Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Oct. 12, 1909, edition 1 / Page 2
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Tuesday, October 12, 1CC3. THE ASHEVILLE QAZSTTE-NEW3. PAGE TWO. Large variety , of Suits like A high class line of Suits cut in All Wpol ;. Worsted. Blacks and all the new shades. with 48 and 50 inch i Coats made in the most exclusive style from English Cloths, all the new shades. Just like cut, $27.50, $30 00 and $45.00, -AT SUMNER'S In this style there are some ex traordinary bargains. Coats 45 inches long, pleated skirts, $19.50, $22.50 and $25.00 AT m . - . i 1 1 KM ii SB , 1 . ' ' t - t. - - -V : H ' t 4 J- .1 - . . , . V, UK J? s . . .. ; V t, ' i t The Millinery Department in Special $5.00 Hat. Watch for the Opening Announcement of the New Store The Fashion, Inc. 16 Patton Ave. Tlirc"-1 Ijukiu' M-llim. I'hlriitrn. (li t 12. Tin miifc'iiatc of lh Throi-I IrrtHiiv UKs.inlil.il ;ii thi' i'.r;itnl I'm i tic hi.t. l .lay ami nhnrtly KtliT 11 "Muck went into nnniKil h. h nl.'ii In himl ( IdH. il d.Mirs. AnidiiK thun- ai'iuaiiit'il Willi lht Hltuiitinii the oilnlim uiiH 'Xri'iisH-il thai the meftlnK llki-ly t. 1fi. Ind. n oplrltrd affair and Ihut uiilun wnuUl l0 tiikfn which would Imve hii lin portnnt hvurliiK t'H H' futurv of th. nrgnnluillon. Though Ihe m'HHon H a whole win iiiiTt'Hsful. m scral of thi chih faili d loroniouplo pxpiTtatloli In a nnHm lnl u. A it coiiBi-.ui nr' u nouia noi ho KiirrllHK If ionic ihuni;'i in tin- circuit were made Another i li'ini-nl thai pr..nilsi il to en llvin the .r.K--.ilmK l the honilllty rxlHtliiK l.i twc.n rrmld.-iit M. 11. Pcx ton and tn r KltiM-lls of tht SprliiK tlcld I'luh. which may lend to an at tempt on the part of the latter to oust Soxtnn from the prmldi'ticy when the annual election of ofTlcer take, place Hlalue CVimned Willi a IXailciu. flly of Mexico. Oct. 12. Today In Ihe hlHtorir church of 8an 1'ruiicUco at (Ylayu the IniaK.' of the Ylruin Mary wnk crowned with a diadem of gold and jewel, whuae Intrltulr worth 1 aald lo ln $ SO. 000. The oc caaion wn. made one of Kreot pom) and ceremony by the I'alhollci of Mexico. The coronation wn. done with the aanctlon of the pope, who lo aned a decree giving hi. hleaaltiR and appointing a papal delegate to con duct the ceremony. A Revelation to many the riohuess of the fla vour of Post Care, exerience mid nkill in inunufnettire, bring out of White Corn the delightful new fla vour. A dish with cream is comforting. "Th Memory lingers" Pkgs. 10c and 15e. PoaMua CereaJ Company, Ltd., Battl. CrMk. Mich. The largest stock long Broadcloth Capes, iu all the new shades and blacks and plaids, 50 and 54 inches long. You ought to see this line capes, ranging in price from $7.50 to $:5.00. Everybody will have a cape. National Campaign IN INTEREST OF MISSION MOVEMENT Among the Laymen Men's Missionary Conventions More Than 100,000 Are Expected to Attend Campaign Opens at Buffalo This Week Eminent Speakers. New York. Oct. 12. rnhiiie in tliei liiKtory ill religiiitiH inovenienta 1m the national ininslonary campaign which Bill lie launched lliix week hy the Ijij men'H .MiHKl.inary Movement, repru . iitlng the laymen ol all the 1'iut estant churi hea In the I'nlted Sta'es. In 75 principal cili.x. east and went, north and aouth, meii'B miwsionaiy ..onventlons will he held, at which in aggn gatn utendaitcu of more than one li u iulr.il tiiouxand men 18 tx- cted. Ten thoimand men are now ser.l'iv on local comltteea In preparntlo'i 'or the meeting. rreld.nt To ft headr Hit liht of over two hundred speak. 'id who will he heard through. ml the winter. Thi lift in. Iiulca prominent puhllc men, ofticerM of army and luiv.v. newspaper men, bankers, huoineiw and profesional men, minlHterK, mij- slon hoard secretarlcM anil miiwlou arlen. I he an. mm en oiiject or the eom- pnigu i to .ir. m.. the l'rotiHtiit ihuriheH of the I'nlled Ktati'8 ! reiilluiti.m that the opportunities "ol miFi'inary work all over the world are greater than ever l.efore and ne. ui eHpecially the eo-operall.ui of the men of the elm relief! In a great increaxe o! support for the miKxionary boai-.l and societies. The Iiymen's Mission ary Movement does not ralxe any money inn seeKs to vllmulate men of all churches to give more gener on'y through their regular church i lixnnels. The campaigii will open at ltuffalo N. V., on o. t.iher 16. The mi'etlngs during the first two week, will In elude Cleveland, and some of the cltic. of the Kast and South. In No vember, the circuit will awing along the euHtcrn coaat and Include I'rovl dence r...slon, Washington. Halllmore and riiiladelphla. It will awing far west as Detroit In December. Three or four days will he apent In each city. The Washington conven Hon will he of national Importance. It la ther that President Taft will give hi. testimony to the value and auc cea. of the missionary enterprlae a. he haa aeen it In the Far East. Chief For ester Plnchot la chairman of the Washington convention committee Ambassador P.ryce and other apeak ers of national and lnternatlon.il re pate will he on the program. A whole week will lie devoted to New York city during the tirat pHrt of January. The promoter, expect that the greatest aggregation of missionary speakers ever assembled will unite In campaign In Greater New York After this meeting, the work will he divided between two team, of uncak en kii." almtiltaneoua conventio n w 'II h held Kou.h and North, the il.ml to .erica culminating In a great national missionary rongresa In Chicago, May This meeting will be. held In Ihe auditorium and five thousand rcpro- 1 sentatlve laymen and ministers will I he present Kpeaker. from all over I the world will ha heard. I Iocal conire'tleea which In most j camsa number from one hundred to I two hundred men have been working t aggressively for some, in mill. In manv of the elite, the preliminary r I rangemenla are practically completed, j Hitch city wil care for Ita own local I expense.. I The ministerial association. A i practically all the cltlea have glvei their hearty approval to the move ment and many rhurrhea will . l over tlc lr .ervlce. for aeverai week I lo a consideration of mlaalonary ub- Jecta. The convenliona themaelvea will last about three day. -the mldsv of thla period of xennral missionary aritMlon In the eh'iroli.-e of a cltv In moat cltlea the conven tion will open with a dinner or .up per at which an average of a thou aand men are expected to be present Meeting, for the consideration of 1 plana of miaslnnary finance will also I b beld and treat raaaa meeting, of I men .ranged. nest dee the local committees, the ' executive committee of the Laymen's mlaalonary movement, with head Quarter In the Metropolitan Ufe building-, In New Tork. la busily pro moting th campaign. In addition to the corps or secretaries and clerks at work In various parts of the coun- 0 this big store is worth a This is the only place Will Be Held in 75 Cities- try, nnd executive secretaries are em ployed fur at least two months, in nch convention city. Among those who will take part In the campaign as speakers besides President Taft are Chief Forester iifford Plnchot. Ambassador James Itryce from (treat liritaln, Henry 1!. MacFarland. president of the board of commissioners of the Dis trict of Coliiml la. former secretary of State John W. Foster. William Jay Schleffelin, president of the Cltl.e-is I'nion of New York, John lt. Molt. general secretary of the World's Sta- lcnt Christian federation. Hear Ad miral A. T. Malum, l.ieut. Colonel K. W llallor.l, Kobert K. Sjiccr of N. vv York. Ceorgi' Wharton Pepper of Philadelphia, Joshua Levering mi ml John Timothy Stone of ltaltimore. former (iovernor Northern of Geor gia, John R. Pepper of Memphis. Tenn., Judge Sel.len P. Spencer of St Louis, K. W. Stevens of Columbia, Mo. William J. l'.rvan. Samuel II. Cnpen of Most. in, William H. Lewis of Seattle. Ccorgi' Sherwood Kddy ..f India, and J. Campbell White, general secretary of the Lay men's M issionary Movement. The complete schedule of cities whi le . oll elltions will be hebl is as follow s: Oct. 16-19 LulTabi. Oct. 111-21 ISristol, Tenn. i li t. "21-2 4 Cleveland. Oct. 2.1-21'. Uichnioiid. Ya. Oct. 2!t-:tl Worcester. Nov. ,r.-7 Providence. Nov. 6-7 Boston. Nov. 11-14 Washington, D. C. Nov. lfi-18 ltaltimore. Nov. 18-21 Philadelphia. Nov. 22-24 llarrishuig anil Scran ton. I'a. Nov. 27-30 Hartford, Conn., ami Portland. Me. Dec. 1-3 Heading. Pa. Dei-. 4-5-7 Detroit. Dec. 8-10 Syracuse. N. Y. Dec. 11-14 Newark. N J. Jan. 9-16 New York City. Jan. 11-13 Haleigh. N. C. Jan. 14-16 Charlotte, N. C. Jan. 17-19 Columbia, S. C. Jan. 20-23 Pittsburgh. Jan. 21-23 Macon. C.n. Jan. 25-17 Wheeling nnd Dayton. Jan. 27-2H Huntington, W. Va. Jan. 28-30 Cincinnati. Jan. 28-30 Nashville, Tenn. Feb. 1-S 1mlsvllle. Feb. 1-3 Jacksonville nnd Tampa Feb. 3-6 St Louis. PEERLESS ( New rcrcales in dark and light colors, at 10c and 12 l-2c yard. , , ; . New Galateas in all the bet styles and solid colors. New Ginghams at 10c and 12 l-2c yard. New Outings at 10c yard. New Flannelettes from 10c up to 17c yd. ' v1!1!1 ?obes' Blanet Robing, Baby Blankets, &c. Long 54-inch Coats Broadcloths, Covert made right up to date and Sweaters this-house is com- , , ,., . .1ft rt plete. All the rage is the long looks ike full suit, $10 1 Knit Coats, -white, tan and $19.50. Fine near Seal Coats, reds3.5o to $7.00. These 54 inches long, lined through- goods are pure wool and the out with fine fancy Satin $40 latest style. values at $25.00. visit. Everything that ladies, misses and children can want. See our you can find a Willow Plume for $5.00. AtSUMNE,K'S. Feb. 4-6 Montgomery, Ala. Feb. 8-10 Memphis. Feb. 8-10 Jackson, Miss. Feb. 11-13 Little Rock. Feb. 12-15 New Orleans. Feb. 13-17 Oklahoma. Feb. lfi-17 Shreveport. Feb. 1S-20 Wichita, Kas. Feb. 1S-20 Houston. Feb. 22-24 Topeka. Feb. 22-24 Dallas. Feb. 24-27 Kansas City. Feb 2 7-Murch 1. F.l Paso, Tex. March 2-4 Colorado Springs. March 3-6 Denver. March 4-6 Phoenix. Ariz. March 8-10 Salt Lake City. March 8-10 Los Angeles. March 12-14 Fresno, Oil. March 13-14 Cheyenne Man h 14-16 Sacramento. March 1 .1-1 7 Lincoln. March 17-20 San Fran. Isco. March 18-20 Omulu. FREE PILE CURE Sent lo Iteinoiwlrale tlic Merits l'srnmhl Pile Cure. of What It Has Ihnic for OtlH'rs, It Can Ho l or You. We have testimonials by the hun dreds showing all stages, kinds and degrees of piles which have been cured by Pyramid Pile Cure. If yon could read these unsolicited letters vou would no doubt go to the iitrt-nt druir-stoTe" and buy a box of Pyramid Pile Cure at once, price llfty cents. . W e do not nnl; ou to do this. Send i us your name ami address and we will sen. I you a trial package by mail free. We Know what the trial package will do. In main cases It has cured piles without further .treatment. If it proves its value to you order more fr. ni your druggist, at 50c a box. This is fair, is It not? Simply till out free coupon below and mall today. j j j j Ki:i'. l'ACH.MiK I'Oi rtlci. Fill out the blank lines be low with your name and nd dress, cut out coupon and mail to the PYRAMID DRCG CO.. 190 Pyramid llldg., Marshall, Mich. A trial package of the great Pyramid Pile Cure will then be sent you at once by mall, FHKi;. In plain wrap per. Name Street ! City and State. in Black Cloths, "For long Knit Coats and N JrI 0 March 22-24 Sioux City, la. March 28-31 Portland. March 29-31 Mitchell, S. D. April 1-3 Davenport, Rock Isl- and, Mollne. April 1-3 Tacoma. April 2-6 Seattle. April 6-7 Milwaukee. April 8-10 Peoria. April 8-10 Spokane. April 12-14 Indianapolis. April 12-14 Butte. April 1.-.-17 Billings. April 19-21 Fargo, N. D. April 22-24 Duluth. April 26-28 St. Paul. May 1-8 Chicago and Vicinity. May 3-6 National Missionary Con gress, Chicago. I IKK .TKKK NOTKS. Correspondence of The Otajsette-N'ews. Bee Tree, Oct. 11. The Ricevllle baseball tram crossed buta with the Bee Tree team on the grounds of the latter, Saturday afternoon. The first two innings showed the scores 6 to 0 In favor of Ricevllle. At this point Mr. Cogglns was called to the pitcher's box by the Bee Tree team, making the game Interesting indeexl; each team Hudson Yva Cylinders, 3 3-4 by 4 1-2; 100-inch Wheel Base, 32-inch Wheels. - EQUIPMENT: Two large headlights, generator, two side oil lamps, tail lamps, full set tooh) and horn 4 ... ....... ... ... .. .... .. .$900.00 With Bosch magneto, top, Prest-O-Lite tank, double rumble seat. . ...$1,050.00 LOOK FOR THE TRIANGLE ON THE RADIATOR. Have An Expert , ViiK Voii, When You Examine the Hudson "Twenty" You can afford to abide by the unbiased opinion of ihe expert and . so can wb. The expert will teU you that the principal features of the Hudson20" are designed after those used in the most successful standard high priced cars. -- .' ' The best makers in this country and abroad have demonstrated in their own ma chines the practicability of the mechanical features of the Hudson "20." ' The general public knows practically nothing of the' long i experimental1 period through which this car passed of the thousands of tests of raw material made of the hundreds of patterns and combinations worked out before the simple' Hud son mechanism was tsvolved. But the dealers throughout the country were quick to recognize the mechanical excellence of this $900 car. . ' They are experts. That is why the entire output of 1910 "20V is now con tracted for by dealers, and that is why you should investigate now. P h t - The dealer in your city may sell before you get your order in. We do not expect that every Hudson "20Vill be sold to consumers at once, but we do know that cer tain dealers are bound to sell their allotment before long. . ' t. ltJ6 ?m on,y bQiW 80 many of these 1910 cars, so please examine., the Hudson "Twenty" now. , . ' Demonstrator expected. to arrive eilnesday: Asheville PHONE I3I0. successively shutting the other out, save one score on each side made In the seventh inning. . Our hoys are to play Ricevllle at toe grounds of the latter next Saturday. Mr. Taylor and Mr. Rowell are en tertaining a party of friends on a week's camping trip to Craggy. Bishop Horner and . Mr. Valentine paid our "burg" a short visit last Thursday en route to Craggy. Miss Nannie King has returned from a two weeks visit to Goldsboro. Mrs. Hcttle Merriman Is spending a few days in the city. The public school has holiday and the students are gone to the show. The roll of honor for September Is as follows: Sixth and seventh gTades Renna Sawyer, Oeorgie Tipton. Fourth and lifth frrados Delia Cappe, Sarah Sawyer, Chapin Merri man, Mammie Shope, Conie Gragg, lola Gragg. Third grade Lennie Bartlctt, Myr tle Recce, Florence Griggs, Charlie Capps. First gradi? Ethel Wyatt, Vance Shope. Cycle -a. mi I5 AND 17 :S. LEXlTOII AVL IIPIER'S CHARLIE GBAPEWIN IN "ABOVlf THE LIMIT" TOMORROW NIGHT Charley Grape win Saved , a Family From Ruin and Disgrace and Re-Unltea Them. In his new play In three acts. called Above the Limit," which will be the attraction at the . Grand tomorrow night Charley Grapewin does all this. The cast Is exceptionally strong and the play gtVes Mr. Grapewin great op portunities. For., fun-making, love- making and a little lesson of pluck and ambition to the struggling youth of our country. "Above the Limit" Is one great big long laugh from start to finish. It is claimed to be a sure cure for the "grouch", or ".blues and as everybody enjoys good, wholesome comedy and a hearty laugh he fat sure to be greeted by a capacity house. A company of well known fun-makers are in his support Including Anna Chance,. Vinnle Henshaw and Duane Wagner. Prices 26c to $1.60. Seats now selling at Hackney & Moale's. Phone 242. ,;,i.,i. -..t t-'. i- ... V'' i
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
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Oct. 12, 1909, edition 1
2
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