Newspapers / The Asheville Democrat (Asheville, … / Feb. 6, 1890, edition 1 / Page 5
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a i Of on the the we are Y with tVio WppWi OiiPs.iriTi VaJhixgtgn, Jan. 30. After rptular routine morning i cine6s was completed, the Sen ate today listened to speeches k-r hPnaiurs v auvc emu. j iiauiu- tln on the race question and cnatof Butler's negro emigra-; tion bill. i i ! 31 r. jrance's speech took a Inimorous turn, aud was fre-i auently applauded by the crowded galleries. He began bv saying that the sins fathers ishall be visited children which he said was an other way of saying tfrat the mistakes and crimes of one gen eration remain to plague anoth er generation. ! He sketched the history of slaveryfrom its introduction to its abolition, and said that for the sake of the negro, todav threatened not on political affliction but with a servile . war wnose , weapons shall be the midnight torch and the assassin's dagger, and whose victims' shall be sleeping women and children, He criticized ZIr. Ingal ls's re marks 4s pyrotechnics conceal ing paucity of ideas. He had searched that speech, anl wond ered where the remedy for the existing evils was suggested in it. , The KansaJBenatorfs "jus tice" was about as definite as the twinkling j that remained under tjie closed eye-lids after withdrawal of light. "Justice" means that the people I of the South should quietly and grace fully submit to negro rule wher ever the negroes were iii a ma joritv. I - . I Since the war whenever the negro had rule, his course had been marked byi .failure and ruin. A few years of siich rule would constitute a damnable blot on the memorv of those who authorised it, and who had look ed, on with complacency so long as the thieves were Repjiblcans and the! victims Democrats. Mr. Yance said the negro had begun to prosper only when the control jof affairs had been taken from his hands. 9 I He referred to the suppression of the popular vote north of Mason & Dixon's line, to the exclusion of the negroes from theatres and other places there He said; it was to be hoped that one black man would bej chosen to represent that section in Con gress some day, and that the intelligent black man might some day be sent to represent theUnitied States somewhere else than in Hayti or Liberia, (laugh ter.,) j . Mr. Mance said notwithstand ing: the threats of Mr. Ihgalls, he of the rescue iren if WAYNESYILLE. I if" THE CHIEF TOWN OF HAYWOOD I i COUNTY. A Lively, Growing, Place With Nat ural Advantages Second to no Other Place in the West Haywood County and What it Contains. Haywood county, just west of and ad joining Buncombe is one of the wealth iest and most progressive counties Iwest of the Blue Ridge. Its fine farming sec tions, timbered lands and mineral depos its are already too well-known to call forth further comment as to their value and importanhe in the commercial world, and we shall deal only, in this ar ticle, with those facts riot so generally known to the people-abroad whose'eyes are turned southward, and whose foot steps will soon be hastening to this God loved, God-favored section of the : "Land of the Sky." I .A.' -ft- a -MA iia 'M I I II III I I lin S -w v-v y-k .n .n. - I fiiiiinci y CtC. (ilCi lUCi Tli L i . ieaamg nouses in their resnective lines t J, , . . in the town nL p ' iu wiuwuv ana nouana learnea men ill me town. 1 lie Conner sl 1 ve Dpm- I - ,i . , . . cue w ueieurare me invention published by Bean & of the compound microscope, which oc- liberal patronage ! and curred in 1590, a$ the beautiful Dutch of the countv. city, .of Middelburg. The idea of the in- first-class I hotel. A. D. XETLSOX. CHAS. JTEILSOsr. ocratic weekly, Rogers, enjoys a T it. rv m is me omcia nro-an i "pO"" Waynesville needs a however, and her citizens 'should stir themselves in the matter. ! I The The Berry Case. strument j was originated by a firm bf. spectacle ; makers of Middelburg, Hanc Zansz, or. Jansen, as it is often given. and his sOn,!ZachaLrias Zansz. It is not known whether itjwas the father or the son who first thobght of using double vu uyuu suciiy iur tummu pns. but nrohah d t vena tbo tr i i ) J - 1 I . WU. M-k. ueorge Bell, which resulted in a mistrial made microscopes for several years of at tne last term ofj the! Criminal Court, is such excellence that they -were not ma- now ion trial. An application j for a tenally improved upon until the present change of venue in this case was refused century. H i I 1 I TS !J '-- . I . . . . and a special venire of 200 ordered. every urop or pater can be a micro scope, inis we oiten perceive when by chance a drop has! exactly under it some siuuu uuitt wn wrucn we are ac- It is magnified by the liquid NEILSON BEOS. ' j ' -.'"!,; Family Groceries, PINE STREET. The best of Family Groceries,Canned Goods, etc., etc., constantly kept. Fresh Country Produce anp Good Butter specialties. Give us a call. '..! ' - Selling strictly for cash, we can sell cheap. . Solicitor Carter. wish to cbmmehd the action of uuainted Solicitor Carter of the Criminal Court in lens, as it would lie by one of crystal W. 0. WOLFE. kahiie m Htm mmm, "VTORTH CAROLINA, Bckcomb uorrif L - ty. In the Superior Court. juiia A. Martin vs. Ueoree H. Martin. Notice. The defendant above named will take no tice that an action entitled as above, has been commenced in the Superior Court of Buncombe County, wherein the plaintiff demands judgment for a divorce from the bonds of matrimony now existing between said plaintiff and said defendant. And the said defendant will further take notice that he is required to appear at the next term of the Superior Court of said county, to be held on the second Monday in March, 1S90, at the Court House in said county, in Ashe ville, N. C, and answer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the court lor the relief de- mandea in said complaint. W". T. REYNOLDS, . Clerk Superior Court Buncombe County. Carter A Ckaig, Att'ys for Plaintiff. We believecl that tlie people North vi'ould rush to tne their southern bret of that i occur prising of (the negro should ; but the houth would not need their help. If that upris ing should come, it would bring the solution of this race difficulty.-' I ; I - Mr. Vance said that he did not claim that the negro was incapable of civilization, only that he could ! not keep pace with the progress of the) white race. His solution for the race probleid was 4 'hands off." If the noi'th would cease to, inter fere there was ho danger that the nesrro would be driven to the wall. Every speecn Senate denunciators m bt the the southern people, only postponed I lie coming ui nicit uu ul iicix- the white and between monv bin ok races. He did not think the bill! of the Senator from South Carolina for assisting the removal of the negro from the south, reached the case) Few people would leave the United States under itslprovisions. and those probably would jbe the best. There wTas plenty of room for the negro in the northern and western states. If, said he, thenego is a gefod thing, let us divide him. ( Laughter.) Unit ed Press Dispatch. ! HOLOCAUST IN WASHINGTON. Haywood contains 230,887 acres of land valued at $970,512; and the total valuation of real and personal property owned in the equnty foots up SoOi.Ow. the school tax is .,200.43, and the county tax amounts to $4,276.45. Farming is : the chief avocation of the citizens of Haywood, and some of the very nnest farms in North Carolina, are to be found m this countv. These farms j are well stocked, the tillers of the soil live in good,! comfortable houses, their lands are in a high state of cultivation, and peace and plenty seem to rule in Ha-wood. The agricultural products of the county comprise wheat, corn; oats, hay, tobacco,1 all varieties of fruits and vegetables and small grain. Stock rais ing is also a feature witfi the farmers in ome sections of the county, and lumber ing, mining and milling are also carried on to some extent. COUNTY OFFICERS. U The officers of Haywood are as fol lows: bhenii, v. li.; L.eatherwood : Clerk Superior Court, j J. K. Boone ; Register of Deeds, H. Bi Moore ; Treas urer, 11. A. L. Hyatt ; Coroner, Robert Walker; Surveyor, T.4 S. Siler; Super intendent Public Instruction, R. A. Sen tell ; County Commissioners, Chairman E. H. Howell, .las. M. Gwyn and C. B. Roberts. Hon W. W. Hargrove is the representative bf the county in the Gen eral Assembly. He is a Democrat and made a faithful and efficient member of the last Legislature. Haywood is in the forty-first senatorial district and was ably represented in the last General As sembly by Capt. M. C. Toms, of Hender- WAYXESVILLE, " . ; I ' !; The county seat, is a live and growing town of about two thousand inhabitants, 'situated nearly in the geographical cen ter of the county and on the line of the Murphy division of the Western .-North Clarolina Railroad. It is the largest town West of Asheville, both in population and commercial importance. It has good schools and churches, and the moral tone of its people is of the highest type. The private residences of its people are, iii many instances, simply elegant, and its business houses will compare most favorably in architectural beauty and immensity of stocks carried by mer chants, with similar institutions in much larger towns than Waynesville. The Cburt House ofi Haywood is one of the most attractive iin the West, and is lo cated upon al beautiful elevation in the western section of the town. Haywood White t Sulphur Springs, near "Waynes ville, is one of the features of this sec tion, and the j elegant hotel and wonder ful waters of the famous; Springs are most favorably known to the thousands ofi tourists who annually visit the moun tains of Western North Carolina. The hotel is at present under the excellent management of Dr. G. D. S. Allen; & Son, and the prospects for a brilliant season this year are most flattering. The delightful on4 and the bnlv live minutes pleasant consenting to submissions of manslaugh ter in both the Fire and the McElrath cases.j Many a guilty man escapes by the action of solicitors (insisting on that which is not justified by facts ; in other words, insisting oh prosecution for mur- The most I i ancient civilizations pos sessed the art of producing: convex of Tables and Slabs, verv low fcr cash der when the case j only involves manslaughter. Jurys will' convict fre- I quently for manslaughter, when the in sistence of the prosecution for mur der brings about either acquittal or mistrial; the jury j not believing the prisoner to be Iguilty of murder, yet, owing to argument and charge, are em barrassed, are led to believe the prisoner rlasses with imagnif ving power, for they have been found sin the ruins of their cities. Such glasses had, and still have, many important luses, butj it was the combination! of two lenses wiiich began the development of that marvelous in strument jof moderp time?, the compound microscope. Why should men celebrate the threr hundreth; anniversary of; such an inven tion? j . ! i . j 'I The complete answer to this question would iill ah encyclopedia in many large volumes, i Take, for example, the art ol New lot of designs just received. Large lot You will save money by calling on ; me before pur chasing. ., Wareroom AYolfe Building, S. E. Court Sauare. - M oclO-lv Reduction, for 1890. Carolina Banner, A DOLLAR WEEKLY. must be hung, which they believe ought ress during the lalt century than it had 0ne 3 ear in advance $1.00, on time $1.25 not to be, or be acquitted, which they! equally believe he ought not to be. If solicitors would di-aw the distinction in their prosecutionsj between murder and manslaughter, we! believe there will be more j convictions!, and! punishments of those who take law in their hands and slay their fellow men. j We; believe in hanging, yet we believe that proper discrimination should be made, and an holiest solicitor is called on to make it. made lef ore; from jthe beginning of time. It is indebted for this advance chief! v to the use of the microscope, which has re vealed essential facts as to the nature and causes of disease, and thus suggested both the means of 'avoiding and of cur- insr it. Botahv, zoology, geology, chemistry. all (are greatly indebted jto this instru ment, and the debt is increasing every Six mos. " . . . .50, -. .65 Good paperlarge circulation, splendid advertising medium. . Try it once and vou will not be without it. Sample copy tree. - MJsKl 1 . KIJNG, Editor. hour. A pall of over the future of scone were stricken out ;of Montreal Star. darkness would fall science if the micro- existence.' STATE NEWS AND GOSSIP. An effort is bein furnace in Murphy! The Murphy Bu the W. N. C. R g made to put an iron I I :i letin says grading on is getting on ! the Compressed Air as a Motive Power. The use; of; compressed air as a motive power for tramways in France is ex tending. The system adopted is that in vented by M. Mekarski, the director of 1 i home ! stretch. The last ten miles of solid earth has been removed. H ! f Charlotte has secured the location there bf the Lutheran Seminary with a j subscription of $25,000. She will now turn her attention to the Baptist College which Raleigh is trying to get and Dur- ashevilIe carriage AND - MAOHINEtSHOP ;J.H. W00DT. "Proprietor. 21-25 WIIiLOW ST., ASHEVILiIiE. Machine shops compiete. S Can. repair or aupneate any parts ot lachimery. Carnages the Nantes tramwavs, which have been I Buggies, Road and Farm Wagons made or re- Twr' ar no-r the paired, au worK guaranteed, i Horse-shoeing I , novv-ly , j i -loirn upt-ueu bmw iow. i xwu vcdis uSu nit by expert workmen system was successiuiry, appuea on tne liive me a can tramways at Nogent, in the neighbor hood of Paris, arid jmore recently on those of Berne and Limoges. This year it is to be substituted for horse power on the tramways of Lyons. The inventor asserts that his svstem is far more eco- John G. Lindsey & Sons, 65 North Main' Street, Asheville, N. C raised enough ham, but not having yet monejr. j I The; new Greensbpro Patriot, will ap pear to-morrow after al suspension of! several months, under the:editorial man- are offering remains of Summer Goods at a great reduction, and are receiving from day to day new and seasonable stock o meet the iau and winter trade, In addition to staple goods, vuich all must have, we are putting in a fresh lot of fashiona mucn cneaper tnan electricity or fGr men, women and children. Our stock is all nomical thad horse Jtraction the cost bf coal per day of a machine equal to eight or ten horse power being! only four shil lings agement of Messrs "VTORTH CAROLINA, Madison County. N. M. Anderson. W. li. Anderson. James Kay and wife. Eline Ray,J. W.An derson, and the heirs of John Anderson, de- . ceased, Petitioners, vs. Marcma Humphries, wife of David Humphries, John G. Anderson, roily nson, li. li. Anderson. Jane Keith, wife of Thomas Keith. Dora Marchbanks, wife of William Marchbanks. Sarah Carter, wife of John Carter, Cling Anderson. John "Anderson, P. Anderson, Esther Anderson. Or J. Ander son, Maud Ray, D. J. Ray, F. M. Ray, Alice Kay. -Madison ureenwood. A. J. lireenwooa. Petition for Sale for Partition. In the Probate Court. In this case it appearing to the Court that the defendants Marcina Humphries, Madison Greenwood, A. J. Greenwood, Jane Keith, Maud Ray, D. J. Ray, F. M. Ray and Alice Ray are non-residents of this State and that sum monses cannot be personally served on them, it is therefore ordered that publication be made for six weeks in The Asheviixe Demo crat, a weekly newspaper published in the city of Asheville, for said non-residents to ap pear before m? at my office, on the 1st day of March, ani show cause, if any they have; why the prayer of said petitioners should not be granted. Given under my hand and seal ot office this 13th day of January, 1S0. J. J. li 1.1 rJ, Clerk Superior Court. In this case it appearing to the Court that the defendant, M. E. Robinson, is a non- - -XJORTH CAROLINA MADISON COUN jH TY. J. W Ramsey vs. S. C. Robinson, Daniel Wallen, Edmond Reuce, M. E. Rob inson and Julius Brooks. An Action for Debt. In the Superior Court. iring to t . Robin S' resident of this State, and after due search cannot be found, and that summons cannot be personally served on him, it is there fore ordered that publication be made for six successive weeks; in The Asheville DhmocrAt, a newspaper, published in the town of Asheville, N. C, requiring said de fendant, M.E.Robinson, to appear at the next term of the Superior Court of Madison County, to be held at the Court House in Marshall, on the 21th day of February, 180, and answer or demur to the complaint of the plaintiff, and let the said defendant take notice, that failing to answer the case will be heard ex parte as to him. Given under my nana ana seal oi omce this 6th day of January, 1890. J. J. WHITE, Clerk Superior Court Madison Co. Gudger & Pritchard, Att'ys for Pltf. Bethel and Scales. The old journal is hjoary with the vicis situdes of two entire generations.! It The venerable and who still sur, ;inal founders. Jrs. Secretary Tracy, Miss Tracy and a Servant the Vietnras. - terrible calamity occurred m Wash- in 3 N ligioh City on the morning of February The house of Secretary Traqv of the - . ..." ..., av7c;mjrut on nre an i in spite oi tne it " ! I rhtjric c-ilorts of the firemen Mrs. Tracv i - 1 . i . i and a tiaughter. received such J injuries that, ''death resulted. Mrs. Tracy was j foiiind by the lire men' in her bed in a state of sinYocation. She was carried out, but every eilort! to restore! her to consciousness failed Sand she died within a few minutes of j hemorrhage. Miss Tracy's body when found was! already chjirred beyond recognition as was also th body of a servant Secretary Tracy birjiself'was found in; a state of jsuffoca tioh and removed from the house. He was restored after hours of exertion and will recover. Other members j of the farjiilv made narrow escapes. j Another account of Mrs. Tracy's death is tjliat she received her fatal injuries by dropping from a window in the ejifort to eape f rom the rlarhis. location is a Springs are walk- from the town. In Wavhesville the Battle House, National Hotel and Merchants Hotel are the leading hostel ries,. but many families take boarders during the summer and j fall months. Waynesville has a splendid military cdmpany the Richland Rifles, Capt. W. Scott Brown commanding. The com pany at present has forty three members and is in a healthy and growing condi tion. The legal profession is also largely represented here. Judge J. C. L. Gudger is the acknowledged ' father of the bar." Other leading attorneys are G. S. Fergu- son, Aiaen jiowen, nom. u. turner, Geo. II. Smathers, W. B. (Ferguson, J; M. Moody, E. B. Xorvell and AV. T. Crawford. The medical guild is com posed of Drs. j. Howell Way,: E. iB- Webb, J. B. IMcIntosh, G. D. SJ Allen, t. i. iien aim n. Xj. riiis.; I COMMERCIAL. i The Bank of Wavnesville. Capt. A. A Iowell President, and F. A Barnes cash ier, is a comparatively new institution in Waynesville, but; one that has met with much encouragement and support since its establishment one year ago. !A gen eral banking and collection business is transacted by this concern. Rogers & Justice, W. f. Lee, Geo. W., Williams, dealers in general merchandise ; Moody S. White; dates back to 1824. honored Lyndon Swtaim, vives was one of the- ori i i Like listening to anloracle is the infor mation he gives of tjie ups and downs incident to the newspaperdom of that day. It is hoped that the community and the press of the; State will extend a cordial welcome to the rehabilitated can didate! News-Observer, j I Reidsville to dated steam power; and that the machinery is fresh and of the newest for fall and winter simple ana aoes not; require a sKinea mechanic to Control, it The British consul cent report, states that! "the tramwavs of legitimate man can do. that town, which are worked by the sys- 0f tern of M. Mekarski, alluded to above, We manufacture tin-ware, do all kinds of U job work, and sheet-iron Jworki ; Roofing and at iN antes, m a re-1 we propose makihff prices as low as any tritimate man can do. Thanking: the public for past patronage, and soliciting a continuane the same, we are A special from lanta tConstitution s was well savs the At- January 28, knovn, there was more at stake in the itrial of Mrs. Cora Morris, charged with causing the death of liei husband b chloroform,! just closed than the mer' conviction or ac quittal; of the prisoner. There is the large estate of Mr. Morris, bequeathed in his will to his wife, and a ten thous and dollar insurance policy on his life, also payable to Mrs. Morris. The ac quittal of the prisoner, of course, throws all this into her hands," whereas if she continue to give satisfaction! The cars are comfortable and run smoothly, with little noise. They do not interfere with the general traffic in the streets, and theii immunity from accidents is remarkable. The average speed is about eight 'miles per hour; but it can- be easily increased or moderated, and Sin case of need an Once a Week. Very Respectfully, JOHN G. LINDSE Y & SONS. octlO-tf ASHEVILLE "VTORTH CAROLINA MADISON COUN lV TY. T. B. West vs. P. A. Cummings, Executor of J. L.. Henry, dee'd, and Wra. Taylor, Administrator of R. Love.dec'd. An-Action for Spcific Performance. , In the Superior Court. In this case it appearing t5 the Court that the defendant. William Taylor, is a non- resident of this State, and after due search cannot be found, and that summons cannot be personally served on him, it is therefore ordered that publication be made for six successive weeks in The Ashevil,t,e Demo crat, a newspaper published m the town of Asheville, N. C, requiring such defend- : ant, William Taylor, to appear at the next term of Superior Court of Madison County to be held at the Court House in Marshall, on the 24th day of February. 1890, and answer or demur to the complaint of the plaintiff" And let the said defendant take notice, that failing to answer, the case will be heard ex parte as to him. Given under my hand and. seal of office his (it b dav of January, 190. j. j. White, Clerk Superior Court Madison Co. Gudger & Pritchakd, Att'ys for Pltf. Notice. had been convicted t band wonld have been This is the home of Mrs. is located in this thriving is located most of tioned in the will o learned to-ni:rht tha ie will of her hus- riull and void. i' i Morris, and it town where the property nien Mr. Morris, j It is . there will be yet more lawsuits over the matter, and there is more unrest in store for pretty Mrs. Morris! The relatives of the dead man will contest his v ill on the; charge of the infidelity of Mrs. Morris and overpersua sion on her part in jinducing her! hus sband to make its provisions in her fa vor. The Mutual BejnefitLife Insurance Company, of Newark, NJ.L, announce that they will light the case until judg ment day before theyj will pay over the ten thousand dollar policy.. L . j St. Petersburg. The British Medi cal Journal thus describes the "grippe' The 'Grippe" iri A correspondent o FOUNDRY AND as it manifests itself is frequently spoken as iiiiluenza, but the, of this disease are far ! more frequently absent than present. ures in common are the rapid course, the extremely rapid spre ill Petersburg: "It of in the lay papers typical symptoms and the ! only feat- MACHINE SHOP. NO. 8 BUTTRICK STREET. U and the frontal MANUFACTURES AND. REPAIRS headache, the great running of the nose and eVes being absent in all the cases ! The two most that 1 nave ever seen prominent symptoms in the present epi J. B. COLE, Prop. 4U uejrs. Subscribe for the Only $1.50 CRAT. vance. A.SIIEVILLE T)EMO- ! : per annum, in ad- Ray and F' R. Justice, & Keinhardt, hardware; C. stoves and tinware; C. Fi Poindexter, furniture; J. books, toys, etc; Jno. M. Davis, watches jewelry, etc.; TV. O. Muller & Co.,, wine and liquor store; W. W. Stringfield, real estate; G. D. SA Allen & Son and Mcin tosh & Co., driigi and medicines; Mrs. Netice to Railroad Contractors. ! j i -I i ! Office Chief Exgineei: 1 ! i FnF.crTi Rroad VIvllf.t I? ATT.iinr V Asheville, N. Cj., Jan. 1, 1890. ) Proposals will be ) received up to 12 o'clock noon, January 21, ,1890. for grad ing, masonry, trestle jworkj and bridges, also cross ties for the first 30 miles of the Frenchf Broad Valley j Railroad. Rights reserved to reject any and all bids. Ad dress all communications to C. G. Dyott. President and General Manager, 52 Wall street, New York, or to j i H. M Ramseur, Chief Engineer. td Asheville, N. C. To Patrons of AsnerHlfe Postoffice. In order to facilitate the prompt free delivery! of mail matter which goes into effect iri tnis city on January 1, next, all parties are requested to notify their cor respondents to direct kheir matter to the number land street of residence. I G. W Cakxos, P. M. Thi Democrat is read weekly by nearly eight thousand people. J Saw. Grist and Cane Mills. Engines, Shaft ings. Pulleys and all kinds ofi Machinery for the Farm or Factory. Farmers and Machinists would do well to call on or addrs-s me before iiirinr alcowhorp In nf.nnoftifin "wriH thA" demic are those of high temperature and Foundrv I have fitted up a most exellent Grist great frontal headacbe, accompamea m iA"iVlQ caV , l UL , , UUU1S i,trr. u: j , . j. j u ii , Bolted and unbolted meal kept on hand and many; t-astb uy pa.11.13 .111. me cjclwiw, xuu 1 jGr sale in all by fouj tongue! ahdj breath, consti patich and general malaise. Thei onsetj is rapid, jthe temperature running up at once to 39 idegrs. i C. or 'even higher. Thej cases j I have seen is not raised propor tionately with the temperature. In some cases (there are added the symptoms of catarrh of the nose and frontal sinuses, in others there are sore throat and ca tarrh bf the i deeper air passages, and in many there are vague rheumatic pains about1 the back, shoulders and limbs. The duration is short,' averaging from three to five days, though sometimes pro- pulse in thos longed to six or eight er. and convalescence is rapid. days, or even long- ! : Artificial Ice. The leading plants jin our line of busi ness all over the country are getting intd the manufacture of ammonia on a large scale for use in refrigerating machines. Every large consumer of ice needs such a machine, to fall back on when no ice crop is made, even if j it is not desired tc use artificial lee regularly. ! The freezing machine has many advantage over t he ice box. There are no ; slops: uo tieavv lifting lias to be donej: the colj.1 stofag room is always kept at an even tempera ture jipt below freezing; point; jthe caLrn are of uniform thipkness, and theii weight is always known; and. in fact, the refrigerating business is revolution izeJ by the. artificial process! Moreover, the ice is just as clear! pure and free from bacteria aa natural iee. j During the next season the process will be the mainstay; of large consumers of ice in St. Louis, and may be I extensively resorted to for sale to small consumers, as natural ioe will necessarilv be very dear. Interview in St. Louis Globe-Democrat. ii-ti:i The hydrocarbon process of! iron so that it will not corrode K sru cost less tlian one-half of thivt if u izing, while the duraLuiitv. conditions, is rossidervib? . v.: HOLD ON! j - ' ' ' j i j j Here I Am Again. With the best stock of i Dry Goods Notions, Dress Goods, Ginghams, Do mestics, JeansFlannels-Blankets, Shoes, Boots, Hats, many of them bought for Less Than Cost Of Making. Agent for some of the largest factories in the South, and can sell home-made jeans, all wool filled, for less than you can get them at any store in I the State. Graham's home-made shoes, all styles, as low as can be 'bought in the State. Every pair guaranteed. ' t ! A great many goods were bought at auction, late in season, and hence can be sold lower than any other house in the State can offer them. 5 j ; , Call I and see. Prices made ; in the store. ! r : ASHEVILLE DRY GOODS CO., J. O. HOWELL, Manager. No. 17 North Main Street. LAND SALE. Bv virtue of a deed of trust executed to me by t. F. Glass and wife, Kuth Glass, dated on the 4th day of February, 1889, and recorded in the liep-ister's Office for Buncombe County, in Book Xo. 15. page 186, for the purpose of se curing a debt therein mentioned, I will sell, at the Court House door, In the city of Asheville, at public auction, for cash, on the SIXTH (Gth) DAY OF JANUARY, -A. D. 1890, three vacant lots and one, house and lot, lying1 in the southern part of said city, all of whieh are fully described in said deed of trust. -Dec. 4, 189-4 w. JULIUS C. MARTIN, Trustee. HW KW' AND Mining J1 "IS THE BEST 1HSS PiM II TEE ICELD." Erery lCa or Krtallurgirt, aaA Every Iareitor la Mines ShaM Sid It. ! Cootaina every thlnrof interest and Tiln In min ts metaflargy. The fullest mining newt. iThe beat coal, metal, and mining uck nwrtef f TaVemr for the U. B., Canada, and Mexleo. t the Bcnamno poBUSHnrn co, 37 Park Place New York. . Mortgage Sale. By virtue of the authority in rae vested by a certain deed in trut, executed by li. W. C Huhey and wife. 1. M. Hujrhey, for the bene fit of i.ucinda Myers, datea the 27th day of February, 1886. and reistere! in the Rdister's Office of Iluncomle County, in IJook No. 7. on page 5u7, I will sell at the ourt House door, in the city of Asheville, ON THE 18th DAY OF JANUARY, 1SW, A certain tract of land situate in the county of Buncombe, and State of North Carolina,, and bounded as follows, to wit : On the east by the lands. of Wiley Roberts, on the we6t by W. E. Weaver, on the north by William and Christopher Filer, and on the south by W. R. Chambers, and containing 130 acres, more or less, it being the old Oliver McDavis tract of land. This sale is made at the request of the party of the third part to said deed intrust, the proceeds thereof to be applied to the sat isfaction of two certain notes now iast due and secured bv said deed in trust. W, K. CHAMBERS, Trustee. . W. H. Mat,oxe, Attorney. Land Sale. William Jones and others by their Guardian David Brooks, vs. Franklin Jones. By virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Buncombe County, made in the above en titled cause, the undersijmed Commsssioner will offer for sale at public auction, on the premises. MONDAY, DECEMBER 23, 188, a tract of land situated on Pole Creek, in Bun combe County, known as part of the J..H. Brooks place, and adjoining W. H. Jimmison. David Brooks and others, containing 25 acres more of less. Said sale is ordered for the pur pose of division among tenants in common. 1 Terms of Sale 20 per cent, to be paid I In cash on day of sale, and the remainder in two equal installments in one and two years; with eot and approved security. Title retained i:nt?I al! the purchase money is paid. CHAS. W. MA LONE, Nov.20 89 Commissioner. FIRE INSURANCE. Fire, Life, Accident. PULLIAM & CO. At; the Bank of Asheville, ASHEVILLE, N. C. '', Represent the following companies, viz. : FIRE. CASH ASSETS IX U. 8- Anglo Nevada, of California, f2,497,833 Continental, of New York, 4,875.623 Hamburg-Bremen, of Germany. l,12,60t London Assurance, of England, 1,543,9& Niagara, of New York, 2,237,45 Orient, of Hartford, - 1-e67' Phfenlx, of Brooklyn. 5,(64,179 SL Paul Fire and Marine of Minnesota, 141,01 Southern, of New Orleans, ., , W e tern, of Toronto. . 1,Uj5C2 Mutual Accidenf Association. Etna Life Insurance Company. 5 i l! i
The Asheville Democrat (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 6, 1890, edition 1
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