simontou, of the Circuit Court, and holds that a sale of said Railway, by division, under the circumstances of the case, would be inequitable, and decreeing that the property must be sold in its entirety. This decision means much to the busi ness interest of North Carolina, as a hasty review of the facts involved must demonstrate. For Fome years the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railw-ay has- been in the hands of 'Receiver, pending a contest in the Courts between the holders of several series of bonds. The First Mortgage covers all the Railroad Lines, except the branches, and was executed to se cure three separate series of bonds, de signated "Series A," "Series B" and ".Series Cj!' each series of bonds being a first lien upon a certain designated division of the Railway, and a second lien uponr the other two Divisions. The main lino from Wilmington to Mt. Airy is two hundred and forty-eight and one-quarter miles' The bonds, iu "Series A" are a first lien on that por tion of the road which lies between Greensboro and Fayetteville and Fayetteville and the South Caro lina Line, about one hun dred and forty-four miles in all, -known as "Division A" The bonds in "Se ries B" are a first lien on that portion of the road situated between Greens boro and Mount Airy, about seventy miles in length, known as "Division B." The bonds of "Series C" area first lien on that portion of the road between Fayetteville and Wilmington, about eighty-one miles in length, known as "Division C. " The bonds of each of the several series are also subordinate lines upon each of the other Divisions, respectively. The Second or Consolidated Mortgage em braces all the lines in the First and also the branches. The contention is . between the plaintiffs, Charles Adolphe Low and others, claiming to be the Committee representing "Series A" bondholders, and the defendants, William 11. Black ford and others, a Committee of the holders of the bonds of the three dif ferent series. The first are known as the "New York Committee, " and the last as tho "Baltimore Committee;" the New York Committee claiming that the Railway should be offered for sale both by Divisions and as an en tirety, while the claim of the Baltimore Committee is, that it should be sold as an entirety. Judge Simonton, in a most able and carefully-prepared opinion, reviews the facts, discusses fully tho equities, and applies the law. The Circuit Court of Appeals quotes, with approval, from his opinion where he says: "This Rail way Company derives all its powers aud privileges from the State which created it, and the bondholders enjoy the security of the mortgage, because the act of the Legislature granted this power to the Railway Company. The purpose and intent of the State wa3 to secure au entire line of railway from its principal seaport to the Virginia line. It granted the franchise to the company as an entirety, -one indivisible fran chise, granted for the purpose of con structing and continuing an entire continuous line of road. If, therefore, the property were offered for sale at auction in separate divisions, it could, probably would, result in a dis ruption of the entire system, against the purpose of, and defeat the end sought by the State, for which the cor poration' was created, and to which it owes its existence and its powers will be inconsistent with the general tenor of the mortgage itself, and will utterly destroy an importaut incident in the value of each division. " Judge Simontou, further elaborates the injurious effects to result, to the State and its business interest, in de feating the object and purposes' for which the franchise of this company was granted. The New York bond holders seek to divide the franchise; the Court holds a sale by division, would destroy it entirely. The Court, in its, opinion, provides for an equitable division, of the proceeds of sale among the bondholders of the respective series and the Circuit Court of Appeals, in the elaborate ODinion of Judere GoiE. approves the conclusions reached, and affirms the decision in its entirety. This means much for the people of North Carolina. It is a distinct recog nition on the part of the Federal Judi ciary, of a duty to enforce the laws of the State, iu dealing with corporations chartered under those laws and as such we hail nd applaud it. It is useless to go into any details as to the disastrous result which, would inevitably follow the sale of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Vallow llailwav in divisions disinte gration would inevitably follow. The great purpose for which it was incor porated, to-wit: a railway from our great" seaport on the Atlantic to the Virginia line would be defeated, the benefits of competition would be lost, and these separated divisions would be absorbed by rival corporations, indiffer ent to the welfare of the people, and looking only to corporate aggrandize ment and the establishment of mono poly. - From this hurried review of the facts of the case, it must.be apparent that the contention o the Baltimore Com mittee i3 in line with the laws of our State and the best interests of our peo ple, aad the decision of the Court, sus taining this contention, must be a cause for congratulation with idl who seek the welfare and prosperity of North Cerolina. A New "Envelope. An envelope for carrying merchan dise through the mails is so construct ed with reversible flaps and a stiffen ing strip attached to the closing flap that the inside of the envelope may be come tho outside, and the same enve lope used to return merchandise in the same manner in which it was forward ed. L Proposing to tax both old bachelor! and old maids in New Jersey again suggests that matrimony is a matter ol money. " III it All the Reconcentrados Said to Be Dead or Sent Away to Die. MANY TOO WEAK TO LEAVE. Flocks of Vultures Circling In the Suburbs These Birds Are Now Called "Weyler's Cliickeni." A special from Key West, Fia., says: The conditions in Havana, resulting from the blookade, are being gradually brought out by information obtained from fishing smack and other email vessels captured off the coast. The situation in the blockaded city appears to be worse than at any other time since the Weyler regime ended. The fishermen who at first braved the blockade for the high prices which fish brought in Havana, now run tho risk not for money,but for the food which they get from the sea. A number of these men have been captured at differ ent times by the vessels of the blockad ing fleet, nearly all of them being re leased after having been questioned by American officers. They unite in pio turing the state of things at Havana as critical in the extreme. The latest news of this description was obtained through two captures made by the United States gunboat Ma chias, which has just returned here for the first time since the blockade opened, making the longest single ser vice of anv blockading vessel off Cuba. The Ma'chias caught two fishing boats off Havana just before her return hero. The Amerioans offered the fishermen money for part of their catch, as the fish were needed on the gunboat, but the fishermen demurred at taking money, saving they preferred to have bread and" that they were desperately hungry. When questioned as to the prevalence of yellow fever at Havana, tha fisher men said there was littla sickness at the Cuban capital, but, they added, there was much starvation. The reconcen trados, they said, aro nearly all dead or have been expelled from the city to die in the suburbs. This agrees with other reports from Havana and Matanzas, to the effect that tho Spanish authorities, on tho departure tf the American con suls, seized all the relief supplies and applied them to the use of the army. The Spaniards then drove tho reconcen trados into the desolated sections of the country between the coast towns and the insurgent lines, the regions de scribed by Senator Proctor and others as being too barren and desolate to sup port grasshoppers. The insurgents themselves have been chary of receiving reconcentrados, and hundreds of the latter who had no per sonal friends in the insurgent camps havo been left to starve between the lines. Near Havana the situation is even worse. Hundreds of reconcentrados from Los Fosas, the big reconcentrado barracks, were too weak to walk out of town and fell in the streets or died in the suburbs, where flocks of vultures, "Weyler's chickens," as they are now termed in Havana, have fasted on the bodies.. In Matanzas this element of the situation is equally bad. The fishermen who have been brought here are soon reconciled to capture, whioh means food and decent treat Tnnf Thv Kftv that if the blockade continues much longer bread riots must follow in all tn large towns oi Western Cuba, as food is reserved exclusively for the army, thus forcing many per sons to enlist who would not otherwise do so. The fishermen also 6ay that some of the most desperate Spaniards threaten to burn Havana or blow up the city in the event of the authorities deciding to capitulate to the American forces. . SPAIN DOES Not Lilke the Talk of an Apglo-Saxon - Alliance. Spain is not pleased with the utter ances on the subject of the possibility of an alliance between the United States and Great Britain. Spain, it is said upon good authority, will draw the attention of the powers to the transcendency of the suggested Anglo American alliance, with respect to European interests. Feels the Sharp Criticism. The administration evidently -feeli the sharp criticism of his appointments of wealthy young clubmen and those (whose only recommendation is that they are their fathers' eons) to impor tant commands. This has caused a storm of indignation, and the adminis tration hastens to announce that these birds of fine feathers will be put in the background as much as possi ble. A Political Sensation in Texas, e Attorney General Morane, one of the leading candidates for the Democratio nomination for Governor in Texas, has created a sensation by withdrawing from the race. This leaves Congress man Savers the leading candidate, and his victory seems assured. The Dem ocratio nomination is equivalent to lection. - 833,000,000 Supplemental for Navy. The Secretary of the Navy sent to the House on the 16th an estimato for an appropriation of $33, 000, COO in round numbers to cover the war expenditures of the navy, for the first six months of the next fiscal year. This is supple mental to the estimates heretofore re ceived. Families Made Homeless. News has been received at Pensacola, Fla., of the almost total destruction of the town of Chip'ey, on the Pensa cola and Atlantic Railroad, about 120 miles east of PeDPacola. Nearly every business house in the place was burned; also the new railroad depot and many private residences. .The loss is very large and a number of families were made homeless. " Hero and There. Heavy rains in California have par tially laved the perishing crops. win Tetter. Salt -Rheum and Kccrna. The intense itching and smarting, inci dent to these diseases, is instantly allayed by applying Chamberlain's Kyo and Skin Ointment. Many very bad cases have been permanently cured by it. It is equally efficient for itching piles and a favorite remedy for sore nipples, chapped hands, chilblains, frost bites and chronic sore eyes. 2 cts. per box. Dr. CadjrN Condition l'owdors, aro just what a horse needs when in bad condition. Tonic, blood pitrifier and vermifuge. They, ar not food but medicine and the lest in use to put a horse in prime condition. Price 23 cents per package. For sale by N. B. Hood, Dunn N. C. I Mil! . Lajin Abed in the Mornfn. I don't believe, when it comes to sport, i That I'm a bit backward or lazy; When it comes to bikin' aud things o' that i sort i There ain't any kiditnore crazy; But ahead of all sr-orts in tbe world they'a one, ' And I want to, give you warniu'; In all creation there ain't any fun ; Like layin' a-bed in the uiornin. ' ' You lay half asleep, and your sisters theyj call; And it sounds like tbe angels a-singin' And thoy pound the door, and rap on the wall, And keep up a deal o' dingin'; And it all just helps to put you to sleep, ; Aud sweetly blends with your dreamin'i And the zephyrs over your eyelids creep; And the sun in ycur face is a-bcamin Then after a while you hear in the hall Your father's boots a-stunipin', And you know that something a-goin' td fall Unless you git to humpin'. . . But when we go up to heaven to stay The place our spirits were born in They won't be nothin' to do all day But layin' a-bed in the mornin'. The rathfinder German immigration. Of tbe3iT,2o2 Germans who emigrated! In 1S90 only 171 Avent to AustrallaJ Most of the rest came here to assist in Germanizing America. Professional Cards. J. C. VLIFFOtil), , s Attorney ut Law. DUNN, N. C. Will practico in allitbe courts of the State where services ojotired. 2. II. Jl'LEAN, Counsellor and Attorney ut Law. DUNN, N. C. Fractice in all courts. Collections a specialty. W. E. MUJICJIISOjV, JONESBORO, N. C. Practices law in Harnett, Moore and other counties, but not for fun. 3 201yf ISAAC A. MUnCJUSON FayettevilleN. O. 1 Practices law in Cumberland Har nett and anywhere services are wanted. Mothers! nPrm disebm , I forts a u d-; - 3anger3 of child-birth can be almost en tirely avoided. WineofCardui relieves ex pectant moth ers. It gives puts them in condition to do their work perfectly. That makes preg nancy less painful, shortens labor and hastens recovery after child-birth. It helps a woman bear, strong healthy children Mm MtELREE'j- TT has also brought happiness to thousands of homes barren for years. Afew dosesoftenbrings joy to loving hearts that long for a darling baby. No voman 6hoald neglect to try it for this trouble. It cures nine cases out of ten. All druggists sell Wine ofCardui. fr.co per bottle. For advlc in ca3c3 rfuMrz spcta! directions, address. ei"'ir.sr symptoms, tha '"Ladies' Advisory Depart nr.er.t." The Chattanooga Medicine Co., CfcatU nooga, Tenn. Mrs. LOUISA HALF., of Jefferson, Ga., sy: "When I (lrst took Wine ofCardui we had been married three years, tut could not have any children. Mine months later 1 bad a fine Girt baby." 80 YEARS EXPERIENCE TRADE MARK8, OE8ICNS, COPYRICHT8 Ac. Anyone fending a eketcb and description may quickly ascertain, free, whether tui Invention la probably patentable. Commonicmtloas strictly eonfldentiU Oldest ajrency for ecui1nj? patent In AmertA. We have a WanhinRtou ofllce. Patent t&ken through Maun A Co. reoelra peciai notice in tbe " SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, ! beautifully ill tint rated, larsrent circulation f any scientific Journal, weekly, tenu tXUI year; flJOaix tnoiitha. Ppecltnea copi and LLAJ1 Hook, oh 1'ATi.yTS sent free. Addreaa MUNN & CO., j xJ 301 lirr53ftn Xark. mm
The Democratic Banner (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 25, 1898, edition 1
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