TH SUNDAY CITIZEN, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 14, 1921. FIVE The Mammoth Furniture Store New Shipments of HIGH GRADE FURNITURE Are Arriving Daily From these rich assortments you can secure the exact suite that will meet your approval and too, one that will give a life time of satisfactory service. Call and inspect our display. J. L. SMATHERS & SONS, 15 Broadway Phone 226 24-26 Lexington. RECREATION AND GAME CITED AS IMPORTANT IN USE OF ALL OF THE 152 NA TIONAL FORESTS The 'use of the national forests for recreation uml game purposes has in creased to a lurge extent, uccordiiiR the fish and game resources of the national forests, congress, it is suid. would make some provisions for the establishment of name sanctuaries within which wild life may find se curity. ThPMe should he relatively limited in area, but should he estab- to forest otllclals in Ashevllle. "This use has not been confined to a few well -advertised regions of special at tractiveness," says an official state ment, our is m.uceaoie in aimosi : hHhe(l ln ,.0siuri,hli! number Their ot the lu!! forest, ll is common to llt.atlon wlM ,-e,,uiie careful prcliml the Uhlle mountains, the southern nill.v npId invosli(!uUoI1 ., t.Ult(l. ,.. Appalachians, the forests of Minne- 1)1R,latloll wUh thl. ,. au.,oritlea. sotu. the liockv mountains, the Cus-1 A favorab,e ns , ,.adv been cade and falerras, and the alluring i .iiiimiiivii t, ,,., ,i,.,, .,'.. ,.. h measures, which would empower the FOUR PAROLES ISSUED CHIEF EXECUTIVE TAKE ALONG A BOOK- -TAKE ALONG A BOOK INVEST IN THE BEST BOOKS valuIhTlinOW b0Ci''' like i!ver nd jM' ar6 ,,rizrd for ,hfir Intrinsic wniniU M,,Kll;s ' I!'-", "Uteri by Edward .). O'Brien f-'A, ,'0h1fU''i,'IHl nrK IjpSTg. h." Henry Van Dvke 'P,?'ni J1 K MAUXinilcNT. by Joseph C Lincoln Tul n.Tn ?,'11'"'' i;"est P''n hy Kdeac A. Guest rA F,1!11, TO lwMK' ix-ms by Kdar A. Guest OALLAIS OF A HOHKMIAN, the la est poems of Robert . Service Mall Orders Filled l'mmptly! Po'sVa'jje flic a i'opy ' ROGERS BOOK STORE Office Outfitters 39 1'atton Ave, Ashevllle, N. C.' Phone 254 .$2.00 $2.00 , $2.00 .$1.25 ..$1.25 $2.00 tablelands of Arizona and New Mex ico. As an important use it bids lair to rank third anient; the major serv ices performed by the national forest service, with only timber production and stream-flow regulation taking precedence. Prices Have Reached Bottom in most of our line. Indications are that they will take an up ward turn about September 1st. Big building is starting all over the country, and there are no stocks of goods on hand. It is go ng to be a question of supply and demand. Get your orders in now for your building material you will save money we honestly believe. We will book your orders at present prices guaranteed against decline for delivery within the next sixty days. Corbin Builders Hardware, Vulcanite Shingles and Roof ing, Building papers, Nails, Heavy hardware, Metal lath, Wall ties, etc. We want your business, and will see that you get lowest prices, quick service, and general satisfaction. NORTHUP - McDUFFIE HDW. CO., 33 Patton Ave. Headquarters. Phone 142. I'residenl to ivnahlisti such same sanctuaries within the national for ests of any Ma to where their estab lishment is sanctioned by Hie state legislature. pei in I mention Mated, i if the i necessity of additional protection for the harassed and decimated herds of elk using the Yellowstone National park and the stirronndniK forests. Famine and cold lost winlei look an ! unusually heavy loll from their nuin ' Iter, driven out of the hinh coimtiy ; hy starvation and early deep snows, 1 the northern herd stil'ti i i i from hunt I rr.s along the boundary line a per centage loss eipial to iliat of a de feated army. Many that esiapcd the . hunters perished lrom eobl and star : vatlnn before spring. The southern I herds also lost heavilv. As a result I Tl t bts on) neet ! m "The growth of this form of use ,sn()U.( . ,,; jt , snows nearly tne inacivisaniuty oi legislation at one lime contemplated, which by opening the national lorosls to "summer homesteads " would have allowed private acquisition oi tracui exceedingly valuable for public recre ation purposes. Such it system would have blocked the general use of these great forests for general recreation, instead of the act of March 4, I'Jlb, gave the secretary of agriculture au thority to Issue term permits lor not to exceed live acres of national forest lands lor periods not lo exceed 31) years. "Luder tho law reasonable tenure ,he tota number of animals on these can ue given wueie suusimuiai - two herds is now estimaied bv Courtesy Pays Recently a customer told us that he was led to do business with this institution as a result of courteies shown him by one of our tellers in cashing his checks. We try to render such a service at all times a service that means the giving of something which is often an addition to a transaction, not a part of it. In all our Departments you will find every employe painstak ing in his or her efforts to serve you promptly, efficiently and courteously. May we have the pleasure of numbering you among our thousands of customers? WACHOVIA BANK & TRUST CO. Capital and Surplus $2,000,000 ' Member Federal Reserve System 36 Patton Ave. vestments are contemplated upon areas not needed In the meantime by the public. It is staled that in carry ing out this act the forest service has engaged in a very extensive develop ment. Counsel and advice have been secured from competent landscape en gineers, and the guiding policy has been worked out in co-operation with the foremost national authorities on such subjects. Always general use by the public, through reservation of open camp grounds, has been given first consideration. Special use by in dividuals who pay rental has been made secondary to the needs of the public. "Vet such secondary use is now be coming a very material source ot rev-i enue. At the close of the last fiscal' year a total of l,32!t permits for1 summer residences and commercial resorts were in effect on a single forest, the Angeles, in southern Cali fornia. The revenue from this Ine item alone amounted last year to ap proximately $22,000. The local otil- the best qualified oMlccrs in the forest to equal one-half of their number five years ago. "The forest service, in dose co-op eration with the biological survey, . will continue to do all In its power, it Is slated, to help preset-.,? these great I herds from destruction by negligent i methods. It is staled that congress should add to the Ahsorrka and Gal-I latin forests the lands still In govern-I nient ownership now under withdraw al along the Yellowstone river north of Gardiner. This land Is urgently I needed as winter range for the elk, It Is said." BY Governor Morrison Arts I'po" Heroin mendatlons of Hoard of Tumle Three Men and One Woman. Governor Cameron Morrison yester day upon the recommendation of the board of parole, authorized the parole of four inmates now being held at the state prison for second 'degree murder. The recommendations were made by James S. Manning, attorney general. James C. Leake, chairman of the prison board ot directors and v . A. Ulair. chairman of the lioiml of charities and public welfare. The pa roles were as follows. Alfred Mull, lturkc coiiuiy was sen tenced December ti, lf-'e, to serve two years for second degree minder He Is 30 years of age and is inairieil and has four children. lie Is par- J alyzed on his right side and his pris on record w as cited as good. Hcrtha Whltt, Mecklrnherg i otmiy j was sentenced to two years on the' .same ch.iige. She us II years of utn and is routined to her bed the greater part of the. lime and four rhildicn arc willing to give her attention and! care. I 1. J. Hurton. Gaston county, sen tenced May L1. llilii, to len .tears for second degree murder. He is 111 years of age l'or lour years be has been a trusty. Ills record is good and pa role was recommended bv Captain '. N. Christian and Superintendent Geo. l'ou, of the slate prison. I'ir.k A. Cline. Catawba county, was sentenced February 3. IfllH. In live years for second degree murder He is . fid years of age and hi married, lie ' has a good prison record and is said to be a w illing worker. j MATTERS OF RECORD LUTHERAN CHURCH HERE TO HAVE NEW PASTOR Tiev Henry A. rturani.lt, of Grattnn, Ohio, has accepted a call to the pas- tomtit fur Ihn V rvt ll n ,, -l 1 llllinrnn ccrs predict that within a lew years , ,.mm.h nprPi a)(1 tnp ,n8tft,aUon SPr. I vices will ho held September IX, ac cording (o announcement made yes- There's More Money in Beets Than Books so Law Is Ignored - . . v. L' ' 1 ijf - d iw rAv ;-.if iw'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiwtiftiiiV'V'rw tn'r''"''! f iiMMiniMwiiMi Joe, h ! tlx years old dotin't , bok very happy and nobody can blame iim much, for it's a fact, no doubt in txplicable to gentlemen who employ Children, that when a chap is six he is naturally possessed of a depraved and vicious desire to romp and play. In addition, there are a lot. of unreason ably interfering person who insist that at about that age a boy or girl should start going to achoot They have even gone so far as to build school houses find pass laws making school attend ance compulsory. But iu the beet raising districts of Colorado and of Michigan, in the cot ton growing areas of Texas, Oklahoma and Imoerial Vallev. California: in the tobacco raising regions of Kentucky and Connecticut, the berry fields of Michigan and California, the cranberry bogs of New Jersey, the onion fields of Ohio and on the truck farms of Dela ware, they don't pay much attention to school attendance laws. The child workers attend only when there is do iwork to be-done in the fields. The : farm owners are influential and the them." You see, if a "beeter or cotton 'picker or tobacco plantation hand can .work his whole family, individual 'wjum'vnd ftiece rates need pot be so high and nobodyuffers except a lot of boys and girls whose parents are too shiftless or ignorant or greedy fO know or care that the denial of justice and' opportunity to children is race suicide of a more cruel sort than denying them' bjrth in the first place. The National Child Labor Committee1, has inaugurated a campaign to awaken' public opinion to the .enormity of the crime that is being committed against those who will form part of America'e manhood and womanhood a few years ' hence, and is in need of funds to carry on its work. Public opinion, the com mittee believes, can bring about en forcement of the school attendance laws and can educate parents and farm owners to a sense of their duty just as it caused the enactment of legislation to end the factory child labor evil David Franklin Houston, who was Secretary of Agriculture and subse fluently Secretary of the Treasury in President Wilson's Cabinet, is chair man of the National Child Labor Com- : mtttee. Owen R. Loveloy is general - secretary ana many ewer men and Un .....nmica nhlninoH fmm tt Vlll't-' ous recreational settlements within I that forest will pay the entire cost 1 of protection and administration. Yet the maximum charge for residence . permits within the national forests ! has been fixed by regulation at $25 per annum, and the minimum la $5. "The use of the national forests for recreation is being recognized by many communities as one of the greatest assets and privileges. Thi la resulting In the establishment of com munity camps under more or less for mal organization. They take every form, from the municipal vacation camps erected on the Angeles national forest under permit from the forest service and maintained by the city of I.os Angeles to the Improvement of some favorite picnic ground In the nutional forests by local citizens in eo-operatlon with local forest officials. Space is provided for parking auto mobiles, simple permanent fireplaces are built, wood Is made available for camp-Arcs and cooking without en dangering the forest from fires, rustic tables and seats are located conven iently for different parties, signs indi cate the direction and distance to at tractive points, and public conven- leadership of Rev lence is given mougnriui consuiem tion. Similar improvements are made bv the forest service when funds are available and local co-operation can be obtained to meet a real public need. These eamns are made avail able to the public without charge of any kind by the forest Bervlee. TJie vacation camps, such as those main tained by Los Angeles, require a charge merely sufficient to cover the expense of feeding and earing for the successive groups of city patrons who enjoy its privileges under municipal direction. "The anneal for local recreational facilities and the demand for summer home sites are growing so rapidly that there Is need for men of special train ing to direct and plan the most ef fective development of this service. Many communities are subscribing liberally .for the erection of Improve ments upon the national forests for public convenience. To bring about the fullest use of the natlonul forests and contribute their proper quot to the nation's health, there is needed a special fund of $60,000 for recreational-development. This will per mit the employment of several trained landscape engineers, more rapid and at the same time more careful de velopment, the improvement of addi tional camp grounds and provision of other public facilities and conven iences, and enlarged co-operation with local communities. It is said that this would be a good business policy; the increased receipts from Individual home sites, .which Is only one by product of our recreational work, will return to the treasury much more than the total amount to be expended for recreational development. "Closely related with the develop ment of the recreational resources 1. the use of the national forests as a habitat of fish and game and the pro tection of wild life as a great public resource. Game protection is one of the regular activities of the field of ficers of the forest service. Co-operation with the state and local author ities in enforcing the game laws has contributed In no small degree to ward making our national forests more attractive to visitors and con veying one of their most Valuable re sources. This work will be continued in the future along the same broad lines, it Is stated. i "To make this work more effective arid to secure better development of terdny by W . P. Kllpatrlc k, secretary of the local church. The local church has been without a pastor slncb Rev. W. D. Peters left the city to assume Iho pastorate at Plrst Orace church St. Louis, which Is one of the largest Lutheran church es in the fnited States and which has a membership of over 2,580. Rev. Mr. Kurandt- was recently call ed from his church at Grafton by a large Lutheran church In Texas hut the general board of the church has The follow in really ' transfers wire vestertlav filed for recordation In the ohVe of the register of deeds' W. I.. 1'arker to W. V. I'liilior. for J'J.'iO, li acres In lleenis ('.'reek town- hlp. i M I'siiaiid In I i'. Chance, for $10 I anil elhir considerations, properly at lit., junction of 1'atton avenue anil l urler street Mrs K M. 1'atton to C V. Patton, for Jl anil oilier coiisiileralioim, Dfi aires In Hlmk Mountain township. V. It. Gixidsnn to C S ration, for SID uml other considerations, .7:1 acres in IM.'iek Mountain IowiimIiIi). Kind .1. Smith to W W. Smlili. for $lii and other considerations 1 l-d nrres adjacent to Adam's estate. Hum iiihIm) county. T J. Ilrookshlre to K. Kdwanis. for $10 and oilier considerations, property on Hash street. Wist Aihtvllle. .lohn M. Parker to Isaac: Michnlnve, for $10 and other considerations, prop erty on Plsgah avenue. K. XI l.ytle to Thomas II. Harper, for $:S. ( acres In Kalrvlew township. William Gilliam to A. .1. Gilliam, for $10 and oilier consideration, property In the town of Black Mountain. I'.ynuni 11. Sumner tn H. If. Weir, for $ii and other considerations, half In terest In property at the Junction of Oak Turk anil West View roads. .laines I.. Alexander to Richard C. ScruRKS, for $'J1, property on Muntfnrd avenue. CI. I). Gardner to I,. J Kshelman, for $10 and other considerations, four acre on the AshevHle-llendersoiivllle high way. It was Josh Billings who said: "If our foresight was as good as our hindsight, we'd be a dern sight better off." This advice applies to our great Summer Sale of Suits, Dresses, ' Wraps, Hats, etc. Buy now, while prices are at rock bottom. New merchan dise that arrived last week will be added to the sales racks tomorrow. Later on, early fall models will cost you more. It's natural in the regular season. So buy now, for present and future needs. CADISON'S A Fashion Shop for Ladies. Fourteen Biltmore Ave a I I . ... . i msrriagti iicvn released nev. Mr. tmrandt from the Marrlnue licenses were yesterday lexns can ana permuted mm to ac- i Issued from tin the office of the register of eept the call to Ashevllle ln view of I deeds to the. following: the fact that this Is a larger field. Charles H. Harris and Nellie Lee TV, a (V, l,.l, ' O". noi n III nmvriviur. formerly held a position as teacher In Concordia college at Conover and was assistant pastor at Conover. He graduated at the seminary in St. Louis and Is considered a man of un usual ability. In recent months the local church has made considerable progress and leading laymen assert the growth of the church will be marked under the Mr. Burandt. WrlKtr, both of Iairester. Clarence B. Holesbee and Klla Mssney, boih of Black Mountain. Leonard Hrltlaln, of Weavcrvllle, and Lucy Williams, of Helena, S. C. YOUR FIRST, LAST AND only chance to buy lots in the Bilt more Forest Development section at auction, will be August 17th, 10 a. m., when 30 lots will be sold. 35i lt- 1 , 1 'J Mfceise;' Invariably rare flavor, appetizing fragrance and nutritive wholesome ness are sealed in every bottle of Budweiser. Butj it by Iris case from your dealer for your home, . BollUJ at the Bmrwy AnhbuserBusch, Im. St. Louis, Mo., U.S. A. ELLIS & BEADLES Distributors ASHEVILLE, N. C. yhoorPraellriiesiUKe to tsaonUejwotneiref national pfwn!nee its sf-' filiated with th Amnkitlrai. OmtrL' butions should be sent to V. EverrTj Mcy, treasurer, at 103 East Twenty-i second Street, New York Cftjn- WELLS TAKES OFFICE AS SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS MONDAY Frank L. Wells, newly elected su perintendent of, the rural schools of Buncombe county, will assume his new duties Monday. ; He arrives at i:80 o'clock this afternoon from New York, and mill be in office Monday; August IS, on the opening day of (3 of the white schools ln the .county. , On this day some 7,000 ot the flower of Buncombe-cOunty's younger generation, between the ages of sis and IS, .will regretfully lay aside the pastimes and pleasure of vacation, pick up their books, and trudge over the hill to the little red schoolhouse. Ths faculties of the 103 schools ln the .county are far better than ever beforer 'j4 every ffort t being made! by the county school officials that this may go down ln the records as the most successful school term in Bun combs history. The other schools of th eounty will ONLY TWO MORE PAYS in which to buy groceries at 25 reductions. Our doors will positively close Tuesday night ITWN TUESDAY M MJ(Go 11 41 R Stock, fixtures, etc., will be sold at Auction. Will sell entire stock to reliable party and arrange easy payments, or accept good notes on part or all. Campbell's Beans. . Campbell's Soups. . . Jello at. . . . Large No. 3 Cans Tomatoes . . . Paul's Jams. . . . . . White Cloud Peas, 2 for Stokley Corn. Large Can Salmon . Libby's No. 2 Grated ' Pineapple. . , ,. . Rosedale large Cans Royal Anne Charries. Large Libby's ' Milk. . !' -I 8c 8c 8c 10c 34c 25c 10c 10c 24c 30c 10c Large Carnation Milk Borden's Eagle Milk Armour's Jellies. . Pie Peaches, large cans 2 for . lb, Cans Roast Beef. , Sour Pie Cheries Large .Cakes Glycerine Soap, 3 for Lassen's Perfection Flour, 24 pounds Queen of Pantry Flour, 24 pounds Lipton's Coffee pound. ' Swift's Washing Powder. . ,.. ,. . .-. .. 10c ,. 20c 10c 25c . 24c .., 25c . 25c $1.30 $1.30 .,. 30c ,4c Renso, 3 for . . . . Del Monte Raisins . . i. Rumford's Baking Powder 1 pound . .i Tuna Fish small Can . v . .r. Wesson Oil quarts.' Large Cans Mustard Sardine, 2 for , . Herring Roe, large 20c .28c 24c 20c ,'40c 25c Del Monte Sliced Pineapple large can . i Large Cans Asparagus Tips. . . . . 21c 35c 32c Large Size G. Washington dt ff Coffee. . i.i....,n.M.i.. vliUU 49c .. 15c Quart Jar Peanut Butter. Bulk Cocoa pound LJ Ml 18 South Pacic Square. Asheville, N. C. i i s i i - :! i pen Monday, September 12.

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