Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / June 26, 1911, edition 1 / Page 7
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THL CHABLOTTE NEWS JUNE 23 I9U )gue Of Woman in White nf Lmen—Princess Effects in Lingerie— . Ribbon Girdles. . t' V omen .Hit ' Mfv WDUian Ml> Wiso DIHU t'H r. " \\»»S iho . ,s !('.• Ul-' Ml*- 'i>' atlinira- , .n' hi'l'u. i ■ i.f \V. 'Phe woman in white, above all oth ers. ninst 1)0 most oarefnl to have her •underpinnings" perfectly fitted and rar«^fnliy made, for aa truly as in science the effect of tlie seen depends ni>on the iniseen. The shopg display n* to j tho most nllurin.u; Princess slips, dalnti- is \\ (>n. ; I> liU'O-trimmed, which represent un- n ovt'V ; derwalst and petticoat in one. Every I well-dressod woman will find this gar- n\incinc i nu'Hl indispensable. They are adora ble in i)inl\. blue or corn-color silk or lawn to wear \inder white, with your various sets of colored ribbons. [i’ip ii m . t' !lii' simple frosluu'ss. wiiistUne !' f.i'-Monings .. ’liM- fnilt- inc. i'b. even I,Mint visionl ’ .'ViM shadow ’ and lans • pally -po:»k- mau will 'ir.^l'’ woman ’ ; I'd fastid- ! '.ore attrac- ALCOHOf. 3 PER QENT. AVcgclablcPrepanfilon&rAs-' slrailaiiijgtiieFoodaiHfRegiila- I ll«c Siomaclis andi^vdsrf jet'll"' Sii'i! Ill FIgue Two. .in'!: Promotes Digpstion,Chtcrfii! ness and Rgst.Containsncitho' Opiiini.Morpliitic norMiaeraL] Not Narcotic. CASmRIA rpr Infantp and Children, The Kind You Have Always Boaght Bears the Signature of f efOld dnSSUSEWKBSH f)r\-:kuf Sftd“‘ jUx-Smaa * ^.^feSsHs- AuseSeed * gKikdSmr- Jme^mnTlnat I Apcrfect Remedy forGnisfi^ t ion, Sour Storoach.Dian^ Worms ,ConwlsioTis.Feveri^ | ness andLoss OF Sleep. F&c Simile Sigmmre af NEW YORK. •> ,olu, feuai^teed tuidcrth^ Exact Copy cl Wrapper. in Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA The OKNTAun oompanv, nkw vorr eirv. NEW AUTO RECORD IS MADE. e One. :h woman o\it ' ■ i! you ha ; 'I' parade give : t.'U ininity in siors. whi’e wb,’»e fac(‘ . ! ov- : n white not leas'!, a ' ou would have n^.-t. that it , ■ •■unlity, for you ‘ r that scu)i) ' • ■ >:r. iMfSsion .r nt: a j>resf'nt (I. t hf* correct - : • m t jio wrong. V , I •will re • . f.»r the effort. 'V' I'itO is >v, i f nimod "cre- Rt 1 r:w 'iVO wl;ite •»' - #■ ' f i-11 Slimmer \',shab!i^. The ■' In' N'iionslvo lln- r . T;‘V.’ wr-aves. - c'.-pes, ba- •' • . 1 Tns and T immings in t’.- s'i'’. popular T'd-. ’,':i iiUlK, '‘Ol- ' H’l lirfn laces and If ’ 1*'s. cords. T i e read.-to-wear ■ Ul ’1 .^i,ow a gon- in t ,j(. V.' ’ i-ty of high ar., iichu-. stoclcB. ■'= ;.nd bo-'lia collars , «”>• clever woman The white hat is charming In fancy braid for morning wear, and again it is tirged that, its poss^ession is not. a mat ter of money but of intelligence; for, while very high priced in a milliner's window. It Ib a simple rtiatter to select a becoming wire frame, cover it with white muslin and baste the white straw braid around It. The left-over braid may be tied Into a big tailor's bow. and no other trimming is neces sary. The lingerie h«*t is made in the same way, the crown being covered With allover embroidery of lace, and the britu covered with gathered edg ing or lace. A simple garlatid of F'rencliy flowers finishes a very dressy hat that is universally becoming, but the final garniture may be i eserved fir the big bow of ribbon above re ferred to. Des Moines, June 26.—Harold R. Wells, son of President James O. Wells of the German Savings Bank, broke all speed records for touring cars between Chicago and Des Moines, making the run in sixteen hours and forty-five minutes. The record previously has been held by Louis Evans of Des Moines, who covered the distance between the two cities in nineteen hours and fifty-five minutes. Mr. Wells made the trip in a w^ells c^r. He registered at the West ern Union office in Chicago and left that place at 2:45. He arrived in Des Moines at the Register and I.«ader office at 7:30 o’clock. Evans’ time was beaten a full thi^ee hours, Harry B. Staver, driving a Staver car. while attempting to establish .a new record from Chicago to Des Moines, plunged into the Skunk River five miles south of Ames. An unruly brake, damaged when the car threw a wheel early in the run refused to work on a steep hill, and the machine backed down and over embankment. Mr. Maxwell, general salesman for the Staver Chicago company, suffered a broken shoulder, but Emery Kiiud- sen and VereiReynolds of Des Moines and Mr. Staver. .lumped and escaped uninjured. The accident occurred w^lien the car w'as on the last lap of its long grind, and a new record almost had been woa. The car will not suffer from its bath. ■ a fifteen-foot face in the ' Answers. Disenchanted. “Until I met you, Matilda,” he mur mured in a A'oice huS'ky with emotion, “I believed that all w^omen w^ere de ceitful, but when I look into your clear, beautiful eyes I behold there the very soul of candor and loyalty.” “George,” she exclaimed with en- enthusiasm, “this is the happiest mo ment I have known since papa took nie to the London oculist!” “T.iOndon oculist!” “Yes, dear; you never would have known that my left eye is- a glass one.” Then the moon went under a cJoud, and George sat down and buried his sofa cushion.—London •■on Ir vo color. V,!' corn '.Id I-. ■> fir t !F VTV t luir.e no ‘ h->l than !!'•; itrnl ion. • iMipio and ! * y r.n 'm ;-, 'j'iie pnrvi'K.l for as -A r->7iHorvat ive dev'd- ' '■'» i;-; '1^ fr>aTuro a - fr.Mnd in tho oppor- *• t!io of embroid- A illM^trnted it was fo V trimmed witli - ill'in'-'. Tlil.ti could f dimit ', uiarQulsette, ri ft: f , V if tlio s«oft >ii'fl r»vio are the fca- ‘ u:-' i'l this dcsiirn. It V. I o constrnclic!' ■ !i ! v, rinl vff it v. • •1 in model. Blue lin ' i- emiiroidery aiwl ■ il for llio develop- f th« Hummer fabrics for this design. ■ • n:'iuor wardrobe, by ' i ‘"t of each color In ■ ■ r Ai'h the white cos- ■-'voly Kmflire gijiilo •r“'. = iies with sash •> ’ '■ Ince bolero itm ' ‘ ' nd flnislu'd wii li ■ ! i !')ng Ktreamer.s at I "'VO hug#* butterfly i‘ hat, as well as ’ o), iio sure to 'I'llet for otitincis ■ , 1 (lf or the wood- ' >iash of red is as '■ ^’Ifo ai> In a i-i-« • ty wo- Good Hunting. “es, there’s a few ducks out ther^.” remarl^ed the old hunter as he gar.ed out across the marsh at Ihe cloud of teal “milling” up and down in the storm, but they don't conii^are to the wild pigeons that used to be back' in Pennsylvania. Why sir. I have seen the j)igeons so thick back there that if we wanted to tell the time of day by the sun we would have to throw up a club through the flight before he co\ild see it. “I mind me one time of the queer est experience I ever had. I was out hunting rabbits with an old musket. It was late in the fall and the rab bits weren’t ven' thick. 1 was coming home and had Just got to the barn lot when a flight of pigeons w'ent over. They were jtist above ray head and when I looed up I chought that a cy clone was coming. As they passed I up with my old musket and let drive. By go.^h, I never got a jigeon. “I went on into the house some dis gusted. V’retty soon my boy went out with a basUet to gather up some chips for a fire and when he come back he I’.ad that- bushel basket full of legs. I had Hhot under them pigeons and pust had shot under them pigeons and just cut their legs off. The next day we went down to where th^' roosted in the timber hack of the house and gath ered up the birds. They courdn’t sit on the limbs, so they fell off and were ly* ing on the ground:”—Outing Magazine. He Was No Mossbank. Jo'nn Adams Thayer, publisher, once declared, at a dinner in New York, ihr:t when he was a printer he used to change his job six or seven times a year. . “I always bettered myself, said Mr. Thayer. “I always advanced my pay a dollar or more* by every change I remember a Boston foreman said to me, when I told him I leaving for Chicago. •• ‘Well, 1 suppose you’ll get a oui there, but remember, boy, a roll ing siome gathers no nioss. •••Moflit, sir,’ I replied, Washington Star. Our Line OF T rousers Have you thought of the Summer Weather, the dust and your Trousers? We have. We can’t change the weather but can assist you in changing your Trou,=ers. Our Trousers are made to our special order by one of the country’s best Trouser Makers. We call Fpecia? attention to our Trousers at $3, $3.50 and $4 The fabrics are new, Better Trousers at handsome and good. The fit is perfect. 13 who waa job for ruinfr. Ohiiaren Cry for FLETCHER’S CASTORIA Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTORIA Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTORIA $5, $6 .SO up to $7.50 Bring us your legs and we’ll fit them properlj'. YORKE BROS. & ROGERS EVERY WISH GRATIFIED K&rpeo liMr ir) There’s a wish in the heart of every newly married young couple, that wish is for a home of their own. Perhaps you wash and don’t know w’^here to have your wish gratified. Well then, if that’s the case just come right dowai to the Parker- Gardner Co. store. Your every home wish will be easily and quickly gratified for this store has everything—goods, prices and terms of pay ment with which to do it. Are you intending today to have your wish gratified.^ Bed Room Suits, Parlor Suits, Dining Room Suits, Furniture for the Hall, Library and Every Room in the House. We can and will furnish your home completely and artistically if you will only let us help you. Come today and see us. PARKER - GARDNER COM PAN Y For Rent 1 10-room house, N. Tryon St. 1 5-room house, W. 12th St. 1 5-room house, S. Church St 1 4-room house, E. Palmer St. 1 3-room house, E. Palmer St. 2 3-room houses S. College Ext. 1.3-room house E. Catherine St. 1 3-room house, N. Davidson St. C. McNelis Nd. 33 East 4th St. 'Phone No. 604-J. His Needs A North Dakota editor in comment ing on an article in the society column of another paper, which stated that a certain Mrs. Newlywed kneaded bread with her gloves on, wrote— “The editor of this paper needs bread with his coat on; he needs bread with his shoes on; he needs bread with his pants on, and if some of the delinquent subscribers of the “Glo rious Rag of Freedom’ don’t pay up soon he will need bread without a rag on—and Dakota is no Garden of Eden in the winter time, either.” Schools and Colleges Presbyterian Colle/^e F*or Women and of Musi® CHARLOTVE, N. C. Faculty of Specialists iu every Depa:tment, Thorough Work, Christian influences. City Advantages. Music, Art, Elocution Specialties. For catalogue, Address, REV. J. R. BRIDGES, D* D. i $36 SUMMER RATES $36 For a limited time you can buy a life scholarship in our Commercial de partment or Shorthand department for only $36 or life scholarship in both departments for only $60. Call to fee us or write for new' journal. • ^ |lBoarporalcd.|^ Oil CHALOTTS;, li. FASSIFERN LINCOLNTON, N. C. A home school for a limited num ber of girls. College preparatory and general* courses. Special advantages in mi’sic and art. No vacancy in the school during (he four years of its existence. MISS KATE C. SHIPP PRINCIPAL OUR NEEDS—More patrons for the best insur ’e in town, at low rates. MAKE YOURSELF HEARD i I don’t like a kicker, i He doesn’t tend to peace, \ But the wheel that squeaks the loud- GSt Is the wheel that gets the grease. We try to make ourselves heard in every w'ay. C. N. G. Bott & Co. INSURANCE HEADQUARTERS THE P ilgrim Stone Lined Refrigerator Is as easily cleaned as a China Plato. It Is the par excellence of modern Refrigerators. See them at our store. J. N. McCausland & Co. 221 South Tryon Street Cyko Paper All sizes and four surfact^s. AN8C0 FILMS Ad sizes. They fit any Ko dak. See our line Ans.-^o Ko daks and Cameras. / The North Carolina College of Agriculture and " Mechanic Arts ' ■>" The State’s Industrial College. ^ Four-year courses in Agriculture; - in Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical ^ Engineering; in Industrial Chemistry; in Cotton Manufacturing and Dyeing. . Two-year courses in Mechanic Arts and in Textile Art. One-year course in Agriculture. These courses are both practical and scientific. Examinations for admission .are held at ail county _ seats on July 13. For Catalon address THE REGISTRAR, 21-25t West Raleigh, N. 0. The North Carolina State Normal and Industrial College Maintained by the State for the Wo men of North Carolina. Five regular Courses leading to Degrees. Special I Courses for teachers. Free tuition to those who agree to becouie teachers I in the State. Fall Session begins Sep tember 13, 1911. For catalogue and other Information address JULIUS I. FOUST. Fresidont^ Greensboro, N. C. 22—12t INJECTION BROU Gives Prompt and F.f:cctual Relief withoiu incoiivciiisnce, ic MOST OBSTINATE CASES No other treatment required. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. I Robinson SI Book Store Auto Tires REPAIRED, VULCANIZED » RECOVERED Inner Tubes Vulcanized. We guarantee they v/ill never laak where we vulcanize them. First puncture ........ 50 cents. Second puncture 25 cents. Third puncture 25 cents. All sizes new tires carried in stock. Relay Mfg Co 231 and 233 S. TryOn St. ASK US ABOUT I Our ilough Dry Service | IN. & W. Railway - Schedule In Effec*t June 11, 1011. It is something thal is needed in every home, and deliver your bundle promptly. Our wagon will cjfll for Sanitary Steam Laimdry 473- -PHONfeS- -800 10.20 am Lv. Charlotte So. Ry. 5.-50 pm. 2.06 pm Lv. Winston N&W 2.05 pm. 1.09 Lv. Mart’vUle N&W Ar. 11.40 am. ' 6.25 pm. Ar. Roanoke K&W IjV. 9.15 am. = Additioti«>l trains leave Winston-Sa- . lem 2 a. m. dally. Connects at Roanoke for the East and W'est. Pullman sleepers. Dining cars. If you are considering taking a . trip to California or the Coast, cet our variable Round-Trip Kare. The In formation is yours for the asking, with one of our complete'Map Folders. W. B. BEVILL, M. F. BRAGG, Gen. Pass. Agt. Trav. Pass. Agt » Roanoke) Va. \ .it
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 26, 1911, edition 1
7
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