Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / Aug. 8, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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e A, z t I FOR RENT, WANTS, AND FOR SALE, I Asheville Daily OLD NEWSPAPERS FOR ALI- Not exceeding three Unci, One Time, 28 cento. Three Times, BO cento. Six Timet, 78 cento. AT - - THIS - - OFFICE. SC. PER HUNDRED, ASHEVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1890. PRICE 5 CENTS. 'VOLUME VI. NO. 81. Citizen. '.T MISCELLANEOUS. iUfJVkLE. ViT: '.If WW.. f 1 nlace planned and devel op as a 1REAT RKSORT. fl Situated in the - ' MOUNTAINS r uirorrnu MflOTU HAD(1I III! ncoicnn nun in wniiwunn. A region noted for health iness and beauty of SCENERY. t 1a n Novation of 3.800 feet. jjrith cool InvljcorailnK Climate It is being laid out with ite and skill, with well 'graded roads and extensive FOREST PARKS. residences and HEATHFVL HOMES. A rrrmrl nnnortunitv for I 1 I profitable investments. For ... . . J 1.1. .4. wl t ii uscrauea ihiihihhui, ,V uruno, . LINYILLE IMPROVEMENT CO., LIUTlUe, Mitchell Co., N. C. NEW INVOICE. GENTLEMEN'S MADRAS, CHEVIOT. SATEEN AND FLANNEL SHIRTS JUST IN. LADIES' BLAZERS, SHIRT WAISTS & CHIM KSETTESJUST RECEIVED. BON MARCHE, 30 SOUTH MAIN STREET. H.T.ESTABROOK'S 33 a MAIN ST., ASHBVIIXB, Tll PLACB FOB BOOKS, STATIONERY, FANCY GOODS AND TOYS. LOCAL Views and Sketches. anr is d REAL ESTATE. WLT. B. OWT, W. W. WT. GWYII & WEST, (Successor to Walter B.Owyn) ESTABLISHED 1881 REFER TO BANK OF ASHEVILLE REAL ESTATE. Loans Securely Placed at 8 Percent. Notary Public. Commluionera ofDeeda, FIRE INSURANCE. OFFICE Southeast Court Square, CORTLAND BROS.. Real Estate . Brokers, And Investment Amenta. Loan, ac nrely placed at 8 per cent. OSamt 34 B Patton An. Second floor, fcbOdlT "HOW NOW, HORATIO I" Woulda't buy timber land., mineral prop- rtlea or A.heTlll. Real Batater Then call on ua, Horatio, and we will irlve .the. thy money', worth. W. can aell the. a bona, lot, lend thee .hek el. to eraet a dwelling thereon, and Inaure th. .am. In any Fire Inanrane. Company .doing buaineaa In thl. Stat.. Otre ua a call, Horatio I JENKS JBNKS, REAL ESTATI AND INSURANCE BROKERS. aeonii 4k 10, McAfee Block SS Pattos At., AiImtum, M. C. MISCELLANEOUS. MATINEE EVERY DAY THIS WEEK FOR THB BENEFIT OF THE PUBUC. The Great Comedy Flay entitled 'BLUE ROIH" Has been withdrawn after very .ucccaaful ran, and we now prcKnt oar matchlem Stock of Groceries GRAIN AND FEED FOR YOUR USE AT POP; ULAR PRICES. DOOM OPEN AT 6 A. M. A. D. COOPER. proprietor. During the month of Au gust we want to close out everything we havo in the line of Summer Goods. We are going to buy a big stock for the Fall and Winter and we want no money locked up in Goods to carry over. We have some beautiful patterns in Flouncings and Allovers that we will sell so cheaply that it would be economy to buy even for next Summer, as one cannot have too many White Dresses. If you need a LHunket or a Comfort these cool nights you can find what you want at our place. A new line of Ginghams in Fall Shades have just come in, and are going to be sold very low, as is our habit with all our Goods. We have about six Ice Cream Freezers of the season's lot; they will be sold very low. You can still buy Croquet Setts and Ham mocks of us cheaper than anybody elso. Our Store is headquarters for all sorts of Housekeeping conveniences of which we ask an inspec tion. Come to seo us before you buy Shoes of any kind and you will save money. Every thing at lowest prices at "BIG RACKET." THE SENSATION OF mtmmASHEVILLE. SEPTEMBER 3, 4,5 8.6, 1890. Of alt the handeomc and valuable property that ha. been offered In A.hevlllc, none com parable to the unbroken forest of oyer One uMHMrf 1mm rilvlrfrri and aubdlvlded Into the moat bcautllul lot. and tract., lying along MERRIMON AVENUE, The Boulevard oftho City, About one-thlrd being within city llmlta and the remainder In the charming auburbaa villa of Kamoth. Only one mile from Court Square (10 mln men drive) and on the beat and moat popular drive leading to the country. There la a lab yrinth of avenue, and atreeta being built through theae ground, under the aupervlalnn of one of the Bneat engineer, in the Bouta The lot. and tract, will range In alae from It acre to 8 to 8 acre., the larger plat, covering aom. of th. moat beautiful and pictureaque elevatlona to be found in a day'. Journey Bend for plat of the property to Nat. Atkinson & Son, MISCELLANEOUS. ESTABLISHED 1874. W. G. CARMICIIAEL, APOTHECARY, 20 SOUTH MAIN STREET, ASHEVILLE, N. C. It will take you but one minute to read and you will find by doing so you can save money by buying your drugs, medicines and such articles at Cannichael's Drug Store. His stock fresh and complete and at prices that defy com petition. Don't forget the place, No. 20 South Main Street. Asheville, N. C. We have made a number of sweeping reductions on Spring and Summer Goods in order to close them out. A large discount on light weight Clothing (black excepted) for the remainder of the season. CLOTHING, DRY GOODS, SMALLWARES, HATS, SHOES AND CARPETS. 7 A 9 PATTON AVE- Elegant Drug Store cen trally located well venti latedeasy of access agree able to customers attrac tive to all. by day and night illuminated with electrici ty telephone attachment- Handsome Soda Water Ap paratus ice cold drinks all day long fine 5 and 10 cent Cigars and Kinney's Cigar ettesChoice Perfumery and Soaps Prescription Depart ment neat and clean Medi cal supplies unquestionably the purest obtainable more goods on hand now than ever before patronage in creasing, public confidence secured, success attained Asheville becomes the Drug distributor for a hundred miles around competition relegated to the rear too busv to say more to-day. T. C. SMITH & CO., Drug gists, Public Square, Ashe ville, N. C. F. A. GRACE. DECORATOR AND- DESIGNER IN FRESCO. auirfldnm JOHN CHILD, ( Formerly of Lyman a Child I, nrHca Mo. Lesral Block. REAL ESTATE ANHaa -- LOAN BROKER Strictly a Brokerage Business Loana arcurely placed at B per cent. PICTURE FRAMES. Gold, Silver, Ivory, Oak, Ollt and Combl nation Moulding. Al.o Room Moulding.. Picture. Matted, Mounted and Framed at loweat price, and work guaranteed. Bngrav Inge, Painting, and Local View, alway. on hand at ESTAliROOK'S, ss S. Main St.( apr 18 d Asheville STOR RBNT. Photo gallery over Law'a .tor. Haye'a patent aayiignti panora .no imnimi nartmcnti commodlona and eaay of acceaa, TIE JEWS I BY ASSOCIATED PRESS TO "THE CITIZEN" TO-DAY. PROCEEDINGS IN THE HOUSE AND SENATE. A TERRIBLE ACCIDENT TO A BATHING PARTY. BUENOS AYRES EXCITED BUT HAPPY AT LAST. A TERBtlBLE HAIL, STORM IN INNBBOTAi Baltimore, Md., August 8. Mrs. Mollie Storm, wife of Mr. S. W. Storm, a clerk in the tax department at the city hall, and Edith V.,hisl4-yearold daught er j Mrs. J. R. Johnson, w'fe of the secre tary of the Viaduct X wnfnrturing Com pany, and Carroll, aged nine years, son of Mr. J. S. Grnhnra, clerk of the Spring Grove Asylum, were drowned in St. Ini goes creek, St. Mary county, while bath ing. The bodies were brought to Balti more this morning. The drowned were members of a party of fourteen Bnltimorinns: Mrs. Storm and two children, Mrs. Johnson and three children and nephew, Miss Nettie Graham, her three nephews and niece, and Mrs. Stevens. The party with the exception of Miss Graham, who stood on the shore, went bathing in a creek about a qunrter of a mile from the bouse where they were stopping. The steamer Sue came along. The delight of the young ones at the sight of the vessel lound expression in hearty cheers, and the waving ot bands, which salutations Cant. Ccoghegnn ac knowledged byseveratwhistles. The Sue at this time was about a quarter of a mile distant from the bathers. The un dertow from the steamer caught the wo men and children and swept some ol them beyond their depth. Miss Nettie Graham cried out so loudly that Capt. Geoghegan heard her, but before hecould reach the bather, a number ot oystcrmcn went to their rescue and saved nine. Mrs. Johnson and Edith Storm lost their lives. : o- - a o. I 11 in cuon. iu auvc iuih oiurm uuu viirrun Graham. Mrs. Storm, when carried ashore was insensible, but was resusci tated. PROCKEDINO OP CONURK88. The Removal of lieu, Grant's Re. mains-Work In the Houac, Washington, August 8. In the senate to-day Senator Call offered a resolution (which was agreed to) instructing tin- committee on foreign relations to repot t sucn a measure as may be necessary lor the protection of citizens of the United States who were formerly residents ol Cuba and subjects of Spnin, against prosecution by the Spanish government tor olfcnccs alleged to have been commit ted by them. The concurrent resolution heretofore offered by Senator I'lumb expressing the desire ol congress for the removal of the remains of Ocn. Grant to Arlington Nn tionnl Cemetery was taken up und agreed to. The conference report on the fortifica tion bill was then taken up for consider ation. Washington. August 8. In the house to-day Mr. Mutchlor, of Pennsylvania, was excused at his own rciiuest Irom further service on the committee on coin age, weights and measures and Mr. Vaux, ol i'enn.ylvnuia, wus upoinlcu to fill the vacancy. The house resumed the consideration of the general deficiency bill, the cnding question beng on the amendment graut ing a month's extra pay to thcempToyees of the bouse and senute. KEMMLER FIRST AND LAST. Probably Mo Oilier Hnrderer will Ever be Killed by Electricity. London, August 8. The Times, News and other big dnilies of this city have come out squarely against the electro- ru ' t , i l : . cuuun ol Acmnwr, iiiiu uciiuuiiwu it un barbarous. They licnp abuse upon the United States government for tolerating it, and declare that civilisation over then tends to bnrhnrism. Nkw Yohk. Auirust 8. All the news- Kapers denounce the execution of Kcmm r by electricity and say it will never be used again tor that purpose. Edison says: "The true way to exe cutes criminal Is to send the current through his body from one nrm of the death chair to the other. The arms, hands and fingers are full of blood, which is a good conductor of electricity. I.ct the hundsbe nrooerlv cleansed nnd moist ened, and the charge would pass through the heart, causing instant ucatn." JUBILANT CITIZENS. Dr. Pellestinnl Elected Prealdcnl and Everybody Pleaacd. BimNot Ayr KB, August 8. The citi zens here are jubilnnt over the election of Dr. Pcllegrinnl to the presidency. Crowds parade the streets bearing joyful devices. Thccitv was illuminated last night. Governors of all the provinces have sent telegrams to Dr. rcllcgrinni congratu lating him upon his accession to the presidency. The program of the new cabinet has been presented to the chamber of depu ties. It includes acknowledgement of resnect for the constitution, promises a just administration of public funds and a development ot nniionui resources. TKRHIHI.K HAIL. STORM. MlnncNola Take II This Time Crops Injured. Montkvipko, Minn., August 8, A ter rible hull storm occurred here last even ing. Kcnortl from the northeast, six miles out. say that all standinggrnin was dcstroYcd. Vrom the southwest, five miles out, totnl destruction Is rcnrtcd, while from e uht miles In the southeast iron, were badly damaged. The storm took a wide stretch. Over one-hnlf of the f train was hnrvested. consequently the oss is not quite so great as it might have been, lis: Odd Pellowa' Parade. Chicago, August 8. Yesterday was a half holiday in honor of the visiting Odd Fellows, and the greatest parade known in the history of the secret order is in progress. Between 40,000 and 00,000 Odd Fellows were in ths column. COXE THEN VANCE. Action of the solk County Con vention X. B. Vance Endoraed. Coluudus, N. C, August 5. The dem ocratic convention of Polk county held here endorsed for Hon. A. S. Merrimon chief justice, Hon. J. C. McRca, associate justice supreme court ; M. H. Justice for judge ana F. I. Osborne solicitor ol Elev enth judicial district. Col. Coxc was the first choic for congress and then Gen eral vance. Resolutions endorsing Hon. Z. B. Vance were unanimously adopted. From the Winston Dally, Polk county democrats have instructed for Col. Prank Coxe for congress from the Ninth district first, last and all the time. Mews Front Henderaonvllle. Hhndrnsonville, August 7c Editor Citizen : Our town continues full of visitors. More than usual are here this year. The rains have prevented much riding, but the last two days are an earnest of future gooC wenther. The crops are very fine. Cabbage are being shipped in large numlwrs. The new jail is going up rupidly. The public foun tain has been removed from the middle of the street to court house square and its surroundings much improved. The new railroad depot building is rap idly nearing completion. This will sup ply a long needed want. We nre looking lor a very large crowd on August 19 und days following, at the sale of lots on those days. Our streets have been muddier this summer than ever ln-fore, and worse even than in winter, but gravel is being placed over the mud uud a good road bed will beseemed. Democratic township meeting next Thursday. IIkniikhsonviixb. THE LATEST NEWS " KM NOKTH CAROLINA. A fire occurred nt Burlington Thurs day. One store and the poBtollice were burned. Down at Greensboro a day or ago negroes were whipHil by a policcmun, properly delegated, for fighting. Rev. Sam P. Jones will commence meetings at Winston on the ITith of Scr tember. The meetings will continue not less than ten days. Judge Bynum, of Charlotte, sold a large xirtin of his laud to Mr. Sink, of Winston, this week. Considerations, fif teen thousand dollars. At Greensboro severnl valuable horses have died thisscusou with lockjaw, which seems to have become almost epidemic among the livery stnblcs there. Considerable interest is shown nt High Point over the rediscovery of a tine min eral spring uIkjuI two mites from town. It had been tilled up tor years. A little boy of twelve named Willie Medlin killed himself drinking whiskey near Vouugsville, Wnkccounlv, Monday. He was begged to take a drink by a mid dle aged man. Prof, and Mrs. W. P. Pentrcm, princi pals of one of the lending schools in Guil ford county, have IhiiIi been extremely ill with typhoid fever for the last month, and Mr. I-cntrell died yesterday. Congressman W. II. II. Cowles is at his home in Wilkesboro, nnd is in very feeble health. His physicians says he should have been at home long ugo, but he stood steadily at his post to vote against the election bill. There is nn organized movement within the Alliance to defeat Senator Vance, and that. too. in suite of the fact that there are many good and true demo crat Alliancemcn who are hostile to tin- movement. Charlotte Chronicle. Messrs. Duke, of Durham, have be gun the erection of a mammoth storage warehouse in connection with their fac tory at Durham. The structure will be five stories high, one of the highest in the State, and the dimensions will be 200x00 feet. Greensboro is snid to have still anoth er aKX. John C. Tipton, who has been editor of the Patriot, daily and weekly, since its revival in January, retired from that pniicr an Monday, and will iicgiu the publication of the Guilford Democrat about August 20. The Democrat will be nn orthodox paper. We have been shown the throttle to Mr. John Smyre's engine, which Stqicrin tendent Mcllce hns kindly had enclosed in a handsome case with a glass front nnd presented to Mrs. Smyers. It was taken from the engine in which he was killed in the fcnrlul accident on buluiln mountain in June. Newton Enterprise. The report thnt a successor to Smicr- intendent Dixon of the Orphan Asylum had been npiointcd. Mqicnntcniicni Dixon hns not even tendered his resigna tion I The apiHiiutmcnt of n successor when mnde will lie made by the directors nnd the directors have not even yet been called together. Knlcigh News and Observer. Thos. Cnmn. of Rutherford county. N. C had ten sons and one dauuhtcr by hi. first wife. He married agnm ns his second wife. Miss Margaret Carney, of North Carolina, and had iy her ten sons and two daughters. Then he died. The twenty-three children of Thos. Camp were, as might have been expected, a prolific nnd stalwart race. Only one of them, unugnicr, npproneaeu mc min er's record, however. She had twenty two children. At a reunion a few years ago in Douglass county, Gn., fully 3,000 cacent cnts were present, a liny or two ngn, nt the residence of the late Major William A. Camp, near Dalton, On., as sembled all of Ids seven sons and their dracendnnts in n family reunion, the oc casion being their mother' seventieth birthday. Essie Skscn, years old, of Charlotte, and a goat, ol nowhere esiiecmiiy, were nlnving on the edge of the Carolina Cen tral's deep cut Saturday. The goat was staked, like a cow in a pasture, am at once both rolled down into the railroad cut. The roie which was fastened to the goat's neck caught on a fence post. On the loose end was a loop, which cnuuht around Essie's neck mid drew tight. Both the child nnd the gont were .ii.nendcd bv their necks fully six feet from the bottom of the cut. Another child gave an alarm and Essie and the ?Oat were rcscuca. nc cnnu wan unit, n the fnce and totally unconscious. Dr. Wilder, by the use of ammonia, nnd forc ing air in her lungs, hnally restored ncr to ennarlnuanru. She is now nil right. Of course the gont did not mind a little thing like that. IS HE THE MAN WANTED? NORTH CAROLINA INTEREST' ED IN THIN CASE. A Man Convicted of Illgamv In Georgia Who Declare He In Not the Guilty One, But Another HIh Experience In Thin State. Atlanta, August 8. The Rev. Walter R. Dale, formerly pastor of the Sixth Baptist church of Atlanta has been con victed of bigamy at Dallas, Ga., where he hus been on trial for several days. The testimony on the triul was that Dale was raised at Concord, N. C, and there he married a Miss Horton, by whom' la- had four children. At that time he was known as J. O. II. Nutull. He was a jeweler by trade and went about from place to place looking lor worn. At Dallas, N. C, he stayed nt the house of u man named Rnwlings, und a daughter of Ruwlings fell in love with him. They disappeared together, Nutall leaving be mud ins v. nc anil children. At (.Olivers, Ga.. the girl's relatives found him nnd in duced her to return home, lcuving her child with its father. Later there appeared in Dallas, Gn., n jeweller named Walter K. Dale. There wus another scandal in which n woman s name figured, and then came his conver sion to the Baptist church, and after awhile his admission to the ministry. He married in Dallas, Miss Smith, who is his present wife. After living there some time they enmc to Atlanta, and here Dale was given a little charge out in the su burbs of the city. He labored along faith fully so far as is known until he was re cognized by an old friend from North Carolina as Nutull. He denied bitterly that lie is Nutull. nnd fought the case through a long trial, but the jury found him guiltv of bigamy. Dale says his first recollection was of lie- iug a street Aral) in New York. He drifted about until he enmc into the hands of a gambler named ilig Ned Mc--Sweeny. Willi McSweeny he coveted a good part of the country, ami was known as McSwcenv's Kid. He deniesever hav ing lived in North Carolina. 11 is lawyers will apieal. AITA1KS Ol- CoNSEjJVEXCE. France has assented to a British pro tectorate over Zanzibar. Lord Tennyson is now in better health than he hus been for years. The m- mlK-rs of the International Med ical Congress have decided to hold their next rongicss in Rome in 1K0X A mob of soldiers und peasants de stroyed a railroad in China, and the gov ernment mnde no effort to interfere with the work of destruction. In retaliation for grievances, men of the artillery battery ot Exeter, England, cut the harness of the horses nnd pre vented a parade which wus ordered. IIOMIt. The President hns returned to Wash ington from Cnc May. The annual retreat of Jesuits in nil provinces of the United States has begun. The Christian Socialist Society is to have n nutionul convention in New York to-day. New York real estate has grown in vuluc neurly $07,000,000 during the past year. Sixtv miles of the Saute Pe Road, be tween Benson und Nogales, have ln-en washed out. Cei sua statistics show that the iudcht- edncs of States has decreused $."18,000, 000 since 1KM0. The New York grund jury found in- lictments for manslaughter in the first legrcc ngainst Dr. McGonignl, Mrs. Fanny Shaw und August Harrison, im plicated in the death by malpractice of Annie Goodwin. The Convention of the United Broth erhood of CarK-nters nnd joiners at Chicago yesterday has decided to locate me ncndiiuuricrs 01 mc uouy ai 1111111- delphia for the next ten years. WASHINGTON. It is snid Philadelphia importers will test the customs administrative law on the point of Mr. Rccd'siiortimcounting. In the senate Mr. Gorman mnde a speech in favor of the reduction of the duties on iron ore, but the proposition wus deteated. In the house the conference report on the original package bill was presented and adopted. The report leaves the bill us it passed the senate. OUT ON THE IWKXiS. Never before hns there Ik-cii such n crop in this vicinity of fine watermelons nnd candidates. Lnlirnngc Spectator, The fine ruins last Friday and Saturday brought out the corn crop wonderfully. As we heard a farmer say, "it ruined many a nubbin." Roxboro Courier. Dr. Ilohlcn of this place has some of the finest tobacco ever seen in Ibis state. It is nine feet high, uud some stalks have thirty lenves on them. Wilson Mirror, IlmirtHvilentlv fine crone nre reported from ull (nurlcrs, onr farmers, with a prophetic eye, can see incir nurns over flowing with plenty. Red Springs Scot tish Unci. A friend tells us that the corn nnd cot ton eron of Chatham counlv is very prom ising. Chatham, however, generally yields a good wheat crop and this is a failure this year. Siiimiioru uxprcss. We have had exhibited to us. on yester day n bcmitiltil acciiiicn of tobacco, the "Yellow unnoco raised tins year 111 Nash county, on the tobacco farm of Mr. 8. R. Hllliiird. of that counlv. He hns in cultivation eight and a half acres, yielding n hout one thousand pounds to me acre. At the present prices, this tobacco crop will yield him about twenty-live Hundred dollars. Wilmington Messenger. Junt an Had. - The value of stylish medical names for discuses is vcrv much overruled. A man feels ns bud when the doctor tells him he hns enteritis or guslrulgui ns if he al lowed his trouble to talk English and confess itself simple stomuch-uche. Phil adelphia limes. The Pity or It. 1 11c large.!. euiign.niVJU" . . mer Sundays arc ut the beach. Somer- vuicjuuraui, MISCELLANEOUS. iiTiiMiir THE NEVER FAILING CURE FOR HEADACHE. TKADB MARK KBGISTMRHD. ABSOLUTELY SAFE, PERFECTLY SURE AND ALWAYS SPEEDY. CureH Every Variety .of Headache AND NOTHING KLSU. ANTIMIGRAINE enr"t 'r tion of being the finest, most effective uud reliublc article iu the mtirket for the speedy relief uud cure of every variety of that common trouble, Uuauaciiu. The immense I'uvor which hus greeted it from ull quarters, proves its true merits uud acceptability to the public. It is some thing which almost everyone needs, uud those who huve once tried it, will never be without. For its curutive powers it does not de pend upon the subtle iullueuces of such poisonous drugs us ANT1FYKLNU, MORPHINE, CHLORAL AND COCAINE, Since it docs not contain an utont of either ol these. It is ubsolutely free from injurious cliemiculs, und can be tuken by young uud old without fear or serious results. It is not a Cathartic, does not disarrange the stomach, uud contuins 110 uoxious or sickening ingredients. The peculiar advantages of Autinii- gruiuc consist iu its being thoroughly reliable us u cure for uny kind of heud- uehe without respect to cuusc leaving no unpleasant or annoying ufter-elVccts, as iu the case of other so-called "hurm less" remedies. These qualities make it the most popular uud saleable article iu the market, wherever known. UlKliCTlONS 1'UK LSU. The dune lor an udult la two ti-uapoonfula iu a wine kIum of wuier. Uune lor children iu proportion, uevorUiiiK to age. In cither cum- the iloav euu be rijK-uti-d every thirty luiuui-a uutil u cure la ilketcd. One doae will ulwuya drive uwuy uu attack of lli-udui-hc, it tuken wlu-u lirst li-cling the preuioultury ymutuuia; Out If the utlui-k in well on, and aulli-riuti is iuuuae, the sci-oud or third doae muy be n-uuin-d. Usually u greater number of dom-a ia required to elicit the Drat cure thau is ni-i-ded lor uny euceccding time there- ul'ter, allowing thut the medicine ia ueeuniu lutive in ita clli-eta, lending lowurd uu event uul pcrinuni-iit cure. For aulc ut CHANT'S I'HAKMACV. WIIITLOCK'S, 46. SOUTH MAIN STREET. Bargains! Bargains! (CONTINUED.) We offer greater induce ments to cash buyers of Dry Goods than any house iu Asheville. All our Domestic Goods bought before the riso of cot ton are now sold at prime cost. Fans and Parasols, tho best selection iu town, re gardless of cost. Curtains in great variety for lens than you can buy them elsewhere. Table Linen, Towels, Nap kins and Doilies at prices that defy competition. White Goods, Embroider ies and Laces at half their values. Our Btoek is very large and we are determined to reduce it. Kid Gloves and Hosiery, tho best stock in Asheville, all reduced to bottom prices. We will undersell the low est. Call and see ua before you purchase. All Goods are now marked in plain figures lowest pricea in everything. Call and con vince yourself. . WIIITLOCK'S, 46 SOUTH MAIN STREET, OppoalU Bank ef Aslurrilte. ABUBV1LLB, H. C. Juncadtf 68 South Main (treat.
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 8, 1890, edition 1
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