Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Aug. 17, 1899, edition 1 / Page 1
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COURIER, Advertising Rites Rsaeonable. VOL. XXIV succumb to the grim knowing of the won- It will establish the menstrual functions, restore the strength and give life and energy to the entire being. PRICE If 1.00 PER BOTTLE.W When there is any costiveness, move the bowels gently with moderate doses £ ST. JOSEPH’S LIVER REGULATOR. M.v dangliter was si: fie ri ng ITc-ra a severe bilious attack, together with great ‘’bearing-®® down” pains and back-ache during iser monthly periods. She had violent nervous spells which M produced a peeniiar sniiverhig and jerking sensation. I bought a bottle of GEESTLES FE-^S MALE PANACEA >(•, F. ik aad some ST. JOSEPH’S LIVE!! EEGILATOK and commenced treat-M i ag her. Ail pairs a ad bilious a ess were removed and the jerking was stopped. It is the best's I ever Saw for young girls. MARY ELIZA BENES, Beulah, Ala. X Here is one of those who are either so prej udiced against all ad vertised remedies, or have become discour aged at the failure of other medicines to help them, and who will derful value of Foley’s Honey and Tar for all Throat and Lung troub les. . For sale by Standard Drug Company, Asheboro, N. U. ^ON’r LET YOUR DAUGHTER. LJ ™ ve a wron s merging into womanhood. Ilie, greatest crisis in every girl’s life is' at this stage when the menstrual func tions arc being established, and s!ie should* have every provision obtainable for establish-, ing this period properly, without which she can never become a perfect woman. Mothers, teach your daughters to confide in you. Explain their condition to* them and watch over them as you would the most delicate plant, and 4 as this most critical age draws, near commence giving her GERSTLE’S ASHEBORO, N. C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1899 NO. 3. L. GERSTLE & CO., Proprietors, Chattanooga, Tenn.^ ^"•-VX^A ^-*~ X^X^ Q®>LIT¥, KES@M.WE 9 are the properties of fis'WJJ WIWFIS - ^ ^ ^4 ^ whic ? satisfy —--is ^ ^ A"> the musical ear. ^Om ^afce of Plane may have one, another two. another three of these properties. piano H t them all in harmonious combination, , Agents in most all cities* If none in yours, write us. ^^^ Established 25 years. ^^^ [^•Mayne^^ foi Permanently cured by using DR. WHITEHALL’S RHEUMATIC CURE. 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. THE DR. WJinTHALLJ^ CO... South Bend, Indiana : By Dr. ALBERT SHAW, Editor of the REVIEW OF REVIEWS, : 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. , ToJhe readers of this paper we make the following proposition to become mem bers of the Review of Reviews History Club, and obtain the three volumes of Our War in Two Hemispheres, By ALBERT SHAW, Editor of the “American Monthly Review of Reviews " 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 Kevi ews 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 t he light of the official reports and documents, winch have only become avai ab'e 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 hi«torv of this decisive ajid successful struggle. Put 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 bv 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 studying their subjects. Thus, the lessons which the war lias for us as to the relative efficiency of rifles and machine guns are in a carefully written chapter by Lieut. John II. Parker, of the Un’ted States army: the military movements of the Santiago and Porto Rican campaigns are analyzed bv the editor of tiie Array and Navy Journal: the battle with Cervera is described bv the novelist w inston Churchill, who is a graduate of the United StatesNaval Academy ; the actual condition of Cuba before the war and the facts which caused the war are de-cribed bv eve-witnewe Murat Halstead and Stephen Bonsal. 3 e witnesses, 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 Americ AN Monthly Review of Reviews can be obtained by any of Cho-readers of this paper 'bv 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 , THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS COMPANY, 1-3 Astor Place, New York City. : STARS FIR PIANO a ORBAN CO. and Dealers. St. Louis, Rio. Birmingham, Ala. Montgomery, Ala. Richmond, Ind. house, A 2-u%Rj; sUmu mw Trade Marks Designs ^^^^^ Copyrights &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents Bbut 1 ree. Oldest .y,gN?.e,Y focseo^W.^ w .tcA..,. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific journal. Terms. a year; rour months, $1. Sold byall newsdealers. MN & CO.^IBroatoY ^ Y^ Branch Office. 625 F S^W' WILEY RUSH, fitterney^i-Law. ....Boat and Bush Building.,,^ ASHEBORO, h. 0. Prompt attention given to buefueiH rusted. SIGNS OF THE TIMES. -S SEEN BY JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE. There Is No Prosperity for the Masses —The Result in 1896 Merely Strength ened the Strong That They Might Further Oppress the Weak. G, N. Henley Attorney at Law, Asheboro, N. C. Practice? in all the courts, business pr> >mptly attended to. M. O. H0$00 ATTORNEY AT LAW, AeasaoBS, AU ». 0. Prompt atteBtio^ ^iven t^ all huai- MM. Office la Bo» & Uriah building. O. L. Sapp, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Practice, ia State and Federal Courts. Corporation, Commercial & Probate Law.” All business promptly ttended to. Office in Koss & Rush Building. John T. Brittain ATTORNEY - AT - Practice ia the court# ef LAW. Randolph find adjoining counties in State and Federal Courts. Prompt attention gives to business of ell kinds. W J. GREGSON, 1 ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, ASHEBORO, - NORTH CAROLINA. State and Federal Courts. WM. C. HAMPER, Attomeyat-Law & ROTARY PUSLIQ. Rcss and Rush Building. Court House Square Asheboro, N. G, Prompt attention to all business. Southern Railway. THE . . . STANDARD RAILWAY OF THE SOUTH—^ The Direct Line to All Points. Texas, California, Florida, Cuba and Porto Rico. SCHEDULE. Train No. 11 from High Point, oonneotlnj 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. m. Train 42 [Mixed] loaves Ashcbero 4:10 p, m., connecting at High Point with main lini both north and south. Strictly FIRST-CLASS Equf^ ment on all Through and Local Trains; Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars on all Night Trains; Fast and Safe Schedules. Travel by the Southern and you cr; assured a Safe, Comfortable and Expel bilious Journey. fiF( Apply to Ticket Agents for Time Tables. Rate? and General Information, or address R.L. VERNON, F. R. DARBY, Charlotte, N. C. Asheville, N. C No Trouble to Answer Questions. F» S. GAM, J. H. COLP, fl. fl. TORK, MV.P.&Gen.Man. Traf. Man. A.». ■WASHINGTON, D. C ^MMMWMwt/y, wytt^My I A FREE PATTERN 5 (your own selection) to every sub- ^ scriber. Only 50 cents a year. MS CALI’S. MAGAZINE 1 MP ^MR § A LADIES’ MAGAZINE. A gem: beautiful colored platcs#Ratcst fashions ; dressmaking economies ; fanc\ r § 'Y 0 ^ • household hints; fiction, etc. Sub- > scribe to-day, or, send (c. for latest copy. % Lady .agents wanted. Send for terms. S Stylish, Reliable, Simple, Up-to- date, Economical and Absolutely § Perfect-Fitting Paper Patterns. Wc^fOS BAZAR." -OSSI ’Pawmsw 5 (No=Seam»Allowance Patterns.) § Only io and 15 cts. each—none higher. § S Ask for them. Sold in nearly every city § 3 and town, or by mail from S § THE McCALL co., 1 g 138-146 West 14th St.. New York. 6 Tivmftntm'y.wwyrfm/w>WK^ From the Mississippi Valley Demo crat and Journal of Agriculture: A prominent man of O.dessa, Mo., writ ing under date of June 20, asks us to ^ve our opinion of “the signs of the times—whether they are good or evil.” This, we confess, is a difficult task. By nature we are inclined to be optimistic. We like to look on the bright side of things, and to feel that the world is progressing and getting better, and that we are really in the midst of pros perity. But it requires a good deal of faith to believe all this in the face of indisputable facts as they exist. There is unquestionably a good deal of pros perity in the land, but it is confined to certain favored classes. In some in stances, in the protected factories and foundries, wages have been increased; but in no instance have we heard that they were restored to the old average. These institutions could very well af ford to increase wages on the eve of a new campaign, for political effect, and circumstances lead us to believe that this is the true explanation of this fea ture; for there are just as -many men seeking employment now as ever be fore, and the general average of wages has not increased. Such prosperity as we have has not yet reached the masses of the people. One of the bad features is found in the fact that there is not increased demand for property, except in circumscribed and specially favored localities. Farms and country property are almost unsalable, and real estate in the cities, in spite of all the blowing of the daily papers, is a “drug on the market.” The papers are sim ply whistling in the real estate grave yard, hoping to drive the spooks away. If you take the average of real values in this city now—and St. Louis is bet ter off than the other large cities—and compare them with those of ’91 to the beginning of ’94, you will find that they are at least 40 per cent less than they were then, and you can’t sell real es tate even at the reduced prices. *Yet you can borrow money, if you have gilt-edged security, at 3, 4 and 5 per cent. A 5 per cert loan will attract money lenders like ants to a lump of sugar. The banks and safety deposit vaults are literally glutted with idle money, and bankers point to this fact as a verification of their claim that we have an “abundance of money.” Of course it is abundant as they see it, but if they would ge^pu! among the people they would so® discover that very few have anything more than enough to last them for pocket change I through the day or week, and millions J have not even that much. Our ruin- I ous financial system has drained the money away from the people and con gested it in the banks and safety de posit vaults, and produced property stagnation. What we need is a cur rency that will circulate among the masses, and the whole history of civ ilization proves that nothing serves this purpose so well as silver and pa per. Gold is not a circulating cur rency, and its nature is such that it cannot be made to fill this important office. Gold is the money of the rich, silver the money of the poor; and for thirty years past all our legislation has been on the side of the users of gold. Last year our trade balances brought an average of nearly $8 per capita in gold into the United States, but its ben efits did not reach the people. Those who were already overrich became richer. A few hundred very rich peo ple added many millions to their wealth, and now have “vast stores” of money, but the masses of the people are as poor as ever. The farmer’s side of the question has been very strongly stated by one of our able country ex changes. During the first week of March, 1897, the week of McKinley’s inauguration, when the coming pros' perity was heralded abroad, a farmer of Boone county, in this state, brought twelve head of hogs to his local mar ket and sold them for $104.10. With part of this money he bought the fol lowing bill of goods: Three kegs of nails at $1.75 each. Two hundred pounds fencing wire at $1.90 per hundred. One cook stove for $30. One hundred feet screening, 85 cents. One plow, $10. Miscellaneous hardware and tin- ware, $11.62. Patent medicines and drugs, $10.50. One hundred and eighty pounds sugar, $10. This left him something over $20 to pay his doctor’s bills and square ac counts with the editor. The first week In this month the same farmer brought thirteen hogs to his local market and and sold them for $105. Then, at the suggestion of the editor, he visited the same stores that he had purchased his goods from in 1897, and obtained pres ent prices for the same articles, with the following results: Three kegs nails, $3.50 each; in crease, $5.25. $3.10; in- $38; in- increase, increase, and tin- The iarmer received less for his hogs than he did in 1397, and would have been required to pay $31.58 more for 11,is small bill of necessaries for his family and farm. It can readily th seen, therefore, that the farmer, as usual, “got left” in the mighty wave of prosperity that has come to us. The editor carried the comparison a little further, with the following results: “The farmer might have followed the prosperity story further for his own instruction and profit. Here is a St. Louis market report for the week McKinley was inaugurated, in 1897, and this week’s report, giving the top prices on. WHAT THE FARMER STILL SELLS: March, June, 1897. 1899. Cattle $4.95 $5.08 Hogs 3.90 3.85 Wheat .93% .77% Cotton 07 .05% Thus cattle alone have advanced, and that rise a small one. Hogs have held their own. Wheat is off 15 cents and cotton is down nearly 2 cents. Then suppose he starts an investiga tion as to the THINGS THE FARMER BUYS: March, June, 1897. 1899. Nails, per keg $1.75 ’ $3.50 Wire, per cwt 1.99 3.10 Per Cent Advance. Stoves 22 Plows 25 All hardware 25@40 Tinware 40 Ail drugs, patent medicines . 33 1-3 Lumber 10@25 Sugar 10 Dry goods 2@20 Doctor bills no less. Insurance no less. Taxes higher than ever—having to pay war stamp taxes. A farmer can get a little more for his cattle, but the material in a house that would have cost him $1,000 in March, 1897, would cost him now $1,300. He cannot get a farthing more for his pork, but it costs him $7.50 more to build a half mile of wire fence. His wheat will not sell for as much by 15 or 20 cents, but the plow he puts it in with costs him a fourth more. The editor concludes his remarks by saying that McKinley’s prosperity fable is like “a pyramid set on its apex—it is top-heavy and bound to topple.” These are some of the “signs of the times.” retirement of Greenbacks. Not satisfied with burying the money question every week, Republicans are preparing to retire greenbacks, in crease the privileges of national banks and reduce the tax on bank circulation. The substitution of. bonds for green backs Will increase the taxes upon the people, already overburdened, while the reduction on tax on circulation will re lieve |^e banks already enjoying great special advantages. The trust question is not a new one, and yet it lias grown in interest and importance because the trusts have grown in number. Attor- ney-G-eneral Griggs is reported as say ing: “If anything be done to control the trusts, it must be done by the states.” No one who has examined this subject will believe that state legislation is sufficient. The federal government must deal with the trust as soon as its pernicious influence ex tends beyond the limits of the state in which it is organized. The president, through his attorney-general, can en force the law now in existence. If .that law is not sufficient he can recommend laws which are sufficient. If the con stitution will not permit the extin guishment of trusts he can recommer- an amendment to the constitution con- conferring power upon the federal gov ernment to destroy the monoply princi ple in industry. The Republican party, through its administrate, could ex tinguish its trusts if it deMed to do so. It is powerless to deal wita the ques tion because it mortgaged itself to the trusts to obtain the money necessary to carry the last election.—William J. Bryan. Better Way Than Fighting. The soldier makes trouble for the present as well as for the future gen erations. Of course, this fact must not deprive the hero in uniform of the honor due him for the great battles which he has fought for the rights of man; of the laurels falling to him foi- patriotic work in camp and field. The time has come in the progress of the world when a better means can be adopted for the adjustment of interna tional differences, says the Dallas News. The soldier himself recognizes this encouraging fact. The people of all civilized nations are coming to un derstand it this way. Some of the war lords do not, but they will be brought around before tftne flies very much farther. The question for the next century is not the question of power to kill, but of power to gave. The pol icy of the coming time will not be war, but peace. T ^V^wXXi® ™W«K Makes the food more delicious and wholesome ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. POISONOUS FLOWERS, Symptoms Which Follow (he Eating of Some of Them. It seems a shame to connect thoughts of poison with, for instance, such deli cate and lovely things as that baby of the flowers, the snowdrop, as the nar cissus, with its delicious breath, as the hyacinth and the jonquil, says the En gineering Magazine. But one is obliged to see to it that the children do not put the bulbs of these flowers into their mouths. The oxalis also is not a safe thing to put between the lips; and all the lobelias will produce dizziness and general disaster. The monk’s hood, too, and the beautiful foxglove, as well, are noxious affairs, from which pow erful drugs are obtained, more than a few drops of their extracts being usual ly a fatal dose. Certain of the crocuses if eaten, even if nothing be swallowed but the juice, produce vomiting; the bulb of the intricately beautiful lady’s slipper poisons externally as the nox ious ivy, dogwood and sumac do; the quaint jack-in-the-pulpit, although not a garden plant, is another enemy to health and life; and so, also, is the marvelous Queen Anne’s lace, which now and then will creep in through the paling, and looks so enchanting when far and wide it embroiders field and roadside. The laughing little butter cup, that might be a drop of visible sunlight, is by no means as innocent as it looks; the cow in the pasture knows enough to avoid it; that and all its cousins, the rich, profuse peonies, the dazzlingly blue larkspurs and the rest, are full of toxic properties. The olean der tree, that Is set out of doors when spring comes and that lines the streets of various of our southern cities, is another hive of deadly poison. The superb catalpa tree, towering with its great leaves and its mass og^/hite and fragrant flowers, is a charming thing in the garden, but its bark is exceed ingly injurious; and the laburnum, that looks like a fountain of gold leap ing into the sun, and even the grass beneath it, is best thrown awa* instead of being fed to cattle when Wt. A New Form of Kite. Scientific kite-flying has made great progress in recent years. The Compan ion has frequently noted the achieve ments at the Blue Hill observatory in Milton, Mass. Mr. G. A. Frismuth of Philadelphia has borrowed an idea from the balloon fly, or “telltale,” used on ships to show the direction of tha sisting of three cones, one within the other. The mouth of each cone con sists of a bamboo circle, to which the silk bag is fastened. The circles in the experimental kite are 12, 18 and 24 inches in diameter, and the cones are 24, 36 and 42 inches in length each, with a two-inch outlet at the end. A little protuberance at the bottom of the outer bamboo hoop shows where a small lump of lead ballast is attached- The weight of the entire construction is seven ounces. The kite at a height of 1,060 feet registered a pull of sixteen pounds. It seems to be an easy lorm of kite for boys and amateurs to con struct Steck collars of fine sheer k;wn with lace-trimmed bow attached. ; A Mile of Reading! Bad Blood Boils, Pustules, Ulcers, Pimples, Running Sores, Eczema, Scrofula, CURED BY BOTANIC BLOOD BALMW.B.BA The Great Flood 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, cut of the body, bones, and blood, leaving ths flesh as pure and as free from blemishes as a new-born Labe’s While B.B.B. is a powerful blood remedy, it can be taken with perfect safety by oi l and young. B. B. B. leaves no bad after effects, and the cures are permanent. Mr. 1;. E^Price, a Philadelphia druggist, recently wrot^g^M'hiit when people afliieted with blood disc.'^^^Aied for a remedy, he always advised them io^ n. Ji. B., and he never knew of a case where it failed to effect a permanent cure.” The" were cured'because the poison was entirely driven out of the system by Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. 15. ;. 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, Tetter, Scaldhead, broken-down constitutions, or any other disease caused by impure^lood, B.li.B. (BOTANIC BLOOD PALM) will cure you after everV other known remedy has failed. B. B. B. is the only quick and permanent Blood Purifier on earth. Dc^Lnofc contain vegetable or mineral poison. One Ik>«BA| t e s t i t i n a n y c a se. F o r sal e b y d r uggist s e.ver Large bottles $1, six forgo. Sent by expyfess, prepaid, on receipt of price. 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NEUROTICO TEA A pleasant combination of Nature’s Remedies for the cure of constipa tion. There’s a packet on your Druggist’s shelf for you. NEUROTIC© TEA Prepared from herbs and plants cor rectly proportioned. A wonderful cure and a pleasant one. NEUROTIC© TEA The cure for blotchy skins and pale complexions. NEUROTIC© TEA A permanent cure for Eczema, Pim ples, Blackheads and all eruptions of the skin. NEUROTICO TEA Does away with the constant use of cathartics. A sensible, natural dry drug mediae. NEUROTICOTEA Cures Biliousness, Constipation, Dyspepsia, and ail derangements of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. 25 cents per Package, For sale by all Druggists, OR Murota Medicine 80. Hornelisville, N, Y. BIGGIE BOOK A Farm Library of unequa l K'aa—PracticstH Up-to-date, Concise and Coi'iprelwnsive—Hand- W somely Printed and Beautified .illustrated. 1 By JACOB BlUULE f No. 1-BIGGLE HORSE BOOK All about Horses—a Common-S^Se Treatise, with 1 ° vcr 74 illustrations •.a standard w^z. P«ice, 5oCeu£ s * No. 2—BIGGLE BERRY WOK “ % All about growing Small Fruits—read and team how'; I contains 43 colored life-like reproductions of all leading J varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents. Two hundred pounds wire, crease, $2.40. The same cook stove, crease, $8. The same screening, $1.50; 65 ’cents. The same plow, $12.50; $2.50. Duplicate bill of hardware ware, $16.40; The same bill of $e?ST. - One hund sugar, $11.25; increase. Total increase, $31.33. Twaddle for Political Effect. The twaddle about the Filipinos be ing encouraged by anti-expansion ex pressions in the United States is all for political effect. If the Filipinos are as ignorant and worthless as they have been represented, they can know noth ing of American affairs, says the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Besides, there is the strict press censorship for the sup pression of all facts unfavorable to the administration. Diamonds in Pretoria. The area of the Pretoria diamond fields continues to be increased by dis coveries in almost every direction, and" the yiehlfrom the extensive wash is reno^^^^Ughly encouraging,' the f J Uic mine;- cor tim jf ihe year running ^■carats. No. 3—HIGGLE POULTRY EGOK -^ v All about Poultry ; the best Pos’trv Book in existence ; : tells everything ; witli23 colored Mie-kke reproductions : of all the principal breeds; with 103 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents. No. 4-HIGGLE COW BOOK j All about Cows and the Dairy Business; having -.great » sale; contains 8 colored life-like reproductions cf each breed, with 132 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents. No. 5-BIGGLB SWINE BOOK Just out. All about Hogs—Breeding. Feeding, Butch ery, Diseases, etc. Contains ever 80 beautiful half tones and other engravings. Price, 50 Cents. be sent by mail Sample of FARM JOURNAL and circular describing BIGGLE BOOKS Address, IF AR.^ Any ONE of the BIGGLE BOOKS, and the FARM JOURNAL The BIGGLE BOOKS are unique,original,useful—you never saw anything like them—so practical, so sensible. They are having an enormous sale—East. West, North and 1 §?4 th - Every one who keeps a Horse, Cow, Hog or Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to sene right 1 away for the BIGGLE BOOKS. The ^MW JOURNAL Xs your paper, made for you and not a misfit. It is 22 years old; it is the great boiled-down, hii the-nail-on-the-head — i quit-after-you-have-said-it, Farm and Household paper in the world—the biggest paper of its size iu the United States of America having over a million and a-balfregular readers. f l YEARS (remainder of 1899, 1900, 1901. 1002 and 1 o any address for A DOLLAR BILL. ' WILMER ATKINSON CHAS. F. JENKINS.
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 17, 1899, edition 1
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