THE SUNDAY CITIZEN, AUGUST 17, 1913. Til ASIMIECIIIZOI Published Every Morning. byTheaizaftCompany, 8 GoverramntStreet fb lAiblW-Gtiaen 6 days -week. Ytm. Kanrtay Citizen every Sunday. 11 Weekly Gtavtw; Wednesday. TELEPHONES Pwrrww Office.. -207 Associated press REPORT8 COMPLETE SUBSCRIPTION KATES JJy carrier to Asheville an ! Suburbs. liuS.y A Ban. 1 jr. in advance tX60 li)y A Sun& tno. in advance,. 1.95 !I)ilv A Run. 1 week in advance- .16 Daily ontv 1 yeardn advance 6.00 Daily cnly 8 mo. in advance L'M Ddily-floly'l week in advance . .10 Py trail b United States, Portage Paid. foaQy tt Sun. 1 yr. in advance $0.00 Daily ft Sum-8 mo. in advance 1X0 Daily only 1 year in advance... 4.00 Daily only 3 mo. in advance.. 1.00 Sunday only 1 year in advance ZOO Sunday only 3 mo. in advance .50 Weekly 1 year in advance .50 Sunday, August 17, 1913. The Cumberland Extcntion ' Sn reaponae to strong public do jfnua& AahirvUls'a tempi at aldrmn hiaa made several commendaMe eftoru looking to the opening of Cumber- I land, aveiue, and just at the time rwtaan auccoaa blda fair to crown lta (endeavors, there nrlaea, or enema to laxtta, fcfcotestis, some of them from : quarter previously fvorableto the "rtension of Cumberland, whloh, for the moat part, are based on the jaeaumption that the street would bs uargsly used by automobile owner. iTTh latter complaint is not well ground ml, elaee many of our cltissns Jeatrhif the "uncorking", of Cumber land baaed their arguments on the of an additional boulevard Wr driveway - wMoh would prove a Wrong attraction to visitors at well M residents. But eren that li aalde )tfom the oonsideration that the open ing Of Cumberland avenue would give )exy cm to one of rh most de- Irafcle realdence'tectlons of the city. It la-generally admitted that Ashe- SclUe-. la faat Becoming a metropolitan city, and traffic ooirdltlone which did Bet materially, handicap the city's BTowth,. twelve, fifteen or twenty yeara Vgo centaJnly militate asreJnst sirpan- Won at this-trms. The; opening of putrtborlaS avwmia into Haywood U public InrpTotement badly needed kind lonr floirtred, and Instead of pro fcest therertshould u hearty eo-opera-ilon with the effort-of the aldsrmanlo g.oard. ' The CtQft la loth to believe that the benefit aaaneementa laid Mai net property owner1 In the aeotlon affect ed Tiaa anythlng'to do with the pro tests In question, and suflv being the jbaae the prospectot antomoblles ualnr Che now driveway has little weight p-nAeed, the latter eonalderaUon which Erould Jorhld the uee of a modem oulevsrd to one of the greMeet fac ers hi the commercial and lnduatrlal IprofiTeM of a community has a tinge i f teiiftahnevi, to say the least. The kiroperty owners in the Oumtxrland faction Mhmild bear In mind the fact )Kht the "uncffrklmt" of Cumberland Krlll increase real estate value to a Woneldwab'e ertent In the eoctlon g'amed, an Incrmse which will far Iraitwelgh the enKMHiwrnts which It l groposed to levy. Women And Work b noted Cathnlle prMate declared t Hihraakee the other day that.deavor to produce the best in- f lis WW1 he bellowed that the Creator' k""1' anrt 'onllm.e Its t.m fnlneFs by i-tj ,. , . .v. ... . wjitehlng over and gradually iwrfoct V.W not intend that the poeltlon "fj ,ng al lis operation,, We Imve plentv wtrmun In the World Hbmild be th f ,en of hluh character to do tli kufcme as t'ntit of man, . there le ni)Puillc service, and they will see the idonht that she le making great pro- '""vantage of ending strife ami die ! ' . . . , . . cord. I have jM heard from fr!end- krreas, and the dav of univerm nuf- , , , , , ., , . , r' - ( In New ZiUiid llt.it the tru.noiul ui- KTg 18 not far ithitant. tHwuwtlng nilfwion or lie liquor question aroiiH. s Sihls snb)ect In theee columns the ! bad feeling at every election 1m ausc otherday, TbeOlUwn mo,le a Hlmilar'" nilngle.l with corrupt p,. lit.es MdmiwUm, for so It mtiat be termed . Tttko " ut of P.liUcs. An-nn (HitHiiler, 1 would imt be mir fcy thono who do not favor wrmmn n ; j,riiW1 t whiskey Interims r.ither , Hjltrage. The (Itlxen 'till believes. ! favor the present law. at one fell It It has alwayn lelleved, that the ' !IW""P ,h,,y were relieved from (he lAlmlghtr intended worn;, to be the 'pnti " ax and reguhiti..n. the competition of beer woa great v tv thome builder, to suMaln It alway by AaCi nlHl tl)y woro put ,n a ,)(lf,(til)n 4rr sweet and gentlo Inluenreji, and to charge double pricen ft.r impure that msa'i fights ahould be left to the whlekey. Mr. Ira t'lemnioim is raih- I er ftiiaialni;. We do not exHc l the I church or the court hous, to mart But this paper has never contended ( .n,nK ! or dry goods on their thtat women dnslrlng to do so should j premises. Me may not realise It. but wt enter tbe field of Industrial pur-i even majority law In changou.hu; for traits ao long monopolized by men. To the woman who has her own way to maJta In the world, many new svvoanea, in whldh men only have traveled, have opened, and are still to, silng. to tbe members of the gentler tssc la sweb conditions we And csass tor congratulation rather ttren rrlisrfem. W3ver woman enters a iijNrKtra field against man . she Jssni!d certainly be his equal In the Star of ramtnMnrtion, for those who e a man's urt Shoo Id reeoiv a SsstVi pay, .. .. - s. reoiwt wOksr 4welswcA 4mb Tnvrlet Mmtlnmu visited this contrtry nhe found onlr seven occu pations opon to wuwn hotiwkeep i&g. keeping boarders, needbrwork, twlihw, working In cotton fietgrla. bookbinding and typMilng. Howl times have ehsmged may I gufhered from statistics that phew that there are In this country morn lhun 1,009 women nuusnns, 2,000 carpenters, 245 plasterers, 430 iilutttbers, 1.700 paint ers and ghisloni and 600 paper hangers. Almost Incredible in the statement that If Iron and steel workers wero called for from among he women 4,470 wearem of pettl cna.lt w cm Ul answer the call. All told, more than , 000,000 of American women are earning their own living .Such condition! as theso must bo gratifying to that once hopolos type of womanhood which looked Into firtuTe years to See only the bleak and dreary pronpect of a life of JonelinenH land inactivity. Notes and Comments A public park which could bo art a swimming pool would about nil Auhe- vllle'a cup of hapnlnoee. . . Whanevor you hoAr a fellow yelling about Aiihevllle's leek of summer attractions, Just ny "horse show." ' It is sall that they have put a heavy padlock and chain on the great seal of New York slate. Things might be different In the Jvmplre KUte If the state trnuniry had been dooo rated In s similar maimer. If tJey don't pot fence arocmd Wihnlngtun some fortnne-tPllnr will come along overnight and cart Che town away. " . Ambassador Wilson's, greatest trou hie seems to be that every time he opens his mouth he puts his foot in 1U TOTS DATK IV 1USTOUT. August IT. 17 Petr Hunter become Beuten. ant governor of UpperCanada. HM-Voiirvdatlon laid for Nelaon'i monument in Trafalgar Square, London. Hl Commodore Perry's fleet tin- . anchored oft Oandinky, Ohio, and was visited by Oon. Harrl aon and his staff, 1(50 Jose De Ban Martin, famous South American patriot, died Born rob. 15, 1771. 1111 Gold discovered in the Klon dike. Tins IS MY I6TU BUITIIDAY. Aroliduke Charlns Irnnrls. Archduke Charles KYancls, who one day may become emperor-klng of Austria-Hungary, was born August IT, 1887. His father, the Archduke Otto, , who died In 1908, wag the son of the emperor's brother, The heir apparent, Archduke Francis KVrdl rand, is the elder brother of Otto. As Franots Ferdinand is married morganatically hla children cannot smteeed him and Charles Francis Is therefore tttxt In Una for the throne. Charles Francis is the first of the line of Hwpeburg who recelvn-d en edu cation in the public ischools of Vienna. He is described ss handnnme, 1m mensely popnlar with the people and a favorite of the old emuvror. In 1811 he married Prlncwis Zlta, of Ilourbon-r.ntna. . Voice of the People THE IJQIKU QClTIO?f. IOdltor The Cltlaen: Regarding the 80,000 majority, or rather, let us take the whole vote for prohibition nt the lat elect Ion. It Is not to be diluted that many of them have llo,uor In their own hnunos at the prenpnt 'moment. Many peopln voted "prohibition e the only mcitu avallttblx to ehow tholr dlxatlrovnl of liquor trade mnthodn and practice. The exprrloiK'n of Miilnn shows Hint the liquor question will periodically come up for resettlement. 8o far an I am iiemonally (Mnrerm-d I have abnolutely no ciinnoct ion Willi the whiskey lutereela I look fur (ho promotion of the irnxty entirely di.i llnct from prohibition, llu- irnxlcrate lrty, wM) will take up my plun ami llll other modornle plann, mi. I peek rational scheme of regiilullon. This party would have nothing to lo wiUi current polltlce. In f:ci. It Hhonld I., merely an awoclulion of utatr-wide membership with one purpose, that In to frame a good law end nwUit in iin operation. The ' uiwtirlntion Mioold study the llinor lns of vwvy ctate nnd of every foreign countiy. ntul en- exam-pie, such a majority as prevailed In PurltaJn MasHochusotts In the lienth century bellved in witchcraft, and put hundreds of Innocent men and women of good character to tor ture and death by fire. W seem to have a majority against Puritanism nowadaya The prohibition majority are not all believers In either tho vir tue or the efficacy of prohibition. Op pressive laws germinate the seed of restitution, and the present law of prohibition oil'reeses too many people of good character for It ever to be re garded as final. H. D. PARKER. Jlnvt laJjp4eCJhiiabeende; vis! of grain by m iM&an cIsjojmU, Savoyard sViews IIKV.W'N flUTIfS. Wanhinifton, Aiigimt 6. Home of our exumplar in ixitrlot ima and eagei,' In Kt.ttwrai t profem to be very much dihturiled laiiutie of the action of Mr. Willlnm J, llryitn in I gjilnn on the" lecture' platforirt at' time when .there l notliing pending j in the department of state, that can not be as -well managed by jmhordl natea. TlK-re Is nothing new In this couren of conduct. A great nirmlier of our public Hervanu have engaged in the viracti:e of the law or devoted themwlves to literary- work or ap peared In the loclure field whlln draw ing salaries as ofllrlnls of state or natliili. The vulgar are iprorto to look on the, firoduct of etatoeraft an work turned by the ton or the cord of the grops. It in to that element that (Senator Hrintow and hl fellows ap)al in tholr dtnoagogis strictures on the. American MTlary of mate. It Is a sitmplo of peanuttcry, or rather ftax- semliiry, In our polHUs. IMit It Is more than that It In an unconscious trfbute to the democratic administra tion. Unable to find In It jrreat things to succeesfully assail they try to pn:k out little things to condemn. Mr. Hryan Js the most popular Tut) llo speaker our counLry ever pro duced. As an orator I have never ac corded him the place so-me of his aU- mlrers o dogmatically ajiHlgn to him. I heard him when his voice waa nioro soducUve than Jt la now 'beccm-ie, and his eloquence no less pe.nuajl vo than it now Is. In my poor ntplnlon he never attatn to the lofty helglits of oratory to which the late W. C. P. I'4'i-ckcnrUlgo sometimee leaped, not always, though I hold him a finer platform orator than the hue 11. O. Iiigersoll. Henry Ward Heecnor aiwl Stuart Ho4)lnon were among the most enter taining -public siieakors I ever hoani, but they were not d'H-lutmers each talked In conversational tone, and as you listened you recalled what Hen Jonnon emld of Lord Paeon feared "he would make an end." Hourke Cockran Is a more dramatic- orator than Hryan, and when they were in Congress together the Irishman had a in iK' h finer voice, splendid as was Mr. llryan's voice. Cockran's Vocabu lary Is thu mont elaborate and the most elegant of them all; but It Is too sumptuous, not to say gorgeous. Ills acquired knowledge beggars that of Bryan, but -as a dejbator he Is inferior to John Klmnp Williams who is no orator at all. Ttepeatedly I have said that Mat- they il, Carpenter, years ago Uni ted Btates senator from Wisconsin, was the finest orator I ever heard, and he was the equal of William Plnkney hlmeelf at the bar. As for voice, 1 never hoard lie fallow, as for mastery of the Kngllnh language you must sunrmrm Wdgsr Allen Pos, the one American that could onatoh him. And as for polcmk-, he was In the cliuts of Hen Hill, Hubert Toorirbs, Allen '. Thurman and Judah P. Hen Jiunln. What a pity the man died at his Intellectual Jtenltu and at an age when he should have been In robust physkal manhood. From what 1 have rend of hie pro duction and heard of his oratory from the Hps of Intelligent men Tffio hung on his eloquence, 1 have little doubt thut William 1j. Yancey was the great est orator our country has produced slnre Patrick Henry. It wae the Vir ginian who conjured the rebellion of 177(1; It was the Alabamlan who pre cipitated the rebellion of 1 8ft 1. WhIU the oratory of Patrick Henry was aft er the order of lVmosthnes, a reslpt lexfi torrent that swept all before It, the oratory of Yancey was compara tively placid, and I um sure It was very much like that of Matt Carpen ter, heated limny degrees. . . Hut that Is wandering from the subject. A member of the cabinet of an American picnlileiit has ns much right to go "il the lecture platform as a senator of the American oongreis 1 1 an to -pra-'tli-e law. And that re mind. A long time nun there was a cafe paroling before the foiled States supremu court Involving stone litiga tion tirought by the Mull- of I'jlli'ornla .-u-aiiiKt ooo or more of the ciitiMillze.l I I'll 'Hie railroads. 1M .Marshall was I Hie attorney general -of ('iilifornla and was here to iiritue the chmc. (leiirge i I-. l:,l annuls, of Vermont, and Wil- Ham M. i:tirtR. of New York, then i i nil. d States senators, were of coun . set fur ; lie roads. j .M.u .-.hall was a nephew of the Igroiii i lilcf Justice and brother of the Tinire fininti Tom .MarMuill. Horn in iKeiitucUv. be was a "forty-niner" In l":illtoroin. tie subsequently return ed In Kentucky, of which stale he cotilluiil a cltircn till Joe lllackbiiru 'beat Ti I in for the demncvatlr noiniiia- t ion for i-oiicr In 1174. Then he i licc-aoie a i -! t ' v n of 1' ilifornia a see. lend I hoc and was eb-clt d altoiliev !giu'tl. uud begjii, a war agaiiut the tr.iiisi'ori.itinn mouit'-oly t.h.-it had ! licit stale )' llii Ihnnl. j 1 had lonrd IM M.irshnll In Ken 'iMckv on tin stump, and wondered if I it could lie true that his brother sur j pawed him a.s a popular orator, and ; now I was determined to bear him i plead before lb" niivt dignified nnd !aui:iif-t tribunal in the world. I went : early, though it had been illinium- ed jthat I'M was to eon, hide the argu i mint. I could sorter follow ld jiiiuiul'C When Kv.irts spoke he might i an well have been talking Creek for all the knowledge ho conveyed lo my ! iiilinl. though I li.ol comprehended ami enjoyed the speech he made in behalf of Andy .lohiiMUi ns printed I In the proceedings of the great im peachment trial. lint so anxious was I to hear Mar sha 1 1 thut I eat it out. When he arose everybody was expectant. .There were old fellows there who had heard him i third of a century earlier In con gress when he got the better of John i". Hreeklnrldgo' himself In debate. We looked for i treat, but bis sjieivh wus as dry as last year's corn shuck. He stemod to be having a confident ial talk with tho Judge, and 1 coilj Utile better grasp what he was driv ing at than when Evarts er 'Edmunds was mieaktnr Am luFUiai. Beu JU11, Sbut Carn. ter, Allen) G. Thurman and John C. I'arllsle were the only men I ' ever heard who could make law plain !n J n. I ore hejirl l'i Huller In su-j preme court, but cuuld not follow him. I read Jeremiah 8. I'.lack In the great Kentucky case Involving the Civil rln-Vilu ,ill ami It la us A. litihtful as a novel- your favorite, lie Kalned the case, but the court shied . ine real msne, and when tbe docis n was rendered in 'his favor. Black Was SlttlTMf In th,. l,ar and remarked to the attorney general so all could near, including the bench: "And now we have It laid Hf.aTi ns the lr hv thi supreme tribunal that It don't af- ci a nigger to kill hhn" WrTIiomas Uv Umj Point. (Coltmiliia Htate.) To "put aside all wntimental and International queMions Involved" and have a mind to "what l essential for business purposes," iSir TlKma t.lp- toii Ik th 6 lad. Therefore, whatever siidllness Orcat l;ritiun may Indulge, Hlr Thomas will exhibit at the Pan ama Kxposltlon In tan Franaclsco, "His ewierlenoe at the Chicago and St. i,oulH fairs was gratifying, al though fae tariff was at the hlgh ret," and "new when the walls of Jerl-lio have fulbn," he, at least, "will not milk outside instead of entering the city." Hut the tariff has little to do with It. Hlr Thomas always exhibits. In fact, he Is an exhibitor. "It pays to advertlee" and ho knows It; he "keepi everlastingly at It and It 'brings suc cess." Buly, for Sir Thomas. Incompatible, (Baltimore Hun.) Coventor Please isays he has "75,- 000 friends in Boulh Carolina who wilt vote for him for the United .States senate against anybody," and that he "will he elected to the United ftates senate in 1914, despite the liars." If HI ease has 75,000 friends In Houth Carolina, the question Is how many friends Koiith Carolina has In her bor ders. It Is impossible to 'be a friend of Please and a friend of South Caro lina at the same time. Vanlanian's Iock. (New Bern IN. C.) Sun.) The country Is enjoying Itself very much twitting Senator Vurdaman on his long hair, in his young days, long Iniforo he became governor of M iRHtsslppl, the senator used to b tauntud about his hair. When he was a young man he wan accused of being poetic, and when ho got Into politics, he was accused of wearing his hair In Imitation of Benator Walthall. A a matter of fact, to such a degree was Kenator Walthallone of the old-time senators Idolized In his native htate that many men purposely wore their hair long because he did. This fact used to be a popular Juke In that state, and one ipromlnent Mlsslsslpplan who so wore his hair wns accused of also purposely knocking out one of his front teeth because there was a con spicuous gnu in the teeth of Senator Walthall. For 'the eiillghtment of tho country at large, however, It may he well to state that Henator Varda- man does not wear bis hair long through eccentricity. Ho has always worn It that way, and the reason Is a disfiguring scar which Is hidden by his hair. Still at It. (Norfolk Vlrglntan-riiot.) Whatever else may be said of the American Protective Turiff leiisue, it must at least be credited with a per sistency altogether worthy of a belter cause. Just now this league, of which Mr. Wilbur K. Wakcmun Is the guid ing spirit, Is sending out to nmmer cial travelers a, circular letter calling en them to write to senators and rep. rCBentallves urging thrwe gciitlpmen to give their support to the ilallinger substitute for the democratic tariff hill. This substitute, It will be re- membered, provides for postponement j of tariff b-iriitlon until IVoember, j II4, and that the pending bill be! submitted to a referendum of the legal voters of tho country at thej congressional election to be held in j the Noveoil'ir preceding. The handful of men -composing the. I league re.pie.seut the few privileged Interests enjoying inordinate protec tion under tho existing schedules. They realise that the order of things which lias long enabled them to fatten! and ball' ii on the great body uf do-! locsUo ciiioorucrs Is doomed, and their game m. w Is 'to postpone an long' as possi li I lie striking of the hour, i Hut il ..! : work. IteputilK an pro- ; tcclion w.ll r-eive Its death blow be- j fore the pr. ' ill extraordinary session or ...m:i--s -.hall adjourn. Mr. Wake-: iii.iu li.ol jet iiS well beein making! pretntrai -" -s for tne nonnng ci ine w;il.i- .".i i "i" corpse. Mil It I! Tt) WSHWIKX. A eniif I'm om'.Iic teed v '! W. U. . Is. !"". adviial . I Mac- - - ci in- ' ' h nee of all the camps In . unity hiu '"-en callcl t lUlsam t'nmp. No. 1, on Tucsd.u' iiir-bt. .i;''ist o'cbM'k. to d xenss the uf petitioning our Ciate appoint a IMslrict lcpMity for Buncombe county, and It i Imp. Hunt that all members be' pr.-sent help discuss tbe matter.1 Ili-i'rw-cii'i'H will be served Vislt li.g Sm,.u" 'i;s welcome. Ity order of 11. M. MAltU'W, i'. C; U HERMAN, rink. Advt-lt liifornmiioii as o hotels anil Ix-Minl-Ing plaii s In all rmittcsi of Western Vortti iindina, Imimllng sbe11le, i'mii tx MitiitNl at Information liiri-nu, SxitlMTn tlk'kct oltici1. K.lwird 11. Onion, of New York, lei.-;,i!v changes name to Harrelt, tie caii.se nple made, fun of former cognomen. I'.ccnw.. dmrirhter mnrrled without bis onsen'. Snlnfhon R. Jost. South African muitl-milllonaire, takes her name off lit yacht. KENILWORTH Page 15 today; What Coal Do You Use? Are you satisfied? Have you ever tried our MONAIICH coal in your range? AVe guarantee this coal give absolute satis faction, no clinkers fewest ashes. Southern Coal Co. Phone 114 10 N. Pack So, 10 PER CENT OFF ON ALL RUGS, MATTINGS AND ART SQUARES BUY NOW SAVE MONEY ' Asheville Carpet House Carpet and Matting laid with out extra charge, SO Church St. Phone 198 JeE. CARPENTER JEWELER. Watches ad Elno Jewelry. Watch Repairing My Specialty. No. 8 Pock Square, A GOOD INVESTMENT WITHOUT ANY RISK That is-what thrifty people want, and they obtain It when they buy their Groceries of us. We make a specialty of selling the best the mar ket affords FOR LESS. Wo know that quality Is the key note of our past success and Intend to continue to supply the good eating kind that produces good health; Rice, head, lb. ,'. 7Jc Grits, Hudnutt's; lb. . .. 3jc Crisco, large 92c Crisco, medium 46c Crisco, small 23c Remember, All Cars Pass Suburban! wmi . Urban Conveniences I OFFER FOR SALE 18 LOTS, on the west side of French Broad River, on the ridge opposite River side Park and overlooking tha City of Asheville. The lots range in siz3 from 4 to 44 acres and to gether comprise an area of 204 acres; each has a frontage of 600 feet or more on a well graded road. They have been cut according to the lay of the land so as to give to each a distinct and spacious house site with an individaality of its own. The great size of each vill assure to its owner not merely the privacy but the freedom and distrations which make the charm of country life, while the trol ley or motor car make it easy to combine these at tractions with the advantages of the city. The lots have been appraised by three gentlemen of approved good judgment, namely: Mr. D. 0, Waddell, Mr. Gay Green and Dr. Carl V. Reynolds, who have made their estimates separately and in dependently of each other. The average of their estimates affords a safe guide both for the owner Lnd the purchaser in fixing' a fair price. For Maps and Full Particulars, apply to RICHMOND PEARSON WACHOVIA BANK ASHEVILLE, N. tt Capital and Surplus . . .,j$1,6O0,WQW Deposits .,....,.:.; t..i.x...'. 6,571,083.06 Assets t. 4t,.M w"c w 846,0099 Solicits yoiir business: Cojiimexd or Trust 'Accounts. . 4 per cent paid on Savings Accounts -or Certifi- cates of Deposit. WHITMORE S ANITARIUM Loveiy Park, Tennis, Croquet, etc. Non-uric acid, diet, Curative Gymnastic?, Naturophathy, Hydrothera-, phy, Chriopractic, Betz Hot Air, Uassage, Eleetricity, ' Vapor, Phower, Sitz and Electric Light Batha. Phone 1020. Take Patton Ave. Car 408 Haywood St. REDUCED PRICES REDUCED BIG ROUND-UP SHOE SALE All This Week. BARGAIN ANNEX of the NICHOLS SHOE CO. On the Square. S. STERNBERG & CO. Depot Street Phone 333 All sizes and lengths of I Beams, Channels, Concrete Steel and Relaying Rails. Structural materials a specialty - WE BUY ANYTHING ' AND t SELL EVERYTHING Lucas Paints and Wall Paper ASHEVILLE PAINT & GLASS COMPAlix Langrni notel Bldg. 2tJ Phones . t -mn nnanlel. refuses to leave graves of f.vmlly of three drowned on sunday in motor boat accment i Uike Oneida. -lllLiJ omes & TRUST ;C0. J ICE FOR SUMMER COMFORT And good health -ice is the one necessity for good health and summer comfort. Phone 72 for prompt delivery. Asheville Ice Co. Best Laundry Work Done the Nichols Way Phone 2000 Asheville Steam laundry 3. A. Nichols, Mgr u Ooltece St BUTTERCRUST BREAD SALT RISEN BREAD CAKE, PIES The good things to eat that makes life happy, and healthy -too. Phone G22, or ask vour grocer for BUTTERCRUST. ASHEVILLE STEAM BAKERY London reports SS7 persona IrfTJed sjid twenty thnuaand injured In lilt