STATE NEWS AND G03SIF. High Point is to hare a chair factory. I The County Jail of Rockingham was destroyed by tire last week. S Winston will celebrate the 4th of July fand G rover Cleveland ! , ; I A publishing house will be invited. "I with, a capital of $15,000 has been organized in Durham. ; It is said that -a nr. .r of capitalist will erect a $40,000 hotel at Chapel Hill S. F. Patterson, of Concord, was mar ried to Miss Bessie Alexander, of Char lotte, on Thursday last. j A new Episcopal Church is to be built i i Charlotte of North Carolina brown one, at a cost of $15,000.. , i - i ! ' '-. Steps I have been taken for the imme diate erection of the new buildings for Trinitv College at Durham. j " i j i ' i I Raleigh is endeavoring to secure a $100,000 ironworks plant, to be removed from Zanesville, Ohio, to the South. : M ' Grover Cleveland has been invited to attend the 20th of May celebration in Charlotte, and strong! hopes are enter tained of his acceptanqe. j ' i ! I" 1 ! A report just made of the naval store receipts; at Wilmington for the past twelve months shows a gratifying in crease over the previous twelve months in all departments. . j lit is reported that J. S. Carr, one of the stockholders of j the Atlantic Hotel of Morehead City, Njc, has offered a donation of $20,000 to the State pro vided that the permanent encampment of the place. State Guard be moved to that Mr. Frank Brown; Of Michigan, and Hiss Katie Nichols, formerly of the Same State, but who has been residing at Asheville for some time, were married at the Glol Hotel, in this place, on Monday last, Rev. G. H. Moore offici ating. Hendersonville Times. t Father Charles, pastor of the Catholic church at Raleigh, has authorized i the statement that he believes ex-Priest Boyle has gone to Scotland fot the purpose of entering the Trappist Monastery there. He says he advised Boyle to go there, and he thinks he has done so. . Fully $12,500 worth of new dwelling houses are now in process of construc tion or let to contract in! Morganton for completion within the y6ar 1890, and the building season has just commenced. We hope to add to the list before long a $25,000 hotel and an opera house.; Mor ganton Herald. ! I i Rev. Dr. John W. McCown, of Knox ville, Tenn., has accepted the call to the pastorate of the church in Leaksyille, N. 0., and entered upon his duties on Sun day last. We heartily congratulate; all the brethren and sisters of Leaksville, and indeed of the State. Dr. McCown is one of the most accomplished and scholarly ministers of the Soutk.-Bibli-cal Recorder. ; ; A rumor is floating around that anoth er large hotel will be erected in Hickory. It will be built at a cost of $40,000 'and Trill be furnished and fitted up with all nodern improvements, land will hiave cbout 100 rooms. This is a good move and with a first-class "hotel man at its head can be kept full of visitors all the year round and will be a stood invest iaent. Press-Carolinian.j The movement on foot! at Winston to secure a $50,000 joint stock tobacco fac tory has met with gratifying success. Already proposals for more than the amount of stock first proposed for the factory have been received, and now some of those most interested in the en- terprise are endeavoring stock to $200,000 which to increaee the would make it the biggest plug factory in the State I I - The North State improvement com pany, of Greensboro, have purchased the wharves at Wilmington of the New York and Wilmington steamship com F iny- This has a water front of 400 feet and is a very valuable property. The price paid was nearly $30,000 The property is bought for the use of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley railway, which is controlled by the improvement company. ; j j Lexington, N. C, '-April 1. At about two o'clock yesterday Lee Graver was shot and instantly killed by Frank! P. Broadway, at or near Barber's store, about nine miles southwest of Lexington, la Davidson county. The Coroner is now summoning a special jury to in quire into the matter. Broadway killed Craver Reports say because of re ports Craver had circulated about Broad way's wife. I Below we give the report of the Cham ber of Commerce with reference to the wage paid employees in our factories uunng the year 1881): i j iotal amount, $897,358.98 Amount paid per month, 74,771.59 '! " u i day, 2,875.84 1 his does not include the amount paid clerks or persons employed in stores, shops, livery stables, hotels, restaurants I or in any other lines of trade or business I except the factories. Twin City Daily. I Colored Miners from North Carolina. I Pittsburg, April 4. Seventy colored I men from Halifax county, N. C, ar rived here to-day to work in the 'coal friines of W. R Rend & Co., near here. Pe colored men are to be paid from $1 11.50 per day at the start. The miners there will be trouble it the men work t ie8 than thft smle rate i f Boyle's Departure. As stated Sunday morning:, f Father Boyle, the acquitted Priest, jbok the first opportunity Saturday night to shake the dust of Raleigh off his feet and took his departure by the 1 o'clock west train! A carriage was brought for him as soon as he was liberated and he was taken to the train and at once got into the sleeper, lie started to a friend of his here that he would stop over in Washington a few days,' where he has friends. He will probably go from there to his home in Pennsylvania. Mr. John D. Hayes, of Pennsylvanai, who arrived here a few days aga in the interest of Father Boyle, is still here. News-Observer. . jj Another Big- Deal. A Philadelphia syndicate has just completed the purchase of 3,600 acres of land i at Lenoir's from) Knoxville, Station, thirty miles Tenn. A big steel plant, woolen mills and a branch road to Harriman to connect with the Cincinnati Southern are involved. The land is the old;plantation, famous throughout the South. Five million dollars, it is said,' are to be invested J A Rich Mineral Find. James Morris, of this county, Mr babught to town one day this week sev eral specimens of gold ore, taken from five different veins. The ore was in spected by Mr. John Lewis, of Denver, Col., who is here for the purpose of locating mines in this section for a large company of Northern capitalists. Mr. Lewis prounces the specimens of the very finest quality of ore, and says that if the mines are developed the ore will yield one thousand dollars to the ton. Mr. Morris say s that the veins are large, and that thousand of tons of ore can be gathered out of the mines, which are located about twelve miles from Ruther f ordton Mr. Lewis will visit the mines in a few days, and report to his company the j result of his rich find. Rutherford Banner. j . I A Young Lady Robbed. Miss; Lil Morehead, of Leaksyille, was robbed at the Air Line depot in this city, last Saturday afternoon, of $25 in cash and a pair of diamond earrings valued at $400. Miss Morehead has been vis iting Miss Bleecker Springs for a week or so past, and started to return home Saturday afternoon. She had her money and diamonds in her purse when she had her baggage checked at the depot. When the train arrived, and just as she started to board it, she discovered her loss. Miss Morehead came back up town, but noth ing has since been heard of the missing money or jewelry.- Charlotte News. . - -1 Business Reform for the Young Men A number of the young men of Char lotte out of a desire to inaugurate a business reform, j have organized an "Anti-Trnst Club!" The rules of this club require each j member to buy every thing for cash. They are under no cir cumstances to make a credit purchase. If he buys a cigar, or a suit of clothes, on credit, he forfeits and must pay to the club $1. The club already has a large membership, j though it was only organized to-day.! It is a good thing All the boys should join. :Charlotte News. ; .' Horace Greeley's House Burned. Cappaqua, N. Y., April 3. The old Greeley homestead, which was formerly the home of Horace Greeley, being built by him in 1851, vas destroyed by fire this morning. Since Mr. Greeley's death the house had been owned by Miss Gabrielle Greeley,! his only surviving child Miss Greeley was in Pleanant ville attending church at the time of the fire. Dr. Crawford on Methodist Progress. New York, April 3. Rev. Dr. Morris D. C. Crawford delivered his semi-cen- ary address before 'the New York Meth odist Conference, giving a sketch of the progress; made morally and socially dur ing the last fifty years in America. He said while there was every reason for congratulation on; these points there were several things in existence which were hardly in conformity with any civ ilizationj The condition of the negro in the South was hardly what it should be ana ne was deserving of better treat men The Roman Catholic Church still possess a domineering influence over a large number of our citizens, but withal there had been a perceptible improve ment ; in ihe views held by leading Catho lics of the present day. Cardinal Gib bons in his latest work evinced an ad vancemeht of opinion and a tolerance of of feeling which no Catholic in his posi tion would dare to have expressed a quarter of a century ago. The Metho dist Episcopal Church had advanced in in breadth of view and spirit of enthusi asm ! vas Dorn in revival and that spirit still continues. Dr. Crawford's speech was listened to with more than ordinary attention. What is the Home Supply Associ ation P It is managed on the co-operative plan. Secure a membership at once. Through it you can buy all of your Household bupphes at wholesale rates, thus saving the middleman's profit. For further in formation call on or address Chas. L. Badger, Room No. 7 McAfee Building Asheyille N. C. j aprlO-lOt E. E. Brown, No. 7&9 Patton avenue over H. Redwood's, j Photography in all its branches artistically done. Western North Carolina scenes a specialty. Call and examine my work. Photographs of unuics au4 stuou iiutuicu a special J.KSL ture. MS. DEPEW AND THE SOUTH. His Observations on the Old and the New Convict Labor System. Washington A.pril 4. Mr. Chauncey M, Depew arriy ed here this evening in excellent health. In an interview with a Post reporter he expressed himself as delighted with the; hospitality of the Southern people. i "Did you see 'much of the new South?" the reporter asked. ! "Some of the deal of tiie old new j South and a good South. It is there still. The old stock look on the colored man as a:sort of animal, destitute of moral sense and responsibility, who like a Frankenstein, becomes, for that reason, dangerous in proportion to his liberty and) opportunities.! They sincerely think that thei property will be wiped out or confiscated, their homes broken up and society destroyed if the colored counted; and they look upon the Northern republicans as a spe cies of anarchists who will cheerfully co operate in that destruction. Nine-tenths of the democrats of the South seem to be imbued with such ideas. I i - "The new Soiith has a different spirit; it believes in mines and mills and corner lots. It believes in attracting enterprise and capital; but! the j old South is a long way j down the jmillenium of a political regeneration. The remedy is not plain, but it certainly does not lie in federal legislation. " i "One thing more than any other has debauched public sentiment in the South is the convict labor system, which holds in certain States Unless George Ken nan's stories of Siberian horrors are ab solutely true, there can be no scenes in a civilized country i so I terrible as in the Southern convict camps. "These poor wretches are leased to men who have no interest in their wel fare or reformaiion. I No one sees wheth er they are properly fed, clothed, housed, treated or cared for "Sometimesjhe contracts ttcall for a certain number of convicts, and the State furnishes them.j How? If they can't fill the quota otherwise, the most trivial offenses are made excuse for long terms of imprisonment. I have no doubt that many innocent men are serving sentence in Southern convict camps that a quota might be filled.' A Federal Election Law. Washington, April 5. The ! republi can members of the Senate Committee on Privileges and Election held a con ference this morniner, and discussed the question of reporting to the Senate national election lawi The conference was very brief It was determined to report a bill, at its next meeting, and Mr. Hoar, the chairman of the committee, was asked to prepare a bill to be submit ted to a caucus jof Republican Senators The Republican members of the com- mittee say that the measure wi acter, as it will the probability is that 1 be of a very mild char he largely experimental By special arrangements with the pub lisher, we are enabled this year I to make an unusual offer: The regular j price of N . C. Farmer is $1,00 a year, j We wil turnisn the asheville ijemocrat m combination with the N. C. Farmer for $1,75 per year, j This is a bargain that needs no comment. Make a careful note of it or what is better, send us in the amount at once If you wish to first see a copy of the Farmer, ! address a posta card to N. C. Farmer Raleigh, N. C. asking for one, and a back number wil be sent, free. j Injaddition toj this all those accepting this combination offer will receive one dozen papers of; improved garden seed free of charge. A NEW METHOD OF TREATING DISEASE. Hospital Remedies. S vv nat are tneyr l nere is a new de partiireinthe treatment of disease. It consists in the collection of the specifics used by noted specialists or Europe ana America, and bringing them within the reaeh of all. For instance the treatmen pursued by special physicians who trea indigestion, stomach and liver troubles only; was obtained and prepared. The treatment of other physicians, celebrated for curing catarrh was procured and so on till tnese incomparable cures now in clude disease of the lungs, kidneys, female weakness, rheumatism and nervous debil lty. ! ; This new method of "one remedy for one disease must appeal to the common sense! of all sufferers, many of whom have experienced the ill effects, and thoroughly realize the abshrdity of the claims of Patent Medicines which are guaranteed to cure 0yery ill oui; of a single bottle, and the use of whichj as statistics prove, has ruined more stomachs than alcohol. A circular describing these new remedies is sent free on receipt of stamp to pay post age by Hospital Remedy Company, To ronto! Canada, sole proprietors. I THE NATIONAL DEMOCRAT. Every Democrat and Every Seeker ! After Political Truth Should ) ' i. " Bead It. j , . i Club Rates :-i-We will send the Na tional Democrat and The Democrat to any address within the XJnited States for $2.00 a year, strictly in advance. I The regular subscription price of the National Democrat is I $1.50 per year, and it is well worth it. It is published weekly in the city of Washington, and each issue contains eight seven-column pages of reading matter, Send to this office for sample copies; It has the endorsement of leading Democrats; it contains all the Washing ton and National news; its record of Congressional proceedings will be full and complete, and it is in every! way a worthy exponent of sound Democratic doctrine. Subscribe now and secure this staunch organ of the party of the people. I j . . i Thk) Ashevtlle Democbat and The National Democrat for $2.00 per year in advance. NOW IS THE TIME 1 - : I 7o hi ia M 1 1 Mde h Ink FOB HOMES,! BUSINESS OB UANU "j FACTXJBING PTJBPOSBS. i 2 nouses ana lots on Lepot St.; lone 7 roomj other p rooms, just completed, very cheap at $2000 each; one-half cash, balance on time1. ! I 2 House anl lot on Hill street, lot i4 acres, house 6 rooms, good outhouses; Very cheap at $3000. 3 Elegant house and lot on Charlotte st, 1 acres in lot with beautiful oak grove covering the whole. Splendid house with 10 rooms just completed; a big bargain at $75- I ! f 4-T-A splendid speculation 20 beauti ful residence lots on Charlotte st., 77 jfeet front 175 feet deep to be sold as a whole or separately for small cash payment and balance on longj time, j The lots range in price from three to seven hundred dollars ana win oe wortu aouoie this amount m less than 2 year$; conie and see plat at our office. If sold in the next sixty days the whole can be boueht for $8000 half cash, balance oA longtime; a great bargain j 50 acres in; the very heart ot the city, corner Main and v ocdnn streets, house has 11 rooms furnished; this property is in the very heart of the city with grove j of large trees and splendid view of surround- ing mountains, it hardly has, anything in town to compare; with it; it can be subdi- Viaea into 20 or;more lots it aesirea. tor purciy gui cage pjopeny as invcs.imenv or as a home it has; no equal, and is cheap at -A. IdSUi IC1114M1UCI 111 i- : j : I, 2 and 3 years with 8 per cent interest; a plat may 1 be seen in our office. I 6 -Lot with bid buildings on South ain street, heart of city, 63x120; price $16,500. , ! 7 -House and lot on Woodfin street. lot 100 ft front, 400 ft deep, 2 story notice with 7 rooms, within t minutes walk of Court house; price $3000. i b Location good, view beautiful, wa ter works in kitchen, house 9 rooms, rooms, hard finished, 4! rooms finished in mahogany, elegant spring water, apples, peaches, grapes, cherries, rasberries, shade trees and flowers lot terraced, plain fence. front picket paling; price $2100. 9 Houe andj lot on Pearson street, rooms, price $2650. ill i 104 lots on Merrimon ave, and Chest nut st., strictly gilt edge' property to be sold on re isonble terms'; prices from $1500 to $2000. I ii I 11 4 XA acres in West Asheville in the vi cinity of factories well situated for subdi vision into small llots, each one having run ning water on it; It all has a grove of fine trees on it affording beautiful shade; price $900 per acre if taken as a whole; will be subdivided to suit purchasers; 15 lots in the vicinity of the above at the low price of $2co per lot. 12 House 10 rooms, six acres of land magnificent view of the town and surround ing country; price $8000 DO YOU WANT A FARM IN WEST- ; i - I j ERN NORTH CAROLINA P . M :! I 200 acres, &k miles from Waynes ville N. C, 30 from city. 150 acres cleared, good farm house and necessary outhouses, splendid water; well worth 3000. j 2 350 acres j miles out on French Broad river; 30 acres bottom, 125 cleared, good timber and fine water, good house, j 7 rooms, good stabjles and outhouses, or. chard. 2zo tiees. ii acres in grrass, fine fish ponti and water power. Price $5000 ; 3 An A. No. k. Florida Orange grove; price on application. I .416000 acres in Jackson co.,thc W.N C K. K.. runs through the tract, this is 4 1 w one of the finest timbered tracts in the State, over 400 gobd walnut trees of good size have been counted and measured. It has the finest of pbplar, Oak. hickory chest nut and white pine. The soil is rich and Droductive. would 'make, after the timber is off, one of the finest stock ranches in the south.! price only $3,25 per acre; orchard grass and timothy (will grow 6 feet high on it. I 5 A farm of 175 acres in Henderson county, 4 miles from Hendersonville, 18 miles from Asheville, I house 5 rooms, I5 good log houses, 7 good tobacco barns, ja tine young orchard of 400 trees apples, peaches, cherries and 1 plums about 20 fine erape vines inlcood state of cultiva tion; a bargain at $2500. : j 16 250 acres 14 miles from the city, 7 c acres cleared, is acres bottom, house 1 rooms, erood barn and water, orchard 25 trees, one mile I from j church and i4 miles from school!; price $10 per acre, Cheap at that price as a stock farm. 17 200 acres 1 mile from Black Moun tain station, 20 acres cleared, 2 cabins, 100 youne fruit trees, 20 old; price $Soo, xr srwr m?1B Ant yc rlpared. I cabin. r ': . T ji. : ' ir.n rrnurreps n trnnn neann? uncc a;uu. 810,000 acres mountain lands 6 miles from railroad. 200 acres I cleared and in . anil vprvrirh with fine timber and f. : , ! , tine mineral prospects; i price $2.50 per acre. o -jjOO acres 01 Swannanoa ten miles oat, 70 acres river bottom, best bargain in the; country; price $7500. 10150 acres, mile from Coopers. 10 j miles from the dity, log cabin, 50 old fruit trees, 40 acres bottom, 50 acres good timber, price $2 -tod. ! i 11 22. j acres, 6 miles our, 4 acres bot tom, house 3 rooms, i good log crib and stable, fine sorin?:! Drice I $60 this is a ; 7 r 01 j - bargain. ' Mineral lands we have a number of. iron, cold, corundum and mica properties that we can offer at very j low figures if taken soon. We can send specimens of ore upon application,1 together with full! discription of property. Natt Atkinson & Son. Barnard Bailfe Ashcrille, N. C. CUJB RATES. The A sheville Democrat $1:50 per an num; The National Democrat $1.50 per annum; NThe North Carolina t i armer $1.00 per annum. The Asheville Demo crat and the National Democrat one year for , $2.00 inj advance. The Asheville Democrat and the North Carolina Far mer one year $1.75 in advance. The Asheville Democrat, The National Dem ocrat and thej N. Cj Farmer, kU three, one year for $2.50 in advance. lhis is a rare chance for our people to get a large and varied ; amount of useful reading matter at the lowest prices. The Asheville Democrat contains 48 columns, The National Democrat con tains 54 columns both weekly; the N. C. Farmer, monthly, j contains 24 pages, 72 columns. (This is a j valuable! library in itself. $4.00 dollars worth of! the best reading matter one year for $2.50. Every person taking, The Asheville Democrat and the North Carolina Far mer, $1.75 in advance, will receive free of charge one dozen papers of improved garden seeds. "We ask the attention of all readers to this splendid offer. Send us your name with the cash at once. Address, FURMAN & VAKCE, Asheville N. c. Read the Best Weeklv Kewsnaner ; and Pami y Jonr- ! r I ' V nal in the! Country. The w-eekly edition of the Springfield (Mass.) Republican, which was estab lished in 1824, by Samuel Bowles, has re cently been ! enlarged to 12 pages or 84 columns. The price remains at $1 per year,or 10 cents a month f or Jshdrter pe riods.! " - ' . This generous enlargement, adding 28 columns to the capacity of the paper, al lows the introduction of many new and attractive features. I . I I The people's interest in 'all political, social and industrial! affairs are (steadily studied and advocated from the stand point of independence and a .patriotism that is higher and broader than partisan ship. In a word, the publishers seek to make The Weekly Republican more than ever the bftst. wfifiblv nflwsnanpr and familv iournal combined in the r-ntrv:t Former dwellers in New England and others evftrvvhrft whoi wish to keen in- formed bf thei life and thought I Of this region will find the enlarged paper in- region valuable. i i I Send for a free sample copy. All subscriptions payable in advance. ESTNew subscribers ! for; a year now will receiye the paper until January 1, 1891.. i ,., ' r i- I:;-: : r- Address THE REPUBLICAN, Springfield, Mass. 4 oupporr nome manuiaciones oy Duy- ing their goodel There is no better flour made tor tbe price tnan Jiilectriq Lugnt Flour. Ask your grocer for it and take no other. . - i marb-tf RAMSAY, J. F. DENTIST.' Office in Barnard Building, Post Office Box 431. Asheville, N. C. 1 j; NOTICE. ! The undersisrned beinK this day! qualified as Administrator of the estate of the late James Holland, notice is hereby triven to all persons having claims against said estate to present them for payment on or before the 24tn day of February, 1891, or this notiee will be pleaded as bar on their recovery. . 1 ' 'i .TKSSU5 T). MOKfiAN. Dated February: 22, 1890. j Administrator. Trustee's ! Sale. - . i - j I By virtue of a deed of trust executed to me by J. R. Hill, j on. the 1st day of i September, 1887, to secure the! payment of a note men tioned therein, said deed being duly registered in the Register's office of Buncombe county in book 11 of mortgage deeds, page 249, 1 will sell for cash to the highest bidder at the court house door in Asheville, on the 4th day of April, 1890, the lot mentioned in said deed and the buildings thereunto pertaining; This lot is situated on Depot street, not tar rrom Patton avenue. This March 4, 1890. ! JESSE R. STARNES, Trustee. TKUSTEE'S SALE. By virtue of a Deed of Trust executed by James Worley and Precilla i Worley his wife, to secure the payment of one sealed note for $87.85, dated Feb. 19, 1889, due Jan. 1, 1890, and interest, payable to C. A. Nichols, which said Deed of Trust has! been duly registered in the Register's Olhce 01 - Madison Uounty, hook 1, page 405, 1 will sell at the Court House door, in the town of Marshall, on i r i MONDAY, THE lST DAT OF MARCH, 1890, the following tract of land, to wit: It being the land where Precilla Worley now lives, ad joining lands of Baxter Randall, Marion. Saw yer and others, and more fully described in said Deed of Trust, to which reference is made. Terms of sale cash. I I i C. A. CLARK, Trustee. ; February 25, 1890. ! I , ! NOTICE! That by virtue of the power in toe vested by a decree of the Superior Court of Buncombe County, I will sen on ; j MONDAY, THE SEVENTH ! DAY OF APRIL Next, to the highest bidder, the following two tracts of land : . ! ! I s J-'f" First Tract is on New Found Creek and con tains about 27 acres being part of the F. Slu- 1 der home tract, and Joins B.: E. Sluder, James Fosser, and others. This is valuable tobacco and farming land. ! Second i Tract is ;the Dover place, on South Turkey Creek, contains 651 acres, has good dwelling and tine orchard. I I L -f Terms of Sale 20 per cent, casn down, oai- I due one and two! vears from date, at 8 Der nt. fmm dat- Tit.lft np.rfpio.t und retained cent, from date. i . gg at court house in Asheville. For particulars enquire: of J. M. Gudger, Attoraey-at-Law, Asheme, N. C.;of the un aersignea. WM.j P. COLE, Commissioner. FIRE INSURANCE. --."-! Fire, Life, Accident. PUT.LIAM & CO. ' At the Bank of Asheville, ASHEVILLE, NIC. Represent the following companies, viz. : riRi. CASH ASSETS IK V. 8. Anglo Nevada, of California, Continental, of New York. I $2,497,833 Hambunr-Bremen. of German v. 1J29,H London Assurance, of England, i 1.5iA,y95 Niagara, of New York, 237,482 Orient, of Hartford, 1,667,692 Phoenix, of Brooklyn, M S 5,054,178 81. Paul Fire and Marine of Minnesota, lMljm Southern, of New Orleans. ! I ! i 43984 Western, of Toronto. I 1,03933 Mutual Accident Association, tna Life Insurance Company. i LH3HXS KIT3X pedants aumuaf) aqi jag pub aang d$i 061 'bTi-toj; 96 $ 'snoods sax -xa p.dfj, xas aai I 'Ai PTO uaiis -ojosja- paiBjqapO aqi joj suai y ajos osro ojb ji i 3ava AvanoH aq joj paaajjo a-1 suoi jobj jy repad saxoKvia axv ! aooo mims w (no9 anos jo 21003 aq aurarexa pay oxiavai anx XV 11V0 ox aaiiANi tsj noi E. BAIKD. .f. B. BAIRD Baird and Brother. Leaders in Family Groceries. The Best grades at lowest prices. Kvery- thing a family wants kept. Country Produce and Good Butter specialties. Give us a call Will sell In quantities to suit purchasers. I . . : octlO-6m I Jesse E. Starnes, Undertaker AND Arterial - Embalmer, Office: No. 27 North Main Sti, ASHEVILLE, N. C. All calls promptly answered day or night. Nov. 28,. ly. HOW TO SECURE A Good Tin Roof. Send to N. & G. TayIjOB Co.. for a copy of their book on ROOFING TIN. "5,000 Refer ences, and 50 Million Spuare Feet Used With out a Single Complaint," is its abbreviated title. It gives full particulars about roofflnf tin, paint, felt, etc., and how to protect your self against the use of inferior materials. It is a book of some 250 pages, profusely illus trated. N. & G. Taylor Co. are the originators of the - O : 0 Taylor "OLD STYLE" Brand Extra Heavy Coated Eoofing Tin 6 This fine, old brand of tin, has been found to be just as good after forty years wear as when first put on. Samples and dook mailed free. N. & G. TAYLOR CO. Established 1810 80th year. Chicago. Philadelphia. Liverpool. PAINT! Paint! Paint! SPECIAL PAINT AND WALL PAPER HOUSE. The largest stock ever offered in Asheville. We carry a well assorted stock 01 Mixed Paints. White Lead Oils and Turpentine. .The best makexrf Varnishes and Hard Oils. . FLOOR AND FURNITURE POLISHES. Hard enamel paints. Best thing out. Col ors in oil from one to twenty-five pound cans, Venetian Red, i Yellow Ocbre. Umber, Sienna Vermillion. Red Lead. Uultamarine Blue and Tuscan Red. .f THE FAMOUS BRICK RED. WINDOW ,' GLASS 1D POTTY". ALABASTINE, A Beautihu Wall Finisli. Wall Paper .. i . . . : AND ' Decorations. We have in stock 7.000 rolls of Wall Paper which we will sell cheap to make room for our large stock just ordered for Fall and Sprins trade. House Painting and Decorating' a Specialty Paints mixed to order. Call on FITZPATRICK BROS. &R0BERIS0N. NO. 30 NORTH MAIN ST. A8HKVILLK. N. 0

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view