Newspapers / The Democratic Banner (Dunn, … / Aug. 27, 1902, edition 1 / Page 1
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•;W. ,>**£>* W} ; v .. TSI FOR II m in HOME PAPER. II n liv costs $1 a year. £ £ JN ' ! - —,■».*• -.// 5. Harold, I .•,i;:NKV AT LAW,— ;j: DUNN, N. C. ; ; • horever service re- : prompt attention to w • Collections a! h y 1 i v , it it a ti- .ut f v | 1! N E Y—AT—LAW, DUNN, N. C. ' 11 - wheiever h.is services i I • required. | | H . M. V. KATOIIKR. | § :Hh & Hatcher, l Hnrrc/s-at-l GW, t 1 - ' J ! _ vs, N. c. • , :: i*i "!•«' of Iho j . . ■ i«- tl! h-.sitiesß ' i*i«trus!o«l. I . The BANNK.rr-nJ.Hus. | y , AN . .1. C. CLIKKOKP j -'■ an & i'rrorJ, I i I I V •\;v, : : : : N. i*. Mciviiflnt? Kitrfutrs lVinV. f , -; .: VAKT. n. L. Godwin t ;r. v p T ronW!\ T 1 j s ;. ;;3} j Pu-SN, N. C. jj , ; in State arvl Federal j j pot f«T t«»- I IP. LOCKE|' I n; !>,'}/& p JiV F *-»' f ! i B uTSON, TT. a . ... in the State and j ; • . >',iits wherever ser-; vices are desitted. jev cf the NVashington, D. •• ,-.Jw iil practice before ; ■ . Jovernment Depart- i City, esped»lly| J romprdraises witii | Revenue C'ommis-j e-.-es of seizure of I tit Distilleries Ac, r - i ' JONESBOnO *.C. h T in Ilar sett, Moore and i . , Jut not f'-'K. '« J. 0. Goodwin, | j • ' I ' j: ::-!=NTiQT. N. C. ; ! ;v on second floor J. j J. \V do's building. nwy he [irvv 111 k;ui. AL STOCK $20,000. r unsurpassed ad van-j . ;iud loan money on easy | We will extend every | imodadou consistent .with | vative banking. J. iiKsr, President. .1 W. PURDIK, Cashier, i n / u/u SGN . \J, &*•* IfS? 3 tLsSj *Jit j DUNN. IM. C. >vi-r Merchants & l 1 arm- Link next door to : (Trantliam. [!!ra¥s FilffiS m, m, ic. I'ITAL STOCK $20,000. •y accommodation offered to the public. E. F. YOUNG, President. V. L. STKPIIENS, Cashier. JUST LOOK AT Hk«. 'li'-n.-e came that sprightly >. fautiess skin, rich, rosy ,)k\ion, 1 iniling face. She 1, i-' Is good. Here's • -ct. S'nc uses Dr. King's Lif'- piiis Result —all is actiy-.!, d:gostion'go)d', • i-.iache-ij no chance for s," 'i'rv them \ourself. * V '.»f* f Jj'iKr Vol. 1 S. $ f°\ * ~ Ni f": /-4 : - y I :c-i M y 0 *\ " \'l iv S-J > Suffer with or Dysnrrsi?. ?1 > v ** ' U" TUiMj»yg' jj J | TAKE |J| |j j | Guarantee li J i £at Yoa Wsnt r.nd be Happy, |ij, i?j A C-ureci Ms« Seys '. HI : n "I Had boon for a number N ' g of ycr.r-i with lnftijreMion. and tried 43 I p almost vvet > f hint* that I saw rso. m- jf.i ' T-A mendou forlt. ar.ii ('>!.EMAN'S Or Ait- j«5 i F? AN ■ BK'is ti:o OQIJ- tMnr that haKever *' J |;i gi, >.-n me any re:ict. I tcclc two tot- t'. j j w lies of it :md now fce.l entirely well." N I n —J. r>. Kobinsou. Danville, Va. !|3 : F;ics 50 Cerfs. % SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. f! Co'e in i n Rcuiedv Co., Danville. Va. : • *tj? 1 11 -.---t." j -'. - . u j' A Frank i'or.a-date. Here is an unique announce iiic.ii of cniuLuutcy fur oilice which appears in the Kiowa j Semiuel : "In announcing myself as a| canilwi .ie for of Deeds; for Kiowa County, subject .o{ uit tlecision of the lte[.ui> ; ican ■ v.'ouni\ County Convention in itpieniber. I uo not t!o it at ihe earuest fcoiicitutk ii of a large lumber ot irieods, nor iias there been a dtuegation of the most prominent citizens of the county waited on me and drank my wlmkt-y and smoked my cignrs and urgently rcquetted me to aliOW my name to come before ihe convention as a candidate, believing 1 was the only man who could be elected —none oi this lias happened. 1 have worked it up myself. ••in fact it is a self-made boom. lam getting a little too old to farm and a little too ani-| bitious to be thrown in the j .va.-te basket, and would like v\ couple of years' office rest, just to st e how loating around the county st-at feels to an olu man." —Kansas City Journal. DYSENTERY CURED WITHOUT THK AID OF A DOCTOR. "I am just up from a hard spell of the *ilux" (dysentery) says Mr. T. A. Pinner, a well known merchant of Drummond Tentt. "I used one bottle oi t'.iamberlain's Coiic, Cholera and i'ia-vhoea Keinedy ane Was cared "without having a doctor. 1 consoler it the ijest • cholera mediciise in the world." T'nere i- no neetl of employing ' a doctor when this remedy i> "used, for no doctor can pre i-cribe a better remedy for bowel complaint in any form either i'or children or adults. It never tails and is pleasant to take. For sale by Ilood & Grantham, j TOWN DIRECTORY. —. CHURCHES. !: *1 ,i«st Chore ii—Rev. E.M. fnij.- » Pastor -»7j ;gg :ii'st tnd fourth Kun ; Li 7 morning a;td uigfct. Prayenneeticg /v -,V Wednesday Suh«iay fcchccl j rt 7ery i 'lranthajxi Sai erici-.'adent. ; Baptist Chnrch.-Bev.w. B. Morten, raster. ! >»cr7icfTts J.-t a:i l xt \ Sumla> icor.xiii£ an.l ' Tight. Prayarciectinif ev«/ l'hnr : !ay night ' uu'lay School Sunday Taylor SuperiutendeHt. PreMbyterian Chnrrh.—Rev. R- W. Uines ! pastor. t*srvi.;es everj-first and lifth 3uad.ty i norr.ing and nigbt. Sunday school every i -Sunday laorniug, D. H. aicLeau.Superlntea ! -J-o 1 Ciiurcb —Rov. J. J. Harper, vas ter. S. . v icf « every first Sunday morning and nijfbt. Prayer meeting t-v.ry Tuesday :.if*ht. >:iii'lay SBbool every Sunday evening at 3 o'clock K v. N. B. Hood Sul>t. Free Will Baptist Church.—Elder 11. C. ?aekson, pastor. Services every first Sun day morning and night. Primitive Baftis! .—Church on Broad street Rider B. Wood, Pastor. Itega'ar ae-rvi •• s on the third Sat.hath morning, and Satur | bfelory, ii. each month at il o clock. LODOK. i Paltr>yra Lodcc.Ko. 147, A. F. ft A. M. null at iVnipl>. Z. Ti:vl'»r, W . >!.; it Ti. G'vluir. K W.; J'. I>. ,1, V/.; v/. A. Stewart. Sec ]»»;sjui:ir •omTnanications are held on the SraSatur- Js .y at 10 o'clock A. SI., and on the Ist Friday it7:3oo'clockr- iueacb month. All Sis-| I iocs in E"OC standing arc cordially invited ! io attend these communications. TOWS OFFICERS. M. T. Young, Mayor. COHMISfIIOSKSS | V. 1.. Stephens, McD. Holliday, J. I*. Barnes i f A- Taylor. W. H. Duncan, Policeman. COUNTY OPFICKP-8 Sheriff.Pi'as A.Salmon. Clerk, Pr. J. H. Withers, i ' Begister of DecSs. A. 0. Holloway. J Treasurer, L. P. Matthews. | Surveyor, P. F. McDonald. ! Coroner. Dr. J. P. McKay i County Kian'iner; Bev.J. S. Black. Commissioners: E. F. Young. Chairman J A- Smith. T A HwUwrtnn. m ■ ~~ ~ CASTOR IA Por Infants and CliiiiU'Cii. Tiis Kind Voa Wm Aiwap Bougiil JOHN A. McKAY. E. F. YOUNG OP ilifl A foil 1 " 511 mOPliu'is;is * 0 lliO jjiu. h,kiiiVOj kuiittliioiuiki bu. Manufacturers of Turpentine . TOOLS, MA/ HMTS, IRON A BK.'SS FOUNDERS, AND GEft -4' 1 EI»AL METAL WORKERS. fHv* :%# > Machine work of every description. Machinery Supplws, Aleuts for A. B. FARQUHAR &CO S Machinery and Southern Saw Works' Saws. We have an up-to-date plant and guarantee satisfaction. j > jJT vr * i 7?" A ~\J ' T7' I o IHL A. iUVivAI H IVvt. vAJ. DOTN, N. C. * . . rm? v-r ( TiT n. t) * n3FTI I£ O i j] Klfflilftl NiHiiKiiM ill iiiLSl i » * The Planters Warehouse is open every day for your tos>aeeo. I wish to announce to the TOBACi'O GROWERS Hai-j nett, Sampson and John- ton counties thai 1 have ieasvo tne PLAITEES W4HEHCU2I of DUNN, N. C., for a term of vears and am in the business to stay. Having AMPLE CAPITAL and a good line of Orders, both Fore inn and Domestic, I am in a position to look a»tei YOUR INTEREST and get you the Very Highest Market Prices for your tobacco. Every pi'e sold on mv door will have my CLOSEST PERSONAh ATTENTION We are going to have a good corps of buyers on our market during the coining season, representing the American Tobacco Company, Continental Tobacco Company, the Imperial Tobacco Company of (-rent Britain and all of the other large concerns of the United States and abroad. There is going to be a hot time on the Dunn T*>ha eo Llllrket This Season and the PLANTERS WAKE HOUSE will be in the thickest of the fight. Competition will be strong and every pile of tobacco sold will call torth a hot fight between the innt rivals of the tobacco industry. I shall take ndvantage o;: this in the interest cf MY CUSTOMERS and see thru •.. I i ile of tobacco sold on my floor has the attention of th- bmer-.; i have been in the Tobacco business for the past *?0 year.- j and fully understand it. Yonrinterest will be protected by me. Your w.ish.es consulted by me anl nothing left unuone on my part to make it V.ui A\ fi ix i o iTfi i() J )14 JL £. v. ii * !ii ItljmC To sell your tobacco at the Planters Warehouse. If you arc in search of the best lighted Warehouse in North Carolina, come t~ PLANTERS. If you want the Very Highest Market Prices j I For your tobacco bring it to the PLANTERS. If you appreciate, the best attention and the most faithful service don t forget the (PLANTERS. Bring me a load and I will convince you otj what I say. , , ... i After the market opens we shall not annoy the farmer wittii drummers and therefore enable us to pay them better prices. , Yours to serve, j T T \^ 7 TT T I Q i x J. J« i-JuA-jJo* Proprietor of Planters Warehouse, Dunn, N. C. OffIVET?SiTY" ot'North O 1 rolina. s-'lw®-!"-.. The head of the State's educa tional System. ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT, LAW, MEDICINE AND PHARMACY. One hundred and eight scholarships. Free tuition to teach ers and to ministers' sons. Loans for the needy. oG.-, Students. r>4 Instructors. New Dormitories, Water \\ Cenlra , i ,. J ing System. Fall term begin-w September 8, Add.es., F- P. YONABLTS, Pres., Chapel Hill, N. C. AND | € MECHANICAL COLLEGE. | IT ■ I 1 Industrial education. 1 // i lii W A combination of theorv and practice, of book- study M and manual work in Engineering, Agriculture, Chenns- /I " jii trv, Electricity, Moclmnic Arts ami Cotton Manufactar- |,| ((( ine Full Courses (4 years), Short Courses (- \\ Wcial Courses (3 months). Tuition and room. 410 a j) ( I'ij term • boird. $8 a month. 30 teachers, 360 stm.ents li new buildings for 500. Write for booklet, "A Day at the || t A. & M. College." / ;j | . ♦President GEO. T. WINSTON, Raleigh. N. C. Jj Frove all DUIMIM, IM'. C. AUG. 27, 190S Diitier- ihe Chameleon A Washington correspondent ■ to ('■•'■ Louisvilie Evenig Post 1 describes Marion Boiler as now • a ln. ii of Htf'drs, that he has grupplod v.ith fortune and has | throwii her, that lie is conven- 1 t/ionally dressed with beaver hat ' and looks the millionaire. He has an oHice in New York. 1 Ho is of course out of politics * and into getting all the money ( he can which is not a crime in f itoc-lf but so unlike the stuff he • wns packing into people but a" 1 few years ago. Marion was the very apostle of discontent and abuse of ' money making men, but it was ' always ciear that apparent con- 1 victions were hut skin deep. Contrary to Butler's raving he f is alriglit to get rich if he can do so honestly, but it is not comforting to a good many that ' he fanned and lashed into par- } lizan fury till the Dunocatic 1 party was not half Democratic 1 enough for ?o many of our peo ple and they v*« Mit off into a third 1 party, then into coalition and 1 are now in the party opposed ; to wh-'fc they contended for at J the outset of the dissension. It j is strange how we can bo influ enced bv th_ se without sincerity '■ who leave us when fortune ! beckons in another direction. ' Who does lv-t know though that • liose who dislike meii because 1 they are successful in business : and accumulate money would ' ijladlv come into the possession : f tii°?e f:>■?"! unes themselves if they know how to do so.—Con cord Standard. NOT OVER-'VISE. There is an ojd allegorical , picture of a j_irl scared at a grasshopper, but in the act of ; heedlessly treading on a snake. I This is parallelled"by the man ' who spends a lorjie sum of mon ey building a cyclone cellar, but npelects to provide his family , \ wUh a bottle of Chamberlain's i Colic-, Cholera and Diarrhoea . ! Remedy as a safegard against ! bowel complaints, whose vie- Itims outnumber those of the j cyclone a hundred to one. This remedy is everywhere recog nizee! as the most prompt and reliable medicine in use for ; these diseases. For sale by Hood & Grantham. It is the man wno k eps his mouth shot that can keep his brain open. SULPHUF BATHS AT HOME j Haricot 1/8 Liquid Sulphur j j baths are superior to those of I the most celebrated sulphur springs, hiving the additional advantage of being made any desired strength. Taking med icine bv absorption into the sys tem through the skin by tnking medical baths is a very efficient method of obtaining r. constitutional treatment. it never fails to cure eczema and all blood and skin diseases. Ask your druggist for a book on Liquid Sulphur. For Sale by Hood & Grantham. LOOK- PLEASANT, PLEASE. i Photographer C. C. Harlan, Ij of Eaton, 0., can do so now. j though for years he couldn't, i I because he suffered untold ago ) ny from the worst form of indi !gestion. All physicians and ! medicines failed to help him till he tried Electric Bitter-, ■ which worked such wonders for him that he declares they are a V godsend to suffers from dyspep / si a and stomach troubles. JJu | rivaled for diseases of the Stom jv ach. Liver and Kidneys, they i buildup and give new life to I the whole system. Try them. 1 Only suc. Guaranteed by C. L. s Wilson, druggist. ;s; hold, fast that whiGh is good." Gocu Roads. J TF.c following i:.i> renting in j formation is v ken l'rom the re ; cent article esititled 'itoad build ing with Convict Labor fn the iSouthern Slate," !-y Prof. J. A Holmes, and will be of interna ;to those interested in the Gocd I Roads movement- in North i (>arolina : Portable prisons on wheels are novelties which are now in use in several localities. Thesis movable jails ssppear to solve the problem of preventing the escape of convicts employed at great distances from their prison proper. In exterior ap pearance- they are freight ear b -dies provided with barred windows and mounted upon wagon trucks. As the ro.- d i improvement progresses they! are drawn forward by horses' and collected in some conven ient grove or open field, eelloct ed as the temporary pri-on cimp. Morning and evening the convicts are inarched along the road from and to their quarters. To facilitate their i being safely guarded duringi the night without too great i i:-k ' and expense, each prisoner, | when he gnes to bed, has either j one foot or one hand manacled j loosely to a chain or rod from | which he cau be easily released the following morning. Tiers of bunks inside comprise the seeping quarters. These are easily and cheaply mado com fortable. Ample ventilation is «;{forded iii summer and during the cold months there is a stove in earh car. One of these portable prisons j which cau be disjointed and] transported in sections, is in use on the public roads of North Carolina. One of these mov able jails and be lengthened to accmmodate iiifty convicts, its sides and ends are of boards bolted together in sections. The roof, of corrugted iron, is also in sections. Large tents are used in Ststes. Women prisoners do the cook ing and washing of some of migratory prison camps. This work is usually done, however by trusty male convicts, and in some cases it is performed by hired labor. The yonger pris oners are usually assigned to such tasks as the carrying o£- vj ater ur the running of errands A ball and chain are attached io convicts who show a desire to escape. While these encum brances make it impossible for a prisoner to run rapidly, they do not seriously hamper h.is movments during the regular road work. Critics of the convict system of road building say that ii • diers too many opportunities i'or the escape of prisoners ; as ,i matter of fact, however, ihe annul escapes amounts to less 1 ban two alien out of each hun dred. Almost 300 counties, re presenting ten States, employ convict labor upon their roads. This furnishes an army 4,377 road builders, each of whom costs his State 33-V ceins a day Were lie left in the country jaii he would cost H cents more a day. Hence he is a cheaper article toiling upon the roads than languishing in a cell or jaii yard. All told, the cost of convict labor in these Stato:- ranges from one-third to one half that of hired labor employ ed in the same work. The Southern States employ ing convict ruiid builders, are Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Ten nessee, Texas and Virginia. In the two C:\rolinas and Georgia such a perfection is reached that large camps are operated at cost of only 20 to JJO cents per convict per day. Provisions are purchaved for the prison camps at wholesale at competi tive rates ; the convicts do their own cooking and washing. Ow ing to the usually good sanita tion of the camps and the - bene - fits of exercise to the prisoners, the cost of medical attention is almost nothing. Another virtue of the system is that the prisoners after in juring the community in which they lived by the commission of their crimes, and after adding to its financial burdens by in curring expense for their cap ture, conviction and punish ment, are put in a position to benefit that community. Hav ing served an apprenticeship in the handling of road machinery ! the convict loaves prison with a } training which enables him to |tarn a better living than he probably aid before. Only prisoners guilty of mis- 1 , demeanors can be assigned to j work on the public roads of Vir ginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, j Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississ- I ' Mexican Hustang Liniment y r lT v *«t ff«.n through the muscle.an* to tao k o2io and driven out oil soreneea and Li>i!rtmrn ft t.ion. TV For a Lame Back, TJJB Sore Muscles, ~ /via p- or, in fact, all Lameness and p ness of your body there is nothing i 1! ; | j : that will drive out the pain and in- J| jf ?| I' i_ flammation so quickly as e"J Mexican ■ J Mmistamig j:. »If cannot reach the spot yom>¥ | jg : self get some one to assist you, for 11 -J % it is essential that the liniment beJUj / J F4 rubbed in most thoroughly. \ I "J "1 Mexican flustang Liniment 1 overcomes the ailments of horses mid ail domestic animals. In fact. It is a flesh healer and pain killer no matter wfcoor what the patient ial '' l ssippi, Texas Florida and j Georgia. Tiie terms of such, j convicts do not exceed one year. In Alabama all able-bodied male prisoners whose terms do not exceed two years, may be sent to the roads. In South Carolina the limit is five years, and North Carolina ten. .An experiment is now being made in some Southern counties in the employment on the roads! of captured, but unconvicted! pii-uners, una bio to give bail.) If the prisoner be acquitted at! trial he is paid for his serv-l ices. If convicted his period >f labor f-sn the roads is deducted from his term. Many convicts in the South ern States are employed on j farms, in factories and in mines being worked under the con tract system, or in some cast s under State control. California convicts quarry and crush stone for use in per manent road building. The cost is half.what it would be with !i i red lai >or. St ron gs t ock ad os surround these quarries, aL-o the convict quarters. The per centage of escapes is no larger than that experienced in jails proper. There are over 52,000 prison ers in confinement in this coun try. Seventy-six thousand of these are men, 13,000 white. There are 73,000 inmates of alms houses, -11,000 of whom are men. Wish such a-force every county in the Ssate might I develop its highways to the highest degree of perfection. The above article referred to on '"Road Building wish Couvict Labor in the Southern States" call be secured free of j cost by application to Prof. J. A. Holmes, Chapel llii 1, N. C., who is rhe Special Agent of tht i Southern Division of the. office jof tin- Board of inquiries of the Department of Agrieulturer : Hancock's Liquid Sulphur is | endorsed and prescribed by | many leading physicians j throughout the country for ali blood and skin troubles. Hun dreds of cases of eczema and other skin diseases have been permanently cured by the pse of Hancock's Liquid. After all I other remedies failed and pro i nouueed incurable. For salo by ! Ilood & Grantham. What is learned in the cradle lasts to the grave. His SIGHT THREATENED. i [ "While picnicking last month r my li year-old boy was poison - ed by some weed or plant," - says Y> T . 11. Dibble, of Siox ■ City, la. "He rubbed the > poison off his hands into his. - eyes and for a whilo we were i j afraid lie would lose his sight. ' Finally a neighbor recommemi- t 1 ed DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. :> | The first application helped him > ] and in a few days he was as : ever." For skin diseases, cuts, -I burns, scalds, wounds, insect o'hit--?, DeWitt's Witch Hazel -, Salve is jure to cure. Cures , pile- at once. Beware of coun terfeits. liood & Grantham. i No 31 i rn 3 1 i lie South erri Railway. Anno uncos the Opening of tho Winter Tourist Season And the pi I'ling on sale of Excursion Tickets To nil prominent points in the South, Southwest, West lilies, Mexico,end California. Including St. Augustine, Palm Beach, Miami, Jacksonville, 'lain pa. Port Tampa, Bruns wick, Thornasville, Charleston, Aiken, Augusta, Pin e hur.st, A?hevilie, Atlanta, Now Or leans, Memphis and THE LAND OP THE SKY. Perfect Dining and Sleeping- Car Service on all Trains. See that your ticket reads VIA SOUTHERN RAILWAY, Ask any Ticket Agent for full information, or address R. L. VERNON, C. W. WESTBURY Traveling Pass Agt., District I'ass. Agt. CIJ-arlotto, 2ST. C. Xsiclna=.o XL&, Va S. H. IIARDVVICK, General Passenger Agent. J. M. GULF, W. A. TURK, Traliic Maiinper. Asst. Past- - , Trafllc Ugt't W JD, C. ALT, WKUK SAVHJ>. "For years I suffered such untold misery from Bronchitis" . writes J. 11. Johnston, of Broughton, Ga., "(hat often I was unable ro work. Then, when everything else failed, I was wholly cured by Dr King's New Discovery for consump tion. My wife suffered intonsly 2 from asthma, till it cured her, and all our experience goes to show it is th; 1 best croup medi cine in the world." A trial will convince you it's unrivaled l for throat and lung diseases. Guaranteed bottles . r >oe andsl. ' Trial bottle free at 0. L. Wil i son's. "WINTER HOMIJS IN SUMMFR LANDS." The above is the title of an . attractive booklet just issued by I the Passenger Department of = tho Southern Railway. It is ,! beautifully illustrated and fully l! describes the winter resorts oi ■ll the Si-nth. A copy may b° s ; secured by sending a i j stamp to S. 11. Ilardwick, G. jp. A,, Washington, D. C.
The Democratic Banner (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 27, 1902, edition 1
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