Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / May 31, 1901, edition 1 / Page 4
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ASHEyilXE DAILY. GAZETTE.- MAY MJQQ ,1 - 4 1 J rC - I ' -1 4 V .- -1 r r iv - v - - - -r. .- - -.j.s1,-- - - a b m .. mm mm mmim mm m mm mm , ,. .m-m i r. :., THE GAZETTE. Pablishcd EveryMorning Exc. Mondays EBB INO CJOMPAiNY. TERMS OP SUBSCIUPTION: pally Gazette, 3- '''''S Iaily Gazee,-w? .-tt, 40 Weekly gm. IT .. . U-00 i GA2JD T!B TE&EttQ8 - afifc "three rings. 202, two rinses Business Office V MaATJBIK AOT TILLMAH. Whether; or not Senator Tillman is more of a "populist than a democrat does not interest us we know he is a demagogue. We shall not spend any sleepless nights figuring out the party status of Senator JklcLaurin. We know rPflks the truth, with the convinc ing force of one who knows and be liAves -what he talks about. His speech at Greenville, published in .these col- umnis a week ago, placed him outside the pale of Tillmanism and Bryantam. , . Within that pale it was forbidden to think, except according to the narrow . decrees of the Kansas Oty piaxrorm, until Mr. Bryan, or Mr. Tillman or Tr. AitMld announced some new polit- cal fad. The contest between Tillman and McLaurin is deeply interesting to us, as involving the question of an in- telllgent, thinking electorate, interested in the policies that are to advance or to destroy our national prosperity, r,Tifvspd to a careless, prejudiced elec- (KHrriw nnPr a. roartv lorate iimvius i name regardless of what that name fr- thp. interests of the ciUzen, the state or tne nauuu. iaurin has leaped the wall, and stands .tv 4o ,Q .hiTmiHatine "7" " political slavery to utter taie irum t, ira i Mon vf (hnsin(ft sense can I reach but 'one ooo,uSio in con.i.erf the progressive national policies that McLaurin advocates, and which chance . A, . .. to he the policies of the republican party, and it will be the aim of Tillman v,.a oiflt nat to meet McLau- tllM vwww w rim in a frank discussion of .ftiese pol icies, but by the arts of which they are masters arraign and organize the prej udice of voters against the man who thus dares to defy their supremacy The contest, as McLaurin has begun it, involves freedom of conscience and of soeedh in politics, lamd even if Mc Laurin suffers a partisan defeat in this he has already gained a lasting vie tory. The words of this courageous and clear-headed South Carolinian have sounded throughout all the land. He speaks as a true southerner for the ad vancement of the south. Whether he speaks as a republican or as a demo- I era,t, he speaks as an American citizen who would nromote the interests of the nation and especially of the por tion of it that gave him birth and ad vanced him to positions of trust. Hie associate in the United Stats senate has seen fit to antagonize him in this brave stand for the air consideration of the great questions involving nation al progress and to endeavor to drag him back to the level of slavish sub serviency to partisan creeds that have i served their day and been repudiated by the intelligence of the nation. The conflict that has centered about McLaurin in South Carolina has its counterpart in this state. Despite the recent success of despicable meth ods of partisan . demagaguery in North Carolina our state is far in advance of all the other so-called southern states in the independence of its citizens Id political thought and ac tion. What appears to be an awaken ing to & mew order in politics in South Carolina has long been the growing tendency in North Carolina. An ever increasing host of intelligent citizens here have grown tired of the supremacy of one political party, dominated (by a few professional politicians and North Carolina today in an honest election would cast its vote strongly against the retrogressive and destructive atti tude of the so-called democratic party as Tegards the national government. En these western, counties especially there is a growing opposltlon"""to the dictation of political bosses, md, the more the bulldozing methods , , such as Tpknan and his class "use in South Car olina are attempted' in this, state the feebler grows the hold of the demo cratic party on Its voters in this sec tlon of North Carolina. We believe this will be the case also in many other parts,, and that the whole south Is grad- ually breaking away from! subserviency to the arrogant bossism of such polit itloians, which are the product of one , party supremacy.' The Richmond Times. a democratic paper, speaking of the South Carolina situation says: 'While he great majority o2 the sou thern people are democrats, there now a large contingent rwho are mnr In accod iwlth the principles and policies james B. Norton Delicious -There fc po better frozen dainty than our ice cream. It is the best we have ever made, amid we have studied" the' Question for years. It is of pure quality, of rare deli cacy and delicious beyond com pare. " You'il Like It. - We supply- tfcebest that , money can buy vnd grains combine . Itr all our sunaner "drinks. I 2 C of the tiol' repubUoan party than thnBA nt the toatkmal democratic party Hon. Thoonas u. jrensnw, cucuiiu" m ' t . Vk n It mvii Tt recently written gome letters to oenaiw MLiajurin aioprovlng tnat gennemauu. McLaurin aproving that gentleman's course in congress, and the sentiments that he expressed' in his speech recently delivered at Charlotte, N. v. we de clares that he is a believer to, tne aoc trime of sound money and expansion, and says it will not be long before the cor- rectness of his position won .uyt" these questidna will be endorsed by the entire south. "Expansion and sound money," says he, "means increase mj the commerce of our country, higher nrfPPs for labor and the .products of la- bor amid greater prosperity gl"iJr - n. " Re 'tbeil goes on to speak of the interest which the south has Jn .Cinnan?a philipptaes ,and says that when Manna g .Aimericanized and our people ar .brought in close touch with -the rtvvfoca and JiQTiATiese nations, there oduction instead of over- production 0f cotton, and! the price will be advanced and "the mas oi uie lina and Georgia will blossom as the rose." Passinc on from that he, speaKS oi the necessity of promoting American carrying trade, and so intimates that he .g in fayor of the ship-subsidy bill. Fin- ally he says that a political party, to pe successful, must keep up with the mu8t gtand upon th llv ine. issues 0f the day amd abandon the follies of the past. We say that there thrOU,hout the south, especially n the manutfacturiug sections who are in thorough accord iwitn sena- .or McLaiirin and! (Mr. Crenshaw in the they entrtaill these questions andi it is a foregone conclusion that these will be neard irom in me forthcoming contest in South iCarolina "But that is not all: There are many o.mvrts in jfjhft south, we do not .gf- Sffi - orjty prty, utterly regardless of these economic questions to .which we have referred. The Momtgomery Advertiser, . the ieading democratic papers I in the south, makes bold the proposition UhicJi it says has not Ibeen controverted!. that it isibest for any state to have two strong parties to. contest for the con - j troi or anairs.. ioe i"1' 'oira"l is contrary to the very enius of gov eminent. - It snakes party issues men and not measures, amd it'bfrgets intol erance and toossism. We believe" that the srv&t hody ,of the southern jpeople are hartily sickasd tired of It, and! we believe, moreover, ; that with the negro question out of the way, and It is rap idly ibemg ' eliminatedv they would not tolerate it for long. The campaign for the new court house is to be a short one, as the election oc curs June 18 L It is hardly credittlte that any voter in-.tjhe city will oppose te imtrtwrmvnt ihiit In order to secure the ting of the 4nds every effort fihould be made to stimulate public opinion fav- onajbty to me lmjproveiment, wnicn win almost equally benefit the" city and the county. The man "out west" seems to- be in a very captious frame of mi ad jariic ularly as regards their women folk. Since Professor Crook took pains to make public that he had never kissed a woman, his mother not excepted, an other professor has publicly exclaimed "God help the man who marries a col lege bred woman" and till another has warned young men that the "so ciety woman" does not make a good I his clas tells tieni that for a man to jpart his hair in the middle is "evidence ' of degenerate instinct," he also warns 5 his students asramst shirt waists. All this, however, may be accounted for on the theory that these learned professors may have trouble of their own in deal ing with some special woman who, however fair she be, may not be fair to he. But what shall be said of Judge Waterman of Chicago, who is out with the statement that he would not believe a woman on oath for "Women are un reliable witnesses because they believe what they imagine." Apparently the gift of imagination is not limited to the women of Chicago and other western centres of learning Bon Marche Colored Lawns 5c: Colored Batiste ioc Colored Dimities 12 12c Children's Prrasols 15c, 25c, 50c, to finest.9 Ladies' Parasols, a fine stock, ranging in price from 50c to $8.50 each. Ladies' Sailor Hats from 19c to $2.50. Ladies' Knit ' Underwear 5c to finest. Maiehe, The Dry Goods Shop n I Opposite Postofffce and to have an almost hysterical abun-!- dance of ft. Is the following argument for or against the use of alcoholic beverages and tobacco? iSneakinK of the recent killing and eat-, ing of two missionaries by cannibals at Fry River. Guinea "The ibwaama. ur- eeonian" says: "These savages do "not eat missionaries because they have any j Captain Farris and fhe crew immedi religious hostility to ehem as preachers I ateiy vacated and warned all persons of a new faitth; taey only eat tnem le-l cause, as non-coflsumers or rum ana tobacco, their flesh is far more palatable thaui any other type of white man. In the judgment of a cannibal the meat of I a missionary is (better eating tthan any-1 thine- except the flesh of a young child, I another non-consumer of tobacco and I spirits. These cannibals not seldom I spare the lives of American awd uro-1 nAan sailors, for the stanDle reason tnatlThose ,atxara tne rerry steamer ss their flesh is so impregnated iwitn tneicapea. flavor of alcohol and tobacco .as to be I unpalatable as we findl that of crows, gulls, buzzards and other carrion con suming ibirds." - - i A society has been formed in Buffalo, N.Y., called the Order of Don't Knock, "To knock"is beginning of the cen tury English for "to backbite," to "speak ill of." The objects of the order are thus described in its constitutior : "Section 1. To overcome in its mem bers the deplorable habit of speaking ill of our fellows otherwise known as 'knocking' and by precept and exam- Tale trying to induce others to do The same. "Section 2. To better the social and moral condition of mankind by a true devotion in its member to the cause of charity in its broadest sense. "Section 3. To keep zh 3olden RuJe ever in the minds of its members. "Section 4. To (bind its irmb')is to gether in a social and fra:irnal man ner." Every person who joins the order (solemnly binds himself to pay a fine of one cent every time he is caught "knocking". The proceeds of the flnea - are to go to charity. Mr. Maurice TT. rtns nt RnfPaM fa tne supreme president. The society has . - . - i a..wiue neia ana nopes to nave a membership, but its first missionary efforts might, be devoted to the .South Carolina politicians and the western college professors. The Hon. Albert J. Beveridee sm,. tor from Tndifl.tia v rr i. l -UHBia t Kuoy commercial conditions there. amo wneny visit iOnarlanA urut wrmany ror the same purpose but will maKe exnaustlve study of the iRntnn empire ana it may be possible that he wiu extend Ms trip to Siberia: When senator Beveridge returns ie nrfM.fr will profit by his investigations for Mm is an expansive one whatever his policy may be. Kentucky cavaliers do not take kind ly to masculine shirt-waists. One John son appeared at a railway statiomi in the ciue urass state with his bosom en- - . v-u, .truuj.evciun, wnicn a bystander promptly inerf Orated. T-ha. is one Johnson and one shirtwaist less in. Kentucky. Atlanta Constitution. " , vvuiouuuu xw mis sort is inot I ment. "witnout tne aecision, con called, a Shirtwaist in North Pumllna I tinues the "Westminster Ciatti "he and its wearer evidently is not wanted in Kentucky. A newspaper whose col ;ua advertisements of business men . - - V 1. 11U Y more lnnuence in attracting atterai cxn ill, uullQing UD a tOWTl tV.-n rT other agency that can be employed. Peo. yi so wnere there is business. Capital and labor go where there is an enterpris ing community. No power on frtn ;a Cn ;Z S i?UJTJS.V aa news - a . . - - fPeLTe11 Patronized, and its power. 'wu appreciated. T. De Witt The south has on its (hands irjh Bryan views .in which it doesn't onrQ with any heartiness. 'New Torir Sun . ... disposal, for they have been 7riM for 1Z S!T- ?!ej,a!?rty1paid rr,Z "I" w"u" ine Pe- .... -vCU. nanotte Observer. J-Jiat tne voter will !h ipaa cmiK44. the influence of rarty boaspa n ture in (North Carolina was oroven bvl iaie municipal elections in this state. iaere was a larsre measure f ncrA- ent action in the electicmi of menn and measures. Party lines -wr hmirAn whenever, m the judgment of the voter the ublia interna Ttrr 4 r,A Is as it should be. and i!s . rwX, tZ 11. 1 r- iimi urn u .a i i n .viu. uajmuw journal. A MAU WHO REMEMBERED. Mr, Thos. S. Linny. one tim nKmi. ca. director gen.ra! the Seattle X. M. C. A., since Ma rvi rortune an tne .Klondike has given time and money to that association and suc ceeded In removing a large mortgage from tne ouiiaing, giving $10,000 for the purpose himself. In speaking of it he said, "While connected with the Seattle association as general secretary the interest money necssary to raise was our most serious problem. After strug gling with that for six years, I had a keen appreciation of what a handicap to the work this debt was. After my good fortune in the nortti, I not only gave put woncea to relieve the T. M. C. A. from debt. Since the dett Jia been paid, the work has doubled an has been the best in its history." lUlmtinn'ilP1? world poliUcs 5t THE rBKIGHT" steameihauriKb BLOWS T ATOMS aytbe ExplMlon of 100O ! mtlmg Caps miteli Set Off S10O 9 j ntto mnu 120OUf rvwr Aw n y from tb IMsasir9fri Bbmi a Bile from tfc BoonevtUe, Mo,, May 29. By the ex plosion of 1000 detonating caps, which' set off 2100 pounds of dynamite and boo kegs' 61 powder, "the fourteen-ton freight boat Laurine, plying between this city and Rocheport, on tne Mis souri river, was blown to pieces" last night. ' Considerable damage was done to propeftyf or a mile around,- Two laborei-s who were aboard the boat are missing. The Laurine .was the prop erty of the Rocheport Ferry and Packet Company and was about ready to laae her dock with a cargb of explosives for use in building a railroad below i town when the accident occurred. The boat was propelled by a gasoline engine. When a match was applied to the generator the gasoline took fire. hear by. The fire spread rapidly to the gUpply tanks of gasoline and a second eXplosign occurred. This evidently set 0ff the explosives on board, and with report that was heard miles away tht boat was blown to atoms, The ferry-boat Joseph L. Stephens lying 500 yards above, was considre.biy damaged, the wood work of the upper deck and pilot-house being torn away. Three residences belonging to .Topt- Sherrer, Mrs. Sallie H. Johnson h.thj. Charles Dunkle, about 6C0 yards from the disaster, were wrecked. EUfteen plate glass windows in busi ness houses on Main street, half a mil'- xway, were broken, and nearly all o: the windows and glass doors for a mil' surrounding the accident were wreckeJ by the concussion. THE OMBIIN.HAKV FBAI'DS, SfrKHiRt WHmoii Gets Three nn I FriMou for Mealing Ktipp!le f.l-u IphruI Towiily aii Trial. Manila, May 29.-rommissary Ser- .enced to three years' imprisonment ir. '3ilibid prison for stealing supplies. The trial of Harold M. Pitt, mana ger of Evans & Co., charged with im properly purchasing government stores. las been postponed. The court-martial of Lieutenant Richard H. Townley for alleged par- :icipation in the commissary frauds at "6" ureu- fni in,.hiS ttm?ny .fd nitted that he asked a contracting lrm to contribute to Captain Reed formerly depot commissary at Manila) 2000 and a percentage on future busi ness toward covering Major Davis' shortage. The defense is that the mo tive was purely to shield a brother officer. - - Rear Admiral Kempff has sailed for I China on the battleship Kentucky: I It. is settled that the governing board of Manila is to consist of ah I army officer, a Filipino and an Amerl- lean civilian. Mainr Bfltsnn a r,ttn with Unri Un:? 7" -'V I Out IKHiBOE HOCfRIKE 1VEAEEHED Bntreneeof the Vnlft! Hleteeen fhe Seene mm a World Power Regarded mm m IMstnrblnjr Vaetor by tne Ea repeen Chancellories. London, May 29 "The world Si large stands to gain something by this momentous decision by which Congress may devise for the dependencies a form of government outside the Amer ican Constitution," said the Westmin- gazette to-day. d focussing the I United States Supreme Court's judg- United States would have been unable to adopt a more liberal trade policy outside of America than within with out disarranging the whole of their continental fiscal system. The relation of America to Europe and the world is profoundly modified by the new depart ure. Colonies mean a navy, a navy means naval bases and coalinsr sta tions, and naval bases are insecure unless they are backed up by the pos i rjcscitrii ui m. n rirnnnn im is t no session of a Hinterland. This is the 1 logic of imperialism, and it may lead the Americans as far as it has led us, Moreover, by stepping outside their continent, the Americans undoubtedly weaken the force of the Monroe doo trine. There is a certain recinroeitv in the present arrangement that helps to reconcile Europeans to their exclusion tftvm Nfll lth lmain v,i if 4- TT.UJ from South America, but if the United "f60- Wltn a strong navy and an American canal, enabling it to concen- trate on either ocean, she can hardlv claim to comrt th. which limits liability while rui tt in a-rvn limit on ner exnansion- Thft pntran of the United States on the spprr m a world Power is already regarded as a I s"1 ulotli' UII18 tactor Dy tne isu- ropeau cnanceiiones. xne new de- P4"111 makes it more important than I before for the British and Americans, by a l P0881 means, to keep on good terms with each other and settle by f.ndly negoOation. all outstanding AN IMPORTANT ISSUE TO BE DECIDED. lins S Washington, May 29. An important conces sions in the Philippines made before the passage of the Spooner amendment was presented to Secretary Root by Mr. Dos Passes, of New York, representing the Pacific Commercial Company, a New York corporation which has .ac quired whatever rights in the Island of Palawan were held 1Sy Prince Poniatowsky. This nobleman contract ed January 22, 1900, with- the Sultan of Sulu for a franchise covering all com mercial mineral and agricultural rights In the large island of Palawan, Tfie Question presented to the War Depart ment now is whether it is still in force since the passage of the Spooner amendment. Secretary Root regards i consideration, ' ' me issue as apt and; will give tt due i B: Stands j for H Stands for HAMMOCKS Tbls Combination Is at , " BAIR BRIDGE'S 47Iatttn Avefue. : ASHSJYlLliB BUINI CX IJLEWE; SUMMER TERM. BE&INS MONDtAr, ' JUNljflW.'. i J&CRANGE NOW TO BNTECR 'RnnkkeeDihir Oourse. (S andntS. ... ... Shorthand aad Typewriting Course rpenmanship by the week penmanship 'by the month Telegraphy iy the month. ... Books and stationery 3.iu to u.uu. By beginning now yotit Soimplee get a situation. College n Paragon floor r Telephone No. 704. . Lives Ios in the French'Bpoad Two unknown bodies were washed up on the river (bank yesterday after noon while two men in a buggy at tempted to cross Goose Nest bridge a few miles below the city during the storm Tuesday, The horse took fright at the mass of water rushing against the . bridge and dashed over taking the men and buggy. The bodies were found a few hours later several miles below where the accident took place. On searching the clothes to find something to identify them, in their pockets were found a few keys and money, also sev eral-hard biscuits which felt like lead, enough to weight any man 'down. If those biscuits had been made with Rumford Baking Powder they would have acted as a life preserver (for such ia Rumford) and the men could not have sunk. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. New York, May 29. At a meeting o the special agents of railroads of th United b'cates and Canada held to-da. W. G. Baldwin, of Roanoke, Va, waj elected president. New Orleans, May 29. An oil gushe: of mighty proportions was brought to day, according to n special dispatc fifteen miles f-outhe..t oi Hou.iio, La. forty miles west of I-Jew Orleans. Havana, May 29. Bids for the sew ering and paving of Havana wer? opened to-day. Only one bid was re ceived and this was from Onderdong, MacClellan & Dady, of New York. Th amount specified was $13,855,575.01. Jamestown, Tenn,, May 29. An oil pusher ia reported to have been tapped T ruar ho ITMitHolrv lino tTuontv I north of Jamestown. It Is the second rapid flowing well recently located that section. in Jackson ville,Pla, May 29. The situa tion in the city is still very quiet, the only exciting thing that happened today- being the collapse of a temporary building, which .t severely, injured rtwo men, perhaps fatally, and Injured two others badly. New York, Ma- 23. Seventeen Pro 4uce Exchange memberships were sola dt auction to-day. The highest price paid was $300 and the lowest $225. Less than a month ago when the stock market boom was on memberships sold I'S high as $10uo each. London, May 29, The Norwegian Steamer Nor, Captain Maxom, from Tampa March 6th for Norfolk, March 12th, for Stettin, has been posted at Lloyds as missing. Nothing has beer, heard of her since she sailed. The No was of 1357 tons net register. Boston, May 20. The jury trial of the suit of Mrs. Josephine A. Wood bury, of this city, claiming $150,000 damages from Miss Mary Baker Eddy, f Concord, N. H., founder of the Chris Han Science sect, fpr Libel, was begun in the Suffolk County Superior Court here to-day," and, according to the statement of the different counsel, it is likely to consume the greater por tion of three weeks. CONSUMPTION AND ASTHMA CURED Medicine Will NoCCure" Consumption and Asthma if Taken In to the Stomach. For one hundred years Asheville doc tors have been dosing the stomach to cure the lungs. They admit among themselves that it only succeeds once in a thousand cases. Lung medicine kills the stomach. The only medicine for the lungs that can be taken into the air pipes is by the use of the Koch Inhalation Ma chine. This wonderful Invention vaporize the Koch tuberculine medicine, that kills the germ, so it can be breathed into the lungs, and the germ life is stamped out. It is combined with heal ing oils and disinfectants, iwhlch purify and heal the diseased lungs. In fact, no form of germ life can live when thor oughly under the influence of those oily vapora. It heals up the sore places, the diseased internal coatings are thrown off, and the" poisons are expec .torated and coughed out; new life is brought to the parts, and thousands of cases have been cured. The doctor will give you the addresses of hundreds of happy relieved and. cured patients In Baltimore, New York, Philadelphia, Rochester and other cities. They urge you to Investigate, for good proof con sists in not oo much what you can do, but absolutely what you - have done. If they, positively cure consumption and asthmaand would not Jet you know it, why, would It not be doing an injus tice to the unfortunate sufferer? Aye, more-iit would be criminal if they did not publish these facts. Therefore, they only ask of you to let them prove what they can do by what they have done. Call or write them at No. 5 W. Court Square. L. ' j . rf.-ys !;-'; 1 BOOKS $27.50 27.50 . 1.50 .5.00 .10.00 (3 months) ... . ' e at a time of the year when you win txuildUn opposite poatofflce. srd H. S. SHOOKLET, Principal. reeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeo tCv Telephone 1J3. II'PHERSOH & MOORE. LUNIBINGi o IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. Tin and slate . roofing, GTuttering and Cornice Work. Repairs of all kinds usually done in a first lass Tin Shoppromptly attended to. Steel Ranges, Fire Bricks, Fire Clay and Tile Pipe for roof Irains always on hand. 46 College Street."? The North Ashe ville Carpenter & Repair Shop . . . is the place to have your furniture re paired. All kinds of cabinet work. Fly screens made to order. Well equipped with foot and hand power machinery. Estimates giveto on all kinds of job work. R IkHAYMOiND, Prop 58 Bast street. Phone 533. JOHN H. SPARKS' Old Reliable Virginia Shows and World's Greatest Train ed Animal Exposition will exhibit in . ASHEVILLE on Monday Afternoon and Night June 3rd. Admission only 25c; Child ren under 10 years of age only ioc. See Romeo, the largest and heaviest Lion in captivity, and Mary, the small est and best performing baby elephant on earth. 'See our little baby lions, a whole family of them, born at Mt. Airy, N. C, Five performing Horses, Ponies, Mules, Dogs, Goats, Monkeys and Birds. Don't miss seeing the Famous Wentz Family of Acrobats, eight in number, four ladies and four gents., the cham pion aerialists of the (world. See our Grand Free Balloon Ascention and thrilling parachute jump given free to all from the show grounds, at 1 & 7 p. m., rain or shine. Corner of Soutbside Ave, and Depot street. NOTICE O'F SALE. By virtue of the power of sale ve?i in the undersigned trustee, by a .ci ia-n Deed of Trust, bearing date Ai-i:I 1890, executed by H. . Jones an J W. Malone, which Deed of Trust is registered in the office of the Resist Deeds for Buncomfbe County, in Book No. 19 of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust on pages 604 et seq., to which reference is hereby made, and by reason oi de fault having (been made in the payment of the indebtedness secured by the said Deed of Trust, said undersigned trustee will sell for cash at public auction at the Court House door in the city of Ashevilie, County of Buncombe, and State of North Carolina, on Monday, the first day of July, 1901, the land conveyed in the said Deed of Trust, being bound ed and described as follows: Lying and being in the County of Bunembe a-M State of North Carolina, Beginning P a rock pile, E. J. Armstrong's and Ar thur Penland's corneTrand runs south 22 east 67 poles to a stake to the present Haywood road; then north 41 east 12 poles in said road; thence north 26 east 16 poles in said road; then north 33 east 8 poles in said road, then north 24 east 5 poles to a stake, Thomas Hendrick's line; then' north 2 east Z poles 5 links to a stake, Ar thur Penland's corner in the old Hay wood road in Hendrick's line; thf south 55 degress west 16 Toles to a staK then south 83 west 9 poles; then nortn 84 west 30 poles to the beginning. This May 29, 1901. N. PLAMANDON, Trustee-. KOTICE OF DISSOLUTION . Notice is hereby givea that the firm of CarrA Ward will be dissolved Friday June 14th, 1901, and that fixtures ard lease for two years with privilege L five will be sold to the highest bidr on thalt date: The nnrchaser of sJ:i.e take stock of goods at cost. ,M3t Cducate Tour Bowels TTlth Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation 0o,25o. If C. O. C. fail, drugjrisi refund r- -I.- 1?" 7 r J!
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 31, 1901, edition 1
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