Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Dec. 4, 1897, edition 1 / Page 7
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The Georgia Bogus Lord jjj. .ft Print: - : : r8 tomcs "J for a weak, - ig P Its musdesand g His Pa in-Law Dies, Leaving An Un-; thoroughly ex- g " signed Will. - T? I I TfP" activity The ' t . 1 ;'0 needs food; a blood- $ . - . making nerve-sfrenethenino- S scenes win e UM tundred 2K atld muscI?M?v 4 " Will Get Thousand H is Whereabouts Now XJuknown, But He'll Turn Up. Sydney Lascelles, known in society $ and to the police as "Lord Beresford," oi V-OO-LTVer Jll is all OI this,4 Z is again in ruck, ids father-in-law,: Ai-i $ and you still have a' tonic in 8? grander Pelkey, of Fitzgerald, Ga., died & t. 7 VT,. $ suddenly a S,ew days ago and all, his $ "Ppaiies OI lime fortune -oes to tne notorious English ana soaa TO act WltH the IOOd. swindler For thm and delicate chHdv pared a will disinheriting his daughter & to it itt;the World It means Si until she had renounced her husband. growth, 'strength, demoness When his papers were, examined after 2 JLjl r 8l5 plumpness bis death it was discovered that he had d ua comiorx to tnem. 13e sure $ omitted to sign the instrument. The g you get SCOTT'S Emulsion. W present whereabouts of the bogus Lord :2J - : ? v Beresford are unknown. Last- July he & i soc-mi I'00 "Udroggists. g s forced to flee from Fitzgerald," tak- $ SCOTT & BOWKE, Chemists, New York. W jng his young bride with him. - The fact j fee666e $10,000 has made it desirable; that he1 hould preserve an incognito. His wife will no doubt appear to claim her in heritance. Later she will Rejoin her husband, when the pair will very likely hie themselves to' far-off climes. Sydney Lascelles was born in Eng land in 1858. In 1890 he had to flee from England because of his crooked, deal-, ings and went to Algiers. While there he posed as Lord Beresford'and became acquainted with Miss Maud -Lilienthal, a society belle of Yonkefs, N. Y., and heiress to $1,000,000. She became infat jated with him, arid her parents, td pre sent a marriage, cut short their tour Ind returned to New YorkJ Lord BereS- ford followed on the next steamer and n due time appeared at the Lilienthal mansion on tne Hudson adjoining fcreystone, the home of the late Samuel I Tilden. In a further, attempt to hwart the marriage o'f their daughter o Lord BeTesf ord, the Lilienthals sud denly departed for Georgia, where they lad a large estate. Beresford followed Ind Miss Lilienthal readily agreed to pis plan for an elopement. ;A11 the "pre- iminaries were successfully carried out, tut at the last moment Mrs. Lilienthal etected her daughter - leaving the ouse. She followed . her across the iwn, caught her, rid succeeded in hrowing her to the ground. . Then Beresford," who was waiting in front f the place with a carriage, came to the escue of his sweetheart, succeeded In lacing her in the carriage, and they rove rapidly to the nearest clergyman nd were married before parental au thority could , interfere. He gave his ight name of Sydney Lascelles to the lergyman. The 'old folks forgave the oung couple and 'the following winter hey cut a wide swath in society circles In Rome and Atlanta, Ga. la the spring of' 1891 "Lord Beresford" tegan to turn to financial account the cquaintances he had .formed-., with the usiness men of Georgia. On various pretenses he secured money f rom. many f them. Among other things he made he firm of Hamilton & Co. believe he pas authorized by an English syndicate o purchase from them some valuable pining property. He . asked tthem to ash a check for $1,000 on the London tnd Westminster bank, and . they, did io. Before word came back from Leiv Ion that the check was a forgery '.'Lord eresford" disappeared. He went to New York, where he swindled Richard" I. Fox, of the Police Gazette, out of 500 by a worthless check. He was pught in New Jersey and taken back o Rome, Ga., where he was convicted ft forgery and sentenced to five years n the penitentiary- He took ari appeal o the supreme court and was released pending a decision in $5,000 bail. He mmediately left that part of the coun- ry. On Sept. 21, 1892, he was arrested at Albany, N. Y., and returned to Georgia, Miere he began serving the sentence Tor forgery. He was sent to the penal camp it Kramer, Ga., and in three months made his escape from the guards. Bloodhounds tracked him and he was captured two days later. After servinsr four years of his sen- pence Lascelles applied to Gov. Atkin- gon for a oardon and It was granted. The governor delayed it until the crim inal's wife (nee Miss. Lilienthal) had se cured a divorce from him in New York, Me pardon was issued on Christmas, Lasoellps wont tr Vtv.e'raAd. Ga:. and opened a broker's office," but his Principal business was maklng'love ti. tne 19-vear-nld rta.uerYiter of Alexander Pelkey, formerly a wealthy manufac turer in New Jersey. He won her and they were married last May. - Two Months later the business men of Fitz gerald discovered that Lascelles had teen practicing his old tricks on them. bogus checks and worthless' notes he secured nni m nnn tmm tViotn "--Bo:' fore any one had . instituted legal pro-; feedings against Jilm, Lascelles packed - uwul,6111bu : --MTMr-rt ms younsr wife, n-ninc- with him. .-'(Her father's riatv. Kfvr-clo-nlticr the" will disinheriting inmrpa "TiOrd..Beres- iord" a biYnrirtno Ufa. oa lrmsr as'her w mv ' .-mm ney lasts. V : ' vELLOW JACK PREVENTATIVE. ' Guard aarninc vVJin TaTr hv keeD- ing the system perfectly clean and free irom germ breeding matter. ,-Cascarets J-andy Cathartic will cleanse the sys 111 and kill all contagious disiease ' c FROZEN, - He had just returned from the top of e Chiikoot Pass and was apparently eiaa of - - .. r lefS?W was the weather when you l- squired a friend. "Cold?" . -ies! but not so' cold as it will be Ret n, iVanuary, after, the mosquitoes ! a chT the air and let the wind have A ma Then " ets sok&nd cold, there b t0ld me wno had wintered tip in Ta. en years that It was so told r candles and-, sold ?-them "for Lnnnnnnnh'n i rinT7l - ' . , ' iiifiiiiV i J i i if I I x i i J i 1 rr -I-r-. i 1 f 1J K II m 1 M U m . I I II I ir..-"i.vAV ' ""Mik I PMiay I. T All II : ' II II' 'T :. M Who Would OfCSCrif rmW 8 m ...... - w 1 Scott's Emulsion 1 , xv.cj m t v . - - - . Mr. Pelkey is reputed to have left 2 ' : s V $ 100 000. He was known to have pre- Sg "w w " ywm&u y superior p strawberries. He said they kept their fires over night by putting them out in the air and letting them freeze and then thawed them out in the morning. iHe .said he had seen four men die of colic from, eating whisky that was froz en so hard that it wouldn't thaw inside of them. He said the cows gave ice cream till they froze to death. He said he knew a clerk in a hotel on the Yukon that got rich selling the diamonds he wore, said diamonds being nothing on earth but ice crystals that didn't thaw till after the clerk had got out of the country. He said he had seen a man fall off the roof of a barn and freeze so stifL befoTe he lit that he broke in two; when he hit the ground. He said he had seen smoke freeze after it got a nunared feet up and fell back on the house, knocking a hole in the, roof big enough to drive ; a yoke of steers through. He said the reason the nights were so Ions in that country was that the dark got froze so hard the daylight couldn't thaw its way' through in less than six months. . He . said " "Excuse me." interrupted the friend, "did this party have affidavits with these statements?" "He said he had, but I guess he must have froze to death hunting for them, because he : never came back when I asked him to go after them for me," and the returned ChiJkooter smiled a smile that was childlike and bland. Washington Star. The little child of J. XL Hays, living near Colquitt, Ga., overturned. a pot of boiling water, sGcalding Itself so se verely that the skin came off Its breast and limbs. The distressed parents went to Mr. Bush, a merchant of Colquitt, for a remedy, and he promptly forward ed Chamberlain's Pain Balm. The child was suffering Intensely, but was re lieved by & single application of the Pain Balm. Another application or two made it sound and well. For sale by by Dr. T. C. Smith, druggist. AS A FASTER Miss Ellen Coppage, of Columbus, O r Will Try 1o Break All Records. "I intend to break all fasting records, even that of SuccL I will prove to the world that women have more endurance than men." This declaration wias made at the Broadway Central hotel, New York, bv Miss Helen Coppage, of Columbus, O., wiiio'semtt to tihe newspapers a declara tion of her intention. Miss Coppage is convinced tihat sine can abstain from food for sixty days, a record wiMoh has never been reached by any man or woraan ' ,-: '";""-'' -:. ' Acccrdling to her story, she has on numerous occasions fasted in . private for the benefit cf medical science, and she is ready and wiHing to do it again. Miss Coppage, is an extremely pretty Monde, wlho looks' not at all uniike Lil lian Rfussell. She Is abouit five feet six iradhes in helghit and .weigths 175 pounds. "I. flrst began fasting in private," said she. "I never made a puibKc fast. In April, 18D3, at Pittsiburg, I weighed 235 pounds and was suffering' from dyspep sia. I faeJted for thirty days and at the end of that time t lost 67 pounds." I felt no ill effects from my Jong fast, but, on the contrary, , aifter the weakness had Worn off, I felt very mucin better for i. Going without food f did not Inconven ience me in the least. - My- next fast was in Ocitolber, 1895, in Cincinnati. It lasted twen'ty-fouiT days and ' I : lost less than' a, pound a day, losing but twenty-three pounds in alll. t I felt perfectly well after fchdts experience and . suffered no inco n venience whatever, noit 'even feeling weak. K My lost: fast wasi in December, 1896, when I fasted for fourteen days in my home at Columbus, 0. In that time I lost fifteen pounds. "I am now under , contract ,. to Mr. Louis C. Miller, of this city, to fact for forty days, and, if possible, to break all previous records. A I am sure that I can do sixty, 'i do not know where I shall be placed; tout my manager is trying to secure Kos'ter . & Blair's o!d ' place -, in Twenty-hird) street. I shall begin my fast on December 6. I have always been' a very strong, 'healthy girl and I have great ' powers of endurance,., and I know I shlam be able to break the rec ords ' I have1 never fasted ' before in nulblic and I do not thiink I shall ike it at aM I understand that physicians are intersted ln.nie because I have cured mvself of ddsease by fasting." TTmake good her claim Misa Coppage will have to abstain from food for more San fifty-eight days and two hours, the actual time recoru . A JUICY MORSEL. A noero's Juicv aooreclatfon of 'pos sum was well illustrated upon a recent evasion when lady, with, whom the THEASHEVILLE GAZETTE. DECEMBER 4 1897. urieans. . sne toid mm tne Biory. narrator 4s acquainted,4 paid a yi$Jttto She 'Was walking down Chartres street early one morning, Intending to visit the celebrated French market of the Crescent City, and on the way she met a very old colored man coming from the opposite direction, evidently from .the market, as he was carrying in one hand a 'possum and in the other a small split wood basket of sweet ; potatoes. The old man's face was beaming with good I nature and wreathed in smiles of antic ipatory pleasure. He looked so joyously into the face of the lady that she, too, could not help but smile at him, where upon he held the 'possum' aloft arid said: "Good eatiri', missey; good eatin.' rShe stopped for a moment, ; looked at the childlike, happy face of the old negro, and said: , "So you like 'possum, do you?". - "Like 'possum, missey! I loves 'pos sum. Dare ain't no eatin' like 'possum. De 'possum am good, but de gravy "with sweet potatoes is better. Did you never eat 'possum, missey? Den you didn't know, what good eatin was. But, ineb be, you all wouldn't know how to cook Mr. 'Possum; fur dars ebbyting in de know how." r "Well, then, tell me how you cook it," she said. The bid man sat the.'possum and pota toes down on the pavement or, as they call it in New Orleans, the "banquet," arid with a look of earnest concentra tion, began with: "Now, don't you. nev er forget jest what I'se gwine to tell you about how .to-' cook de 'possum. Well, ' de fust t'ing you does is to- get you 'possum. Dat may be easy for you'ins, but tain't fur me dat is, al ways. , Well, den when you's dun got you's 'possum, you skins him fust. Den you puts him into de pot with cold wa ter, and put de pot 'over a hot fire, and den you parbiles him not too much fur you don't want to lose any of his nice sweet fat. Den you takes himr out of the pot and you dries him In a clean towel. Den you puts him into a big frying -pan: den you scrapes the skin off you sweet potatoes and you puts dem into the same pan wid Mister 'Pos sum. Den you has you stove red oi, and den you puts de pan and 'possum and potatoes into de oven, and den go away fur a little while, but not too long. Den when you comes back you puts in a little hot water, and den you begins and bastes de 'possum and de sweet potatoes, and you keeps on bast ing and basting till de 'possum is a good brown jest like my color and' de sweet potatoes is soft and juicy and de gravy is almost black, an' plenty of it. Den you takes it - out ob de oven and den you sots de table, and den, well, den you bars de doors, fo' the smell of cooked 'possum goes a long ways, an' when you have only one 'pos sum, you doesn't want much company besides yourself." Now, there is your recipe for cooking 'possum, and , given by probably one of the best chefs for that dish in the world. Philadelphia Times. It often happen that the doctor is out of town when most needed. The 2-year-old daughter of J. Y. Schenck, of Caddo, Ind. Ter., was threatened with croup, he writes. "My wife insisted that I go for a doctor at once;, but as he was out of town, 1 purchased a bottle of Cham berlain's Cough Remedy, which relieved the Child immediately" A bottle of this remedy in the house will often save the expense of a doctor's bill, besides the anxiety always occasioned by serious sickness.' When it is given as soon as the croupy cough appears, it will pre vent the attack. Thousands of mothers always keep it in their homes. The 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Dr. T. C. Smith, druggist. At last Mr. Hanna will admit that the people are, not raising up and yell ing for him. Cincinnati . Enquirer. We haven't noticed that any gold bug is lakely to be nominated by the Ten nessee democratic gubernatorial con vention next year. Bristol Courier. A San Francisco woman died a na tural death the other day. In this in stance, a confessHon to save Durrant will not be necessary. Bristol Courier. The foot ball season is now over, but the official list of dead wounded and interning has not yet been sent to the secretary of war. Memphis Commercial-Appeal. 4- Citizens of Georgia have more kin than those of any other state. At a re cent trial down there the court asked a panel of twenty-four men if any of them were related to either of -the liti gants, arid nineteen men rose to their feet. Clarksville Times. -" -- Secretary Gage is said to have 'an amiable difference of, opinion with Mr. McKiriley on the questlori of finance. It would be gratifying to know that Sec ictary Sherman had an acrimorious dif ference with the pr esident on the Ctuban question. Cincinnati Enquirer. . Afiber jantaouinicing that the Evening Telegram wouid suspend the next day, the New York Herald made another an ncuncemenlt to the effect that ita would conitinue. The ecoentrio conduct of Mr. Bennett is. causing much coinment In New York. Knoxville Sentinel. , The manner In wMch the United States has, stood by and refused to rec ognize the independence , of the Cuban people is the one blot upon American diplomacy and sets pace and prece dent to a series of similar acts, which from this time forward will character ize our foreign relations1 with, the small er countries' contiguous to ours. ' The great westero giant has been shorn of his hair "By the mercenary Delilah., of modern times. , Until the money p6we'r is madie to let go the thro3 t' o.f. tlj 're public American manhood will sfand for nothing. Pulaski News-Review. - - YEYLLOW FEVER GERMS Breed in the bowels. Kill them ' and you ' are. safe from the awful disease. Cascarete destroy the germs throughout the system and; make It impossible: for new ones to form. , Cascarets are the only reliable safeguard for woung and old against Yellow Jack.'. 10c, 25c,; 50c, all druggists. Among the many ; otJher articles ittoat (have been left with ? the comriiittee to be l- deposited. ; to the cornerstone of the public buildang' are . Uhiree, booties of fine old whisky. We have W, learned whietflicr- a ntaice .wfflfl be refti-vfd fnr this liquor,. tout if t should .be,; wht-a ecraimSblinig dBbere wiH . he, for its" session some hundred or more -years "henice, when that cornerstone is opened! Hundred .yetairS odd whisky! Why, it would be a temptsatroai- to a proihibi'tian- ist. CiarksvlUe Leafc-Chroniole. T THE PRINCETON INN FIASCO. . Ntorer tfhat the fuss concerning selling Mqaior at the Princeton. Inn has blown over, tbe truitlh "b-f thef matter , comes to light, a -way tine truth has of doing, af ter everyone has stopped talking. The Inn, whose license to sell i liquior 7 Mr. Cleveland signed; is vnot a bar or a, sa loon. It is an inn or ciiub-house. It has a grin-rwrn, where meals and beer- can t)ie had, b-ult no whisky or brandy. Only juniors and seniors who are supposed to know how to behave themselves are al lowed to enter this now famous resort. It Is here that the students give their dances, receptions and ether functions, asmd as a great many people from New York and neighboring cities honor, these occasions by their presence, they stop at 'tine Inn. It is a most reputable and respectable place. So why should not G. Cleveland, Esq., sign its liquor li cense? Like other less .. difetinguished men, he. (becomes " thirsty upon occasions and is the father of a bouncing boy to boot. -Nashville American. POOR OLD FOOL. : There is something touchlngly pathet ic in the interview with little Dora, the peasant child wife of old Clay, whose money and palatial home and musical and literary instructors could not make a fine lady, of her and win her from Clell, her brother, whom she loves. Love of the right kind is neither bought nor sold, but must be the outgrowth of a true understanding of congenial minds. Poor old imbecile Clay! .He has-lived to learn, when too late, that the winter of old age and the springtime of youth are hot congenial. There is no other fool like an old fool. Dresden Enter prise. THE HAYTTAN INCIDENT. The announcement that Germany has conclud'exi to send warsfMps to Hayti and that the claims of Herr Emiil Leu ders against the black repulblic will be investigated and the matter amicably adjusted, is pleasing news to this coun try. Germany acted with, creditable promptness, but upon insufficient infor mation and she no doubt now sees the error into which she has been betrayed. Leuders. it appears, according to the statement made by the Haytian gov ernment, is a half-breed-, his mother be ing a native of the island and his father a trerraan, tie was a citizen oi xiayw under the laws of that country. His character was that of a rough and bois terous fellow, who had frequent collis ions wiKtJh the police, and in order that he mi'gfct have more sway he renounced 'his citizensttidp in hi native country and become a German citizen. His collision with the authorites gave him an oppor tunity to diem and redress and the com plications following were at one time threat eniing. It is fortunate that the case is such as to permit of a modification of Ger many's demands without compromising tZhe honor of that nation. Had Emperor William insisted on pushing the claims for inidiemmity, this government would undoubtedly have resisted' and protect ed trie weaker people-against unjust demands. The Monroe doctrine must socner: or later be defended by force, but it is gratifying to see that the strug gle Will not be with a nation so closely connected with this country as Ger many. . Meantime it is well enough for this governmient to make clear its policy of preserving the integrity of the sister re publics to the south of us. ' If any of them deserve punishment, let the pun- teUiment fee .administered, but no for- . eign aggressions are to be toieraxea. aa no injustice , aiiowea. mwuyuio mercial-Appeal. From the Lone Star State comes the following letter, written by W. F. Gass, editor of the Mt. Vernon (Tex.) Herald: "I have used Chamberlain's Colic, Chol era and Diarrhoea Remedy in my fam ily for the past year, and find it the best remedy for colic and diarrhoea that I have ever tried. Its effects are in stantaneous and satisfactory, and I cheerfully recommend it, especially for cramp colic and diarrhoea. Indeed, we shall try to keep a bottle of it on our medicine Z shelf as long as we keep house." For sale by Dr. T. C. Smith, druggist. The Chattanooga News, speaking of the question of suburban sewerage here says: "It I invariably the case that the health of a town is worse while its streets are torn up for the purpose of laying pipes of various kinds." We do not admit the truth of this proposition: bait waiving that point, we wieh to 6ay that The New does not understand the situation here. In the laying of sewer pipes along .our suburban roods nothing more deadly would te turned up than earth and gravel, and if there were any thing unhealthy in the former, then the spade and the plow ,would have to be abandoned and suburban gardening 'Ms continued. Where a city has been paved with wood and the wood has rot-r ted .tearing up the streets during warm, sultry weather might nourish ' and spread disease; but no such conditions exist here. Nothings will be turned up but honest dirt,'and if that is unhealthy then we hod all better get off. the earth. The News offers, in fact, an argument against all public Improvement and san- THE DOUBLE STANDARD" . Ig 'X'JbJLJEl v uctc iucj uiiiic:(t actidiiy ui uisi-ukim wuuay auu wiuut auu ucxy CumpeuuOIl in either quality or price. r - , .And I still claim to have the largest stock of first-class goods of any house in the) v is it iu my piace. wm convince you; inai , i nave tne omy nrsi-ciass liquor nouse in tne State: ; Beer bottled fresh every day and delivered to any part of , the city. ; Orders frbma distance solicited. Bdiing and packing, free. "QuaHty, Hot Qoiantlty' is'QyQottO. Phono 139. P. O. Bos 372. 66ncl 58 Eputh I5cdn Strooi Ration;., but in this matter Memphds knows she ; is right and will go ahead. We .ore now extending our ; sewer sys tem throughout the late infected "dis trict, but we wish to sewer the suburbs aHaa. ATempfoia CXanimercAal-Apepal. . HEAD A NECESSITY. - - He doufbtless " would have " kissed her then, ' - - . In candor be it said (The chance was duly offered), If he hadn't lost hds head. - ' Detroit Journal. A FAMOUS INSTANCE. TTou can't keep a good man down," Is true beyond assail, Twos proven many years ago 1 , With Jonah and the whale. H . -PUCk EXPECTED. Her husband had reproved her for her - great loquacity; "It will never trouble you again," in angry tones said she! So she solemnly sat down1, s On 'her face there was a frownv And she never spoke nor stirred; For on hour. Then he heard A report as from a bomb or a cannon overloadted. Drop the curtain drop It sitowty-rsne'd! exploded. develond Leader. From the Chicago News. .Kisses amid manors go from mauftUx to moutth. The scsaflies of a fish, don't give It a weigth. Number won' 5s the most popuQar num ber in a lottery. Ut's a cold day for when he geltis fired. the office-holder Bad wealthier in Kentucky means any kind that has water in it. It never reduces the size of a dfiaim against an estate to file it. Newspapers and bootblacks polish the understanding of their patrons. Some men are bom bald, some aOhieve 'boldmesB amid others get married. A match between two dentists would very likely resuQt in a draw. Woman's Jove for ribbons may be ac credited to her having originated from a rib. It is said the mere sight of whisky wiH make a proMbitionist's eyes water. The mind cure doesn't require any faiith, and the faith cure doesn't require any man'd. Poets, like hens, are continually chanting their lays, but the Thanksgiv ing turkey has no chance. The man wlho is wefli thought of ait home ought to stay there and" take no chances with, a cold, unsympathetic world. The Tammany tiger will no doubt prove his filial love by putting his paw onto everything good and filling his maw. Men who run for congress love to see complimentary things said of them through the, press. Yet .they never feel it their duty to send in a tendollar bill and have theirs name properly an riounced to the public Thley also get very angry if the editor happens to say anything detrimental to their interests. Oh, consistency! The press is really, too ijurerai ll Li-ua . uiuo ui va.u.vmvi.aii.c. . Times-RepubHican. ) BRUCE GETS HIS OLD JOB. Washington, Dec. 2. The president today appointed BEancfae K. - Bruce, of Mississippi, to be register of the treas ury. Bruce represented- Mississippi in lihe United' States senate in recon struction days and "i one of the best known negro republicans in the coun try. The position to which he is ap pointed is one he held some years ago. VIGILANCE COMMITTEE. Prague, Dec 3. The city authorities, the Bohemian National and1 Students' Associations and the workmen's socie ties met today and appointed a vigi lance committee. The Stadthalter was then 'waited upon and informed that the object, of the commtEttee was to se- 66Pio9s.Cnire for Consumption saved my life. Twelve years ago I had what doctors said was second stage of Consump tion. Tried everything, without benefit Was finally persuaded to take i-isp s uure. xt neiped me, ana I continued its use until I was cured." ' -,. .-- , ' : ' j . Mrs. T. P. BARBER, Lake Ann, Mich., Dec. xa, 1896, SCROFULA It is Foul Blood's: ' ment Advertise Out It Is Soon Cured by Hood' ' Sarsaparllla. Yes, Scrofula, if anything, max be called : At " LI A. M M. 1 t ' T&'l- AV. tnp nnvRrr.iBPmpni nr inni iiumii . it im. v.nw scourge of the world offensive, painful, T a. f 1 9 a. A-m . . m. m ' m- - -ki .a ueouiuiimg, BiuoDorn ana r weu niga unendurable. , 'v . v Outward applications do not cure, they only drive the difficulty to new quarters. Emollients may palliate, they cannot abolish the evil. There is bat onei sure way out, and that Is to eliminate the faint, frevm t.T Mnril. -t . There is one remedy that can effect thlay and it is the only one that, so far as we know, has almost invariably succeeded even where the system has been poisoned by long years of taint, and the ravages to be repaired are tremendous. That remedy "My daughter was afflicted with Im pure blood.: There were running sores all over her body ana they caused &gf IUUUUDIU1UJUK, TIC UWU MWWWMM ni were recommended as blood purifiers, hnt. nnnld not. boa that thev did anv ffood- A friend told me about Hood's Sarsapa rllla and I began giving the girl this med icine. The result was that she was per fectly cured after taking a few bottles. She has had no symptoms of scrofula sores since that time." - MABXBIXA 1U Smith, South Middleboro, Mass. IHood9s Sarsa parilla Is the best In fact the One True Blood Purifier. Insist upon Hood's; take no substitute. HOOd'S PillS HoodSSsaw&T1 R. S. SMITH, Architect Far&con Buildlnc Pbon tBL ,iI9 cure onJea" and; safety to Eife and prop erty. The Stadthalter was requested to wiltthdraw the troops, but thiis was re fueled, declaring that he was responsible for the maintenance of order. The Stad- thdTter, (however, invSlted the deputatioia from the vigilance committee to request the comimilttee to use Its Influence to prevent further dEsturbances. MAIL BXXBBEIR ARRESTED. Pittsburg, Pa-, Dec 2. C. W. Merritt, of Mansfield, O., was arrest ea tma morning for roibbing the malls. Mer- clerk on the Fort Wayne railroad, be I 11)1.1. VV ICLO CUHIJUVJ vv - - ' M tween Crestline and Pittsburg. For a long time the postal ofllciols have been troubled with, complaints of money ihrfmsr stolen from letters. Two decoy dettens, witb momey, were found in his pockets when' arrestea1. Positively enred by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A paw feet remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsf ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongusi Pain in flw ZlAa TnUPTTt T TUTTO 41m Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. J Gmall Pill. Small DocOi Small Price 1 1 ICARTERSI rllTTLE sA PER
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 4, 1897, edition 1
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