Newspapers / The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.) / Sept. 2, 1902, edition 1 / Page 1
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V V 7 if The People Read The Times . . ft Reach the People . . . Through f THE TIMES. lj VOLUME XVII. HENDERSONVILLE, N. 0., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1902. f , rr p. A wINotynA I tU HICTURt. 111 How It JOHETST.OEFS k if 7 MNJI ji-J pall am CTfflT Ladies Tailor Made Garments made to order and delivered one week from date of order promptly. , Made of the very prettiest and most fashsonable ma terial for walking and dress purposes, all new, ; thorough up-to-date styles, Call and examine sam- pie garments and prices. Ladies ready to wear skirts in great variety 40c to $5.00; Ladies ready-to- . wear Cloth Jackets $ 1-50 to $5.00; ladies ready-to- f wear Oloth Gapes 75c to $2 50 ; ladies ready-to-wear -shirt waists 25c to $2.00; just received .and ready for sale Fine solid Black dress goods 10c to 50c; fancy colored dress goods 10c to 50c; all wool' shirt-waist flannels 25c; yard wide fine heavy F.'anneletts 8c; " - . Colored outing flannels in great variety 4c to 10c; v . Heavy canton flannels 6c to 10c; all wool Red and White flannels 15c to 25c ; white and colored blank . ets per pair 60c to $1.50; we offer the greatest bar . . gains and best values In seasonable dry goods. S. JOHNSTON, 39 MAIN STREET nnn Q n n f L uV u Paints For All SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINT. JOHN W. MASURYS PAINT. PERMANERE FLOOR FINISH; SATSUMA INTERIOR ENAMEL. DECORLNE WALL FINISH. You've no idea how a few dollars invested . n this department .will improve the looks" of your home. . L Leads in Fire and Life Insurance, At the Real. Estate Office of . " r SMITH & VALDR0P. MWmrd THE BATEfl IS COJIlPIiETE K : Only when a dash of toilet water is added. ' Select this from our fine assortment. The ." quality will please. Any of these are delightfully refreshing and give just the right touch of per- , fame. OTHER TOILET ARTICLES Such as Brushes, Soaps, : Sponges, Powders, etc., are here at the smallest prices consistent with good quality. Some prices. that may prove interesting. J. F. BROOKS & CO., Druggists, Henderson ville, N. C. . We've made a specialty of footwear for many years. You will find the best for the pricey here. And the price is low, quality considered. Widths from AA to EE. That's why 73 fit all sorts of feet. i Hail crdcrs a specialty . J. Spansenbsrg, Asheville, N. 0. Ccnrt C laro. " Hsbevillc Seminary Invigorating cli- afor 1iQbev Education of ,HClomen. " mate; refined associates; full col lege faculty, graduates of Ameri can and European colleges and universities; scientific and classi cal courses; music, art and ex pression; individual instruction. Elegant appointments. Summer Doaraers received. For catalogue addsess Is. t. Burfee, XX. S president, 110 Cum6erlan& Hrenue, HeberiHc, .r. J i porjG ii at F. F. BAINBRIDGE'S, ' . Pctton Ave. AsheviUe, N. O. Affected a Model, the Artist and a Kobleman. A popr Bohemian gypsy girl of re markable beauty was employed by a German artist to sit for one - of his "studies." In .his studio she saw an unfinished . painting of the crucifixion and asked him who "that wicked man" was and what he had done to deserve such a terrible punishment, y The artist smiled at her ignorance and told her that' the man nailed to the cross was not wicked, but good above all good men in the world. ' From; that time her interest in the story of the cross never ceased. She was utterly untaught, and it was by her ' questions rather grudgingly an swered by the painter, who had no real Christian sympathy that she got her first knowledge of the Saviour of mankind. Noting her employer's lack of feeling, she said to him one day: . ; I should think 'you would love him if he died for you." The remark fastened itself in the artist's mind. The death of Christ had appealed to him as a pictorial tragedy. The divine life of Jesus had never touched him. The ignorant Bohemian girl had presented the subject to hia i in another w.ay, and it would not let him rest till he sought religious coun sel and ultimately became a servant and a worshiper of the Crucified. i Under the inspiration of a hew love ne finished the picture, and it nung in tne Dusseldorf gJillery, with this, inscription: "I did this for thee. What hast thou done for tne?" Some time afterward he met his. former model there, .weeping in front of the . painting. This time he cojild speak to her as a Christian . , sue fiaiUy. .uiu ne uie ior Ihe poor Bohemians too?"" . "Yes." -- . a ' " i And the Man of Galilee had one dis ciple more. ' A few months later, dying in a gypsy camp not far 'from the city, the girl sent for the artist and thanked him. I "I am going te him now," she said.' I love him and I know he loves, me." j Years afterward a frivolous young nobleman ' looked on the same picture, and the study of it and the rebuking pathos, of its inscription so moved and influenced khim that -3 he ; consecrated himself to the Service of God. The young man was Count Ziazendorf. the founder of the Moravian church. : The benediction to the world of a noble and uplifting picture is but fee bly measured by the few examples that ever attain publication. It can teach the ignorant, it can rebuke the immor al, it can inspire the devout and thoughtful, and it can preach the su preme truth which St. Paul declared to be his only message and his last en thusiam. Youth's Companion. his parish Why, the letters are the author's Initials," answered the clergyman "G. A. Townsend." "But what does the H stand for?", the other persisted. "That's where he Is going when he. dies," came from the doctor. The questioner was visibly Im pressed. 7 ' "Is. he such a very bad man?" she1 asked, almost in a whisper. "Certainly hot," replied Dr. Swallow. "The H stands for heaven." New York1 Times. . BOOKS FOR GIRLS. Are ' Crivelll'a Faintinar of Clirist. :' Carlo Crivelli's famous painting of Christ, entitled "Deposition From tike Cross," has been added to the picture galleries of the Museum of Fine Arts, on Copley square. ; : - The 'painting , was finished in 1485 and: was brought to the museum from a private collection of paintings in It aly. Three-fourths of the cost of the paint ing was paid by a contributor who-refused to make his name known, while the museum paid the remainder of the cost. , '-.;;7;:';:';' ':''i.;c7:;':'-;. ;'rV;:' 7 The painting Is on a wooden panel and represents the dead Christ, the Blessed Virgin, St. John and Mary Magdalene. At the bottom on the frame Is signed "Opus Carlo Crivelll. 1485." I At the top of the picture Is a wreath of fruit. The background of the painting Iln gold, as Is the -dress of Mary Mapi lene and the halo .of the dead Christ. I The colors of the dresses are particu larly bright. . Behind the body of Christ is hung an elaborately decorated piece of embroid ery. Boston Post. A Critic Who Declares There None Worth, the Reading:. Where are the books for girls ? Adults' books there are and books for boys by the carload, says Frank Norris in the Critic, but where is the book for the young girls? Boys' books, tales qf hunting, adventure and sport, abound. They are good books, too, sane, healthy," full of fine spirit and life. But the girl what does she read? The feeblest, thinnest, most colorless lucu brations that It is given to the mind of misguided man to conceive or to per petuate. It must be this or else the literature of the adult, and surely the novels written for mature minds, for men and women who have some knowl edge of the world and powers of dis crimination, are not good reading In any. sense of the word for a sixteen- was tyear-old girl In the formative period of her life. But for all the great parade and prat ing of emancipated women it neverthe less remains a fact that the great ma jority of twentieth century opinion is virtually oriental In its conception of the young girl. The world today is a world for boys, men and women. Of all humans the young girl, the sixteen-year-old, is the least important, or at least Is so deemed. Wanted a cham pion; wanted the discoverer and poet of the ) very young girl. Unimportant she may now appear to you, who may yet caM her by her first name without fear and without reproach. But re member this, you who believe only In a world of men and boys and women the very young girl of today is the wo man of tomorrow, the wife of the da"y after and the mother of next week. She only needs to put up her hair and let down her frocks to become a very important person indeed. Meanwhile she has no literature; meanwhile, faute de mieux, she Is try ing to read Ouida and many other books intended for maturer minds, or, worse than all, she is enfeebling her mind by the very thin gruel purveyed by the mild mannered gentlemen and ladies who write stories for girls. Here Is a bad business; here is a field that needs cultivation. All very well to tend and train the saplings, the oaks and the vines. The flowers they have not bloomed yet are to be thought about too. There's a steady roll of bargains here. It's a restless current of popular trading that carries all things with it. 1 We Supply the Goods As You Want Them. No Risk of Inferiority, No Chance of Disappointment, No Useless Waste of Kash, When you do your trading: with The Wilson Mercantile Company, HENDERSONVILLE, N. C. No Excuse for Idleness. livery you ng person who wants '.employment can secure it through a thorough course at the Asheville Business College, Asheville, N. C. The following applications were ' selected at random from our correspondence file and are a fair average of the number received every week in the entire Tear : From G. P. Stevens & Co.. Atlanta. Oa . "Wn ping clerk), one who writes a good hand, is fast at figures and doi?t make mistakes. One not under 26 ves. in nrftwT3 ro . . ". r t- - jr uu no cure us a man it Yours trujy. 'G. P. Sttvens." From Southern Express Co., Charlotte, N. O. : "I want to secure a stenographer. The writer will be in Ashe ville in a few days. Trv to r V ' ou" u uioiw bwwi as a geii mere. ; "Very Respectfully, OUR By Long Distance 'Phone, from Atlanta, Ga.: "Have you a young man or lady who is well up in book keeping and stenography, Is quidk, and dont make mistakes. Will paj $60 a month for afgood stenog rapher. Please write us by today's mail or wire. - "Southern Manufacturing Company." Telegram, Jfrom Chattanooga. Ten n.: "Confirming your favor of yes terday.EJSend us a stenographer or a book keeper at once. "F. G. Willingham." A"B. SCHOLARSIP. -America Alwayi Leads. "If the people of England knew how beautiful the public buildings in the United States are and: how superior American hotels are. the amount of travel! to this country would be many times as great as it is at present,'' said a Londoner to an Interviewer in Wash ington the other day. "I am on a tour of the world. When I landed in New York, I did not expect to find much of interest to me. That city was a series of surprises." Its modern buildings, with perfect elevator service and every con venience, ' made a great impregQion on me. I did not expect to find any build ings 'in this country which would com pare with those of the old world in architecture, but a ride through the streets of Washington was enoogh to convince me that my ideas of America were very erroneous. The capltol. Con gressional library and other govern ment buildings are as beautiful as any buildings in the world, and their Inte riors surprise all Europeans. It takes the Yankee to equip a building with ev ery possible convenience. . - New England Dialect. The professor of Latin in a New England school has until within six months claimed that stories of New England dialect were absurdly exag gerated, but a few months ago a liv ing refutation of his views arrived In the person ot a New Hampshire maid en of stern aspect Who had been en gaged for general housework. The professor's study is a good sized room, and, as he is fond of plenty of air, he finds three windows and a door no more than sufficient to Drovide a current. When the new handmaiden had been In the family a week, she passed through the hall one cool morn ing and stopped at the door of the study. "Do you wish anything?" asked the professor, roused by a dry cough from the doorway. "Well. I don't want to be forthput- tlng,'' said the New Hampshire maid en In a firm but pleasant tone, "but It does seem as if you were setting in a complete draft "Don't you want the door cluz or the windows shet or least ways the curtains drew?" Youth's Companion. . m m . m" ' Perfection Attained. "Clifton" fancy patent is a perfect flour. It is not possible to put more quality and purity into a flour than our Clifton" brand contains. "Clifton" is a soft wheat fancy patent. It is made from select wheat, every grain of which was grown on keeduct, soil the best wheat in the wide world. ; Only the plum pest and choicest ' berries are selected. These are thoroughly cleaned, and then by a special process of graded reduction are converted into flour. The cream of the flour is separated and sifted through the finest silk bolting cloth, fj giving it a velvety softness seldom p, tound in ordinary flour. That's "Clifton" and that's why it is a per fect flour the finest product expert milling and modern mill can make from the best wheat grown. "Clifton" is a flour of quality at a reasonable price.' You can pay as much and get an inferior flour, but you cannot get a better flour, what ever you pay. Bbaksfobd Mills. r Owensboro, Ky. Embraces withaut doubt, themost complete business and short hand course in the south. Positions on this scholarship are an absolute certainty. We issue this scholarship every year at this time. If you complete it and want a position "we can get it for you. Asheville Business College, Asheville N. C. a Wide-Awake amd lH5iiiiy That keeps our stock fresher- Drugs never get old Newest and latest varieties The most perfect equipment Experi enced liscensed pharmacists for prescription work Wide awke progressive methods to improve every feature. We are not the "Biggest thing on earth" ; but those who trade here seem satisfied to keep on trading here year after year. We invite you. The Justus Pharmacy, JheDrrn.r.eoatb9 flendersonville, N. C. M ) ) ) ) ) RUES ACCIDENT, HEALTH. ) ) ) The Northwestern Mutual Life's new policy contracts cover every contingency of life. I have spent years in the study of Life Insurance, so am prepared to write for you just what you need to suit your own case. . Fire Insurance I write as well.'as Accident and Health, also Plate Glass. . '' No companies in my office except those which have stood the test of time and ngidJState inspection. ERNEST L. EWBANK, TomsiStone Building, North Side Main Street, Hendersonville, N. C. 1 'I 1 : -Where He Wm. Going. The Rev. Br. Swallow tells a story about George Alfred Townsend, who writes over ine nom ae piume 01 uatn. This sfesatue ii on every box of the genniM "What does that name mean?" Dr. LasativC LrcrQn5 TabieU 1 1ST ii Tl r JF SS ijuij m iiiii W P MMHK MHH 1 MEET ME AT ... STATON BUGS', Opposite court house, where you friends. Also a complete line ; of Goods, Notion, tlats and Shoes. will 'find your Groceries, Dry rw f vao icsMoy i&M evea mala to
The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.)
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Sept. 2, 1902, edition 1
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