Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / April 27, 1911, edition 1 / Page 3
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' ■ 11. wif" jw THZ OHABLOTTE NEWS APRIL 27. 1911 3 IC. SHTE SUNDAY ASSOGIIITION A Marvelous “Let Go” KING MANUEL AND MOTHER s of ex-King Manuel and his mother, the former Queen Amel- npshot taken at RIchmomli rear London. There have been of late to the effect that a great plot Is being fostered t^e deposed monarch to th« throne. It Is reported that the orth of Portugal appears to be eager for the reetcration of c^y. while a great part of'^ths army Is affected with the same ■3int. That the ex-KIng Manuel Is kept fully Informed of the t;vity in Portugal there can be no doubt, but he certainly vv iny responsive seriousness. He and his mother are living usion at Richmond, one of London’s most charming suburbs. he Capital City I Esq. As briefly stated on the inscrip tion oa the tablet Bloomsbiirg, or _ , , 'Wake court house was founded in '1IJQ JtPl^nYTTnPTtf 1"71 when Wake county was founded, ao rendezvous of Governcr jTryon’s army when he marched I against the Regulators in 1771; here ^ I met the state revolution assembly in * "v-i vicinity was removed „ state government when North (’arolina Na- '•lanr r. A. Boone, for made by Chas. .i, Mass., in order that re to him a Bible that on the battle field } ofn dtjring the civil warl • • fly-leaf the name of n the inscription: “Pre- C, 1\. Caldwell.” L*t. ^“1 Capital City of Raleigh was incor porated in 1792. The ceremonies to day were witnessed by an immense crowd. Governor Kitchln spent today in Nash county, delivering an educational address at Gastonia. He will return to the city tomorrow. Tlie W'ake superior court is wrest- rV.ired ChHstVan min;|»''B » "“I '.''o ““’“S'; (• .’IPCP He has a son I Pmkie Phillips vs. the City of • who is a oracticing' in which $5,000 in damage rhnm i demanded for injuries sustained by M—♦ Maw Q 'falling into an open drain near the orth f'aro“a »' Bloodworth and Worth ,01 tn t.aroiina i.rana October court there was a trial in which the jury failed to agree. ..w ...er, a... "i;.,*?;? orriinHtP lodces with commissioners for build- n?l t hnt Tirfnjr the > $250,000 state administration . i," „ oremi/ed seven >'"‘>*‘■'8 I'™"''®" ■ a that two^ defunct still holdmg up the r irmtitPfi The formal announcement by the pvernor N' I* Vorfh '^ names of the commissioners d. i.iitv crand master ■ causing the loss ’ ’' of considerable valuable time in the preliminaries for the erection of this jreatly needed fireproof building. Among those known to have accepted P ’lows convenes in an- WinsvoTi-Salem, May 9, fJrand Secretary B. H. •\v that there are in iMhiiatn; the grand. .IciM's, Wiliningion. I rs Iss'JC^J. T’ * r' w J- S. Carr, Durham; Col. Ash- n V n vr .. iunri’ !>■ Home, Clayton; J. Elwood Cox, • ill i High Point; W. L. Parsons, Scotland ■ * * ■ county; State Senator Rascoe, Bertie county. The $2.’>0,0U0 bonds that the legislature i>rovided for are. State Treasurer i..acy says, to be issued as the ])ro(*essess of building requires them, the issue.s to l)e at any time af ter July I of ihis year. There will be no movement fo rthe issuance until the commission shall have been or ganized and signifies the fact of its leadinesH to proceed with the work. Tiieii the issues will be as the pro gress of the work requires I al Tn.^tirauce ’■ t0«!:'y i'll li ''niHlliOt of it'-. I ill There ■ l i f'lii - ot an atnrud- ' ' 'il 'i'iir .\f>\vi)o:n i ■ pMthori/pd r*;p)i- ■ "111 (),h) to $10 ).• ! l i id. lit oi i iit? « Another Squad. ''^arolii;:! >vill have ;iii- !• n:'I r.uard oHi- : t ihe Sm t' iiiiiii ‘ ii! the Mox- ■ i; ' > i the iiifor- • V(ijiitant (Jener- T r«i,i i.- ONE CONDUClur, HELPED BACK TO WORK. Mr. W’ilford Adams is his name, and he writes: ‘ I was confined to my bed ... , _ with chronic rheumatism and used \ lutod Stai^-s bottles of Foley’s Kidney Remedy ‘ with sood effect. Tiie third bottle put tiiud I resumed work f») repn.t at San conductor on the Lexington Ky... I Street Railway. It will do all you claim "d at Rale 3h. ; cases of rheumatism by eliminating his nior!>iu- the the urice acid from the blood. Special- liit inari^inu the recommended for elderlj’’ people. I (»r !'.Io(»niy')uru;, jjowen Drug Store on North Square. rt’.'idi'ntinl see-! I he loc a ( hai)ter i ii^qepenDENTS CUT LOOSE FROM oluiion and thej the rity. The! GERMAN POTASH SYNDICATE. Mi>s Mary Hil-j nt ()f tho North Caro-* By Associated Press, in ac(Ti,timce \\an, Berlin, April 27.—A despatch from W’yiiiii . The i>rin-' p'rankfort today announces that an ' wine; tiie founding agreement has been reached by inde- ' !'i its i.h\‘e in Co- jxindent potash interests in the Unit- ity \\. B. Snow, Slates and the German syndicate through which the independents will IRRITATION. fut loose from the American combina tion interests and negotiate direct with SUin Trouble Quickly the German syndicate. The negoti?. lensive Treatment. ' tions will be oi)ened at Hamburg on .1- with any skin jiay loth. ! ii I Ilf-itching seems ■ 'liinU th»t it is ne-, Great Church Congress. di^i^nMting p:reasy j^y Associated Press. -r:.. i.ure and sim- Washington, D. Cn April 27.—“The ! gmirantu d to I jpgjjg ci,rist of the Gospels and of '•r ands and ■ Theology” was the subject of chief tu) soil the linen.' ^efo^e the 29th church .in ■ maker'll' toft States, in its IS nlinoht miracii-j ^^Tlio"pl^ograra included papers by the Rev. William Groton, of the Divinity School of the Protestant Episcopal iy'nlrexlVVn'.t the Churcl. at Philadelphia, and by the Rev. Harojd S. Brewster, rector of bt. Agnes hurch. East Orange. N. -I., and talks by the Rev. George C. Stewart, rector ol St. l.uke’s clmrch, Evanston, ill, and the Rev. Elwood Worcester, rector of i'Imm:muel church. Boston- A pilgrimage of the congress to Mount Vernon as guests of the Wash ington Cathedral Council was arranged for the early afternoon. Special to The News. High Point, April 26.—This city is hostess already to quite a number of delegates from differ ent parts of the state who are here to attend the meeting of the North Carolina State Sunday School Association. Scorcs of other delegates will arrive today, and it is probable the number will reach several hundred before the evening session. The opening session will be held this afternoon, and the program wIil consist; of a song and devotional ser vice which Mr. and Mrs. Charles But ler. of Springfield, 111.: will con duct; an address of welcome from Hpn. P. N. I’ate, mayor of High Point: a res])onse to this address, frcin I-:. S. \V. Daineron, of Burlingtou and ihe annual address of tiie presi dent of tho State Sunday School As sociation. Rev. R. M. Anderson, of Henderson. The subject of Mr. A«- dtrson's address v.'ill be "The VrJue of a Vision.’’ The speal'.ers al: ihe session to he held this evening will be Rev. C. N. Tyndale, D. 1)., of Fayottovillc, whose subject will be ' The Power of the Blood of Christ," and Rev. C. W. Byrd. D. 1).. of Asheville, who will sp;eak on tho subject “The Material of Which the Cburcii is Built and How to i’vepare It.” After tho ad dresses some time will bo devoted to social inierconrpe. High Point is prepared to entertain five hundred delegates tuiouguoat the convention, and more if they come and in this welcomo which is being extended to ihe Sunday sschools of the state the churches of this city are one, and no denomina tional lines are known. There is special interest attached to the pro gram of the co)ivonticn tomorrow', and on that day Greensboro will send five hundred delegates. They will reach High Point in time for the morning session and will remain until after the evening session. Among the special features of the program of tomorrow are addresses from Mr. Marion Ijawrance, of Chi cago, general secretary of the Inte’’- national Sunday School Association, and following the afternoon session the Mens’ Sunday School Parade, in which it is expected that several hundred men and boys oveii. sixteen years of age, will participate. Another prominent visitor to the convention from out of the state will be Mr. W. N. Hartshorn, of Boston, chairman of the International exec utive committee. Mr. Hartshorn, like Mr. Lawrance, will . be accoi’ded, a very cordial welcome, both gentlemen being recognized leaders in Sundav school work and prominent factors in the extension and development which this organization has achieved, nvOt in America alone, but throughout the world. Among the most convincing evi dences of the great w'ork which the Sunday school is acomplishing is that which is being done in the coun try churches. Some of the most ac tive and successful Sunday school workers are found in the churches of the rural districts and as a rule, many of the delegates to the state conventions are from these'churches. Ten years have passed since the State Sunday School convent ioi' was held in High Point and during rhese years many new methods of work have been inroduced, and there has been marked development of the methods already in use. The Sunday school school is inter denominational and it is international and these facts go far in furthering the success of the organization and in giving force and effect to the con ventions held under this auspices The fact that the Sunday school fur nishes a platform upon which all denominations meet upon one level aids the woi-k of the movement in a large degree, and the fact ^aat the Sunday schoo’ knows no territorial bound but is established wherever the church of God is found is another impetus in its rapid advancement. The convention sessions will be held in Pickett warehouse. Three sessions will be held tomorrow and three on Friday. After the close of the afternoon sessions conferences on different methods of Sunday school work will be conducted un der the leadership of capable work ers These conferences will be held in different churches of the city. A large degree of the success of the convention will" be due to Mr. J. Van Carter, of Raleigh, general secretary of the State Association, who is untiring in hia work in the interest of the work throughout the state. He has given valuable aid in this work of preparation for the con vention. A Final Good-Bye to all the Oxfords Left from tiie Great Foreman & Miller Company’s Shoe Stock Never again in Charlotte’s Shoe History will you experience anything like this. Pnh!p ShrtP Ph’q Pride will not allow them to permit the Oxfords UUUIC wiluc I U. o bearing the old firms name to remain longer. They will and must go at a double quick action rate of speed. Don’t you think they will-fly out when we tell you that One Big Lot of Hanan & Sons Oxfords worth $6, go for a Two Dollar Bill—$2.00} There Are Other Reasons Just as Good for Big Selling. JuSt Look at These Reductions for Instance. One Lot of French Schriner’s $5.00 oxfords $ *1 .89 1 And one big lot of tKe Great Northern Shoe Co.’s fine oxfords in Goodyear welts at $ t .67 1 LADIES! Here is a Treat For You : prices up to $2.89, have been selected out and will in one heap, at - - - ... First Come First Served and the Early Choosers Get the Plums. Oxfords that sold last ‘Week at all be sold $1.00 If You Have Small, Narrow Feet Come and Get a Pair of Shoes worth $4 to $5 for a $1.00 Bill If Your Foot is Large Come and Get a Pair at a Little Larger Price. These are for Men and Women All Boys’ Oxfords that sold for $2.^, now Marked Down to - - $1.69 Children’s Shoes, Almost Given Away, at - 69, 89, 98, $1.24 and $1.89 ALL, WORTH DOUBLE MORE. The Slaughter Begins Friday Morning and will Continue as Long as There is a Pair of Foreman & Miller Co.’s Shoes in Our Store. Men’s Shoes and Oxfords Ladies’ Shoes and Oxfords One Big Lot $2.50 and $3 Oxfords, Fore man & Miller stock, Second Knock- dj -i OQ Out Price ^ *Ov A New Fine Lot Patent Leather and Gunmetal Oxfords, Let Go, Give dji Away Price OAe Big Lot $3.50 to $4.00 Oxfords to ^ 1 QO go at V *1 One Lot $4.00 and $5.00 Oxfords to go at the Second Knock-Out. $2.39 One Big Lot Oxfords and Shoes, $5.50 QQ values, to go at All Hanan Oxfords that sold last week for $2.89 as well as the fine Pullman $5.00 OxfordSj go now for $2.00 This is something the like of which Char lotte never saw before—a snap for all women. The 98c rack to go down to CQ^ Second Knock-Out Price OUC One Big Lot New Blucher Cuts, worth $3 to $3.50, sold last week for $1.89, now go down to Ladies’ Pumps, Straps and Blacks, Walk Lively Price Big Lot Velvet Pumps, Tans and Blacks, $3.50 and $4 Spring styles, last weeks price $2.39, now go down to the Coble Knock-Out Price Four Dollar Spring Style Oxfords, go down to — New Tans, Blacks, Suedes, just what you want for the summer, were all $5.00 values, now $1.39 $1,67 $1.89 $2.89 $2.79 • Remember These Prices Apply Only to the Stock of the Old Bargains Yet Offered. Oot>l6 42 East Trade Street, Successors to Foreman & Miller Company, :i'>r sUln troubles liead.s, acne, bar of salt rhtMiin or 'I nud hcalod by oii(> may try Ho- ' II. .Joiiian & "-ral sized Jar at ' "ii;uant‘r to re- i’"' tn'atinoiit Uoefi 'iUK'il lor It. Lariicr The Salisbury-Monroe Railroad. (From Concord Tribune.) Mr. N. B. McCanless, vice-president and moving spirit of the Salisbury- Monroe railroad, is here today with the street car people. In conversation with a reporter of this paper Mr. Mc- Canless stated that the prospects were exceedingly bright for the new road. That the election in Goose Creek and Buford townships in Un^on county would be held May 13 and he had. ey- ery asurance that the bonds would carry. “How soon, Mr. McCanless, after the election, provided the bonds carry, will work begin on the road,” he was asked. ‘^The engineering work will begin in thirty days and within sixty days we will be moving dirt,” he replied. Three Cholera Cases. By Associated Press. St. Petersburg, April 27—Three caa es of suspected cholera were regis tered In this city yesterday. BLOOD TEuLS. Yes. Tt is tile Index to health. It your blooa Is out of or der yoK should take Rheumacide. Rheumaclde compounded In li«iuid and tEJlet form. Is a powerful blood puri fier. Rheumatism i? a blood diseaf^. Rheumacide cures rheumatism and blood disease to stay cured. Bad blood causes catarrh, indigestion and many other diseases. Sold by drug gists. Tablets by mail 25c. Bobbitt Chemical Co.. Baltimore. Md. T. PiGRES!; OF [DUGATION B.y Associated Press. Boston, April 27.—Dr. Booker T. Washington, president of Tuskegee Institute, was one of the speakers at “Fisk University Day” of the “Worjd in Boston Missionary Exposition.” In urging support for the negro college at Nashville, Tenn., Dr. Washington said: “Forty-five years of Fisk University means forty-five years of progress for the negro race. PerhapS it is true that the life of few ‘institutions in the soyth are more closely linked with the pro gress of the black people than is Fisk University. It was among the pion eer institutions planted in the south for the benefit of our people. During forty-five years it has done its work wisely and successfully through the graduates and ex-students who are now at work for the uplifting of hu manity in every part of the soutli. “Fisk University not only present's an object lesson in tne matter of col lege education, but in the direction of ■securing the sympathy, the confidence and the co-operation of both races and both sections of our country this in stitution stands as a model. In the cit%’ of .Nashville, Fisk has the good wishes and the active help of black people, of white people from the north and white people at the, south. It will require the combined effort of those three groups to bring about the satis factory solution of the problem in which we are so vitally interested. “Few people realize to what an ex tent the nation is indebted to the ed ucated colored man for the mainten ance of peace between the races. While'inany race wars have been pre dicted, no serious and prolonged racial corvflict has taken place in recent years in the south. It has-been in a very large degree the influence of the educated negro who has counseled pa tience, forbearance and sympathetic co-operation between the races that has prevented disgraceful outbreaks and has resulted in securing and main taining a large degree of peace and harmony between the races. “The people of this nation should re member that the negro is not a beggar so far as his personal needs are con cerned. He supports himself in clothes and In shelter and has done so for 45 years. The only call that he has made upon the public has been for aid in the direction of education, moral and religious training; that call I believe we have the right to make through Fisk University and such a call will be answered. Mrs. O’Brien to Berlin, By Associated Press. Tokio, April 27.—Mrs. O’Brien, wife of the American ambassador, who will leave on Saturday for Berlin to visit her daughter, was received in audience by the empress today. Phone 1530—Job Printing •t ••••••• •••••• I® If You Want Dry Coal, Buy Sta^ndard M COAL It is all under shed £uid protected from the weather. Phon» IQ or 73 ^jStahdard Ice & Fuel M. A. BLAND/ Sales Agent A
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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April 27, 1911, edition 1
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