Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Oct. 10, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
ins a WILL ATTACK HILL f f WITH BIG 1H5T.5 me 1 A mm " ' " sssalmaaaBJiBB---- filll ' Lgi ...... . - ALCOHOL i PER CENT ting die SuioadB aodBrndsi' Promotes D&3tkxiktift nessandRntlonuiiisneiaar OpiumMorphine nrxMuoaL NOT NARCOTIC , i ft Aperfed femrdy forCoosfl Hon, Sour Stoaach.Dlanttw Worms forwilsiDnsJwns ncss and Loss OF Sleep. -feSbaV ti&tan of NEW VOiyC. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears Signature First Work of Obliterating Grade of Pack-Saddle Hill on the Democrat Road. the ' M Ei art Copy of Wrapper. In Use For Over Thirty Years 1T0E1 VMS eKaYTsW BWMT, MCW TMI fTT. I SENATOR EXPENSE SLIGHT Campaign Managers Say Ste phenson Could Have Spent $200,000 Legitimately. MUCH OF THE GRADING HAS BEEN COMPLETED Iliurlneer Valentin Think It SJmold He lliiLolml in a Month I Torn -ises for Fine Road. Milwaukee. Win., Oil. n. mt of ' I the. te.timonv irhi'ii before the I. S.J eenate committee which j iim i:-at-! ing the ch.irew that bribery ri t ri buleil tu the . ele ni-n o! .S-ii.ii.r li-.ta-Stephenson vecerlay. was ilev i-!,.pe 1 'i'ltni-? tbut III Stepheneon com paign managers regarded the $107, 7'H mlniltieilly expended a small compared with the tlin.iMiu or $2'm.- ,WWW Will' II JIIIJ.IIL lllttV Ifl-.ll Bl'V'UL mure systematic campaign. The ex pensiveiiess of the campaign was !--dared l li partly Jin.- tu a -lose light between two factions in the re publican party in Wisconsin, one heailcd liy Senator K. M. I.a FulUtto and the other by Senator Stephen son, a "regular" republican. A showing Senator Stephenson's position and also as showing how he had to spend liberally to advertise, i'ampalKn literature wan read into the record, staling that Senator Stephen son wa a lieliever In th-1 Roosevelt Ideas and as such wax bound 1 sup port Mr. Taft for president. I'oiiM-rciu- cck Information. The statement from llmlm-v Saek ett, one of the Stephenson campaign managers, that i;ii.iim or fivo o mlKbt leifit'n'atHlv h.ivi- been xpi nt for the ftenatnrUI noimnatiiin brought forth eoniinent from Senator All. 1'omerene, of Ohio, mi'iiib.r of thi committee. "if IIuT.'miii i not enoiiuh l'i wim inattt a I'nitcd SLites wnalnr In Wly ronsln. huw mnrli and wh.it oubl you do with K'l O.fimi b-uitiinali !y Bvcxire for a man a position with 1 17,000 annual milary?" uxk'-il Senatoi J'onieri.if. "Me I'oulil have been more syste matic," aiiawered Sarkett, "There are uiiuroriin Heir 4no.i'"0 repubH nn In the state. Had we the money we elioubl have personally rimvuwil oil voter. This I estimate would ae i-..jtt from $l.-,ri,iinii i,i $ 2 O'l.ooo. s it '.v;ii with our means limited to littb- owr sl'oi.oioi. we roiild n.it - -.oh i'ter and had to net nlollK le beet 1 1 1 I . " Where Some of IIm- Moim' Went. Aretnnu nit.onji bearim; ilireetlx 11 the . har.-M airainsi Senator Ste-!.-ni.n. S.o k"tt lestilied. That ni'.ne .ut oi Senator Ste- I phetijtuif . l and had been given to I slate offinais a.- in the instanv of lSi.it.- liaine Warden J. W. St"ne. who luari 1'ii-m J.r.ioi to work up -nli-ri,-nt in favor ( the senator; that j ui'iiiey w.i.j paid t randldaies for of ! I a a-i in th- ease of seven eiindl- -idat.s for the legislature, three of !h'.t!l Were eleete.l. .Vlttlollnll the '! three men eei-ted all. rwards nted for Senator Stephenson, the witness ibelared, it was ni knon when the rii'inev wirf iveii them they were 1 an- llidates. Saekett also said no lomplete de tailed ai-i-.. lints of the campaien ex-peni-x with kept and that nil records ftir the campaign o-rc diHtro.ved. The statements .-ort i'ned In th' lea- imony were din-lared In the original liafue presented to the i'nited States wnate to show violations of he Wisconsin statutes. The aHaertlon that part of Senator tephenHoti's h-ay expinii-s were due to his desire to make it generally known that he was a supporter of Mr. Taft for the presidency came when Saekett, in explaining an advert. sina bid of J12.69ii. was required to pro- e befure the committee one of the advertisements. The Man With Steady Nerves la not euslly np-set Ilia brain thinks clearly ; hi Kid j obeys promptly; ho la n IcH sncreasf ul .' One of the essentials Is Right Food Thre la a remarkable amount of nourishment for body and brain In a aouier of Grape-Nuts anrf t rrnm. - ' : - Thla fduil la mndo nf v. In U end hurley, and rontina the Valuable phosphate of potash tarowri in tin grain) for re placing th delicate Itrny sub stance of brain anil nervea the combination that makes bur Ihlnkdig. "There', a Reason t I'ost 11m t'erial t Haiti otnpiiny, k, Ml. h. Ud. MADISON COUNTY MEN GROWING SUGAR BEETS Have Had Success With Small Crops and Will Try It on Larger Scale. fin Thursday or Friday n score or ore of iciant blasts will be set off by the force now engaged in irradinic the ln-imu r.il roa.l, which will be the first .steps toward obliterating the heavy trade at "Pack-saddle hill," about six , miles from Weaverville, which haa . Ions leen the desimir of teamsters. This hill is also known aa the Hnrnett I. Ill and the (trade will be so lowered by the 24 foot cut that it ia to be made that a horse can easily trot up either side of It. on both sides of the hill the road has been relocated and n this side it comes down to the branch and crosses the old road on a hiah till, then wind around with an easy grade until it comes to the bread pone" or (Jentry hill and then around to the top of the Rlackstock hill. Both of these hills are so "lit down that thev would not be raooa nized by their oldest aciiuaintarc e. Much of the tradini; Is already done and County Knsineer J. ". M, Valen tine stated yesterday that he thinks the Ki-iilinx should lie finished in a month and the sand-clay coating put i n six weeks after. Kater Than KxHi1cil. Mr. Vitl-ntine stated that the work is proereKKiiiu very mm h faster than be had expected and that It was cost-insf- much less than he had estimated. Mr Valentine has made many radical 1 nances in the location of the road and he said that he has had miu-il opposition. ut as the n-ople see the results they become reconciled to them. lie has located the road with an eye to the future needs, having ample reminders in the shape of dis used roads along the route to tlx his determination. He has evidently pro- eeded on the assumption that where people wtsn a mil renmven irom ine road, sooner or later that hill will have to disappear and he is "iloini; it now. No one can go over the road, even In the unfinished stage, and not commend the progresslveness and de termination of those responsible for the improvement. Hearty o-oM-ratioii. .Most of the people, Mr. Valentine ivs. are co-operating with him heart ily. The laving of the sand-clay sur face Is coining on well and la praotl- callv nnihed from Democrat to Mor gan bri.ch. on account of the long haul they had to stop getting the sand rom Hig Ivy and ara now getting it from Morgan branch. In this work .Mr. Valentine is being ably assisted by Mr. Cauble, who laid the sand- lay on the lieaverdam roads. Ifeim are built in the branch and the sand accumulates In them. To Mr. I'nuble was given the Job of solving the mud problem at the "tleorg Cole" hill. Hefore the dirt waa packed or the sand put on, the ralna came and the rond bed was stain a perfect loblolly with a jiroblematicn' bottom. Mr Cauble aald he tried put ting sand In the mod and load after load disappeared with a rapidity that waa disheartening. He then went to a large boulder, broke it up and dumped 40n loads In a space less than yards In length, then applied the and and clay and now the road la is good as any. I'ndergrnund drains are also put In every 50 feet. It will cer tainly be a road for good roads enthu siasts "v point at with prtda. Cob-man ttamm-y. mayor of Mar "hall, and .1 prominent nttorney of that town, was In A-h'iille last night to alien, I the boosters' banquet. In -peaking of t:ie development of Mad ison conntv Mr. lumwy told of a new industry that is being fosierxl by some of the more progressive farmer ti. -I one that may assume larger pro portions In the rear future. Thla Is tha raising of sugar beets, and accord ing to Mr. Ramsey their production in Madison promise to prove success ful. Three men near M.i..hall planted sugar beet seeds furnished them by the United Htates department of agrl culture this spring. They were Oeorge Lander. Enoch Hector and J. J. Red mon, and each of them achieved re sults which were better than they ex pect id. Mr. Landers' beets were- 1 peclally fln, some of the.m weighing a much as eight or nine pound. The def arUnent haa notified Mr. Lan ders to ship to Washington aome of the three and four pound specimens In order tu tind out the percentage of sugar they contain. If the amount I satisfactory Sir. Ramsey thinks that many other Madison county farmers will raise them and that the Industry may soon prove Important. He say that they grow best In bottom land. Bach of the farmers planted only a small piece of ground thla year. Mr. Ramsey also stated that those farmers In Madisen county who have been raising burley tobacco have had good crops, lis said th acreage is not so great hut tha quality of the product Is fine. , CORNEOUS N. BLISS Note I Republican 1 mailer Plea fnan Heart Failure was Prominent 1st BsMlnewa. During The Fair Railroad Fare Refunded to Out-of-Town Customers Who purchase $25 or more and who live within 75 miles of Asheville Stylish Apparel of Every Description for Womeo, Missey and Children TAIFjOREI) Sl'ITS AND COATS SILK AND WOOL DRESSES SEPARATE SKIRTS XO MATTER HOW MUCH YOU PAY FOR GARMENTS YOU CANNOT GET BETTER TITAN IS OFFERED BY THIS STORE. UNDERWEAR HOSIERY GLOVES UMBRELLAS HAIR GOODS NECKWEAR VEILS VEILINGS KIMONOS HAND BAGS EVENING GOWNS WAISTS PONY COATS FURS ' EVENING CAPES SWEATERS YOUR VALUE THE STYLES WE SHOW ARE CORRECT IN EV ERY DETAIL. WE HANDLE THE VERY LATEST PRODUCTIONS FROM THE FASHION CENTERS. IF YOU ARE A JUDGE OF MATERIALS AND KNOW GOOD WORKMANSHIP WHEN 'YOU SEE IT, YOU WILL BE HIGHLY PLEASED AT THIS STORE.-. ' . WE CATER TO THE WANTS OF WOMEN WHO DEMAND the BEST AND WHO UNDERSTAND THE ADVANTAGES OF DEALING AT A SPECIALTY STORE. . PEERLESS-FASHION GO. MI3SI0NS DISCUSSED Four llnmlml IVhtatra Are Attend lug Aannul Me-UiHC at Mil- , ttaakcti. ' Milwaukee Oct 10. Missionaries, preachers arid laymen numbering 400 arr attandlng the annual meeting of the American Iloare i f Commlsaio nera here Of Foreign Missions, whose four ilu.vs' convention opened hers tc da V. - ' Twentv-llve foreign mlsslonsrlee 111 tell of their Iliume cm furlough .III 'yyff- l'i foreign lands. New York, Oct. Is. Cornelius N fltias, for years one of the prominent figures In natlional republican poll ilea and otherwise well known as a merchant and a member of the dry- gods firm of tolas, Fauyaa j Co., died at hie home here last night, aged II. from heart disease. The end waa not wholly unexpected, as Mr. Itlisa had keen HI for year. While death la attributed to heart failure, there has . been a general breaking down which came of old age. . Mr. Hllss was born at Fall River, Mass., in 11)2. He waa treasurer of tha republican national committee from 111 to Ittl, and iirevloua to that he had been chairman of the New York -state republican commit tee. With the late Senator Platt, Ketiator Depew and Jovernor Levi P. "Worton. he had for years represen ted New York state aj republican na tional conventions. He twice refused to become a candidate for governor of New York, but following the nation al campaign of 1S9C. In whlrh Wil liam McKlnley was elected president he accepted the position of secretary f the Interior In the McKlnley rah- Ine" He hetU this post for two year CXPOETANT TO XIOTHIES A record of sixty -Bia years eontlnw- ous) na) of "Mrs. Wlnalow's Soothing Syrup" by Mothers In all parts of th world, hi the) highest raise that any remedy, for "children . teething" has) ever received. Every year the young mother follows, la tha footsteps of her mother an4 flaia lira. Wins lows Soothing tyrap to be tha favorite, and sa It haa goos oa for a period of sixty-lira years. Millions of mothers have asest M (or their children wall teething with perfect sttneesa. , It aoehea th child, sortea the giru. a' jays ail pale, earea wfnd eoP'j and la bset remedy for dlarrboee, Bold by 4rori's aad sneibins e!ra Is all parte ef the known soril ltn- ty-te rents a a p sore 1 f r t a. T mm ftrisil ' 51 Patton avenue ind thtn reslOTadLlbeCTiVw. of atTMS if private business, Mr. r.Hse had amassed a great f'r une. ( He was nlways active in move ments for municipal reforms, lie waa a mem tier or "many organisa tions. For some- years he waa preai- lent of tha American Protective Ijeague. , at ' K GIlfrSKCirs THKOUY 3 " ' " ' K stlsltKtl(l(sflttK (From an article on the Htandnn! Oil and Tobacco decisions in the July Mnrth American Review by the Chica go Federal Judge w ho is retiring from the bench because ha wishes "more freedom.') I It would be more hypocrisy to say hat the court has not turned upon lat'f. What the court fourteen years ago sntd was not in the: art Ihe court now says la in the net. Meantime not letter of the act haa been changed What ha changed is the attitude of the public mind the public mind In formed by this faurteen years of experience. a The explanation la -that the Sher man ai-t at previously Interpreted was wholly misconceived and mlsdirect d public experiment. It was losded with disappointment to those who Incerety are looking forward to a na'lonal prosperity more widely dis tributed, and with dynamite to those who sincerely are looking forward to a national prosperity more widely dis tributed, and with dynamite to those whose Interest la wholly In the prea- nt. A a road to restored "Individ ualism" In trade and commerce It led nowhere: every ona of Its boasted achievements, like tha Northern Se curities raae for instance, faded en tirely away the moment the last line of the decree had been written. The -dissolutions" were dissolutions on paper only. a a As a road to better business and economic conditions the act had brought the country to Ihe edge of the volcano. It waa Inevitable that an experiment of that kind would be stopped some time by somebody. a a The "fact" thai modern enterprise operates and must operate through combinations and even monopolies haa become so obvious that every one see It every one except the "law."' In other word, the currents of "law" and "fact" respecting mon- oimiIv and combination. Instead of running side by side as they should run, took to running In opposite direc tions. a a a In no place wss the misplacement of the Hherman act as previously In terpreted mora clearly exhibited than it) it application to th railroads of the country. a a The practical result of the Hherman act aa previously Interpreted was that not only the carriers of the country and the so-called big trusts of ths country but nearly every busineee of every character was put literally "tin der tha condemnation of the taw.' Nearly every busineee sspveroeat with spirit In It became a national sin. And thers was no escape fn.m the wrath to come except to make one's peace with the execitive authorHVs at WasMnston. Of course no president ir attorney-general .er' wished to bring havoc to business. There Was never a day. therefore, that khe m was executed against all wive fell lit erally under lis ciiiuleo iiailoii. 1 from tha Rirta' to the executive, and the transfer, unobserved as it was, was nothing lees, aa aome one JuTlge Lacombe, I think haa already said, than revolution in every' Ideal of Rng llsh and American Jurisprudence. a a a a - Ona word more. From the view point of tha business man and his lawyer. It is plain that the Sherman act. even aa now Interpreted, la still not definite; that no business foresight can discern what restraint of trade In cidental to business may be held by the courts to be reasonable and what unreasonable; that every' push of en terprise forward ia to enter upon un charted waters. a From the viewpoint of a large num ber of those to whom this Inquiry la a matter of deep concern, perhaps a large majority yet. the Hherman act. as It now stands interpreted, wilt look like a gun from which the load has been extracted. As a weapon It will look dismantled. As a mere weapon It Is dismantled. Indeed, the ptiramontt. bereft cf th'' Uit'it dels- ton., to my mlua, is that it will bring; tha public mind to discern that we are ia a new age in which combinations nd monopolies even are economic necessities, and that being here as the necessary economic equipment of the times, the Uilng to do with them Is not to train guna on them as If they ought not to be here at all, but to so safeguard them as forms of Invest ment and so limit them In dividend allowed to be paid (their rights of natural personal that liiey will have no motive to deal otherwise than fair ly with the people and will become also, as property Investments, repre sentative of tha people. Who shoul-l be pnnb . II la Wa a t " You are not experimenting on your self when yen take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for a cold as that preparation haa won Its great repu tatlon aa dextenalv sale by lis re markable rurea of colds, and ran al ways be depended upon. It la equal ly valuable for adults and children and may be given to young children with Implicit confidence as It contains no harmful drug. Bold by all dealers. No Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Gas or Indigestion in Five Minutes. Take your sour, out-of-order stom ach or maybe you call It Indiges tion, Dyspepsia, Gastritis, or Catarrh of Stomach; it doesn't matter take your stomach trouble tright with you to your Pharmacist and ask him to open a 60-cent caw of Pane's Diapep aln and let you eat one 22-graln Tri angula and see if within five minutes there is left any trace of your former misery. The -correct name for your trouble Ui Food Fermentation food souring; the Digestive organs become weak, there is lack of gastrin juice; your food Is only half digested, and you liecome affected with loas of appetite, prefure and fullness after eating, vomiting, nausea, heartburn, griping In bowels, tenderness In the pit of stomach, bad taste mouth, consti pation, pain In limbs, sleeplessness, belching of gas. biliousness, sick headache, nervousness, dhuiness or many other amllsr symptoms. If your appett Is fickle and nothing tempts you, or you belch gaa, or If you feel bloated after eating, or your food lies Ilka a lump of lead on your stomach, you ;an maka tip your mind that at the bottom of all this there la but one cause fermentation of undi gested food. . Prove to yourself In five minutes that your stlmarh is as good as any: that there Is nothing really wrong. Slop this fermentation and begin eat ing what you want without fear of discomfort or misery. , Almost Instant relief la waiting for you. It ia merely a matter If how soon you take a little I)la pepsin. THE WEATHEB . .... . - j a TKatTraUTTTRK. f . .... AshevIHa it Atlanta 2 Augusta. C Charleston , 71 Charlotte ta . Jacksonville 74 Key West Knnxville ... Mobile , New Orleans New York .. Oklahoma ., Raleigh .... Savannah ... Washington 3 74 it 4 0 70 SI Wilmington 4 f x 70 7 Forecasts until p. m., Wednesday; For Asheville and vicinity: Unsettled weather with occasional showers to night or Wednesday. For North Carolina: Local rains to night or Wednesday; moderate north east to east rains. Summary of conditions. An area of high barometric pressure, attended by fair, cool weather ia slowly reced ing off the north Atlantic roast and la being succeeded by a disturbance of some intensity now central over Mon tana and Wyoming. Occasional show ers ara reported from theRocky Mountains southeastward to I ho south Atlantic. . .The continued eastward progress of the storm will be favorable1 for oc casional showers In thla vicinity to night or Wedueaday. with little change in temperature. It. T. IJndley, - Observer, Weather llureau. Normal today Temperature 17: precipitation, ,01, U. a Department or Agriculture, , WEATHER BUREAU . WlUiS I. MOORE.. Chi '' I f ,r vli.la'inn j iiifrrvi! r i ... e.aaa.-H-. Y tX,2Jt'ty 000 Vym - V' - ' ' er " i n i -' ' ma"i -ia " ' .
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 10, 1911, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75