Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Nov. 3, 1900, edition 1 / Page 2
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aiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiininiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiifliiii niiiiuinHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHUiHituiiiiuiiiiiiiufiiiuiiiin MAIL ORDERS REOErV-E PROMPT ATTENTION. - ; T ITrnnO Examine the quality, compare tne prices witn i II EIvIUb what others ask for the same 1 will not wonder that this is the busiest store in town. These 1 great values will crowd every aisle in our big store I Thursday, Friday and Saturday. 00 Yards Fine Bleach- ed Cambric, S Yard wide, soft finish good quality, worth ioc, S Thursday, Friday and S7r Saturday VQ8 Ten Yards to Customer. 1 25 doz Ladies' Flannel- SBBBSS j ette Wrappers E Trimmed in braid, lined to the waist, H perfect fitting and well made, all H desirable patterns, bargains at EE Si. 25 S Thursdayt Triday and Saturday S 31 dozen genuine Turkish Ej twisted nap, knotted, 15c I More of Our Famously Low Prices in Domestics 1 100 pieces apron Ginghams, strictly fast colors one of tie ibest makes Thursday. Friday and Futurdiay, 4 3 4c . For Saturday, 5 ; The 8&ryain Centre of Ashevillc EE 10 and 12 Patton Avenue s nuiiiiiiiEEiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu siuiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuin iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini M)(qI1 Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Itartificially digests the food and aids Nature In strengthening and recon atructing the exhausted digestive organs- It is the latest di jcovered digest ant and torn,. No other preparation can approacn it in efficiency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea. SickHeftdache,Gastralgia,Cremps,an all other results of imperfect digestion oarcd by E. C. DeWltt 4 C ChJcag fcOOK AGENTS WANTED FOB, fM frwidett and- fitott- lling book erer pubUshsd, Pulpit Echoes OB UVUIO TKUTHS FOR IIEAD ARB HEART. Containing Mr. MOODY'S beat SermW 60 Thrilling Stories, Incident, Ferional Experience!, He-, u tola By D. L. Moody nd a Introduction by Rt. I, THAN ABBOTT, fo. IK VOtm IjurtfeHU Cub., The one sure cure for The WdnoSaiver and Blood and Whlfkey EtMti cured at home with out pain Book ol pap. ticulars sent FREE no r m vunm rwv Tff 0 Atlanta. 6a. Office. J04 Nortb Pryor VV-, ueaucwuuy luutaraea. irj-i.o more AWKATS WANTEII-Men end Women. IfcrSalet unmenie m harreet Hum for Agent."' Send to term te A. SK WOKTBIK6TON Oth. 'iZmSL MUCH Gazette "Wtae ate. One Case Extra Heavy Bed Spreads Pearl trimmed, N beautiful patterns with raised effects, ready for use $1.50, quality Thursday, Friday and Saturday only 1000 YdsExtra Heavv Cheviot Just the thing for shirts and walking skirts, great wear resisting cloth, first quality SS)c Thursday, Saturday Towels, large size, with heavy double and (Rjp EE quality, Friday and Saturday, only SfV 4 7-8c yard Thursday, Friiiay emd Saturday for yard-wide un- Ibleaohed Sheeting', full piedes and So quality msimy goods bis you rwarat, 4 7-8c. only &Ka3Sfu!t. ?f 7 3-8c Yd TOE ALT! THE DAILY GAZETTE Is on sale at the follow ing places in the state HBVIL1E: H. Taylor Rogers. C. P. Ray. F. F. Bainbrldse. Ashevllle Printing Oo. 1. Blomberg. Battery Purk Hotel News Room. Berkeley Hotel Newa Room. Swaunanoa Hotel News Room. Southern Railroad Iepat. ON AT Ji TRAINS of the Southerm Railroad enterlng aiux leaving AsLevllle. HENDERSONVIKLE: A. F. P King. WAYNES VILIjE : Waynesvllle Pharmacy . -lJ .evard: Leonel Youmig & Fisher. JIOT SPRINGS: Mountain Room. Pari: Hotel Newi RAUE2CQH: Tevrtvotrugi) Houm Hrrm Room, ilORGANTON: B. B. Oelther. CHAKLOTTBS: Buford Hotel New Room. GUBENSBCyRO: McAdoo Houm News Room. WINSTON-S w UBM: T i Flhoenlx Hotel News Boom - THAT THRDBBINO HIEAiDAOHIEl t . !V7buld; quicKly leave you If you uael Dr. iKtajg'e New Idle PUIS. TlboaanLnidis of eufCerens ICbdave xxroved1 it!hslir' smiteih itess merit for 3dck emtdi Nervaua HeaJd aohes. Tthey anuatJef pure Ibloodi aiud build up 'your health. Sold toy 2H dxiucsStfts. 1 More failures are due to lack of will goods and you 9'8c Friday and Two ibalas extra heavy Canton FI'amneT, mill ends, regular 10c. quality Thursday, Friday Maud '.Saturday, only 7 2 -4c. ECZEMA. ITCHING- HUMORS. PIM PLES CUBJHU BY B. B. B. Bottle Free to Suffer rs. tresfclng Erupt vona on tne skin oo you feel ashamed to be eeeo m comipaiiv. Do Scabs and Scales form on tlio Skin, Hah or Scalp? Have you Eczema? Skin Sore and Ci-cked? Ra6h form on the Skimi? Prickling Pain in the Skin' BoilB? Pimples? Bone Paine? Swol len Joints? Falling Hair? All Run Down,? Skin Pale? Old Sores? Bating Sores? Ulcers? AH these are evmp toma of Eczema and Impuriti " and Polaonia in the blood. To atay cured take B. B. B. (Botanlo Blood Balm) which makes the blood pure and rich, B. B. B. will cause tLe sores to heal, itching of eczema to stop forever, the skin to become clear and the breath sweet. B. B. B. Is Just the remedy you have been looking for. Thoroughly test ed for thirty .years. Our readers are advised to try B. B. B. For sale by all druggists at $1 per large bottle; six large bottles (full treatment) $5. Com plete directions, with each bottle. S sufferers may test It, a trial bottle riven away. Write for it. Address BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. Describe your trouble and free personal medical ad vice riven- A VILLAGE BLACKSMITH SAVED HIS LITTLE SON'S LIFE. Mr. H. H.; Black, the well-known; yiraajge blacksmith at Oralhamisville Sul-Wyan-county,. N. Y., soys: "Our lltttle aoo, five yeans old!, tms always bleein sub ject; to orouip, land! so (bail .huw th at tacks ibeerji tttoatt we have feared! many i times ttihwfi (he fwould' die.- W ihartfe had t!he doctor lamd) used Tniany metfictoea, but . OhaonfoerleJin.'a Oouigih Remedy Is aiorw our sole reliance. It eetema to dis solve Ibhe tough, mucus and! by givtog frequemt. dJooea wihwa -.the croupy syimiE toms laippear we have found tfcWat the dateadedi. croup is .cured Ibefore ft gets settled," There is mo danger in giving this remedy (for it contains mo opium or other. Injurious drug end may Ibe g&ven as confidenltiliy to a baibe &s to &n lad" ut.' For stale by O. A. Rayisor, drug gist..' ; Clhambertai'nfs Stomach andLtetr Talbietos cure ih&Moustness, constipation and headache. They are easy to take Biod1 (pfteasanft it effect. For sale by C. A. Rayisor, draggist. v-' There' always-room at the top but wfllrm. BIG FOOTS BIG SHOE. It ;Wm"Goo4 For f2,500 In av Gentle r "Did I. ever tell you how Big Foot B4 Bunch of Leavenworth . won nearly K $5, 000 on a poker hand by betting one. oi his shoes?" asked' the old sport. "Not Well, then I'll tell you. "Back in the sixties Big Foot Bunch was the most famous poker player that ever strockLeaven worth. In those dayi the old town was an outfitting point and was booming. ; Bunch's one striking characteristic was the size "of 'his . feet, and that is how he got his name. Nfl other man of modern, times ever carried such a pair of feet. They were each fully 18 inches in length, and he , wai compelled to have his shoes made to or der. ' "One evening after a boatload of tour ists had come up Big Foot fell into con venation with some of the passengers, and finally a poker game was suggested. Four men, including Big Foot; signified their desire to play, and in a few min utes they were at it- As the cards weri being shuffled for the first deal one of th three strangers remarked that he guess ed it would be a gentleman's game, which means a game in 'which a player ma make bets without putting his monej in front of him in other words, betting on credit. As the three strangers all looked prosperous Big Foot said that h was satisfied, and the game proceeded. "In those days the old fashioned leath er pocketbooks were used almost exclu sively by wealthy men. You will remem ber that they had one compartment for bills which folded up, and the -book was held together by a strap which slipped through a leather holder. Every now and then one of the strangers would dig up his leather pocketbook, throw it into the middle of the table and murmur, 'A thousand better.' "Big Foot had about $1,500 in cash in front of him, but his hands were not run ning high, and it was some time before he had occasion to go against the pocket book play. Finally, on his own deal he caught three tens to, go, and the fourth ten dropped into his hand on the draw. liiverybody staid, and when it got around to Big Foot after the draw he made a raise that took every cent in front of him. The first player to" the left then went for his pocketbook again and tossing it into the center simply remark ea, ifci,uuii better.' The next man saw the raise and went it $500 more. The third man threw his pocketbook into the center to make good, and the three looked at Big Foot inquiringly. "Big Foot was equal to the occasion. He was convinced that he bad the top hand, and he proposed to play it for all it was worth. Quickly slipping off one of his immense shoes he threw it into the center with the remark: 'Well, gen tlemen, as you are all playing leather, I . will do a little of it myself. I guess there's enough good calfskin there to see the bets already made and raise $2,500 more-' "The other players sized up the shoe and then breaking into a hearty laugh laid down their hands. Big Foot raked in all the loose money in sight, and the strangers then opened their pocketbooks and counted out the amounts for which their leather stood. "I've heard lots of times of fellows bet ting their clothes on a hand, but I doubt if you will find another instance in the history of draw poker where a player's shoe was good for a $5,000 pot."-Chica-go Inter Ocean. Tiie Story of a Novel. One of the most popular novels of the day had a strange history which might have been considered fatal to its success had it been known in advance. A New York author, whose books are always sure of a certain degree of popularity, finished all but the last few chapters of a , novel. Try as he might, it was impossi- ! ble for him to complete the story satis factorily. So he put the book away, and for two years it lay unfinished in his desk, although the author thought of the work from time to time without being able to get any nearer a solution of the , plot. j Finally he lost all hope of ever com- pleting the work and decided to end it at a point several chapters in advance of that at which he had ceased to write. With this abrupt and unexpected ending the novel went to a publisher, was ac cepted, and it turned out one of the most popular novels this author has ever writ ten. One of the most praised features of the book is its unconventional ending, which is said to be just explicit enough to satisfy everybody without going into inartistic detail. And the author was at one time so discouraged about the ending of the book that he had almost given up the idea of submitting it to any publisher. New York Sun. Good Story of Macaulay. The following excerpt from Margaret Macaulay's little volume on her brother, which was printed in 1864 for private circulation, shows Macaulay's catlike ability always to fall on his feet: "One day Tom said jokingly that there are some things which always inclined him to believe in the predominance of evil in the world. Such, he said, as bread always falling on the buttered side and the thing you want always being the last you come to. 'Now, I will take up vol ume after volume of this Shakespeare to look for "Hamlet." You will see that I shall come to it the last of all.' "The first volume he took up opened on 'Hamlet.' Every one laughed. " 'What can be a stronger proof of what I said?' cried he. 'For the first time in my life I wished that what I was look ing for would come up last, and for the first time in my life it has come up first.' " ' Chinese Customs. A correspondent of theJLondon Graphic says that the friends of the dead in Chi na beg permission to buru quaint paste board images of men and cattle shaped in crinkled paper on the spot where the dead lie. The ceremony is a mark of re spect and Is believed also to act as a-sed- ative on the departed spirits. : Another curious custom in China is the destruc tion at funerals of bogus bank notes bear ing a huge face value, which are s token that the friends of the dead are over whelmed with grief and so forgetful Of worldly matters they lavish their sub stance even to the vergeof bankruptcy. These bogus notes are specially manufac tured and. sold for the financial effect they produce at a funeral. - 81e Got It free. ',, .,, Enterprising Chemist Here's! a card, madam.. Every time you buy something to the value of a shilling I'll punch, a hole In it When 1Q shillings are punched, you get a siphon of soda water free. ; Madam Thafs a fine idea. I'll take 10 shiuings1; worth of postage stamps now. London Fun. , v ;- mmmmm.nnimraiiimmiiniimmmiMmmiiiiiix SPECIAL i LADIES' TAILOR MADE SUITS 1 C AT .PALADS i Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Remember for Thursday, and Saturday only Silk Shirt All our $5.00 Silk Waists on sale for Thursday, Friday and Sat- ' urday v I PALAIS ROYAL CO. j xiuuuuiuuuuiuiuiUiUiumuiiuuiUiiuuiiUiUiuiiiiiiJ MedlsdtRedsonablePnoesfaRoute toTexasl eat it, and you will only have 1 m The Cotton Belt offers you the quickest aad jhortest route Texas, without change of cars or ferry transfer. Both day and night trains are equipped with comfortable Coaches andfree Reclining Chair Cars, also Parlor Cafe Cars by day and Pullman Sleepers at night. Write and tell us where you are going and when you will leave and we will tell you what your ticket wiU cost and what train to take to make the best time and connections. We wiU also send you an interesting little booklet, "A Trip to Texas." FRED. 8. JONES, D.PJL, Heaphis, Teai. W. C. PEE LEI, f. LWYAn,T.P.JL,CliiclBMU,hl. E W. LaBEAUME, G. asiffi The New-York Tribune Die IJSADINGr NATIONAL REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER, thoroughly W 10 late, and alwa;s a staunch advocate and suppoiter of Rerubiicn principle, will contain the most reliable news ol (THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN . . . 1 ,. inCluaing uibu usmsiuuo, uuiicBvuuucuva cuiu eyeeuuvs ui - U ders, brilliant editorials, reports from all sections of the land showing pwj ress of the work, etc, etc., and will commend itself to the careful perusal erery thoughful, intelligent voter who has the truj aterests ol hie country heart. NEW YORK TRI-VEEKLY TRIBUNE Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday, is iu reality a fine, fresh, every other day Dally, giving; th: latest news on days of issue, and covering news of the other three. It eon tain all important for- i eign war and cher ca- Ws mmwm whleb appears in THE DAILY TRTBUN21 of same date, also Domestic" and Foreign Correspondence. Short sto ries. Elegant Half-ton Illustrations. Humorous Items, Industrial Informa tionv Fashion Notes, Agricultaral Mat tern and Comprehensive and Reliable Financial and Market reports Regular eubserlption price, U per We ftiirnlBlbj : It wrfih THE 1 WEEKLT QAZBTTB for ;2.00 per yar. nil TL - am sin j-m. : BLBj. r m s Advertisers in SuriiReiurnsl iALE.... 1 3 3 3F THE f vAll our $10.00 Suits on sale at a Special 3 These goods are nude i of. the Serge Material, in ': all the leading shades of 3 uray ana Drown, blue and Black. : Friday Waist Sale. In going to Texas, via Memphis and the Cotton Belt, you can ride all day in a Parlor Cafe Car for only 50 cents extra (25 cents for a half day) . YoU can have your meals at any hour you vant them, order anything you want, from a spring chicken or a porterhouse steak to a sandwich, take as long as you please to to pay for what you order. T 5JL, lespbis, Tena. W. G. ADAMS. T.PX, RaiMW. Ten I. H. SDITOH, T. P. Chattanwja, Ttna. P. and T. A., St. Louis, Mo. J v,A ahlt ..vn-hPri on Tho HEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE aay, anu every part of the ujl ed States as a NaW1 Family NewpAp farmem and Vill! Tr fnn tains all the 0 ' important gen"1 n m J.-MrJ JJAixiY J J-Clli U rv n "V - u of going to press, has enterUlnin ing for ever member of the ' and youag. Market reports wtucc accepted as authority by !afm country merchants, and Is 1 w date, Interesting and instruct! weguiar suDscnpiioa GAZETTE for $1.25 per year. C - AA Ux,U' (,. HI si n 'aw. h sv m. n 1 ry w a ' the Gazette u0 A Try for yourself. tbaa to lack of etreaetbu . f few .men care to dwell lo art attio. r v , Uir&-i fAy ? .r
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 3, 1900, edition 1
2
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