Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Nov. 18, 1911, edition 1 / Page 9
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if ' Saturday, November 13, 1011. THE ASnEVILLE" GAZETTE-NEWS. page in:. . See Ooth Mows for PALACE ti f G TMEATO T o Shows for the Price of Orie Admission Pictures that are Unsurpassed Either in Asheville or , ! Elsewhere Beginning Monday, November 20th, for one week, every person purchasing a ticket at the Palace will be given a coupon good for admission at the Theato on that day only. Those purchasing tickets at the Theato will be given a coupon good for admission to the Palace on the sameja We have exclusive rights for all licensed moving pictures released by Motion Picture Pat ent Co., conceded to be the best moving picture films manufacture Vi ACE 4 Piece Orchestra Live Musicians : Pictures that are unsurpassed Spot Light Songs ; 'i - f y S'iil'rf !;; : i' f O' ;.-'- . ' THELAT Orchestra i Live Musicians I Pictures as good as the best. All pictures are passed upon by the National Board of iCensorship - II THE KltKltttKRltKI(lttltltKlttH R H PRESS fMXKNX. 9. 9. It A NATURAL. SUBSIDENCE. ' 1 One of the first Indication of the wav of rndkuliam whlrh ' n now Hepli)K over the country wan the tleen unit widetprend Bnlmiwlty toward the ra I Iron ris. And this fellnir wna umply juitltled by what the railroad hnil done. . It took effective form in xrvater power for the Interstate Com merce t'onimiwlon and in much state l-'Rlxliitlon. There were rew Btutei thut did not enact laws aimed at rail road abuse. Many . of them were Kooii. Some were unduly oppressive nil Injurious In their final effect upon the public,., Candidates for the legisla ture conducted their campaigns upon this issue. Nothing too bitter could he snld of the railroads and no meas ure aimed at them could be too dras tic to be in accord with popular senti ment, in some quarters. Kut a change has come. It Is shown In a striking manner In a report just issued by the Railway Kuslness asso ciation. There has been ' a marked subsidence of legislative activity against the railroads. The number of laws denting with railroads enacted by the forty legislatures that were In ses sion this year was only !7, as com pared with 664 in 1909, a decrease of 58 per cent in two years. Arkansas reduced the number of its new rall roud. laws from 32 to 9; Minnesota, from 31 to 17: North Carolina, from 50 fo 8; Oregon, from 20 to 10; feotitti Dakota, from tT to 9, and. 'Wisconsin, from 34 to 17. J1 wenty-f our states passed -eight or fewer railroad laws, some of them ."deliberately designed to encourage railway construction and showing a freedom from hostile dem onstrations toward the carriers."' In other words, publlo ppinlon has swung backward somewhat in regard to the railroads. It recognizes more clearly than It aid that by crippling them the couhtry would be Injured. Radicalism In respect to the regulation of rallroadB has subsided to a modera tion that Is safer and more sane. Cleveland louder. KIIMS j Li Read wlktJaTprommen Writes regarding; the great '.Dandruff CureT "I have been affected with dandruff for Just ten year and hare tried Kriotu remedies for same, but f oond nothing that woold core it. AXtej ag TO-BAC-TON for on month am entirely reliered of trouble. I hmrti'j recommend toil remedy to anyone affected with same diseaee I H,...ff f LINVILLE, U. V., Winiton-Salem, N. CL'.' j This U'only on of 'many letters) praisini? TO-BAC-TON, "Th " - mi All Umir Tmnif "iTf Tnn'iri lufferinr with Dandruff, if your hair ii falling oat or your scalp siring yoo. trouble, use TO-BAC-TONJ DUhmt frora m otlwr luir tonh tt emtalm no skohol or m which Is inJoriooS to th seals. It is principally mad from th iuin of th tobacco laaf which Is raeosatta kr akratclaM sa ta BMatairaotmsanucina. wmoivs if rn sirrnav. Th faa-raaiaats Bra Mimmlmti mmd kmmhhtmt. This wonderful Hair Tonia smll " " mil di WeaaWwa htmmtUmL fajranuc hmtr. Kt aorUawxUTat ji lUaaer rnrnk yarn tarter a ro ywl TO-BAC-TOW awHmrtoa. J '1 1. . in ill ImiiniT" f "v"-ll- rJ .--- rr Sal at All Drag Store at 25c, SO r $1.00 Bottle. VUKCI Pis hast lit. "rh Mis Tftnl It teDra all about Um ears at th hahw TH-t'tra r'TJlCTT if'MI. WInston-Sa!en. H. t Distributor for Asheville, Dr. T. C. Smith, Wholesale Drug. gist. ; ..,... . a . - -Mv.Ar ft . i .1. !. ...-I 1T f n H f 'I lUML U 1 B.ll IIIMT mra in niM! illllWII u csutwauT m vuiuLiv ii , ji i v. . deiirabl for imal! bathroom. Though they are economi cal in the use of space, they are r- just at unitary and easily cleaned J as th larger design. Prices cheerfully given for Installing this andard" Lavatory or for any other kind of plumbing work. n J. 0. KcPHERSOlf, h No. S5 A IT E. OiUeg St riione 1J$. f ilJilf "T!VK" l.JSMf , A WASTEFUL PEOPLE. We are a wasteful people. Our mil llonalrea glory in It The average citi zen Is lust as wasteful without think' ing about It. It is computed that as much as one-twentieth of all the sugar used In this country Is absolutely wast ed. Watch any man at a restaurant. Ho will dump sugar Into his coffee by the spoonful, stir a little, drink his beverage and depart Nine times out of ten there will be almost as much sugar lying wasted in the bottom of the cup as there has been put Into It. This waste In the aggregate amounts to thousands of pound of sugar the year, and this at a time when sugar Is selling at the highest price recorded In years. We waste In everything. . Shoes, the tops of which are perfectly good, half- soling alone being necessary, - are promptly discarded. . Our ' forbears used to sew new bottoms on all stock ings of which the top were good, Hundred of men throw away their socks a soon as a small hole appears In them. Styles put garments out of use before they have served half their nurnose. We are not content to be warmly and comfortably clad. We are wasteful In our eating; wasteful In our clothes; wasteful In our amusements: wasteful In our voice; wasteful In our activity even. We are almost a nation of squander ers, a prodigal In living as th earth has been prodigal in granting as the earth has been prodigal In granting us her resources. Perhap thl prodigal Ity of nature is responsible for our own lack of appreciation of value. Whatever the reason, the fact remains. Charleston News and Courier. REAL THING THE CENTRAL BANK. The Central bank, a worked out by Mr. Aldrlch end his associates on the government commission, looms bigger and bigger as a contra lira tlon scheme. The different features are not well d fined, but whatever ha been written and said by the commissi, the fol lowing may he fairly surmised: The new Central bank Is to have" 1300. 000,000 capital: $300,000,000 average deposits by the government; $J0, 000.009 of. reserve ,from national banks; 1300,000,000 other deposits at least Also the power to trade In all foreign exchange; the power to Issus all bank note up to $1,I0. 000, 000 to 11,600,000,000 or more; the power to tlx the rate of discount oil over the United States, and whatever political pnwer from th government It csn get In addition to all this. It I supposed to take away from all national banks ern North Carolina Boosters' asscKjl' tlon, the Waynesville board of trade ts following out, the law of the god help those who help themselves. These seven counties are the only one wntfl have shown any real Interest In this great movement for advertising We em North Carolina. ' Ttiey are puttM their united effort and their monar into this schnme with the expectaVM of results. They ore doing' it ' asJ strict business proposition on a ni- noBs basl. They are doing tt for their future good and not fur glory.'" they can not be expected to help on any territory that Is not putting In the cash. ' Then too on account of ths close proximity of these counties n their natural ' intimate connection otherwise It'i better for thl move ment not to be too extended. 'An li tensive campaign will count for far more than one covering a great extent of territory. In going It on the inten sive rather than an extensive cafl pnlgn, this association starts off weft and shows a business foresight that must mean results. Wayneerilt Courier. " , - ' Chamberlain' Stomach and Liver Tablet do not alcken or gripe, end may be taken with perfect safety by the most delicate woman or the youngest child. ' The Old and feeble will also find them a most snltnfbls remedy for aiding and strengthening their weakened digestion and for reg ulating the bowel- For sate by an dealer. , . J v . i! la Rplte of Tommy. . ; ! ' Home tudy for Tommy had just b.wrua and ha found It hard to apply hi anelf to regular hoar. -ii ,t bed Um one evening hi father saiofc ''Tommy, I am not at all pleas ed trlth the report your mother gives me off ydr conduct today." j t . "ISO,' facner, smowea jreu wiumn be, wnd I told her so; but it right ahead .n' joade th' report Just like woman ain't ?' Korn.aq.iH. Mactt NatloniM Monthly. 't New Vork Herald and The Gosette-Newi. rtrwnryt I : I the power' to' tsNiie any 'money" at' all. these must depend upon rediscount ing paper upon the central bank. The money available to such a bonk would be from $2.000. 000, 090 to 4,0110.900, ono for trading, or hanking purposes. All national banks would become mere agencies for this big hank. Independ ence or. Individual banks Would be gone. ' f , . 'h i I A movement ha been Inaugurated In Chicago for the development of a plan for .the preservation of the in dependence of each national, hank. Until utterly th. need M our banking system has been slmi'ly a fli-xlhle fea ture gniist pas leu. The need In con nection with foreign exchaMge has not made any , trouble In the past and the manner In which comlitiotis have tlxt'd the rule of illiK"nt has nut been a source uf any sort of trotililK to the cmninercn of the counirv. Tn C.hl !i"ti nioeni'nt fyr SM't;ititin i'1 I ..f . rrtllr itl..i ,.f t!i. l.-iiil reitlon of the National CUIsen' lague, headed by Mr. John V. I"nr wHI, president, at tZi West Jackimn Ueiilevrd. ATiarlotte Chronicle. i -: , t , ' WOMEN'S IMPORTANCE IN ' FRANCE: .Frenchmen cannot llv alone; there must always be an Eve In their para dise. The bachelor party, which is a cemmon feature In, English social life. Is unthinkable In France. How cn men enjoy themselves without wt.men? Women Is their enjoyment It, Is only the cold Englishman who wants to I onve his v.fe st home while he banquets nr plays golf. The Frenchman's first esMiys in the royal and ancient guine are always accom panied by a feminine retinue; his wife, his aunt anil his motlicr-in-law. It Is only wh.'n lie make progress In the t;HiiH, end ri';li7H th" ni'i'tli's if It , ihin.'it tiuit lit i 1 1 u n i s t s )jir M' n ii li nr or two 1 rr,m t icocbo Iqmlnln society. - Unless he play ad vanced golf, he will lway prefer hi wif' society on the links to that of n man. . : That la why club life I Vnposalbl In Paris, except club life of a special sort Involving baccarat for high stake, end appealing to a rMth and leisured class. Tel, here, romftenss tlon are offered te the olTened god dess, momentarily abandoned, while her husband goe to the ' "trl pot" She Invited tA'weekly the atrloal entertainment provided for, by the way, by the card-money snuun dered by th fneu. And theVxhibl- lions of all sorts that fluorlsh M the ' For patn In tha or ht danr pen plsee 6t fiaWel wRa Ohambe laM'a Linlmnt n hind It 'on fr th seat of pain. -Jhere uethmg better. For sale by all dealer. t( '; An old dart-ey" was Phnainted Uilit a bill rendered him TIT hi otitcJI Jr wa not correct ' . 4 , . . ' ' 1 H complained to thehVtcert1 said, "Sam, figure don't IfeV' " i ( ,"I know dat," .aald Rnm.'-But H.iYs do figires.''-f-N"orniKn K., JtUfik's' Xi. tldnal MotiOily:: , , -:" N .1. w EiPoiiTiirT to i:oiur : A reord of tlzty-flv year crr OU BS Of "lira. WtnakiW 8oe Symp" by moth or la all parr of t worhe, I lb blvhest praix that a rhusfly. for "children teething" 1 r reeelved. vry yea th you mother follow In th f"ptir 4 a ' r t '1 her mother and lirili krti Wlniow Soothing Bjmjp to t tbe fatorltx, i I an It ha goo oa fir period f ' ty-Bv year. Million of i ha used It for their chlrai. taathlna' wl.k tnarfai-t ar chills nearly everyone has sorr.e ar- ,oths th child. oftena th tlitlc mission are so tunny occasions sn m pin. ciir i- l ( nir xne miiiRiing or tne si'Xoe. law bern's "Frar.ce and th French." I the t.-.t by fr TIIMSR Wll In In r-- II !"1 .1 Tlif I.VFM. I
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 18, 1911, edition 1
9
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