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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 5

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Asheville, North Carolina
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5
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THE 'ASHEVILLE CITIZEN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1913.: FOR RENT. Comfortable unfurnished home two blocks from postoffice; four bed rooms, furnace heat, rent reasonable; car fare. MOALE CHILES Real Estate and Insurance 27 Patton Ave. "Rogers' Box Files" SPECIAL VALUE 25c Each $2.50 Per Dozen ROGERS' BOOK STORE 39 Patton Avenue. Phone 254, Asheville, N.

O. Fancy Stuffed Olives Pint Jar, 35c. Quart Jar 60c. Half gallon jar $1.10, One Gallon Keg, $1.90. Clarence Sawyer 53 Patton Ave.

Six Phonas, No. 1800 H. A. BROWN CO. General Contractors 18 Temple Court Bidg.

Phone No. 341. Our Specialties- -Sto: Foundations, Concrete Work and Excavating. Dealers in Rough Bullding and All Kinde of Crushed Stone. A Trial Is All We Ask.

LAUNDRY uranmama? PHONE 70 We Treat Your Laundry 1913 BUICK 1913 The Buick cars as hill climbers are unexcelled. They are especially adapted to this country. Last year we were forced to return the deposits on several cars because of our inability to procure sufficient cars to supply the demand. Come in now and make your reservations for the coming year, you may be disappointed if you wait till later. Arbogast Motor Co.

60 North Main St. Phone 303. ATTEND THE Crescent Jewelry Company's CLOSING OUT SALE Jewelry, Diamonds, Watches, Cut-Glass, Silverware, Trunks, Suit Cases, Traveling Bags and many other useful articles are selling at cost. MR. JULIUS LOWENBEIN is in charge of sale.

Your money cheerfully refunded on any unsatisfactory purchase. Hudson Motor Car Agency 62 S. Main St. Come and be convinced that the Hudson has no superior on the American market. They are designed and built for comfort, beauty and strength.

Economy in upkeep is one of its great features. A noisless engine is another great achievement started by electricity, lighted by electricity, touch a button and you are off at any speed from 24 miles per hour to 65 miles per hour. Touch another button and your car is beautifully lighted. So light to handle that any lady or even a child of 10 years can drive it. The Hudson i is a wonder.

Be sure to examine it if you are in the market for the "real thing." Hereafter all care in adjusting and keeping in best condition will be done free of charge. The Hudson Home Office makes this statement. J. A. PORTER CO.

The Star Metal Shingle A Home Industry Manufactured by A. L. McLean Co. "Quality is our Motto." 95-97 Patton Ave, Asheville, N. C.

BOARD WILL DISCUSS COMMISSION GOV'T All Meeting Board of Trade Endosses Training School Idea. President Weaver, of the board of trade, will call an all members' meeting of that organization to take place some time next week, at which time advisability of endorsing a commission form of government for Ashevile will be discussed. There have been a large number of requests from different members of the board of trade and from citizens outside the board, asking that a special all membera' meeting of the board be called to diacuas this question, and President Weaver has decided to call it for next week, after the citizens who attend the Inauguration of Gov. Craig at Raleigh have had chance to return. Prof.

Tighe, Prof. A. C. Reynolds, of the Cullowhee training school and Rev. W.

A. Weaver, representing the committee of the Greater Western North Carolina association which 1s working toward securing a state training school in Western North Carolina, were before the board of at the meeting held Thursday night, asking that the board of trade endorse the movement. The board of trade went on record 33 supporting any measure that will secure a training school such as the committee is working for in any part of Western North Carolina. DIRECTORS MEET TO ARRANGE FOR FUNDS For the purpose of making arrangements for the year's work and preparing plans for the annual campaign for funds with which to run the association, the directors of the Y. M.

C. will meet Monday night at the auditortum of the association building. The campaign will be started Tuesday morning and the present indications are that it will be one of the most successful in the history of the organization. At Monday night's meeting, cards will be distributed bearing the names of contributors who have supported the institution in the past and residents who are belteved to be terested in the welfare of the local Y. M.

C. A. It was stated last night that several persons who contributed to the support of the Y. M. C.

last year have already expressed their intentions of subscribing again this year and have asked that they be called upon by the committeemen. The directors will work in committees of two and they are hopeful that the work of raising the amount which will be called for in the budget can be secured within a very few days. POLICE BLOTTER'S DAILY RECORD The following arrests were made yesterday: George Campbell, drunk. Ruby Ellis, and disorderly. Annie Pool, drunk and Beatrice Griffin, colored, assault.

Ophelia Jackson, colored, sending false call for policeman. Martha Wilson, colored, assault. Lavada Hamilton, colored, assault. Alonzo Wilson, colored, assault. RE-HEARING ASKED.

RICHMOND, Jan. petition for a re-hearing by the circuit court of Wytheville, was fled in the court of appeals of Virginia this morning by counsel for Claude and Floyd Allen condemned to be electrocuted on January 18 for the murder of court offteials at Hilleville, Va. The petition was based on the affdavits of Alph Thomas, who states Foster, sheriff of the court at Hillsville, had asked him to kill Floyd Allen, and of G. W. McMillan, who states that Foster told him he expected to kill Floyd and Sidna Allen.

Other affidavits state that Goad fired the first shot and that there was bad blood between the court officials and the Allens. The court of appeals refused to hear oral argument. RECEIPT FOR WEAK MEN--FREE Send Name and Address Today--You Can Have It Free and He Strong and Vigorous I have in my possession a prescription for nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened manhood. failing by accesses, unnatural the memory and lame back, brought, on foliles of youth, that has cured 89 many worn and nervous men right in their own homes- -without any additional help or medicine- -that think every man who wishes to re gain the manly power and virility, quickly and quietly, should have copy. So I have determined to send copy of the prescription, free of charge, in a plain, ordinary sealed envelope, to any man who will write me for it.

This prescription comes from physician who has made a special study of men, and am convinced it to the surest combination for the cure of deficient manhood and vigor-failure ever put together. I think I owe It to my fellow man to send them a copy in confidence, so that any man, anywhere who in weak and discouraged with repeated tailures, may stop drugging himself with harmful patent medicines, secure what, I believe, is the quickest-acting, restorative, upbuilding. SPOTTOUCHING remedy ever devised, and so. cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me 8 line like this: Dr.

E. Robinson, 3980 Luck Detrott, and I will send you a copy of this splendid receipt, a plain ordinary sealed envelope FREE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We have a New Method that cures Asthma, and we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether your case is of long-standing or recent development, whether it is present as occasional or chronje Asthma, our method te an absolute cure. No matter in what elimate yon live, no matter what your ARe or occupation, our method will certainly cure you right in your own home.

We especially want to send it to those apparently hopeless cases where all forms of inhalers, douches, optum preparations, fumes, "patent smokes." have failed. We want to show everyone at our OWe expense that this new method will end all difficult breathing, all wheezing. and all those terrible paroxysms at once and for all time. This free offer is too important to neglect a single day. Write now and begin the cure at once Send no money.

Simply mail coupon below. Do It Today. FREE ASTHMA COUPON. FRONTIER ASTHMA Room 600C, Niagara and Hudson Buftalo, N. Y.

Send tree trial of your method to: BANKER STARTLES COMMITTEE (Continued From Page One). for a time and then answered: Gone About Far Enough. "I think it has gone far enough." The Baker lawyers sitting nearby, sat up in their chairs and looked interested. "You think It would be dangerous to go farther?" "It might not be dangerous, but still it has gone about far enough. In good hands, I do not say that it would do any harm.

If it got into bad hands, it would be very bad." "If it got into bad hands it would wreck the country?" demanded Mr. Untermyer. The situation grew more tense, spectators craned eagerly to catch the reply and Mr. Baker leaned back in his chair, his chin resting on his hand, watching the lawyer closely. Finally he said: "Yes; but I do not believe it could get into bad hands." "You admit," persisted Untermyer, "that if this concentration to the point to which it has now gone were by any accident to get Into bad hands It would wreck the country?" "I cannot imagine such a situation," protested the witness.

"I thought you said so." said it would be bad," explained the witness vigorously, "but, I do not think it would wreck the country. do not think bad hands could age it. They could not retain the deposits nor the securities." "I Am not speaking of incompetent hande," maid Mr. Untermyer. "We are speaking of this concentration which has come about and the power that it brings with it, getting into the hands of very ambitious men, perhaps not over -scrupulous.

You see a peril In that do you not?" "Yes," answered Mr. Baker. Safety Lies in Men. "So that the safety, if you think there is any safety in the situation, really lies In the personnel of the men?" "Very much." "Do you think," demanded the lawyer, "that is a comfortable situation for a great country to be in?" "Not entirely," maid Mr. Baker very slowly.

At this point, Mr. Untermyer closed the examination precipitately. "That will be all, Mr. Baker," he said smilingly, and the spectators sat back with a sigh. Ag the committee adjourned until next Tuesday, the witness, arising in his place, thanked the committee and Ita counsel for their courtesy and was in return thanked for testifying.

He and his party left immediately for the train that was to take them to New York. Early in the day, in the midst of wordy discussion of bond issues of millions and the Intricacies of high finance, Mr. Untermyer endeavored to connect Mr. Baker, J. P.

Morgan and James Stillman up in a financial triumvirate controlling huge Interests. "Ta Mr. Morzan recognized an the great general of the financial army?" he asked. "That in according to whom you ask," said the witnews. his friende, think he "He in generally so recognized.

1s he "Well. yes," maid Mr. Baker. you and Mr. James Stillman are his chief Neutenants?" "We were during the panic." "And you three dominate the n- nancial Mr.

Baker would not admit thin, but he said that Mr. Morgan, "would be the most dominant figure in the world if he were younger," and that "he knew of no one more dominant than Mr. Morzan." Throughout the day Mr. Intermyer went over with the witness the flotation of securitien by him bank and after considerable argument with for the witness secured an agreement that if the directors of the Chase National bank are willing. Mr.

Baker will submit to the committee by next Tuesday Mat of the big transactions in which that bank, J. Pierpont Morgan and company and other large institutions have acted jointly, Winona Winter in in vaudeville this season. Boot and shoe workers are planning an active' organization campaign organize all the shoe workers in Greater New York RAILROAD BUILDING TO BE RECOMMENDED Association Committee Visited Asheville Yesterday and Investigated Local Conditions. G. K.

Roper, railroad secretary of the Y. M. C. for the states of the southeast and Interstate Secretary G. C.

Huntington, whose work covers the two Carolinas, will recommend to officials of the Southern railway that bu building Young be Men's built here Christian for the association use of the railway men of the city, on the lot which recently was donated to the sociation by 8. Sternberr on the condition that it be used an site for association building. A letter will he sent to the proper Southern officials within the next few days and petitiona will be circulated among the railroad men of Asheville, asking for an expression of their wishes in the matter. The association men who viatted here yesterday held a lengthy conference with Superintendent C. C.

Hodges and later went over the lot which has been offered by Mr. Sternbers. They were assured that the sentiment AIDONE the railroad men ta strong for a building at this point and it la generally beHeved here that one will be contaructed within the near future. Colonel Hodges, it is understood, expressed himself as being heartily in favor of a railroad branch of the association at Asheville, Before coming to this city he was closely identified with and a strong supporter of the institution at Atlanta, and la thorough. ly familiar with the workings of the railroad Mr.

Roper men's will organizatione. findings with his recommendaton for a buldIng. It will be shown how many men reside in this city who would be benetited building in the depot section city and the location the of the let will he explained to the Southern men. All buildings along the lines of the Southern are built upon his recommendation and Ashevillians who are familiar with the subject are firm in the belief that the day is not far distant when the railroad men of this city will have a building near their places of employment for their own use. AROUND TOWN.

LINEN SHOWER. Mrs. P. Meerin and Mrs E. 8.

Clayton wilt be hostesses at a linen shower Tuesday afternoon at 31 street. from 3:30 to 6:30 'o'clock. All friends of Trinity church are cordially invited to attend and take a piece of linen. A 'special mustcal program will be rendered by Miss Kate Laxton, Mrs. J.

B. Anderson and Mra E. B. Glenn. Refreshments will be served.

MRS, J. B. M'INTYRE DIED YESTERDAY Mrs. J. P.

McIntyre died last night at her home at Grace. For some time past she has been sick although relatives and friends had no idea that her condition was serious and it was generally thought that she was rapidly Improving. The news of her death will come as a distinat surprise to her many friends in this county. Before her marriage, Mrs. McIntyre was Miss Angie Hall, of Canton.

She was a woman of many fine traits of character and had hosts of friends who will regret to learn of her passing. She is survived by a husband, a mother and father and several children. One brother and two staters also survive. Relatives of the deceased in various parts of the south were wired last night and the funeral services will not be arranged until are heard from. However, It in probable that the funeral will take place tomorrow.

MILITIA RECALLED. MOUNT AIRY, N. Jan. were reselved here today from Governor Kitchin recalling the memof the Mount Airy state militia Fordered out by the executive to ald the capture of outlaws whe recently attacked Deputy Marshal Harkrader Sheriff Davis, of Surry county. No cause for the recall order was made public.

Special officers and deputy marshalg still are in the mountains near here in pursuit of the outlaws. Pure tobacco goodnessthat's the foundation of TURKISH BLEND CIGARETTES Most intelligent Turkishblend smoke that outsells all other Cigarettes! Distinctively dire 20 for 15c TURKISH CIGARETTES en d. Ca. 7A. A RICA TOMACCO OR, RURRE OVERWORK MENTAL STRAIN causes run-down health and sickness.

Scott's Emulsion and rest are needed, but SCOTT'S EMULSION is more important because it enriches the blood, nourishes the nerves builds the body and restores strength, vigor and immediate energy without interrupting daily duties. Scott's Emulsion drives out colds and strengthens the lungs. Scorr BOWNE, Bloomfield, N. J. 13-07 FUNERAL SERVICES WILL BE HELD TODAY The body of Col.

James G. Martin, who died at New York city Thursday morning. will reach here this afternoon at 2:43 o'clock. It will be met at the Southern passenger station and will be taken immediately the Riverside cemetery, where the funeral services at the grave will be conducted. The frat part of the services were held at New York.

REID'S WIDOW GETS ESTATE NEW YORK. Jan. entire estate of the late Whitelaw Reid, ambassador to Great Britain in left unconditionally to his widow, Mrs. Elizabeth Reid, with the exception of bequests totalling $110,000 un. der the terms of the will made lie this afternoon.

To Ogden Milla Reid and Jean Templeton Reid, now Mrs. John Hubert Ward, him son and daughter, there is left outright not a penny although the late ambassador indicated unmistakably him wish that they should be well provided for by their mother. The value of the estate has been estimated at from .000 to $20.000,000, No hint of what appraisal will show la given in the will, however. The widow is made sole executrix and special request is made that she may serve without giving bond. The will was executed November 3rd, 1894, in Mr.

Reid's New York home and was written by himself. PEACE PROGRESS. LONDON, Jan. pendulum of peace in the Balkans swings between the fall of Adrianople and action by the powers of Europe. Advice, suggestions.

good offices. pressure and friendly offers--all that diplomatio terminology haw been attempted by the powers to bring the conflicting parties to terms over Adrunople, but the reluctance of Turkey to cede the "holy is only surpassed by the determination of the allies to win their point to have it included in the territory of Bulgaria. Gaby Dealys it to make a tour of Canada. WILLIAM H. CARTER DIED YESTERDAY After an Illnes of several weeks 'William H.

Carter, one of the county's oldest and most well known citizena died yesterday morning, at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Robert Greenwood, at Grace. The deceased was eighty-eight years of age and for several years was one of the prominbusiness men of the Big Ivy section of this county. Several years ago, however, he moved to Grace making his home with daughter at that He was a consistent member of place. Methodist Protestant church and was man of strong character.

He was very popular and the news of his death will be learned with regret by his friends in this county, The funeral services will be conducted this morning at 8 o'clock, at the residence of Mrs. Greenwood, after which the body will be taken to Democrat for burial. Rev. C. W.

Bates and Rev. J. 8. Williams will officiate at the funeral services. REBELS DISAPPEAR, MEXICO CITY, Jan.

Rebels today had disappeared from the hills about Ayoteingo, 25 miles from where yesterday's battle took place. They left during the night on the arrival of the federal reinforcements. More than 250 men yesterday, counting federals, rebels and non-combatants, according to liable estimate. Furthermore a force of 200 Infantrymen from Mexico City la said to have been cut to pieces and a similar fate in reported to have befallen a column of 100 mounted police. The battle raged from 10 a.

until late at night. DATES FIXED. SAVANNAH, Jan. 10. ber 25 and 27 have been tentatively agreed 1 upon as the dates for the runnine of the 1913 Grand Prise and derbilt cup automobile races on the Savannah course according to nouncement made here today by President, Granger of the Savannah automobile club.

President Granger arrived here a day from New York. The Motor Cup Holding company at a conference in that city Monday awarded the races to Savannah. See H. REDWOOD CO. for prime values in White Goods, Linen Laces, Spring Ginghams, Galateas, etc.

They have a good stock all around and they are selling freely from all departments. Butteriek Patterns for Feb'y should be here on Monday next. Come in for a catalogue and study out a pleasing and becoming costume for yourself. Delineator subscriptions $1.50 per annum. The Fashion Quarterly 25c the copy which includes A coupon good for any.

15c pattern. DINING ROOM FURNITURE Suites and odd pieces. Wide range of choice and prices. BEAUMONT FURNITURE CO. 21 SOUTH MAIN STREET..

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About Asheville Citizen-Times Archive

Pages Available:
1,691,309
Years Available:
1885-2024