Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / May 17, 1901, edition 1 / Page 6
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- PAGE ASHEVILLE DAILY GAZETTE, MAY 17. iQ )i .it. LITTLE BIG HEKOES. ONE OF HERRMANN'S TRICKS. f II E n U rM nV Irm in wmAvy u Auuwm liffiDumnMl rfu uiin iipii ntmn 1 1 uim pmiiiHHHHiiMuj n lutiiiniituinmtuitnitiiiMiiiuiHiiti AVkgetable Preparationfor As similating foef ood andBeg ula Ung foeStoinaehs andBowels of IMPMliTtlUBliMgi THE - PERSONAL APPEARANCE SOME GREAT PERSONAGES. OF Promotes Digestion.Cheerfur nes sand Rest. Con tains neither Opiiim,Morpliine nor Mineral. wot Narcotic. Jpe afOUlk-SAMUELPtTCHER Atx.Sauut AsueSetd ifarbonaJ&Suta,-. Ctanfud Show A perfect Remedy forConslipa Ron, Sour Stomach, DiarrJhoea Worms .Convulsions Jeverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. 1? For Infants and Children. i The Kind You His Always Bought Bears Signature By Far the Larger Part of the Mem "Who Have Ruled the World, Either Intellectually or "With the Sword, Were Small of Stature. the t in: a- Use For Over Thirty Years EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. I r U rm v- m b a iiii ii One of the natural instincts of men is Xl ! ! A 1 1 1 i T-i V i mat cunusiiy wuicu uu ieei reKtn-""& the personal appearance of those per sons who have stood mentally high above their fellows. Whenever we read or hear of a great man, and especially when we are familiar with his historv. we uncon sciously form a picture of his looks and stature to which the contrast of the actual man is often very disappointing. Often we refuse to substitute the strange, unsatisfying reality for our own fond cre ation, especially if the great man is found to be a small one the intellectual giant a physical dwarf. As a rule we overes timate the height and bulk of our heroes and endow them, if attractive, with su perhuman beauty or, if hateful, with ugly and repulsive looks. It was this feeling which made the people at Yar mouth, England, when Nelson, delicate in body and insignificant in appearance, was passing over the quay to take com- ! mand of his first ship, exclaim, "Why make that little fellow captain?" During jNapoleon s nrst campaign m Italy, in 171)6, the Italians were greatly surprised at his personal appearance. His short stature, his pale face, the sick ly thinness of his frail body, which seem ed consumed by the fires of his genius, but was in reality made of muscles of steel, seized the imagination of the peo ple by the contrast they presented to his dazzling feats of arms. It was a novel and startling experience to find that di rect and penetrating glance, that abrupt, imperious gesture, that laconic speech and peremptory and absolute tone all which bespoke the man born to command asso ciated with such a dwarfish and attenu ated frame. Bit of "Mind Reading" by the Fa- moal Magician. "The late Alexander Herrmann always went fixed for an impromptu exhibition,' said a theatrical press agent who was once associated with the famous ma gician, "and in the early part of his ca reer he would go to extraordinary pains to 'lay his fences' long in advance for startling effects. In that way he was frequently able to do things that seemed next door to supernatural, and the result was no end Of valuable advertising. In later years, when he became celebrated and systematic booming was no longer necessary, the old man, as we used to call him, would often refer to these exploits and laugh heartily over the mystification they had occasioned. "On one occasion, to give yon an illus tration of his patience and forethought. he was in a popular bar, in Pittsburg and chanced to notice a bankbook fring on a desk behind the cigar counter. The cover bore a printed number, which was in plain sight, and when he got outside Herrmann quietly made a memorandum of it in his notebook, together with the address of the place. There was not more than one chance in a hundred that the information would ever be of any service to him, and he simply filed it away, so to speak, for possible future reference. "Well, fully six months afterward. when he was playing a return date in the city, he piloted a party of friends one day into this identical bar, and the proprietor. who was present, was called up and in troduced. All hands sat down at a table to have a bottle of wine, and. as usual. Herrmann was urged to give an example of his skill. He performed several neat tricks, and, remarking that he would wind up with a little exhibition of mind reading, asked the cafe proprietor to think of some number that could after ward be verified. 'Take the number of your bankbook,' he suggested, 'if you re member what it is. 'I don't recall it off hand, but I can easily find out,' said the barman, and going over to his safe he un- wm Special Low Rates to he Southwest. J&ag 29th and 30th, 1901. Your wish to visit Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas Indian Territory or Oklahoma at a small cost part nnvr he Tf,i-rfA . All roads will make low rates to Memphis for the Con- federate Veterans' Reunion, May 27th to 30th The limit on the tickets (June 19th) will enahle vn., "J j V your visit into the Southwest. ' Alcuu V Thatyouaydosocheaply.theCottonBeltwillsellspecial low-rate tickets (stop-overs allowed) from Memphis to At- t "j , rr. ' wimti j auu vr&iaooma on May 29th and 30th return limit three weeks Such an opportunity is not likely to occur again in years. Write t onee for free eopie of our ItsndaoinelT Ulntraio kv. "Homes in 'hefiouthweat'' nd mn 7iii?'!rJ booF., ey wnere yawBt to go &Bd ve wiil tell wht vou m iui aaiwi - i. j - . vUleort and you m complete schedule tor the trip. E. B. SCTTM, T. P. AvCkattuoog Ten. L f. USEACZE, e P. art T. A..SL Ireh, . SOUTHERN RAILWAY 2i:ti. No.t7-ll. No.tt. Eastern Tfane. KH-tt. No.K. ire T 4.80 pm .56 pan 9.20 pm 10.43 ipm 6.10 am 2.10 am 8.85 pan 1.00 am 2.09 un U.OSam Lv..New ock...Ar. 12.4Spm l.60tn Lv. PhOadelpJiia. Ar. 10.15 am S.60am Lv ..Baltimo(re...Ar. 8.00cm .07pm Lv..W8hi on..Ar. 8.42 am 6.07 pm Lv. ...Daavllle ..Ar. 11.25pm 12.01pm lrV....Hlck wl..Ar. 6.40am 9.10am Lvt....NoirAj(lic....Ajr. 8.20 S.&Opm Ax .. ..Raedrk .. .Ar 6.20 am t.50pm Ar . ...R4 Lv. 11.45 mn 6.15 am 2.56 am U 25 pm 1.05 pm 20 pm 6.25 pm 5.56 pm 11.15 am 8.50 am .m . It is a singular fact that while nothing locked an inside compartment and pri THE OCNTAUR COMPANY. NCW YORK CrTT. 1 MDisinj U 1 J fiHDWT B. PUTT, Wiil civupui Platfs Chlorides asyournouseliold disinfectant An odorless, colorless liquid; powerful safe and cine -. Destroys dlaees frerma ajid noxious gase. Prevents sickness Sold la quart ottle osily oy druggists tul high clajB3 grocers. F oparc I only 3y Henry B. Piatt, Piaft Stxe, New 1 0rtE. . x ii A WOMAN'S AWFUL PARIL. "There is only one chance to save your life and that is through an opera tion" were the startling words heard by Mrs. I. B. Hunt, of Lime Ridge, Wis., from her doctor after he had vainly tried to cure her or a frightful case of stomach trouble and yellow jaundice. Gall stones had formed ond she' constantly grew worse. Then she ?egan to use Electric Bitters which 'xolly cured her. It's a wonderful 3x ach, Liver and Kidney remedy. Cm. Dyspepsia, Loss of Appetite. Try it. c 'v 50c. Guaranteed. For sale by all 'gglsts. ( jj would seem to be easier than to ascertain the exact size of great men yet it is real ly difficult and often impossible to do so. How long did "the grand monarch," Louis XIV, pass for a large man, being described as such by courtiers and histo rians! Yet the measurement of his skele ton some years after his death revealed that he was under the average size. NapOr vately inspected the book. 'All rieht.' he said when he returned to the table: T am tmnmng of the number now.' Herrmann took him bv the hand. - 10.10 aim 11.12 am 11.52 am 12.10am A .i cjco tu 1113 peculiarly i s 1 w. impressive fashion and said, 'The num- 820 nm ber is 129,068.' 'That's right,' gasped the ' care proprietor in an awestruck voice. He was absolutely stupefied with amaze- s.wpm iv...aasbuiry...Ar. 7.85pm 9.23pci Lv ..Statevl!Uie ..A C 41pm 10.01pm Lv.... Newton.... Ar. 6.00pm 10.20pm Lv ..HlckoLy.... Ar. 5.41pm 11.80pm Lv ....r ar i Ar. 4.22 pm 1.08 am Lv.. ..Biltnvr...Ar. 2.40 pm 1.10am Ar... AsheyUile .. Lv 2.80pm 10.40 am 9.58-am 9.18 am 9.01am 7.52 am 6.26 am .20 am Central Tims. know that he was very short, little more than five feet high. Indeed, far the larger part of the men who have ruled the world either intellec tually or with the sword have been men of small stature. Aristotle, the Greek philosopher who for 2,000 years main tained despotic sway over the world of thought, was a slender man with spindle shanks, small eyes and a shrill, stammer ing speech. In the great council of Nice, consisting of 2,000 delegates, the most potent spirit, who, after long and fierce disputes carried the council with him. 1 was Athanasius, a man of very small stature, "a dwarf rather than a man," says Dean Stanley, "but of almost an gelic beauty of face and expression." In his little body dwelt a mighty soul. Com bining subtlety of thought and power of eloquence with resoluteness of will, inten sity of conviction and intrepidity of spir it, he fought single handed and for half a century the great battle of orthodoxy having "no friend but God and death" and today the creed of Athanasius is sub stantially the creed of Christendom. Gregory VII. the mightiest and haueh- bottles." Positively guaranteed fo tiest of the Roman pontiffs, who de- cougJis, Coids, ana all mroat and Lun throned sovereigns at his will, was a 1 TTT ik. i.1 J .. I rt ""T "u ue'rs ment, and so, for that matter, were tha nif'Ton u u innioonn in nffimn s nnm i ' " " "6U'C- " I Otners in thP nnrhr 6.10 am 7.32 am 9.25 am 11.00 am 2.40 pm 4.0w pm 555 pm 7.40 pm 11.85 pm :.10pm U.lmTLT.vaa . ..Ar. 1.16pm 5.l5au tlfM 1.29 ami Lv .Hot S paints. ; x. 11.46 am 4.00 am T.tfiZ 8.. 0am Lv .Iforrtstown ..Ar. 9.60am 2.80am I.Mbb 4.i m Lv . Knoxville . .Ar. 8.25am l.ifiam 4 ttsl 7.40 am Ar. Chattanoo .Lv. 4.20 am 10.00 pm .xvpox Ar....jHmjiui.a. jy. 815cm 915am l-05pm Ar ..Bri.V;.LV....7.rr Ml, A RAGING-, ROARING FLOOD. Washed down telegraph line wolc Chos C. Ellis of Jsbon, Iu.., had to re pair. tandiinig waist dleep in lc water," he write, "gave ime a terrlbl 0 Id ao,v cough. It grew worse daily Finally, the best doctors In Oakland Neb., Soux City and Omaha said I ha Consumi Jon s id could no: live. The- 1 begun to use Dr. King's Now Dis covery and wv 'vnolly cawed by si 6.40 am t.S3pmA? .JahvlHito ..Lv. 10.00 am 9.19 as 7.60 m w.46pm Ar...LoiTiil....Lv 7.45pm 7.40am Ar..C!liacia2Mutt.. Lv. 8,90 pm 8.29 8-Wam Ar. New Orea- Lr. 7.80 am Ar. rVaObils Lv. A AND S: BKANCH; troubles by all druggists. Price 50 and $1.00 rial battles fre Two wrongs will not make a right. A. KEEN CLEAR BRAIN. Your best feelings, your social posi tion or business success depend largely on the perfect action of your Stomach and Liver. Dr. King's New Life Pills give increased strength, a ke&n, clear brain, high ambition. A 25c box will make you feel like a new being. Sold by all drug-gists. RACKS EXAS Effective March 10th, 1901, tne - nnouncs the Opening of its Red River Division Denison and Sherman, Texas, Through Train Service will shortly oe-established from St. Louis anct City over the Jt jl j Shortest Lies Teta All men have equal rights but not resolution to reach them1. Tou are mi in more liable to dis ease when your liver and bowels do no properly. De Witt's Little Early Ris ers remove the cause of disease. AH druggists. diminutive man, and so were Canute the Great and the great Conde. Voltaire, the literary autocrat of the eighteenth cen tury and the most brilliant wit of thp ages, was one of the thinnest and most ly we tave known but few such, but in The fact that th book had been locked in the safe and the apparent impossibility of Herrmann knowing anything about it in advan made the feat seem almost miraculous. it is talked about in the honsw tn fhia .New Orleans Times-Democrat. THRIFT VERSUS MEANNESS. xouisr I'eople Should Save MnnT. I 7.ttm " Sftnm dux mot too Industriously. Most young people are not willing to save money. &j& it costs them little or nothing they are lavish in spending it. This is a great mistake. All should trv io save money and never spend it with out a reason or without eettinsr anm- thing worth what they pay for. They ofthpm. ASthMw.,n 1 vT" z-tl f vwu . . i.ipm s.pm money. Young men need it, and young 9.02 am 8.57 pm Lv.Hndronvils Ar l.llpm 1.50 pm UCCu iu irereuus snouia rarely or tu.wiun m.w pm jjv. ..ATyoo . . .Ar... a.Gflrm It rtm ucrci marry uniess mey nave some mon ey saved or are receiving so much for their labor that they can take ran nf themselves if they should for awhile bp sick. Those who do not marry and save nothing are in a pitiable condition when old age overtakes them or sickness Dre- vents them from working or leaving their nomes. Once in a great while a youth is found with a morbid desire to hoard. Personal- 7.N! F. 14. NO. 16. Eastern Timr No. IS. N. 9. Castera Tlmis. 11.22 am 6.09pm A- -rt.nburg ..Lv. 2.40 pm 2.20pm 9.85pm Ar Colur-ula ..Lv. 11.40am 8.29 am 8.17pm 7.i0ta Ar.... Charleston.. Lv. 7.9 11 90pm Camtral TJma. 5.15am Ar... .feavannak ..Lv 12.f5azy The people who talk most about their citizenship in heaven are often those who pay no taxes there. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURE! 6y local applicaitloais, as they caimot reach the dlaeased portion of the ear. There la only one way to cur d Jfaess and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dlitioo of the jou lining the imflaimed you have a ruimlbll.ig sound cr Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets imjerfect harii. . and when it is en tirely closed Deiiirness Is the result, and unless the lm -jmmatJo cata he taken ouc and this tube restored to its nor mal conditlOin, hearing will be destroyed (orever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which Is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous sur faces. "We will give one hundred dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that canmot he cured by Hf 11 s Catarrh Cure. Send for olirculam, free. F. J. CHESNET & CO.. Ttntedo, O. Sold by all druggists, 75o. Hall's Family Pllis are the best. Pretty little boas, collars or (whatever they may be called come in chiffon with rows of plaltings, edged ruohlngs and sprays of flowers fastened in the front and running the length of them. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR 5 mt, Breakfast foo1 DnftUa. Genuine Jlamped C C C Never sold ln bulk " Beware of the dealer who tries to sell Tsomethinji fust as good." THIS "WTLL INTEREST WANT. To qudtoWy Introduce the famous bloov purtflteT, B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm into new homes, we win eive atwayj lu.ow treatmemts. B. r ' B. win posi tively cure all blood ad! skin, roujhli-. luateers skofuaej, eczemia, eating sores, inning mi jots, sweai:-r t pimpaes, boils, corbuncles, bone" paCias, rhieuma tiara, catarrh, ibloodS poison, aJEectI throat or bones, mufcous patches, cancer swelKners, persistent pimple or wart B. B. B. tmakes the blod pure an : rich, heals every sore or - -UDtjda, am B. B. B. meel s the blocttrpoW wid 21. Fbr free treotmert taddiress Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Describe, itrou ble and free medical advice glve.U til cured. Bi. 'B. B. cures cia,, dteen seated) cases that refuse to h-salundei patent Mrs ii; Ines r doctcrs' treatment. B. B. B. composed cf cure boitanl dirugs aid is the finest bioad puaifier in the world'. .". " God works in moments. spectral of human beings. Two of the most potent spirits that directed the storm of the French revolution, Robespierre and Marat, were far below the average stat ure. The former, an incarnation of will, who by the sheer force of his intellect swayed the multitude and the national assembly at his pleasure, was but five feet two or three inches high, and the lat ter was less than five feet. Many of the most eminent Frenchmen of the nine teenth century La Place, Poisson, Fou rier, Thiers, Guizot were small, spare, spiritualized beings, who could distinctly feel their own ribs. Montaigne, the father of essayists; Dr. Watts, the hymnist; the sickly Scarron, who, in reference to his ill health and in- Bigniucant stature, caned himself "an abridgment of human miseries;" Alex ander Pope, who wore three pairs of stockings to plump out his legs to a de cent size and also wore stays; Campbell, the author of "Hohenlinden," "a pretty, little, delicate, ladylike, finical gentle man;" Thomas De Quincey, the "opium eater," were all dwarfish men. Suwarrow, the greatest of Russian gen erals; Frederick the Great, David Gar rick, the wondertul actor, and Alexander Haihilton, whom Talleyrand pronounced one of the three greatest men he had ever known, were slender and below the mid dle height. The brave General Marion "was in. stature of the smallest size, thin as well as low' and Dr. Kane, who sur passed all his arctic companions in brav ing torrid heat and polar cold, was but five feet six in height and weighed at hia best but 135 pounds. But more dwarfish than any of these ghostly beings was that phenomenon of the eighteenth century, the Abbe Galiani of Naples. "Personally," gays Marmon tel, "the abbe who. was but four feet and six inches in stature was the prettiest little harlequin that Italy ever produced, but upon the shoulders of that harlequin was the head of a MachiavellL" Refer ring to the frequent and sudden alterna tions in his conversation, of great, lofty sublime thoughts, which, Sainte Beuve says, were worthy of Vico, If not of Plato, .with pleasantries, jests and buf fooneries he abbe, said of himself, "You see that tarn two different men kneaded vho.- nevertheless, do not en- .oecupy the room of one" William Mathewaiu Baturday Evening Post. 7.40 jw 7.40 machine which. Seems almost' thint It consist of two chisels; whicUrbarely. pass each, other when the sUt is made, and the exact way In which the pen is poised so tetf to place the chisels in the proper position for cutting is one of the martels of penmaking. - If yon have a present to give a child. Civ ,He wi Sent any way and -by-giving it to him you save the trouble of, fighting for it-Atchi-son AiioDe. - 1 - them the habit grew until they became notorious for meanness. A story is told of a celebrated bishop who grew so mean that one day when he cut his finger with a penknife and no court plaster could he found a clergyman standing by brought out his cardcase and took from it a "j cent stamp and gave it to the bishoo to I i ue uj tLop me now or Diooa. ine bishop accepted it gratefully, placed the 5 cent stamp in his own cardcase and then took out a 1 cent stamp and pasted it over the still bleeding wound. This seems almost too much to believe. But a celebrated minister in New Eng land was offered a hat by a hatter who was a friend of his and who admired him in most respects. He asked him if he had another kind. "Yes," he said, "though not quite so good as that." He said he would like to see one and asked what the price of the first one was and was told $5 and of the second $3. "Well," said he, "as you offered me the first one, if 1 should take the second would you give me the difference in money?" A young person should not be a spendthrift, nei ther should he be stingy. Christian Ad vocate. r.25 am A .. JaeksonvlIlie..Lv 7.45 pm ;.wam Ar ...Augu ta.... Lr. 9.99 pm 9.89 pm 8 '5pm F.19m Ar Atlanta.... Lv. 7 59am U.58pm ISIpmAi.N Orleans .Lv. 7.45pm 7.55am At ...Memp1 Is ,..Lv '.OS pm 8.89 am AT Macon Lv. l.eOam 7.19 pa MDBPHY BEANCHi Quite Proper. "Mr. Untidy," began his talented young wife one night as she stood knee deep m a bowl of dough, "can you tell me one thing?" "I certainly can," grumbled the ambi tious husband, who was standing in the corner peeling some of the apples which had been sent to them by his mother-in- law np in Podnnk. "Tell me, then," continued the good woman, pulling off a small piece of the pasty mixture for Wilfred to play with. he proper season of the year in which to ffeck apples?" "Let's see," scowled Mr. U., "didn't Eve pick them just before the fall? And immediately after this utterance a frightful noise evolved from the parlor. where Wilfred was trying to- take the temperature of the cat's ear with a piece of dough, despite the feline's unceasing SKirmisnes. New York Herald. Tbe Honeymoon Out of Stylet Honeymoons seem gradually disappear ing. Their days are shortened, their se verity is being modified. The fortnight of our grandmothers honeymoons has merged into a few days, and during !thafc' tune an kinds, of amusements are ad missible. We read of -brides ?oinor bnt thm Slit In the Pen. j,ne.'!enteTifsut:tn. a, ren I rhr fhnntinr. t w. -k-I this case), paying visits and otherwise mitigrating the seriousness of the tete-a-tete until it is quite possible that we may be approaching the extinction of the hon eymoon. London Graphic. An Egrotist. Henry L. Clapp, in a company of good fellows, once said of a well known editor who was constantly impressing people with his own importance, "Yes, he is a self made man, and he worships his crea tor." . No. 17. 10.19 Bcaterx 1 km No. 18. Ne. 20 .OOam 2.45 pmLv ....Ashevllle ..! . .50pm 1.50pm 10.88 am 5.10 pm Lv. Waynasvtlle Ar. 6.10 pm 1.26 rm 10.59am i.SOptmLv Balsam .. Ar. 4.40pm 12.00n 12.40 pm 7.28 pm Lv. Brysoa dry Lv. 1.45 pm 10.20 am 10.20 nm Ar. ...Murpaiy ...Lv 7.20m except Sunday Dally except Sunday Trains 27 and 11, and! 12 awd 28, carry Pullman eDeepers fcet-e New York, Wash ington, Ashevdlle, Hot Spring Chatt sooga and Nashvill . Trains 9 and U, and 10 and 12 betw "-n Jackson ville, Savannah, Ashevllle, Hot Qprtags Knoxvllle and Cincinaia. Tratna 85 and 86 oarr. pulliaa lecip ers between Salisbury, AaievSUe, Hot Springs and Memphis. Together with our e eaUent equip ment and! schedule to the sjortth and east, all rail through Washington, ttte public's rAcdal attentloxi lm called to our r.1 and ma ' r route ta the north e Southern JlaUw y and Cats peake line. This scfck -uOe allows dty'i top ever T Norfolt, Va., affordlai opportunltj- t visit Old Point Oomfsrf (Fort 'lljsnroe, V l irginl Ba4 NewS;t Ktrva, HA 'HiiB THANK S. GANNON, td V. P. & Q. If. WashlngtoB, D. C 8. H. HARJW:CK, Q.P.A. Washington, D. O F. T.. DARBY, C.T.A P.A Asheville, N. C. Railroad Company General Offices, Brevard, IX. C. oal Schedule, Effective Monday, Decea ber 10. Nx2jNo4(Eseira Staadard Tlm)Ne.2 a m ?mi :05 4:80 4:45 BTATXO" Lv ..BDenfersoavUls . .Horse Chios TIME CARD. North!souaiI Pstsnjtrr Mix1' Chaster Leave.... 7.49 8.89 sal YtortcvUa " 8.48 am I ..Etowah.. . BS&mcvre. . 5:051 Penrose fu:40 DaVidBosii Btver 10:40 ilv .. ..Brevard ..Aril2:19 . .Selicsj. ... ....Oalvert .. Ar .. ..Toxawav .. ..Lvtll:40 x, OMBy except Bunccay. I 11.10 No. Fl Oaatosla Gastonia LlaoslnJtoQ M K wtoa m Hlcxery " Hickory Lenoir Jrttrm Seiiitkjbomvd . Leoshr Hlekory .... 9.48 rm .... 9.48 am ....10.45 am ....11.88 am ....12.00 m ..12.15 pm .. .. 1.16 pm Pwsnr. .. iO pm A. 02 pm .... 2.80 pm 4.20 J 5.20 pm 5.80 pm . 8.49 pat 19.49 ad 12.27 pal 1 19 I.tfpai 4.89 pal 5.19 7 5.59 9 7.51 Klxi 6.89 tM 8.59 aai 9.29 ap 11.19 atf 12.15 90 1.12 pal 8.29 pal He whof has been bitten by serpent Is afraid of m UzzarAi MILLTDNB CVIEN 4WAT. It is eertamly gratiryinr to the pub lic to know of on canoena which I not afraid to be genroas, Tiie. proorl ' tors of Dr. Kline's Newscovery fo" Ooaisaumiptlioai, CVxughs ad CWde, bay given away over ten million triai hoc ties and.; have tLe saltlsactloiri f bW icnig It has cured thousandB of . hopek.44 cases. Asthima; Bronchitis, La Gripp and all Throat, Chest amd . Luug Dls eases are surely cured by. 'it. Call o ' a. y druggist and geft a fk trial bottt -jeguOar size 50o. and 81.00. Every bot 1 m I j-inooizitaai roaaooaBa) Ii asrtonm Tsrtvtlls I S H OIS "SBVarl, Jr -r- mt KOTHANDUD BYYDraORU65T DELIVERED FRK imnii ecmernrnDirr m. 863 BROADWAY fcwYowcJ
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
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May 17, 1901, edition 1
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