Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / May 14, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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,, nif wj'fl 1 't;i rjr t rn f f "THE CITIZEN" i Asheville Daily Citizen FOR RENT, WANTS, AND f Off SAtf, t i ...... I J Containing lull dally report of the Oen. erul Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, will l sent for 00c. postpaid to any address during the union. nut vxi-CTuiuK mm nni, One Time, 38 centa. Three Tlmea, 00 ccnta. 81s Times, 75 centa. - ASHEVILLE, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1890. PRICE 3 CENTS. VOLUME VI. NO. 27. MISCELLANEOUS. LIHVILLE. A place planned and devel oping as u GREAT RESORT. Situate in the MOUNTAINS OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA, A region noted for health fulness and beauty of SCENERY. An elevation of 8,800 feet, with cool Invigorating Climate It in being laid out with tanto and nkill, with well graded roads and extensive FOREST PARKS. A desirable place for fine 1 ivsiueiiccs ana H1UTHFIX HOIWKS. A good opportunity U)r profitable invent inents. For illustrated pamphlet, ad drenH, LINYILLE IMPROVEMENT CO., Lliillle, Mitchell Co., N. C. BON MARCHE. NEW NECKWEAR TOR GF.NTLliMKN JIST 1N-1IANH-SOMB LATliST DliSIGNS I'KliTTIIvST SlIADlvSOP SILK. LADIES' BIjOUSES. NliW AND ALLGKADIiS. FANS ! FANS ! USKI'UI, AND ORNAMIiXTAL. jo South Main St. BON MARCHE. H.T.ESTABROOK'8 !I3 H. MAIN ST., ARIIHVII.l.B, 1 Tim placs run BOOKS, STATIONERY, FANCY 600DS AND TOYS. LOCAX Views and Sketches ir lie d HEAL ESTATE. WILTS 11. Owtk. W. W, WOT. GWYI1 & WEST, (Mttewawin to Walter B.Owyn) ESTABLISHED 1881 REFER TO IANK OF ASHEVILLE. REAL ESTATE. Loans Securely Placed at 8 Per Cent. Notary Public. Cucnenlaafoeiera of I teed. FIRE INSURANCE. OPriCK aonttieawl Coter! Heimir, CORTLAND BROS., Real Estate Broker, And Investment Agent. Loam at urely placed at par cent. UIHi-rat 8 ft HO ration At. Second tout. frliixilv JENKS&JENKS, REAL ESTATE AND IN8URANCE BROKERS. FlttU INMUHANCH I'l.ACItll IN TWBNTV OF TUB MliaT COMI'ANIUi IN TUB WOK I. II. AUUNTS OP TUB TKAVB1.KKH' MI'K AND ACCIDHNT INnllMANCB CO., OF MAMTPOMU, CONN. STATU AOKNTS POM THB IIBTROIT Fl M B ANU BU KOLAS PNqoP BAFB CO. Rooms 10, McAfee Block MISCELLANEOUS. IF THERE IS ANY P O W 12 K IN RICES, ANY V IRTUIi I N ALDUS, O R A M Y B 15 N B 1 I T I N AHIIAINS, II U Y YOUR GROCERIES, FEED, ETC., V K 0 M A. D. COOPER, North Side Court lluuw 8iunrc. ELGIN CREAMERY BUTTER, 25 CTS. PER LB. SUMMER GOODS. Ice Cream Freezers, 2, 8, 4, (, 8 and 10 quart, at prices lower than ever. Hammocks at 8c, $1.28, 1.48 and $2.25. Beautiful line of Fans. Berry and Snuco Dishes by the sett or dozen. Matches (large boxes, 800,) 25et. ier dozen. A new lot of French Satines, beautiful patterns. The prettiest lot of (iinghams andChambrnys in town; solids, stripes and plaids. We are daily exjMict itig Croquet Setts, 4, 0 and 8 ball; also the Harper Fly Traps, best made, at I8cts. each. We have a very com plete stock of goods at prices that are sure to please. If you will tako the tremble to come to see us before you buy we shall he satisfied. We do not claim to have all the goods in town, and are not giving them away, but we are selling them (lots of them) nt very low prices. No chromos, no free gifts, no avalanches, no cyclones, no humbug. Everything is guarnntiH'dj nnd ns hereto fore, the best place in town to trade is the "BIG RACKET." VAN HOUTEN'S COCOA BKMT AMD UOKS PAKTHI'.MT, KOPP & LICHTENBER6ER, s8 Patton Avenue. ASHEVILLE, N. C. MOST MHHI'BCTFt'I.LV INVITH VOI K SBLP ANU FAMILY TO V1HIT THHIK STOKH ON THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, May is and if. TO TASTB A CUP OP THIS DBLICIIIItS Cocoa WHICH TIIIIV HAVK JUST IMI'OHTIII) FKOM WEESP, HOLLAND. MISCELLANEOUS. EHTAHLISHED 1874. W.C.CARMICHAEL, APOTHECARY. 20 SOUTH MAIN STREET, ASHEVILLE, N. C. For sixteen years I have carried on a Drug and Pre scription business in Ashe ville, striving at all times to buy pure Drugs and sell no goods that are not strictly first-class in every respect. IOverytluug warranted rs represented or money re funded. My goods are pure and fresh and my prices ns low as the lowest. Prescrip tions filled at all hours, day and night, and delivered free of charge to any part of the city. Mr. J. Taylor Amiss is with me, and will be pleased to meet his friends and custom ers. ARDEN PARK HOTEL AND COTTAGES. Ill miles South of Asheville, on A. S. K. H TUKMS: Per Month $-M Per Week lano Per Kay " Dinner and Tea I'urtli-s oil one day's notice. T5 cent.. Thou. A. Morris, Prop., nprllldtf Arden. N. C. I. w. u. WILL. AKTIII KJ. WILLS. WILLS I1ROS., ARCHITECTS, ASHHVIi.I.H, N. C. office llnrnard UulldlnR. I. o. Ilm tin-!. Inn., KKillUnllont. Details, Kic, forevcry class of liulldinK at short notice. ARTISTIC INTERIOR DESIGNS A SPECIALTY. Call nnd sec us. nprind.lm We are showing an unusually large and attractive stock of Clothing, Men's Fur nishing floods, Hats, Shoes of all Kinds, Dry Goods, Fancy floods, Smalhvares & Carpets, bought with great care, marked at short and reasonable profits. The lino embraces all grades from low priced to very fine. One price system. 7 & 9 Patton Ave. THE SHOE STORE. Herring & Weaver, -LIIADUKS IN SHOES OF ALL GRADES, 'AND- FINE HATS. 39-Patton Avcnue-39 Aolievllle, N. C. THE DAILY CITIZEN. FACTS AND COMMENTS. TUB onlv change In the Cushion of fish- ingtncklc litis spring in tlutt the flask hits mure neck nnd not quite so much body ns Inst Benson. Richmond Recorder. It is not electrocution they nrc trying to kill 'cm with just now, but elocution, and being tnlkcd to deuth is proverb ially slow and painful. Dansvillc Urcczc. Polich Inspector Eliersold.of Chicngo, Iiub cscntied denth by two torpedo explo sions during the past week. If such inci dents ns these ure in vogue now, what mny we expect in ? L. K. Moomiiii'.Aii, of Sun Francisco, has received an iuf Miner's fee of $.ri,000 for his assistunce in the seizure of smug- Klcd opium a year n'o. Informers would be a drug in the market if these rates prevailed to any grcut extent. Switzkmi.ano proposes to reduce cow's milk to a dry power, ns being better for transportation and suieriortocondcn!ied milk. Next we shall hear of making marbles of strawlK'rry stortenke, first to lie plnycd with, then eaten. Tiik Kansas farmer will have himscll to blame if he burns his corn, lie can buy himself sonic chickens, tench them to lay great numbers of eggs, and sell the eggs at an enormous proht under the new tariff duties. I.ouisvilleCuuricr- Journal. I'll TV ycHrs ago Alvin Adams iKgnn with a carict bag the business which has since grown into the great corpora tion known as the Adams Ivx press Com pany. The company pays handsome dividends on its $12,01111,0011 of capital. Many a man in the past half n century has begun life with n cariei bag and wound up witli .snlililethat it could In- tied in a red baiidanna. Tint ponderous tarilf siccches in con gress arc nearly all withheld from publi cation in thcCoiigrcssioti.'il Record. They will lumber up that document terribly by and by. It is bad policy in those who make them to engage in this delay. An clalmratc tariff sin-cell is none too likely to lie mill, even in its freshness. It should never he allowed to take m anything of the last ycur's uhu.-'iinc taint. Tiik conduct of Mr. Ure White, of New Mexico, who celebrated his release from the Santa lJc jail by capturing n town and making railroad employees and other stand 1:111! deliver their silver watches and small coin, recalls the hal cyon days ol Jesse James mid his gang and shows that the Yahoo still has a fair hold with both hands on the over lapping edges of civilization in tlie Tar West. Tun Florida Timcs-l'iiioii says: "Whether Sam Jones saves many souls or not, he is very successful as a money maker, and in that rcsjicct he snmvtinics docs the churches n good turn. The sc ries of meetings he held recently at Char lotte, N. C, resulted in putting $21:00 in his own pocket nnd in raising SS.1100 toward paying for the building of the Young Men's Christian Association ol Charlotte nnd $. Kill for the Joncsorplmn age in Georgia." It is a lofty look into the future which Mr. Ivstcc has taken Irom the top of Tel egraph Hill or the cliffs beyond Gulden Gate Park. At the baiuiuct of the San I'rnncisco chamber of commerce, this del egate to Three Americas Congress said : When American lines of steamers shall regularly ply between American ports, when all American republics shall have lirect railroad communication and when arbitration shall be the universal rule on the Western continent, the civilized world will look upon the international conference as the most splendid achieve ment of the ng" Onh of the most interesting and how- I'ul features of the present increasing and extending movements in the effort for the recognition and improvement of the rights and privileges of laboring men, is the ardent espousal of their cause by the clergy, both 111 Ivurojie and America. Not only individual lending men in the va rious religious fellowships, but several of those fellowships, in their combined and organic action, have wnrmly declared their sympathy with the agitation raised by the whole inclusive nnd rnmilicd muss of men and women who earn their sub sistence by the labor of their hands. ONE GREAT LEAGUE. At a meeting recently held in London in favor of imnrial federation of the llritish colonics, Lord Kosclicr-y made a remarkable speech, in the course of which he said that, when he considered the enormous influence for good that must Ih exercised by Ivuglish sjiciiking nations in time to come, it might well be that they should coalesce intooncgrcnllcngiic of A list nihil, Canada and the United States, with Great llritain, to coutrnl the whole world. That might well come to pass in the till arc, but before Great llritain could hold out her hand to the I'nilcd States she must federate her own iossessions. Then she could any with confidence, let us form n league, without the permission of which no shot shall lie fired in anger throughout the world, Hut the whole llritish empire must sieak as one. In trying to unite its brethren across the sens it should do so In a man ner consistent with its own self rcswct and the dignity of self-government, not in nn attitude of supplication, hut ns the representative of the uiiccslral glory of Greut Britain, one nnd indivisible. THE OTHER SIDE SPEAKS. SUPERINTENDENT M'DON ALD TALKS OF BRICKS. SAYS THEY ARE STRONG ENOUGH FOR PAVING. How Till Ih lletlcr Tlinn the Hale IHlnt The City Hecnred by Uood Bonds. There arc two sides to the paving ipicstion and Mr. W. A. McDonald, gen eral Young's suH.'rintcndcnt of the street paving work, outlined the other yester dny afternoon. The first ipicstion asked of him, was concerning, the cpiality of the brick which arc to be used here. "I think these brick will average ns well," he said, "ns those used on Mil av enue, in Columbus, Ohio. I live on that street and have a good chance to observe the wear and tear of the pavement, l-'ifth avenue is one of the heaviest trav eled streets in the city, and there is ns much trulHe over it in erne day as there is over Main street here in six. The loads there weigh several times ns much us those curried here, nnd when General Young wns there, last I'cbruary, 1 went out and scriicd the mud off the brick nnd could find no sign of wagon tracks." "As to the striking out from the con tract of the words 'on a foundation to be known us the Hale patent,' to which the gentleman interviewed by yon to-dnv refers, that wns done not lit Gcuernl Young's suggestion, but lit mine. I have had considerable cxieriencc with the paving and find that the plan we wil! use is incomparably Itetter than the Hale patent. It was not the intention to use the Hale patent when the contract wns mndc, and I don't know how the words got into it. They should not hnve lwcn there. General Young never noticed it until 1 culled his atten tion to it. The contractor had no ob ject in having it changed save for the good of the city. You can sec for your self how it will lie iH'tlcrin one particular. The only dillcrence will be that we will lay the plank ncross instead of length ways of the street, and if a gas or water main is to be tapped t run service piiic into a building the plumUrs will only have to take up one or two plank to dig the ditch, whereas, with the plnnk running lengthways they would have to cut across the whole section to do the work. The llalc patent wns put down 011 one street in Columbus, and it was not good, and the plank were taken up andchnuged to run across the street. In llirmingham the council ullowcd us to change from the contract in that particular. "Wise men will see that the city is n in pi v secure, and will be content to wait nnd try the pavement bclorc venturing an opinion on something they have never seen und of which they know nothing They will also rcmcmlicr that the parties laying this pavement are men of charac ter and cxx.'nencc who have much more at stake than thepullry profit there may be in this small contract." MORRISTOWN'S GOOD LUCK The NorrlHtown and Cumberland inp Knllroad AHNured. Mokkistiiwn', Tcnu., May 111 Morristown nt Inst lias the eagle of victory lurched upon her banner of pro gress, iciteruny was a uuv tniii win oc remembered as the turning point in the history of Morristown. The grcnt eucs tion as to whether the counties of Grainger nnd Hamblen should subscribc $1. ")(),()( 10 towards the building of the Morristown nail CumlKTlnnd Gap rail road, was finally decided by vote yester day. The subscription was granted, nnd the words "progress and improvement nrc indelibly stamicd upon the forehead of the voters, Morristown oilers inducements that arc unsurpassed by any town in ICast Tennessee. She is not in iron ore, but has mines of zinc, lead nnd conl, large I Harries of the new cclclirutcil black mnrhlc, and Ih'SiiIc the great Torcsts ol bountiful timlier, possessus soil of n most productive character. The population of Morristown has increased from 1..MMJ in INHll to .1,110(1 in 1S1MI, and every train brings numlici'S of coplc to the thriving little city. The building of the Morristown and Cumberland Gap railroad will give Mor ristowu great railroad facilities, connect ing her with the Grcnt Trunk lines of the North, South, lvasl nnd West, thus scat tering her products, as it were, to the "tour corners of the earth." New build ings arc hang put up, new enterprises started und real estate is gradually in creasing tiny by day. Morristown will have n sale of ollll beautiful town lots, commencing next Tuesday the 20tli. On thai ilnv the Dairy Spring I'ark, n beautiful tract land within a ipiarterof a mile of post oiliec, court house and depot, will lie sol nt public auction by I'iidier'sagcncy. Ivx cursious will run from nil points and re duced rates will be given on all railroads entering the city. The terms of the sale nrc very liberal one-third cash, the balance in onenndtwn vears. This will give the laboring man ns well ns the capitalist a chance to reap big returns before the deferred payments lccomc due. Attend the sale, buy a lot nnd lie for ever happy. Rcmcmlicr the place and date. I'or further particulars, plots, etc., nil dress Fisher's Agency, Morristown, Tcnn, NORTH CAROLINA NOTES. Sum Jones is to be asked to hold a series of revival meetings at Wilmington. Nine students of Chapel Hill hnve vol unteered to go ns missionaries to foreign lands. A tcn-months-old colored child drank some spirits turpentine nnd died in a few minutes. The Register of Deeds of Wake hns not issued a single marriage license this month. A good deal of sample gold is licing found on the lands of Gilliert Holler, 3 miles from Hickory. Work will licgin nt once on the south ern extension ol the Wilson and Florence railroad from Faycttcvillc. J. A. Hoskins.shcriffof Guilford county, has settled State taxes with the Treasu rer, paving in $10,0:18.10, The Rockingham Rocket hns changed hands, Messrs. II. C. Wall and Thomas Guthrie having taken hurgc. The Review henrs thnt the Rcidsviile Times is to lie reinforced bv cnpitul and run us 1111 aggressive prohibition p:iXT. Rev. Kerns and Seilierger arc at Salem preparing for a voyage to the Mosquito const, where they will become missiona ries. Chin el Hill is to have n $13,0110 Y. M. C. A. Iiiiildiiig. This is of course if the moiiev is forthcoming nnd the boys think it will lie. Rev. K. L. Patton, of Morgaiitou, has accepted 11 call to the pastorale of the llantist church at Moravian Fulls, Wilkes county. The military of Wilson participated in the memorial exercises lit Goldsboro. Major Graham Daves, of New Heme, de livered the address. The little son ofThonmsCIifton.keciwr I the Roanoke light house, was drowned 1 lew davs auo. The bov had gone alter wood mid fell overboard. Dr. Hamilton V. Ilorton, of Winston, and Miss Annie Laurie Cowles, a niece of lion. W. II. II. Cowlcs, were ninrricd at Wilkcsboro Wednesday. Col. Wharton I. Green, of Faycttcvillc, will deliver the annual address at the lose ol the Hand military academy ut Frecinont, on the 4th of June. There is in the State Treasurer's eifliee a beautiful Confederate ling. It will be nrricd to the unveilinu ol the K. li. I.CC statue by the North Carolina delegation. Richard Aycock, a colored loy of Greenslioro. ran into a man who Had nn 0111 knile in his hand and received a se vere cut III l lie uouoilieil. ins injuries uie serious. At New Heme Winnie Churchill, col ored, aiicd C0 years, fell dead while whiii- . . 1 1 0:1 i'i i.lii ping a lime ooy imiiicii inej- vuuiluiu ut her home. In death she retained her hold on the whip. The annual reunion of the I'hi Knppa SiL'ina I'ratcruitv ol Cluiiicl Hill will be held in the Chapter House on Thursday, June nth. All the nliiinui arc coruiully invited to oc present. The Governor hns oll'cred a reward eil JS20I1 for the couture or apprehension ol cither L. 11. Stagger, Jim Stagger, or M. W. llluc. ot .Moore county, all 01 wnom arc charged with murder. A new dconrtmcnl is being organized ut the. Salem lemnlc necademy which will receive the name of Industrial depart ment, nnd will embrace ns its chief branches, cooking anil circssmnitmg. In Currituck county the cultivation of sweet poinioes lor euriy niuriicuinj i. growing to be a profitable industry. The slips nrc raised in hot beds nnd thousands have occn piiinteu out uircuuy. The resilience hclonuim: to. and until nUiut three weeks iil-o. occupied by S. L, Gardner in Monroe wns, set lire to by nn ineendiarv. and burned to the irreiuml, touether with the smoke house. Loss $HU0. William Sellers, near Grover, was se verely lrored bv n Icrscy bull. The nni- mill thrust his' horns into Mr. Sellers' ab domen and threw the impaled victim over Ins head. .Mr. Sellers was Disem boweled, lie is now m a precarious con dition. The Randolph Guide notes the fact that Mr. Hal. Worth, of Aslicboro, who repre sents the Randolph depnrlmcnt of the Greensboro l.umlier company, has re ceived an order from Australia for nshii lond of lumber, the length of the lumber to lie sixty lect. The Sliiloh Methodist church, three miles south of Monroe, was burned by nn incendiary and the Ivmpmcr and l-.xprcss hints that some mcmncroi one 01 tiiciwo factions into which the memhers were divided might have had more to do with it than they will admit. The election nt Charlotte on the issu ing of the $73,000 city lieinds passed off very quietly. 1 he opMincnls ol tlie inensure contented themselves with stny- iug away from the polls, The issue of the Dunns was earnea oy a nigmujoriiv, tlie vole standing 311(1 to 32 in lavor of than. The Cabarrus county democrats arc evidently taking time by the forelock. The township primaries nave iiccn calico for Mny 2-V, and tlie county convention for May 31. This convention will name Cabarrus' choice of a candidate for con gress. Col. I'. H. Menus nnd Cnpt. S. II. Alexander arc 1 lie rivals lor tnc nomina tion The oratorical contest of the State In ter-Collegiate Oratorical Association nt Charlotte, resulted in fnvor of Trinity College. Stonewall Jackson Durham be tin the winner of the $23 gold medal. The other contestants were A. II. White. of Trinity College, nnd W, F. llollings- worth nnd liyrun C. t-lnrk, ol Davidson College. A horse was hitched in front ol the F.pisceipal church nt Faycttcvillc and when the owner returned n few minutes Inter it had disaiiiicnrcd. They were found some time Inter in the creek the horse drowned. The supposition is thnt the animal, going into the water to drink, suddenly plunged over his depth, and the weight of the buggy held liim down nnd prevented Ins caciqic. The south bound train for Raleigh rnn over nno kiiicii mr. ninry Ann reigsnee, nucd (10 years. The accident occurred one mile south of Hollownv's. The en gineer snw the lady walking along the side of the track, nnd well out of danger some time before the train got to where she wns. But when the train was only n few yards nwny, coming nt full speed, she attempted to cross. She was struck and thrown twenty-five feet, and when picked up was dead and horribly mangled. MISCELLANEOUS. J. S. GRANT, Ph. G., Of Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, Apothecary, 4 South Main St. TOR ALL HEADACHE USE HOFFMAN'S HARMLESS HEADACHE POWDERS. Tney sea s IpecHlc. tte.UI.ta. M bra. I.M vr itrnllM, Th.r sr. nlftfflhr1l.. rrlMttitU. r.r uto by afkl w ftr BUU. ADDBBSI TUS iSCOMa-oxr H0FFMMH DRUB CO. ii Main St., Buirtlo. N.Y. kid Interna tlonil Bridge, Ont Oil SALS DT J. S. GRANT. If your ptvperiptiuns are prepared at Grant's I'hui uiacyyou can positively de- end upon these facts: First, that only tlie purest and Ijest drugs and chemicals will be used; second, they will be compound ed carefully and accurately by an cxicrh enccd I'tvscriptionist ; and third, you will not be charged an exorbitant price. You will receive the best goods at a very reu- sonublc profit. Don't forget the place Grunt's I'liurtnacy, 24-SouthMainstrcct. Prescriptions filled ut all hours, night or day, and dcliveied Iree ol charge to any part of the city. The night bell will Ije answered promptly. Grant's Phar macy, 24 South Main street. At Grunt's Pharmacy you can buy any Patent Medicine at tlie lowest price (not ed by any other drug house in the city. We ure determined to sell as low us the lowest, even if we hare to lose money by so doing. We will sell all Patent Medi cines at first cost, and below that if nec essary, to meet the price of any competi tor. We have the largest assortment 01 Chamois Skins in Asheville. Over 200 skins, all sixes, at the lowest prices. We are the agents for Humphrey's Homoeopathic Medicines. A full supply of his goods always on hand. Use liuncomlie Liver Pills, the best in the world for liver complaints, indiges tion, etc. A thoroughly teliuble remedy for all blood diseases is Iluncombe Sarsapmrilla. Try a bottle and you will tukenoother. J. S. GRANT, Ph. G., Pharmacist, 2 S. Main St., Asheville, N. C. WIIITLOCK'S Special Sales Week. CIonc buyers will iiloune noto tho following great induce ments this week : Iilnck Mohair Itrilliant irion at HO and 7oe., formerly 7oc. and $1. Mack Timiino Suitings, 00 and H."l, former prieo 75e. and 1. IMaek Camel's Hair and Serge Suitings at 75e. and 1 , formerly 1 and f 1.25. Ulack French Henriettas, ."0c, 7.n and $1, former price (mc., $ 1 and $i.2."i. Fancy Mohair llrilliant ines, "iOc. and 7."e., former price 75c. and $1. Colored Henriettas nt 2."5e., 40c, "0c. and Toe, worth much more. Domestic and IniportiHl Challies ut oc., He., and 12c. per yard. ash Dress Fabrics, Lawns and Prints at Jte. and up. i' reneli anu Domestic foat- ines at popular prices. Dress Ginghams and Seer suckers, large variety. Uutmg Cloths, Table- lin ens, white and colored. lute (mods, Nainsooks, Lawns, India Linens, Hani- burgs, Laces, Underwear, II and kerchiefs, Corsets, Gloves nnd Mitts. Large assortment and low prices. Parasols and Sunshades, tho most attractive in tho city. Prices lower than else where. .lust received A new lot of Black antl Cream Lnco Floun cing and Drapery Nets. Something New We sell tho only absolutely Fust Black Hosiery in tho market niado by Smith & Angoll for Ladies, Misses and Chil dren, also for Men and Boys. They are rruarantood not to dye, crock or turn green, or monoy refunded. WHITLOCK'S, 46 SOUTH MAIN STREET, Oppc-sltt Bank ot AahrvUI. lli as Pattoa Am., AabavUI, N. C.
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 14, 1890, edition 1
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