STEROflWSiiil umiKEiiil OF. THE -NEW usactions AND CHI rON AND GRAIN OF THE COUNTRV. v THE ASHEVILLE GAZETTK ;PECEMB9VS97, . ... 42 January .;. 4 40 V j, mar- V- -"V- '.' v,"' ' rATIONS OF - NEW V YORK MONEY MARKET. ; - 6ncinnatlilec. '8: The " flour ket ouiet but Sfa::- f;: fl?ur ;qorn--Easy;i2727a- , r , Oats Market st. " $4 6?d$4'10; bUl.k W! bacon iskyQuiet at U;19.'- - -v. cinct But Comprehensive Re t of Transactions xa. the . Marst Commerce in the Great Centers Day's Doings in the World ofl de and Finance. .... v York, Dec. 8. Prices at the7open f the stock market showed -gains t0 y, of all of the leadingr stocks t Sugar, which :Was'off,l:;StjfPiil rew Jersey Central showed the ex 'rise, and in Manhattan thei gain jed to The rket opened considerable show of" f animation vigorous buying movement.";, ' "I Sugar 'showed f (tetrreased iesg after the openingand under ige of long stock the price receded L4, a loss of 1, as compared With day's close. . . . - n Money on call- nominal r X2 ?nt- ne mercantile paper ' 34 per ling exchanse firm, with actual 's in bankers bills at 54.85 demand, and $4.824.83 for y-s- posted rates $4.844".87; cdm il bills $4.82. ' . er certificates 59G0C: : ' silver 59V1C. , ' " lean dollars 46c. .' - :e bonds dull. ; --- ' - 1 Ircad bonds, firm. 1 .. .i. ernment bonds firm., - , . ted States new 4's registered and ns 12S; 4's registered 112; cbu 114; 2's registered, , 99; 5s" reg & arid coupons 114 ; Pacific 6's of 2. 1 - - . ar continued very erratlq and kept market s ome what unsettled. s of stocks up to noon, 264,020 bond market LCtive. continued strong n was ations. dull and almost without mkesley & Fry's Private Wire.) :ago, Dec. 8. The grain and pro i markets today ranged as follows: Opening. High. Low ' Close. eat nber n nber mber mber ary . ary . 8? 83 25 28 9 91 83 25 28 29 1 89 25. 28 29 90 83 25 f?28 ;29 22 22' 22 ' . 22' 7 30 .8 25 8 47 4 25 4 17 7 30 ; " 8 25 ; 8 50 ;.. 4 25 : ': 4 17' 7 30 ' S 20 8 42; K! '4 25 : .4 17: 7.30 ; 822 8 45; ;4-25-:'' VAA17' Justus ' - i i - - s and w sell it much jP is a statement sometimes the drtfegist wheniScotfs Jion is called for." This shows the druggists themselves regard EntuteEoini Cod-Li ver Oil with; Hypophos- PRODTJCE. Dec. creamery, Ll14Ue; New York. Dp 8 t ' , , wuiiw, ..sieaay; tr creamerv, iif5)5rt ttii factory iiui':151"3,; western: part skims. 4 OKUr. fn on . 9i 5fP"Quiet: stateJ and Pennsylvania, 2125c; western,; 2023c. ' ( 5 Sugar Raw, firm; fair! refining, 3c- Coffee Firm; No. 7; 6c ,bid. New COTTON MARKETS " xTork;; Dec. 8. Cotton ' fut,, opened steady at the decline, sales 4,300 hales; closed steady, with sales 92,800 bales. ' -:"lr:i:SK:Xy: Open. ..... 5 63 5-76' January February March April ......... May .'...... June ..... .... July .......... August ...... September . .. October ...... November ... December ... spot cotton opened steady: middling uplands 5c: middling gulf, JbC Spot closed unchanged.1 Sales, none. . " . . , - 5,81 5 87 1 5 91 5 95 6 01 6 03 5 64 Close. 5 72 - 5 5 5 5 i 5 ' 6 6 76 80 91 95 99 03 $3 6 03 5 69 NOVEL ENTERTAINMENT. 3RAIN AND PROVISIONS. ago, Dec. . 8. Wheat was strong ; opening today, May starting at )0c, against yesterday's closing jf 89S?e, andwith a moderate id from shorts. For the first 'tiriie nths, northwestern receipts -.were the figures of last year, Minneap nd Duluth reporUng60picars aS, tred with 715 last; week;andC629v a ago. Chicago rjeoeipts,v. however. iberal, 256 cars. A San Francisco I ,ge estimated the California wheat 3,000,000 bushels, less, than ".the gov mt October statement. This .and s of an excellent foreign demand; i an increase of buying, the mai illing up to 90c shortly after the ig. There was considerable, sell ?ainst "calls" at the advance, and arket eased off to 9090c. The nber option was " also firm,- open ,c higher at 99c and easing off. to but recovering again to 99c. A 1 increase in the visible was looked It often happens that the doctor Is out of town When most needed. ..The 2-year-old daughter of J. Y. Seherick, of Caddo, Ind. Ter.. was threatened,, with croupl he" writes. "My wife insisted that I go for a doctor at once; but as he was out of town, I purchase a bottle" of, Oham 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"1 appears it will pre verlt the attack. Thousands! of .mothers always keep it in their homes. The 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Dr. T Smith, druggist. , C MYN ATT LEACH washangat; 3iiTON AT Knoxville; Dec:- 8: Mynatt Leach was hanged at Clinton, Anderson coun ty, Tenn., today at 12:05 p.- m., for the murder of J. D. Heck, superintendent of the Royal Coal and Coke Company, of Coal Creek, on Feb. 17 last. On Feb. 17, 1897, John D. Heck, man ager of the Standard . mines, at Coal Creek, Tenn.,- wa5 -assassinated. He was shot from ambush: His young wife was en route to meet him and witnessed the murder.; . - ; Mynatt Leach and Ahaz ' Johnson, miners in the Coal Creek valley, were arrested. Leach was sentenced to be hanged and Johnson to one year in the penitentiary. -7 The little child of J. R. Hays, living near Colquitt, Ga., overturned a pot of boiling water, sGcaldlng 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 sufTering Intensely, but was re lieved by, a. single application of.the Pain Balm. Another application or two made. It sound and weJ. : For sale ty by Dri T. C. Smith, druggist. ; It Wm Provided by St. IIs Man Fo Hi Wife's Feminine Friends. i A wealthy St. Ijouisan living in Ihe Ticimty of , ; Lafayette : park- provided if 4 novel ,lorm of entertainment ior his wife's guests one evening, says the St Lotjis Republic. t: ' . The- hostess was extremely anxious to provide sonietiiing origiDal for the edi fication of a score of 'guests whom she intended to call together for an informal evenings Her husbaiSd promised : to pro vide such novelty; and took a bodn com panion into his confidence .to that end.. They had not exchanged ' ideas 80 con secutive seconds before they hit : upon the device of converting the. elegant parlors into a gambling - house 'ro tern. A faro' bank, a ; roulette wheel j and po ker and keno lay outs were easily pro curable, as the conferees well knew, and that part of the programme was ; soon settled. The friend suggested as a pretty epilogue the introduction of a pair of bulldogs, guaranteed to reduce eaph other to mince meat in tliree rounds. This rather staggered the ambl-. tious host, but his frieijd is a ward poli tician, and with the eloquence he always keeps on draft soon convinced the other that the evening would be a failure without those bulldogs. The evening arrived, and with it came the guests. The ladies were prettily shocked at sight of the "gambling para phernalia, but became accustomed to it in an astonishingly short time and sharr ed in the. games with becoming vim. It was when the yellow bulldogs, made their unexpected entrance that the hor ror of the fair guests proved genuine. The beasts yelped and growled and showed other ; peculiarly canine symp toms'bf "spoiling for a fight" There upon the ladies sought refuge on the pi ano and card tables and chairs, con ducting their retreat as from a mouse. Notwithstanding excited feminine protestations, the friend who had been consulted as to a novelty in entertain, ment unleashed the dogs. It was an ex citing climax to an "original" evening. The dogs feasted for five minutes on choice bits of each other's anatomy. The ladies screamed and the friend?who was consulted. exnlted in the success of his novelty. When he was quite con vinced and it took a considerable time to convince him that the ladies' desire for gore had been fully gratified, he doused the dogs into a convenient tub of water and separated them. MUSS .- Tbrougn Back: Window, Glassr: antf;AU, After He Had Carved Off the Younq ;: Udie Tees. A Hilarious OldL Time in a Hill City Dance Hall, Where Blood and Red Eye Ran Riot and All the Fighting Was Free. .... MOVE J SENATOR ALjLEN, y OF? NEB RAS ' KA, OFFERS A RESOLTJTIONj Animal Kindergartens. It will be noticed that all creatures which have large families, whether beasts or birds, have less trouble in rear ing them than those which have only one or two young. Little pigs are weeks ahead of calves in intelligence, and the young partridge, with its dozen brothers and sisters, is far more teachable than the young eagle. There seems no doubt that the latter is taught to fly by its parents. A correspondent informs the writer that he ; has watched the old birds so engaged ar relnctautlyrf dlloing them to a height Specialized education in'-animals fee- j lius lute u.uo ucavci. XkXt.ucu o axxixug does not begin until the autumn of the year in which it was born. The old beavers, which have moved up tributary streams into the woods, or roamed to the larger lakes during summer, then return to inspect their dam and repair it for the winter. Tney then cut down a few trees, and, dividing them into logs, roll them or tow them to the dam; The , kittens meantime are put on to what in a workshop would be called a "soft job." They cut all the small branches and twigs into lengths and do their share of light transport service. In the mud patting and repairihgvo the dam the beaver kittens take their share, but there is little doubt that they do so because .their elders are so engaged- It is a kindergarten of- the best kind, be cause mud patting and stick cutting are a great joy and solace to old beavers as i well as young ones, and so instruction, pleasure and business are all combined. Young otters, and probably also young water rats, have to be taught to go into the water. According to the observa tions of Mr. Hart, the late head keeper at the zoo, the young otters born there did not enter the water for weeks,' and .ieven men ineir momer naa w nuua - s them and, fetch them out when she thought they, had. had enough of. :.it ? They swim naturally when once in the water; and this.seems' true of all ani- 'mals. London Spectator. " -.. -.'v. , . , . f-r - . - Chattanooga, Dec. 8. There was a-'few cfi$ngr, . mean- oraiDae, req ntime?in Oiiil City night before last . and: the; HfliScaty: folks" yes terday and .today haye, 3iad somethlng to talk aboui - Hill city is an unus ually quUet,- peaceful UtJtle .'suburb and f the greatest. paEtor the i time- the resi dents have been,, feced; to use, Chatta nooga haprn3ng&;'for their subjects' of gos&ip. tVIhejn' ;sEom'ething really Mvedy and exciittog does happen in thei-r midst they .naturally use it for all it is worth. Monday night's little incfident furnishes all the material they ' desirei For some time past in tthe Little yellow building at the north end ;"oT:;e'"c$finty bridge in Hill City. .a, nuinber ot young people have been, having- dances nightly. These balls have .not beeji swl formal affairs by a consdsdesrable niit . . The people who attended: t..;hje;:Tkrt been society leaders of sitlokiers for propriety, not at all. To state the facts the dances have been regular" can-can, . Bowery affairs and the people who have participated in them are known as the "free and easy" assodatiom. ' TSae dances were gotten up for a good time artd the dancers every evening took partTcular pains to see that the good time was in .evidence, . Now, some of theptous 'peopie of 'Hill. City have been. looking, wittt .ddsf av-or' on. the oeieibratlion'S. :The; pious, people. haVje been calling ;the Ifittie higihtly functions "rnaandgm orgies,":. "Mots on the . es- cuitcheon of nuratiamty,- ;i?e?tc.,. etc. Ncine of these pdous people eemed willing' to start a movement to break up (he dances, however, and t3ie dance have gone on : without initerferemce. : ;; ? Monday night a dancje ;of uiivisuar pro- portions was given. Scores of the "free and easy" were cut and all eeemed more than ; uisASly - entfcroeiastic. ' 'Red-eye? flawed liike water and as the hours flew by all tine boys and all .the girls began to sihow the effects of , its work. The youths howled and sang, and the girls gigiglea ana screamea ana an went as merry asi a marriage 'bail or a coon re vival. : ' Along about twelve o'clock a youth from- this side of the bridge, under the t-eftsojpie--; exming Ved-eye' -started "'iMI- tohave- ''socoe fwn bis own lhook.i v He stumbled up to That CohgresiB - Should at . Once knowledge the Political Tnde. pendence of Cuba.- Ac- - . , - ' ;t-o, -r " ; i "Washington, Dec. 8. In the senate to- day Mr, Ailen, of, Nebraska,' presented a. resolution declaring It to be the sense of the senate that congress should with all due and convenient speed acknowl edge by appropriate act the, political in dependence of Oufba. : ; Mr. Alien said -.he had long urged the United States- to rec-iftfi-nasPR' tttue indeDend'ence of. .the Cuban Insurgents. He would not be content wth the recogni'tioni of belligerency, but . S of Lime and" Soda. AS the would insist upon the acknowfledgment adard" ,n4 V ' t! of aibsoHwCe pottl'tical liberty. He was sat- gWj and the ptir chaser who J m not.be con- Procure the -" Standard " terA the course advised by. the ad "c tnows it has ; teen vOf : ministration. v Inasmiucii; as ( the, Cubans ?li Benefit, should-nof for Onfr for more 4ha'n two y.eara, on many bat tanttt; 1 lVi.5nOUlO noior wi -aMf, had demonstrated their valor using; some untried prepay 'ation. TheC substitution something:- said , to .be just as good" id & stand ard preparation . twenty ove years xn the; market should not fe permitted by the intelligent purchaser. get SCOTT'S :: Emulsion. See an and fish are ,on the wrapper,- f Bo WNE, Chemists, New York.' a a . v' fr fibenty; he felt that they had earned recognition 'of their' pdUtical liiberty and iit-ougntt ta peaccoro'ev w them withiotat further temporizing If fleet tf American, vessels ituuuo 1 1 X i T" "; T'a a neoessary,- in Cuban waters we expreu -"-v-nefMxt the .owners of WwjJ-tonte ij . ml 1. . l .TWf.rt property lured or rdeslbroyed by--he insurgents, and the-carrying trade or e "S'l that there are wos, in common use in r. , Ztr bv such a etep, J Cuba's political independence. ,;;, -X jCMvalrous Mr. Fields. i Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, in her book, "Chapters From a Life, " pay the fol lowing tribute to James T.- Fields : ! 'Mr. Fields was a man of marked chivalry of nature, and, at a time when it was not fashionable to help the move ments for the elevation of . women, his sympathy" was distinct, ' fearless and' faithful. In a few instanc(iS,lwe knew, and he knew, that this fact deprived him of the possession of certain publio honors which would otherwise have been offered to him. : f "He advocated the political advance ment of our sex, coeducation and kin-' tired movements without any of that apologetic murmur st common among the half hearted or the timid. His fas tidious and cultivated literary taste was sensitive to the position of women in letters.. He was incapable of that liter-, ary snobbishness which undervalues a woman's work because it is a woman's. A certain publishing enterprise which threatened to traat of . . eminent men came to his notjee. Fe quickly said : The timer has gene by for that I Men and women! Meo and .women I. V - iX.';i''ti.v.V''ii'.ijtf'i;l . . ' . Growth of 'English:- - , - i i f The growth of - the English language dnTinsf ; the nr&sent centnry has ', been' tongue. -The commercial associations or the English and American people with all the nations of the earth have brought m 'cuha wfoiclh had been in-1 tjoutributions from every clime to enrich our. mother tongne; and" the result is the English language from every knova language on the face of the earth, - on a big gfirl from, somewhere in the back woods and propping Mmself up against the wall, says. f'Come here my honey, (hie) comesh heresh to your (hie) man." The big girl was not in a good humor and did not want any attentions at that moment. "3o away, fool," says she, "get away before I lamfbaste you." But the guile less youth was hot to be rebuffed by tale words. i . v ) Stop your foolin' and- come here Xbioh)- sweet thing," f ays he. Then the fun began. The big gdrl without wasting . any; more words grabbed a broom out of a near-ftjy cornier and with all the force of her : vigorous yoaung strength broke it over- the -youth's back. She followed up the attack and. the youth seeing that hiiial Mfe and limlbs were in danger jerked out a 'big pocket knife and prepared to defend himself. The girl came on with the broom stick. The .youth made a vicious lunge with. his knife at her inter nal machanism but he red-eye proved too niuioh for him and he stumbled and feH right at the feet of the young lady and tihelsef eet he at once began to oper ate on. Two of tih youittg lady's toes were out off and her motive powers were otherwise badly damaged. At tfhds stage of the game a number of robust, yoamgimeai began to partici pate in the grand "tournament. The city youth was shoved, bodily tlhrough the wtodow glass .toCthe outer darkness, various portions Vof has outer clothMg betog ripped ; up in he - operation. . As soon as he hit I the grouaid. the youth : be gan running and he hasn't been seen since. After the departure of the youth a general fight took place. Several men were' badly out up and the floor of the dance hall ;was crimson with "flowing blood:; , When-. ttie.Vlights were 'finally knocked, out and.the dancersi started (home ' a largie humlber Was wounded. " The' people o H1H City are now stir red up. Theysay these; dances must not to(h4toaetOTOur,:.-tlh they will form a "Citizen Ieague" to stop thesm if necessary etc.. A; deputy sheriff will be given a warm reaceptlon and plenty of information if he will make a trip to the north end of the bridge.' IS GALLANTOY LANGUISHING? Observations on the Decline of Street Gar . Manners In the" South, j .- It cannot be concealed that there is a growing " tendency, even xin the south, Where masculine gallantry has held out ; longest; on the part of men to let wom en in the street cars shift for themselves. It has not comq-to that : point yet, but the movement is growing in that direc tion. ' It is a fact tiiat men are rapidly fail ing in the courtesy which was, once uni formly shown to women, and the rea son, to a large extent, is that men are meeting women as competitors in all fields of labor, and this fact vastly changes the social relations between the sexes. Women are claiming all sorts of equality, with men, moral, political and physical, and are declaring more and more their independence. 'The effect on the next generation will be very marked and peculiar. The men and wo men of the present are affected to an overpowering extent "by the influence of old ideas and training, and that is theJ reason they talk about street car 'man ners and social ethics in their relations to the sexes, but in the year 1930, or the period of one generation from ,the present time, people will no longer con cern themselves about such matters. The greater the number of women at work in proportion to the men the more stringent the competition, and it can easily be seen that, according to the fig ures 'shown, the day might come when there would be no street car manners, but -every individual would look out for himself or herself, as the case may be. But even should chivalry he extin guished from human manners there will always remain the Christian grace of charity, so in the time to come able bodied young men and women who have seats , in the cars will rise to give their places to old men and women and to others who may be sick or disabled. "-New Orleans Picayune. Shadow of HeiSelf StomachcWas -Too .Weak V' to: Retain Food ALL THE OX UTILIZED. Every Particle Pat to Use Only Its Dying Breath Lost. In an article on the "Wopders of the World's Waste," William (jreorge Jor dan, in The Ladies' Home Journal, de tails how science at the present day utilizes the ox. "Not many years ago," he says, "when an ox was slaughtered 40 per cent of the animal was wasted. At the present time 'nothing is lost but its dying breath. ' As but . one-third of the weight of, the animal consists of products that can be eaten, the question of- utilizing the waste is a serious ona .The blood is used in refining sugar and in sizing paper or manufactured into doorknobs and buttons. The hide goes to the tanner; horns and hoofs are trans formed into combs and buttons; thigh bones, worth $80 per ton, are cut into handles for clothesbrushes; fore leg bones sell for $30 per ton for collar but tons, parasol handles and jewelry; the Water in w.hich bones are .boiled is re duced .to ?glue; the dust from sawing the bones is food or cattle and poultry; the smallest bones are4;made into bone- black. Each foot yields a quarter of a pint of neatsfoot oil; the tail goes to the "soup, " while the brush of hair at the end of the tail is sold to the mattress maker. The choicer parts of the fat make the basis of butterine; the intes tines are used for sausage casings or bought by gold beaters. The undigested .food in the stomach, which formerly cost the packers of Chicago $80,000 a year to remove and destroy, is now made into paper. These are but a few o the products of abattoirs. All scraps unfit ior any other use find welcome in the glue pot, or they do missionary work- for farmers by acting as ferti lizers." , - - YELLOW JACK PREVENTATTVB. Guard against Yellow Jack by keep ing the system perfectly clean and free from germ breeding matter". Cascarets Candy Cathartic will cleanse the sys tem and kill all - contagious disease The Gazette circulates in all the mountain towns and resorts and is the best advertising medium in Western North Carolina. A Complete Cure Effected -by i-. Hood's Sarsaparilla . Wow Enjoying trie Best of tfealth, AWth Digestion Perfect S . , - ,4l My mother was subject to sick head- aches and indigestion for overyearv 8hV was unable to stand for any length of time, and was obliged to stay ina dark room as she could not bear the lightif Jhe had no appetite whatever and her stomach " was so weak she could not reUux'what f ood she . did eat. She also haT severe: pains In her head. She Buffered to': much that she -became but the shadow thex self .' One day I happened to read: a tea timohial about Hood's Sarsaparilia. It . . ? ' Sounded So Truthful I persuaded; her to try thia medieine Before finishing the first bottle there was an improvement in her condition, She nib longer threw up her food and her head ache was not as severe. She took in all four bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla .and several boxes of Hood's Pills and regnined her weight.; She is now enjoying the beat of healths Her digestion is good ind she can eat almost anything she wishes. ...She is 42 years old and says she-feels as well as when she was 16. Hood's Sarsaparilla made - a complete ure in her case.? Miss Mast Masoabtb, Ironton, Ohio. Hood's SarsapariHa Is the best in fact the One True Blood PurUler. Prepared only by C. I. Hood ft Co., Loweti,Hass. HnnH'c Pi 11c the best family cathartio. ilUUU f ind eagy to operate. 26e t It. S. SMITH, Architect Paragon Bulldlnc 'Phone 2Si THE MESSAGE. If President AlteKtoley's rtcommendav. tion on the Hawaiian' question is car ried into execution Senator Morgan will no dOnuht have the pleasure of; seeing the bulla hul'a gftrls at Washington; as wettl as at Hoho3u3u. Birmingham Age Beiattd. ' Tihtere lis - motMog In the president's message on true cuiban queetlon to indi cate that Senator Billy Mason wrote any part of it nornvaa there the least evSdence that' hllsr'advlce was even re-membered.-Birmlngham Age-Herald. The : aninexatiojw;" of Cplba, . : Mckinley eatya.' woS?siA aii'reeMoa.-" Butt in the; same message 'he urges he aitio of ab lot of islands in the Pacific ofeeanBlrmiingtha '; : From the Lone Star State comes the following letter, written by W. F.i Gags, 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 oor medicine shelf as long as we keep house." For sale by Dr. T. C,- Smithy 'druggist. It fa a waste of time, to make lore to a cold, unsympathetic girl. About the best you can expect from her fe ttte Th1Tkhot rtass. ' ' ; TETLLOW' 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, -26c, 60c', all druggists. r ' -' 66TR) for Consumption saved my life. Twelve years ago I had what doctors said was isecond stage of Consump tion. Tried everything, without benefit. Was finally persuaded to take 1 Piso's Cure. It helped me, and I continued its use until I was cured.'? f- I ; Mrs. T. P. BARBER, Lake Ann, Mich., Dec. x? x8g6. THE double: STANDARD ; 'Aeffle Wine $ liquofHbuse ; Where 'they make a specialty of .first-class -whisky, and i wines, and defy competition in 5 either Equality or price. . 1 .vy, And I still-claim to have the largest stock of first-class goods of any honse in the visit it is .useless ior me 10 xry 10 Tiani me amercni oranas 01 sooas n Keep in siociw t to my place will convinceVou that I have the only first-class Uq!6r'boasenVti!iB0tk& cBeer.botUed.freshevery day and delivered to any part)ci;hQ city, Orders from distance solicited. . Boxing and packingjree. r "Quality, liOt Quantity, " k f-ijj.l(tf to?$ V f ; JAS. H.i Prop'riY 'fiione 139. P. O. Boz 372. ? ; ii - 56 end B8 26uth;IIoin Stxcofc

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