THE? ASHEYILIE CTTIZEX, THURSDAY, AVJlUl 2.1, 19tt THE S AFE-C ABIYET, AU gTKEL 6a tt in wr weit window. Th modal la approve by th Underwriter" Laboratoriea Protect money, books and valuabl pane. Buaineaa men, aJI anA see It. ROGERS BOOK STORE Fatten Ave. Roger Pre Pattoa At. Pbon m 'BATTERY PARK BANK ABBEVILLE; V. a Capital ...... Surplus and Profits . ... . . . .;;.;. -.rei sore -? . v;! - officers! v; ' .. , Jama P. Bawyar, Cnairma. of th Board. $100,000 $115,000 r. C Cox, PrMldaat . Frwln Bludar, Vlo-Pridnt. J. H Raakla, Caahlar. C. Raakin. CaaMar. MR. HAT HCKT. , lAi meag from Columbia, ft'C, la t tha lTot that Wayn' & Bay, who Is Visiting that city, aiurUlQd High Injuria in a. runaway ther. WIRELESS OTATKW. ,Th Langren hotel And. the log oabiq inn to , te oonduoted on. Mount GRAY HAIRED FOLKS ATTENT10J) Cray Hair Darkened Erenly N'o ; Greasy Drug Barmles , Makes You Look Tear Toungcr ResulU Bure '' bsbbbm Gray Katr need no longer exist be cause Q-Ban Hair Color, Restorer, tpplled to hair an? scalp, darkens the hair no beautifully, naturally and evenly that no one can auipect you us Q-Ban. No matter how many other things have failed to restore oolor to your; gray ' hair, no matter what your age or what' caused your graynees. "Q-'Bn" enables you to darken your hair, to original color, .vigor and charm. It maktes you look years younger. If hair is streaked with aray, white, faded or all gray, or brittle, an application or two of Q Ban darkens tha hair beautifully, '.evenly, naturally and produces that oft' luster of appearance of afbund arte which makes the hair so fas ;clnattng and attractive, .beside pre 'vents dandruff, Itching scalp and fall ing halt; Q-Ban is not sticky or mus-sy-HdeHgMful to use. Cannot injure ' w-stain the most delicate scalp or hair.' If you cars for dark soft hair, free from grayneas, make a personal trial of Q-fflSan. It will please, delight and surprise you with satisfactory re sults to your hair. A' large T-ounce j bottle sold and guaranteed tor only ! SOo by C. A. Walker, preeoriptlon ! druggist, Ashevill, N, C. Out-of-town S people supplied by mail (Advt.) KHclial . arjng fa tMwoajdfcwg summer vf& b ooartected by Trur leas, it la noounoed Ths arrange ment is mad Xor the conveuieno of guest of the Langres, who are de sirou (t going to th cabin tor the trip to th ton of th mountain. BURNING Olli STOVE. Th fir department yesterday aft ernoon was 0114 to iW Eagle street wher an oil tov in flam threat ened to do considerable damage. It was thrown into th street, however, before th flame eouWi gala any headway. CIVIL WAR RAGES IN COLORADO COAL FIELD; MANY DIE Hundreds of Miners, Armed With Rifles, Are Battling With Mine Guards and State Militia Situa tion Serious. . THOU) RANK, . . Th third rank will be conferred on a class of five candidate at to night's meeting of Trench Broad coun cil, Jr. O. U. A. If, which wlU be held at I o'olock at the lodge room. Th meeting promise to be on of unusual Interest and V full atten dance is urged. SOCIAL MEETING. Following th business meeting of Vance camp, No. 13,144, Modern Woodmen of America, last night the member of the organisation were the guest of District L Q. Bagwell at thoroughly enjoyable smoker and sup per.' The social meeting was fea tured by short address by several of th member of th local 'camp and visiting Woodmen and th oc casion waa-on which-will ndt soon be forgotten by th - memfbr , of the lodge. G.M, ALDRIGE BOUND TO COURTD George is. Aldridg, arrested sev eral day ago on a charge of obtaining an- automobile from 8. Sternberg un der fata pretense, was given a pre Umlnary , heating In th court of Magistral B. : L Iff da ytday. PrObaibl cause was found and the defendant was bound to th next criminal term of the Superior eourt in th sum of $1,000 In default of which h was aent to th .Buncombe county Jail. . . . Fraulein lis Bulorfi, of' Budapest, Is th -only woman jockey : : In ,. th world.. TBINIDAD, . Colo.. .April :j.81x mine employe dead and two miss ing three men, two women and a iMLby reported, to b entombed in a burning mine; several mining camps destroyed and other riddled with bul let; less than two hundred militia men and company guard confronting art army of striking coal miners estl maUd by atrlk leader at mora than four hundred this was. the situation when the sun sat on th third day In th southern Colorado labor war. Th list of dead on th side of the coal woeratars as the result of the day fighting,, included the nam J ot William Wad dell, superintendent of th Empire mine of th Southwestern lel oompany. A persistent, but ' unconfirmed re port had It that J. W. Bipl. manager of th Empire and Southwestern mine of th juthwestem Fuel com pany, with bby, two women and two men were sealed in th empire mine which then had been set on nr toy trlker. On Striker Killed. . Strike leaders tonight asserted that only one tot their fighting men had been killed during th day battle, and that two had been reported wounded. According to report received by th military autherltiea th fighting at Aguilar which followed that at Ilagua was participated la by the sam body of strikers. 4 Th firing at Delagua began soon after daybreak, with a clash between fifteen guards and a lame body ot miner This fight occurred In the hill, mil ur more from the camp, where the guards are declared to have gone To ' meet 'the -approaching striker, -i There was hot. fighting at close rang lor a- few minutes and thrf th guards retreated toward the camp, the .pursuing, striker, at-their heel The atriker reached th crest of the canyon directly abov th camp, then rushed for the mine buildings. Mine company report de clared that In this rush dynamite was exploded by the attacking party, Striker Driven Batik. " A party of militiamen hastily sent from Ludlow in steel cars, reinforced th guards and after heavy fighting th strikers wer driven back. Shortly afterwards a party of strik ers appeared in tha Aguliar district. separated .from the, HasUngs-Detairua canyon by' a hWh range of Jillla . The assailant of Delagua in th mean time haor vanished In th dlrecton ot Aguilar. The attacks on the Amillar ENGINEER KflliCrx WASHUWrON", April 11 Jam. Clark. nineer, waa killed and. a number of trainmen and ' passengers slightly Injured tonight, near Rockflah Va., when the engan and baggage car of Southern loeal train, Number 20, left th track and turned over lu a ditch, . mine followed, i. , . t Trinidad las a seen ot ten ex cltenvent tonight . The saloons were closed iby order e( - the city council but throng of men U 11 congregated on th street.- Labor headquarter wer Jammed with striker, mostly aliens, and the crowd overflowed la the sidewalks. Many womtn and ehlldren from the Ludlow, tent colony were In Trinidad, cared for by union ay m pat hlser. ' .Throughout th day ateady atreami of strikers iaased In and out of the morgu where lay th bodle of sev eral victim of th Ludlow battle. LZ,HELI. DKNVKR. Colo.K April 12. A tele gram to the Colorado Fuel and Iron company her Just received from Sup erintendent "V, Q.. Deck, ot th Rose mln. says:. . "Four miners just reached here say 200 strikers coming this way, shoot ing everybody In sight, Need help, Greatly outnumbered and short of guns." , j;;,; -.j,,, ITT WORK TO FIG1IT. ' COLORADO IJPRINGS, Colo., April 2Z, -About Q0 union miners, em iployed at th El Paso, Curtis, Pat terson and uther union . mines, quit work today, declaring they were go ing to the Trinidad district to fight th state militia, Seventeen Greeks, well armed, are known to have taken a train for th couth. 1 COMMENT IN CONGRESS. WASHINGTON. , (! A prl' IJ. Labor trouble in the coal fields of south em Colorado and th clash between striker and militia at Ludlow, Colo., today called forth comment in both senate and house, ,, ., "I fear," said Senator Thomas, "that the keen deslr of young Amer lean to go to war before many month will find satisfaction, and un lea society And some way of putting down the trouble . between capital and labor. Mexloo will not b the only country torn.byvinternal war fare." In th house, Chairman Foster, of th house committee which Inve-tl gated the Colorado coal strike, told of condition in the strik sons. Repre sentative Seldomrtdge, of Colorado, said that conditions wer Intoler- .i v " ,!' 'gl1'' ' '., :'-: A PERTINENT SUGGESTION, LOOK! LOOK! Front Porch Hall Iiviiur Room This Group of Fixtures For a 7-Room House These fixtures are made of solid brass and we can furnish thenx in brass "or copper finish, complete with shades as shown, not installed, ' For $25.00 Or Installed ANYWHERE In the City For $30.00 S Bed Rooms 9 Liglit This is a Bargain YOU Can't Afford to Miss Dining Room V m l Light Parl .f tflaaVB 4 light Piedmont -Electric Go, -64 Patton Aver opposite Postoff ice JAVEIJN TIIKOWER8, My xperiences with the Guawoonas occurred some years aigo, when they wer in th height of their Independ no, narrate Captain fi, A. Rlsley, an American Civil War veteran, to Ouy Elliott Mltohell, of the U. g. geological urvey, who writes of the "Javelin Throwers" in th April WMe World. They owed no allegiance to an yon. av a alight regard for their elective chiefs, and they feared neith er man, beast nor devil. I have heard of Quaweona hunters fighting aad slaying jaguar with machet r Javelin, alngle-handed. For their In d lan neighbors sturdy fighters, too they had only contempt. It was their boast that they never retreatd from th fo before accounting for a num. ber equal to their own, and many times they cut their way through greatly uperior numlber ot both In- mies. They wer th Zulu of Eene tuela.- , Their wer many good rubber for- eat in the Interior ot VenesueU In th old data, and for several year I was engaged, sometime alone and ometltn In partnership, in outfit- tmg--J"grubetaklng,---natlv rubber cuuers, ana toon buying th crude ww upon ; their return to my camp. My own profit on the rubber wa about five hundred per cent, but thi diet not, ee you may think, rep resent an imposition on the natives, sinoe my own post wer far in th interior, and I had a lot ot trouble In getting th product out to transporta tion. On of my route of trawl waa by th many lagoon and river which indent th Veneaualan eoaot by means of which men in canoe can pen trate far into th interior ot that wild region, Th Ouawoon country waa at th end of a considerable chain of lagoons, and where th ground ross rather abruptly into hilly and almost tnaooesslbl forest. This was good rubber country, and, though the Ouawoona themselves never brought down any rubber, they wer exceed ingly jealous of anybody , lnusdlng their ohoaen domain. I had several band of half-breeds working for m who would hunt rub ber as a miner does gold. . No chance- wer too grant if they promised a good haul of rubber, Hevera aangut nary conflicts had occured with th Quawoonaa, anA I almost decided to forbid my men entering their territory, although rher was little hop of con trolling the ; resolute , -native -or knowing Where their .. trails would lead one they , plunged . into the tropical Jungles. Th saving ns of humor whloh relieve an awkward' situation ' recently illustrated th house of representative. Congressman ; Gray of Indiana, referring to the fact that a certain class of men seemed to be "chafing for a fight," ald h might b willing to vote with Mexico upon certain conditions. Then were that the war advocate themselves should compose the first company to lead th invasion, their sons th second, and the Jingo editor and correspondent the tHfrrV. This arrangement, lie ad mltted, might somewhat dampen their martial ardor and dissipate their en thusiasm. He might very well have added that Mexico ha already thrown away some 15,000 to 20,000 lives in the present rebellion. In the Balkan war, lately concluded Bervia lost 71, 000 men, Greece 48.000, Montenegr 11,200, Bulgaria 150,000; out of the total of 1,800,000 combatants. Hi,. 000 killed and wounded, being over 22 per cent of the male population, W imagine that if th aftVocate of war wer to weiih these tatlties. which cover a period ot a few months, and add the orphans, the widows, the destitute dependents, and all the suf fering that goes with them to say nothing about the material costthey would hesitate about lifting their voice in favor of any policy that would lead to such6 reeulta The Christian Herald. RICH ROY'S LOKHR8 AT GAMBLING In the April American Slagatine Hugh 8. Fullerton'goe on with his series of articles entitled "American Gambling and Gambler." ' Th pres ent installment i' entitled '0-illlng with Father' Monty," and It Includes a description by th Bradley brother, proprietor ot th famous Beach club, Q3.SO and 07Sorc2: This store u fully prepared, to me 2; th requirement t any and very, man who ha an oxford want. W hav all th wanted style and ll th popular leathftT. Cheaper Snoe in lh Bargain Annex Johnny Bradley, on f th propri- j tor of this cHro, I th man who aent 3D. Cook on hla polar expedi tion. v Following 1 MY. Fullerton's aocount of what h saw happen at th Bsaob club on nlghti fOn vnlng rly last season I was at th Beach club, merely loiter ing and talking with an old friend employed there. He U a rather Inter esting friend, for he has been "bounc er" in theatre gUer!e. rac track and public place.. Ha is a man of hug frame, great strength, and heart that fit well into it, and Ms viewpoint of th multi-millionaire class was now. Th scion of on of th wealthiest of the steel trust families trolled into th a almost ' drtd Casino. He was bored and weary and seemed languid as h aumbltted to having hi cap removed and started to play roulette. He lost few stacks of check. "Beastly dull this evening, h r marked to tha croupier. 'Wher Is veryon.' ' ' " 'Vry few hav been Jn this v nlng,' replied th croupier .- politely, 'PThap it is a bit early and there la a oak walk at th hotel.' ', Th youth played wsarlly for per hap a Quarter ot an hour, cttrtng hi oheok a If playing in the tea sand. . Finally h placed what was left upon th blaok, aroag whll th ball still was rolling, and turned with out Interest to see .the ball tall Into th red. ","v- " -'ydi .: 1 shsll' stroll ovr to th hotel and It I can't start a bridge gam something. Deadly dull heah,' "And, sorawling a check for seven hundrect dollar lost in thos few mo ments, he let an attendant drap his cap over hi ahoulders and strolling out stepped Into a Wheeled chair." What tiding of reverent gli-ues ar voiced fcy the bll that -wr 'A' summon to men to gathsr today lr th court of th King) , v "He is risen I" O gtoriou nesagc 1He live, wh one wm dead! " And heart iht,wr heavy -wUU or row hear and ar oonuortM. W corns to our dead Lord' aHar. What brightness greets u. there! ' Th gloom of th winter ha vanish ed, and beauty 1 everywhere. Prom the oenser-oup of the lllle tie cent ot myrrh and balm, AnA th soul, ilk a. lark, ors up. ward wlngd with th Easte palm. . - i O beautiful, r beautiful lllle. wt)s truth you typlfyt Vou seemed to die in th autumn - and yet you did not die. And on this Raster morning whll joy. ful voices lng ' Yon reoeat to all the leason ot tTt miracle of spring. . "AlUmls," th choir ta clsantlng w'.-t joyous, jubilant voir. "Th Ixird la risen,- is rtant ReJ .J - - rejoice, rJolcl" From th tomb in which men, t ' 1 htm th ton is rolled away. And to! the Christ thy lng of U i : i in our midst today, . .Kbsn E. Rsxfrd, In Th Chr!. :' HeralA. DETAIL CLERKS SHSET. ' Th Retail Clerks' association met at th Central Labor union hall last night at T;0 o'clock anA dlsoussed several matter pertaining to th early closing movement. Fifteen candidates wer initiated the entire sale fore ot Format Brothers blng' Included in th numlber, Another meeting will b held next Wednesday night at th him place. " " ' - - -' HU" . .ilium, I ww - I -v T 3 - I V- t J "l.i-j. i . . w. :m. tilth ' $ - -! Tf' --.--i I". . t' I, " ' K LAND SQCKraEI) DRV. Robert Bird, In his Inters-ting life of 6t. Paul, tell ui that when Paul lived In Tarsus th river Cyndus. which gushes forth from a deep cleft In the mountains to the north, "passed through fields of rich red earth for ovr twenty " miles," receiving "" many little streams on Its way to the sea. Small villages, whlt farms, and dark mui'i huts were scattered over rhe plain of pasture land and fields of grain, hedged Vineyards and fruit gardens, some protected with walls of mud and atone, others by dense prick ly hedsea .' Taoerlnav Dontari tr, dank cypresses, mulberry,' pomegran- aie, aDpia, cherry, silver olive, grew by the river side or cast their shad ow round the. house doors, while tall shrub marked the bank of the river water-oourses, wlti branches woven together by the star-ilk flower ot th clematis, sweet honeysuckle and wild vines, and thus, although th son or a w, Haut flvsd far away from hi own country, among Greek manner' snd customs, but under Roman laws, In what would now be called an ancient university citv. in a fruitful plain between th mountains ana tn seas. - . - - This description of the early eur roundlngs of 8t Paul, though the au thor I indebteA in part to hi imag ination. Is doubtless correct in its main feature. But now what a change! During the hundred rear of Turk ish misrule many of th refill flalda have become barren. The loaded fruit tree hav been cut down. The cyndus ha formed for itself a new channel, and th , old harbor which wa wUlts with the aaila af manit Aiiliun-. la nnw Satis fadtioE . m 'Mm i " fir 'A.-- l l mm H 'Cm4 ran Tbt Ht si r.-4-x-a.i-j-i bathe The big fact hind every sale at live store. When we take your money for a suit it's only after you have satisfied yourself that it is thebest in every, way that you could find. If there's any doubt in your mind we don't want you to take the clothes. We want to be sure that vhat- (;ver you purchase, exactly meets your requirements, furthermore that it will continue to do so day after day aa long as you demand service from it. Ill the ilfirstplace we've In- etired the widest possible choice range as to fabric and style; the highest possible quality and .work manship by selecting clothes from The House of KuppenlieiTaer And then we go the limit and guarantee your -satisfaction by offering a refund of the purchase pica, without quibble or question if everything isn't ab solutely 0. K.- ' $18.00 for better clothes and satisfaction. $29,. $22.50, $25, $27.59, '$33 zzl f:3 for the best in both. " R. ' B. ZAGE"" - Just a Whisper og th j V - 1! an, unhealthy jrtor&s.--Tli ChrlUa

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