the isns' rAcn tv;o VILLI GAZETTE-NEWS. SUHL1ER TRAVEL IS ATM TIDE District Passenger Agent Ad vised to Provide Extra Pullman Cars. As showing that travel to Asheville la getting heavier every day, is a telegram received by J. H. Wood, dis trict passenger agent of tho Southern railway, advising him, in order to pro tect "overflow travel," to provide and handle extra Pullman sleeping cars from Jacksonville to Asheville, on trains 14, 24 and 9, leaving Jackson ville on the night of August 2 and 3. It is the opinion of those who keep themselves posted on this matter that the tourist travel to the mountains is now at its flood tide. H. C. Allen of the Asheville Transfer company, who is probably in as good position as any one else to speak; with authority on this question,, states that , travel Is heavier now than it has been at any time this year. Asked how this season compared with like periods of former years, Mr. Allen said that in his opin ion there were more people here this year than at the same period of any former year. Mr. Allen obtains his information by handling the trunks of the tourists, which is evidence that the visitors he speaks of are those who come to stay who are simply passing through or spending a day or two. STOOD UPON WIFE'S BODY AND FIRED FATAL SHOT Tills Is New Theory of Detectives In the Bcattte Murder Case Beulah . Binford Denies Being Harslt- ly Treated. Richmond, Aug. 3. A new theory in the Seattle murder case came to light when detectives Investigating the murder are said to have conclud ed that Henry Beattie, jr., knocked his wife down, stood on her prostrate body and fired the fatal shot. Beulah Binford, "the other woman" in the case. Issued a statement from the jail in which she denies allega tions to the effect that she had been harshly treated by detectives in the way of "grilling" and the "third de gree." Her treatment since her In carceration, she says, has been all that could be expected under the cir cumstances. THE AFFAIRS OF MEXICO MUM I SNARL Dismissal of Secretary of Interior Fol lowed by Threats from Radicals v of Revolution. liinnniim n iPPflllMT i ' n nUDDAllU M huuUUUli ; II THE BODY OF CNE VICTIM 1 OF THE ONE IDENTIFIED That or Assistant Engineer Mcrrltt Two More Bodies, Beyond ... Idcntllk-ation, Found. HOT WEATHER HURTS THE SKIN Poisonous perspiration causes rashes, hives, blotches, pimples and prickly heat, often the beginning of serious skin troubles. To wash away the poison entirely, apply a simple solution known as D. D. D. Prescription for Eczema. D. D. D. Is generally sold in $1.00 bottles, but for 25c we can now give you enough to prove that the very first drops soothe and heal the inflamed skin as nothing else can. We vouch for the wonderful prop erties of D. D. D., for we know that it brings instant relief for all kinds of skin trouble. Smith's Drug Store, South Pack Square. , Cuts and bruises may be healed In about one-third the time required by the usual treatment by applying Chamberlain's Liniment It is an an tiseptic and causes such injuries to heal without maturation. This lini ment also relieves soreness of the muscles and rheumatic pains. For sale by all dealers. Heretofore, Japenese and Malays have done most of the pearl diving In Australian waters, it not being work that white men could endure. But now the commonwealth government has decided that after January 1, 1913, white men only shall be employed as divers and tenders. Mexico City, Aug. 8. Enraged by the dismissal of Emlllo Vasques Go mes from the post of secretary of the interior, numerous former officers of the revolutionary army -have openly declared that they would recall their followers and lead them in a second rebellion. - President De la Barra Intimated that Francisco L Madero was the one really responsible for the elimination of Gomes. He did not regard the sit uation as critical. The more conservative element ap plauded the dismissal of the minister of the Interior but the radloal portion characterized it as an indication that the government was attempting to rob them of the benefit of the revolu tion. V Madero is censured by the radicals. His attitude towards the . dismissal was made plain In a telegram to the president, in which he stated une quivocally that the course of the chief executive had his full sanction. He declared that Minister Gomez's hand ling of various important problems had lacked tact and judgment. It is reported a few of the former officers have left the city to gather their forces. Not since the days when the revolutionists were negotiating with agents of the Bias government for peace have the affairs of Mexico been in such a snarl. Havana, Aug. .1. The bones found in the wardroom of . the battleship Maine which were believed to be the remains of Assistant Engineer Mer- ritt, have been fully Identified. Tne identification was based on the con figuration of the skull. The skeleton is that of a tall man and corresponds to Engineer Merrttt's height Near the bones were found a portion of an officer's cap, uniform buttons and a fountain pen, The bones were discovered at tne precise spot where midshipman Boyd testified that he and Merritt had been separated by the Inrush of water while struggling to make their way from the junior officers' wardroom to the main deck. The bones have been placed In a casket to await lnstruc Hons from Merrttt's family. Two more bodies, both beyond iden tification, were found near the war rant officers quarters on the port side of the berth deck under the central superstructure, making a total num ber of 21. Charity covereth a multitude people with cast-off garments. of Buy it now. Now is the time to buy a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Chol era and Diarrhoea Remedy. It is al most certain to be needed before the summer Is over. This remedy has no superior. For sale by all dealers. NEW DEPARTMENT MANAGER FOR THE BON MARCHE Mr. Price, Formerly of Wilmington, Taken Charge of Silk and Dress Goods Dept. SHOOTS IHI) DEATH Says She Supported Him and Tried to Make a Man of Him, but It Was no Use. Season End Clearance of San Francisco, Aug. 8. Unable, to make a "man" of her husband, Anna Langley. a frail woman 19 years old, yesterday shot and killed him. They had been married 15 months. Early In thn rtnv James Laneley left home, saying that he did not intend to re turn. Mrs. Langley bought a revolver and started to hunt her husband. She found him in a saloon. Accoraing io bystanders, langley turned on her with a torrent of abuse. Without a aTni-1 th. nrita fired four Shots. One struck Langley and he died on the way to a hospital. Mrs. Lngiey was arrested. "I do not see why I should be ae tolnul " aha (Hill nt the citV DriSOn "I did' nothing wrong and I am not fiirtA niir mnrrinfire I have supported my husband and myself by working as a stenograpner. L triea to make him stay away from saloons. I endured his abuse. I tried to Instil some ambition into him and coach him for the firemen's civil service ex amination. He would not try. I could endure no more." Summer Apparel .Wash Skirts, Tub Suits, Evening Gowns, Street Cos-, tumes, Dancing Frocks, Shirt Waists, Summer Coats, etc., etc., aft prices so low that they are proving a real surprise to our customers. Peerless-Fashion Co. A. I Price, recently connected with the C. W. Polvogt company of Wilmington, N. C, has accepted a po sition with the Bon Marche. He will have charge of the silk and dress goods department in their new store on Patton avenue. Mr. Price began work for the Bon Marche August 1. Mr. Price comes to Asheville with splendid recommendations from his old home. A man with a big family learns even how to think boils aren't the worst things in the world to bear. DEFENDS PRESIDENT TAFT BECAUSE HE IS SO LONELY Alabama Democrat Thinks Mr. Tuft Is So Honest That Ho Is Too Cretlulons. 51 PATTON AVE. Washington, Aug. 8. Declaring that he desired to defend President Taft because the latter "had no one In his own party to say a word In his behalf," . Representative Burnett of Alabama, democrat said in the house yesterday that "the only trouble with the president Is, being honest himself he Is too credulous." "No honest man, as I believe Mr. Taft Is," said Mr. Burnett, , "ever had such mournful comforters since the days ot Job. I have no doubt that his dally prayer Is that Wickersham and Hitchcock will do as Ballinger did."- .' , Mr. Burnett said Secretary of Agri culture Wilson . was another honest man to fall a victim to bad advisers, and that consequently the downfall of Dr. Wiley, "who has so often stood be tween murderers and the people," had almost been accomplished. LUBIN NOW II, WASHINGTON. WALL STREET PAST AND PRESENT The Romance of the Market THE CAPTAINS OF FINANCE AND HOW IT IS DONE NOWADAYS On of th man whose nam la often sn In connection with affairs In Wall Street Is Jacob Field, but be la not an operator; he Is a trader, He rarely operates on his own account. A great many of th men who are credited now and then with large purchases, with great operations, are merely the hired bands of others. They art possibly employed by big banks or by big speculators. John. W. Dates was pyrotechnic for a while In his operations In Louisville and Nashville and In BteeL No one ! New Tork ever conducted such a tremendous brokerage establishment as he did. He ran th "House of th Twelv Disciples," so called because there war twelv part- The New LeaderaJ." P.' Morgan, Jr., Otto Kahn, Frank A. Vanderlip, J. D. Rockefeller, Jr. Will They Achieve the Faw and Power That the Old-Tlmers Held? J. FRANK HOWELL, STUDENT OF MODERN FINANCE AND GOVERNOR OF THE CONSOLIDATED STOCK EXCHANGE OF NEW YORK, REVIEWS THE NEW CONDITIONS COMPARED WITH THE OLD DAYS OF DREW, VANDERBILT, SAGE AND JIM KEENE WHERE DOES THE PUBLIC COME IN? Oro H. KajtV wnscsngcr la a Jambs' J, HnX Nothing in America o typifies the revolution in business In the last Decade as does Wall Street itself. Time was when Wall Street was a Mace of personalities, of preat leaders, when big movement centered around the movements of individuals. Those were the days of William p. Vanderbilt, of Jay Gould, of Addison Cammadc, of James R. Keene, pi Woerschoffer men who fought their battles in the market place like the gladiators of old. But the battles of the leaders of a generation fgo now read like child's play. The game has grown so big that cap iins of finance are banded together in groups. These groups control corporations, banks, insurance companies, and are allied with other Capitalistic groups in Europe. The man to-day who does not have behind bun a great, complicated machine of capital cuts a small figure. A man with a mere trine of eight or ten millions has no chance of swinging a great corporation like the Union Pacific Railroad, Missouri Pacific Railroad or United states teel corporation, for instance. in Chicago. U " they carried ob big speculation a. Diamond Match, and went down In to eol- w mat enter prise, They managed to tat on their feet u short order and h,. mediately took the Ni Uonal Biscuit Com peny la hand and be earn Interested In Tin Mr. luit started la llf as t mall national nam. - Richmond. Indiana j became Vlos-Preai dent, and then gradually widened hi. activities. . With Mr. Leeds be ... ,k- Immense . opportunity afforded h tv.. McKinley tariff lews to build up a tin plat Industry that would rival sarioualv that of Wales, Thes four men mad large nroflte .i most simultaneously Out f th new Indus uir -i amj rarmea such a liking for each ether that thy decid ed to merg their In terests and - to pool their ambition. After loosJng over th Said they determined to get control of the Rock Island Railroad, which Was so strata. glcally ptaoed as to It a power la western and southwestern trafflo, Thee, four men had good many million. Ives and their guooawas had strengthened their sredlt am that they abl to borrow a good many millions more. Therefore they started to boy to stock of th Rock Island la th opes market. Wall Street dis missed them contemptuously from Its mind a " set of Western gamMar but la nine months, and before th ree of the world realised what they war do ing, tbey bad In their basil apoasb sunk to eoticrot lb big railway system. Ihea began tbelr remarkable career as railroad eoneoiidator. On road after another paened Into their hands, la tour years they built up aa empire of 11,000 miles of railroad, It took James J. Hill II years to bring 1,00 miles of road onlar his enntrol. To-day th Moori end I'.nlnl u, I- i hare Dior or tees Ita- C senre In a h;nir1 Cnpnn M "Tie eU Ter " "T. '' -f It : " I. on s dn : 1 r t 1 i . . I r- : fit i I i r , Th same has changed." said Ji St. Ksen Nosntly Just Mora bidding soed-hy to America. "When I earn to Wan Street from California aa IndlTtdual Operator aould carry on his campaign. Th.hing his wits against his rrfals la th market. But now. no man. bowerer large big prtYSt rssouress, can bop to play th gam la a MS way atagtohandsd. Against hint ar arrayed, Dot merely group of men with enormous for tune, bat sis with the ommead of stin greater resourees of powerful banks and corporations,' 1 Tb great operator In th market te y ar tw and outsld of Wall Street ar UtU known. Barnard M. Baruch, Eutan Meyer. Jr. George Blumentbal and lalddletoo BurriU are amen th greatest. Blamenthal ?.. the raorsMntatr Of Laxard ' rrereat BurriU IS generally looked npon aa being rather dos to th Morgans; Baruch ' M In leader ' Of the crowd that has toeea pretty act la th mat twe rearm. Aa a jtnattar of fact, bow-m-,mr. there bag" not beea aa active market for a long Ume ih. sort of market that derslops leader ship. One of the most apeotacuisr leaders aaa m " Daniel a Reld, of tne Rack island crowd. Occasionally be and bis aaaooiates stir the ir1" ' up In the bull I rlns or the bear. ! The Rock Island crowd has beeo aad UU la one of tb must OWirlll Bnaucial ITOiip In the country. r.ur OHilnally It eoneleted of Julge W. 1L Hoore; i,r. J. M. h ". I'nM . 1 ,i . I . . a f r. 1 v- e (I at i , l. I " tf i : ' f Daxun. Dsaw th r, t i Johm W. Oans ners in the firm, Thar war very faw happen lugs In Wall Street that war mora re markable than his cor nering of th Louis. Till and Nashville. It was on of th most dishing and daring; things in th history of the street, - It all happened be cause one oa a time certain director of th U K who lived la LtOuisrUle, cam to Maw York to a board Blasting. He chanced to mast Ur. Gates at th Waldorf and Gates invited him to dinner. Th Kantucklaa waa id and flattered. Under th strenuous rnfliisno of big host t became eonfldentlal I among other he told Galas that there waa enough LoulsvUl and Nash vlll stock In th opea market to secure con trol of the road. The company had Just au- p7Z formallyToV was not to b. wrmsuy tor several months, but to talc advantage of th strong market that prevailed Just than th person who ruled th destiny of th property determined to sen th shares then and deliver th stock later. la ' ether words, they war "going short" of L, A N. nr. Gates said nothing, but th oast morning be unllmbered all his finan cial artillery. lor all his Boise and bump tiousness Mr. Gates Is a wonderful manip ulator and It was not many days before he had bought enough I A N. to im rasNK A. MuMsa-r control of It from th Belmonta, What nans u anair pleasant lor Gates was th fact that he ,ad such a distinguished hatred for Mr. Belmont that be many Wan mreet battles. Be hag financed every possible project from eomlo opera companies to Western railroads, j Bis scheme of financial strategy seems to b to hunt with a brass band. He was born on a farm In what is now West Chicago. Bis first Job was as clerk In a hardware store. As a young man he sold barbed wire In Texas. With aU bis bluster h has lots of money. - - - E. H. Hani man for years was prac tically the ruling spirit of the whole stock market Bis fight with J. P. Mor gan for Northern Padllo, his wonderful bull eamnahrn In Union Pacific, his tak ing hold of the Erie and his fight with JaJCSS . Kxam Istuyresant Fish for control of the Illinois Central arc historic. ! V It J 4 is : a ,- f ': . ? 4 .... l. D Rocaaraixi. v V' ! ', . .'. . . i. ' ,. '' , . . a ! s r , i . t t (.;') CONSOLIDATED STOCK EXCHANGE OT NEW TORK, BROAD AND BEAVER 8T3, N. I. CtTT, gwua In the same ocean with one said b r would not . him. Whan Belmont discovered bow Oat bad tricked him tbsr war loud sounds la Nassau Street. It was torribU to think of th L, t H. la possession of such a person as Gates. Then J. P. Morgan took a band. Lie sent for Mr. Oats and said s "Gates, you ar not th kind of a maa to oontrol tb LIN.' "All Hunt!" replied Oat, "Get someone you like tetter but you'll have to pay my price f Mr. Morgan did get someone else an,) Gate I said to hare cleared 14,000.000 la profit on the dnaL Cktcs e the r,rr,r type of the Wall f,Trwt rrn. ! . n e In viil Htrt Is - t , , t ( p : . csn e.l' THi,! A BTJ8T CAT IS "WALL STREET. There was also his controversy with various Interests that led to his getting control of the Kansas City Southern. But all these things tended to the centralization of his vast Interests. " Mr. Barrimaa played th gam as no en ever played It before. He waa both a stock market operator and a railroad builder. Wall Street never realised until tho very end that bis nam would go duwn In th history ot th Street as one of the great constructors. But be was unique. Be knew both ends of the gama When he needed hundreds of millions to rebuild the Union and Southern Padllo he knew that the eanltal must be raised through Wall Street and ha knew now to Ivdom W. H. Mooag raise It. Bill thought that WaU Street was of no use In rail. reading. Harri man's strength was because be knew aa much about practical rail reading as he knew aDoui stock opera tions. The country will never as another man like him, for the opportunity that Bar rimaa had Is gone tor- evsr. mere ar many marvelous tales of for tunes mad In Wall Street, and th curl, ous thing about them la that tbey ar all true, tnougb th amounts that . have been gained are usu ally exaggerated. At' tor the wreckage of very financial flurry ha been cleared ewar there I a flood of buying orders from hard-headed men all over the country. The rich men In WaU Street, the Veterans of many , panics, tell their friends that th Ume has com to buy securities at bargain prices. , Msgaslnes and .newspapers teU their readers about WnU Street and bow the goods oa th counters there have fees marked down. But nlne-tsnths ot the psnple wbe read and bear the fUigs either do out believe them or else they wait until - too late tor price to go still lower. Oc casionally a rank outsider comes into Wall Street and make many millions ot dollars In a burry, but this Is not often. When Steel tai in the twenties and thirties, Frank Munsey, publisher of magailnes and n v .papers, told his readers to buy. 11 ut - 0 them month after month to do so. II a,. fairly rich himself and took his own s ' ire snd bought Btsel ocmiwin, until V .1 Hirwt britan to take notice. That b i that he bmijht a 'M Ihnu. in, ( r It lii'i i lt ot r I t f.i I I Edwin Hawlst be mora worrlad about Mr. Munsey when the stock passed 10, TO, 10, 90 and even higher. Wall Street stopped worrying and, began to flgur up bow much money this outsider had made without neglecting nil business in th slightest degree. Some' said that he had cleared 16.000,000 ; others made It four Umes that much. Mr. Mun seys friends say that he confesses to being 110.000,000 richer aa th result of his one great plunge. . : ' . ' The public usually thinks that the bis people on the Inside, like Mr. Morgan's partners or like Mr. Gary of th 8teel Trust, or th younger generation ot the Rockefellers, can make money as easy ad rolling off a log, simply by manipulating the market. As s matter ot fact, this 1 as rro neous aa most popular impressions arev good many of the "Insiders" have speculative capital ot from M.000,000 to 110,000,000. If they could make1 th ordinary pawnbroker's Intarest of 1 par cent, par month oa this and keep oa turning It. over month after month and year after year, they would have most ot the money la th world la a very short time. a reality the men are perfectly satisfied It they can mak their money earn them 10 per cent pat annum a th result of their operation oa the stock market. Thsy bav to b as patient and as Industrious. In order to de this, aa any ratal! grocer In making big own business a J. P. MOBOaM V:. -1 Sr 5, MR. CAVED L.U&IK Mr rtnvM T.nhln. delesrata of th Enlted States to the permanent com. nilttee of the international institute oi AftrkuHure, Is In Wasbinirton lor s short stny after his last European toot tu toe Interests of the Institute, Which included trips to Kussla. Germany and France. He Is enthusiastic over th work being carried out by the Institute, which alms to give all countries a bentlc information on the world's Ttel Die supply of the leading agricultural products. Pointed Paragraphs. F'rom the Chicago Kewa. . , . , ; Figures do not lie, but esumates are often misleading. Soaking the brain in alcohol does not preserve the mind. ' Few -men cut their wisdom teeth until after the yarc married. At the age of threescore and ten many a maa reminds us of an experi ment that failed. . It doesn't cost very much to pleas a woman, but keeping her pleased is what causes many a man to go broke. Tb reason why so many people go Into Wall Street and los money la that they expect to double their thousand dollars, or whatever thsy put In, In a day or two. If It war possible to start with fl,000 capital and double It only one year, it would grow la tea abort years to mora than million, and to mora than a billion In twenty years. Th great secret of the nnsumess of thes outsiders, and ot the majority ot people in Wall B tract. Is that theylack patience. Patlene Is Just aa necessary la buying and selling stocks as It is In buying anf sailing real estate, - -. - One of th most fascinating and dan. serous lure of th plunger, big anj little. I th "pyramid." A speculative pyramid Is a mass ot securities bought oi margin with paper profltg. . When th, market collapses paper profits fly awaj in the storm. Most of thes pyramid? ar built oa a bull market and it ha boss tb xperlenoe of Marly every big plunge, that h baa beooms fascinated by thi building of bis pyramid and baa Uoi on reaching for mora and more millions until tb wbol thing toppled over Thoma W. Lawsoa la a striking ex. ampl. that proves th fat of plungers. Tou can beat the game la a small way. but no on eaa beat it la a big way . Mr. Lawsoa acknowledged recently, "ii Mil hot waa Kbk. . cvh pawsvv g 1 1 m SUUI -luck and th tempera ment for speculation, there Is no reason why you cannot mak money la th stock market. Th chance era that yon will not encounter any real trouble until yon have mad what seem to Welti tst Ksa sa mJ A ot money. Then whea . HoM . you have several million to tb good, th big fellow la th gam will bealq to tak notlc of you and from that time on yo. will hav to fight them tor eery dollar that you mak and for (very douar that aovTth." W1. yon wu! discover that rou ar on maa against many. If you are wise, yon will leave Wall Strtot and be eooteT wUh WaU you have take, out of it. If you ara .W" " o0.' a so many successful men are, tb crowd will surely , wui loriun in th They will U too many for yoa" Th essence ot h. hoie thing g thai to mak money U E!lMt . need th asm level bead that 1 areas, sary la conducting any busing big UtU U be U in hurry toiJt ric. ...M Ulteiy to occur. U he is patient, pere.vrlng and use or dinary common .., h Is Just as sure - w-, .. i t,e in mrnmer, ! 1 ventum ' r i Camphor production In Florida la practical and can be made profitable. Successful experiments by the United States department of agriculture war rant this conclusion. If Frau Woener could have her way In Germany, for every boy drafted In the army there wmld be a girl doing compulsory housework In a school for housewives. , Dr. Grace Kimball, president "of the Toung Women's Christian association of Poughkeepsle, N.j T., Is chiefly re sponsible for th new tuberculosis hospital In that city. . v - France has established the first aero club for women. ' The member ship Is open only to women who hav given unquestionable proof of their fitness. snd, eny ordlnsiy U he tilt LAND SALE..," ,.' . . By virtu of the power of Sale con atlned In a deed of trust executed on t'.ie 24th day of June. A. P. 110. by R. C. Rtevens and wife. Pearl Stevens, to J. II. Tucker, trustee, to secure the Indebtedness therein described to R. H. Uither, which said deed of trust I duly recorded In the office of tho Ren ister of Deeds of Buncombe County In Book 78, page 511, and default having been maile Jn the payment of both principal and interest f thn mite so- cured by said deed of trust, and upon application and demand of the hold ers of said note, the undernlened trus tee will on Monday, tlsn dtli day of Nontciiihr-r. A. 1 tail nfrnr tnr nl... at the Court House door. In the City ui Asnoviue, county of Iluncomte ami State of North Carolina, to the.hlghest bidder, for rtt.h lh. Ktllnvln. real estHt, situate In thasald city of Asli"- vine, saja county and state, on tne iVurth ttlda nt matAM l-.,t anil bounded and more particularly 'do- rioea as follows: ' Beginning at a Stake 'located In the North AiiirA nf . ih. Southeast corner of W. p. Fortune' oi, originally J. H. Woody S corner, and running thence with thtt North erige of Clayton street r'xty (60) feet to a stake, estimated to te one hun dred and Slxty-fivs'(KS) feet from the West edge of Churlotte street; thenee North 1 de-. VmmI one hun dred and twenty-two (122) feet to a lke In D. O. Devenlsh's line; thence with Devenlnh't line North 8R d'' West s'xty (60) feet to a sinke In Fortune's line; thenre with Fortune's line1 South I deg. West one hunrtreJ nd twenty-two (122) foM to the He glnning; and being the same Innd con veyed hy Hufth Lalliu-be to the ld R. C. Stevens y deed dotted July i'Utl, H0, snd registered In the o'TUe of the register of deed of Ulin.'. t.,! . i ,irw, Nnrtli Ci.riil na. ti I1,,, n 1.1. t r , to v.hl, h t:, r.-r lit ' n. i i .! si t 1 f t I " " ' W l I 1 1 I ' " ' ' ' ..e a r