Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Feb. 16, 1916, edition 1 / Page 7
Part of The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
j Wednesday, Fehrnary 16, 1918. THE ASHEVILLE GAZETTE-NEWS PAGE SEVEN GIRLS! ACT NOW! Hi CM 1CJ MEANS T HUFF 25-cent "Danderine" will save your hair and double its beauty. Try this! Your hair gets soft, wavy, abundant and glossy at once. Save your hair! Beautify It! It is only a matter or using a little Dander ine occasionally to have a head of heavy, beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, wavy and free from dandruff. It la easy and Inexpensive to have pretty, charming hair and lots or It. Just get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's Dan- j.-ia nnii nil driiff stores recom mend It apply a little , as directed and within ten minutes tnere -wjii oe nnnumnM nf A.hunda.nce: fresh- Bii art - ness, fluffiness and an Incomparable gloss and lustre, and try as you will you can not find a trace of dandruff or falling hair; but your real surprise will be after about two weeks' use, when you will see new hair fine and downy at first yes-but really new , onmitlncr nut all r over Your Iltt" "1" ,ecaip Danderine is, we believe, the only sure tmir rivww, uuohwjw ui dandruff and cure for Itchy scalp and It never falls to stop falling hair at If you want to prove how pretty and soft your hair really Is, moisten . Mnth with a. little Danderine and carefully draw It through your hail Inking one small strand at a time, cnn. hnlr will h soft, trloesv and beautiful In Just a few moments a delightful surprise awaits everyone who tries this. - . I17A Like a Gas Jet '-pO light the? Rayo 1 lamp you don't have to remove the shade or the chimney. Just lift the gallery and: touch a match. It is just as easy to light as a gas burner and it re quires little effort to keep it clean. Lamps are the modern lamps for the farm. Simple in design yet an orna ment to any room in the house. Use Aladdin Security Oil or Diamond White Oil to obtain best results in Oil Stoves, Lamps and Heaters. Here are some other specialties for the home that every housewife . needs. r . . Standard Household Lubricant Parowax Matchless Liquid Clost , ' Ask for them by name. If your dealer does not have them, write to our nearest station. ' STANDARD CIL CC!PAKT Baltimore N.rf.lk. W. V. Cfc.rl. W, V. USTWCKLAMX. The Mornlnir Honrs Teu think "an hour's an honr"t Well, you set another guess. Some hold a great deal more of good, him hold a great deal less. The hours when the day Is old, and resttng-ume draws nigh. Are feeble, to tf ring hours and they creep instead 01 ny. The noontime hour Is lagging tome, and goes on weary feet The morning hours are the ones that Blmply can't be beat! The morning when yonTe full of pep, the whole big day ahead! The terrors of the night are gone. aiscouragements are ned. It's youth again and truth again ' come back with hopo renewed. With vestes wisdom standing by to check each impulse crude. The early, pearly hours are the ones that can't be beat The hurly-burly hours when the day is young and sweet! Flnnlgin FUosofy Ct Isn't th' hookwurrm that th airly burrd ketches. Star Sausage HOME MADE HOME CONSUMED HOME APPBECIATED Made From Buncombe-raised, Buncombe-fed hogs. STAR MARKET Phone 1917 O Very WeU "Why, I thought you told me your car was a self-starter!" "It is. Didn't you Just see mo start it myseltr fert mfWI t lilMS) .4(1 ll V-X Mm vlth- ,l tnfJenmiWWS. Hi J h) mil Jrntu. Evil Evil is what the love of money is the root of. The root Is the lowest part, of course. . There is less unanimity of opinion as to what is the height of evil. If everything else thrived as wen under opposition as evil does, this would be a far different world. Evil is also what men do that lives after them, if Bill Shakespeare is to be depended on. Somebody a long time ago labelled a lot of things "evil" and we have stuck to the labels pretty faithfully. But most of the things they marked "evil" should have been placarded "foolishness." People who exercise all the in telligence they have do nothing that is really evil. . And they have a fine time, with no big heads or next mornings or other popular brands of hang-over. Most of the time when we ask, "Is it right?" we could get the answer more suddenly if we said: "Is it intelllgentr Many things pnee labelled evil are not so. We were brought up to believe that card-playing is evil, intrinsically. Also dancing gee, whiz! Dancing was the worst thing there was! Murder was a Sunday-school eier else compared with it If one plays cards when one should be and could - be doing something helpful and necessary, it is wrong. So would corn-hoeing or onion- weeding be, it you were neglecting something more important for it. Ditto dancing. Although we do believe It wrong for anybody to do it as badly as we do. A dancing teacher told ns so, once. This isn't all we know about evil. But it's all we're going to tell here. I :MNi.vMrt'?a ::. W"7 J :!- J . Buy Shoes Where They Have the Better Kind at Popular Prices. BARGAIN ANNEX AND i i if H II I ItiME IM SSJ-M 6 lJ5l MAMMOTH FURNITURE STORE J. Tj. SMATHERS & SONS. Phone 220 15 and 17 Broadway Vs. Lis K Lj LJ iJk hJL jjjlj v g J. 1 KEEP THE BALL A-ROLLING Community Enterprise is like a snowball. When all push together the work is easy for each. Today is the day of the HOME town. "Back to the Home Town" is the slogan of the nation. The BIG CITY is a self-confessed failure. It has failed to provide for its own. It has shipwrecked humanity. But there are no breakers ahead of US. In OUR community ALL interests can unite. ALL WE have to do it TO keep the ball in motion. It grows by itself if we only Btart it. Let's ALL take a hand. Nellie Is No Bos;, Or She'd Be Dead Alter swallowing a largo dose or b"Uug exterminator last Saturday Horning, Mrs. Nellie Walker, wife of Joseph F. Walker, residing Ave miles southwest of Lone Tree, discovered her mistake and sent for a doctor. I She was hurried to the University hospital at Iowa City, where she is said to be recovering. Lone Tree, la., Reporter. Bill and Aleck Reaited, B'gosh William McCuIlough and wife at tended church at Cone, Sunday. They went home to dinner with his brother Mx and wife, and spent the rcma'.ndtr of the day. Catnip Ridge Items, !n Tree Reporter. Couldn't Stand Kvcrythlng A man had Just walked under hdder. A clrl rptlt the salt and threw none f It over bar left shoulder. A boy had Inst kicked a black cat hat crossed the rond. Providence pulled down its veil. "My face wont stand any mors fly ing into," it said. . Th Shock "I understand your husband was brought homo on a stretcher lost evonlng." "Yes, but he's all rieht to-day again. Re gave up his seat on the street-car to a lady yestorday, and the lady thanked him. He has a .weak heart anyway ." TWikung Lady AcrossTheWay FJIBER OF DECREASES IS PAHIS ca Various Industries Recover From Shock Felt at Out set of the War. lords' The young lady across the way says It's so much mors eonvnlat to py everything by ehwk tht her fthr ds all bis nionny In ths hn and never rrrls more than Collar, sr two la his ctarr . Broadway Pharmacy Co. ( 12 Broadway Prescriptions Carefully Filled and Promptly Delivered . Toilet Articles :: Fine Candy Why pay for Experience when it is all around you. SHEVILLE UTOMOBILE CCESSORY COMPANY We'll Save You Money 35 E. College St: Safety First in . Electrical Installations, In sures Peace of Mind. Lighten life's labor for the loved one with a So-Ez Sew ing Machine Motor. Edwin McKay Electric Co. 35 Biltmore Ave. . Phone 2516. Tempting, Toothsome, . Home-Made Peanut Butter FRESH DAILY 20o lb. ASHEVILLE TEA & coffee co. Phone 2740 - 35 College St LOANS ON DIAMONDS, Jewelry and All Kinds of Personal Property. In stock, a complete line of Guns, Revolvers, Ammunition and Sport ing Goods. Also Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases and Leather Goods. Harry L. Finkelstein Popular Pawnbroker 23-25 Biltmore Ave. Phone 887 - - AshevUIe, N. C Davis 100 PerCent Pure Paint The World's Standard "Bring Us Your Paint Problems." Carolina Paint & Varnish Co. 21 BiltmoreAve. Phone 239. Eventually We will examine your tired, strain ed eyes and fit you with perfect fit ting glasses. 20 years etperlenee in exclusive op tical work. Consult us for eye relief. CHARLES H. HONESS Exclusive Optometrist and Optician M Patton Ave. ' Opp. Postofflce Milk-Made and Butter-Krust Bread for your Stomach's Sake. Cakes and Pastry for Social Functions. ASHEVILLE STEAM BAKERY Paris, Feb. 16. The number of men and women In the city of Paris thrown out of employment by the war has diminished from 257,435 during the battle of the Marne In September, 114, to 73,447 in Decern ber, lli, according to official figures, gathered from the number of "un employed cards" Issued to workmen and worklngwomen to entitle Ihem to receive the .allowance to the' unem ployed made by the city. The decreasing number of Idle workmen is evidence of tho revival of nearly every Parisian industry. The most Important of all, the textile and clothing trade In which there were 44,131 unemployed March 1st, has TRUTH TRIUMPHS Ashevllle Cttisens Testify Public Deneflt. For the A truthful statement of an Ashevllle citlien, given In his own words, should convince the most skeptical about the merits of Doan's Kidney Pills. If you suffer from baokache. nrrvousn sleeplessness, urinary disorders or any form of kidney Ills, use a tested kidney medicine.- An Ashevllle cltlsen tells of Doan's Kldnsyi Pills. Could you demand more convincing proof of merit? W. W. l.rltt, poltcsman, 4 Wood fin street, Aahoville, says: "Being on my t all day Is What brings on back ache. At times my back gets so bad that It throbs like a toothache, and I cannot tal.s a step or even stand with out great pain. Whenever these spells coma on, I use Doan's Kldnsy Pills and In a fw days the trouble disap pears." Prlra tOr, at all dealers. Don't slm auk for a kidney remedy got t.1 r Imsns Kldnoy rills the same Mr. Ilrltt hud. ruMsr-MllburB Props, ufflo, N. V, tht Co., now only 29,933 porsons out of work, of whom 28,569 are women. "Unemployed" enrda were Issued to about 10,000 men and women prac ticing "liberal professions." The number was reduced only to 9,347 in Murch and 9,817 in December, show Inff thnt the situation of the me chanic, the Bowing girl and the com mon laborer is better In comparison than actors out of engagements, ar tiHts without customers, etc. ouse servants are the worst off. Of about 40,000 Idle at tho beginning of the year, only 15,000 have found places. This Is attributed to meas ures of economy In some Parisian families, the breaking up of others and to the fact that many families have loft tho city for their country homos for the duration of the war. The building trades have come buck nearly to normal conditions since there are only about 2,437 men of thoso trades Idle: it Is about the normal flKure of times of pence. women so largely employed In lux ury Industries were the most affected by tho war, but they are rapidly find ing new occupations. "I am taking the place' of my tin land who is fighting In the Argonne.' said a woman street car conductor. "Jefore the war I was seamstress In a big dressmaking establishment." There are now 610 women taking men's places on that line, enabling the company to double the service of the lines In operation last spring. The subways have given places to about 1,600 women. Like the tramway conductors, they wear a jaunty fatigue cap that gives thsm a military air that everyone accepts as quite ap propriate: they are doing their share. The Paris commission houses lost 43,570 men by the mobilisation and took on 27,400 women, mostly wives, sisters or cousins of their mobilised employees. Ten thousand women found places In the Paris post offices which have lost 20,000 men by the mobilization. The, six railway com panies centering in Paris gnve plnces to about 7,000 women, while 2,500 Were taken Into the principal hanks. The number of women employed In the national tobacco factories tins doubled, whllo no less than 150,000 women ars employed in different branches of the military equipment and munitions Industries. In the handling of machine tools they soon become quite ss expert as men and bn fine work have a lighter and surer hand. Their wnses aro In most esses about I rents an hour, thouah in some fnc- tnrles. working by the piece, they esrn ss hlxh as 12 frsncs ($3 40) tar OF TALENT CAN BE Frenchman Refers to 18th Cen tury Methods Used in Pro moting Soldiers. tlon, failure to succeed in adopting new plans of offensive and possibly putting new leaders to the test would not necessarily spell disaster." Typewriters rented $3.00 per month J. M. Hearn and company. Phone 448. tf SOLDIER-ARTISTS TAKE PEACEFUL PASTORAL SUBJECTS AS THEMES Paris. Feb. 16. Prof. Aulard, dis tinguished for his historical studies on the French revolutionary period, has a theory on the possibility of discovering military leaders of talent, possibly some genius, among young otllceM and men who are prevented by the ljierarchical system In all armies from disclosing any particular latent gift of generalships When France alone was facing in 1793 the most formidable European coalition she has ever withstood sin- glchunded," says Prof. Aulard, "sne was saved by the appearance oi ex ceptional generals, such as Hoche, Jourdan, Moreau ana nnauy uona narta. Their talenta were discovered bv a system of close observation on the part, not only of the deputies with official missions, but by the per sonal contact of members or tne gov ernment with the troops. By mix ing and talking with the, men, those officers who had their confidence and aroused their enthusiasm were dis covered. Advancement was then of the swiftest. Lexers Hoche, for ex am Die. who la the beginning of 17(t was a simple captain, was appointed brlsadier-senerat In the autumn of the same year at 26 years of age." Prof. Aulard declares that a slm liar system for the advancement, of now men in the army would be both possible and desirable today. But It would be necessary that members of the government personally survey the troops In action as Carnot, minis ter of war. and Hatnt-Just did In 1792-4. It might seem that experiment with new leaders entails a greater risk to- day than In former times, when ar mies were counted by thousands In. stead of by millions, but Prof. Au lard Is Inclined to the contrary. "A pitched battle, lost or won i hundred years ago," ssld lie, "could and generally did, decide the late of a -rnmpslgn, whereas todsy, with itrencn wariare snu inn ohiiwi Jmens of elaborating a defensive ac- Paris, Feb. 16 Many soldier-artist continue to pursue their art at tha front. Mualo, as well as painting and sculpture, Is being cultivated. M Qheusl, director of the Opera Comioue, has found no decrease in the number of scores which reach him from all quarters, even from the trenches. But there Is this difference, that whereas tl.o civilian revels In martial themes the soldiers-musician sounds the pas toral note and seeks Inspiration from nature In her country aspects. Some of'the latter contributions are of no mean order and there Is notably one score an opera InUhree acts which bears the hallmarks of a masterpiece. The production of this work will prove anything but costly as there are only two scenes, the sea and a mountain pinnacle, and three characters. M. Gheusi was so struck by the dig nity and masterly technique of tho score that he suspected the anony mous author of being possibly one of tha luminaries of his profession who by this subterfuge wished to test the merit of his work on its face value and to compete on equal terms with his less known rivals. Accordingly an as sembly of musical Olympians was con vened to hear a recital of the work, but none of them could recognise tho style of any of their contemporaries. All agreed that a new masterpiece had been created for the glory of French music. None of the work submitted at pres ent will be definitely judged before peace is declared. a -fWr "ajiAiiiiiilin II Ill11llimil11inn?? n Itiiiltu..,.. tit KA 1 V n ' H H H ...H!'' ,.... 0T AV n ..hi 5 raw m 1 1 Why tear those pdns? g A single bottle will convince you Sloan's Liniment i Amst$ Inflammation. JVwcnU Mfon compli cation. Just put a j(W drop on tha painful tpot and th pain diy appear. n
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 16, 1916, edition 1
7
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75