Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / March 6, 1906, edition 1 / Page 7
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THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, MARCH 6, 1906 7 OC0 S SIDE BY SIDE WITH SON E-til Veterans of the Civil War Still Living and Residents of Hagers-toA-n. Md. Daltiinoie, Md Mch. 6. Forty-one vt,ivs since the end of the civil war a;e few men living who partic 'itod'in that bloody strife who were onoush at the time to have a son "to iWit inside them in the same cause. In Maryland, however, there is at least re instance of the kind. Colorcl E. M. Mobley, of Hagerstown -rd his son, Edward C. Mobley, fought ti-vtlHi in the same company of the sanie rodment from 1861 to the close ci the war. Thev are both living today in Hagers- TIn "l"! Colonel Mobley was elected sVrift" of Washington county. Just the expiration of his term of office Pn'Viu Lincoln issued his first call for 75 000 volunteers. Colonel Mobley jiium MiV.uely became interested and be .'.', to recruit a company. He was 'icc.ful in procuring a sufficrent nunil'ev f men. The' wore formed nn'l mustered in as Company A, Sev enth Maryland Infantry, with Mobley as captain. In the ranks was the captam s son. Edward C. The regiment was soon sent to the fI(vu It participated in many hard contested fields. Captain Mobley's bravery on the field in every battle in w'l';ch his command was engaged- at tracted the attention of his superior of'Uvrs. and he was gradually promot ed until he was finally breveted colonel. He was severely wounded three times ilurintTthe struggle and still bears the sr"is of battle. "llis son also earned the title of a callant soldier and has had a record of which anv one would be proud. Colonel Mobley had ten sons, eight cf whom are living. They all would have ieined him in the war had they Wn old enough. One who, in the vern reular of today was a "kid" did run luvav from home and tried to join the rnvy. but was refused enrollment on account of his tender age and was sent back to his mother. One of the sons, Harry, now employ ed in the Custom House, was seven years old at the time. He said yester day: i remember distinctly seeing the redment especially my father's compa ct as both "of my eyes were fixed on tiiat part of the command, march out cf Hagerstown on the way to the front. And how I did wish I was big enough to go with my father and brother." Colonel Mobley also ' has a brother living. Walter Mobley, who was a member of the Seventh Regiment. Colonel and Mrs. Mobley in 1893 cele brated the fiftieth anniversary of their wedding, the eight surviving sons be ing present. They had no daughters. Mrs. Mobley died in 1P00. Colonel Mobley was married when nineteen years old. He is now eighty one. WELLMAN TO GO NORTH IN JUNE. Flans to Make Experimental Flight in Airship at Spitzbergen. Paris Correspondent of the Chicago News. Walter Wellman's preparations arc progressing in such a business-like way that he expects to be in Spizbergen by June to begin the preliminary trials of the airship in which he hopes to reach the north pole. The airship which he just has ordered from Louis Godard, the expert state balloonmaker, meas ures sivteen meters (about 57 feet 6 inches) long. Therefore it will be un like the Santcs-Dumont type cigar shared gas bags. The envelope will be composed of three heavy tissues. The airship will be propelled by two motors, one of twenty-five horse-power and one of fifty horse-power. These motors will be capable of working either separately or together. The speed of the airship when both motors are working will be, it is estimated, about sixteen miles an hour. With 300 liters (317 nuart) of gasoline in the reservoir the motor will be able to work for 17r hours in other words, long enough to cover more than twice the distance from Spitzbergen to the pole. Mr. Wellman's choice of airship type has been criticised in certain quarters, but this selection was ' not made until after many days of investi gation, comparison and study. The dis position which was first shown to doubt the seriousness of Mr. Wellman's intentions has entirely disappeared. Al though it is generally doubted if the pole can be discovered in this manner, it is agreed that if it can be, Mr. Well man is the man to do it. "At Spitzbergen in June Twill make ascension which will permit the study f aerial currents and meterological conditions," said Mr. Wellman to the correspondent of the Daily News to- flltv ''TIti"" r : : 1 1 1-. rtirt?c-irtf j. i uis filltli ieilC Will V ucv-cooaij for the following year, but if all condi- ""us. me essentially tavoraoie we snaii tot hesitate to make an effort to reach the pole this year." The airship will cost $14,000. Memphis Commercial-Appeal: ' San Francisco wants to celebrate a birth Jay in 1913 with a world's fair. Uncle kam has too many municipal children getting along in years to give each a Grid's fair for a birthday present. STARVING TO DEATH. -, because her stomach was so weak ened by useless drugs that she could J?1, eat. Mrs. Mary II. Walters, of St. air St., Columbus, O., was literally - arvmg to death. She writes: "My w-miach v.-as so weak from useless u- that I could not eat, and my r, vw ;" " recked that I could not TP ami not beIore 1 wa3 given up i451& 1 induced to try Electric iC?v.' vith the wonderful result ' f lr-Provemonl5 -jegan at ence, and co-nnlete cure followed." Best health i?Dlc oa earth. 50c. Guaranteed by oaali Sheppard, druggists. .4 SI Med Avers Cherry Pectoral is not iri - t - wiw.ij.lw doctor's medicine. It cures hard cases. severe and desperate cases. Especially e , , 6u " uioutums, pieunsy, consump I f i 71 P -Ask y?r doctor all about this. The South the Place to Die. Two Southerners now livine in Northern City were exchanging recol lections, f , ' "Whatever became of -, who came up here from Selma a few years ; afterxlteconstruction?" asked the Ken- ( tuckyian. j "Went back, baggage and accouter ments about four years ago," answer ed the Georgian. J "Didn't he do well here?" "Better than he ever did' before. But ; Jim had a streak of that fool senti ment, which has kept so many South erners down at the heel. He was al ways pining." , "If he was doing well, why did he ! pine?" , "He always used to say to me that i this was the best, town on "earth to live 'in. but he" always got the blues when he got to .thinking about dying here. And what do you suppose was ,the kick about that? j "I was up at his house on night and he got to doing business with the undertaker as usual. I made myself very inquisitive, for I had got tplerable tired of hearing him on that topic. "Thereupon he dug up a bundle of Southern newspapers. They were from several States. Jim began opening the ( file. Nearly every paper had an obit r uary of some prominent man or wo ' man. ! ''Look at 'em!' said Jim in a forlorn sort of' way. '"Well, Jim,' I says, 'what about 'em?' " 'That's it,' he replied. 'Every one of these obituaries has mourning rules at the - top and bottom, and in some Leases the whole of the page is in mourning. They read as if the writ ers were broken-hearted. Some of the articles have poetry in them. Now and then there is some latin.' "I asked him if it wasn't alright for a good man to have such a send off. "He allowed as I was right. '"That's what I'm talking about.' he said. 'That's what I want. A fel low like you an me has no chance to j get a notice here. The other day one j of the best men in Alabama shuffled the ceil and he got less than seven lines, and some of the papers here don't know yet that he is dead. When I got my batch of Alabama papers they had left out the sheriff's sales and some of the county news in order to make a spread of my old friend. It's the same whenever a good man dies down there.' 'It wras a streak of sentiment in Jim. He couldn't help it. It preyed on him until he just quit business here and hiked to the back-yonder." "And he is waiting to die, I reckon, so as to get a good obituary." "No, he died about a year ago. I got an Alabama paper printed the day alter his demise, and all there was in it was the usual death notice that look ed, as if it had been paid for." 'In some parts of the South it is considered a crime for a man who has lived down there to go anywhere else. If he goes back he never seems to be as big as he was before he left. "That was what ailed Jim. I reckon if he had stood still in Alabama he would have been good for at least a column in his town paper." Some Advanages in Being Dead. From "Success Magazine." Colonel Henry Watterson tells of the astonishment and chagrin with which a certain well-known citizen of Louisville, named Jenkins, read a long obituary of himself printed in a morn ing paper of that city. He at once proceeded to the editorial office of the paper, and after much difficulty, suc ceeded in obtaining audience of the busy city editor. Laying a copy of the paper before him, he observed in a mild, almost humble way, tnat ne naa come to see if the city editor could "tell" him "anything about it. With a snort cf impatience, the busy city editor grasped the paper and hastily read the article. "It appears to be an obituary for one JenKms, ne growled. "What is there to 'tell' about it? What is the matter with ycu, any how?" "Oh nothin? esnecially." responded thf- milri Jenkins, "only I thought I'd like to know how theobituary came to be printed that s all. "Came to be printed?" repeated the pHitnr in irritated tones: "why, the man died, of course. My paper does not print obituary notices or living men. "Perhaps not, as a rule," gently re plied the visitor, "but, in this case, I happen to be the Jenkins referred to." Thereupon the city editor began a profuse apology. "We'll print a cor rection at once," he said. "WpII after all." observed the mild Jenkins, "perhaps it would be better to let it stand; I'll show it to my irienas when they try to borrow money of me." The Farmer and the "Party Wire." From "Success Magazine." When the independent teiepnone rnmnanies first began to come togeth er in conventions to exchange experi ences, one fact was always commentea upon with great curiosity by the man-acroi-r. nf tnwTi nr rit.v nlants. This was that they invariably met with fail ure in their endeavors to induce iarm oro tr nut in what are known as "lock out" devices, by means of which every telephone on a party line oecuuieo q nrivate wire. In, cities, the party line is considered a great nuisance, because tnere is no pnvaujr in conversation, and all the bells on the line are rung each time a sub scriber calls. Naturally, the managers of plants figured thatthis objection prevailed in the country, also; but, al most without exception, they found that one f 6 the great attractions to the farmer was that his telephone did rin" every time the other sixteen or twenty people on the line rang up, and that he could hear or be overheard m conversation. It was a practical dem onstration of the social hunger the farmer has endured fcr centuries, and which is now ended, thanks to the ar rival cf telephone competition. TEXAN TOOK TAINTED MONEY. And in the Morning the Finger of Sus picion Was Levelled at Him. From the New York World. Don Singer, from Texas, cattle rais er, mine owner, inventor, and all around good felow, sat in the lobby of the Fifth Avenue Hotel yesterday and looked sad. Sonie'one asked the cause, and this is what he said: "It's tainted money that's got me locoed. These here newspapers talk about tainted money as though it were a great joke; but it ain't no joke to me; and I'm subscribin' to the truth from out'n a big fund of experience." Don refused an invitation to go to the highball counter by saying: "Not on your life. I'm havin' no more of this Broadway booze. I'm going to wait till I get back to Fort Worth, where I know the people that sell it. It always gets me into trouble up here, and, between that' and tainted money, I'm sure up ag'in it this trip." He looked sadly out into Madison Square and went on: "I had a long business trip down in the Mazuma district yesterday, ands as Mrs. Don was taking dinner out I took on a date to go along with some of my sky-scraping financiering friends to dinner, and we started up town late after a long business meeting. We lick ed in a few., from the Savarn to the Savoy, and when we got to the table I began to feel something like the age I was when I attended a party in the old round-up times. " I don't know whether it's because they thought I needed it, or because they wanted to show how good they were, but anyway them fellers started spraying with that gold water wih the tickly bubbles in it along with the soup, and by the time we got to the condensed milk and co coa I was feeling just as springy and bright-eyed as I ever did in the days when I thought the only way to spend an evening was in a honky-tonk in the pueblos. "Then we went to a variety show and then to one of them lobster joints to get something to eat. After that I got going some and felt I ought to let out a hole or two and begin to do some buying myself. We started down that street out there they call the White Way, and feeling rich, I can't see it to lay down anything but gold pieces, even for a round of drinks. Of course they hand me back the change in that dirty rag money that seems to be fash ionable down here, and I stuff it in my pocket to give to the bellboys. "I never rot to a bar: once, mind you. It was always sitting down in some small place where they don't care what kind of society comes in so long as it's got the price. Well, I hove in about midnight, with a regular old fashioned tired feeling on, and after listening to Mrs. Don's remarks about the wickedness of men in general I goes to sleep. This morning Mrs. Don' comes to me and says, 'Don, I want some change for the chambermaid,' and I tells her to go to my pocket and get it. In about three seconds she came back, and stuffing a wad of short change in the shape of dollar bills un der my nose, wants to know who my company was the night before, because that rag money had been in some per fumed person's kick. "If it wasn't Tor my past record I know Mrs. Don would be down knock in' on the door of one of them divorce lawyers right now. As it is, she's out buying a new fur coat, and I've prom ised no to touch another drop till I get home. Plenty of Air. From "Success Magazine." A crowded trolley car slowly wound its way from the city of Newark north ward toward New York. A bald-headed man who looked like "Citizen Fixit" clutched" a strap with one hand and gesticulated with the other. He was addressing the crowd collectively. "Not a ventilator open,' he shouted "not a window, not a door! Here we are, penned in like a lot of ani mals; we are longing for a breath of fresh air. But what does the company care?" A tall man with a derby hat dodged instinctively to avoid the waving arm. "We get aboard; we pay our fare," declared he of the bald head, "and the doors are shut, the windows are shut, the ventilators are shut. We. cannot move; we are siffled!" "Has anybody got aboard?" suggest ed the tall man. "Fixit" withered him with a glance, and then shouted excitedly: "What kind of air is this we are breathing now? I ask you what kind of air is this we are breathing now?" The tall man in the derby shoulder ed his way toward the back of the car. "Hot. air," he replied, with a grin. The 1906 Summer Man. New York Correspondent Chicago Inter-Ocean. The make-up. of the summer man of 1906 is forecast in the Haberdasher for February. He will differ from the sum mer man of former years largely in be ing "more so." Indications show that the shirtmak ers having reached the limit in weird combinations of colors last year, have gone back to the patterns in use when the negligee shirt era began. The popular pattern will be a white shirt full of all sorts of squares made by deep colored light lines which will re mind one of the kind that "Uncle Si" used to wear with a celluloid collar pinned on it. The clothing for menvwill be light in color and full of squares made by dark colored lines The coats for spring and summer are to be "waisty" that is, they are to show the figure between the hips and the shoulders. The fold-over collar will continue in favor. Trousers will be slightly nar rower and as short as sisht lines . will permit. Half hose of rainbow hues and neckties to match will help along the color scheme. Panama hats and the fine straw al pines and sailors will make up the headware. The pajamas for summer are wonderful things, and, to use an expression of Broadway, are "perfect screams," with all sorts of fancy orna mentations. ' Indianapolis News: It is possible, too, that there maybe some hitch in rr.0o?iont Cnstro's rjlans for making j X i L kllUVlv Venezuela a world Power. Boy "Gee! There comes old March Wind. Wonder what he's after?" March Wind "I want a spring hat, sonny." Casual Philosophy From a Common place Person. Warwick James Price in "Success Magazine." What one goes into debt for, nine times out of ten; is a luxury. ' Gossips have no use for people who refuse to furnish material for them. A man always making excuses leaves himself no time to make anything else. Whoever wastes time brooding over time earlier wasted ages so much the faster. They say there is a snare in good looks, but it usually catches those that haven't the looks. Business based upon friendship threatens both; friendship based upon business strengthens both. That man can best ignore the en mity of those who don't understand him who goes home to wife who does. Dishonesty, in its last essence, is the forsaking of permanent advant ages for those that are merely tem porary. It runs in a circle. If trouble drives 3'ou to drink, drink leads you to more trouble, and there, you are. Tranquility is a'.flecent enough guest to entertain, but ; 'ti&6 cafe r that' she does not bring albiig' her twin sister ennui. , ' It is a good deal easier to pray for men's souls than to pour balm into their wounds not to mention that it costs less. The Supreme Court has not yet de cided which is the weaker man he who is not able to see his own weak ness, or he who has no faith in him self. : ; V ; The millionaire who has caught up with fortune turning sharp corners is much poorer than the bankrupt who failed doing his honest best. That much-talked-of "armor of sus picion" may protect the wearer once in a while, but usually it is of about as much help as a winter ulster in a hundred-yard dash. From an intellectual point of view, that time of one's life is most wasted when he tries, in a spirit of dumb loy alty, to admire all those things that are popularly considered admirable. "I Trust You." O. S. Marden in "Success Magazine." "I owe my salvation to three words you spoke," he wrote; "when all the world was against me you said, T trust you. " If every boy or girl who has made mistakes and gone astray could have such a friend, a great many of them would return to a normal life. The. feeling that somebody believes in us, trusts us no matter what oth ers believe or say touches the heart. Criminals are sometimes totally re formed through the consciousness that somebody still believes in them, no matter how low they may have fallen. Could we realize how much this trust and confidence would. do for a man when everything else has failed, we should be more generous of our confidence in our fellows. Something to be Thankful For. Sir Wemyss Reid wrote as follows cf one of his early experiences as a reporter: "On the first occasion of witnessing an execution, as I stood trembling at the foot of the scaffold on which the victim was about to ap pear, I noticed an old reporter, for whom I had entertained a great per sonal respect, pacing up and down be side me reading the New Testament. "In the passion of horror and pity that filled my young heart I concluded that my friend was seeking spiritual comfort in view of the event, in which we were ab6ut to take part as specta tors and recorders. I said, something to him about the horror of the act we were shortly to witness. "He looked up 'with a placid smile from his reading, and said gently for he was essentially a gentleman: 'Yes very sad, very sad; but let us be thankful it isn't raining.' And then he calmly returned to his daily read ing of the Word." Pittsburg Dispatch: Interesting as are these disclosures of how Mr. Wal lace "took off his hat" to Mr. Cromwell and Mr. Cromwell's eyes were "dim med vith tears," they are not moving any dirt at Panama. Is it npt about time that the Senate Committee goo down to business and abandoned this pro- jfitless excavation of personal quarrels? 9ighs9 Lots of people look at a cough' or cold as if it were inevitable, and refer to it as some ailment which they naturally expect dur ing the stormy winter months. No person need have the slightest at tack of cold or la grippe, nor even pneumonia, if their system is properly fortified. Rexall Mucu Tone will fortify your system against any such attacks. " Since we make this strong statement we will tell you how Mucu-Tone does this: Coughs, colds and pneu monia are but the result of a ca tarrhal condition, which is in reality an internal scrofula. If the system is free of catarrhal germs you need never fear coughs, colds and pneumonia. Mucu-Tone will do it, because Mucu-Tone clears the system of every trace of ca tarrhal germs, tones up the sys tem, shakes off hanging on tag end coughs and colds, revitalizes the entire system, increases the appetite and makes you put on flesh. You take no chances in buy ing Mucu-Tone, because we back it up by refunding the price if you are in any way dissatisfied. We couldn't 'afford to spend our time selling this remedy if it didn't benefit ninety-eight out of every hundred persons who use it. We want you to try, on our per sonal recommendation, a large trial-size bottle that we sell for fifty cents. j'-R. H. JORDAN &.CO., Druggists I THE PRESBY TERIAN COLLEGE for WOMAN CHARLO TTE, N. C. High-grade College for Worn en equipped with every modern con venience, hot jnd cold baths, el ectric lights, steam heat and fire es capes. Faculty of trained specialists. Standard High and work thorough. For catalogue, address REV. J. R. BRIDGES, D. D. We have Today 125 Horses and Mules in our Sales Stables, and they are the best selected lot of stock we have had this season. Each animal sold must , be as represented. J wadworth "V"S5 The Fire Alarm Bring ne fear of loss to the man whose home is protected by the Vir Fire and Marine insurance Co.. The Company with a record f seventy-three years of fair dealing and old-fashioned honesty. m n PJTTT SoS sT , AGENTS For All P WHATEVER YOUR FUEL REQUIREMENTS MAY BE WE ARE READY TO FILL THEM TO YOUR SATISFACTION. WE HAN DLE ONLY THE BEST COAL THAT MONEY CAN BUY STEAM, DOMESTIC BLACKSMITH'S COALS, REASON The United Drug Compajiy, , manufac turers of the Rexall Remedies, for whose preparations we are agents in this city, make 200 remedies, one for each ill. Each one is especially prepared to cure one disease, and that only. This is an age of specialists. You don't contract with a plumber to build your whole house, do you? Why should you con tract with one proprie tary medicine to cure all your troubles? For Nervousness Rexall, Americanitis Elixir, 75c. For Dyspepsia Rexall Dyspepsia Cure, 25c. For Coughs Rexall Cherry Juice, large bottle, 25c. And 196 other Rexall Rem edies for 196 other ail ments. 's Sons' Co V 4 you where to buy the dependable kind of Jewelry, such as we take pride in selling such as you will take pride in possessing. We offer very best goods for least possible money. Don't let the price court your suspicion for the quality is there. " Everything in the line of Jewelry that bears our thum marks has quality with it. We guarantee . every article we sell. E. LINEBACK Jeweler. 221 North Tryon Street. 4. v i '5 1 1 ! irposes 4 COAL Fuel Co SBABORD. ..... Air Line Railway.. Direct Line to Prin clpal Cities, North, East South ajivl Southwest Schedule Effective Jany. 7th 1U00. Trains Leave Charlotte as Folio,. No. 40, daily, at 5.01 a. m. for Monr Hamlet and Wilmington, connects at Monroe for Atlanta and points South, at Hamlet for Raleigh, Norfolk, Rich mond,, Washington, New York and all points north and east, for Columbia, Savannah and Florida points. No. 133 daily, at 10,10 a. m. for Lin colnton, Shelby and Rutherfordtoiu Connects at Lincolnton with C. & N. W. No. 132 daily, at 7,15 pi m. for Mon roe. Connects for Atlanta, Birming ham and points South, also Hamlet -Kaleigh. Norfolk, Richmond, Washing, ton, New York, and all points North and East, at Hamlet for Columbia, Sa vannah and Florida points. Pullman ' Sleeping Car Charlotte to Portsmouth Norfolk. No. 8 local freight, dally except Sun day with coach attached at 9,00 a, m for Monroe. Trains Arrive at Charlotte as Follows; No. 133 at 10,00 a. m., from points North and Sotuh. No. 132 at 7,05 p. m. from Rutherford tou, Shelby and Lincolnton. No. 39 at 10.45 p. m. from Wilmington, Hamlet and Monroe, also from point North and South. Connections are made at Monroe with all through trains for points North and South, which are composed of Vestibule l)a.y Coaches , Pullman drawing room sieep-cars and dining cars between At lanta through Richmond and "Well ington to New York. For rates, time tables, reservations apply to tiekt agents or JAMES KER, CP., Charlotte, N. C C. H. GATTIS. T. P. A.. Raleigh, N. C C. B. RYAN. G. P. A., Portsmouth, Va. . SOUTHERN RAILWAY in Effect February 11, 1905. ' This condensed schedule is published for information and subject to change without notice to the public. 4.00 a. m.. No. S. d.l.ilv fnr TJIfViTnnn. and local points, connects at Greensbo ro for Winston-Salem, Raleigh, Gols boro, New Bern and Mor',hed City, at Danville for Norfolk. 6.05 a. m., No. 27 daily for Rock Hill. Chester, Columbia and local stations. 7.10 a. m., No. 16 daily except Sundav, for Ktatesville, Taylorsville and local points; connects at Mooresville fot Winston-Salem and at Statesville foe Hickory, L.enoir, Blowing Rock, Ashe-ville--and points west. 7.15 a. m.. No. 39 daily. New York and Atlanta Express, Pullman Sleeper tc Columbus. Ga., and day coaches to At lanta. Close connections at Spartan burg for Ilendersonville and Asheville 8.33 a. m., No. 33, daily, New York and Florida Repress for Rock HIii. Chester. Winnsboro, Columbia. Savan nah, Jacksonville and Augusta. First class day coach Washington to Jack sonville. Dining car service 9.25. a. m. No. 36 daily, U. fS. Fast Mail ror Washington and all points north: Pullman drawing rooms.sleepers to Ne7 York and Richmond, day coaches New Orleans to Washington; dining car sen vice. Connects at Greensboro for Win ton-&alcni, Ralaigh and Goldsboro. 9.30 a. m. No. 37, daily, Washington and' Southwestern LJznited, PullmaB drawing room sleepers. New York te New Orleans and Birmingham; Pull man observation cap New York to Ma con; dining car service; solid Pullman train. 10.05 a .m. No. 30 daily, for Washing ton and all points North, Pullman sleep ers to New York; first-class coach to Washington. Close connectisns at Dan ville for Richmond. Va. Dining car ser vice. . 11.00 a. m. No. 28 daily; for Davidsou Mooresville, Barber Juntion, Cooleemeo, Mocks ville , Winston-Salem and Roa noke, Va., and local stations. 12.S5 p. m. No. 11 daily, for AtlanU. and local stations; connects at Spar tanburg for Hendersonville and Ashe ville. 6.00 p. m. No. 25 daily execept Sun . day. freisht and nassfn avr. frr PhoatD . S. C. and local points. , 7.00 p. m., No.. 12 daily for Richmond and local stations, connects at Greens boro for Goldsboro. Pullman sleeper Greensboro to Raleigh; Charlotte to Richmond, and Charlotte to Norfolk. 7.50 Taylorsville and local station; con for Statesville and local stations; con t-ects at Statesville for Asheville, Knox viile, Chattanooga and Memphis. 8.18 p. m. No. 38 daily, Washington. ind Southwestern limited for Washing ion an1 all nnints nnrth Pullman ci.n. ers and Pullman observation car to New lOrK. Dining car service, fciolid Pull man train. 10.33 rt. m ' 'Vn. 31 fla llr 'Nroar Tm-!r and Florida Spress for Washingtoa ana points nortn. iJuit'nan sleepers from Jacksonville and Augusta to New Yor. First-class day coaches from Jacksonville to Washington. 9.50 p. m. No. 29 daily, Washington and Florida Limited for Columbia, Au gusta, Charleston, Savannah and Jack sonville. Pullman drawing room sleep ing car to Jacksonville. First-class day coaches Washingtou to Jackson ville. 11.03 p. m.. Wxo. 40 daily, for Wash ington and points north. Pullman sleep er to Washington. Firt-class day coach Atlanta to Washington. 10.20 p. rn., No. 35, daily, TJ. S. Fast Mail for Atlanta and points South and Southwest. Pullman drawing room sleepers to Mobile and Birmingham sleepers to New Orleans and Birming ham. Day coaches Washington to New Orleans. Dining car service. Baggage called for and checked from hotels and residences by Wadswortr Transfer Co., on orders left at C. T. O. H. S. SPENCER. Gen. Mgr. S. H. HARDWICK, P. T. M., W. H. TAYL.OE, G. P. A., Washington, IV. C. R. L. VERNON, T. P. A., T. J. WITHERSPOON, C. TVA. 11 S. Tryon St.. Charlotte, N. C- INSURE AGAINST Fire, -Sickness, Accident. In companies that are liberal In their dealings and prompt in their set tlements. it D. MOORE ROOM 7. 4C's BUILDING. i
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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March 6, 1906, edition 1
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