Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / Oct. 13, 1922, edition 1 / Page 4
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d. ., r.i III t -i Jim rr rest a It LA' ! i tour THE ASHEVILLE CITIZEN, FRIDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 13, 1922 THE ASHEVILLE CITIZEN PUBLISHED It VERT MORNING By the emrs cv ahfikviu.b. n. c, J J Haywood Street Oeorge Stepbena Charlee A. Webb Hrw"ol Parker Ownera Charlea K. Wobiasan Editor Entered at the poilofflrt, Aahevllle. N. C aa eerond-oaae matter, under set ct March i. 1878. TEI.ErilO.SK8 Circulation Department Buslneia Manager Advertising Department City Newe, Spor.e and Society CUv Edlto- and Ed, tor ...? . ..40 ...JU ...i:t . ..! SUBSCIUPTION HATES (Br Carrier la AsheslHe and etabiirtia) Duly and. Sunday. Ir' mvno. ...! Daily and Sunday, t montna In advance.. i Iaily and Sundy. montha In advanot... I" D.1IY and Sunday. 1 week !n advance... (By MaJl la tfnllKd HUa Dally and Sunday. 1 year In advance. . . .7. Dally and Sunday. 6 Moniha la advanea. . i Dally and Suday. t Montha In advanea.. Dally odly. I Mottha !n advanea hinder onlv, I rei.r In '""' Tha Oltlxan la glad tc publish lettere. not too long, on mattera of gsneral lntereat. wui auch communication muet be accompaniaa ny tha raal nama of tha wrli'.r. even when trtey ara lo ba publlahed over a nom da plume, j o. Cltlser., of couree. reservee the right tnv artt-la offered fnr Vb vo'"' v MEMBERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ill MM af ifHUtti af art alif fpwrrW Friday Morning. October 13. 1922. Some o The Citizen' Ambitions For Asheville and Wentevn North Carolina: I. A hard-surfaced highway fiom Ahe villa to tha county-seat of trery oouoty ad Jolnlng Buncombe. a. Hard-aurtaoad highways coanectin j tha oapttala ot all mounUIn eount.es. . j. Mora tourist hotela in thla whole mountain region AND ANOTHER COM MERCIAL HOTEL F03 AellBVILLU. 4. Establishment of addlfton.J, Summer Camp Schools. ' i. Increased uaa of tha forests for ro raatlon and sport. a. A eantral park with a gystera C amalltr Prj!' A col'ge in Aahavtlla built upon fosndatlune broad enough to support c great university. I. A greater Summtr School. lth cur riculum arrange to give vocational trailing In arts and industries. Buncombe Pigs And Buncombe Babies Thera Is constant appeal to governmental AuthorHles to practise economy, The problem of finding revenue to meet the necessities of enlightened : and progressiva government be ,... .v.n in.v mora complicated.., ' But il Jn publie business than that described in a letter appearing on this page today. 1 . . Buncombe County U making great advance ment In tha improvement of the public schools and in building highways. Better care is taken of tha poor, the defective, the delinquent; but theVe Is practically no preventive work outside AshevIHe to save babies from growing up stunted in mind or maimed inody. Moreover, the death rate among Infants In the rural dis tricts I distressingly high; there Is ft dlscour aglngly large number of children left mother less because the mothers do not receive proper nursing. This matter has not been neglected in dis cussion, Members of tha, Buncombe County Medical Society, realising that one of the great est discoveries of modern medicine Is the Im portance of prevention In fighting disease of mind or body, have urged the County Commls rioners to employ a health nurse to supplement the labors of the County Physician. Let It be said for the commissioners tr it the county is in straitened financial condition at the present time; but is it not doubtful and shortsighted economy to refuse to apend a few hundred dollars for the saving of an Incalculable sum in mental, spiritual and physical resources? Cramped by lack of finances, the commlRBlon ers have so far bpen unable to see that one Tfe, redeemed from disease or Intellectual stag nation, might mean more to the county than all the roads laid in ten years or all the consolidat ed schools established. Io not the commis sioners overlook the fact that they are in thi instance dealing with the most precious pro duct turned out from the loom of creation human life? Who can say when there will come from the humblest home, In the nint adverse environment, a boy or girl whose life Mill be the beginning of a new epoch, in the history of the State? Who knows what Bun combe County and North Carolina have already lost in this respect through phyalcal death or mental dwarfing? These are questions that can rot be answered by the hard and fast rulea of administrative arithmetic in conserving public finances. The most vipiiant watchdog of the treaaury ought to recognize that the minds and bodies of the babies of Buncombe are at leaat a valuable as the capacity of Buncombe pigs to transform feed products Into marketable commodities. The Mission Hospital And Free Patients The Mlaalon Hoapltal deaervea no more than ,., proportional allure lo the donations made ,o tl.o Community Cheat, but thera la aoma ,v;Jtnet that tha hospital Is being unjustly dla ciinili.sted against by some contrlbutora ba ,,, of unfounded gon with reference to ,he charily ork whirl, it does. Csnvasa.ra for the Chest yesterday emountered the lrre ponribas report that there ara only two fraa pat.e-.ts In tha hospiial at preaent and that habitually the management of the IneUtution refuse without good reason to take In free patlerts when requested to do so. It ao happens that at the hour thla attack was being made on a great remedial organisa tion, whoas Board of Managers serve the pub lic 'lithout pay and because of tha deelre of doing good, there were fifteen free patients in the hnapital which la lta capacity for non paying cases until the endowment la Increaaed and the buildings enlarged. Even caaual ac-q-jaliitance with the Mission Hospital would dis close the fact to anyone that the free beda are seldom empty more than a few hours. Thla go-railed charity work has always been one of the distinctive features of the Mission and one in which the managers take most pride. Ministering to those who needed medlrsl at- tenllcn but have not means to pay for It waa one of the controlling motives In the building of the hospital. Let no one believe on the evl uente of misunderstanding or of gossip that Die Mission Hospital has In one whit departed from ideal of Its founders. ..A Our Women In Politics Asheville's women, as civic and political workers, have a fame that carries far beyond statu lines, in a recent article under an Asha- ville date line, signed by Louise Dooly and published In The Atlanta Constitution, la this: "A vialtor In'Norlh Carolina needs no more than twenty-four hours in this beautiful West ern section of the State to be impressed by three significant things. One is the apparent proosperlty of the State. A second is the pride the people take in the worth while things. The third lu the civic activity of the women. "Ot Monday last a Democratic mass meet Ing was held In Ashevllle, st which Governor Morrison was the chief speaker, and this meet ing was arranged and presided over by women while on the same afternoon a rally of Re publican women was held at Republican head quarters, preparatory to the Fall campaign." The article-then describes the formation of the Democratic Women's Club of Buncombe County with Miss May F. .jojies as one of its leading spirits,, tells of Mlss Mary Henderson, Vice-Chalrman of the State Democratic Com- women, prominent among whom Is Mrs. Charles Maicom Piatt of this cltyyJnd gives much apnee to Ashevllle women's courage tfnd Initia tive in asserting themselves in politics. From her eminence a's a great tourist city Aal.cvllle throws a long' shadow. It would bo difficult to imagine how she could exert a bet ter or a more creative influence than a qlcken iiig of Southern women's Interest in public af fairs. , Asheville's women, have caught the Ashevllle spirit. - They are doing more in poll tics this Fall than they have ever done; they are proceeding with their work In a more organized and effective way; and they have definite Ideas on what they want to Improve and correct. In all this they are reflecting conditions In Ashevllle, now enjoying the great est expansion and construction she has ever known. They are carrying Ashevllle forward, and, in doing that, they are showing all Southern women how to carry the South forward. General Dr. Sawyer Every man has his pet doctor. In having his, tha President of the i niieo emr, ...... goes the way of all flesh. But. when he makea bia pet a menace to the health and comfort of many thouaanda of men, he carriea hla confid ing admiration of the medico too far. Tl.a Amerhan legion is agslnsi General Dr. C. E. Sawyer's holding the Job of Chief Co ordinator of Government Hospitals. raclfic Cjsst delegates to the Iglon'a New Orleans Convention hae already announced that they will aeek to put the organisation on record as ... . . - ... I f U I demanding the Oenerai uorior rrm.. n..i iuc essin putting through thla Iron-boot resolu tion Is apparently ssaured. Furthermore, their ob I'ttions to the man will be upheld by opinion n the National Capital where he Is caressingly refer id to as a combination of brass, buttor.n ,nd bluff. ' From the viewpoint of Justice end effl .Miry, Mr. Harding has only one courae be fore him. which la to limit the General Doctor's hea.'inc activities to the achea and Ills of th Voice of the People IUHMB M SMI MtM mmn to m Sauna.) i lasumil BUNCOMBE'S BABIES. Editor of The Citizen: Your pages constantly aid In putting- throagh mesaurea for which your perper Is dedicated The up building of Western North Caro lina." Buncombe County haa ex cellent rosda; aha la consolidating and improving her schools o ht each child may have the oppor tunlty of a high school education, ahe la constanlly planning bettei care for her poor, her delinquent, and her defectlvea. She u congratulated upon these things. But in the fight for better cltlsen shlp In the next generation we are not fully heading the old adage. "An ounce of prevention U worth a pound of cure.'' Little children are tieing brought up motherless because some -moth-era do not have a chance to live. Little children are being born de fectlve physically and mentally be cauae of the conditlona of their mothers before they were born. Little children are being stunted i- ,h.i- hrlnfftno- u: so they will never be able lo get the most from-4 the advantages Hunconine w in hem use ihelr parents do not t i .. w ,,,-nvnr ihia. i , . i. aiieht and few t h os i ta ihpu conditions mil Willie n"i , I j,,,.ti,..,. - . .. ' .n more normal, productive allllctlons may be. In thla buslneaa of aeannB ,,, , tne future; it will cut down the expense of caring for ue fectlvea and delinquents. Our county physician Is doing all he can In this line. He needs help. He needs a county nurse. I would rather say nurses. For this we can get Federal and State aid. VMM you klmllv through your paper, bring this need before the citliens of Buncombe County. MRS. C. B. A. . West Ashevllle, October 11), 1922- with sick men, their mental sttitude Is a tre mendous factor. The American Legion and the sick soldiers have no confidence In the Geneial Doctor. They blame him for the Gov ernment's delay In carrying out the provisions of the Langley bill. They hold him responsible for most of the inconveniences they have suf fered. Even If their charges were false, the mere fact that they believe them to. be true mnkes the General Doctor a man unfit for his place. Men do not get well rapidly when they distrust the official who In some degree rules their destinies. The President 1 wrong to wait for the formal demand of removal to come from the Lesion. Outside of Mr. Harding, nobody haa esi.ri'ssed a belief In the pet doctor's fitness for Ms hospital job. The thing has not even the dignity of a controversy. The Legion is against tho General Doctor, the country is against him', nnd from lhat powerful duplex spring board he should be catapulted Into the prob lems and pitfalls ef private endeavor. - . Xolonel Harvey has made effort to Vegain a ojace on the, front Dags of the world's news, but nobody any longer takes the Colonel seri-. ouaiy. Influenced possibly by an environment less dry than American passenger ships under the new -prohibition ruling, and no doubt axl pus to retrieve some previous errors of utter ance, the American 'Ambassador Is quoted as lolling Englishmen that if war comes Ameflca will he by England's side. This statement, the Administration mildly deprecated for the pub tie. nr,d nrobablv wrote ColoneWjW'arvey 'some ..... . . iTnncress is as miooiviii lu uoiouauo In Indiana And New Jersey (By Savoyard) Senator Frellnghuysen, of New Jersey, and Senator New. of In diana, are charter members of a chumship that, according to th late Senator Knox, of Pennsylvania President Harding loves to be a party to when the Presidential mind Is In need of "mental relaxa tion." Both the Senator from In diana and the Senator from New Jersey were candidates In te Re publican primaries of their respec tive States for renomlnntlon. Sen ator New was defeated and the Washington Post printed many miles of logic to demonstrate that the victory of Bull Mooser Bever Idge in rejllana was a triumphant vindication of the Harding Admin istration. Senator Frellnghuysen defeated his competitor for the Re publican nomination in Jersey, and a writer in the Washington 'Post wakes us all up crowing for day and proclaiming that the nomina tion of the Senator Is a triumph for the Administration and a blow to the Democrats. i ' This rooster, his name Brown, seems to be a fledgling, not yet amenable to barnyard, discipline, and a prey to the obsession that his crow makes the dawn of day. Whether the event he crows over a inw to the Democrats" will not be determined until November 7. when it Is' more than likely Mr. Brown will discover that the Ke-1 miKIIcan nomination for Senator in Congress is as impotent to persuade I For Mutiny on the High Sea after-dinner speakef. , Did not Jir, vey long ago Inform England and the jrforld th,at the United States fouglft In the Great War only because It was afraid not to fight, and that his country would have nothing more o do with the Old World quarrels so long as thesu disturbances carried no menace to Our national .'lite? The President must be even more convinced than ever that he erred grley ouh; lrt-allowIng personal friendship to away him in selectihg the American spokesman at the Court of St. Barnes. ., . . Congress mailed out some heavy bills to the people, but let us be thankful for the 12,000 thai failed of Congressional O. K. . T. hen the political war chest Is well swelled out, it is easier to get spellbinders to swell out their f-hests on the rostrum. : , Congress will doubtless award a medul to the army aviator who stayed up in the air i lon er than anybody. 'Congressmen appreciate that sort of thing. ' 1 - The bankers who wsnt America to help JSurop have concluded that they can't bank jfl Harding ! Those "Political" Prisoners Jn his fight to obtain paidons for the seventy-five "political" prisoners still confined in Ailanta and Leavenworth, Senator Borah has ume logic on his side, but logic Is not all of life. The Senator can remind the President ,;iat uens, most nuiunuun ui uhjih j t.; cripple the power of the Government in ,: time, has been given freedom. And Debs, cecause of hla ability and his knowledge of what Americanism means, is more culpable morally than many a poor devil who went Debs . l etter and advocated the destruction of the -, ,i r.ment by violence. J'r. Daugherty reported to the President th.it Kugene Debts IS a dangerous man, and ;,t the Debs' sentence was commuted. Now. sjy the petitioners for smnesty, there is n- , 1 inyei any reason to punish men who. though j pi,k violent, did less dpmage to the morale of tli American cause than a man who had been isndldate for the presidency. .. . . : 1 - .. CAntn.. If.. ,- I v. i me cat?B rsyuuoeu uy have been carefully Investigated by the De pigment of Justice, it is to be presumed that the fei eral understanding Is correct with re gard to the charges on which these men were i-pinii-teu, tnat is, mey not oniy upiioseu ioe I'ruft tut sought to take advantage of the crisis of '.vnr to overthrow the tepubllc and aet up ano.h r fashioned after their own anarchistic ideas if Justice and opportunity. Men irho aro guilty of sjich crimes in time of "war are llber a'.'y treated when they escape with their lives from the righteous wrath of the law. V The monkey theory that some Democrats hDn& Mr. Bryan will oppose Is the monkej'- 1th-1 he-Democratic-Party. Tho Allies cut down the Turk as soon as each of- them quit putting In so much time grinding Its oWn axe. t i Money is getting .easier, according to the financial experts; but not easier to keep. ' About the time of year coal enters the cellar the price tries lo climb the roof. LYRICS OF LIFE (By Douglas MallochV If Bouillon had failed In his parleys with Kemsl, the Near East situation would hi been In the soup. There Is No Time You said some things that hurt nie so, And I was mighty mean, I know. Oh. let's own up, let's both admit We both were wrong a little bit: Not ask forgiveness, nor forgive. But Just forget the life we live Is much too short for folks to snarl, There isn't time enough to quarrel. So many words of love to say Why throw the golden chance away? So much of happiness to be. Why keep a bitter memory? So muclSof happiness to share. Whv plant a thistle anywhere, A thistle where a rose would climb , In days to corche? There Isn't time. Life isn't long: a little while To live and love and sing snd smile; Ar.d words to anger are not worth A moment's thought, an hour of earth:" The words that pleasant memories bring Alone are worth remembering. Yea,' life's too short for forks to snarl; There Isn't time enough to quariel. anrt shuffle the cards is oftime wiae and an admirable admoni tion. The Senatorial situation In In diana is more or less interesting to an imagination that loves to ex plore the realm of party politics In our glorious Union. Mr. Beveridgo Is a brilliant figure intellectually considered, something after the or der of the lato Tom Watson, of Georgia, Jjut with a happier temp erament. A Bull Mooser. like Julius Caesar's wife, ought- to be abovo suspicion; but one day In the Sen ate when Mf. Heveridge was a member of that bodv the fate Nel son W. Aldrich, the G. O. P. reader, petulcntly uttered a hint that cer tainly was a blow below the belt, and the Interpretation of the In sinuation waa that the "Progres sive principles," whatever they were, of Mr. Heveridge were de cidedly "Pickwickian" in character. A scene followed that was vivid re minder of an exactly similar scene In that chamber many rears later, the actors Henry Clay of Kentuqky and James Buchanan, of Pennsyl vania. Buchanan when challeng ed by Clay as violating confidence retreaded. And so did Aldrich re treat In circumstance precisely identical The Inference drawn from the recontre was that Sen ator Beverldce's relations to the Progressive movement were exactly, similar to Theodore Kooseveits, or whom as late as 1912 Mias Ida M. Tarbell was convinced that he "did not know what It was all about." Nominated as a Bull Mooser, Mr. Itoverldgof Is running as a Stand patter, one of the Old Guard. His preachments prompt me to make a quotation from memory: "So wary, held and wise that he scare received For Gospel what the Church believed." On the stump Mr. Beverldge champions Standpattery In Klihu Root vein, and he hints that Jim Watson is not ax Bound In the mat ter of Standpattery ns he, Hever idge Is. The uncharitable, and in politics unrharity In ofttimes a vir tue, may suspect that Standpattery as now preached by Beverldge Is "to get In on." and as soon as he gets In he will herd with Lu Fol f tie and Borah and as they are, he will be. a! thorn in the side of the Administration. This Is a. wicked world we live In. , (Copyright. 122. by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate.! Out in California, too, la another Bull Mooser . who Is roaring as Kently as a suckling dover one Holl-Itoaring III'' Johnson. His I progrejuuve principles, line uiose ui Beverldge, are lam away in laven der. Beverldge who voted against the Payne-Aldrich tariff when It passed the Senate in 1909. is now lauding to the skies the Fordney McCuniber tariff that will add three Dinions of dollars annually to the cost of living of the American people. HI Johnson glories in the fact that the particular bloc of ttsnstnrs "of whom he Is one of I which" destroyed our trade with Ihe peoples of the lands washed by j the Mediterranean Sea and has I thus forced the American people to pay greaiiy more ior curoun nuiu, nuts, figs, raisins and so fprth than they ever did before. This is to promote Industries In California paid for by all the people anil that are the property of few of the nntile. Even a veteran weaves a tangled web when out to deceive. What a glorrlous thing it would be If we could secure a divorce a vinculo matrimoni between politics and hypocrlcy. Waahlngton. D. C. October 12. 195J. PHOTOGRAPHING THE GREAT (Frederic J. Haskin) v (Sr'M Cnmptoitmt T il! Ciltim. Washington, D. C When Justice John Hessin Clarke resigned from the Supreme Court the other day, he did a seriice not only to the man appointed to succeed him but also, though quite incidentally, to one or more news photographers In Washington. A new Justice on the Supreme bench means a new photo graph of the Supreme Court, and a new photograph of the Supreme Court is worth many hundreds of dollars to the photograpner woo secures it. " , , But photographing the Supreme OT...i.aiMin the Jay's business for the news photographer Trt the liatlonal -capital although not-many- tihotoaranhera are .i9 iaiuauie.; a has a hlstbrac' vafue "wnicn causres It to be purchased not airly by the also bv lawyers, law libraries, "et also by lawyers, law libraries, 'et al," to use legal phraseology. Yet it frequently happens that the news photographers by some lucky shot .wore a nicture that outdistances the formal group photograph of the Supreme justices as a eei:er. This Is usually a view of some Sreat man in an unposed ana numan al titude the well known picture of Mrs. Harding fastening a rose in her distinguished husband's button hole was an example out it waj be merely a still picture of sonic scenio phase. . The man who nrst ptiotographed the reflection of the Capitol's dome on the wet asphalt m ida himself a smaH fortune. How many copies of the photograpli of tho blossom ing cherry trees along the tidal basin lii Washington have been sold? Tens of thousands of them. Some day, when the landscaping of the approach of the Lincoln Memorial is done, some lucky but top presser will gJt that right; and there will bo another fortune made. , No other city In the world is so thoroughly photographed, both us to Its distinguished Inhabitants and visitors and ns to its streets and buildings, as Washington. The firm of Harris and Kwlng uliinn owns over half a million negatives ot Washington pictures of rews vafue past and present. The llrm of 1'nderwood and Underwood, al though established in Washington only for a few years, alBO possesses an enormous fl!K Besides these there are several other photog graphecs whose business Is primar ily a studio business but who deal in news photographs to a greater or iesa extent, tl is probabiy safe to estimate that there now exist the negatives of a million news photographs of Washington and Its neonlo taken by professional photo graphers. And the oldest of these negatives is not much more than 15 vears olds The business of photography the progress of our Government has grown to be ns highly specialized that of reporting It in print. The photographer has taken his place along with the Washington correspondent. News photograph ers have their regular station at the White House, for Instance, Just as do the representatives of the press associations. This Is all an ultra modern-development. In fants born before the modern ac tion news photograph was under stood at all are still minors. Yet today there is scarcely any phase of historical progress anywhere In the world that la not being com pletely preserved In photographs. To appreciate the truth of thla statement. Jhe reader has only to search his recollection for a ment al Image of, aay, President Ben jamin Harrison In some nctlve pose. He has no such recollection, for he never saw ao action picture of Harrison. Kxcept for those who saw Prealdent Harrison In life the public today haa no better means of knowing what he really looked like than It haa of knowing what Julius Caesar looked like. It haa aome formal portralla and that la all. The aame is substantially true of Presidents Cleveland snd Mc Kinley. although motion pictures had been Invented by McKlnley's time, and the movie camera was turned upon him. But the photographing of newa, aa now know It, began during Itoosevelt's Administration, when Waamne-ton kinds of action. No man was more receptive of new Ideas than Roose velt, and wnen uiineuiuni Roosevelt about the new camera, the President invited the photo grapher to test the new Instrument by taking some snap-shots of T. R. on horseback. The famous photo graph of Roosevelt vaulting a five bar fence on a horse was the result of that first appointment- a photo grapher that is said to have made Cllnedinst over J20.000. It was the forerunner of the modern action picture of public mi.",. Roosevelt was best of all presi dential subjects for the camera. He was a man of striking actions, and he was that most excellent of all posers, the man who can be utter ly himself in front of the camera's eye. But T. R. had something more: he could sit in a studio and register Jl portrait that fairly .glow n .i,u v.! min nf-euiinalitv. Other nuhlift men cart is c c - - caslinaliv. and tien they secuie who. thAv ...pHfliv, as- -their best j. ,jf V 9 e-.,-w - v-a, . .as'- facility "all t"hr-trtner It Was legendary the number .off times President Roosevelt was photographed, but the cameras have clicked even more Industri ously in the vicinity of his succes sors. That la because of the in creasing public demand for pic tures and the increasing number of cameras to supply the demand. Mr. Tft did not seem to lend him self well to photography his pic tures were all much alike but Mr. AVllson came In to be another good subject and was often photograph ed until his Illness after his re turn from the Peace Conference. Since then pictures of- Mr. Wilson have been extremely hard to get. Mrs. Wilson was photographed less than any modern mistress of the White House. Mr. Harding Is an exceptionally good subject for the photographer. He poses well, as if unconscious of the lens, and gets a great deal of his personality Into the pictures. Since his nomination for the Presi dency two years ago he has prob ably been the most photographed man in the world. Harris and Ewing alone have a thousand picy tures of him. It becomes evident from what has been said of tho taking of tho Roosevelt horseback picture that these snapshots of the great in ac tion, pictures that seem casual and accidental, are in reality staged and arranged affairs. And so they are most of them. Not long ago there was published a photograph of President Harding playing golf on the public links In Washington one morning be.fore most folks had eaten their breakfasts. The Un sophisticated must have wondered how the photographer, too happen ed to be there at that earlv hour. He didn't happen to be thereit was arranged in advance. Each day the President's schedule for next day is given but to the corre spondents at the White House. If any of these activities lend them selves to news pictures, the photo grapher arrange to be there. Now and then the photographers are able to pull off stunts of their own devising. In spite of the willingness of the modern public official to be photo graphed, the news photographers are not cynical when It comes to the essential modesty of such men, Many notables, were they to con sult their own feelings, would shink from the camera as does the rare Individual who holds up a news paper In front of his face to pre vent the photographer from giving him unwelcome publicity. But pub lic men. most of them, believe thoroughly In full publicity; and they feel that the public has Just as much right to see what they look like as It haa to reed about what they are doing. And so they submit to the snapshot as a duty that cornea to them with office. Now and then, however, there comes the rara Individual who ob jects, (leneral Dawes was one of these. When he was first made di rector of tho budget ha held his famous meeting with the govern mental heads; and In his apcech to Illustrate how useless govern ment employes should be swept out and expenaea cut down, he waved a new broom In front of his audi enre, Government economy was then the watchword; and a photo graph of General Dawea waving -Ms broom would have been good siuff. Hut he refused to pose. The photi graphera appealed to Presidant Hnrdlng who was there; but he only replied, with a laugh, 'No. tliis Is General Dawes" own show. oh the Capitol steps. He secuH a good picture, and after that t picturesque general waa not camera-shy. There is one familiar figure i ntuiiuuK.uii, a. .,, w.t pin. eral .occasions has been prorrilnei ly In the public eye, who has neil been photographed. This maul Andrew Furuseth, the head of if Seamen's Union and the man i is as much responsible as any vti er for the provisions of the V& Follette Law regulating the cif duct of oor mcrchaht marine, far as Is known here, no pictr Andrew Furuseth has ever bttj published. More than once Furf, seth has made bodily attack w photographers who attempted j defy his wisnes. Don't Let Home' Laundering WaahlruAand ironing are- ab the hardest household tasks. 1 Ways of lessening the wVurT laundering are badly needed many homes. Following the best method!,! ing good supplies and pro) equipment will go far toward llgi ening the burden. Experts of the Federal Gover ment have studied the problem making home laundering as as possible. The result of th studies Is embodied In a book) certain to be of great benefit anv housewife who has to stmf! with the weekly wash. I This is a free Government m licatlon. Our Washington Ibh matlon Bureau will Secure a w for any reader who fills out i mails the coupon below, encksi: two cents In stamps for few postage. Write your name and dress clearly. i i i i I ill i Frederic .T. Haskin, TJlrectorJ The Asheville Citizen Information Bureau, Washington, D.C. I enclose herewith two, cenb In stamps for return postage on a free copy of the Laundry Booklet. r Name Street City .. State' . m Street Car Schedule RIVERSIDE- PARK 8:1a and IS mlnulM until 11 n. m. ' DKPOT VIA SOUTHSIDB AJ 5:30 a. m.. and every 15 minnts 2:45 p. m.. and then every IS mln until 11:00 p. m. ' ' DEPOT via FRENCH BROAD A 6 00 a. m.. and every 15 mtn until 11 p. m. CHARLOTTE STREET TEU1 6 a. m., and every IS minutes 11 p. m.. 11:30 car run through t turnine leaves end of car line t 1- PATTON AVE. ( a. m:, and en 1.1 minutes until It- p. m. EAST STREET a. m and 15 minutes until 11 p. m. GRACE VIA MERRIMON AVH a. m., then every 15 minutes ' 11 ' m BILTMORE a. m., and then ew 13 mlmitee until 1! p. m.. last car,, DEPOT AND WEST ASHE-VU'; VIA SOUTHSIDE AVE 5:30 a. J and every 15 minutes until 11 P- SUNDAY SCHEDULE 0ffZ THE FOLLOWING PARTICULA Oars leaves Square for Manor I I :15 a. m.: arrive Square 1:15, every JO minutes until 8:30. , Cars leave Square for Depot Southside Ave. 5:30, 5 43. 8:1, J 7:00, -7:30. :00 and 8 20 a. m. leave Square for Depot via, FK" Broad avenue, :15, 8:45, ?:I '' 1:15. ,.,( Car for Depot leaves Square m.. both Southslde and French " First car leaves the Square Charlotte street al I a. m., and w 03 mlnut until 8.S0; next 8:4- First car leaves the Scjusra Ashevllle 8:15. 7:00: next. J First car leavea Square for Biifl 8:30 a. m.. and every 30 minute ' S o'clock. First car leavea Square for :30 a. m.. and every JO minutes 1 Sam.. With the above exceptions Sur achedulea commence at 9 a. m j continues fame as week-day. On evenlnga when enteral"'"" Rarnev Cllnertinut photographer. Imported from Gar manv a camera with a abutter s1( I'll not Interfere." rapid that It would stop upon the Later on a photographer hap-iiriar time and holdinc over at are tn progress at tlie Auditorial" line Trip on an lines " , , I entertainment, leaving Square al photographic plate Hie aw Iftest pened to aurjirlao General Dawea Auditorium
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 13, 1922, edition 1
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