I--....
; . r*- * _' J ,
, I
I
F?
VOL. XIII.
PLATFORM ADOPTED!
Princioles and Policies of Renuhlican i
w ? - r
Party Outlined
THE ADMINISTRATION IS ENDORSED
Administration Strongly Endorsed
and the Party's Record Cited as a
Pledge for the Future?Democratic
Party Declared Untrustworthy, Especially
as Regards the Currency
and Tariff?Congressional Action
on Suffrage Restrictions Favored.
Following is the full text of the platform
of the Republican party as adopted
by the National Convention in session
in the city of Chicago nft June
2L'nd:
"Fifty years ago tho Republican
party came into existence, dedicated,
among other purposes, to the great
task of arresting the extension of
human slavery. In lKGO it elected its
gist President. During twenty-four
the forty-four years which have
lapsed since the election of Lincoln,
the Republican party lias held com
pieio couiroi 01 ine government. b'or |
eighteen more ot the forty-four years
it lias held partial control, through
(ho possession of one or two branches
of the government, while the Democratic
party, during the same period,
lias had complete control for only two
years. This long tenure of power by
the Republican party is not due to
chance. It is a demonstration that the ,
R< publican party has commanded the '
confidence of the American people for
nearly two generations to a degree I
never equaled in our history, and lias
displayed a high capacity for rule and
government, which lias been made even
more conspicuous by the Incapacity and
infirmity of purpose shown by its opponents.
"The Republican party entered upon j
its present period of complete supre- |
inacy in 1897. We have every right to i
congratulate ourselves upon the work
sir.ee then accomplished, for it has i
added lustre oven to the traditions of !
the party which carried the govern- !
nient tlirough the storms of civil war.
"Wo then found the country, after
four years of Democratic rulo, in evil
plight, oppressed with misfortune and
loubtful of the future. Public credit
h:iil lmoti lott'f.n.,1 1
declining, the debt was growing. tin* i
administration's attitude towards Spain I
was feeble and mortifying, the standard
of values was threatened and uncertain.
labor was unemployed, business
was sunk in the Impression wlileh
had succeeded the panic of 1SD3, hope
was faint and confidence was gone.
Unhappy Cona.tions Met.
"Ww met these unhappy conditions
vigorously, effectively and at once.
"We replaced a Democratic tariff
law, based on free trade principles and
garnished witli*Sectional protection, by
a < onsistent protectiv tariff; and industry.
freed from oppression and stimulated
by the encouragement of wise
1 i\vs. has expanded to a degree never
b fore known, has conquered new ntarlt
( ts and has created a volume of exports
which has surpassed imagination.
Under the Dingley tariff, labor
has been fully employed, wages have
risen, and all industries have revived
and prospered.
"Wo firmly established the gold
standard, which was then menaced
with destruction. Confidence returned
iii business, and with confidence an
i-nexanipled prosperity.
'For deficient revenue, supplemented
by improvident issues of bonds, we
gave the country an income which produced
a large surplus and which enabled
us. only four years after the
Spanish war had closed, to remove over
one hundred millions of annual war
taxes, reduce the public debt, and lower
the interest charges of the government.
' The public '' -lit. which had been so
lowered that in time of peace a Democratic
administration made large loans
at extravagant rates of interest in order
to pay current expenditures, rose
under Republican administration to its
highest point, and enabled us to borrow
jsi 2 per cent, even in time of war.
Expansion Record.
"We refused to palter long with ths
miseries ot Cuba. We fought a quick
and victorious war with Spaiu. Wo set
Cuba free, governed the island for
three years, and then gave it to the
Cuban people. vTUli order restored, with
ample revenues, with education and
public health established, free from
debt and connected with the United
States by wise provisions for our mutual
interests.
"We have organized the government
< t Porto Rico; and its people now enjoy
peace, freedom, orf~Y and prosperity.
"In the Philippines, we have suppressed
insurrection established order
and given to life and property a security
never known there before. We
l ave organized civil government, made
It effective and strong In administration
and have conferred upon the people
of those islands th<? largest civil
vberty they have ever enjoyed.
"lly our possession of the Philippines,
wc were enaMed to take prompt
and effective action in the relief ol
the logatlons at Pektn and a decisive
part in preventing the partition and
preserving the integrity of China.
"The possession of a route for ar
isthmian canal, so long the dream o
American statesmanship, is now an accomplished
fact. Th<> great work o
connecting the Pantile and Atlantic bj
a canal is at last begun, and it is du< 1
*,
()RT
]
to the Republican party.
"We have passed laws which wil
bring the arid lands of the United
Stater, within the area of cultivation.
"We have reorganized the array and
put it in the highest stato of efficiency
"We havo passed laws for the lmprovemeiit
and support of the militia.
"We hwve pushed forward tho building
of the navy, tho defence and protection
of our honor and our interests
"Our administration of the great do
partraents of tho government has beet
iionest and fficient, and wherevei
wrong-doiug lias been discovered, tin
Republican administration has uot hesitated
to probe the evil and bring offenders
to justice, without regard tc
party or political ties.
Trust Regulatipn.
"Txiws enacted by the Republican
partj'. which the Democratic party fail >
ed to enforce, and which were Intended j
for the protection of the public agailist
the unjust discrimination or tho illegal j
encroachment of vast aggregations ol .
capital, have been fearlessly enforced |
by u Republican President; and new ;
laws, insuring reasonable publicity n* j
to the operations of great corporations j
and providing additional remedies for'
the prevention of discrimination in j
freight rates, have been passed by a
Republican Congress.
"In tills record of achievement during
the past eight years may bo read
th" pledgee which the Republican party
has fill (Hied. Wo promise to continue
these policies, and wo declare our constant
adherence to the following principles:
Principles Declared.
"Protection, which guards and dovolops
our industries, is a cardinal
policy of the Republican party. The
measure of protection should always
at least equal the difference lu the cost
of production at home and abroad, j
We insist upon the maintenance of the |
principles of protection, and, therefore,
rates of duty should be readjusted only j
when conditions have so changed that
the public interest demands their alteration.
hut this work cannot safely
he committed to any other hands titan
those of the Republican party. To ontrust
t to the Democratic party is to
invite disaster. Whether, as in 1S92.
the Democratic party declared the pro- j
tective tariff unconstitutional, or
whether it demands tariff reform or
tariff revision, its real object is always
the destruction of the protective sys- 1
teni. However specious the name, the
purpose is over the same. Democratic
tariff has always been followed by business
adversity; a Republican tariff,
by business prosperity. To a Republican
Congress and a Republican President.
this great question can be safely
intrusted. When the only free trade
country among the great nations agitates
a return to protection, the chief
protective country should not f ilter
in maintaining it.
"We have extended widely our foreign
markets, and we believe in the
adoption of all practicable methods for
their further extension, including <on>mercial
reciprocity wherever reciprocal
arrangements can he effected con
sister, wun tno principles or prniec
tion and without injury to American
agriculture, American labor or anj
American industry.
The Gold Standard.
"We believe it to be the duty or the
Republican party to uphold the g >ld
standard and the integrity and value
of our national,currency. The maintenance
of the gold .standard, established
by the Republican party, cannot
be safely committed to the I) *nocratic
party, which resisted its
adoption, and has never given any
proof since that time of belief in it or
fidelity to it.
"Wliile every other industry lias
prospered under the fostering aid of
Republican legislation, American shipping
engaged in foreign trade in <0111potition,
low wages and heavy subsidies
of foreign governments, has not for
many years received from the government
of the United States adequate ?ncouragement
of any kind. We. therefore.
favor legislation which will encourage
and build up the American
merchant marine, and we cordially approve
the legislation of the last Congress
which created the merchant marine
commission to investigate and report
upon this subject.
Maintaining the Navy.
"A navv powerful enough to defend
the United States against any attaca.
to uphold the Monroe doctrine and
to watch over our commerce, is essential
to the safety and the welfare of
the American people. To maintain
such a navy is the fixed policy of the
Republican party.
"We cordially approve the attitude
of President Roosevelt and Congress
in regard to the exclusion of Chinese
labor, and promtse a continuance or
the Republican policy in that direction.
"The civil service law was pla-ed
on the statute books by the Republican
party, which has always sustain
cd it, and we renew our former declarations
that it shall be thoroughly and
honestly enforced.
"Wo are always mindful of tic*
country's debt to tho soldiers and
sailors of the United States, and we
believe in making ample provision for
them, and in the liberal .administration
of the pension laws.
"We favor the peaceful sell lenient
of international difficulties by arbitration.
"We commend the vigorous efforts
made by the administration to protect
American citizens in foreign lands,
and pledge oursolves to insist upon
the just and equal protection of all
our citizens abroad. It is the Jin-1
questionable duty of the govornirient
to procure for all our citizens, without
distinction, tho rights of travel
and sojourn in friendly countries, and
we declare oursolves In favor of all
proper efforts tending to that end.
"Our great Interests and our growing
commerce In the Orient render*
the condition of China of high importance
to the United States. We cor
IHB' '
MI j
FORT MILL, S. C WE
dially commend the policy pursued lr
tlijat direction by the administration;
of President McKinley and Preside! t
Roosevelt.
Suffrage Restriction.
"We favor such Congressional ac
tion as shall determine whether, l>>
special discriminations, the elective
franchise in any State lias been nr.
constitutionally limited, and, if snob
is the case, we demand that represen
tat ion in Congress and in the electoral
college shall he proportionally reduced
as directed by the constitution of the
United States.
Combinations of capital and of la
bor are the results of tho ecomonic
movement of tho age, hut neither
must be permitted to infringe upon
tho rights and interests of tho people.
Such combinations, when lawfully
formed for lawful purposes, are alike
entitled to tho protection of the laws,
and neither can bo permitted to break
them.
"Tho PTOflt <t f? foem o ?*wl mlrtnUn
American. William McKinley. who
was re-elected by the Republican party
to the Presidency four years ago,
was assassinated just at the threshold
of his second term. The entire na
tion mourned his untimely death and
did that justice to his great qualities
of mind and character which history
will confirm and repeat.
Administration Endorsed.
"The American people were fortunate
in bis successor, to whom they
turned with a trust and a confidence
which have been fully justified. President
Roosevelt brought to the great
responsibilities thus sadly forced upon
him a clear head, a bravo heart, an
earnest patriotism and high Ideals of
public duty and public service. True
to the principles of ihe Ropublicar
party and to tho policies which that
party had declured, lie has also sliowr.
himself ready for overy emergency
and has met pew and vital questions
with abilitiy and with success.
"The confidence of the people in his:
justice, inspired by his public career,
enanled ntm to render, personally, an :
inestimable service to the country by
bringing about a settlement of tho
coal strike, which threatened such disastrous
results at the opening of wintor
in 1902.
Our foreeign policy under his administration
has not onlv been nhle vie.
orous nnd dignified. but in the hlp;h
est degree successful. The complicated
questions which arose in Venezuela
were settled in such a way by I
President. Roosevelt that tlio Monroe i
doctrine was signally vindicated and
the cause of peaco and arbitration
pic: |y advanced.
Ilis prompt and vigorous action in
.ma. which wo commend in the
iii: ! st terms, not only secured to us
He canal route but avoided foreign:
- iuplications which might have been !
i. a very serious character.
"lie hns continued the policy of ,
I IT' iilmit McKinley in the Orient and
;u position in China, signalized by
cur >cent. cominnrcial treaty with
flat empire, has never been so high.
"lie secured the tribunal by which
ti e \c\ed and perilous question of tho
Ah.skan boundry was finally settled.'
"Whenever crimes against humanity
h: ve been pereptrated which have I
i shocked our people, his protest has
been made and our good offices have
I I;i en tendered, but'always with duo reI
par i to international obligations.
"I'nder his guidance wo And our!
s Ivc- at peace with all tlio world and
never were wo inoro respected or our
j w islic3 more regarded by foreign na- j
i lions.
"Pre-emiently successful in regard j
to our foreign relations, ho has been |
equally fortunate in denling with do- '
niestic questions. The country has
I known that the public credit and the
national currency were absolutely j
safe in the hands of his administration.
In the enforcement of the laws j
ho has shown not onlv courage hut t
the wisdom which understands that;
to permit laws to be violated or dis- i
regarded opens the door to anarchy j
while the just enforcement of the law I
is the soundest cuusoi vatlsui. Ho
has held firm to the fundamental American
doctrine, that all men must
obey the law, that there must he no
distinction between rich and poor, between
strong and weak, hut that justice
and equal protection under tho
law must be secured to every citizen
without regard to race, creed or condition.
His administration has been,
throughout, vigorous and honorable,
high-minded and patriotic. We commend
it without reservation to tho
considerate judgment of tho American
people.
Cave-In on Southern.
Columbus, C,a.. . Special.?With a
crash, 40 feet of the Southern Railway
tunnel at Pine Mountain, near Warm
Springs, caved in at one o'clock I' rlday
morning, blocking the track. The
cause of the cave-in is a mystery, as
no train was passing to jar the earth.
Several weeks ago the wood-work in
the tunne! burned, and In replacing
it only the stoutest timbers were used
and the top of the tunnel was thor
oughly cribbed.
Fire at World's Fair.
St. Louis. Special?Fire which
threatened for a time to destroy many
buildings at the World's Fair, consumed
the House of Moo Hoo. rendering
the building and contents a total
loss. So quickly did the flames spread
that the live occupants of the building.
all on the second floor, had difficulty
in escaping with their lives, being
compelled to climb down a tree.
The loss on the building and contents
is estimated at $d0,000. The Are Is
supposed to have started front an electric
light wire.
Russia has fllty seven warships at J
Port Arthur.
L-L :
ItNESDAY, I: N K 29,
TIIF: RUSSIANS HEAVY LOSERS
Heavy Loss to Russian Fleet Reported?Battleship
Sunk.
Tokio, Special?Adnurcl Togo , roporLi
an engagement at Port Arthur
ast. Thursday in which a battleship of
the Peresviet type was sunk and a
battleship of the Sevastopol typo and
a first-class cruiser of the Diana typo
were damaged.
The Japanese fleet was practically
undamaged.
Russian Cavalry Ineffective.
in imii um s iifiimiuant'is ill mo
Field. via Fusan, Thursday,? tDelayed
in Transmission)?A Russian cavalry
division commanded by General
Rennenkampft opposes the Japaneso
right flank. The country is mountainous
and almost impossible for cavalry
operations, although it is ideal for Infantry
movements, hence the cavalry
forays upon which the Russians have
greatly depended to harass the Japanese
have proved ineffective.
Junction of Japanese Armies.
Liao Yang. Ily Cable?It is reported
that Generals Oku and Kuroki hav.j
Joined forces and are attacking from
the direction of Vafnngow.
There is talk of a serious engagement
shortly. It is also rumored that
tho Japanese forces which were recently
advancing in this direction have
fallen hack on Feng Wang Cheng.
Vessels for Far East.
St. Petersburg. Hy Cable?It is
stated that the ice-breaker Yermpk
designated by the late Vice-Admiral
Makaroff, is preparing to start for the
far east.
Naval Battle Reported.
TV>kio, Hy Cable?It is reported that
t.ho Port Arthur fleet came out of the
harbor Thursday and engaged the Japanese
fleet.
A Double Tragedy.
Detroit. Midi.. Special.?A small pri
vate oliice in a suite on tne eleventh
floor of the Chamber of Commerce
Building. at the corner of Griswold
and State streets, was th?- scene of a
most thrilling tragedy, when Chas. A.
Swayse, an insurance agent, fought
with Miss Eflle Alvonl for several minutes
in an attempt to throw her otit of
the window, then shot her twice and
plunged himself from the window to
the brick pavement of State .street, being
almost instantly killed. Miss Alvonl
was shot twice in the neck and
badly beaten about the head and face
by Swayse, but iter physician paid to*
night that she ia not dangerously hurt.
Every hone in Swayse's body below his
neck was broken by his fall of 1 " ?."> Vet.
Despite the terrific fall, a faint flickering
of life remained when he \v:i|
picked tip. but it went out as his broken
body was being carried to the lobby of
the building. Hack of the tragedy lies
a tale of intimacy between Miss Alvord
and Swayse. who was f?l years old,
married, and the father of two young
daughters.
Sweeping Cabinet Changes.
Washington. Special.?A sweeping
change in the cabinet of President
Roosevelt was announced officially at
the White House Friday. The announcement
came in the form of a brief
typewritten statement issued by Secretary
I.ocb. as follows:
' The following cabinet appointments
are announced:
"William H. Moody, of Massachusetts.
Attorney General.
"Pnul Morton, of Illinois. Secretary
of the Navy.
'Victor H. Met calf, of California,
Secretary of Commerce and I^ahor.
'The resignations of Secretary Cor
telyou and Attorney t.enerai Knox
have been accepted, to take effect July
1st."
The Visible Supply.
New Orleans, Special.?Secretary
Hester's statement of the world's visible
supply of cotton, issued Friday,
shows the total supply to bo 2,120.880,
against 2,250,082 lust week and 2,295,432
last year. Of%this the total American
stock is 1.136.808. against 1.197,022
last week and 1.192,432 last year,
and of all other kinds Including Egypt,
Brazil. India, etc., 981.000, against 1,053,000
last week
Of the world's visible supply of cotoon
there Is now afloat and held in
(treat Britain and continental Europe,
1,197,000, against 1,282,000 last year.
In Egypt 121,000, against 31,000 last
year; in Lndla. 483.000, against 007,000
last year, and in the United States
320,000, against 302,000 last year.
Superintendent Suspended.
Richmond. Va.. Special.?John S.
Riley, division superintendent of the
schools of the county of Itodford, was,
suspended by the State board of education.
Tho charge against Mr. Riley
is that ho has been guilty of subordination
of perjury in connection with
fire insurance policies on his house,
which waB burned some time ago.
Mr. Riley has been indicted for the offense,
and Hi under bond.
p.
riME
l'.tOI.
NEWS THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY
I
Paragraphs of Minor Importance
Gathered From Many Sources.
Through the South.
The Arkansas Democratic Convention
was hold at Little Rock.
Fire destroyed 'he Virginia Woolen
Mills a' Winchester, loss $50,000.
The Arkansas Democratic convention
instructed for Judge A. It. Parker
for President.
Mr. It. H. Edmonds, of Baltimore,
delivered tlio annual address at the
Virginia Polytechnic Institute.
Carlton McCarthy, Democrat, was
elected Mayor of Richmond, Va., with
a full Democratic hoard of aldermen
and councilman. The voto was ex- I
ceedingly light.
A handsome portrait in oil of the
late .lodge James C. Lamli has been
presented to the chancery court of
Richmond by the Rar Association.
The picture was painted by Miss
Adele Williams.
Wshington Happenings.
It is thought that Assistant Secretary
of the Navy Darling may succeed
Secretary Moody.
There is a hitch in' the. negotiations
for the release of Ion Pordlcaris, the
bandit chief Ralsuli having made
new demands.
United States Circuit Judge Thayer
issued a writ of habeas corpus for C.
H. Mayer, president of the Western
Federation of Mineis, returnable July
5 in St. l.ouis. Governor Peabody, of
Colorado, and General Roll, his adjutant,
are summoned to appear at the
samo time.
In the North.
Ahss Elsie Whclan, of Philadelphia. ,
was married to Mr. Robert Goelct, of !
Now York, at Wuyno. I'a.
The National Conference of Charl- I
ties and Correction began its thirtyfirst
annual meeting at Portland, Me
Three men were killed, another fatally
wounded and a fifth .shot twice
in a street light, the culmination of
a feed, at Brvantsv illo. Ind.
The Illinois Democratic State Convention
Instructed for Hearst as long
as his name is before the convention,
and Lawrence 13: Stringer was noniI
inated for governor by acclamation.
1 A jury in Brooklyn, N. Y., awarded
i Morris C. Mouses, formerly of Haitimore,
$1,112,000 on his claim against
CJen. Louis Fitzgerald for services in ]
connection with the sale of the Western
Maryland Railroad.
Willie Fitzgerald, of llrooklyn, gi i.
I ti^o decision at the end of a 10-roimd
, tisht with Fred Douglass, of Savan
j nab, at Toledo, Ohio. The former was
! the aggressor anil Douglass was weak
j at the close.
The ofllcial experiments made with
submarine torpedo boats off Newport
R. I., were reported to have shown
that they could he used to great advantage
in war.
Reginald C. Vanderbuilt. returned to
his country place near Newport, It. I.,
having evaded all efforts of Now York
detectives to serve a subpoena on
him.
A strong effort is being made in
Hergen county, New Jersey, to have
the death sentence of Mrs. Valentini,
charged with murder, commuted to
life imprisonment.
Three men taking $10,00?) to pay !
oft the men of tho Johnstown tl'a.t
water Company were attacked by robbers
and two of their horses were shot ,
but they escaped with the money.
A baker's oven In Prance, which
Is heated by electricity, is said to bo
a. success In every particular.
250% lr t-"SET
Customers teiuimB Wtf fl 9 jl ?!
Shipment* KM 'jSeW tBSB hUd *
nulr in pluln WW U il I ^
.no.x.r.:^.?;? togj W 8 SaI %
ealeniBUDta. JjUfo) ,
?r ,HS it YEAR OLD jx.rKBii.jn,
S^.' ll ciin.,-1 LU mumrli'w
tl 5 3 e? tmltliKlv.
si made dv honest^j
Oo*t>
JJtniTOR'S NOTKl ?Brfor* MnnlltiBjr th* *bo?? whi
- . l^r"UKh tbrir Banker.. We cheerftill/ cuJori. the
at heeitate to opler nmj le lot.
1
.
a
:s.
NO. 15.
CAROLINA SEASIDE RESORT.
Wnghtsville Beach Unsurpassed For
Health and Pleasure.
Or all the avenues open to the weary
and the ov<-rworked to seek a few days
or weeks of perfect quiet and undis"
turbed repose during the heated summer
period, none are quite so inviting
as a stay at the seashore, where the
never-ending splash of the waves of old
ocean lull one. all unconsciously, to
perfect repose and utter forget rulrie*s
Many seaside resorts are open, each
one with its advertised attractions but
no other appeals so strongly to those
desiring an Ideal spot in which a long
or short vacation can he most satisfactorily
spent, as the Seashore Hotel,
Wrightsvilo Beach, N. C.
Nothing hero is wanting that could
add to the comfort or jtleasufe* of the
most fastidious guest, whether that
guest be the monied prince or the or
dinary citizen seeking a lioliilay. so
long as a capacity for real enjoyment
is left. All alike will find a welcome at
this magnificent resort, anil each will
be fanned impartially by the invigorating
breezes that are the gratuitous gift
from the bounteous Atlantic.
The Seashore Hotel has been enlarged
to three times its former capacity.
'.md no resort on the Atlantic
coast affords such charms to the health
or pleasure seeker. The management
delights to give its guests the most perfect
service and the greatest pains are
exerted to make each feel at home and
at ease.
This popular resort is reached by way
of the Seaboard Air lane Railway, by
means of a splendid schedule of passenger
trains, a new one l?elng contemplated
that will leave Charlotte and
up-country points in the late afternoon
and arrive in Wilmington in the evening.
carrying special parlor cars and
first-class coach accommodations. The
i-M-mjuuru system lias become a wellknown
factor in developing the resorts
ot' the Somh. and Its schedules are arranged
with a view to accommodate
its ever-increasing patronage in every
possible way.
No higher pleasure awaits the one in
need of a vacation than a stay at the
Sea Shore Iiotei and a dip in the surf
thai rolls so near its spacious piazzas,
and no need to seek further North?or
Fouth. for an ideal place to spend one's
lei mi re than at this popular resort.
Sain'a itnnual export of ptckle 1
green olives amounts to about $S0Q.
on
j. i?^ lu.???5
Dragging Painsl
Ciiicaoo, fi.'i.., Oct., 2, 1902. |jj
! suffered with falling and con
gestion of the woml), with severe fi?
J pains through the groins. 1 suf- I
fa lered terrihlj* at the time of men
? striiatioii, had blinding headaches >3
K and rushing of blood^.o the brain.
What to try I knew not. for it Eg
& seemed thai 1 had tried all ami H
;l failed, but I had never tried Wine B
of Cardui, that blessed remedy for ig
fl sick women. I found it jfleasant |.
I to WK" ?i11*i soon Knew tiiat I uau H
the right medicine. New blood li
seemed to course through my veins la
and after using eleven bottles I I
was a well woman.
Mrs. Hush is jiow in perfect ?<a
health because she took Wine of H
Cardni for menstrual disorders, ^
bearing down pains and blinding pu|
headaches when all other remedies H
failed to bring her relief. Any f|
sufferer may secure health hy tak- fl
#ing Wine of Cardui in her home. &9
The first bottle convinces the pa- 1*
tient she is on the road to health. S3
Fur advice in cases requiring H
uiicutiuun, anun w, Kivn^ mm
M symptoms. "The Liulies' Advisory n*
I Department," The Chattanooga fc
Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tcnn.
I wwggroiH |
FU^^OUA^T^Op 1
im FREE
1 tho meaning of wortli and will do an wo say. W
bo till luuril-prirdl W'hUi.17 IIohmi and the
lull Order Whiskey Contrrn In the South. All tho
iillnit WhliLtjr wo acll la foud -tbrrr'i no bail.
wouldn'lndulicratn It lliey knew how?thej arc too
<> 1 whiskey sellers arc uoted for mi.inn,blending and
Wo Mill tui.io ttoiiulno old whiskey and leas water than
comietit-.r. "t usprr'a II Ycsrtllil" U'lilaliry la
or! It'a made by honest poop I o in Iho mountains of
.:111a. 111 ol.l sijlo copper stills, Jiu.1 as it was made by
a them. kirst-ruto whls'cry Is sold nt #G.OOtn$A.OO
hut it 's net any t?-tUT than "(Jasper's II Year Old." It
j or wo will huy It hack. Wo havo a capital of (hOO.OOO,
jplca' National Hunk and the Ilodronnt Savlnirs Innk
will toll you our won! Is pood. To Introduce this old,
vLey, we offer four Full Qusrta ef *t'a?per*a 11
'?two aamplo bottles, one IN, one IS year old a corka
iirlnl*in,f gltes?all for *?.???. If ?G.VO Is srnl we
tliosli ncaii.l put in free One Full Quart Extra,
one of this whtski y only 7 years old, and will send flrefor
SIO or will furtiNh twenty full piart bottles on reland
trive free corkscrews, drinking (tlaaora and .amir
this wht'ikey cost loss than Si. 20 per (rail on delivered.
flaln boxes with no marks to Indicate contents, a ad
Express. buyers West of Texas, Ksntas, Nebraska
I niuil add vOcents per tjuart extra. ^
THE CASPER CO. fine.)
?r Bld?. WINHTON.aAI.Fw. W. C.
iskey advertise on.at to appear la ooreelaaias. ws ineesti rated
in, and frier la in need of pure whiskies for medical use need