k;'u"1 - y. -rc.i Tha Gazette-News EtuJzj Kewi PutlistlSi Co UBSCRTPTION RATKtS OM Week vr It, Thrtft Moatb t -. 11.15 SU Month 1.60 Tvelre Month t.00 BY MAII4 VX ADVANCE: Three Months $1.00 BUt Month S.00 Twelve Month -. 4.00 Any matter offered for publication that la not daaWfled aa news, riving otic or appealing (or aupport ot any entertainment or project where an ad mlttanoe or other fee u charged. eevertlelng ana wlU be accepted at regular rata only. The aama applia to oarda of thank, obituary noticee, political announcement! and the uxe n at t ! H at l at e ai at at at ai at at at m H The Oaaette-Nem I a em H ber of The Aiaodated Preen, a ft olMmnh mm la the for eomDiet and reliable. L atatataiatataiatataiatatatataiaiatatat Bntered at th Poatoftlc In Aahevllle a aacond-elaa matter. Saturday, March 16, 1912. PI?. WILEY QUITS THE THUMC SERVICE. The wrong mnn left the department of agriculture yesterday, speaking nfter n humnn nnd fallible manner. Secretary Wilson Is old. He has ren dered the country high and valuable services. Ills declining days should be highly honored by his fellow men. Itnt in the maze of fierce controversy about his department his merit Is for gotten. His mistakes and the failures of his policy arc magnified. Every day he hangs on makes his position less tenable. The Infirmities of nge seem apparent In his exercise of Judg ment. It is clear that a hopeless con dition of friction exists. The conscienceless vultures that prey upon the American people, foist- some food and drink and medicine, being driven to bay, are desperately trying to save what they can of their nnelent privileges of exploiting human health for gain. Wiley, not Wilson, Is the man the situation seems to re quire. However, while divested of official power and authority, Dr. Wiley Is still the best equipped man for public ser vice In his Held, and lets It be known that he Is still in the fight. Twenty nine years, Secretary Wilson says, Dr. Wiley has been In the department. That Is a long time. Yet he Is com paratively young, and in full vigor. He probably knows as much as one man can know aliout the food dopers and the quacks; 'the extent of the harm they have done, the magnitude of the lies by which they live, and the extent and nature of their power and influence. He has wrought might ily In the cause of simple honesty. He has performed wonders in an edu cational way, arousing the Interest of public and public journals; for this people Is notoriously indifferent and ignorant about what it eats and drinks. 'It I announced that efforts are now making to bring the North Car olina Press association to Ashevllle for Us next meeting. Thofs certain ly a move in the right direction, pro Ided it he home in mind that Waynesville will claim the honor of entertaining the press gang In 1913. Then there will be volumes to write," says the Waynesville Courier. A ma jority of the boys would probably be glad to go to Waynesville this year, or anywhere else in tne mountains that Is accessible, and where they can find comfort, including plenty of fried chicken and biscuit. If the Greater Western North Caro nu association needs a rallying cry, hat is the matter with "fried chick en, biscuit and uncanned tomatoes?" THE CXDEItWOOD CANDIDACY. An entire section of today's Gazette News is devoted to the Presidential candidacy of Hon. Oscar W. Under wood. There is a good deal more Un derwood talk Just now amongst read .era of The Gazette-News than there has been at any previoua time, and therefore many will be glad of this opportunity to study a pretty full de scription of the brilliant Democratic floor leader, written from a friendly viewpoint. His convictions on the most discussed political topics are ex actly and succinctly stated. It is perhaps needless to say that this matter is furnished and Its publi cation paid for by the friends and admirers of the stntesman who are working to present his candidacy in the most favorable light to their fel low Democrats throughout the United States. It Is a. matter which, how ever, we are glad to have the ODDor tunlty of presenting. It is all well prepared, It touches things that arc . vital, as concerning the whole body politic. You might be for, or against, thl or that candidate for the high office without being able to give a very clear and. comprehensive summary of the reaaona for your position. If you will peruse carefully this Underwood aectlon of The Gazette-News you will . know exactly to what extent you agree with him or differ from him In large matters of public policy. ss about nine persona out of ten ml pronounce the name of the only liv. In ' ex-President, the discoverer of the south pole may expect to be gen erally called out of his name for many yeare to come. . Within a few daya publication of another serial atory will begin. It has been decided to make a permanent feature of aerial fiction, but on such daVe aa there la an unusual pressure of news and advertising matter an In stallment of the story may be deferr ed. The next atory has been chosen for a number of characteristics, it Is cleverly written. It Is clean. It is crowded with action and the move ment is dramatic. If you enjoy that sort of reading "The Pool of Flame," by Louis Joseph Vance, will Afford you great deal of pleasure; so do not overlook the opening chapter. In the morning St. Patrick's day. take off their hats and look about for some place to put the troublesome things, pat and arrange their nat reminds one miserable sinner of the flurry before the curtain goes up keep mine on! They lack Humor. Another Hon in the path of the re cently arrived is the extraordinary lack of humor that. It aeems to me, la a part ot the westerner's make-up. The people out-English the English in their density, their utter Inability to recognize the most gently, in grattatlng little Joke. There isn't any Joker In their pack, and life Is such a dull game. There are plenty of western novels with fun In them; at the moment I recall the "Virginian' the title tells the hero's southern birthplace. And, In passing, I have met the man who planned and took part In "mixing those babies up" In Owen Wister'a novel and he was a southerner! I recall another excel lent California novel, "The Winning of Barbara Worth." The "San Felipe" of the story Is San Diego, the "King's Basin," Imperial valley. There is a man in the tale with a sense of hu morhe's from Texas. Evidently these novelists draw from life. It has occurred to me that the reason Cnll fornians do from one to six moving picture shows a night and flock to musical comedies in droves. Is be cause they do not know how to amuse themselves with "Jest and youthful Jollity." Conversation Is such a dead level of monotony. The writer has been asked, occasionally, to speak on he "Mountaineers of the South," to certain missionary societies, begin ning with her own. I had been at tending the missionary meetings, and felt that there must be some hidden cause for sorrow. I determined to make those women laugh. I didn't quite do it but they smiled; the na tive wit of Mrs. Berry White, Rachel Stewart and other real human beings n the mountain coves near Asheville on the unaccustomed smile, no umorlsm8 of the speaker's. Of course there are many charming poo- e here from the Kuuth Kentucky seems to lead the far east nnd mid- e west, hut so far they haven't leavened the heavy lump of serious ness, evidently a western coast char acteristic. Mild and linlmy. People in the arctic city of Ashe- llle who struggled with bursting wa- pipes through January nnd Feb- . When our advlca la naked and ex amination riven, wa give It honestly, Therefore when there ara aymptoma of eight breaking down, you had bet ter consult ua at once, we'll exam ine your eye and lit yon with proper glass ea In a thoroughly adentlfio man ner. Our reputation assure yon of best result attainable. CHAS. H. H0NESS Optometrist and Optician Our Ce-Rlto Toric Leneee are the best. 54 Patton Ave. Opp. Postofflre, FOR THE HANDS Use Crab Apple Cream. An elegant lotion for healing chapped skin and keeping It soft and smooth. Will not soil the daintiest fabric. Price 15c per bottle. GRANT'S PHARMACY Dm re and Beeda. A Letter from California. UNDER this r'gn there could be. diverting than this evening nothing more this, which omes from alar to the staff and readers of The Gazette-.N'ews: From the golden state to the Land of the Sky, greetings! ly out In California there is do frost nor snow, nil the "booster" not the blizzards are the only things that blow; The sun shines every morning and shines some more at noon. nd only stops a-shining to accommo date the moon; The air is soft but sparkling like a southern maiden's glance, And seta your spirits soaring and makes your pulses dance; The grand old ocean's booming and O, of course it's great, But my heart somehow keeps turn ing to the Old North State! The other nine hundred and nlncty- ine verses of the above I find ex press exactly the same sentiments ith a different arrangement ot ords. Therefore they are withheld. is true California la great for the comfort of the body but North Car olina is greater to live in for the con solation and uplift of the spirit. This such a strange land. To the small pointa of difference one soon gets ac- ustomed. To have all one's money n silver and gold Is strange at Drat. But soon the very Infrequent paper dollar or five dollar bill, looks like a lost sheep, scared and lonely, and not as if it could really "pay the price." Five and ten dollar gold pieces weight down one's purse, but the strong arm the rule in California; only one ust have a care not to pass five dol lar gold pieces for nickels, ten dollar pieces for quarters, or "two bits as they always say here. To the new comer, who goes calling, it fa a .novel- Although Amundsen has, been a famous man ever alnce he discovered the Northwest Pannage, his name Is still . pronounced wrong as often as right, the Springfield Republican ob serves. .'The correct pronunciation Is with a strong stress on the first syl lable, which la made rather long 'Ah!-moond-aen." The 'DO" Is not quite ao close and positive as In moon. nnd the "e" la aomewhat alighted The last two syllables, being cluttered up with consonants, take each about ty to have her friends' doors openeu by yellow-faced Japs or Chinamen nd to the tourist It is strange to aee the atreet gangs made up of typical sombreroed and legglnged Mexicans. For a. time the liquid Spanish speech that one hears every day, mingling with the high pitched western dialect thut fairly shivers with slang phrases, rouses interest, but soon that, too, an old story, and exiled ABhe- llleians begin to get homesick. There a remedy: to write to all ones friends at once, a letter to The Gazette-News, and then wait for Indl- lihial replies! But the larger differences to which it Is almost Impossible to accustom oneself, are tn the very atmosphere one breathes. The most Insistent Is the sensation of unrest. Society, re ligion, ethics, music, literature and tho drama In California seem, from the writer's viewpoint, as tumultu ously restless as the great ocean, and that is not,, from my bIx montns ex nerlence. na Pacific aa the Atlantic, To an old fashioned body the count less lams vegetarianism, socialism militant suffrugetteism, theosophy, half dozen new religious secta all eager to take one by the hand give a queer feeling of d'.tqulet; aa If one were picking oneself up, out of tne debris of 'a sociological earthquake. Then If one gets on the inside of any thing ita component parta appear to be changing, oo. I have met rres. hvteriana who are "going Into Cathol Iclsm," Methodists who are "going Into aclence," and many, many for mer orthodox folda who are ataylng out of all established religions and believe they are building better, new religions of their own in tenta upon the aonds or In luxurloua touring cars In the church, attended by your cor respondent, the women get up and talk in prayer meeting, and In a cordance with that constant spirit of change within the last few months an emphatic little footnote has been added to the Sunday bulletin that reada, "Ladles will please remov their hats, as an act of Christian courtesy, before the sermon," Th congregation Is made up mostly of the hatpin sex, and the stir all over the the same time as the long "ah," ao thut the rythm la much like that "fjchurch, when the minister, "j;umon"u, or Ically spoken, In his excellent" emphat-, gown, steps to tha pulpit after the It Is a resonant, spirit-'opening ceremonies, and aaveral hu ed name, j m;, uy worthy of a modern vlk- money to be made here In real estate if one has a little capital to begin with, but of unskilled laborers there are too many, over 600 unemployed In the city, many lured thither, doubt less, by the halcyon climate and the reports of projected harbor Improve. ment and work at the exposition grounds. It has been Interesting to read In The Gazette-News ot the reully good things Asheville has been having at the Auditorium quite metropolitan; also, the accounts of the Civic Better ment league are eagerly read. Progress, la marching with you; from a comparative viewpoint, I have more faith in the future of the greater south than of the great southwest! MARY C. ROBINSON. San Diego, Cal. How Tyrns Cobb Visits Murphy. ruary and burned coal enough to like a payment on n home lot in Nni Diego, may be interested to now thut our winter has been mild nd balmy; the old residents Bav it has been one of unprecedented cold! The greater pnrt of the time a small re is comfortable in the early morn ings and evenings; we have burned (4 worth of wood in a small heater the living room, our only lire; the windows huve never been closed, night or day, in the sleeping rooms. We have had six cloudy days during the last six months and about as many raius. The experienced any it occasionally rains at night with such gentle courtesy that even light sleep ers are not aroused. Every one Is lnmoring for rain, and hoping we shall soon have what the old black preacher called "a gully washer and trash mover." A little more ahout the climate; It Is not In the least enervating and there is no malaria. Everyone seems toundingly healthy; the children nd women are especially stalwart nd rosy. The equable temperature seems Ideal for the weaker sex, but pparently lacks the strenuousness to develop the best physical condition in hat Walter Pritchard Eaton in the last "Everybody's" called, "the brute male." So far ambition and energy are not Aead in the Asheville colony, but older residents declare they (lnd it almost impossible to work. They re greatly Inclined, for the most part, to take housekeeping, culture and so ciety with a languid indifference, 1 speak of the women; .the men seem to have an open eye for business, and there is evidently plenty doing. 1 re- ently had an Interesting conversa tion with ont of San Diego's leading pnysiciana; people sometimes need a doctor and do die here, of old age This doctor has a theory that he Bays has never been exploited. It la his purpose to demonstrate and develop his idea and write a thesis upon the subject to win some more Iettera to rite after his M. D. from a college in the' middle west. He believe the vast kelp beda that lie off our Imme-1 dlate coast exude or disseminate bro mide and Iodine, properties obtained from kelp. This, he thlnka, makes the very air we are privileged to breathe, both sedative and nutritive. Everybody sleeps here even the most confirmed Insomniacs who come with little hope, of wooing favor from Mor pheus kelp bromide! Then almost everyone increases rapidly In weight. The really fat men and women In Asheville could be counted on one's fingers the thin ones In San, Diego. But what Is the great advantage? Nine houyi slumber here, while It may add to one's avordupola, does not give one aa much mental and physical snap and agility as five In your city. I hope I have not given away, pre- muturely the great physician's kelp-bromlde-todine theory; If there is any thing in it. It certainly should be used to advertiae San Diego aa a sanitarium for nervous patients and those that Kipling writes of "Who go back with Policeman Day, Back from the city of Sleep," We have, all winter, enjoyed an abundnnce of fresh vegetables and the delicious California frulta, brought to our doora by our Chinaman, How Lo. That la hia name, not the price, though all the thinga he carries the results of scientific Irrigation are much cheaper than tn Ashevllle. In contrast to our market gardener, the laundryman la Blng HI and that la name and price, both. The products of the dairy and the chicken ranch also sing high: eggs, buttar, milk and chicken, fried and frlcassed, are for the multi-millionaires, tn their lux urioua auburban homes at Coronado and Point Lome Lyman Gage, John Vance' Cheney and their associates. Mr. Laasiter and family of Aahe vllle. Who arrived in Kan Diego a few weeka ago, have gone back to Los Angeles, being utterly unable to find a roof to cover their heads, other than the hotels. That tells the tale of San Diego aa a tourist city. There will be plenty of , apartments and bungalow In th spring and summer when the easterners turn backwards In their flight This xltuation ia in spite of an amazing amount of hulld ing going on constantly. There I Ty Cobb, the famous center fielder of the Detroit, Mich., baseball teum, was here Monday on his way to visit his uncle, Taylor Cobb, at Ivy Log, Oa. Ty Cobb la perhaps better known than any young man in the United States. Years ago, when but h kid, he played short for Murphy In several games and was a wonder even then. Murphy Scout. NOTICE OF SALE. By virtue of the power and author ity conferred upon the undersigned. Allen T. Morrison, by a certain deed in -trust executed on the 4th day of September, 1911, and recorded In the Register's office of r.uneomhhe coun ty, N. C. in Deed in Trust book No. , at page 221, to which reference is hereby had, default having been made In the payment of the debt secured by said deed In trust, and request having been made by the owner and holder of snld debt that the undersigned do execute the powers of sale contained In said deed of trust, I .Allen T. Mor rison, trustee, will, on Tuesday, the tli day of April, 1012, at twelve o'clock M., In front of the Court House door In the City of Ashevllle, liuncombe , County, North Carolina, offer for sale at public auction, for cash, to the highest bidder, the fol lowing described piece and parcel of land, situate, lying being in Buncombe Count, North farnllna. Black Moun tain township, adjoining the land of THE MEN ARE LOOKING "With favor on tho new Pedestrian Shoe, 'Bannis ter made, because it shows at in glance the honest quality and comfort feat ures of its makeup. Tho broad low English heel, graceful lines give it the combination of comfort and style that men desire. $5.50. BrownJfliller Shoe Co. Leaders in Fine Footwear 47 Patton Amu PhoM tit. MMMMMMMWMmmmrTHti BATTERY IJAIU BAl- ASHEV1XLE, N, C. . J. P. SAWYER, Pres. E. SLTJDER, Ymk - ' ' . ustij, Capital . . Vi. . ; j ... . . . . . .$100,OC8 ' Surplui and Proflti ... .... .'ioqq TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING nttsrNEsa Special attention given to collection .Four per cent Int. on time deposit Mt Ml Sow Sweet Pea Seed Now TJreers Choicest Named Varieties, mixed 5 cents per or., 1-4 lb. for 25 cents. . . Brownhurst Greenhouses or 48 Patton Ave. George Fortune and others, and bounded as follows: UEG1NMNO on a Spanish oak on Whiteside's line near the enst side of the Mill Cove branch nnd running south 178 poles to a chestnut near the top of the mountain at a cliff of rocks: thence east 90 poles to a hickory on a little rise near a flat rock; thence north 178 poles to a stake on White side's line on a ridge: thence west 90 poles to the BEGINNING, containing 100 acres more or less, said land be ing known as the Crips tract: except ing two acres thereof heretofore con veyed by Thomas Patlllo to Mary Lytle by deed of date March 20, 1895. ALLEN T. MORRISON, Trustee. Phone 87 BROWN h Ann war f. co. : ' II 25 North Main St. drpl wnmfn search for the wicked llttlA hfitnfna iha KM. thamaalva. la. the Uipublkan. Inaamuch feathery brakes and flowery meads, JhSa k4 ai tw nXPnCTOHANT Cwrjt csys::y a.n: cclc Our now goods are arriving daily. ' Vo 'invite 'inspec tion of quality and prices. We have just received a shipment of New Perfection Blue Flame Oil Cooking Stoves. We can furnish this stove with the steel ovens and glass doors. Come in and let us explain the ninny excellent features these goods hnve. Brown Hardware Co. Phone 87 25 North Main St. MMIMIMM m4HW Call at our store and see the $200.00 SHETLAND PONY "Which will be given away June 10th, to some boy or giri under 16 years of age. ' M. HYAMS FRESH MEATS Phone 49-343. GROCERIES . MaJn A Merrimon Av. We Buy Anything AND Sell Everything S. STERNBERG & COMPANY Depot Street. .Phone 333 Japanese and China Matting Rugs New shipment just in. Very attractive prices. $30.00 Brass Bed Free. Aslt for tickets. DONALD & DONALD 14 S. Main St. Phone 441. FOR SALE One of the nicest Hotels in this country. Small, on a nice plot of ground. Price $30,000. S. D. HALL Phone 91. 32 Patton Ave. We Have Nothing BUT" Satisfactory Laundry Work to Offer You. Phone 70 "A trial is all we ask." Swannanoa Laundry We Treat Yonr Laundry -While. Cadillacs GUARANTEED FOH Lift . We have also Borne m. celled bargains In second bu cars. Western Carolina Auto. Walnnt ana Lcilngtoa, Special Values in Go-Carts 1 Nice assortment J. L. SMATHERS AND SON 15-17 North Main St. E9HHHSSSSEBBBSSHIHBSEE I NO FIT NO PAT I HARRY S. BURROWS I f Tailoring I Office 1 and 1 I OVER CITIZENS BANK Farms for Sale Two fineat farma in North Carolina. One 1600 acres, 600 acrea in cultiva tion, fine dwelling houaa and tenant houses, barns, blacksmith ahopa. Ev erything that goea with good farm, $26 per acre. Another farm 620 aero houaea, barn and 400 acrea of thli river bottom 2 1-2 miles railroad sta tion, one hour'a ride Asheville $40.01 per acre, gee me for further panic ulara. 4 , Jno. M. Campbell Rooma 212 and 214 Legal Bulldlnr. Phone m. , i Aahevllle, N. a phone 1900 Phons 1900 I Colored Wash fabrics in Wide profusion Our showing this Spring of colored Wfish goods is truly wonderful. Ve li'nva' pnri0nvn1v.1t in hv'mtv irtrrpthpr fill -- " v ws-v v j Mai - the nower effects in these materials and how well we have done so will be obvious to you when you call. A few of the materials are mentioned below. Solid, striped and figured voiles, just in, 27 inches wide, for 19c yard. . . 1 ' : ,V White Voile, with narrow dark striped border, 40 inches wide, for 35c yard. Bordered Lawns, 40 inches wide, for 25o yard. Linen Suitings, all colors, 28 to 48 inches wide, for S-'ic to 90c yard. Colored Cotton Foulard, 28 inches wide, for 35c ynrd. Colored Voiles, 28 inches wide, for 25c yard. Colored Embroidered Batiste, 29 inches wide, for 50c yard. - Colored Flaxon, 32 inches wide, for 19c yard. Colored Tissues, 23 inches wide, for 25c and 29c yiird. Ilolly Batiste, 28 inches wide, for 12 l-2c yard. Vi:!::rs )aif at ths LV'&zrtj Opcntj -