PAGE TEN Triangle is LURE the Center oflkalEsldte HENDERSONVILLE- JL /*. •. V ~r k T Uctmty in Western T North Carolina □rj -■ Activities in Western North Carolina have already attracted nation-wide attention. jgv v Men and money are coming in from everywhere, every day. Many hotels that were V‘V'~&**=>,, never full in February have been turning people away. The spring and summer in raJfef J asion from Florida and other points South will be unprecedented. The vanguard j afy X has already come. Real estate transfers in Buncombe, Henderson and Rutherford HBBSIv counties, breaking old records every week, define the Asheville-Hendersonvilie- Take Lure triangle as the central market of Western North Carolina. ' \ Buyers Demand Water V . While new development projects are being announced every day, Lake Lure is and ju^Tffrf.v* i w *h remain the one resort of first magnitude—largest—most comprehensive in 1 t scope—best financed and nearest to completion. As Coral Gables compares with * - ~jj the developments of Florida, so will Lake Lure continue to rank first among devel* opments in the Land of the Sky. The investor has shown a preference for water, and ' Lake Lure, with 40 miles of shores, will have the only considerable water area. And Perspective of uke Lure village »ire*dy so the greatest sales of resort real estate of 1926 will occur at Lake Lure under coMtruction. Architecture, Northern Italian. * tt i ,i. ,r. , Lake Will Appear This Fall Unduplicated Features of •*. J So far, Lake Lure can be traced only by its water line definitely marked bv the the Resort of First Magnitude completed clearing away of trees and shrubs. The great dam is to be completed in of the Land of the Sky the fall. Water will be accumulated by late summer. But Lake Lure Business Center is plotted, and its first hotel, the Isothermal, is under construction. Contracts have Largest-esort Uke—shaped like a starfish, with been let for community buildings. Three beautiful concrete arch highway bridges ample space for regattas and water are being built. The new State High way No. 20, along higher levels, will soon be com , ml h i n p^“htL\t U evU in .^c%”rt-l:r r S P lete| y S raded The first golf course has been started. Finest Mountain Scenary-ukeulre vinlyTbor. Luremont section, bordering Lake Lure Business Center, will shortly be mapped. An dered by the beautiful Chimney Rock Mountains, narrow- army Ol Surveyors IS Oil the job. I ing into Hickory Nut Gap. where the new paved Fair- . 3 You can soon select your lot. " . M ': Famed chimnly Rock, ascended fast s°M rS by"so.ooo"per. Parlor cjr motor coaches are being constructed. Before summer, they will be bring- ■ls < ciouda— Hickory Nut Faiia to Devii”* ' n & dad y loads of tourists to Lake Lure Business Center, Bottomless Pools, Lure- ® l«L P no"fVeL™ n NYrth cai s oiin. b vilr d in every co, ‘ mont S€Ction and Chimney Rock. Bottomless Pools—a succession of beautiful cascades ,/ I 1 I Tor more than a mile down the ravine of Pool Creek, (.M \ PWjfag into smooth-worn glacial “pdts’* of unknown \ ' wyyySßk jgfr Light and Power—Generated at the great dam. from ~/ *$ V V W& daily overflow, without lowering level of lake Dam is • # , . I \. c . - . . h 1 104 feet high, 585 feet acro«-40,000 cubic U FZSCSS&£. ij . ' Send coupon f„ vie. book S inforced concrete anchored into bed of granite more an- d «T v »c»-pr*«>d«i»t chtmney Rock fZ- ■ of Lake Lure, showing Lake -JH cient than the Alps. Can be seen now under construction ,Br * CJ| ,mn *> r Rock, N. C. in v *’ * _ _ »„..... „ sending application, send complete / Lure Business Center and Lore- qfe On Mam Highway No. 20 from the Mountains to the record, confirmed by letters of *n- w| j Sea— to Wilmington-hard-surfaced from donement from recent former cm- "*<>»* section—mailed postpaid „ ~•' I 10 —' f! ChimneyßDekMountains,^: Chimneyßock,N.C. f ______ CHICAGO—UnIess you have at least six different pain of shoes foe. your man to keep nicely shiied. you are not the well dressed ytdtteAkn. Harry, Sels, president of the: Shoe oCmpanA in an addreta at a style sss&^ias%s£i special type of shoe, he asserted, end Sash I one of these pain must be in “the nude.” This edict comes at a time when “WJdHC are beginninsr to ap pear is the larger centers. The Uutt.hap is fleah color and it is aa t ticipated that this shade will be ail 3 the rage for spring and summer, an especially pleasing combination with outing clothes. 1 “The six pairs that every .man j owjdsMgne hbiek for evening > ‘nude’ calf for light outing wear, t patent leather oxfords for formal iarggsag ;ss?Ssi^S| <4 the j'4. '■ 1- irf ■<**. > costume by the average man. Now he is developing a shoe conscious ness, and is demanding a shoe for •very occasion. The well-dressed man realises that .it is as necessary for him to have shoes for the occa •*£ tat{ &.*****■ tk * correct |n the long run, a man’s shoe bill is no higher for the wear is distributed At the same ttme. his feet are in better condi tion, due to the frequent changes into fresh shoes. Shoe comfort is asserted the well-known inmefer iHE LvflNtiUKU. UAH*! IKiBUNB COUNTRY CLUB NEXT | MOVE FOR ALBEMARLE Charter Obtained and Site Pur chased at Cost of $20,M0. ' Albemarle, March 24.—Albemarle is to have a country club. Applica tion was made today to the secretary of stare for a charter. A large num ber of the very best of Albemarle’s business and professional men have joined in the proposition and will be stockholders in, the corporation and thereby charter members of the club. The Moss Mineral Springs proper ty. Ideated just east of the city and consisting of 140 acres, has been purchased at a cost of $20,000. There is already located on the property a large dwelling which will readily be converted inton convenient and com modious club house. Also there are located on the property an excellent mineral spring, and a pavilion nearby which will he repaired at once. A sufficient quantity of the land is cleared to furnish gmple space for a nine-hole golf ling. A magnSceut oak grove surrounds the springs and the club house. The property is lo cated a short ways off the State high way nuber 74. It is understood that about one half of the real estate will be reserved for country club purposes while the re mainder will be developed as a resi dence section. Plans for developing the club’s buildings and real estatp wilU go forward, it is Ktnted, as soon as the charter is received, and the organization effected. An electric line runs out from Albemarle to-the property and the club house will be equipped with ail (modern comveu ienees. MARSHALL IS PACING 10 TO 20 YEAR TERM Chiropractor Is Found , Guilty, of Philadelphia. March 24.—Divld Zi. 1 Marshall, convicted today of secoqd degree murder for the killiug of Anna May Dietrich. Muees a sentence of-ten to twenty years, if he is not granted a new trial. The unregistered chiro practor. who admitted dismembering the woman's body after sKc died in j his office, hoard the jury verdift, \yjrb I little outward emotion. On Hie witness stand he had said Miss Dietrich, who was hie patient, died from self-administered poison and rather than have the notoriety of her dyring in his office he dismem bered the body and distributed the parts in woods in the suburbs. The commonwealth, however, submitted a confession in which he said he choked her to death in a quarrel because she threatened to expose their relations to his wife. Marshall’s counsel asked the court to allow him the usual four days to make an appeal for a new trial but he did not indicate whether he would file such a motion. Columbus Hart sell Dies SuMdtnly in California. Stanly News-Herald. Mrs. Alex Little, of this city, re ceived a message from Han telle, Calif., announccing the sudden death of her : brother, Columbus Hartscll. Mr. Hartsell was well known to the middle aged and older people of the 1 county, especially of the western por-1 , tion, where he was born and reared. l . He was a son of the late Mr. mud Mrs. Jonah A. Hartsell and was reared in western Stanly near old , lam pout office. He tp*s a Spanish- Amerieun war veteran, having made ' l*is lieme in the west since his dis \; charge from military service at the ; close of the Spaniah-Amedoui war. " He was about -45 yean old and leaves surviving a widow- umi om cMld five years old, in uddiUon to local rela- 1 tiVes. An Egg in An Egg. Stanly News-Herald. You have heard of “a wheel in a wheel," hat have you ever heard of an egg lh an egg? WVU, last. Satu rday. morning Mya, J, „J. „ Eller of North Wrst street. Albemarle, broke an:*lg which wagilaid.byone of her - itH ■■« *«!» ***» orV'tW-a-e tlt Ihiso of u normal-hen’s *S *™ikj«v-oh-hyoh r m i England, Holland, Belgium and France are the popular countries fhr collegiate tours during the aummer of 1926, and the St. Law rence route seems to be the popu lar short route for many students. The idea of being able to cross the. ocean and get back home again at the price usually paid for one way. seeips to be the necessar ry inducement to college people, and, according to the Art Crafts Guild, Chicago, which is organiz ing these tours in connection with the Canadian Pacific, bookings are much ahead of last year. No one. should attempt to see Europe without a background of England. The experienced travel lers arranging the collegiate tours Realise this, and plan a veek visit ing Oxford, the great intellectual centre. Stoke Poges and other bits _jf rural England," and London. London, so full of interest histor ically and with many nooks and crannies filled with, the ghosts of famous literary personages! ' Prance comes next to England in aopularity with college folks. P—iMi thaw ska 1 m> 1 See the New Complete Line of Low Priced Metal Cabinet Frigidaire*. Revolutionary Values. Week Begins Today. STANDARD BUICK GO. DISPLAY ROOM J SOUTH UNION . • ' 'r".". v ■ x . -2> C Phone 87® or 383 ** • .!. ’ . I A-- ..I ■ '"'II '■» II" »n— I-■ .1.1 I I t 1 __ 11 ■; - " il_ , j Times and Tribune Penny Ads Get die Results ~ Am Hathaways comek 1 ' % 51 thrilled with life in Paris that a second trip across the ocean would be incomplete without at least a wee in the gay boulevards and Art galleries of France’s capitoL But there are others to whom the somewhat superficial atmosphere of the chic Paris is less attractive than the wooden shoes and Quaint caps and flaxen braids of the Hol landaise. Very few in America have not some keen personal interest in the battle areas of France and Bel gium, and so most of the collegiate tours embrace an extensive motor trip through Belleau Wood, Chateau Thierry, Soissons, Senlis, and Rheims. Tfc. itUm mi Umm. —H.—'.t. , ■ Thursday, March' 25,' is rapidly becoming an aoce| thmg. At firat.4o travel t did not appeal even 7to enthusiastic graduate unable t< travel without a substantial,rei tion in even the second class fa But, realizing the increasing n » f Professional people wfl to travel at reduced rates, steamship companies inaugun the tourist third rate, put ratal bare stateroom floors, revised menus to suit AmerlciCn stead of .foreign, ancf the rei was that. students shd profesi last year hobnobbed with.« other below decks. This year « increasing numbers will follow set by the ventures! '«**— - *1 ■ mmmmmmm