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DUKE I!
Cigarettes !
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ETET W.DuKeSons !>Co.T-<"TBi, /
toffim. MlßtCN TOBACCO CD-'lff ',- IX/
■v_/J xj ‘.’Mr
DURHAM. NX. U.S.A.
MADE FROM
High Grade Tobacco
m AMD
ABSOLUTEUY PURE
INSOMNIA
SLEEPLESSNESS CURED.
VIGOR OF MEN
Easily. Quickly, Permanently Restored.
MAPUCTIP MCDUIkiC i aold with writ-
IRAuntl 111 ntnllllL ten guarantee to
cure weaknenses, Nervous Debility and all the
evils from early or later excesses, the results of
overwork, worry, sickness, etc. Full strength,
tone and develownent given to every organ or
portion of the boffy. Improvement immediately
seen from the first box. Thousands of letters of
praise on file in our office. Can be carried in
vest pocket. Bent by mail to any address on
receipt of price. One month’s treatment in each
box. Price SI.OO, 6 boxes, $5.00, with Written
Guarantee to refund money if not cured. Bend
to us for the Genuine. Circulars Free.
MAYS’ PHARMACY.
~‘ BV THLFM£LPUC’
w'ay £s*l
to&c.fjfc -
Yov/r H°
and^.Ve
Of
IVchenors Antiseptic
\A/l)Cf) be tpoubled Witlj C°UC or>|
ROipft /twill pojifiViily cU f<£ •
uefp >T in*# I*' S** 4
H^ r tr l H°UVE.. PnuootSTS
Caution___
Your friends not to
buy a Cooking Stove
or Range before they
have examined Into
the merits of
* MU*
TWAlfy always %>AHO
Reliable
A. D. GILBERT,
AGENT,
CARTRRSYILLE. - GA.
hair R balsam
and beautifics the hair.
Promotes n luxuriant growth.
Fails to ltestoro Gray
- jeSfiß xlnir to its YOutltfiii Color.
Curr! A falling.
The Leading Conservatory of Amarica^- ——^?>
Carl Faelten, Direcior. .t'AMT
Founded in ISM by CliV/V U
f()Nbb v i^sS^,
Prospectus
* .jKLIP^S- — 1 — * giving: full information.
Sr''*' — * ' Frank W, Hale, General Manager.
Pt'klcheitcr’i Endldi IMumond BnaA
ENNYROYAL PILLS
~^ a r*'v Original ami Only Genuine. A
safc, always reliable, ladhs ask i&A
J\,y) l,ru *?s! st for Chichester's English Dia
fp I Brand in Ked and Enid Metallic
. s-'aied with blue ribbon. Tukc yK'
VVtlno otJier. Effuse dangerous suhstitu- v
j / Art ions and imitation*. At Druggistg, %r send 4e.
! S Jr in stamp* for particulars, testimonials and
XT* £p ** Relief for I.adlea,” > letter, bv returr
—"S. !V>uil. 10.000 Testimonials. Name Ihtpir.
Sold bj all Local Druerists. I’liiiinltt-- l'k
THINACURA
FOR THIN PEOPLE.
Are You Thin ?
Flesh made with Thinacura Tablets by
a scientific process. They create per
fect assimilation of every form of food,
secreting the vainat>le parts and dis
carding the woitbless. They make thin
faces plump and round out the figure.
They are the
.STANDARD lIEMEF.Y.
for leanness, containing no arsenic,and
absolutely harmless.
Price, prepaid, $1 per box, $0 for $5.
Pamphlet, “HOW TO GET FAT,” free.
The THINACURA CO.. <H9 Broadway.
New York.
S2OO Offered Free!
Office First National Bank,
Nashville, Tenn., April 6, rs9s.
Prof. J. F Praughon, Pres.Draughon’sPrac
tical Business College, Nashville,Tenn.
Dear Sir: —The time for which you deposited
sioo three months ago to-day as a forfeit under
your proposition to give fioo to any charitable
Institution in Nashvilleandjiooto any Business
College south of the Ohio River, if you could not
show more written applications for” Bookkeepers
and Stenographers during _ the PAST FIVE
MONTHS than any other Business College south
of the Ohio River could show iu the PAST FIVE
YEARS, has this day expired, and, no demand
having been made, the same is now held subject
to your check. Respectfully,
W. F. Bang, Cashier.
N B.—A certificate of deposit for the above
was published in the daily papers of Nashville,
the Cincinnati Enquirer , the Atlanta Constitu
i> ”, and thirty thousand circulars, giving the
three months’ time to accept.-JVash
ville Daily American, April 7, 7895.
Write Prof. J. F. Praughon, Nashville, Tenn.,
for his free Catalogue.
J S4&-I&S3JI Female College-1805
Well equipped. Teachers graduates
of thegreatest institutions of the land.
Russelville.Ky. A. G. Murphey, Pres.
UNCLE SAM’S VAULTS
Where Coins and Bullion Are*
Stored Away
UNDER TREASURY BUILDING
In Enormous fjintiiie*—Sixteen Thousand
Teams Would be Required to Trans
port it Across the Country.
(Chicago Tirnes-Herald.)
In the national capital there is
no spot more attractive to strangers
than the big vaults of the treasury
department. These vast reposito
ries of gold and silver are among
the curiosities of the town. They
rank in interest with the Washing
ton monument, the dead letter of-
I lice and the echo stones of the cap-
I itol. Every day, between the hours
of 10 and 12, swarms of strangers
descend the damp, dark staircase
in the big treasury building to the
realms of the precious metals. A
guide accompanies them, and as the
visitors peer through the iron grat
ing at the steel safes holding gold,
or the wooden boxes containing
silver, the guide delivers for their
benefit a most entertaining lecture.
Me tells them how much of each
kind of money is in each vault, the
nature of the precautions adopted
against sneak thievery, tunneling
and other forms of burglary.
The most interesting part of the
show is the big silver vault. There
are in all seven vaults in the treas
ury, and the total amount of gold,
silver, notes and bonds in them is
nearly $800,000,000. but it is the
“big silver vault” that all the visi
tors want to see. They have heard
of it and its dimensions, and they
are curious to behold it with their
own eyes.
“Great Jehosophat!” exclaimed a
stranger, with bulging eyes, as he
stood at tho door to this vault:
“Can it be possible that all that
stutf in there is silver? Why, it is
as big as a meeting-house.”
“Yes, it’s all silver,” replied the
accommodating and intelligent
guide. “This big vault occupies all
the space under the northern court
yard of the treasury building. Its
exact measurement is 89 feet long,
51 feet wide, and 12 feet high. Be
hind the iron grating you see those
wooden boxes. They are full of
silver —$2,000 in each box. The
boxes are piled ail around on the
edges, and in the middle are bags
of silver piled in a great heap. We
have lots of trouble with this silver.
The boxes burst and the bags get
rotten, and then when anew ad
ministration comes in we have to
weigh it all. It takes us about
three months to do the job, and it’s
hard work.”
“Does tils vault contain all of
Uncle Sam’s silver?” asked the
stranger.
“Oh, no, bless you, no,” responded
the guide. “Here we have only
$103,240,000 in coined dollars. That
is less than a fifth of all the silver
the government owns. In vault
No. I—you passed thatjon yeur way
in—we have $18,000,000. In smaller
vaults we have a few millions more.
We never could find space for all
of Uncle Sam’s silver here. We
are frightfully crowded. In all,
we have here 100,000,000 to 170,000,-
000 of silver dollars The remain
der of the 370,000,000 coined dollars
owned by the government is in the
sub-treasuries at New York, Chi
cago and other cities.”
“You say Uncle Sam has more
than 500,000,000 of silver dollars on
hand ?”
“Yes sir. Standard dollars, 370,-
000,000, and silver bullion enough
to make 178,000,000 more; grand
total, $548,000,000.”
“But there must be a lot of silver
dollars in circulation ?” asked the
stranger.
“Not as rnanv as you would sup
pose,” replied the guide. “We have
coined 422,000,000 of these dollars,
and the number in circulation is
now only 52,000,000. The people
don’t seem to want’em. We have
done everything we could to induce
the people to take the standard dl
-lar. Congress has appropriated
money nearly every year to enable
the secretary of the treasury to
send out silver dollars in exchange
for other money without expense
to the people, but it doesn’t seem to
make any difference. They don’t
go. Why, the number of standard
dollars in circulation now is much
smaller than it was a few years
ago. Instead of inducing the peo
ple to take more of the dollars, they
have actually been sending them
back to us.”
“Do you know’ how much the
government has paid out for sil
ver?” asked the stranger.
“To a cent,” replied the guide,
consulting a little note book which
he drew’ from his pocket. “We
have bought 503,003,811 fine ounces,
for which we paid $516,623,011.
That is an awful lot of money.”
“ADd how much is that silver
actually worth today?” persisted
the stranger.
The guide used his lead pencil for
a few moments and then replied:
“Just $334,625,688. The net loss
to the government on its silver pur
chases has been $181,697,923.”
At this the visitors stopped look
ing through the iron grating at the
boxes of silver and turned their
faces toward the guide.
“You find it pretty difficult to un
derstand such big figures, don’t
you?” continued the official; -‘near
ly everyone does. We can’t con
ceive a million very well. It’s too
big for us. I’ve thought a good
deal about this while taking visi
tors to see the vaults, and I believe
I can help you tj appreciate what
a million is.”
By this time every man and wo
man in the-crowd was listening in
tently to what the guide had to say.
“Now, if you have seventeen of
these silver dollars,” he went on,
“you can easily hold them in your
hand. They weigh just about a
pound. But if you have a thousand
dollars you will have about all you
could carry, or sixty pounds weight.
Now, suppose instead of a thousand
silver dollais, you have a million.
That means thirty tons of silver.
To haul it through the smooth
streets of Washington in our big
treasury wagons would take twelve
or fifteen wagons. Now, do you
grasp what a million means? And
then remember that Uncle Sam has
548,000,000 of silver dollars.”
“Let us look at it in another way.
Take eight silver dollars and place
them in a row on the table, flat,
rim to rim. They will reach just a
foot. If you have a thousand dol
lars placed in the same w-ay they
will reach 125 feet. But suppose
you have a million. Then they
will make a white streak more
than twenty-three and one-half
miles long.
“Haying now secured a better
appreciation of the magnitude of a
million,” the guide continued, “let
me give you some figures I have
made at odd moments about the
544,000,000 silver dollars Uncle Sam
has in these and his other vaults—
the silver that he has paid out his
good money for, and which the peo
ple apparently do not want.
“If all of these dollars were
placed rim to rim, flat, they would
reach nearly 13,000 miles.
“They would cover all the space
between the rails on a railway line
clear across the state of lowa, a dis
tance of 350 miles.
“The weight of all of Uncle Sam’s
silver is 16,440 tons. If it were ali
loaded into railway cars, 40,(KX)
pounds to the car, we should have
822 car loads. This would make
twenty trains of forty-one cars each
and these trains, with their locomo
tives, would have an aggregate
length of six miles.
“The coined dollars are packed in
boxes containing $2.00 each. It is
about all a man can do to carry off
off one of these boxes. Suppose we
wanted to move all of Uncle Sam’s
silver by man power at the same
time, we should need at this rate
274,000 men. Giving each man five
feet of room, they would make a
single file procession more than 250
miles long. Twenty-seven states
and territories of the union have
not so many as this within their
borders. Arkansas would fail 15,000
short, Louisiana 25.000, and even
Maryland, nor Mississippi could
furnish the required number.
“If the government were forced
to carry all the silver across the
country in wagons probably 2,000
pounds would be a fair load to each
two horse team, taking good roads
and bad roads. Sixteen thousand
teams would be required, and when
on the road, driven close together,
one after another, they would make
a caravan considerably more than
a hundred miles long.
“If these teams were lined up
side by side in solid phalanx, as
the wagons of settlers u'ere on the
borders of the Oklahoma strip, they
would make a column thirty miles
long, with every horse able to swish
flies off his next noor neighbor.
“Suppose all this silver was coin
ed and stored away loose, so you
coaid get at it easily, and you were
set counting it, dollar by dollar
How long do you suppose it would
take you to count it all? Well, if
you ran the dollars through your
fingers at the rate of 100 a minute
and worked ten hours a day, ex
cepting Sundays, it would take you
about thirty years to finish the job.
It is now’ 12 o’clock, ladies and gen
tlemen, and the vaults will have to
be closed, under the rules of the de
partment.”
English Spayin Liniment removes all
Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and
Blemishes from horses’ Blood Spavins,
Curds, Splints, Sweeney, Ring-Bone,
Stifles, Sprains, all Swollen Throats,
Coughs, etc. Save SSO by use of one bot
tln ,most wonderful
Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by M.j
F. Word, DruggistCartersville, Ga.
THE CASTLE OF MACBETH.
Vi*it la tbe Old Tower Where Scotch King
Was Murdered.
(London Corespondence N. Y.Tribune.)
It was one of those showery days
which incite rebellion in the heart
of even a pious Scotchman that I
journeyed into Forfashire to visit
the Glamis castle. There were
broad prospects of valley, moor and
woodland, and entrancing vistas of
the Grampians before the ancient
village of Glamis was reached and
the battlemented gateway with its
lions and curious images was
passed. Within opened a splendid
park with ievel meadows and state
ly avenues, and in the distance was
one of the oldest castles in Scot
land. The residence of Lord Strath
more, famous in the histoiy of the
Highlands, and the apocryphal
scene of the tragedy of Macbeth.
The cent: al tower has stood since
the tenth century, and two wings
were built about it in the seven
teenth century by the first Earl of
Strathmore. The name of the first
builder is unknown, and his work
has been subjected to structural
changes by the architects of the re
• construction period, who trans
formed the grim, battlemented cas
tle in the north into a French ba
ronial residence in the style of the
sixteenth century. Inferior to War
wick castle in picturesqueness and
scenic surroundings, it appeals
more strongly to the imagination
as a relic of feudalism, haunted
with ghostly presences and with
tragic memories. With its richly
furnished drawing rooms and cost
ly works of art, the interior of War
wick castle, in spite of its antiquity,
impresses the visitor as a magnifi
cent modern residence, and this
effect is increased when the liver
ied guides conduct large parties
through (he apartments, catalogue
the paintings by old masters and
estimate the value of buhl cabinets,
tapestries and mosaic tables. At
Glamis there are no professional
guides with stale jokes and auction
room rhapsodies. The visitor, from
the moment he enters the great
door at the base of the ancient
tower, is convinced that it is a mys
terious old castle with secret stair
ways and blood stains on the floors,
and wonders whether, like Sir
Waiter Scott, he would like to sleep
in the haunted rooms.
One of the three staircases seen
in the basement of the tower leads
to the room where Malcomb 11. is
reputed to have been assassinated,
and in one of the uppermost cham
bers a bedstead is pointed out as
the one on which the king died. In
another bedroom is shown under
neath the floor the entrance to a
staircase with hidden passages con
necting with other apartments. A
secret well in one of the great walls
leads to an upper room where pris
oners were once confined. Every
time repairs are ordered some dis
covery is made—an unsuspected
staircase or fireplace, or some pecu
liarity of the original design, or of
the work of the reconstruction ar
chitects which had previously es
cayed observation. After groping
through the dimly lighted corridors
the visitor is readily convinced
that there is a secret apartment
known only to the lord ot the cas
tle, and half expects to hear Lady
Macbeth, “Infirm of purpose, give
me the daggers,” or “The sleeping
and the dead are but as pictures.”
Even when he Is shown into the
room where Earl Beardie started a
game of dice with Satan, which
was to last until the day of judg
ment, he listens intently and al
most fancies that he can hear a
strange clicking like the noise
shaking of a dice box. A rare old
place is Glamis castle. It does not
matter whether the right king was
murdered in Macbeth or whether
any sovereign, a Duncan or a Mal
comb, was ever assassinated within
the castle walls. Mystery broods
over the ancient feudal pile. It
has the scenic setting for bygone
tragedy and ghostly yisitations.
There are many handsome rooms
in the castle. The dining room is a
splendid banquet hall with floor
and wainsfcot of oak, a richly carved
sideboard and chimney piece, and
with the arms and mottoes of the
Strathmores and connected fami
lies emblazoned on the side wall.
The great hall is a vaulted room
with massive stone walls, and it is
adorned with coats of chain mall,
old-time weapons and firearms and
hunting trophies. The drawing
room has antique furniture, an im
mense fireplace of carved stone, a
French ceiling elegantly designed,
and portraits by Sir Peter Lely and
other famous painters. In the bil
liard room there are addttional
family portraits and four panels in
tapestry representing scenes in the
life of Nebuchadnezzar. Richly
furnished a3 the great rooms are. it
is the central tower, with its spiral
staircases and vaulted corridors,
that gives character to the castle
as a medieval baronial stronghold *
CASTOR IA
for Infants and Children.
Mothers, do you Know that Paregoric,
Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and
most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine ?
Bo Yon Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons 7
Po Yon Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics
without labeling them poisons ?
Be Yon Know that you should not permit any medicine to be given your child
nnless you or your physician know of what it is composed ?
Po You Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of
Its ingredients is published with every bottle ?
Po You Kasw that Cactoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher.
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than
of all other remedies for children combined f
Po Ton Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word
“ Castoria ” and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense 1
Po Yom KLuow that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was
because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless?
Po Know that 3& average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35
cents, or one cent a dose t
Po You Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may
be kept w ell, and that you may have unbroken rest ?
'Well, these things are worth knowing. They are facts.
The fac-simile // fT *** 1s on every
signature of /-CUC&At wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
AUv For inner Dollars !
if ifwjs st, 0 £ M el 7 &75/\cciD£NT
(f~\ I?) urANC * Policy
Sp| f or / loo.—
o X a 0.0 J
O \j NX „ * jO * c
<3 Jen- yiyzly oxyb-
! THIRD AMD LAST I*SOWTH of
|THE ST. LOUIS REPUBLIC
DISTRIBUTION
i FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS
IN FREE CSFTS
To Subscribers of the Twlce-a-Week Edition*
: One thousand special gifts valued at $6,807.10 were distributed to subscribers to
■ the Twice-a-Week edition of The St. Louis Republic, who sent in their subscriptions
: in July, and 1,000 special gifts valued at $5,607.20 were given to those who sent in their
. subscriptions in August. Another list of one thousand special gifts, valued at $5,512.20,
: Is offered to subscribers who send in their orders during September. In addition, a
; valuable engraving is to be given to every subscriber during this distribution, irak
: ing the total value of the gifts over $53,000. The list of girts for subscribers in Sep
: tember is given below. The first 700 and the last 300 subscribers during September who
j send correct answers to the question:
Where does the word “Paper” first occur la the Bible?
i will be awarded the following gifts In the order their answers and subscriptions are
* received:
FIRST 700 GIFTS:
■ Correct Answer—Scholarship at
; Metropolitan College ot Music.
: New York City (the leading
• „ "i,usieal College of America) $672.00
: 2 —One year scholarship Clara Con
i . way Institute, Mempnis, Term.... 200.00
. 3—Scholarship Barnes' Shorthand
• School, Arthur J. Barnes, Prest.,
; St. Louis 150 oo
: 4—Life Scholarship Watson's Busi
: ness College (successors to Led
dins Business College), Memphis,
: , Tenn.; W. T. Watson, Prin 160.00
! s—One year scholarship Central Fe
: male College, Archibald A. Jones,
• Prest., Lexington, Mo 115.00
; 6 —One year scholarship complete
; business course (actual business
; practice and practical bookkeep
: Ing, with banking), Jones' Cora
; mercial College, J. G. Bohmer,
; Prin., St. Louts 100.00
: 7 Scholarship Eastman Business
; College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y 100.00
: B—CompleteB—Complete course New York Col
-1 lege of Business 100 00
: 9 —Course of Shorthand and Type
; writing, Jones’ Commercial Col
: lege, St. Lows 100.00
: 10 —Scholarship Christian Brothers’
j College, Memphis 100.00
; 11—Scholarship K. C. (Mo.) Bus.
; University 100.00
; 12—Scholarship French or German.. 70.00
j 13 —Walter A. Wood Cyclone Mower.. 65.00
■ 14-15—One year scholarship Spring
; field Normal School, Springfield,
; Mo.; S6O each 120.00
: 15—Springfield Farm Wagon 60.00
1 17—New Home Sewing Machine 60.00
; 18-19—Round Trip Colorado Springs
: via Missouri Pacific; $54.20 each.. 108.40
: 20 —One year scholarship (literary de
: partment) Baptist Female College,
LAST 300 GIFTS: #
tt ar ‘ BWer * vd' l come In late from subscribers who reside In remote parts of the
L ni i J n order that these may also receive handsome gifts we will give to
Ub^ !berS , Send!n S D orre S t - * !3wers (envelope to bear postmark not later than
lowing Stndsome and valuable gilts: ° ffice " 0t later than ° ctober 12 ’ 1895) ’ the fo ‘-
; Last Correct Answer—One vear
; scholarship Baptist Female Col
: lege, Lexington, Mo., Rev. W. A.
: Wilson, President J3OO 00
i 2—Scholarship (same as No. 4 Ist 700) 150 00
: 3—Course at Memphis Keeley Insti
; tute 134,00
: 4—Scholarship (same as No. 5 Ist 700) n.EOO
: s—Scholarship (same as No. 9 Ist 700) 100 00
: €—Scholarship (same as No. 11 Ist
: 700) 100.00
: 7—Scholarship French or German.. 70.00
j B—Scholarship (same as No. 14 Ist
■ I00) gQ fyi
■ 9—Ticket to Colorado Springs ’ ’aid
! return 54 20
: 10— I Ticket to Denver and Return ’ " 49 00
j 11—Round trip to Atlanta Expos!-
• tion
: i-goM-*nea Hunting Case Watch! 35!oo
: 13 —bt&unbo&t trip 12'00
y 14-15 Home Course Shorthand, sio
each 20.00
j 16—Pair Pine Opera Glasses 8 00
: 1“-1S—Graphic Atlas and Gazetteer of
I World, $7.50 each 15.00
! "T.Sf.T I T-.VT n. .
! fttliTalK? 1 JSL, a T WPrs T elve ? :
TXZ 35 ’^ s “ : i
EVERY SUBSCRIBER SE A i* AN RECEIVES A GIFT.
i too^Hrly r ßu ,r \he n iast^3i>o' , pp P rOa! 0 glfts e wl > ll I
! HANDSOME ART ENGRAV ING consisting of the iT rt J?f ™SK? mber wl,h a!
I
UR. Each person desiring to coatest for one 1 o? tA. c, 5 9 - . wor . th ONE DOL
i nct fVfry vi n tfon S TrlSie§ ,f X^e ted muat • eßd !
i TEAR’S TO THE IC OI aiA R FOR ONE 1
• recorded the moment received This wninhSr AU an s wp rs will be ;
i s .yaas ws a s
| -■, I 1... I . ..I. n,,,,.h,public IlnIII.„j
Lexington, Mo., Rev. W. A. Wil
son, President 60.00
21 — Round trip ticket to Denver via
Burlington Route 49.00
22 Fine Breech-loading Shotgun 40.00
23 Round trip to Cotton States
Exposition, Atlanta. Ga.; via L.
& N. and N., C. & St. L. Ry.:
$37.20 each 74.40
25 — Gold Filled Hunting Case Watch 35.00
26 Gold Filled Hunting Case Watch 35.00
27 — China Dinner Set... 25.00
28 — Steamboat trip 12.00
29 —Barnes’ home course Instruction
in shorthand; $lO each 30.00
32 Pair Fine Opera Glasses 8.00
33- Graphic Atlas of World; $7.50 ea 15.00
35-37—Ladies’ Mackintosh, $7.00 each.. 21.00
38 — Solid Gold Ring, 18 karat 6.00
39 Remirfgton 32-Caliber Rifle 6.00
40 — Solid Gold Ring, 18 karat 6.00
41— Remington 32-Caliber Rifle 6.00
42 Five Dollar Gold Piece 5.00
43 Subscription to "North Ameri
can Review;’’ $5 each 125.00
68-82—Oxford Teachers Bible; $5 each 75.00
83-112—Political and Geographical Map
United States (11 colors), $5 each. 150.00
113— Set Rogers’ Table Spoons 4.50
114- Set Rogers’ Tea Spoons, $3 ea 30.00
124-138—Gold-filled Thimble, $2 each.. 30.00
139-143—Fine Umbrella, $2 each 10.00
144-146—Miniature Atlas and Gazetteer
of World, $1.25 each 3.75
147-171—R & G Corset; $1 each 25.00
172-322—Fine Engraving; $1 each 151.00
323-522—Tickets two days great St.
Louis Fair, 1895, Oct. 7 to 12; $50,-
000 in premiums; $1 each 200.80
523-636—Fine Engraving; $1 each 114.00
637-895—Dollar Package Old Coon
Smoking Tobacco; $1 each. 59.00
666-700—One Silver Dollar each 6.00
19-20—Fins Ladles’ Mackintosh, $7
each $14.00
21— Solid Gold Ring, 18-karat 6.00
22 Remington 32-caliber Rifle 6.00
23 Sub. North Am. Review, $5 ea. 25.00
28— Gold Watch Charm 5.00
29- —Genuine Oxford Teachers’ Bible,
each 50.00
59-50—Geo.-Political Map U. S., $5 ea. 100 oo
59—Set Rogers’ Table Spoons 4.30
00-64—Set Rogers’ Tea Spctons. $3 each 15.00
65 One Gold Coin 2.50
66- —Gold-filled Thimble, $2 each.... 20 00
76-78—Fine Umbrella. 92 each 6.00
79-81—Miniature Atlas and Gazetteer
„„ of the World, $1.25 each 3.73
S2-P o —Engraving, $1 each 9.00
91-104—Celebrated R. & G. Corset, $1
each 14 00
165-204—Jicket St. Louis Fair, $1 ea.. 100.00
Engraving, $1 each 50.00
555-295—Pks. Old Coon Tobacco, $1 ea 41.00
20b-300—One Silver Dollar each 5?oo
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