TH® CHAELOTTE w- t'LV 23 1911 TWENTY-SIX BARGAINS Charlotte Steam Bakery BREAD \ ,k \ our Grocer for it or Phone 66 A Dfj- Light, Sweet Loaf Tor 5 Cents. Let Us Fit You With the Best Hair Cut in the City Realty Barber Shop 715 Realty Building. HAND’S Family Liniment FOR PAINS EITHER INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL Money Back If It Falla. Price 25 Cents. DON’T THROW AWAY THE OLD SHOES Call us on ’phona 953-J and we will send for them, put them in good condition so they will look like new and return them to you. No troubio to you and very little expense. P. A. BOWDEN’S SHOE REPAIRING 10^ East n. rad? St. ’Phone 953-J. Call for anti deliver work. Wa Maka Photographs ^ - where, auy time. 01»® ua a al on your view work. Rader’s Studio Phona 1178. 20*/i W. Tradt. -f -4- QUAKER OATS, 7 1-2e. PKG. (Until Closed Out.) 5c. Pkg. .. 25c. .. 15c. Roaster Egg-O-See 3 Cans iPe Peaches . Canned Pearr Peanut and Pop-Corn For Sale. A. Ottinger Phon® 932. 303 N. Tryon St. EAS ’EM. Reits tired f«et. Cooling, .othlng and antiseptic. A scien- • f5c preparation for the feet. Not Talcum Powder.) 25c Package. Tryon Drug Co. 11 N. Tryon. Phene 21. WILEY’S W AX E N E FOR FLOORS Torrence Paint Co. 10 N. Tryon Street Phone 178 REMEMBER-I AM C. F. SHUMAN The Old Original -♦ TINNER Get It Right MY PHONE IS 611 Herring & Denton 16 North College Street. Furniture, Organs, Stoves, Ranges, Refrigerators, Etc. Largest Line of Medium floods in the City. Easy Payment Plan a Specialty, On this page appears Twenty-six Separate Bargains, every one worth reading, for it represents a chance to save money. This is a regular Sun day feature of THE NEWS and most of the ads will be changed weekly. These ads alone make mighty interesting reading, but to make it still more attractive THE NEWS will print each week a silhouette of one of the advertisers. Each advertiser is a well known business man or woman and you may be able to tell who it is at a glance, but to make it easier we print a write up of each advertiser. How It Pays Visit These Advertisers Last Sunday we published a picture of W. H. Morris whose splendidly equlpi)«d meat mar ket attracts many housekeepers and prudent buyers to West 'I'rade street and is one of the .best known establishments in that section of the town. We thought it a pretty good likeness but must have been mistaken for there were no claimants for the rewards at this office. We are going to publish this pic ture again soon and warn our readers to be on the watch for it. The name of the advertiser and those receiving the rewarda will be published next Sunday. (Copyrighted 1911, I. C. Cham- berlyne.) The ManYou’re Looking For Not many years ago there was no such business as this gentle man conducts. It is the out growth of modern science. To day it is a very ilnportant line, and one that every house owner or builder comes in contcat with, and feels the need of. He offers to save«^you money on his par ticular line of work, and his weekly ads are well worth an swering. His methods are strictly up- to-the minute, and he has built up a fine business because of that fact. His name is a short one, only four letters in it, and you’ll have no difficulty in locat ing his ad, nor his place of busi ness. The first adult who cuts out the advertisement of th« man whose picture appears here and presents It at his place of busi ness Monday morning will be given 11.00 In cash. The next two adults who bring the ad vertisement will receive 50 cents each. Employes of the man or concern are barred. Humtn Hair Qoodt Ideal Beauty Parlors Mrs. M. Croas, Prop. 18 S. Tryon St. Bell Phone 2487 Hairdressing, Shampooing, Fa cial and Scalp Treatment, Mani curing, Singeing, Oyefng, Chil dren’s Haircutting a Specialty. C R. Mayer & Co. FAMILY DRUGGIST We will send for and deliver your Prescrip tion in a hurry. -Try Us- PHONE NO. 252 No matter how thirsty you are, or how tired you are, or how particular you are, you’ll like because it hits that dry spot c.nd tickles the palate all the way down. COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Luther Snyder, Manager. MOVED TO A LARGER STORE. WALL PAPERS DAHL-DUNN CO. Under Presbyterian Hospital, West Trade St. The Finest W.H. MORRIS MEAT MARKET Phone 165 FRESH MEAT, FISH OYSTERS Dr. C. H. Wells DENTIST 16 W. Trade St.. Charlotte, N. C. Has returned to the city and will be at his office as usual. Phone 495. THERE’S A DIFFERENCE Ask Your Doctor. PSi Makes the Cheeks Plump and Rosy. Relieves Exhaustion. At Founts 5c In Bottles HAVE-U-SEEN SMITH 10 N. COLLEGE Furniture and Stoves on Easy Payments TYPEWRITERS REBUILT Tour old machine can be made as good as new in our shops at a nominal cost. All makes of typewriters rebuilt, l^epaired, cleaned and adjusted in the shortest possible time and in th« most satisfactory manner. J. E. CRAYTON & CO, Cha.-lotte, N. C. •j - -f- THE COMPANY WITH THE Greatest Credit System ON EARTH. Union Clothing Go. L. N. DAVIS, Manager. 42 N. College. >- NO USE TO GET A NEW SUIT if .32 me is not fitted proper and right. It takes an expert Tai lor and Cutter to fit, cut and mane Right Cloth. We have—The People, The Experience. HENRY MILLER, Sr. THE MASTER OF FASHION 'Phene 1167-L. 10 East Trade. HOUSE WIRING AND ELECTRICAL FIXTURES Art Domes, Electric Fans—In fact anything electrical, and the prices right. “You wire for us and wire for you.” we’ll GLOBE ELECTRIC CO. ’Phone 921. Cor. 4th and Church. Roy A. Page, Manager. Spring Suits Made to Order at Reasonable Prices, Fit and Workmanship guaranteed, Clean ing, Pressing and Altering a Specialty. Every garment is made in my shop. Henry Miller, Jr. Merchant Tailor. 22 W. Trade St, Charlotte, N. C. Over Blair Bros. Drug Store Phone. Watch Repairing and Engraving Our work Is guaranteed, and we save you money. C. F. Lemmond 25 Howell Arcade. EDUCATION IS FREEDOM INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS SCRANTON, PA. W. C. Fielding, Representative. Room 322 American Trust BIdg., South Tryon St. Have You Seen the Four Sea* sons of the Year on ^ Display In Brown-Gruse Go. Windowa 304 N. Tryon SRt. Phone 1051. f! -f- England Dependent On Other Countries For All of Hei Food By PHILLIP AVERETT) as it is obvious there can be na reform on the lower deck without in some way restricting the power of officers. This the admiralty will not do, and therefore it is only by organizing every man in the service, irrespective of rating, that we can hope to force their hand.” If the admiralty is wise it will do well not to treat a symptom like this letter lightly. The bluejackets have seen what the brethren on hoard the merchant vessels have , done to the big concerns like the ; Cunard, the White Star and the Wll- son lines and being hired men them- I er determined tom ake a fight for selves they see no reason why they — ' living wae:es and humane treatment, should not be able to enforce their ^ndon. July 22- Only a few weeks The organizing of labor will from own reasonable demands at a time ■tie strike of the sailors and flre-'now on progress rapidly in England like the present, when the whole who were joined by the dock-'«nd the high and mighty hay^ every Tory pijss asserts that rnri teamsters, gave the people reason to look forward with fear may need her navy at any moment. L-snrt nn nhiAot lP(w»on show- «nd apprehensipn. for events that, that in snite of all their are to come are throwing their shad-, Having amassed a snug, fortune .b«7u,«ly depeBdenJ, ows before them. 1 from the of p^rtaces AmerJj f »r rountries for their food.! Probably nothing is filling the can h^has often been -tHke had lasted only a little hearts of the upper classes with guids adwser he ^ years Mr ^eek and the ports of Hull : greater anxiety than the fact that during the iMt ’^ari- i had been closed to the the general fermentation has spread Rost, the ^ _ gj. I o bacon, eggs, butter and to the British navy. In a Portsmouth ton "■om the Scandinavian coun- paper, the other day, I read an as- tion an ' " people of the whole north-' tonishiug letter which shows the dl- career. 'f o^ the country began to feel • rection of the rising breeze. The, The fortune he has earned from ingg of starvation. Warnings' writer, who is serving in the navy, his tips ... !• , J_ rxf Inwor Ilia has inv^AtAd in 1&I1(1 3USI strike had been many and demands for the men of the lower salary, he has rping an'J industrial circles it'dock, more wages, better food, bet- =m.th of Tendon, which he intends to - f been known that it was ter messing arrangaments. more lib- * . f' lt nobody paid any atten-j erty, less class distinction, that all f I^ike the nobllitv of France important offences be tried by jury * ... I ... ^1 X M ..M A I I south of Ix)ndon, which he intends to develop as real estate agents at New York and other American citiea de velop American suburbs. e vears that preceded the'in a civil court that small offences' when I saw him yesterday in his ' Crt I » I iia c jf I «* - V.evolution. the people of Eng- be punished only by stoppage or rofused to see the threatening wages temporarily, a wnoiesaie le- one thing onlv was of im-' duction of the powers of officers and the crowning of a king, nothing hut a mere figure- nnd when finally the storm ' found the large cities of England absolutely unprepar- o food supplies of any kind •n hand; the great warehoua- ■f'*ain»-d provisions of ail kinds. new offices, almost opposite the Carl ton, he said; “I made a fortune at the Carlton, and I have bought land. What bet ter investment could I have? “London now ha» seven t million numerous other reforms that are long overdue.” The writer, who spent consider- “L,ondon now ha» seven 1 able time together with American jg gh© can’t help growing.. In bluejackets, says he was surprised years she will be ten millins. to hear how well these were fed ana jg q^iv one London and only treated on board Uncle Sams men,^^^ England. It is the centre of «- of war. and he does not see why iniv/lict - ’ ’ OT war, ' ^or a few days, and, when the Ri-iiannia should not treat her sai- _« » M MaIa O’llOT'QTlt^^ rr val of »tearner* from abroad 'iddenlv Interrupted, the peo- Engiand fotind themselves ‘ Rame situation »a the Inhab- ^ of Paris of 1871, after a siege n months. The leaders of the \»er«- certainU very consid- for had they chosen they ' have ruined the whole corona- The events of the last few have f»hown that the strikers h«\e bottled up the city of r> «:ompletely and the king and guests would have had a very ' tp. (,f it, if indeed it would ••ve been neressary to postpone whole show. Probably the strike ' ’ were wise in not bringing ■'hat the snobs would have '’•r*(l a national calamity, es- n- they won the fight with- •'I ' ing to put on the screws »;ht the strike has been settled. > rfpcts are apt to prove very for it has shown the mass- ’ " • noriiious power the wield t iey stand bhoulder to should- lors, "who form the sole guarantee of her national existence” ’^Ith consideration, and asserts that ir this were the case the admiralt. would find all the vesels x.. --- x „ Openly advocating the a -Royal Naval Industrial Union for “fighting purposes,” he conclude as follows nance The English make the world work for them. They invest their mcney abroad, and it comes back in interest at ten and twelve per cent. When other parts of the world pros- iiic _ T)er the people in I.ondon draw the I no difficulty in >‘«nning, sels of the navy. ..j politics. No country in can make money like England. The social standard has gone up. The man of moderate means now wants a house of nis “I*rt’"u8 trv to recognize that there ^ a garden. I am going to I, wlr between the forepart of he|,,„ real est»te up and s.11 it ship and the after part. Under the, own house. fjjf,®**and *^hop^ hoard of ad-j antique show of a less ana I sons world has never «een since the ?n7 relatives who occupy the after | of the Roman emperors will and with alt all the old-fashioned ] outshine all the old-fashioned pant^ mimes at Christmas time in London, wh»n Professor Max Rheinhardt, the ido. of Berlin and friend of the kais- ano reiauves. , nart of the ship, invesied ,‘aughf iieT'B.,rp«» Ss “one-time ‘ lower deck, and ev are Herbert BeerUolm rtneHar^land ’'of“’humanU>-' and !?ree'“Tt"i» '.he Idea of Profes»r a >0 Tjhoit are born to rule. "It is about time we had a chang . Rheinhardt to present at Olympia an original wordlesa play—a drama of intense and most serious interest, with music by one of the foremost German composers of them odern school. * The period ot the work is the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Over 2,00 people will be employed, gathered from all parts of the world. The chief characters .will be sus tained by a group of the most talent ed “mimes” in Europe. There will be ail orchestra of 120 performers, reinforced by a huge organ. Olympia will be set as a Roman theatre, with the stage in the centre and the public all around—the seat ing being arranged as at the Horse show and Military tournament. The setting will be devised by a stage designed of world-wide renown, who will carry out the ideas of Herr Rheinhardt. The lighting of the stage wil be one of them ost startling ad juncts to the spectacle—beams from all round the great building will be concentrated on the impressionistic scenery and vast mass of performers. There wiil be two performances daily during the Christmas holidays. Sir Phillip Watts, director of Nav al Construction,^ and those working with him have in contemplation the abandonment of the “Dreadnought design for our battleships and the adoption of a totally new p^pe. This will not, of course, affect the battle ships and battleship cruiser now un der construction. Though no details of the new type of vessel now under consideration have been allowed to leak out, It is possible to state that in point of dis placement they will approximate to the “Lord Nelson” type rather than to the super-Dreadnoughts now on the stocks at Devonport, Portsmouth and elsewhere. That is to say their displacement will probably be rsome- where in the neighborhood of seven teen or eighteen thousand tons, as against the 27,500 tons of the “Queen Mary ” now building in the Palmer Yard at Larrow. It is not proposed that the “all big gun*^’ principle shall be abandon ed in this new type of ship, ©n the other hand, if apparently well au thenticated reortb may be credited, the primary armament of these ves sels will consist of six of the new IB-inch gun which is under discus sion at the moment, while they would also carry a comparatively heavv anti-torpedo armament. One great point that is urged in favor of these new ships is that they would be relatively cheap to build; indeed it is contended that two of them could be built for less than one super-Dreadnought costs, and, ot course, in much quicker time. It is a matter of common discus sion among naval men at the pres ent moment, as to what the effect would be if the whole of the ten 13.4-inch guns that are to be mount ed upon the King George V and its sister sliipB now building were fired Judge Roasted Bigamist Ftaud London, July 22.—In sentencing George William Lucid, alias I»eBlie, Moran, and l^y, to seven years’ penal servitude for bigamy and heartless- frauds on a large number of women. Judge Rentoul of the Old Bailey the other day declared, “I think the earth never contained a more infamous simultaneously with full charges as might easily be necessary in the case of a fiercely-fought action. Gun nery officers of the -ripest experience have been heard to declare that no ship that has yet been conceived could inevitably buckle badly. In this connection it is perhaps signif icant to recall that never yet has one of the British “Dreadnoughts” or “super-Dreadnoughts” been per mitted to fire all of her big gruna together with full war charges. The new battleships will be design ed to develop a speed hitherto un dreamt of in the case of "capital ships.” On paper, the battleships now i scoundrel than you.” on the stocks are to have a speed! a clerican-looking, plausible man of of thirty knots an hour—a thing that j thirty-nine, Lucid through matrimonial would have been deemed impossible advertisements became acquainted a generation ago for a battleship of [with many women from whom he re- 27,600 tons displacement—but those jceived sums varying from five to three who are concerned with the design j hundred dollars by promising to marry for the new vessels are confident! them. In his rooms were found no few- that thirty-four or even thirty-six j ep than 2,700 letters from more than knots can easily be attained. i seventy different women. At one time I he was sending love-letters Interlaced I with appeals fcr money to thirty wo-’ j men. Born in Tipperary, the son of a farm- The Camp Bed of Napoleon Fiist Paris, July 22.The camp bed of Na-, poleon L, which General Bertrand ^ brought to France from St. Helena,' after having passed through many j hands has been sold at auction in Paris. It was purchased by Mr. Edward Tuck, who has presented it to the Museum at Malmaison, where are to be found many relics of the emperor. ] The bed bears the imperial crown, together with the name of the make. Although the bed has seen many j changes since 1821, there seems to be | no doubt as to its authenticity. IMPORTANT CHANGE IN EDUCATIONAL METHOD. Demansttaiion Against Germany *s Action London, July 22.—David Lloyd- Ix>ndon, July 22.—The Education ! committee of the lx>ndon county coun- 1 cil is embarking on an enterpriTO j which constitutes a remarkable inno vation in educational methods. j er in good circumstances, he was fit- The cgmmlttee hag taken an old | ted for the civil service but age off house out at Paddington way—Kensai i . p I nineteen he enlisted in the Royal ! House It Is called—and adopted Ita i George's demonstration against Ge -1 jrigj. Rifles and rose to the rank of rooms and picturesque old garden to 1 mwany’s drastic action in Morocco|color-sergeant. ]n iggi he was reduced ^ the purpose of a school for the special! made in a speech, before Ix>mbard, to the ranks for embezzlement and' and exclusive ediTcation of children has been ' *ome time afterwards he was sentenc- of tuberculosis tendencies. It will be a street ftnanclerg last evenmg, has been ^ equipped with apedaf hailed with enthusiasm on all si e ^ theft, the blame for which he threw | apparatus suited to its unusual design. | as a clear intimatioa that the British his fellow soldiers. j The little consumptives will bfi>! government remains faithful to the j When he was released he had many j taught, as much as our fickle climat; Anglo-French entente and will be found opportunities of regaining his charac-, taught, as much as our fickle cllmatft at France^s back throughout the pres-'ter. but he embezzled |500 belonging permits, in the open air. Desks will be ent negotiations. jto one employer, ruined a Roman nttle nsed and canvas chairs are b=?- Not Aimed at Germany. i Catholic Sailors’ home at Plymouth, ■ jng provided, so that the pupils may Berlin, .luly 22.—The speech of David and began his career as a vampire. lie down over their lessons. On flClI Lloyd-George, the British chancellor, 1 His first wife died in 189fi, and be-! fine days the youngsters will be could not possibly have been aimed | tween that year and 1906 he obtained jn recumbent positions imbibing at Germany, according to the reassur- j $5,000 from ten different women. | fresh air and learning in the same : ing views voiced by the officails of He married Kate Ramsan in 1906, but draught. the German foreign offce, who were' deserted her after obtaining $7,5001 The crusade against oonsumptlop.; unwilling today to believe that the I from her In 1907 he committed big- jg being carried on energetically Ih j minister referred in any way to the amy with a woman of means at Bristol Moroccan situation. These officials! and in 1909 he committed bigamy stated that the negotiations with i with Ethel Selfe in I^ndon, all this France were proceeding normally,' time he was writing love-letters to with a prospect of success and that dozens of women, and he continued th^re was no reason for Great Britain;his case of fraud unchecked until he which since the beginning of the ne-j was arrested recently, gotiations has stood aside to permit; other parts of London. the Franco-German returns, to aban- DISCUSS CRISIS IN don a waiting attitude and strike a' belligerent tone. Some intimations through diplomatic channels were to ENGLAND. An Inquest on An Old Sea Captain London, July 22.—At an inquest 0^ an old sea captain, whose body wA London. July 22.—Premier Asquith 1 found in a barge in the Regent s Cana\ inrUUj^n f .lUlv 1. 1 • have been expected, if the speech,^ had an audience of half an hour with Docks, it was stated that *^he man had as the English papers assert was in-j King George at Bucckingham’ Palace of starvation, and had been all«- tended as a warning to Germany. None today when he placed before his maj- such was received. jesty the government’s views on the latest phases of the political crisis and Nashville, Tenn., July 22.—Edmund. made final airansjements to meet the Cooper, secretary to President Andrew j possibl./ contingency that action by Johnson, is dead at the age of 90 at i the insurgent unionist peers necessi- his home in Shelbyville, Tenn. H6 was i tates by the creation of rew members a half brother o;f Colonel Duncan E. j of the house of Lords. Cooper, of th« Carmack case and I brother of the late Chief Justice Wil- Condition of John W. Gates. Ham Cooper, of New York, and former Paris. July 22.—The condition of United States Senator Henry Cooper, John W Gates is said to be unchanged of TennMse*. tliiB evening. viating the ptngs of hunger by eating tar. The dead man was Benjamin PoweTl Wilkins, aged 67. A son said that hts mather had been veiy unfortunate of late. He had lost his wife, ind hard i been shipwrecked twice. He saw hli father last on May 18th, when be borrowed some money in order to gb ij-®nd seek for work. I A verdict in accordance with the medican evidence was returned. ir' , I

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