! AVERAGE CIRCULATION l,OOQ. 0- -o 1 (Place your "ad" with 'us and' see the results. Vol. S The Best Shoe 4 -.nt; VV -""A This isniBBEsr Sold by TTIE MASSENG1LL TOVN 33IRECTORY. CHURCHKH.'. Metliodist Churcli Rv. VV A. Forl.ea Pastor first Sunday iiitfht, an.l tourth. Bun- d.iv liioriiiii,' and mlit. Frayerme.eting t-very Wednesday niffht:' Sunday gehec' every Sunday uioriiing1 at 10 o'clock, O. K. (Jraiitham Superiutendeut. Ba)tlat Church.-Rev. L. R- Carroll, pastor. Services e.veiy second Sunday morning and nifc'lit. Prayermeeiing every Thursday night Kuuday School every Sunday morning, J. A. Taylor .Superintendent. Presbyterian Church. -RefeAT M. Hassel ' pastor. S-rvices every first aiiffl fifth Sunday morning and night, KuudayUschool every .Sunday morning, Doug SinpL Superinten dent. , j'. Disciple Church-Rev. -V. B. Hood, pas tor Services every third Sunday morning ami night. Cm istiaii Kndeavor Society every Tuesday night. Sunday School every Sunday evening at A o'clock, McD. Ilolliday Supt. Free Will Baptist Church. Elder R. C. .Jackson, pastor-Services every first Sun day morning and night. Primitive Baptist. Church on Broad street KlderW.O. Turner, Pastor. Regular servi ces op the third Sabbath morning, and Satur ()ay before, in each inontli at 1 o'clock., LODGE, Palmyra Lodge. No. 117, A. F. & A. M. Hall over Free "Will Baptist church. F. P. Jones W- M ; W. A. Johnson, S. V.; E. A. Jones J, W.;. J. O. Johnson. Secretary. Regular "communications are held on the 3rd Satur day at jo o'clock A. M., and on the 1st Friday at 7:"0 o'clock p. m. In each mouth. All Ma sons in good standing are cordially Invited to attend these communications. J TOWN OFFICERS. J.F. Phillips, Mayor. Commissioners E.F.Young. R.O.Taylor, J. VV. Jordan and McD. Holiday. M.L. Wade, Policeman. County Officers. Sheriff, Silas A.Salmon. Cleik. Dr. J. H. Withers. Register of Deeds, A. C. Holloway. Treasurer, L. D. Matthews. Surveyor, D. P. McDonald. Coroner, Dr. J. F. McKay. County Examiner, Rev. J. A. Campbell. Commissioners : ' E. P. Young, Chairnii n N. A. Smith. T A. Harrington. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. D. H. M CLE AN, Counsello and Attorney at Law, DUNN, N. 0. Practice in all Courts. Collections a Specialty W- E- Mnrchison, JON ES BOKO, N. C. Tract ic:es Law In Harnett, Moore and otlu'r counties, but not for fun. Fob. 20 lv. Isaac A- Murchison, FAYETTEV1LLE, R. C. Pi act ices Law in Cumberland, Harnett and any where service are wanted. JVC CLIFFORD, Attorney at Law, DUNN, n. c. Will practice in all the court; of the State, where .services desired. H. L. GODWIN, Attorn ey-at- Law Dunn, - - N. C. ; Will ptactice wherever pervices m iy "be rc(ii-red. Difficult colleclion? jirompily made. , yj l. iiudson. m. n. Physician and Surgeon, Dunn, N. C. Ofliee on N." E. Wilson Sr., second build iiiir from Broad St. liesidence at junction of K. Broad and ltJm Streets. lirompt attention to iul calls from either Town or Country, day or night in the various blanches of the profession. F. P. .I0XES. W. A. STEW ALT' JONES &r STEWART, Attorneys, Dunn, N. C. Will practice anywhere in State or Federal Courts. Collections a specialty Oscar J Spears, ; Attorney and Counsellor at Luvr,"". LlLLINGTON, N.C. .Office iii the Court House. General Practice in all State Courts. i 0fe tmmmjB'm dii"a FIT FGR A.KIRP. 'V 9 g Vi ft. 2 R. 4 V IfJi La s& fife Bfl tft fl 1 n h & m nm n ? Over Oae People wear the V. Lcvf.as $3 and $4 Shoes. All nxvr titws are rc.unliy matisfactcrrt They (rive tlf Lea 'ie Tor tne money. hey eaui.: cus.c'.i soea in style aud 3t. Their ww, in ; quahlics :re uncu paired. The pric-os are us!fer:n stamped cn solo. j; rum k sae.i i vtr hit r.asi's. r t , l3 i.;:g. sA $StG,.70 Cry: School II ynv.r t'p?j?r ccr.not eur.'J 7. L. Dougln-. DRY GOODS CO., Dunn, N. C. The Duel Between Mr. Shott and Mr. Nott. A duel was lately fought in Texas by Hiram Shott and John Si Nott. Nott was shot and Shott was not. In this case it was better to be Shott than Nott. There was a rumor that Nott was not shot and Shott avows that he shot Nott, which proves either that the shot Shott shot at Nott, was not shot, or that Nott was shot notwithstanding. Circumstan tial evidence is not always 'good. It may be made to appear when the trial comes off that the shot Shott shot shot Nott, or as ac cidents with firearms are fre quent, it may be possible that that shot Shott shot shot Shott himself, when the wdiole affair would resolve itself into its original elements and Shott would be shot and Nott would be not. We think, however, that' the shot Shott shot, shot not Shott .but Nott. Anywa7, It's hard to tell who was shot and who was not . E xch a n ge . Odd Things That Happen. The meanest thief on record has turned up or rather hasn't turned up in battle Creek, Mich. He broke into the house of a colored man who had died d urine the day and stole the suit of clothes buried in. The weather he was to be was so cold in Kansas last week that a prison er who broke out of jail over night came back to keep from freezing. . Mrs. Lottie Bunker, a Chica go wh eel lady, has a record of 19,000 miles for last year and 45,000 miles for the past three years. She became Mrs. Bun ker before she took to wheeling. A Ballviller. O., schoolteacher has been asked to resign be cause he punished the scholars by making them Jiold their noses in a small ring which he had drawn on the blackboard. An interesting young man of Lima, 0., last week shot his sweetheart, his rival and him self m the order named. His act would have been more com mendable if he had begun at the other end. of the list of fa talities. Greenville Reflector. Cloth From Pine Needles. Grant's Pass; Ore., promises soon to have a manufactory where wooly cloth will be made from pine needles. That is, a cloth closely resembling that made from wool -will' be manu factured of the slender spines. The industry has; been carried on in Europe for many yearsV and now it has been found that the material in the Oregon for ests is better than that in the old world. Several grades of cloth may be made from the outer fibres of the needles. It is said that the cost of manu facture of those peculiar cloths, is uo more " than that attached to making the better: grades of woolen goods, and it is asserted that the pine-needle fabricjias medicinal qualities tliat make it particularly , desirable for bandages and1: underwear. Excjiange Jk8 Kind Yea Ksyb Always Bcgit -4 rr stv Bflontlia : A la B8 Kl YTf "Pi-overall 57' v'ot? the Sea. The pinna (mvtilidae), shellfish found in the - Mediter ranean bea, contributes to tne world's silk production in small quantities. This shellfish has the power of secreting a viscid . . .it silk, which is made into a hand some fabric in Sicily. This fibre is ejected by the shellfish for the jmrpose of fastening it self to the rocks, and it is able to guide the delicate filaments to the proper place and there clue them fast. The material when gathered (which is done at low tide) is washed in soap and water, dried, straightened and carded, one pound of the coarse filament yielding about three ounces of fine thread, which, when spun, is of a love ly burnished golden brown color. The Berlin Roval Museum has recently received a pair of crnblon hrnwn silk odnvps mnrlf of byssus silk. This silk is j obtained from the small silky tufts protruding from the bys- sus sneJl. Tins nore is siiny and changes in color from green ish yellow to dark brown. The single threads are from two to three inches lone, and after and dried they are spun into yarn. Byssus silk woven, into material is still a great curiosity, for the supply of material is so scarce that in dustrial development of the manufacture is out of the ques- tion. r lsiiermen tear tne slieil . tt- ,i tin rora the rocks, and, after cut ting the tufts, return them into basins of shallow water : the tufts will crow" again in a year. It requires between 3000 and 4000 shells to obtain one pound of fibre. Philadelphia Record. Millions GJven Away. It is certainly gratifying to the public to know of one con . . . -j . cern in tne land wno. are not afraid to be eenerous to the needy and suffering. The pro prietors of Dr. King's New Dis- covery i o r consumption, Coughs and Colds, have given away over ten million trial bot- les of this great medicine ; and lave the satisfaction of know- ng it has absolutely cured thousands of hopeless cases. Asthma, Bronchitis, Hoarse ness and all diseases of the Throat, Chest and Lungs are urely cured bv it. Calf on McKay Bros. & Skinner, Drug gists, and get a free trial bottle. Regular size 50c. and $1. Every bottle guaranteed, or price refunded. Ten Beaus For Every Idaho. Girl in With the bachelors outnum bering the maids in every State in the Union it ought to be easy for the unmarried Woman to se cure a partner anywhere, but the region where bachelors are most in excess is, of course, the most favorable to the spinster, since the abundance of unmar ried men gives her a wider range of choice. From a mat rimonial point of view Idaho is the best State of the Union, for there the number of the bache lors is to that of the ; maids as 16,584 to 1426, each unmarried woman in Idaho",' therefore, having ten or eleven bachelors, not exactly at her beck, but available as a husband. From most points of view the West is the "Mecca of the young unmar ried woman, for not only are there more unmarried men in the Western States, but a living is more easily made in the West than in the East, and therefore the Western men are more ad dicted to matrimony. Profes sor D. R. McAnally in the March Ladies Home Journal. That Throbbing -Headathe AVould qujckly leave you, if you used" Dr. King's New Life Pills. Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for Sick and Nervous Headaches. They make pure blood and strong nerves and build up your health. Easyto take. Try them. Oaly25 cents. Money back if not cured. Sold by McKay Bros. Skinner, Druggists. rssirr fizz-- r things; holdfast that which is good." EUIMIM,.IM. O. MARCH The Peabody School Fund. a The Peabodv school fund - j from which so iiumy voting men i ana women or, tne ooutn are j receiving benefits, was given by j George Peabody, who was born at Danvers J(now Peabody), tt i . h r i .i Mass., February 18th, 1795, and died at Eaton Square,' Lon don, Nov. 4. 1SG9. The North Carolina Journal of Education in the February number enumerates the princi pal gifts for education made by Mr. Peabody as follows: $250,000 to found the Pea body jnstitute and libraries in his native town. $1,000,000 to found the Pea body Institute in Baltimore. $60,000 toWashingion College, (now Washington and Lee Uni versity.) $2.5Q0,000 for homes for the homeless poor in London This now amounts, with rents and interest, to. more than $6,000, 000, and furnishes comfortable homes for 2U,000 people at a rental of about $5 a month for each complete dwelling, with gas and water free. $150,000 to Yale College. $150,000 to Harvard College. $3,500,000"for the promotion fof general .education in the South. This I give to the suffering South for the good of the whole country. This last was' given in 1867 and 1869 Only . $2,000,000 of it has been productive.- This is the Peabody Education Fund, which, through its wise use, has done so much to stimulate and help the public schools of the South. The disbursements have amounted to more than $2,500, 000. To September 30, 1897, Alabama had received $146, 000.59!; Arkansas, $129,100; Florida, $67,375 ; Georgia $132, 531 ; .Louisiana, $135,200 ; Mis sissippi, $86,878; North Caro lina, $173,015; South Carolina, $129,441; Texas, $141,974; Tennessee, $216,300 ; Virginia. $305,949.41 West Virginia, $167,510 ; Peabodv. Normal Col lege (at Nashville) , $228,562.25 for support and $398,690.88 for scholarships. Of this , scholar ship fund North Carolina has received $38,625.58. tf f MCgD You have used all I sorts of coueh remc- I dies but it does not i I yield; it is too deep I seated. It may wear f I itselr out in time, but it is more liable to produce la grippe, j I pneumonia or a sen-f I ous throat affection. I You need something I mai win tyve you strength and build up the body. SCOTT'S .EMULSION I - . f will do this when everything f else Jails. There is no doubt about it It nourishes, : strengthens, builds i up - and makes the body strong and ; hsdthy,' not only to throw i otf this hard cough, but to I further attacks. If you are f run down or emaciated you I should certainly take this 1 nounsnmg iooa mcaicinc SCOTT & BOWNE, Chcmisu, New York. Rev; Bennett Sraedes, prin cipal of St. Mary's School, Ral eieh. died on last Wednesday morning. He was 62 years of age and one of the State's most progressive educators. 1, 1899. "Not the General's Cow.' "Tommy Atkins" the slang name of the British private is not noted for his politeness, but for his obedience to orders. Years ago in a Seaport town in England a general and an admiral were neighbors. The general's house was fronted by a grass-plot, on which Jie pas tured a cow. One day his wife complained to him that the sup ply of milk was falling short. The sentinel accounted for the deficiency the public trod down the pasture. Thereupon the general gave orders that no human or other animal exceo his cow should be allowed on the grass-plot. He added that X if this rule was infringed the sentinel should be flogged. Soon after, the admiral's wife, in haste to keep an en gagement took a short cut over the plot, disregarding the sen tinel's order to keep off the grass. . , 'Common soldier, don't you know who I am?" ejaculated the offended lady. , f A 1 1 T" 1 .1. "ail i Know is tnat you re not the genera s cow. -Youth's Companion. A Frightful Blunder Will often cause a horrible Burn, Scald, Cut or -Bruise Bucklen's Arnica Salve, the best in the world, will kill the pain and promptly heal it. Cures Old Sores, Fever Sores, Ulcers, Boils, Felons, Corns, all Skin Eruptions. Best Pile cure on eartn. uniy zo cts. a box. Cure guaranteed". Sold by McKay Bros. & Skinner, Druggists. : March Ladies' Home Journal The March Ladies Home Journal has a noteworthy feat ure in the page showing "Pope Leo XIII as He Lives in the Va tican." The pictures were made by the only photographer wlio has been admitted to the Vatican for a number of years, consequently they offer the first close view the public has had in a long time of the Pope and his surroundings. An article that will be widely read figures out "The American Girl's Chances of Marriage." and another, "So cial Life- in America's French City" gives a really charming glimpse into the exclusive Cre ole circles of New Orleans. "The Most Wonderful" Musical Festival in. America" recalls the great-Peace Jubilee held at Boston in 1872, with its seven teen thousand. "Ghurches Dec orated for Weddings," "The Prettiest Country Homes in America," "Flowers and Flow er Beds," and "Fifteen Good Mantels and Fireplaces" are shown from the photographs submitted in the contest for Journal prizes. 'In nature's Garden" pictures and describes our wild flowersso their identi fication will be easy. The arti cle is by Neltje Blanchan and is the first of a series. On his editorial paee Edward Bok pays deserved tribute, to his late associate editor, Isabel A. Mallon, who also wrote for the journal under the pseudon ym of "Ruth Ashmore," As a matter of course considerable space is given to Easter hats and frocks, etc., all illustrated from original designs. Besides A the concluding chapters of, "The Girls of Camp A ready" and the experiences of ' 'The Jamesons in the Country" there is an ex cellent short story, "The Touch of a Child," and a h umorous sketch by John Kendrick Bangs. Mrs. S. T. Rorer continues her cooking lessons and advice upon domestic economies, and every phase and condition of home life is considered. By the Curtis Publishing Company - Philadel phia. One dollar per year ; ten cents per. copy. G ASTORIA Per Infants and Children. Tt3 Kb j Yea Hits Afcgj Bears the - St m Cinxatura vm Y7 CUAU1A February the Cold-Wave Month- It is a curious fact that stu dents of the weather have long ago observed that the coldest weather in our northern win ters usually occurs early in February, says Leslie's Weekl v Icemen on the Hudson, who fail to gather a crop of ice be fore the middle of February, usually give up all hope of se curing on?, but no matter how mild the weather may be before the 1st of February, they still look with anticipation to the prospects of the periodical cold wave between tire 4th and 10th oi reoruary. in tins connec tion it is well to observe that of - T7! 1 -r . 1 the 15 snow storms of consider able magnitude recorded by the weather bureau between 1893 and 1899, half of them occurred in February, and in nearly every instance these were among the severest. Philadelphia Record. Siz8 of the Tobacco Crop. Are you in possession of an- data bearing upon the size of the tobacco crop in the United States and in Europe. R. E. McH. Charlotte, N. C. The world's product of tobac co is estimated at 1,900,000,000 pounds, valued at about $220,- 000,000. Of this the Western Hemisphere raises about 650,- 000,000 pounds the United States contributing- 480,000,- 000 and Cuba, whose tobacco is the widest known and highly esteemed, only producing 62, 000,000 pounds. Europe raises about 5,000,000 pounds, the East Indies 400,000,000, Aus tralia 10.000.000 pounds and Africa not enough to be count ed. By the addition of our new territories the United States will increase her product by Cu ba 62,000,000, Porto Rico 8,- 800,000 and the Philippines 45,- 000,000, which will give us a total of 603,800,000 pounds. Of the States in the Union, Kentucky leads with about 185,000,000 pounds, which is far in excess of any other State. North Carolina comes next with only 40,000,000 and Virginia next with 35,000,000. Alanta Constitution. . . J Spain 's Greatest Need. Mr. R. P. Olivia, of Barcelo- ua, bpain, spends nis winters at Aiken, S. C. Weak neryes lad caused severe pains in the back of his head. On 'using Electric Bitters, America's greatest" Blood and Nerve Rem edy, all pain soon left him. He says, this grand medicine is what his country needs. Aii America knows that it cures lver and kidney trouble, puri- . 1 -v. .1 nes tne oiooa, tones up tne stomach, strengthens the nerves, luts vim, vigor and new life uto every muscle, nerve and organ of the body. If weak, tired or ailing you need it. Every bottle guaranteed, only 50 cents. Sold by McKay -Bros. & Skinner. Druggists. A correspondent writing to the Raleigh News & Observer on February 22, from Jones boro says : "Some time ago there appeared in the town a negro, by the name Geo. Edwards, torhb claimed to he a clergyman of the BaptUt church. He was modest and humble in his way, and was not long in gaining the affections of Penny McCoy, 20 years his senior, and who is possessed of some cash and a good tract of ground. They were married. It turns out that the negro is not a preacher, but a veritable demon. In the last month he has beaten his wife cruelly several times ; tied her out in the yard during the cold snap; sttnk a pitchfork in her arm ; and, finally, last Sat urday, stuck the prong of an iron table fork into the old wo man's eye, destroying the sight thereof. It was only by acci dent that his atrocities 'became knonn. The negroes were on the point of lynching him. But be is how, I understand, safe in jail at Carthage, and Penny don't want to see him any more. HARNETT, . CUMBERLAND, JOHNSTON, SAMPSON Large circulation in each county. No. O. STATE NEWS. Items of news gathered krom i all parts of the state. Joe Rodgers, colored, was run over and killed by a freight train on the Southern road be tween Wilson's Mills and Sel ma last Wednesday morning. A deaf and dumb man named Pool while walking on the rail road track in Vance county was struck by a train and severely injured one day last week. Mr. David S. A vera, a well known and highly esteemed citizen of Raleigh, died at his residence in that city last Wednesday morning, in tho 77th year of his age. The dwelling of Mr. James Morgan at Forest Hill was burned last Monday morning and with it his ten year old daughter Jennie who was sleep ing just over the room where the fire originated. The family thought she had escaped from the house and did not discover that she was not out until it was too late to rescue her from the room, says the Concord Times. The Washington Messenger quotes Judge Bowman (Senator Pntchard s father-in-law), who is holding court in Beaufort as saying that there are only sixty- hve registered colored voters in his county (Mitchell) and in one township a negro is not al lowed to live. On one occasion he states that a drummer went to that township, accompanied by a negro driver, to remain over night, and the negro had to be guarded all night for fear of receiving bodily harm7 Wednesday morning Mrs. G. H. Watson met with a serious accident which came nigh being fatal. She suffers from rheu matism, aud was bathing her lower limbs with gasoline before an open fire when the liquid became ignited. Before help could arrive she was painfully burned. The fire destroyed tho carpet and spread to tho ceiling before it could be extinguished. Smithfield Herald. Lawrence Pullman, ex-cashier of the National Bank of Asheville, who gave himself up to the sheriff at San Francisco, Cal., in January arrived in Greensboro Thursday afternoon in charge of a United States, marshal from California. He was turned over to Marshal Milikiu. Pulliain left Ashe ville five years ago last Decern ber, with his account short. It is said that he left the bank for the Express office with $5,000, but failed to ship the money or return. He was not heard from until he surrendered. It is said that Pulliam spent all of the $5,000 and did not have money enough to come home on. This is thought to be the reiison he surrendered. Greens boro Record, i i r-"1 CET TE-3E -BEGT? Wben yon are about to bay a Sewing1 M achte do not be deceived by allurm? adrertiaement and be led to think 701a can get the best made finest nnisnoa ana Most Popular for a mere aonjr. See to It tbat roa buy from reliable manu facturer that hare rained -reputation by honest and sq nare iealingr, you will then get a Sewing Tiachlna that i noted the worU over for ita dura-r.iUt-r. Vnu want the one tbat U easiest to manage and 1 Light Runninc h;- Ttera U sots In the woril thai JJ 1 etruction, dnrabilit 7 can equal in mecnanica coo ity or wontiBg parts, fineness Of nnisa, ommmy la appearance, or has aa man Y Improvements a inm New Home H fas Automatic Twislen. DooMe Peed. on both des of needle fatentufX no other ba it : New Stand ( patented), driving wheel blcarea on ad justable center, tbn reducing friction to the nunlmnm. VniTE for emeu LAD 0. the m eoue sraira nicso . 1US JaCWOO,CaU aTLAlA.O. roil SALE BV , Gainey fe Jordan. Dunn, N. C. Educate Your IUiwem With Cas- CAKITii. fro lvr. 10rt 2V. If C. C. C. fail, mz gi.t refund money. Esn tit - tti Y:3 r l Zz.X i