Newspapers / The Democratic Banner (Dunn, … / April 5, 1899, edition 1 / Page 1
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S Is' '-' . ' IiuiIn ETT, , , -i. CIRCULATION Y CUMBERLAND, 1,000. J JOHNSTON, o- -o SAMPSON Large circulation r-hicc your "ad" with u- ami see the results. 1 N?- i i 7 5v - - - ' - - . a . i , - i . JWfc M ' - ' ' . '"Prove all things; holdfast that which is good." ' "VolTS- DUIMIM, IM-O. APRIL 5, 1899. , No. 14 On Dunn, I WO 1 hi the Spring a young man's far v hglitly turns to thoughts: :, but l young woman s seriously its of t u r n s t o SP1UNG DRESSES, f,,r mo young .woman knows li that tne younir man s 1 inniirliis of love will lurnquick- r inwards lier if she is diked out ina dainty . TE U'i - ;4J " DRESS. ' have the stuffs that ii as. rainbow vapor are and ;lic,ate as the chancing (.,Vr of a soap bubble. V alo have a beautiful lino of Duck Serges, Percales, Wc'lts, .Saltcns and Cashmeres in all the Spring Shades. It would bo a pity if you 1 n vciv to mi Shirtwaist ; seeing goods our Jine 01 and ready- made shirts. FJICo. "We sell Warner's Corsets and ft nice line of Gauze Vests, Hosiery, Muslins, Hamburgs, Luces, Belts, Umbrellas &c. Vou ought to see the latest in L idies' Slippers :hey are out i!' -'mlit . Xow iust a word to the Ladv liue-keei)ers whose. thoughts are t urn tug to house cleaning. VvV have not forgotten you. Wr have just received a com plete'. lino, of Mattings, Hugs, Ki-Hr Oil Cloth, Curtain Poles, Screen Curtains etc. "Linen Window Shades at J5 cents. 1' vo ry body k no ws '.re headquarters for that we "Coats' s p.'oi (Jotton, Ball Tliread, Knitting Cation, Turkey Red, Kmhroidery Cotton and wash ilk in all shadesT We have added to our stoc complete line of CsROC'eRIES, cckorv. Glassware, all kinds utt, and tne cneapest uoe bacco-in the city. We 1.1 1 L M JuVue iv specialty of country Mi-.i. and water-ground Meal. Wo v:n sell. vou two large cakes 1 o;ip for of', and four Boxes ofhvo for 19. You want the.M' goods." We want you to lla V O f 1mm ii v e PRICES Well, you know, or you ouMt to know by this time tii it there is never" a question ul prices between us and our c '-!-' tumors. We sell so much e'l!,aper tiian any other house tlttu it gets positively tiresome t0 talk about it. ('ome to see us and we'll do A, you good. 3 j Very truly, P. T. MASSENGILL, Manager. 0 0 5 N". G. s In the other ?store we carry the most complete line of Gents' j Famishing Goods,- Trunks and Valises evei shown in the town, all the goods are bran new and most UP-TO-DATE 1 4-1 lines you ever saw. ivnd our prices-will so surprise you that it will be impossible for you to resist them, even if you wanted to. We would like to call your special attention to our line of Summer Clothing which is the most complete line ever shown in Dunn of course, and what interests you most the prices are cut down to the verv core. We advise vou ( to look at our stock before buy- ing. we advise you also to in spect our line of SHIRTS for it is so great, as regards variety, value and quantities. Our J prices are so low " that it will only take a glance to see what opportunities we are offering. Nice Percale Shirts for 33 ccnts. How does that strike you? (dollars and (guff 8. , An entirely new line of Col lars and Cuffs, we place before our friends. The styles include the very latest produced. A more up-to-date line will be hard to find. Prices of course have received their usual "riz up" so that they are hardly noticeable. THE LflBO'Er IS WORTHY of the very best goods obtain able for his money. That is the reason we are selling our line of Overalls and Pants at such reduced prices. Our bet ter grades of overalls are made as well and strong as it is pos sible to make them and no one can offer any more. i Our line of Men's Fine Shoes are absolutely the best in the world. No one can contradict this statement and tell the truth. The Shoes of which we speak is the W. L. Douglass, sold by no other firm in town. T Last but not least is our line of Spring and Summer Neck wear. Boys, you ought to see it, for we tell you it is a thing of beauty and a joy forever. With best wishes, we are, Yours truly, G, K. MASSENGILL, Manager Gent's Furnishing tores New Chattel Mortgage Form. An act to Provide va Short Form for 'Agricultural Liens and Chattel Mortgages, and to I prescribe the Fees for Probating ana itegistering tne same. The general Assembly of North Carolina do enact : Section 1. That for' the pur pose of creating a valid agricul tural lien under section seven teen hundred and ninety-nine of The Code, and amendments thereto, for supplies to be ad vanced, and also to constitute a valid chattel mortgage as addi tional security thereto, and to secure a pre-existing debt, the following form shall be deemed sufficient, and for those pur poses legally effective : ' State of N. C, county. Section 1. Whereas I am engaged in cultivating the soil, and ..... ha ... . this day agreed to make advances to me of sup plies, to the value of dol- lars,'and such futher sums as said .may deem necessary, not to exceed in all. . . .dollars, during the year 18.. to enable me to make a crop during the said year on land in said State and county township, ad joining the lands of...... and being the same Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises, l do covenant witn that I will properly cul tivate and harvest on said lands . . .acres in cotton. . . .acres in -i corn .acres in tobacco, and acres in .. ;that there is no lien on said crop and to secure payment of the amount advanc ed to me, I do hereby give ..... lien as provided in section seventeen hundred and ninety nine of The Code of North Car olina, on all crops which may be raised on said land during he year 18... . And if - by. .,18 . . ,1 fail to pay the amount ad vanced, and also fail to deliver o. . . .all said, crops at 3lace of business. ...... .may close this lien as provided in section eighteen hundred of The Code, or otherwise, and receive rora the proceeds the amount due for advances, together with all costs and expenses of closing the same, and the surplus, in (if any,) pay to Section 2. And to futher se- cure payment oi tne amount that may be advanced, and also the sum of dollars, now due. .by note. date. 18. . . .with interest from. ..... I convey to ... . all , the above crops; and also the following ar ticles of personal property. .... all of which is myjown'and free from encumbrance, and if by . .18. 1 ,1 fail to pay the amount due them, . . . .may sell the property conveyed in this section, as provided by law for sale under chattel mortgages, and from the proceeds retain all amounts provided for. in section one. Witness mv hand and seal, this. . . .day -of ,1b. . Witness: . . ...the owner of the land de scribed in the foregoing instru ment do. .. .hereby agree with the said in consideration of the advances to be made to . . . .by .that the above given Hen shall have priority to the extent of the advances made by . .to. . during the year 18. ., over any lien J to which I may be entitled upon the crop to be made by him -on said lands during said year. I Witness: Seal. State of N. C. j. .. .county, . . . . . . 18 . . The due execution of the fore going lien was this day proven before me by the oath and ex, animation of. . .1 subscribing witness thereto ........-Seal) Justice of the Peace State of N. C. .j. . .county, The foregoing certificate of a justice of the peace of county, is adjudged to be correct. Let the leiii with the certificate, be registered, this .... day of. . . .18.". Clerk of the Superior Court . State of N. C. . . . . .county. . . .j. ... .18. . The due execution of the fore going conveyance was this day proven me by the oathe and ex amination of. i. .the ing witness thereto. subscrib- Let the registered. Clerk of the Superior Cour Filed for registration at. . . , o'clock. . m 18. Register of Deeds Section 2. That the fees for the probate and registration of liens executed according to the forms set out above, shall, be as 1 WW 1 111 roilows: o the clerk tor pro- batieg, ten (10) cents, and to the register of deeds for regis tering the instrument together with the probate and all neces sary acknowledgements and cer tificates, thirty (30) cents. The fees shall'be the same whether said instrument conveys a lien on crops alone, or a lien on crops and a conveyance of chat ;els also. Provided, the above fees shall not apply to: other forms of lien or mortgage. Section 3. If any person after executing a lien as aforesaid for advances shall fail to cultivate the lands described therein, or the. person to whom said lien was executed shall be relieved of any further obligation to fur nish supplies ; and the debts and advancement theretofore made, shall become duo and collectible at once, the person to whom the instrument was executed may proceed to enforce the same, and to take posses sion of, cultivate and harvest said crops, jit shall not be ne cessary to incorporate . such power in the instrument, but this section shall be sufficient authority. Provided, the sale of any property under the pow ers contained in this act may be made at any place in the county, after ten days' notice at the court house and three other puplic places. Section 4. The commission ers of every county to which this act may apply, shall forth with liave record books made with the aforesaid forms print ed therein, and the cost of said books and of the printing of said forms, and of such other said books as may be hereafter required, shall be paid by said commissioners. Section 5. This act shall ap ply only to the counties of For syth, Perquimans, Harnett, Davie, Washington, Granville, Cumberland. Vance, Nash, Edgecombe, Greene,. Duplin, Wayne, Lenoir, Buncombe, Person, McDowell, Martin, Rutherford, Onslow, Pender. Wilson, Rockingham, Rowan, Durham, Caswell, Robeson, Bladen, Brunswick, New Han over, Moore, Polk, Burke, Beaufort, Chowan, Ashe, Wa tauga, Sampson, Alleghan-, Carteret, Pitt, Catawba, , Ala mance, Craven, Jones, Gaston, Richmond, Lincoln and Gates. - Section 6. Trhat an act enti tled "An act to amend chapter sixty-eight of public laws of one thousand eight hundred and ninety-rreven'' ratified on the . . . .day of January eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, be amended by striking out section three thereof and inserting in lien thereof the following: This act shall be in force from and after the fourth day of March, nineteen hundred and one. Section 7. That this act shall be in force from and after" its ratification. Ratified the 28th day of Fub ruary, A. D., 1899. iCyrus Thompson, Secreta ry of State, do hereby certify the foregoing to be a true copy from the records of this office. This March 17, 1899. Cyrus Thompson, ' Secretary of State. Volcanic Eruptions Are grand, but Skin Erup tions rob life of joy. Bucklen's Arnica Salve, cures them, also Old, Running and Fever Sores, Ulcers, Boils, Melons, Corns, Warts, Cuts, Bruises, Burns, Scalds, Chapped Hands, Chil blains, best Pile. Cure on earth. Drives out Pains and Aches. Only 25cts a box Cure guar anteed. Sold by McKay Bros, cfc Skinner Druggists. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Row Between Two Lovelies. A row is on between the Hon orable Marion Butler, who signs himself ."Chairman of the Peo pie's Party Executive Commit tee," and the Honorable Milton Park, who signs himself" Chair man of the Populist National Reorganization Committee ' Park's crowd assembled in na tional convention in Cincinnati some mouths ago and norai nated Wharton Barker for Pres ident and Ignatius Donnelly for ice President. Last week Park issued a manifesto, an nouncing the appointment ; of "organizers" for the various States, Joseph Parker, of Louis ville, being put in. charge of North 'Carolina. The aforesaid Marion uutier nas also issued a manifesto, which is published in tne vvasnington Jrost, in .1 " " T 1 "TV which he says: "The People's Party has not yet nominated a presidental ticket for 1900, nor has it assembled in national convention at Cincin nati, or anywhere else, since it assembled in national convention at St. Louis in 1896. The People's Party national ex ecutive committee will meet some time next winter and is sue a call for the next national convention, which will assem ble before either of the old par ty conventions, and will then nominate a presidential ticket for 1900." With both Park and Butler trying to 'get' a ring in the nose of the Populists, the best thing the decent - members of that party can do is to jump the fence and find peace and Drosperity in the Democratic old. It awaits them there, and nowhere else, particularly in the South. Charlotte Ob- Thin, pale, an&mic girls g need a fatty food to enrich & their blood, give color to $ their cheeks and restore their I health and strength. It is $ t safe to say that they nearly I all reject fat with their food, g 5? OF rnn 1 ivfr oil WTtf HYPOPHOSPMTES of LINE SODA is exactly what they require ; g I it not only gives them the inv r portant element (cod-liver oil) in a palatable and easily di-1 I gested form, but also the hypo- J I phosphites which are so valua- We in nervous disorders that j usually accompany ana&mia. SCOTT'S LMULblUN is a $ S! fatty food that is more easily I digested than any other form g of fat A certain amount of $ t flesh is necessary for health. I You can get it in this way. $ We have known per' sons to gain a pound a day while taking it g 50c. and $1.00, all druggists. W SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York. C ' After John Bell, the jailer, had ordered the prisoners into their cells to be locked up for the night, on Tuesday evening he asked if they were all in, each man answered to his name, but on Wednesday it was found that Robt. Davis had skipped to parts unknown. When Da vis answered to his name he was hiding behind the cell and when the iailer left it was but r 0 little trouble for Davis to es cape. 'The wonder is that he did not open the cells and liber ate all the prisoners. Roanoke Beacon. o Bean the Signature STOHIA. The Kind You Hava Always Baught flt s Easy til! 12M M 9 i I ' 1 II U i M'lT Cure for Smallpox, This receipt is from a noted Paris physician and he says : 'I herewith append a receipt which . has been usedr to my knowledge in hundreds of ca ses. It will prevent or cure small pox though the pittings are falling. Y hen Jenner dis covered cowpox in England, the world of science hurled an ava lanche of fame upon his head, but when the most scientific school of medicine in the world that of Paris published tins receipt as a solid panacea for smallpox,.it passed tinheed ed. It is as unfailing as fate, and conquers in every instance It is harmless when taken by a Aven person, it win also cure (11 T" . 1 1 1 scarlet fever. Here is the re ceipt as I have used it, and cured my children of scarlet fe ver : here it is as I have used it to cure small pox, when learn ed physicians said . the patient must die, it cured : Sulphate zinc, one grain; fox-glove (digit alis) one gram ;half ateaspoon f ul of sugar ; mix with two ta blespoonfuls of water. When tnorougniy mixed add lour ounces of water. Take a spoon ful every hour. Either disease will. disappear in twelve hours. For a child, smaller "does, ac cording to age. If counties would compel their physicians to use this there would be no need of pest-houses. If you value advice and experience, use this for that terrible di- sease. No Right Tjo Ugliness. The woman wliois lovely in ace, form and temper will al ways have friends, hut-one who would be attractive must keep ler health. If she is weak, sickly and all run down she will be nervous and irritable. If she las constipation or kidney trou ble, her impure blood will cause pimples, blotches,, skin erup tions and a wretcheq complex- ion. Jiiiectric fitters is tne best medicine in the world to regulate stomach, liver and kid neys and tos purify the blood. It gives strong nerves, bright eyes, smooth, velvety skin, rich complexion. It will make a good-looking, charming woman of, a run down invalid. Only 50 cents at McKay Bros. & Skinner's Drugstore. Cure For Deafness, The Paris papers mention the accidental discovery of a cure for deafness by a school-mis tress named Clerfet, viz 'Sul phuric ether poured directly. in to the ear in a dose of four or ivc or six or eight drops a day.. Usually this agent produces on- v a slight degree of sensibility or pain. Alter it nas oeen used fifteen or t went" days the oper- 1 tor may suspend its use for 'or several days to retain its en- 1 .. T ,1 ergy betier, and men resume its use. The application may be continued, if not indefinitely, at least for a very long period of time." The committee ap pointed by the Minister of Pub lic Instruction to examine into the subject says : "The innocu ousness of this substance (sul phuric ether) is more than de monstrated by the numerous ex periments we have witnessed." It is said that the cure has not yet failed in any of the numer ous cases to which it has been applied. Twenty-nine children were attended, and in every in stance advantageous results ob tained. Two children, declared by approved medical men to be incurably deaf and dumb, were completely cured. Seven other children, completely deaf and dumb, after receiv ing attentions for eight or nine month?, were evidently great improved. ! Bisraark's Iron Nerys Was the result of his splen did health. Indomitable will and tremendous energy are not found where Stomach, Liver, Kidnevs and Bowels are out of order. If you want these qual ities and the success they bring, use Dr. Kings New Life Pills. They develop every power of brain and body. Only 25c at McKay Bros. & Skinner's drug store. STATE NEWS. Items or news gathered from all parts or Tns Statb. In the five hotels at Southern Pines and one hotel at Pine hurst, there are now 1,600 guests. The two towns are lit erally swarming with people from New England and the North. San ford Express. A man passed through this place on last Saturday who is making one of the longest jour neys on foot (if his tale be true) that any mau ever made. He said that he is from New York and is rolling a wheelbarrow from that city to British Co lumbia, via New Orleans and San Francisco, and he must make the trip within two years. He said that a wager pf $5,000 is pending upon the result of his trip. His tale mav be true, and may not. He looked like a common tramp, and it may bo that he has restored to the nov el device of rolling a wheelbar row through the country in or der to attract attention and cet - money. He had a cover ovor his wheelbarrow, in which he carried his outfit, all weighing about eighty-five pounds. Ho spent the night, camping out, in a pine thicket near hero. Ho departed westward, in Vhe di rection of Asheboro. Chatham Record. " His Life Was Saved. r Mr. J. E. Lilly, a prominent citizen of Hannibal, Mo., lately had a wonderful deliverance from a frightful death. In tell ing of it he says : "I was takon with Typhoid Fever, that ran into pneumonia. My lungs be came hardened. I was so weak couldn't even sit up in bed. Nothing helped me. I expec ted to soon die of Consumption when I heard of Dr King's New Discovery. One bottle gave great relief. I continued to use it, and now am well and strong can t say to much in its rrs 1 praise. lliis marvelous med icine is the surest and quickest cure in the world for all Throat and Lung Trouble. Regular sizes 50 cents and $1.00. Trial bottles free at McKay Bros. & Skinners Drug Store : every bottle guaranteed. . Father James Needam Dead, Winston, April 1. Rev. Jamefe Needham, Ncrth Caroli na's oldest preacher and citizen, died this morning at his home near Pilot Mountain. He would have been 100 years old oh May 2, next. He was ill only a few days. 'Father Needham," as hf , was familiarly called, was ac tively engaged in ministerial work for 00 years. While ho was never a member of the Meth odist Episcopal Conference, he served as a supply pastor many years. His last sermon was preached at Winston during the lat session of the Western North Carolina Conference, in Novenvoer, 1898. He had ac cepted an invitation to preach the annual sermon at the school commencement in Pilot Moun tain the day he reached the cen tury mark. Two weeks ago lie preached a strong sermon of 50 minutes' length. Father Needham leaves sever al children and a number of crand and great. grand-children. Two sons and one grand-son are preachers. Rev. Dr. u of Winston, who was a warm personal friend of tlio deceased will conduct the funeral servi ces. For some time, I have suffered with rhrutuitiam and tried every im aginable remedy, without effect. Mr. F G. S. WtlU dvied me to try Ckauiberlaiu's Paiu Bilra, telling uj that it had cared rvoj cases f loog standing like aiine. I have used four bottles and feel rare that one more bottle will make my euro complete.- A P. Ko tz CUremore, Ark. SAd bj Mclwj Dro-. & Skiauer. Department. same with this certificate be
The Democratic Banner (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 5, 1899, edition 1
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