ASHEBORO COUK 'R.
PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN.
Advertising Rates Reasonable.
VOL- XXIII.
ASHEBORO, N. C.. THURSDAY, MAY 4,1899.
NO. 40
CO’JGHSa
Do not nob'lcct a Cough
gold, as delays aro of-
■cndangerous. Foley’s
Money and Tarisa
pleasant, safe and sure
cure. Contains no opiates
and is guaranteed.
ASTHMA,
-oiey’s Honey and
T a f is guaranteed to give
prompt relief in all cases
of Asthma. Do not class
this with other medicine
that has failed to give
you relief.
CONSUMPTION.
Foley’a Honey and
fates hopes in advanced
stages, but claims to give
relief in the very worst
cases, and in early stages
LA CRIPFE=
If you have had the Grip
you probably need a re
liable medicine like Fo
ley’s Money and Tar
WILEY RUSH,
Bitfirney-atTaw,
Rosa sad Rush Building . -
ASHEBORO, N. Q. .
Prompt attention given to ’budnoM
^trusted..
MEXICO’S PROSPERITY.
EVERY INDUSTRY ENJOYING A
STEADY BOOM.
Free Silver Is Proving a Blessing to
Our Friends Across the Rio Grand—
Our Capitalists Not Afraid of Their
“Cheap Dollars.” $
stop the racking cough
incidental to this disease
CROUP.
Thousands of infant?
a n d children die yearly
of Group, every one of
these innocents could
have been saved had Fo-
iey’3 Honey and Tar
PNEUMONIA
new, Mich., says: “I have
used Foley’s Honey
ninths past month, with
good results.”
G. N. Henley,
Attorney at Law,
Asiieboro, N. C,
Practices in all the courts. All
business promptly attended io.
For sale by Standard Drug Company, Asheboro, N. U.
One of the First Symptoms of j
Failing Health in a Woman is S
NERVOUSNESS!
Did you ever think that there is always a #
cause for this malady? In women Nervous-
Hess is generally the forerunner of some w
form of female disease, such as Whites, J
Painful, Profuse or Irregular Menses, etc.,
either of which will produce Nervousness ^
jin all of its distressing intensity. If you use #
' fierstle’s Female Panacea 5
M. 0.° TOONS,
ATTORM^T AT LAW,
Asebbos^ - - - W. 0.
Prompt attention given to all bud-
u*ss. O^oe la Rose A Rush building.
O. L. Sapp,
ATTORNEY - AT - LAW.
Practices in State and Federal
Courts. Corporation, Commercial &
Probate Law. All business promptly
ttended to.
Office in Ross & Rush Building.
f you will very soon be cured of Nervous
ness and all other female troubles as well.
If costive, move the bowels with mild
doses of St. Joseph’s Liver Regulator.
_ I HAVE SUFFERED FOR YEARS
M With painful menses, attended with sour stomach, rushing of blood to the head.
/ and occasional whites. I also have severe nervous spoils and heart,pal Station so
bad I cannot rest. 1 have used various female remedies lor a long time but found
Z n G!?iSSlJ. l c” a!1OtherS ' ’^g 1 "^ “MRS. SARAH JENKINS.
1 If your case is complicated, write us and we will give you full in-
T formation regarding the use of this medicine. Get it from yourdrug-
/ gist. If helloes not keep it send us SI and we will send a bottle,
% all charges paid. L. GuRSTLE & CO...Chattanooga, Tenn.
SWUTY, USOMWE, are the properties of
sSsFOTW WtfMHm} 414 ile. Ple. ’■ 0M which satisiy
If 1. BL Jr V Ira. & the musical ear. «A
"One leaks of Piano may have one, another two, another three
of these properties, ^ ^ ^ ^
piano.
none in
H i. them all in harmonious combination. Agents in most all cities®
i yours^ write us, ^^^ Established 25 years. ^^^
^Wayne Organ Go., Ft Waynes, Ind
RHEUMATISM
. John T. Brittain,
ATTORNEY - AT - LAW.
Practice in the courts of Randolph
and adjoining counties in State and
Federal Courts. Prompt attention
gives to business of all kinds,
sn j R E »r
*® * ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
ASHEBORO, - NORTH CAROLINA.
State and Federal Courts.
O^eiC « A^boro wad Randleman.
^Sie. h^We^
Attorney-at-Law &
NOTARY PUSL8C>.
Ross and Rush Building. Court House
Square
Abhebobo, N. 0,
J^x^^^t .-.4k, r .*\, n f () ^ Li-min^*,
Southern
lUijway.
THE .
STANDARD RAILWAY OF
THE SOUTH—--MBaa^ik
The Direct Line to All Points.
The “protection” now enjoyed by
Mexico is of a kind that even the free-
trader cannot logically or fairly ob
ject to. The free-trader opposes a pro
tective tariff because, as he claims
(and justly in some cases) it unduly
raises the prices of certain things for
the benefit of certain classes or indi
viduals. But the silver standard in
Mexico protects and builds up the in
dustries of the country without rais
ing the price. It operates in this
way. When a Mexican importer buys
goods in England he must pay for
them in gold, and in order to get the
gold he must exchange his silver dol
lars for it at the rate of about $10 to
the pound sterling, i. e., $2 of silver for
$1 of gold. Compared with gold his
silver has fallen one-half. The prices
of the goods have also fallen, but not
so much as the silver. The classes of
goods which Mexico imports mostly
(manufactures) have only fallen from
35 to 40 per cent while the silver has
dropped 50. Hence in order to keep
even, when the importer sells them in
Mexican market for silver he must
raise the price 20 to 30 per cent. Rath
er than pay these higher prices the
Mexicans, or foreigners in Mexico,
build factories and go to turning out
the same class of goods, which can be
sold for less than the price of the im
ported article. The difference in ex
change, that is, the difference in value
between gold and silver, produces a
veritable paradox: The foreign article
is kept out as a tariff wall, and at the
same time the price is lowered. This
operates to the benefit of all classes
except a few importers. When Mex
ico exports her own products, the pro
cess is reversed. She sells them for
gold at lower prices than formerly, but
the prices have not fallen quite so
much as the gold prices of her silver.
So when she exchanges products for
gold and then exchanges the gold for
silver she has more of it than she for
merly received, and in Mexico, so far
as native products are concerned, this
silver is as good, dollar for dollar as it
ever was. Thus the gold premium oper
ates to diminish imports and increase
exports with the inevitable result of
building up and developing the inter
nal resources of the coin " Every
■ -.., j£ w^v'-t-Lic new ATaL come-,
from Mexico shows beyond all con
troversy the unexampled prosperity
of that country. We advert to the mat
ter not because we believe that free
coinage in this country would make
our currency exclusively silver. As
frequently stated, we have no doubt
that the great area, financial strength
and resources of the United States
would be fully equal to the task of
maintaining the two metals, at a par
ity. We are simply pointing out the
absurdity of the oft repeated but nev
er verified claim that if our currency
should become exclusively silver, we
would be ruined.
of corn being ground by any concern
except those of our company. We or
ganized, taking in five plants, only one
of which was profitable. We are now
operating them at a profit. We are
operating on the policy that the ab
solute, bed rock basis for the success
ful conduct of an industrial company
such as ours is to be able to sell its
product at a price which, while render
ing a profit, is still unprofitable to
'competitors. We are doing just that
thing. We are in business for a long
pull. On a ten-year run we might
have raised prices, made $5,000,000 the
first year, $2,500,000 the next, $1,000,-
000 the next, and down to nothing at
the end of ten years. It is better to
be moderate and earn $2,000,000 a
year for ten years, which would be
$20,000,000 in profits against a loss of
$10,000,000 the other way. We did for
a short time make the mistake in the
beginning of putting the price too
high, but it did not last long. We
have abolished the rebate system and
are doing a straight, clean business on
the merits of our product and price,
and, best of all, we have on this basis
cleaned up all competitors.”
“Best of all, we have on this basis
cleaned up all competitors’” This re
sult, therefore, is better than profits,
better than any other kind of success,
this cleaning up of competitors. That
is to say, it is the end and aim of
trusts to destroy the business of indi
viduals with small capital, put them
into tire hands of receivers, close their
doors, and leave their employes out of
work.—Atlanta Constitution.
Low Prices for Farms.
Farms at forced sales in the coun
try around Philadelphia appear to be
bringing very low prices. In Honey-
brook, Chester county, an assignee has
sold a farm of 126 acres for $30 per
acre, and another in the same town-
ship, size not stated, for $29 per acre.
The Townsend Walter farm, near West
Chester, 185 acres, a very fine estate,
was offered at public sale by the as
signees, October 19, but only $70.75 an
acre offered, and it was withdrawn.
The Doylestown Intelligencer reports
the recent sale of two farms in Sole-
bury township—one of the richest sec
tions of Bucks county—at $20 and $15
per acre, respectively. It suggests that
the assessors’ valuation for tax pur
poses will have to be lowered.—Phil
adelphia Manufacturer.
Here is another splendid opening
for some gold standard orator. He
can take the above item for a text,
and a la Atkinson and Aldredge, he
can paint a golden picture of the beau
ties of low prices They can no doubt
vutirciy ’erjove lLo sting and discom
fort of a “forced sale,” by snowies
how advantageous it was to the pur
chaser to be able- to buy it cheap.
When a farrr-" ^-- ” - c -- '■•im
proving and' beautifying a farm and
then 1a forced to sell it for 30, 40 or
50 per cent less than he gave for it,
the accruing benefits should be made
the subject of a glowing eulogy by
somebody. It is, however, beyond the
scope of our genius, and the whole
matter is therefore referred to the
humorous financier of the “Lone Star
State,” Judge Aldredge.
Permanently cured by using DR. WHITEHALL’S RHEUMATIC CL RE. The
surest and the best. Sold by druggists on a positive guarantee. Price 50 cents
per box. Sample sent free on mention of this publication. , T
THE DR. WHITEHALL MEGRUHNE CO. South Lend, Indians
History « e Spanish War
By Dr. ALBERT SHAW,
Editor of the REVIEW OF REVIEWS, i
AND A LONG LIST OF NOTABLE CONTRIBUTORS.
Over 1,200 Pages and 500 Valuable Illustrations.
Three Beautiful Volumes in Half Morocco.
See special offer at bottom of this advertisement.
This Magnificent Edition for only ONE DOLLAR DOWN,
To the readers of this paper we make the following proposition to become mem- .
bets of the Review of Reviews History Club, and obtain the three volumes of
Our War in Two Hemispheres,
By ALBERT SHAW,
Editor of the H American Monthly Review of Review's " and author of “Municipal Government
in Great Britain,'' etc., and a number of prominent contributors.
e VERY American teacher possessing a library, and many that do not possess one, will be
interested in the announcement of the history of the late war with Spain, now published
by the Review of Reviews Company. Much of the narrative was written by Dr Albert
Shaw during the actual fighting of the summer. This has been revised and amplified by
him in the light of the official reports and documents, which have only become available after
hostilities ceased. A free quotation from the critical Congressional debates and other public
utterances at crucial periods aids in making this work what it is, the standard reference history
of this decisive and successful struggle. But it is much more than a lively and comprehensive
narrative. Itgoes back to the years of struggle in Cuba which prepared the way for the war;
it discusses energetically all problems which confronted the United States after the war as
to the Philippines, Cuba, and Porto Rico; and as a whole it forms a broadly conceived picture
of the year which has seen America brought face to face with new world duties.
The important special and technical matters of the war period, generally dismissed by the
historian with only- slight and often insufficient discussion, are fully' and authentically dealt
with in contributed chapters, written by men who had unusual Opportunities for staying their
' subjects. Thus, the lessons which the war has for us as to the relative efficiency of rifles and
machine guns are in a carefullv written chapter by Lieut, John H. Parker, of the United States
' army; the military movements of the Santiago and Porto Rican campaigns are analyzed by
the editor of the Army and Navy Journal: the battle with Cervera is described by the novelist,
' Winston Churchill, who is a graduate of theUnited States Naval Academy •, the actual condition
1 of Cuba before the war and the facts which caused the war are described by eye-witnesses,
1 Murat Halstead and Stephen Bonsai. , , ,
■ The illustration of the book is especially valuable in the hundreds of portraits, pictures of
• the navies, photographed scenes of the war, and the entertaining cartoons reproduced from the
. Spanish, French, German, and English papers, as well as from the American.
How to obtain the handsome edition by
• a payment of only ONE DOLLAR DOWN.
‘ The three beautifully bound large octavo volumes and a year’s subscription to the AMERICAN
‘ Monthly Review of Reviews can be obtained by any of the readers of this paper by
1 joining the Review of Reviews Club and paying one dollar. The volumes will be sent as soon
’ as ready to those who remit the sum, and the purchase will be completed by the payment of
• one dollar per month for twelve months. The first volume will be ready early in December.
► The subscription to the magazine which goes with the offer can be dated from any month.
> Address
I THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS COMPANY, 13 Astor Place, New York City.
Texas,
California,
Florida,
Cuba and
Porto Rico
THE ‘FIFTY CENT DOLLAR ”
The Chicago Tribune ana the rest of
the Gold Bugs have much to say about
50-cent dollars—just as though there
was such a thing—and that they are
mighty dangerous. The Tribune man
will write a flaming editorial about 50-
cent dollars, and go right out and push
one of them on the unsuspecting lunch
counter man for 100 cents. Neither he
nor his allies ever saw a 50-cent dollar.
IWEB
k&AMAU 50 YEARS’
YWS^Wy?' EXPERIENCE
sEMs^sfssssssasaazaE^ ^^ssBaesaBESBagessaBKss^^ssr-a^M^^^nBSK’
ute
Absojmutebv Pure
Makes the food more delicious and wholesome
SHARK LIKES WHALE.
THAT IS WHEN THE LATTER
IS A DEAD ONE.
Story of a Banquet of This Nature In
the South Seas — The Sea Wolves
Come in Vast Swarms to Pia-fake
Thereof. a
STARS
iL
America's Leading
Instruments,
PIAHO & 0R8A^ GO.
Dealers.
St. Louis, Mo.
Birmingham; Ala,
f, AU.
DESIGNS
Copyrights &c.
Anrone sending a sketch and description may
quickly Ascertain our opinion free whether an
■ ^inyontion is probably patentable. Cornrnunlca-
^^t^>c£!xiadential. Handbook on Patents
Patents taken through Munn 3 \s*-ASkEU.°.
special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A. handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cm.
rulatton of any ecientifle journal. Terms, a a
year; four months, th Sold ay ail nswadeuteys.
3-C£nts^n ry^
jo. 36 Wreathes
&fe ir x^Wi
SCHEDULE.
Train No. 11 from High Point, connecting
with train north and South on main line, ar
rives at Asheboro 9:50 a. m.
Train No, 12-leaves Asheboro 10:00 a. m,
connecting with No. 36, Fast Mail north.
Train 41 [Mixed] from High Point arrive
Asheboro 3:00 p. in.
Train 42 [Mixed] leaves Asheboro 4:10 p
m.. connecting at High Point with main lin*
both north and south.
Stri^nT^f^^^
me nt on all Through and Local
Trains; Pullman Palace Sleeping
Cars - n all Night Trains; Fast
end Safe Schedules.
Travel by the Southern and you uri
assured a Safe, Comfortable and Expe-
dltious Journey.
Apply to Ticket Agents for Time Tables. Rate
and General Information, or address
IL L-VERNON, F. R. DARBY,
TP.A., C.P.&T.A.,
Charlotte, N. C. Asheville, N. C
No Trouble to Answer Questions.
■ 8. Grata J. H. COLP, B. IL TBPS,
3dV.P.&Gen.Man. Traf. Man. ^ e.
WASHINGTON, D. C
Cannot Jlie.se men be made to under
stand that the value of the material
a dollar is made of is one thing, and
its value as money—as a dollar, after
the government has monetized it and
made it a dollar—is another thing? A
gold dollar, a silver dollar and a paper
dollar all have the same purchasing
power, and each passes as a dollar.
The material they are made of varies
widely in value, but the value of the
material a dollar is made of does not
determine its value as money.
It is the fact that it is one of our
units of account—-is a dollar—that
gives it its value as money. Standing
by itself, the government’s making a
dollar, and making it legal tender,
confers no value on such dollars, nor
does it attempt to. It simply makes it
money—a dollar—and legal tender.
But the moment it becomes a dollar
there is an instant and overwhelming
demand for it on the part of our sev
enty-one millions of people to transact
their business—they are all toiling to
get those dollars.
Raising Funds for Next Year.
Among the many ways of raising
money to successfully fight against
Hannaism in 1900 no offer has been
more opportune or generous than that
of the cigar manufacturers of Chicago,
who give the Ways and Means Com
mittee of the Democratic National
Committee 1 cent on each of their
“Ways and Means” cigars sold, and
one-third of a cent for each “Defense
Fund” cigar disposed of. This is a
voluntary contribution on the part of
a large and responsible firm of cigar
manufacturers, who employ union 1a-
bor, and are patriotic supporters of the
cause espoused by William Jennings
Bryan, Richard Bland and other lead
ers of the bimetallic standard. It was
not offered in an ebullient moment of
enthusiasm, but after mature delibera
tion and counting the cost up into
thousands of dollars that must go out
in case orders came in sufficiently
numerous and large to run up the
out-go in these royalties. The smok
ers using either of these brands of
cigars may rest assured that the roy
alty money actually goes into the
funds of the committee, as the labels
are countersigned in the office of the
Ways and Means Committee by two of
its officers. Orders are coming in lib
erally for these cigars from all parts of
the United States, making it a most
gigantic undertaking. The quality of
the cigars is the best that can be given
at the prices—5 and 10 cents.
The presence of any large quantity
of easily obtainable food is always suf- i
ficient to secure the undivided atten
tion of the shark tribe. When “cut
ting in” whales at sea I have often
been amazed at the incredible number
of these creatures that gather in a
short space of time, attracted by some
mysterious means, heaven only knows
from what remote distance. It has
often occurred to us when whaling in
the neighborhood of New Zealand to
get a sperm .whale alongside without, a
sign of a shark below or a bird above.
Within an hour from the time of our
securing the vast mass of flesh to the
ship the whole area within at least an
acre has been alive with a seething
multitude of sharks, while from every
quarter come drifting silently an in
calculable host of sea birds, converting
the blue surface of the sea into the
semblance of a plain of new-fallen
snow. The body of a whale before an
incision is made in the blubber pre
sents a smooth, rounded surface, al
most as hard as india rubber, with ap
parently no spot where any daring
eater could find toothhold. But, ob
livious to all else save the internal an
guish or desire, the ravenous sea
wolves silently writhed in the density :
of their hordes for a place at the
bounteous feast. Occasionally one,
pre-eminent among his fellows for en- [
terprise would actually set his lower;
jaw against the black roundness of the
mighty carcass and with a steady,
sinuous thrust of his lithe tail, gouge
out therefrom a mass of a hundred
weight or so. If he managed to get
away v. kU. it the spot-.-A 'sf^^^.^
uuriuu-o Lu- - ,^1-ad hollows w Y r ”'-
serratfe-d nguiar teeth naa worried-
their way through the tenacious sub- -
stance, telling plainly what vigorous;
force must have been behind them. I
But it was seldom that we permitted !
such premature toll to be taken from
our spoils. The harpooners and the
officers from their lofty position on the
cutting stage slew scores upon scores
by simply dropping their keen-edged
blubber spades upon the soft crowns
of the struggling fish, the only place
where a shark is vulnerable to instant
death. The weapon sinks into the
creature’s brain, he gives a convulsive
writhe or two, releases his hold and
slowly sinks, followed in his descent
by a knot of his immediate neighbors,
all anxious to provide him with
prompt sepulture within their own
yearning maws.
A Bridge 1800 Years Old.
Eighteen hundred years ago, or
thereabouts, the Roman emperor, Tra
jan, built a bridge across the Danube,
the piers of which are found by the
Roumanian engineers solid enough to
sustain a new structure, which will
unite the towns of Turnu Severin ix
Roumania and Gladova in Servia. In
the middle of the structure the statue
of Trajan will stand, four square, to all
ihe winds that blow, as it well deserves
to do, perpetuating the memory of that
great conqueror and bridge-builder for
perhaps another score of centuries.
Embalmed Beef Scandal.
WWWWWW^^W«W^
1A FB ? PATTERN |
(your own I’j, . ion) to every sub- £
scriber. Onl. cents a year. 5
M£CAti;s/~
MAGAZINES.
.YEAR
A LADIES’ MAGAZINE.
A gem; beautiful colored plates; latest
fashions ; dressmaking economies ; fancy
work; household hints; fiction, etc. Sub
scribe to-day, or, send 5c. for latest copy.
Lady agents wanted. Send for terms.
Stylish, Reliable, Simple, Up-to-
date, Economical and Absolutely
Perfect-Fitting Paper Patterus.
MS CALLUS
Patterns^
IC is this terrific and constant de
mand for money that gives such dol
lars all their value as money, and not
the value of the material they are made
of. Give us a rest from this 50-cent
dollar nonsense! The amount of value
in our dollars is shown in the general
range of prices of commodities—wheat,
cotton, etc.—and is determined by the
quantity of money in circulation among
the people, as compared with popula
tion and business. As Ricardo, the
great gold standard authority, says:
“The value of money in any country is
determined by the amount existing.”
That commodities would rise or fall in
price, in proportion to the increase or.
diminution of money, I assume as a
fact that is incontrovertible.”
GEORGE PRENTISS.
Yelk.
«w^
Some Mine ago one of t
of the glucose trust, whicl
the family of “industrial
reporter
fl
otors
is to
to a
.em -
The army beef court of inquiry has
made some discoveries which indicate
that it is not Gen. Miles, nor sensa
tional newspapers, nor jealous foreign
ers that some of the packers of this
country need fear as injurious to their
trade, but their own dishonest and ab-
'solutely criminal methods. How one
Kansas City house can escape condign
punishment, if justice be done, does
not yet appear. It was shown by com
petent testimony that the Armour
Packing company had furnished the
army a lot of rotten canned beef, sev
eral carloads of which were condemned
at Jacksonville and Mobile and re
turned to the company at Kansas City.
It was shown that as to much of this
condemned beef new labels were pasted
on the cans containing it and these
were placed in the general stock. The
manager testified that a large part of
it was shipped to a foreign government,
and explained its reappearance in the
United States army by saying that
some of the cans likely found their
way back to the United States and
were probably accepted by this govern
ment! The Armour Packing company
contributed very liberally to Mark
Hanna’s nati^^J honor swindle In
1^1
The British usurer is perhaps ths
most rapacious of modern Sh/ocks,
and it is good to hear that a bill 75
about to be introduced in Parliament
which will be sufficiently drastic to
curb him, if not to “regulate” him out
of existence. Up to ten per cent the
money lender will be allowed a free
hand, but a higher rate entitles the
debtor to invoke legal redress. Every
money lender will bo compelled to tran
sact business in his own name; he
must not have even one business alias,
nor will it be permissible for him tv
pose as a benevolent organization in-
der some specious title; hitherto a fa
vorite trick with the rascals that prey
upon the needy and helpless. In a
country where 400 per cent per annum
for short loans is not uncommon, and
2,000 per cent per annum not unknown
such a law is sorely needed.
The Are/ of Mexico.
Mexico has an ’ea of 751,000 square
miles, or near!/ re-fourth that of ths
United Stales
Bad Blood
dulls, Pustules, Ulcers,
Pimples, Running Sores,
Eczema, Scrofula,
CURED BY BOTANIC BLOOD BALM (B.B.B.)
The Great Blood Remedy.
Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) has a mas
tery over all Blood Humors which no other
remedy even approaches. B.B.B. literally
drives the poison, which produces above-
named troubles, out of the body, bones, and
blood, leaving the flesh as pure and as free
from blemishes as a new-born babe’s.
While B.B.B. is a powerful blood remedy,
it can be taken with perfect safety by old
and young. B. B. B. leaves no bad after
effects, and the cures are permanent.
Mr. B. F. Price, a Philadelphia druggist, recently
wrote us: “ That when people afflicted with blood
diseases called for a remedy, he always advised
them to use B. B. B., and he never knew of a ease
where it failed to effect a permanent cure.” They
were cured because the poison was entirely driven
out of the system by Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.).
Should any one be afflicted with any stage of Blood
Poison, Scrofula, Scrofulous Swellings, Rheumatism,
old Ulcers and Sores, Tumors, Skin Diseases, Kidney,
Troubles, Eczema, Catarrh, Mercurial Poison,- .--•,■_
Scaldhead, broken-down constitutions, or any other
-Tir^JAiAmi^ cure you after ^e,- ollie-
contain vegetable or mineral poison. One bottle will
test it in any case. For sale by druggists everywhere
Large bottles Si, six for 85. Sent by express, prepaid,
on receipt of price. Book of cures Free.
BLOOD BALM CO.. Atlanta, - .
nnd
ning
> A rule of Rea^g. 1
■ The Choicest faction T’tsratiKc.~A ]
* . A Remarkable Library for 3
* ' a Lyttle Money : : : • \
YOtm^JYILL 1
’ fill your order for the
HE?/ TOK HESS UM1J
► and clelAet it you iD n.b:y on t.ue ,
* “Easy Uuyi>i ut” pl.-til.
Eacu number contains no-re h-s' ]
’ class rea.iLig matter ibu. bay “rutr 4
( Monthly in Anu iica. 4
Tile best productions ol world-iam-
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I FOUR ^^ ;
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s tor ten cents a month.
Fifty-tire complete masterpiece*
. a year’s numbers, 3,328 .i '.ue.i
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in a single column strip it wo mi ne
► 53,248 inches in length-afloat «
i mile of reading. *
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BIGGIE BOOKS
? A Farm Library of unequaTea ywus--Practical,
Up-to-date, Concise and Coin ;,ruieastve—Hand-
somely Printed and Beautify’!;’ .'.rostrated.
By JACOB K.aULe
’ No. 1—HIGGLE HORSE BOOK
z^A^Jr 1 All about Horses—a Common-Sr ase Treatise, with over
1 74 illustrations - a standard work. Trice. 50 Cents.
[ S \ No. 2—BIGGLE BERRY BOOK
\ Allabout growing Small Fruits—read and Bearn how ;
* 1 contains 43 colored li Ie-like rep ■ od act ions ot all leading
®^ B varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents.
W t N °- 3—HIGGLE POULTRY EGOK
^^vd^^^^'Y I -^ about Poultry ; the best Pcsttrv Boo^ in existence ;
J tells everything ; with23 colored, .'lie-lik.. reproductions
1 of all the principal breeds; with 105 other illustrations.
a / Price, 50 Cents.
\J) No. 4—HIGGLE COW BOOK
^ ^ All about Cows and the Dairy Business shaving "great *
sate : contains 8 colored life-like reproductions each ►
breed, with 132 other illustrations. Pripe. 50 Cents 1
No. 5—BIGGLE SWINE BOOK
1 Just out. All about Hogs—Breeding. Feeding, Bntch- I
J \ cry » Diseases, etc. Contains c^er 80 beautiful half- X
I tones and other engravings. Price, 50 Cents. I
\ \ TheBIGGLE BOOKS are unique,origiuai.useful— you never |
, \ saw’anything like them—so practical, so sensible. They f
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?''\ - r ^ F w Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to send right ^
c “52^E^E^) a away for the BIGGLE BOOKS. The
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Is your paper, made for you and not a misfit It is 22 years
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) quit-after-you-have-said-it, Farm and Household paper in
the world-the biggest paper ofits size in the United States
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