Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Oct. 28, 1914, edition 1 / Page 5
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THE ASHEVILLE GAZETTE-NEW a AGE rvra L GLEAN LIVER PUD BOILS li 111 esday, October 23, 1914. BILIOUS? SIGKEwS t Lose a Day's Work! If Constipated, Sluggish, Head achy, Take a Spoonful of "Dodson's Liver Tone." I . " ; ten to me! Take no more sick f, salivating calomel when bilious mstlpated. Don't lose a day's ! lomel is mercury or quicksilver h causes necrosis of the bones, mel, when It comes Into contact t sour bile crashes Into It, breaking p. This Is when you feel that aw nausea and cramping. If you are gish and "all knocked out," if t liver is torpid and boweta consti ;d or you have headache, dizziness. :ed tongue, if breath is . bad or nach sour just take a spoonful of mless Dodson's Liver Tene. - ere's my guarantee Go to any C store and get a 50 cent bottle of Icon's Liver Tone. Take a spoon tonight and if it doesn't straighten you right up and make you feel fine and vigorous by morning I want you to go back to the store and get your money. Dodson's Liver Tone is de. stroylng the sale of calomel because it Is real liver medicine; entirely eg- etable, therefore It can not salivate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dodson's Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work and clean your bowels of that Bour bile and const! pated waste which Is clogging your system and making you feel miser able. I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone will keep your entire family feeling fine for months. Give It to your children. It Is harm less: doesn't gripe and they like Its pleasant taste. Carriers Maintain Certain Phases of the Justice Act Are Contradictory. . C. FARMERS TO IET ill. 18-20 '' mual Meeting of State Union to Be Held in Greenville, ' N. 0. Special Rates. The annual meeting of the North rollna Farmers' union will be held s year In Greenville on November , 19 and 20, and the preparations it are being made for the enter nme'nt of the delegates who will present the various county unions ve been under way for some time, Is expected that the attendance Mill larger this year than in several ars past. The secretary of the Buncombe untv Farmers' union, a branch of 6 state union, has received from eretary Farles the following letter, nounclng the meeting: "You will please inform your dele tes to our annual state meeting, at eenvllle, N. C, December 18 to 20, it railroads of the state have grant- us a rate of three cents per mile way for the round trip. The Nor k Southern railroad has kindly con ited to run a Farmers' Union spec- from Charlotte to Greenville, leav t Charlotte on the morning of No nber 17 at 6:30 o'clock. We very ich desire that as many as can do have their tickets routed so as to In us on this train, either at Char tte or any other point most conven- nt, - "For the benefit of those who have come to Charlotte the night before, s have arranged to have a public etlng at the court house, at 8 . u lock p. m., November 16 ; also ln-t-rstlng side trips at Raleigh, both lng and returning. Ask your rail ed agent In advance about these kets, and be sure and have them uted via Charlotte over the Norfolk uthern to Greenville, N. C." A meeting of the local county union v ill probably be held some time wlth i the next few weeks, at which tlmo legates to the state meeting, will be ected. 3 MEMBERS OF CREW ON AMERICAN VESSEL ARRESTED BY BRITISH St John, N. B., Oct. 28. The Amer lean tug Security, owned by the Stand' ard Oil company, was boarded Mon day afternoon by a detail of eight men from the sixty-second regiment and four of her crew were removed. One, a neutralized ' citizen, was released. The other three, all Germans were detained. The members of the crew were ar rested on the ground that they wero subjects of a nation with which Great Britain is now at war. The tug's pa. pers showed that three of the four men had signed as subjects of Ger many. . BANK PRESIDENT MUST SERVE HIS SENTENCE J VwJF Weather , Forecast Heavy Frost. tj ' j ' J 1 y '$ Wanted furs for Winter : iMll SIX EFFORTS MADE TO DITCH PASSENGER TRAIN Social Servico Secretary. Is Scndlnj Out Great Deal of Literature Other State News. Washington, Oct. 2$. A review of the conviction of William L. Norton, president of the American National bank of Bartlesvllle, Okla., for alleg ed misapplication of .the banks' funds has been denied by the Supreme court. This was Norton's last oppor tunity through the courts to avoid serving the seven years' Imprison ment sentence imposed on him. 11 OF L, CK E Dr. James' Headache Powders Relieve at Once 10c ( a Package. Tou take a Dr. James' Headache Powder and in Just a few moments your head clears and all neuralgia and pain fades away. . It's the quickest and ' surest relief for headaches, whether dull, throbbing, splitting or nerve-racking. Send someone to the drug store and get a dime package now. Quit suffering It's so needless. Be sure you get Dr. James' Headache Powders then there will be no disappointment. (By W. T. Bost) Raleigh, Oct." 2 8. The protests and the arguments in the special com modity rates hearing before the cor portatlon commission held at Raleigh. are all in and the order Is to be made as soon as the court can make up its mind. In your correspondent's former story representing the railroads as in slsting upon strict application of the long and short haul, emphasis may not not have been laid upon the car riers' contention that the existing commodity rates cannot be maintain ed without violation of the long and short haul section and all of them In sisted that they wish to obey the law. And they want Instruction. But Colonel W, B. Rodman of the Norfolk Southern, actually asked for the abrogation of the commodity rates on the ground that they were discrim inatory. The colonel contended that granting a special rate on crushed granite from Salisbury, for instance, to Goldsboro, was a violation of the anti-discrimination phase of the Jus tice act. He opposes the whole scheme of commodity rates and ask3 to be allowed to obey the law as Rep resentative Justice wrote it. Colonel Rodman's road, however, Is known to be geographically fortunate under the provisions of the Justice act Com plaints have been coming here from all sides that the act tends to mon opoly by the Norfolk Southern In the Washington and Greenville territory and that the Coast Line can't get toe hold In that- business. The smaller roads complain bitterly that the Jus tice act Is putting them out of Intra state business. Can't Do Both. The railroads are not contending that the long and short haul provision is the essence of all worldly wisdom or Justice, no reference of course to the . Greensboro statesman, but that the law devours Itself In providing that there shall be Tio greater charge for a short haul than a long one when the haul is in the same direction and the short Is embraced in the long, then Insists upon the retention of rates that do violate that very principle. It cuts many ways, rate students And, and one of Its newest phases is tho discovery that there may be a commodity rate from Greensboro to Goldsboro which Is low and advan tageous, but tho return rate x from GoldHboro to Greensboro may' be ne tually 50 per cent higher. That's the reason so" many Individual shippers have given protest against the charg ing of the special rates. They may ship with advantage from one of their manufactories to another, but on the return of the finished material, the toll may be much greater. Kills Transfer Service. The next thing that It has done, ac- Yesterday, for the first time this fall, furs were very comfortable. As soon as the weather changes onr fnr stock begins to grow smaller, for everyone seems to want first pickof our attractive assortment. :' A few are briefly mentioned here. ' .. Red Fox Furs are priced at ........................... $20 to $35 set of muff and scarf Genuine Mole Furs are priced at . . ....... . .... ....... . . . . . ... . . ... . ...... . . ,'.$50 to $60 set of muff and scarf Black Lynx Furs are priced at .. . . . ... . . . . .... . . .$40 to $65 set of muff and scarf Genuine Mink Furs are priced at ....................... ............... ...... . .$50 to $85 set of muff and scarf Jap Mink furs are priced at ... .... .$20 to $40 set of muff and scarf tOarm lankets and Comfortables Your choosing will be' easy from our immense line of cotton, wool and down filled comfortables and cot ton, wool-nap and wool blankets. You take no chances when you purchase here, for we tell you just what ma terials are used in the making and prices are lower for like quality. Comfortables are priced at $1.75 to $20. , Blankets sell for $1.25 to $15.00. - 0eavy Cloakings and firess (foods The cloakings will be to the fore today. They have been selling well, but the little drop in temperature will double the demand. Our values are uniformly the best obtainable. Let us convince you of the truth of this statement, either thru comparison or your own good judgment. ' Cloakings in the plaids, checks and imported mix tures, 56 inches wide, for $3.50 to $4.50 yard. Dress Goods, serge, gabarfline, broadcloth, poplin, etc., priced at 50c to $5.00 yard. 1 .'WmMmSm cording to the Southern, is the anni hilation of Its scheme of local trans fer. W. H. Gatchell of Washington, superintendent of agencies for the Southern, had worked out a system that the Southern uses with Spencer as a basing point He loved his infant of two years. That town is the gathering point. From all contiguous towns freight had been shipped to Spencer without charge, collected in trains and routed in less than carload lots to stations along all the roads. Thus, freight went rapidly to its destination and re lieved the rods of much transferring. The new law makes trouble here, the Southern says, because it" conflicts again with the long and short haul clause. Instead of gathering up the baskets at Lexington, China Grove, Gold Hill, Cleveland, and a hundred other places, local freights must do this business and the delays are great er. Mr. Gatchell mourns the passing of the baby. What the commission now has to do is to work out a system that will carry out the real wishes of Mr. Jus tice and save his act from the reputed contradictions and self devourments. Many who were at the hearings de clare that what the railroads ought to do one time Is to find an official wil ling to do the big thing obey the spirit of the law, and not pettifog or eavesdrop for lapses In syntax. Attempts to Wreck. Six efforts to ditch the Norfolk Southern's Raleigh-bound passenger trains Monday night tailed, according to passengers coming from Wilson Monday. Four crossties were put on the track and the engine refused to stumbla over them. These were laid in dis tances of less than a mile of each other. Further on the road to Ral eigh two more ties were found lying across the rails. The clumsy wrecker seems to have had spite against only one train. Whether he was after any special thing Is not known as tho train was the usual incoming 7 o'clock passenger. The secretary of the North Caro lina conference for social service, W. C. Crosby, who Is getting out the pub licity matter for the community ser vice week in December, Is mailing great quantities of literature and everything Is working well for the week which Governor Craig has set ; apart in December. Dr. Edward K. Graham, president of the university, was here Monday and called upon the committee which Is carrying out his own Idea, Doctor Graham being the father of the scheme. A tentative program has been printed In this paper. YESTERDAY 'anton Man, Injured at Pulp Mill, Succumbed After Des perate Fiht for Life. After" making a brav fight against eavy Odd, W. 8. Waldrop, who was rought here last Monday afternoon nd taken to tho Meriwether hospital uffering from Injurleo received while orklng at tho Champion Flbro com ny'i plant at Canton, died yesterday rternoon at tho hospital. Tho body taken to Canton lto yesterday, hero tho funeral and Interment will .k nlar today. According to reporU of tho Injuries ecelved by tho deceased, no was orklng in tho plant when hlo cloth nt caught In a revolving shaft and ie waa thrown with a great deal of orco to tho floor of tho room, sustain n tha Inlurlea that caused hi death. I waa 21 years of age, a native of rfedlson county and a member of th Csnton lodgo. W. O. W. A wlfo, on child and sister survive him. MRS. J. S. M'ELROY HAS STROKE OF PARALYSIS Mra J. 8. McElroy,.wlfo of Colonel McElroy of Ivy, waa suddenly stricken with paralysis yesterday morning, and her condition Is very aerloua Her i.hyslelM thinks, however, that with . rf ul attention she will recover, Mrs. McElroy la about 70 years of age nd has been In 111 health for several , ears. JO SPECIAL SESSION OF CONGRESS INTENDED Wanhlngton, Oct. tl. President Vilsnn has let It be known officially hat h has no Intention of railing a iiorhil sraalnn of congress after eleo nn, There m some talk In eon Juat before adjournment thai an tra prMton might Ink Up Irglsla n to relievo cotton planter Leave It to Mutt to Put 9 Em Over 0$ By "Bud" Fisher fl-A 3 THMU.TY V TZUS ( BV TNQ UiAx"" f B,LI- WIVt5 ?, j 1 ( HTS CoT ECO FAC fill- . r Jil ... YfirilJl f i ... Bl. r 1 -1 u - -r v e i ii t i n i - -rr i 11 .
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1914, edition 1
5
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