Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / Oct. 18, 1922, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE ASHEVILLE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCT. 18, POLLOCK'S Two Floor Of Shoe Service ' - - In Price. ' Attractiveness No Less Than In Style, We Lead, This Fall! A. New co'or . in Fall ; Footwear now takes its place in the- aun Patent Leather , and Satin as Above $6.50 "Otter" -a rich, mellow shade of brown, that goes with everything and will go like every thing. v E FROM CEYLON, JACOCKS WANTS TO STAY r ' t Ex-Football Star Is Inter-' esting Figure on Chapel , mu uampus. THREE I And they cost only $8 6 (The House of Fine Shoes and " Hosiery MANY FINE EXHIBITS FAIR AT MILLS RiVER Began Flans for Still Bet ter and Larger Fair Hext Year. r Smimt CvriWMtai) r A&nOlt CMm MILLS RIVER, Oct. IT. The ain that . (ell Saturday morning did not lessen the crowda that at tended the Mills River Fair; held here laat Saturday. . TJe exhibit of - fancy work, soned goooH jellies, preserves, ; iwm-i, cakes, flower and ; every fZWy larm products drew ra-i-aJbIe criticism from all who at CJbided. ; Tie -exhibits . completely filled the four large rooms of the school building-, the livestock ex hlblta , being held outside1 the building;.; v., ' ' ; , At 10 o'clock the crowd was at tracted to the athletic field where they were royally entertained by 13 members of Company F, 109th Cavalry, from AahevlUe, led by Sergeant F. W. Bryson. This- ex hibition consisted of racing, fancy riding, running high Jumps, pyra mid and various other stunts. The exhibition ended with the hang ing of the hqrse thief, which was tnorougniy enjoyed Dy ait wno were present. "The picnlo dln-fier was spread upon .the grass, to which- everyone did ample justice, ice cream, cakes, sandwiches, and hot coffee WAf a MArvAil thA nrortaeria minor So the school library fund. I The Judges of -the fair were Miss Rogers, teacher of home economics fat the Hendersonvllle High School, Mrs. Samuel Garren,: of Henuer sonvllle, . and C. C. . FroflUt, of Asheville. , Miss Pearl 'Weaver, County Health Officer. - waa present and- weighed over ZOO children and re ported that only six were under weights .... Among the visitors present- at the fair were: Judge Frank Carter, of Asheville: Mr. and Mrs. Hollo well, of Hendersonvllle; Dr. and Mrs. Dixon, Mr. W. Eubanks, Mr. and Mrs. James Shlpman, Mr. Ko- selle, Mr. Martin. Mr. King, of Hendersonvllle; Mr. Morris Kin sey and Mr. F. H. Corpening. i; So well pleased were the resi dents of Mills River over the fatr, i.thab plans are already being laid I fn-'a much larger fair for hoxt A --- - - aimney Rock Never Closes. ' QJ Is any method or plan fol lowed in the International Sunday School Lessons T O. B, H. A. . The lessons are arranged so that the Bible will be reviewed each elx years. This period con stitutes the time that the average child attends Sunday School. One temperance lesson is included quarterly. , HHM PrraMere TU AtSftVf CUitn) CHAPBb mm N. C. Oct. 17 In a group of Carolina alumni -who were exchanging reralntsoencea a few days ago about old time iootballera. the taut turned to me period 01 jus- los. "Where la Bill JaoocksT" one of the group asked. on, nee out in . ceyion, enomer answered. "Nobody ever heara from him now. It takee latter five weeks to reach him." I was passing In front or the Me morial Hall yesterday and there I w BUI Jacooks, loplag along on his way to Kmerson Field to see the varsity football team in action. In his Far Eastern home, he said, he had been reading In the Ahimn Re view about the football prospects at Carolina,. and since a return to Amer ica waa scheduled for this year, he had hastened to take ship In order to see some of the" games. 1 Dr. Jacocks was on the football team here in 1(02, 1103. 1904, flrat as halfback and later as Quarterback. In 1 HOI he waa quarter on the team that defeated Virginia. He kicked a goal from field In that match, but some body was offside and it did not count. Fortuntely there were plenty of points to spare. Colombo. Ceylon, a city of 250.000 Inhabitants, most of them natives of the island, has been Dr. Jaoock'a home for the last five or six years He Is In the service of the Interna tional- Health Board, which Is sup. ported by the Rockefeller Foundation, and he haa been helping to promote initation in Ceylon. There are 4.600.000 people In Cey ion, which Is about as large aa South Carolina and of these all but 10,000 ara native. The 10,000 are mostly English. Dr. Jacocks has had a pret ty hard time trying to get any ideas of sanitation into the heads of the natives. They are not negroes, but they are nearly black. The few English present among mem ruie mem witnout nimcuity. "These natives are Sinhalese." said Dr. Jacocks. "They pronounce It as If It bad a g In. but it la apelt with an h. The word from which It comes means "lion," - so that Sinhalese means 'Hon people.' 'Silt they are as little like lions aa anybody you ever saw. The English run thins com pletely. "I livrfd mostly with Englishmen, of course, there Velng relatively few Americana out there. I learned to -drink tea as naturally as If I'd been brought up In Piccadilly,-but I find It mighty easy to drop out of the habit now that I'm back In America. Everybody In Ceylon drinks tea There are immense tea orchards In the southern part of the country. Splendid mountains make the scenery beautiful In some places. I've been Mill through the Interior. u b not a dud uuia oy any means. out I m giaa i m oacK. i expect to be In North Carolina a month or so, in Elizabeth City. I'll aurely make it a point to see as many of the Caro lina football games aa I caa. I don't know. where I'll settle down when my COURT INSTITESVILLE First Time" Sessions Have Been Held in Iredell in Six Years. . fsWMl CorTtttmimtf rue JiatfUl Clitem) STATES VILLE. Oct. 17. Fed eral Court convened here this morning at 11 o'clock with Judge K. Yates Webb, presiding) and District Attorney Frank A. Llnney, prosecuting. J. M. Deaton was made foreman of the grand Jury and Dr. C. O. Bryant la officer in charge.- This Is the first time a session of Federal Court for this district haa been hold- In Btates ville for alx years. In lets practi cal and timely charge to the grand Jury, Judge Webb emphasized the need and demand for the 18th amendment, affecting the handling of whiskey and said the wonder was that it waa not adopted soon er, "Everybody realised that whis key had to be done away with or civilization would go backward. Better schools and churches-, bet ter roads and, bigger savings ae- iuunis iiuvb reauuea. vvnue the law has not altogether prohibited. it nas made as satisfactory prog ress toward that end as laws for otner crimes have." said the Fed r-eral Jurist. So far only cases involving vlo latlons of the liquor laws have been taken up, floes having been imposed in each Case. One case attracting considerable attention waa that against a cripple man, Huskle Poteat. of Maiden, who was charged with having whiskey In his possession. The defendant had to be carried into the court room. His plea was that he was a cripple and that he dealt in whis key in order to support his Tamlly. In Imposing a fine-of 1200 on the defendant, Judge Webb reminded him 4hat county homes were pro vided for those who were unable to earn their support in a legiti mate manner and he could not ex cuse the crime on the plea of the defendant. , 1 THE GRIND LECTpER University Alumni Favor Locating Medical School on "The Hill." Mills River School !'- : After Big Library; Books Are Donated (IPKUt Ca-rawMSrace r drtmUl, CilUm) fj T T a Dnmo . -. . Mills River High School has reached an enrollment of over 60 students, there being more, "boys than girls:- - In the Senior Class are six boys and two girls. A great deal of interest is be ing manifested by the students in building up the school library. George K'eenan, noted traveler and author, haa donated eeverai vacation Is over, but somewhere in. America, thank Cod. I am still with the International Health Board and expect to remain with it." Ilnrld faniHMmw tmt Jrtircllle TINimJ HICKORY. Oct. 17. William Ritchie Smith, of Raleigh, lerturci for the trend chapter, spoke to the three bodies of Maaonry In tho Maaoftlo temple here last night and iiave a large assemblage ono n? the best atldreBsea ever heard in Hickory. Tho guest .was present ed by Dr. R. H. Craig. Mr. Smith, who went to Asheville today, gavo the foundation atones of Masonry rnd empnasir-ed ita prlnclplea and aims, .stressing charity aa the greateat t-f virtues. - He made a. plea for the unification of work In ail blue lodges and compared the ritual In North Carolina to th-tt in other Ktatea. He said the nex: trend lodge meeting would take up the question. Attor Mr. flmith'i lecture. Dr.. N. ' J. Wright and othirs sooke and Daniel L. Mlllrr reminded Maaons of the Thanks Klvlng offering for the Oxford Or phanage. University alumni here have ap pointed a committee to work out plans for raising a scholarship fund ts l-.-nd to needy and worthy young men who wish to attend the institution and the committee is expected to report soon. The loan fund, it Is hoped, will eventually amount to several thousand dol lars. . The Hickory chapter en Joyed its best meeting with A. Alex Bhuford as- host. The locil apsoclation also went on record aj favoring Chapel Hill as the loca tion of ' the proposed four-year medical college and memorial hos rital, and extendedan Invitation tj the University Glee Club to come here next November and the Caro lina Playmakers to visit Hickory ln the apr.ng. , Rev. C. S. KIrkpatrIck, pastor of the Firht Methodist Church, lefi, today for Monroe to attend con ftrence w;th the best report this cnurch has ever made. It has the largest membership of any church In the -fctatesvllle district, raises about 91 5.000 annually for all causes and the congregation have outgrown preaent quartera. A new church building is being discussed. Mr. KIrkpatrIck will rome bark to serve a membership that appre ciatesahlm . Footwear of Style fp2 Patent VN Ooze In the Season's Newest Patterns A Three-Day Selling of AH New Novelty Patterns at $6.95 autographed copies of his bonks and has given a subscription for tho National Goographlo and the Outlook. .Mrs. Mary C. Snyder made the library a gift in the form of a set of Luther Burba rtk's works. - The High School Library Association has - been organized with Jackson Bright, , president; Julian Corpening, vlce-presideot; Bessie Powell, secretary; Guy Sil ver, treasurer, and iMyrlte Drake and Jluth Johnson, librarians. and Grace ' Satin e Calf Value up to $11.50 Brocaded Sating, Wishbone Strap, Hand-turned Soleg, Spanish Louia Heel. Satin and Patent Combinations, Cut-out Quarter Strap, Spanish Louis Heel. ' AH Patent with Lattice Work Croai Strap; ono of the Very Newest of Patterns Adapted from a French Model of Unusual Charm and Craco. All Sizes, 2 to 8 C All Widths, AA to C ALL MAIL ORDERS FILLED SAME DAY AS RECEIVED, MAJKSTIC WF.DNF.KDAY ' "Don't Change Your Wife." ap pears to be sound advise to tho average .man. But the lines take on the order of an eplo In the musical play by that name which will be presented at" the Majestlo Theatre today and tomorrow bv the Broadway Follies Company, If advance reports are reliable. Duval Scott Is assigned a strong role in thU bill in black face char acter, playing the part of the ser vant In the case. All of the prin cipals will have special numbers. Att Candler, who proved a whole some entertainer In the openinnr bill of his company, is assigned some more comedy In this num ber. .Bll'y Fenton will.. entertain with some- new song numbers, ami L'lllan Mack will appear In sink ing and dauclng parts. Miss Char lotte Karlo will do a single, am' wilh Gene Howard will have a ne? double, - The chorus has been ene of th features of the show. The singlnir Is good, the material strictly fresh, end the dancing of high order. JURE WAY TO GET RID OF BLACKHEADS - There Is one simple, safe and sure way that never falls to get rid of blackheads, that is to dissolve them, i To do this, get two ounces of ealo nite powder from any drug store sprinkle a little on a hot, wet cloth rub over the blackheads briskly wash the parts, and you will be surprised how the blackheads have disappeared. - Big backheads, little blackheads, no matter where they are, simply dissolve and disappear. , Blackhead are a mixture of dust and dirt and secretions that form in ; the pores of the skin. - The oalontte powder and the water dissolve the blackheads so they wash right out, j leaving the pores tree ana clean ana in their natural condition. Advt. y IE I 1 t TSDSTEC'S MLB . Br tlitae af Uu Km t Ml nnubwd In a rwula i or tratt m br WHUub Whl 14m M Um mdenmad Tnatet, Uted the lilt day at June. 111. m dulr nfliund la Ui nti f Of JtwUtar at Dm far SaaeaaM CMmcr. H. C, la Bfe mt tinrtttSM m Df T Tnnt No. lit. M bias M m b ans MnH taaas Ma m9t la V boomM at th, tadMUilnw mans br wld SM4 at trait, vsarabr uie pane af aM ilMi nnMlaal kM HaM apataUM, Mid aa- ittartirMd Tnu'-n will, -m Saimtar. Uw lata oar Oeubar, Itll. M 11 ! in. Ha aonwa, far mm. at V-t com noon am the City mt v-tmiy a, iHMni t-M af Ko Caroaaa, ow rairamns lawn rMtlMI. aHoal. Wins aaa eawc an w Mos at Craaint Straa), ta tfca CUT af nm. Canrtr mt jwaaMiM aaa SMia at Nenk aaMrtaat m foUana, rta: v mint " a suae la tae nana awnria at 4 Sin, SM wuMt aeraar mt Mima . ' M. ami mt sum Mlk u aaat llaa at n mil, b. HiU'a M Hana It oat. if atta. I M I ruati aaa Santa 1 oaj. V Kaat M MKI tuaa; SUaaa Sent If ala. Wart 111 mkl nata la a Mrala af CimmM SmM: thaca a-tu naram ar Ciiiimii Suan Nan oaf. 11 BK-PMC H TTV TT T TrWK ION- OF FOLLOWING TABLE SHOWS PRICES OF FORD CARS EACH YEAR SINCE 1909: Auer.IAug.IAug.lAug.IAug.lAug.IAug.IAug.IAug.IAug.IAug.IMar. I909l91019llf1912191319l4191519l6l917l9l81919l920 Aug.lSept.l Jan. 1920 1920 1921 Sept. 1921 Jan. 1922 TODAY : Touring . . $850 $950 $780 $690 $600 $490 $440 $360 $360 $525 $525 $575 $575 $44ol$4l 5355 $348 S298 " .Runabout '825 900 680 590 525 440 390 345 345 500 500 550 550-395 379 325 319 S269 : Chassis .'J. - - 1 360 325 325 475 475 525 525 360 345 295 285 $235 1 - Sedan . - 975 740 645 645 775 775 975 975T 795 760 660 6451 $595 C Coupe 950 1050 1056 750 590 505 505 650 650 650 850 745 695 595 580 $530 - 'Ton Truck. - T 600 550 550-600 640 545 495f 445 430 $380 The Tour, Runabout, Chassis and Ton Truck listed without Self-Starter $70.00 extra. The Tour, Runabout and Chassis listed without Demountable Rims $25.00 extra The Sedan.and Coupe have Self-Starters and Demountable Rims at the above list. On All Present Models Owing to the present shortage of cars and exceedingly low price, we advise placing your order at once. Terms if desired 'TCDnOK LINCOLN, FORD AND FORDSON SALES AND SERVICE1 Phones 3865-2266 , ' ; fulT TTQ) 52-56 Broadway wmi 4t real ta ox eefiaaaac - IT lTih, lilt.
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1922, edition 1
3
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