v , ' nrroirrr Y A VWWPV. WTBWft ' " IOnday, Jnn PAGE TWO 'Phone 456 ATTENTION-VISITORS AND TOURISTS Est 1887 ....... 1 ... . - ., . . j j'inrjtorujfJur ji I, iwia ' LUMiwwm j"',-niw"riin-iTTTnrTnr i i m : n ... r H The long' felt want and need of Asheville has been realized. During all of these years you have been 1 plainWof not finding playthings for your childrea In my store I am now prepared to supply you i with .ff;J..:hii Vol Spirting Goods, Toys, Fancy Goods, Novelties, Souvenirs, Japanese Goods and Japanese Novelties. All kinds of Imported an Domestic Leather Goods, Lihmese Novelties, orassware, auverware, rrencn ivory iuvemcauu nuvciuco ui vu. v ?' ft) I; r fa 1 1 II TirwHWI KIT SYt VTTT TtTTT T tITWn UW itUi I1AS1 XliUUA IUU W IXilJ X . ; "Electric Vnd Steam Engines and Toys, Fancy Goods, Novel -liea, Sovenirs, Japanese Ware, Desk Lamps and Electroliers in "Brass or "Wickervrare, Imported and Domestic Leather Goods, Cajna Ware, Novelties in Brass and Silverware, very large line f French Ivory goods and novelties. DOLL DEPARTMENT The largest Lie of domestio and imported dolls eve .the city. Dolls tht walk; talk, cry, jump inf act they dceVery-, ttung but think. They range in price- from (fl 1 Cf AA 5c to ....... .WLO'VU SPORTING GOODS DEPARTMENT Baseball Supplies, Fishing Tackle, Golf Supplies, Gym Supplies, Bathing Suits. ' " ON SECOND FLOOR Children's Vehicles, Auto Carriages, Tricycles, Veloci pedes, Go-Carts, Wagons, Children's Furniture, Doll Houses, Trunks, Suit Cases, Ppol Tables, Pianos Pictures and Pic ture Frames, Croquet Sets, Hammocks, Porch Swings, Tents Japanese Goods and Vases, Lamps, Baskets, Cassaroles, Bak ing Dishes, Smoking Sets, Jardineres with pedestals. THOUSANDS OF OTHER ARTICLES Convince yourself. Come in and loojc over my stock. Largest store and stock in entire Bouth enough said. Two floors. Plenty sales clerks, courteous treatment. All goods guaranteed. SPECIAL ATTENTION gkrm to Parcel Post orders. Postage prepaid on orders of 25c. or over. BLOMBERG The Toy Man ONE PRICE TO ALL ALL . GOODS PROMPTLY DELIVERED On the Avenue FREE INFORMATION I If you wish to inquire any. thing about the city or sur rounding country, will be glad to have you call in. RECRUITING OFFICE A GOOD W Within Year 135 Men Have , Enlisted Here For Service In the U. S. Army. , The business of the local United States recruiting office, In charge of 6ergeant E. W. Bonney, has exper ienced of the best years since the of fice was established here In 1901, ac cording to the reports of the officer In charge. The fiscal year of the Fed eral government will end next Tues day, June SO, and H is expected that the total number of applicants that tvlll have been accepted by that time will push the present year to the top ,wf the list. Already for . this year, which Is from July, 1913 to July 1, 1H14, 135 men have been accepted through the local office. The highest record made by the local office was In when 17 men were accepted. ,The next highest year was 1912, when 137 men were sent from this office. This puts the number of the present year third In the list, but as there Is still left several days, it Is thought that the present year will either go to the top or rank as second ' all the years since the office has been estab lished. Eight were sent from the local of fice yesterday to Columbus (Ohio) .Barracks, where they will be given the final examinations and put through the preliminary drills, If accepted, be fore being sent to the different branches of the service for which they have enlisted. Of the eight men leav ing her tomorrow, they go In al most as many different branches of the service, although all are for some branch of army, as the local office does not accept applicants for the navy. During the month of June, 14 men hare been accepted by the local office and sent to Columbus, where all wpre to pass the final examinations. Already the number accepted during th present month Is far In excess of the average month or the average June. Two men, one a co."poral and one a private, are kept at the local station, besides the recruiting sergeant, to help in the work. These' men make regular trips throughout western North Carolina and distribute litera ture for the purpose of getting men into the different branches of the army. T Henry Brown and Eugene Pen land Sent to County Farm Today's Record. 1 Henry Brown and Eugene Fsnland, colored boys, drew thft long end of sen tences pased out In Police court Sat urday, the former gttlng a total "pt one year and the latt r six months, to be served at the county farm. The boys were arrested on charges of steal ing a large number of sacks from the Asheville Mica company and the Brown boy for stealing a wrench from the Asheville Supply & Foundry com pany. Both of these boys have long police records and have been arrested and convicted on numerous occasions on charges of larceny. , Henry Egerton, colored, was given 30 days on the roads on charges of retailing to Ernest Winchester. Aleck Sauerwhlte, colored, was found not guilty of retailing to Henry Edgerton, colored, and two other re tailing cases against him were con tinued. The cases against Mollis Owenby and Lizzie Hcnson, charged with re tailing to Jim Calloway, were continu ed until September 17. Theodore Brown was taxed with the costs on charges of speeding and In a case charging him with dangerous an'l reckless driving, prayer for Judgment was continued. Prayer for Judgment was continued until July 28 In the rases against Nine. Hears and Mrs. Ervin Galloway, charged with disorderly conduct. John Pugan was taxed with 12 of the costs on charges of violating a city sanitary ordinance. Max Lynch, colored, was taxed with one-balf the costs on charges of violat ing an automobile law. John Elliott and Roy Smith were each taxed with one-half the costs on charges of violating automobile laws. One "drunk" drew a fine of J5 and the costs. MPQRTANT MEETING OF THE BOARD DP TRADE All Members Will Meet Mon day Night to Make List for Electing Directors. There win be an all-members meeting of the Asheville board of trade tonight at 8 o' clock for. the purpose of preparing a list from which directors for the coming year will be elected. The meeting will be an Important " one and all members are urged to be present. The call for the meeting has been Issued by President F . M . Weaver and Secre tary N. Buckner. It follows: "An all-members meeting of the board of trade will be hel , next Mon day evening at 8 p. m., In the board of trade rooms. Temple court, for the purpose of selecting candidates for directors of the organization for the next fiscal year. "The board of trade is your or ganization, and Its every effort Is di rected toward the uplift and benefit of Asheville and community. Tou, as a member, and resident of the com munity, are enjoying the successful results of these efforts and should reciprocate by tsklng an active part In the work. Please write or phone the secretary If you will be present" OF UNNERVED HE INSISTS Counsel For Storstad's Owners Says Steering Gear of the Empress Was Broken. COMMENT IS REPORT Washington Officials Stirred By Alleged Talk of Minis ter to Greece. Fats Make the Hottest Fire And as the digestion of foot generates body beat, so the more greasy, hoary food yosi eat, the hotter yoa are. One can feel several degrees cooler and more comfortable in summer by se Wring proper food. - rape-Nuts U made of carefully selected wheat and bartfy and contains all their smtrMre ralaea, Incrading the mineral phoih4e, (grown Isj the grain), that are espertally nerrwry for rebuilding the Us saw rolls of body and brain. Grpe.NaM Is theroagnly baited (It to 14 boars) whkh breaks down the starch cells. Tlierefore M la easily and quickly di tested gisMeaUy In a boat ens bear. ' Quebec, Que., June It. Contentions that the story, submitted to the Em press of Ireland wreck commission by Captain Kendall and his officers was false and that the present head ing of the sunken vessel proves the collier's owners opinion of how the accident took place and Captain Ken dall, unnerved by the appearance of the collier after his stearing gear had broken down, had lost his head, form, ed the main part of the statement made Saturday by C. S. Halght summing up for the collier's owners. He attempted to show that the collis ion which, was caused solely by : the Empress being stopped directly in the path of the Storstad, "If the stearing gear of the Empress broke down," said Mr. Halght, "there was explanation of one of the most surprising movements at sea. when Captain Kendal, when he met the fog. put his engines full Bpeed astern from full speed ahead. "I submit," he said, "that there Is an explanation to be found for this surprising order, if it Is true that something had gone Wrong with his ship's stearing gear. There must he some emergency to make him put ills engines full speed astern when the vessels were from two to mour miles apart and on a safe and clearing course." LAKE JUANITA MUSIC Washington, June 29. Adminlsta- tion officials, particularly those In the state department have been Interest ed, mildly amazed and in some doubt over reports from abroad that George Fred Williams of Boston, minister to Greece, had officially condemned In emphatic terms the present govern ment of Albania.' No such official report has reached the department. Inasmuch as some time ago the de partment investigated a published re port that Mr. Williams had offered his services on behalf of . the United States as a mediator in the Albania crisis, and discovered It was unfound ed, they were Inclined to await the result of an Inquiry on the latest story. Some time ago Mr. Williams sought permission from the state department to make a personal visit to Albania to learn first hand the conditions In that distracted country. Bo far he has not reported the results of his Inquiry. INT TO SELL BATTLESHIPS ..G nsinmr rare te feet rout and t make Grsne-.Nau part of the detlrtone pari ) "There's a Reason" , boI1 ly Grocers everywhere The following musical program was given at take Juanita yesterday afternoon from 3:20 to 6:30 o'clock: PART I. 1. March," "Kaiser Frederick". . . . Frledmann 3. Overture, "Orpheus" Offenbach . Selection, "High Jinks" Friml 4. Intermeuo, "Sparklets". .. .Tobanl 5. Songs (a) "Grey Days" Johnson (b) "O Dry Thou Tears" ' e) "The Rosary" ..Nerin e. Concert waits, "Tre Jolle" ...Waldtenfel PART II. 7. Selection, "Faust" Gounod I. "Berceuse" from Joselyn. I. Spanish serenade, "La Poloma" ..... ... ,.. ... Teadler 19. Medley, "Bunny Bouth?.. . .Lamps 1 1. Valse Lento, "Charms d'Amonr" : Kendall II. March. "National Emblem".... i Bagley . ; . NEGRO JAMES CONLEY DENIED NEW TRIAL Senate Adopts Completed Con- ference Report on Naval Appropriation Bill. Atlanta, June It. James .Con ley, a factory sweeper sentenced to one year In prison as an accessory after the fact to the fact to the mur der of Mary Phagan for which crime Leo M. Frank now la under sentence ofldeath, has been refused a Dew trial hf Judge Ben It. Hill, of the Fulton county Superior court. Con ley's at torney did not attempt to support his motion by argument and Immediately served notice of appeal. The matter will come before the higher court at Its October term, LA SALLE STREET BANE DOCUMENTS MISSIING Chicago, June 19. Disappearance from the office of John J. Brady, state bank examiner Jn chief, of documents relating to the failure of the La Balls street trust and saving banks, was re ported Saturday. The documents were made out by inspector Rire, who later became secretary of the bank and president of the Broadway street bank, another of the Lo rimer banks. What this will lead to has not Deen stated thus far. ' Griffith and schafer have been suspended Philadelphia, June 27. Manager Griffith and Germany Schaefer, of the Washington American league Satur day were notified by President Johnson that they had been indefinitely sus pended for their part In the affair at Shlbe park yesterday which resulted In the umpire forfeiting tka rust a Philadelphia. During the umm yesterday Schaefer was mm the field by one of the umptrtt, , : .:.', " ' 1,1 .,- BOMBARDED KINO AND : QUEEN WITH PAPK3 London, Juna ITe-enIhjtt evaded the police tonight nl bom barded King George and Quten Mwr with leaflets) at. the entranct to Hrtt Park. ' A bundle of the papeit ttrot the king's hat and knocked it tMmfi while the queen's parasol cughts other shower, of pamphlet. Two women were seized by the n llce and carried away, straggling lently. . , . , 1 MoGorem Named. Washington, June 37. Tht prj dent has nominated Paymaster Sunt, McGovern, to be paymaster hum and chief of the bureau of tuppfe and accounts t.,,'1, the rank ot E Admiral, .. '. . '. A Medal of Blood. Garibaldi was once presented with medal made of his owa blood. The giver was Dr. Manlnl ot Naples, who was well known as a petrtfler and pre server of the human body. Dr. Ma nlnl In offering the gift to Garibaldi said that whenever the general looked at it It would brace him up tor the last fight, and across the medal were en- grayed the words, "The Blood of Gari baldi Is Forever Red." The strange medal hi preserved by the general's descendants. M leers Renew Wsge Seals. The miners ot Pennsylvania district 2, United Mine Workers of America, have roted by a majority conserva tively estimated at not less than 13, 00O to renew for two years from April 1, 1014. the 1012 scale. Her leasts. flei'k -Does your wlfs always get the last wordr Pck-Kot alwajs. Kb talks with (fiber women Washington, June II. Authority to sell the battleships Idaho and Mis sissippi finally was conferred - on President Wilson Saturday by adop tion in the senate of completed confer ence report on the naval appropria tion bill. The report was agreed to by the house Friday. Arrangements practically have been completed for sale of the two battleships to Greece. The bill carries appropriation for three new battleships and sets aside some $140,000,009 for support of the navy. Ia the final conference an appro priation of 3100,000 for a breakwater at Key West and an Initial appropria tion for a 13,000,000 dry dork at the Norfolk yard ware stricken out. Nething Unusual. Several years ago tourist fell ever rock from a height of about 800 feet, near Europe Point, Gibraltar. lie was killed, of con me The lieutenant In charge of the guardroom, however. Inserted In bis guard report for the dy that "nothing nnnsual bad oc curred." For thta be was "carpeted" before the town mayor, who asked for an ei planation. "Well, sir," replied the young officer, a Scotsman, 'If the pulr mannle bad na" been kilt it would bare been a very eitraordlnary fact but aa the pulr body was klit-wby, sir. 1 thought It was na' extraordinary or unusual" The plea was accepted. . The Long and Short ef It, . "He msy win the race." "Yes; he's short legged, but long wlnded.'Ietro1t Free Press. I COMING ATTRACTIONS ! . MAJKSTIO THKATKK. Given Away Farmers and Fruit Growers of Western North Carolina DEPARTMENT A. FARM AND GARDEN CROPS , James H. Arthur, Director Premiums m 1st 2nd 3rd A 1. Best and most artistically arranged Agricultural exhibit bj resident of Western N. C $100 A lVz. Best and most artistically arrang-. ed collective Agricultural Exhibit by residents of any township in Banc . ombe County" ........... ..i,.;,.... $75 A 99 Best Exhibit' of Cbm by member of Boys' Corn Club ................ $10 A 100. Best Gerjfcral Agricultural exhibit by member of Boys' Corn Club . . $20 $50 $50 (25 $5 $10 Attractive prizes in 97 other classes in this department VasM The Langreei Kent GareVea in Uw Ktenlnsr. Dancing for the I'ulillo Kvery Nlaht Service la Hall Itoom Cool Krtninaa The following criticism ef Paul Ullmore a;id associate players In the "Mummy and the Humming Bird," whloh comes to the Majeatlo next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, with a matinee each day starting at I o'clock, was clipped from The Knorvllle Journal and Tribune of yesterday: The audience, which attended the opening performance Thursday night, of the "Mummy and the llummlns Bird," by Paul Ullmore and associate players, was the largest since the opening of the theatrical season at the auditorium, Chllowhee park, and it was also the moat enthusiastic and appreciative. Although the players have been very cordially received In the other plays produced here this summer, the "Mummy and the Hum ming Wrd," Mr. U II mors e old favor ite, made a most pronounced hit, end the need of applause given Mr. Ollmnre and associates was most generous. ' Mr. Ollmore played In the "Mum my and the Hamming Itird" for sev en years, and It Is said that he never appeared to better adavatage than Inst night Ceneha It Is tnet the au dience enjoyed his work and that ef the ether members of Ihe com pany, and all ef the pans were well takea. The work of Mr. Ullmore, Miss "coit and Mr. Trrhuae was partiou larly worthy of mention. . DEPARTMENT B. HORTICULTURE E. N. Atkinson, Director ' ' . Premium - 1st 2nd 3rd B 1. Best commercial exhibit of not less ill i i . a man two uarreis ana tureo boxes ap ples (standard pack $50 B 2. Best commercial exhibit of seven boxes apples, any varieties $40 B 3. Best packed box of apples. Based on grading and packing $20 B 4. Best box of apples i , . , . $15 , B 5. Best barrel of apples, , ... $20 , If premium in class B 3, 4 or 5 is award ed on exhibit, entered by boy under "18 years of age, 20$ additional will be paid. B 62. Beet and most artistically, arrang ed Horticultural Kxhibit $30 . $20 $20 $10 $10 $10 $5 $20 $10 m w flllltl "T " . Attractive prizes in C2 other clasaeg in this department i'remium lists for departments A and H are " ready. Complete catalog containing nn extensive of liberal premiums will be ready. for distribution vitn in thirty days. Don't fail .t promptly begin prrpflr tion for entering exhibits. Numerous and umiual attri tions will b provided for the FOURTH ASM1, FAIR, Octobar 13-14-13 and 16, 1914. Full infec tion with referenoo t any feature , will, b cheerful1? furnished Upon application, ; WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA FAIR Ar:0ClATl-T I