Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Oct. 19, 1911, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thus:.! 7, 1-:. . ID, A XJ-ij- a. Grows hair and we I can prove it Hair Becomes Soft, Fluffy, Lus trous and Beautiful Immediately I After a Danderine Hair Cleanse Get a 25 Cent Bottle Now "and Forever Stop Falling Hair, Itching Scalp and Dandruff A little Danderine now will immediately double ' the beauty of your hair No difference how dull, faded, brittle and acragfy. Jurt moisten a cloth with puderine and carefully draw it through your hair taking one imall ftrand at time.. The effect ia immediate and amazing your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy and hare an appearance of abun dance; an incomparable lustre, softness and luxu riance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Try as you will after an application of Danderine, you cannot find a single trace of dandruff or a loose or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most will be after a few week's use when you will actually see new bair, fine and downy at first yes but really new hair sprouting all over the scalp. . : ; .' Danderine is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them. Its life producing properties cause the hair to grow abun dantly long, strong and beautiful ? Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter and prove to yourself tonight now that your hair is as pretty and soft as any that it has been neglected or injured by careless treatment that's all you surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it, if you will just try a little Danderine. Real surprise awaits you. M ' V" - iMm&m a Treasonable Truth-Telling Editor of The Gasette-Newa: Now that the summer season haa well-nigh ended, and the limit of the longest-lived excursion ticket la .about to expire. It may be pardonable to re mind the good and bad people of Asheville that this town la not the only pebble on the beach by any man ner of means. (Will anybody tell me what In this world or the next "any manner of means" means?) That is to say. namely and to-wlt: that there are other localities in or on this sub lunary "spere" besides the ; "Queen City," however' queenly she may be and however firmly she may be en trenched In the affections of those who "never knowed no better." For therein lies the delusion or Illusion which ever It may be of thinking there Is no other place as fair Ignor ance of facts. There- arc several. But there Is one section In partic ular to which attention is sought In this faultless effusion that of Un title, on the beautiful LlnvlUe river, 75 or 80 miles north of Asheville as the crow does not fly; aa mlehty. few trows that ever I saw fly In a "straight Bat,, but go flopping here and there till they And what they are after. Still, if you will tako the early morn Ins;' train for Marlon-or, preferably, let It take you and two miles further east of that piedmont city board one I Insist that you board only one of the trains of the Carolina, Clinch Held Ohio railroad the finest In the south you will have made a mighty good start for a visit to the most attractive section, scenically. In the North Carolina mountains. But this C. C. O. train will not land .or water you at LlnvlUe by a long shot, as it passes no nearer than a little station culled Llnvlll at the foot of tlit Blue Ridge, about eight miles east of that picturesque locality known aa the LlnvlUe country. Some of these days, believer, some of these days, as the old hymn used to go, and may still b going for all 1 know, some capitalists like the ones who developed the "beautiful Sap phire country," will call the world's attention to the far more beautiful LlnvlUe country, and the world will don't forget and take another one which leads somewhere else, and pro ceed with more or less speed to Lln vllls falls, proper. I say proper be cause I am not going to go to any Improper falls, If I know It. Somewhere in the intricacies of this one-streeted village, created, organ ised, existing and. operating under the name of LlnvlUe Falls, lives a brother of United States Clerk Hyams, and on the opposite side of the same street another man, who shall be nameless here f orevermore, because, for the life of me, I can't remember what ' it. Is, - or was,! or ever will be, world without end, amen, come again, thank you ever so much, etcetera, and so forth and so on. (That little aberatlon is simply another instance of "His Master's Voice." This old typewriting machine has been so ac customed to write from dictation that whenever it hears Its Mistress Voice, it Just takes the bit In its teeth and runs away In spite of all I can do to restrain it). But, in one of these houses I am going to find a bed and board,' mensa et thoro, as the law books have It when speaking of a certain kind of divorce the plsonest kind, because it still leaves you tied hard and fast while depriving you of all the joys of matrimony. That is, I am going to find bed and 'board It I happen to have the price of both; and if I have, from there I am going to ramble back and forth, and side ways and fifth, and crosswise and sixth, till I see every blessed thlrfg in sight if it takes me till doomsday and a week later In this clear Octo ber weather and my money holds out. The very first thing I am going to do Is to visit LlnvlUe Falls them selves for there are several all jumbled up together In wind and rainy weather like the represented tenants of McNally's row of flats. But alas, alack and alannah, starry banner, slavery days, boys, every .one -"-LlnvlUe Falls are not what they once were. They have been standing where they still are several years, am told. They surely were there In 1874. for I saw them with my own eyes. They were two things or beauty and two joys forever, then. But Time's strong hours. Indignant, work ed their wills" since then, and "beat them down and marred ahd want In presence of ." That's about as fur" as I can get with that quotation, clan Its hands and come a-runnlmr. and If you don't think it good Eng Fo ft Is a far more beautiful section I ... Jnst mttke ovr. fpl IV"8 merary exeuuiurs ui Aiircu, uuiu icic than Sapphire ever dreamed of be ing and that Is saying lots. Now, nyson, ana make them correct it. Frost and logs and several other saying "lots'' Is meaning of a ."whole tMn formed ' a conspiracy some years ago to break down some of the and that is "de 'xactly" what I am LverlaBtlng ,tone ledges which used to trying my levelest best to do today. with all my might and main. Which leads me to ask, en passant, as the Frerfch say, what Is the meaning of main In connection ,with "might?" Isn't that rather crowding the mon key? I dunno. - uphold the river at that point and Just left It more of a cascade than a dis tinct fall. Still. It is well worth a visit from anyone who is In search of the wild, the picturesque and the grand, for all these are found about the falls, from the top of which one or two or Now, If you are going to take your three Qr a doze can ,ook ,nto tne foot iii your hand, as I did a year or two ago, and trump up that' steep wild and weird magnificence of the vawnina- gorge through which the . . . . 11 . ... ... .. jnnilltlH r - n.. mountain siue to wnviue viuage near fottm.flecked river KOes dashing. Or, the falls, then you are going alone or In company with someone else; for I am going to stay on that C. C. & O. train as It threads that's the word threads Its way from the North cove of McDowell county to Alta Pass, at the top of the Blue Ridge. I said thread" was the word, and.lt Is, for that train acts the part of a thread and the 27 tunnel it passes, through on its way up are so many neeoies- eys-all of which shows how easy it Is for-a rich mnn to-enter a certain desirable place If 'only the eyes of the needles are made large' enough. And one or two or threo or a dosen or more can look up through the twilight of noonday from the base of the falls Into and among the gigantic mass of granite cliffs and stones hemming In the white water as It plunges into the still, black pool beneath. Selah. (How s that for thrilling descriptive writing?. Hey?) ! ,.....'- " Having eTtmbed dowrf tne precipe tous side of the falls into the gloom of the gorge below fhow's "gloom of the gorge" for alliteration ( T) If I didn't have any more sense than some people I have seen, I would go on down the This May Interest You Then Why Not Give the Following Your Undi vided Attention for a Few Minutes. YOU MEN WHO KNOW THE VALUE OF A DOLLAR CAN APPRECIATE SHOPPING AT THIS ST6RE. . . . Men, this season we have surpassed our best efforts in selecting just the kind of clothing that will appeal to you, whether your taste be conservative or for the smartest styles, here you can find that suit. Tailored to perfection models the latest in vogue materials, "Pure "Wool Guaranteed" what more could you ask for when you consider out lowness in price then you can't help but feel interested enough to pay us a visit. every one ot iiicne luimtjia is ibibo . , . . - . , .,-.am iu enough to admit the richest man or J11 !'yh 'w".m ' ... , j ,. j. 1 1 came to what the French would call Our Men's Furnishing Section can well look after your winter needs, Cravats, Shirts, Underwear, Hats, Evening Shirts. Our Collar Section is full of new styles. Men's Suits $12.50 to $25.00 New Overcoats $10.00 to $25.00 , King Quality Shoes for Men. Men's Hats .$1.50 to $3.50 New Shirts $1.00 to $2.50 Neckwear 25c to $1.50 Gloves, Underwear and TToirry. I "THE -TORE THAT 5AVt YOU HOMEY i ss- the largest camel and still leave day light enough, ron. ither side of both to ae tu read by, Well, when we get to Alta Fass we are ten miles from Llnville, falls, al though we have been traveling some thing llkfl a score of miles since pass Ing LlnvlUe station. Why, oh why? you will ask, did you do such a numo- would be what the French would call an 'impasse,' wncn in mis cane nmd bo what the natives call a rock CUft, jutting out Into the stream In such a way as to forbid further pro gress along that side of that river, I say the natives call It a rock clift, and I say also that the natives. In so doing Because I pre- "e"er r'Kht thin we. their bet- to have that stem engine haul jer, (in our own estimation) in calling , the side of that steep moun- " lth th J .J6""; . . n a two per cent grade to climb- - fw hy.T NW " ' thiLT' skull thing as that? ferred me up lain on iwu pr i b'-" . v..... wh tnr ing tho- eight mile, from th. :'i,r"'"r tlon on a 20 per cent graae, going 2. 7 I , . , k I" . "V..7 . i-ii .nrt h or "what" Vindicated again, be Jab- r;;. ... hnt what 1. in reality sev- ber.). Because there Js an old hlme eral slg-aag ladders. Having reached chune which calls foj Roc ... ... ,.ik ht in m..n Hih cleft for me. -1 thing cllft Pass, If altitude means height I am c man m cm. going to strike out on top of the Blue cliff , and th. nat ve. cllft the same Ridge along a road. I know, wnen x .'V; "- 1 CAr"''nn'r'';a,,''':''ii!'i 1 Kli rrrrH In Hi ! iii ALCOHOL 3 PER CLMT. AUtoMeRrprrtlonra'Jb-1 slmHartrvj tbcRjoflanlllrrjitt ling a S iuwia aaiiiawJs i 1 1.3 Promotes Ditionfliff rfi nest arvl 1 WionloLis nriCw Opiuru-Morplmie mYmi. NOTNAKCOTIC. Tor Infants and Children. faV Hon. Sow Sa- '.ch.UUrrtufi: WonnsfoTrvu'.. . :nswrua ncssariLcrscrSax?. i"t of her -1 Ths Kind You Have ' . Alvays Bought Bears the Signature; of 5J a In Uso For Over Thirty Years 11 i.e 11 IVJ' r- f I o-f. or cloven In twain.-which Is still another way of saying that It was cleft In two. (Another triumphant vindication, on, Phllologers! ) Now. having proven all my conten tions (q. e. d.) to my own satisfaction. 1 proceed to tell what those Tool peo ple would have done when they got to that French impasse or North Caro lina rock cleft. They would have waded the river and gone down on the other side till they came to another one of the same kind of things, when they wsuld hve waded back to the other side, and have keept this fool thing up till dark. .Then they would have built a fire on this side- or tne river or on the other side, depending entirely on one's view point, and have eaten whatever they had . orougni nlnnf with them, and 'then stretched out on the bank of the stream and tried to go to sleep till next morning. I apeak advisedly I say. "tried to go to sleep," for that fa all they would succeed In doing. The next morning they would have begun to sh, and later In the day tuey would navs oeen glad enough to get out of that gloomy e-orse and go fcacK noms to me vai ley and alt down to a regular table with "vlttles" on It, and cumD into bed with pillows and sheets and blan kets and things and wonder wny tney harin't had as much sense as I had when I turned around and "clomb' back Up to the top of the falls and went back to the house to food and bed and Bleep." They will never nnd out "dee auokly" why that waa unleas I tell them, and that I most emphat ically am not going to do. Having acted so sensibly by remain Ing at home. I am going to get out of mv virtuous couch early the next morning and go over to Bob Frank tin's at Alta Mont, two or three miles from the falls, i Now Bob Franklin la clled "Bob" merely because that la not his glvert or boughteh or Christian or first nam fit till. It Is not even Robert I am not going to tell yo anything more at-out that man's first name. Enougliior you to know that hla last nami ia Franklin: and If h Is not a direct lineal descendant of the Great Benjamin himself, It was nut Hob's fault, lie is what none of Old Hen's defendants ever were a fliu achiiolmnnter, ami a devout and con. crated Mathi-din preacher, and a l'-l frniHI. U !i --Uiil anil citi'ui - enuuti lu rutitli-l 1 1 i ' i t' I come down or gone up from the great- Isaak Walton In bis prime. I am sure that If Bob had had any idea when he was young ,that anybody wanted any lightning brought down out of the clouds on a string to a key fastened'on "tother eend" of that cord, h would have "flewed" that kite himself. But he never saw any sense In any such a fool trick as that, and turned his attention to catching flsh Instead.1 That beats fooling with things you don's know-nothln' 'tall about; no how you can fix It To claim that our modern Franklin has gotten . any great pecuniary re ward from hla fishing proclivities would be to make a statement wide of the mark which seema to me to bo as expressive aa to say, narrow of the target Welt, neither did the elder Franklin gst any cash out of that lightning he enticed down that string, did heT 80, the two Franklins are even so far. But our Franklin the one who never has seen Philadelphia and who did ppt found the Saturday Evening PosWhas dona better than to get money out of - his - scientific knowledge of fish and finishing. He has got something far betteiwoppor tunlty for holding sweet communion with nature In her rapt solitudes and reflecting upon the vanities and vexa tlona of life when, soothed by the many reeded flutes of Pan.- F-s-a-a-i Boom I Ahh-h-h- . . Bo. If Bob has good luck, I shall have a mesa of trout for supper and a comfortable bed to lie In oa the bank of the loveliest -stream bariiag only the Nantahala In, the mountains of North Carolina, which la tantamount to saying In the known. world. - (I like that word tantamount, tantamount Ah-ht Why. I can roll It as a sweet morsel under my tongus. It ,1a so mouth-filling though my practice Is to roll sweet riiotsels ere my tongue Initead of under It, as Is, I believe, the habit of everyboily but these eter nal and . everlasting phrase-makers.) Now, you will have noticed, as the Scotch say, that I have thus far failed to give any description whatever of this lovsly country. What little I have said haa certainly -been most meager or meagre, either you choose. No, I am not going to bodge another foot! I know that Unvllle Lake and Unvllle 1ty are lust a few miles away; that Pax-maw not Wli hkun but Saganaw, North Carolina is even nearer; and that Montesuma not the Axetec chieftain, but Montesuma, Mitchell county are even nearer yet; and that the great Grand Father mountain itself Is looming and gloom ing in the purple distance; but I just hain't a-goln' to budge another foot for a whole week unless Bob Franklin turns me out Into the big road, and If he does, I am just going round to the back door of his house and go right n at that door and stay there. I re ally ought to have quit before 1 started, anyhow. BUD W'UNTZ. Biliousness is due to a disordered condition of the stomach. Chamber- laln'a Tablets are essentially a stom ach medicine. Intended especially to act on that organ; to cleanse it tone and Invigorate It, to regulate the liver and to banish biliousness posi tively r-.nd effectually. For sale by all dealer , , , AMUSEMENTS "The Winning Widow." . Not what you have seen every time you attended a musical comedy, but something different, built on original lines, with a well defined plot, and characters that necessitate actors of ability. That Is wty Max Spiegel pro duced the new musical comedy, "The tlon on the part of the multitude of theatergoers who have patronized It so far this ason. This latest musi cal ofuring Is booked at the Audito rium, matinee and night, Saturday, October il. There are 40 people in the cast- and on the stage when the curtain is up, led by the clever prima donna, Miss Perle Bartl, late of "The r . - I'N" y.; . ' t Lexington, Ky., Oct. H. This city was the mecca yesterday of Confed erate veterans, their sons and daugh ters from all over the west and south. The occasion for the gathering waa the unveiling of an lS-foot bronze equestrian monument to General H. Morgan, the Confederate leader. Governor A. E. Wlllson made the address of welcome to visiting veter ans and daughters on behalf of the state of Kentucky. Dr. Carleton Lee, of Baltimore, Md., delivered the un veiling address. nnoaAiiT to rioTuxRs A record of slxty-flva rear eontlnn- ous use of "Mrs. Wlnslow's goothlni Syrup" by mothers In all parts ot ths world, Is the highest pralra that any rsmsdy for "children teething" has tver received. Every year ths youns mother follows la th footatepa - of hsr mother and finis Mrs. WlnaloWi Soothing Brrup to tx the ravorlta, unC sot tt has gone on for a period of six tr-flve years. TkUlllona of ' mothsn bavs baed it for their children whll te;Mtif with parrect aucness. II nwithes th el.l'.a. softens ths gums, t ij isln, cures f'nJ collo and is t t t r- f tor d 1 ' , gold tr ' . 1 med!- ' -i.)ra Is I T i . of t! known w . 1, TWa .- - 1 t ' : i i f-r "-. v 'nitew ... - llOXNIK F.UU.KY In flu Musical t)innlr. "Tlie" Win nlnir Willow," MathMfi and Night, Sntunlny, Ot-tolx tint. Winning Widow," and gae It 11n111t11m1a m-ltltiK and aplencllil caw ih.-it liia iiimJu it an ol j'-ct nt ailiiilia Morgan Monument Cnvellcd. Battery Park Greenhouse Chrysan themums for sale at Raysor'a Drug Store. , tf Hi SCHLQS THEATHft CIRCUIT " Saturday, MaUnee and Nitclit, Oct 91. Ma MAX SPItGLU euT PONWW TVit.MOST C.NTRAMCIND .iWUCOfii jnATYarviSfA HCTs. I" Uf PER LB BAKTI, FIELDS AND . KCAMOV In "Thn Winning Widow,- Aufliu. riiun, Matlnrn and Mglit, October 81. Kissing Girl" snd "Th Broken Idol' and those always funny men, Jpe M. Fields and George B. Uranlon. While neither a chorus nor a series of vaudeville acts were necessary to the success of th comedy. Max Spiegel has lavishly provided for both. The richness and brilliancy of the costumes, admirably set forth the charms of th young ladles compris ing the chorus, and those competent to speak critically of such things, say that there never was more artlsncaay or harmoniously gowned chorus than the one in "The Winning Widow." The comedy Is the Joint work of three of the most surccsaful writers of moatcul comedy. They are Frank Kennedy, who Is rusuoiixlliui for the book; Will Heelan. who wrote the eraceful and humorous lyrics, and Seymour Furth. the composer of the music. A few. of the song hits in clude: "What Would We Do Without the Moon." "I Love Vou," 'The Light That Lies In Woman's Eyes," "There's Something Awfully Cute About a Sol dier," "Never Get Cross With a Girl,"' "Don't Get Peevish, Pet," etc. Tickets went on sale at Whltlock's clothing store this morning. A big rush was experienced. Lam back la one of th most com mon forms of muscular rheumstlam. A few applications of Chamberlain's Unlment will glv relief. For sale by all dealers. 1 eTi I mm r tKTROftUCsM nw tum-ijoi rtntLi-6to. A sevtew ARtMAKKABLE SINGING COMfiNY Of POKTY. CHORUS Of Bl AUTIf UL JMOW OIl . PRICES MaUne. S5e to 11.00. Mglit 51k; to tiM. Tickets go on sale Thursday morn ing at Whltlock's Clothlr.c; Store, H TMtAIKt, CIRCUIT MATIN KE AND . NIGHT Monday Oct S3rd. A. II. Woods offers for your approval the Sensation cf the year Exceeding th Speed Limit The Girl in the Taxi An all star cast, th scnatitlnn of Europe. Has received the endorse ment of America. PRIC1?5 Matinee 85o to 1.0. Night 60o to 1 110. Tickets at Whltlock's Friday. Vaudeville snd ricttirn, tv"" Iloue. t"" 7 " LOG . 1 rn.irTT' If 1 i H, ; i I." .
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 19, 1911, edition 1
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