Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Aug. 19, 1911, edition 1 / Page 8
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CHABLOTTE NEWS, AUGUST 19. 1911 WANTS! The People’s Market Place Read By Thousands Daily 1 Cent a Word Each Insertion PHONE NO. 115 WANTED BOARDING HOUSE, 301% North Try- on street, under new management. Try our place for meals or meala and room. 19-lt PIEDMONT M.\RKET—Fresh native moat and fish delivered promptly. 1101 E. 7th St. Phone 2926. 15-5t ^\ ANTED—Monday niornlnR. Expe rienced stenographer to sub for three weeks. Phnne 23113. 19--t j 1 HARNESS WANTED—At ™ f vour old harness for cleaning and marrlPd preferred, for Polkton Htgn i j-^pairing. Hutchison, Sehorn & SrhiH.l, eight months term, ^t^te ^ ^ • 27-tf rnilary wanted. Address S. R. Har-; ris. Chairman. Polkton, N. C. l9-4t WANTED—Three or four furnished r.^ms by couple without children to do light housekeeping. Phone l8-2t \S A.NTED—Two young ladies, good personal appearance and address, to demonstrate. Address “E, care News. WANTED FOR L'. S ARMY: Able- bodied unmarried men between ages of 18 and 36; citizens of United States, of good character and tem perate habits, who can speak, read and write the English language. For information apply to Recruting Offl rer. 307 W'est Trade St., Charlotte, N C.; 3 Scurh Main St., Asheville, N C.; 3304 South Elm St., Greens boro, N. C.; 1522 Main St., Columbia, S C.; 2014 West Main St., Green ville. S. C.: or 167 H West Main St., Spartanburg, S. C. PERFECTION and not cheapness is our motto. Eyes are valuable. See Dr Ix)max for glasses. 6 East Trade St. 17-7t FOR SALE FOR SALE—Top buggy. Rubber tire. Good condition. Call 707 East Ave nue. 19-lt FOR SALE—120 acres of land within six miles of Charlotte. Two or three horse crop from part in cultivation. Will sell at $45.00 acre, or exchange for city property. McD. Watkins. 13-tf.-eod. FOR SALE—Small stock groceries and fixtures. Good opening for first class store now. Box 5, Lowell, N. C. 19-lt WANTEI>—Autos to repair and oyer-1 SALE—Modern seven-room house haul also vulcanizing. Prices reas onable; w^ork guaranteed. W. C. McNabb, rear Selwyn, phone 2678. 10-6t-eod WANTED—Roomer* and boarders for nice large front rooms upstairs and down siaira. House newly furnish ed. Apply 307 South Church. Phone 2850. 30-tf ^ FOR RENT ♦ ♦ fOR RENT—To gentlemen only, three nicely furnished rooms; four blocks from square, bath, telephone and electric lights. 203 North Bre vard. Phone 1228. 18-tf-eod Fourth ward, good neighborhood. W’^ould exchange for vacant lot. Phone 524-J. 16-tf FOR SALE—1911 model 4 h. p. belt drive Indian motorcycle. Cost |22.'j.00 in June. Will sell for $200. A. R. Leonhardt, Lowell, N. C. 19-lt FOR RENT—An up-to-date six-room flat in good condition. Phone 1130. Stf-wedsat FOR RENT—Sept. iBt, modern six- room house thoroughly screened. Lo cated 206 East Liberty, $22.50 in ad- vavce. Phone 610. l8-5t FOR RENT—7-room modern resi dence. 427 Elizabeth Avenue. Ready Sept. 1, $30.00 per month. Address Box 222. Lenoir, N. C. 17-5t FOR RENT—One large perfectly ven tilated room with private bath, side porch entrance, large closet, phone. Convenient and best locality. Phone 573. 15-tf FANCY BRED POULTRY AND EGGS. INDIAN RUNNER DUCK BOOK. 50c. Reliable, authoritative; nat an adver tising catalogue. W^ill save you from blundering into tHe wrong kinf of Runners. C- B. Valentine, Box 8, Ridgewodd, N. J. 18-lOt INDIAN RUNNER DUCKS for sale.— few dark Indian Runner ducklings for sale, $1.50 each. From heavy egg strain. Order ahead for eggs from pure white and fawn and white Run ners. The best going. Can rear them successfully the year round. Call 2260-J. Veterans Indignant At City Officials Must Vacate Veterans" Hall in City Ball by Monday as City .is to Use Hall as Court Room ••Confederate Treasure to Be Shipped to Richmond. Indignation is rampant in the ranks of Mecklenburg Camp Confederate Veterans. Some years ago the city tendered the camp the use of the auditorium in the city hall as a Veterans’ Hall—a place in which the camp was to meet and also to store its treasures. The hall has been known as Veter ans’ Hall. It was handsomely car peted and the walls hung with pic tures of noted Confederate officers, and other Confederate pictures of interest and value. Cases holding treasures of valuable historic interest occupied space here and there. The hall has been an ideal meeting place for the Gray coats. It has been to the veterans of the county a club room where they met monthly, or semi-monthly to talk over the past and dispose of matters of the present. Must Vacate. But in the march of progress the city is making, tlie city hall—part of it—is to be remodeled. The city is to use the auditorium as a court room. Yesterday afternoon Col. W. M. Smith, commander of Meckleijburg Camp, was notified that the veterans must vacate by Monday, as workmen would commence ’ rerqodeling the room. The camp is patriotically indignant that the city should put it out sum marily, and not provide a place in which it can store its treasures and meet. Said Col. Smith today: "I think it is a disgrace to the city of Char lotte that it does not provide a place for the Confederate veterans to meet and to have their valuable relics cared for." Mr. J. P. Sossaman of the camp, and others expressed similar indigna tion. “We have about decided.” said Col Smith, “that the best thing for us to do is to ship our valuables to Rich mond where we know they will be wel come and valued.” Veteran Conrad Writes. In regard to the matter the follow ing will be of interest: "To say the camp of Mecklenburg Veterans is much perturbed today over the order to vocate the city hall is to put it mildly. They are seriously talking of shipping their museum to Richmond which would possibly mean the breaking up of the camp alto gether. They have been the pride and glory of Charlotte in manuy re unions, and their name has been sounded abroad to the extremities of the country. They feel the city is not treating them with that mark of patriotism which has characterized it in the past. To turn them out in the street without a home or where to go would be an advertisement which Charlotte would not appreciate in the eyes of the world outside., They are without money to pay a high rental and the patriotism of the city and community has been their main stay and support. Can’t the city in some way relieve the situation. “The chaplain for the camp, “S. F. CONRAD.’ WE NEED MORE PICT DRIES IS In reference to the meeting in the Greater Charlotte Club rooms uesday night Is the following, which will be sent out as a bulletin this afternoon: COLUMBIAN Wy^dottes are beau* ties and good layers too. Eggs for sale. A. P. White, Myers Park, City. 2-20-mon-fri-tf FANCY POULTRI AND EGGS are easily sdld through advertisements FOR RENT—Beautiful flat, four rooms, all modern conveniences, cen trally lacated. Reference. "A,” care News. 18-3t FOR RENT—Nicely tumlshed rooms with baths and without, 22 E. Trade, Eelmont hotel. 30-tf FOR RENT—Two 4-room houses. Ap ply 414 East Seventh. 27-tf Special to The News. Asheville. Aug. 19.—The Asheville Poultry and Pet Stock Association is already laying plans for the poultry show this fall. Committees were ap pointed some time ago and the re ports at the meeting which w'as held Thursday night showed that the pre parations are going on smoothly and that there is every reason for a successful show. FOR RENT—Room furnished or un furnished, entrance on side porch facing South Boulevard. Phone 2743-J. 16-tI “Dr. H. R. Alexander, president of the North Carolina Farmers’ Union, returned yesterday from a tour of Rutherford and Polk counties, where he spoke at several places in the in terest of the union. MISCELLANEOUt KEAL€ 25p. Try my place, the table will please you. 301% N. Tryon St. 18-2t With hue like that when some great painter dips His pencil in the gloom of earthquake and eclipse. —Shelley. MRS. DR. MOORE, Painless Tooth Ex tractor. Office 23 West Trade St. 10-tf REFINED MARRIED COTTLE without children want to rent house jointly with couple. References above question. Address “B,” care News. 18-3t HARNESS REPAIRING—Best equip ped harness shop in the city. Hutch ison, Sehorn ft Hipp. 27-tf PARTY who took blue silk parasol from Amuse U please leave at News office. 18-2t "STENO WATER" purifles and strengthens the Blood. Nerves—• tnakes skin soft and white. Write •‘STENO,” Barium Springs, N. C. 31-tf FRESH SUPPLY Sherrill Mineral wa ter. Cures Indigestion, Constipation, •II Kidney and Bladder Disorders City chemist says absolute pure. Phone order 2123. N. J. Sherrill 26-tf BOARDING HOUSE, 301^ North Tryon St. Can accommodate four boarders. 18-2t BBTV^INO MACJell2Vli3& tor sale 1 rant, tS.OO month. Needles, shuttles and bobbin* for all makes of ma* chinM alwaj* on band. lawlng-Rob- bins Furniture Co. 'Plione >14. IS-tf SPECIAL CUT PRICE wle of furni ture will continue 30 days longer at Hastings-MItchell Co.. 48 N, College. 26-«od-tf FOR POULTRY SHOW. Coming—“In Hands of Imposters Three reels. The feature picture of them all at Amuse U next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Special ad mission 10c. A Great Meeting. A New Plan ' i For New Industries * For CHARLOTTE. Tuesday—August 22nd. The cry in Charlotte has long been “WE NEED MORE FACTORIES.” It has been one of the features of the work of the Greater Charlotte Club to try and secure them. Various meth ods have been resorted to but with dif ferent results. The possibilities along this line are great and SUCCESS in landing NEW INDUSTRIES means everything for the the FUTURE growth of Charlotte. If Charlotte is to hold the people who are constantly coming here WORK MUST BE PROVIDED for them. Every business man here is inter ested in seeing his BUSINESS EX PAND—he is consequently interested in the coming of new people—he is interested in new industries. A systematic plan to provide the city with new industries has been carefully mapped out—it is entirely different from anything the club has yet undertaken. Thi» plan, we will pre sent in detail at the meeting on Tues day night. EVERY LINE of business in the city should have representation at this meeting. BE THERE YOURSELF. Como and learn what the new plan is. Yours very truly, C. O. KUESTER, Pres. W. T. CORWITH, Sec. Selwyn Assembly Hall, 8:30 p. m., Tuesday, August 22nd. If You Eat Somet^i it’s a idow proceea and makes jfbu fed bad. Get rid of it quickly by taking a pincn or two of SIMMONS RED Z LIVER REGULATOR THB POWDER FORM) It driret out impurities and badly digested food in the stomach and bowela; stim^ates the torpid liver and restores re^^ar bowel movements. It is a fine tonic and system purifier that puts the vital ois^^ in ^ound, healthy condition. Sotd bjt Doaiers. PHeu, Large Faekag*, tl.Ofk Aak for di0 8«nalne with the Red Zen the labeL If jrwi ctanotfetlt. it br niaU postptU. Slmaoni Urer Refulitor b pot w alao in liQoid fooa lor wow wao ptefer k. Pxioe ^00 por bott)|t. Ixwk for the Red Z laheL I. B. ZEILIN & CO.. Froprtotora. 8t. lamU, WUmmomH Business Builders GROCERS McN EEL’S Home-made Cakes. Beaten Biscuits. Vegetables. Corn, String Beans, Lima Beans, Lettuce, Celery, Cabbage, Onions, Sal ad, Okra, Tomatoes, Egg Plant, Squash, Radishes, Parsley, Grape Fruit. Fruits. Apples, Pineapples, Cantelonpe, Wa termelon, Grapes, Peaches. Call early so you can get you goods promptiy. Phone 2622. 205 N. T^on St, Bnejs y —Bom to Dr. and Mrs. A. D. Glas cock a daughter. —Mrs. J. W. Russell has rented the house, 208 East Fifth street. —Dr. J. L. Caldwell will preach at the First Presbyterian church tomor row—both morning and evening. —Mr. James W. Barry, the well known lawyer, who as noted A delightful place for an autumnal vacation is Llnville, which has become a favoriate with residents of the Pied mont country. Linville Is especially attractive to else-' men by reason of the Trout Fishing, where, is soon to be married, is nt * and the excellent golf course, present in Boston. | a number of interesting golf events There are three cases of smallpox are planned for the late season, t the pest house. Two came yesterday j Fishing in both lake and stream, is from near Matthews—railroad negroes, good in September, and does not close One of the patients has a bad case. ^ until the 20th of the month. —Miss Mary Dawson of the Char- The popular Eseeola Inn is a lead- lotte Millinery, left Wednesday for ing feature of Linville, and the fame New York, where she will spend a of its hospitality and its cooks extends couple of weeks in the interest of the over many states. I Eseeola Inn will keep open doors Coming—“In Hands of Imposters.” unUl October 10th Three reels. The feature picture of Eagles to Fly High On Thujsday Next The Eagles are to fly high on Thurs day. ’Twill not be an aviation meet, except in the high altitude of pleasure, as the following show's: Aug. 12th, 191L Secretary Asheville Aerie, Asheville, N. C. Dear Sir and Brother: — On August 24th we are going to give a barbecue to all the. Aeries in the state, and beg to extend to your Aerie a cordial invitation to be present, to gether with your mothers, wives, sis ters, swethearts and lady friends. We assure you that no stone will be left unturned to make for you and all those you bring a pleasant day. Trusting to have the pleasure of hearing from you at an early date, ad vising approximately how many you expect to bring, in order that we may make our arrangements acordingly, I am, fraternally yours in L. T. J. & E. SECRETARY & CHAIRMAN, of Committee. Coming—“In Hands of Imposters. Three reels. The feature picture of them all at Amuse U next Monday Tuesday and Wednesday. Special ad mission -lOc. Coming—“In Hands of Imposters.” Three reels. The feature picture of them all at Amuse U next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Special ad mission 10c. FOR RENT 5-room cottage, 712 E. 9th St., 115.00. 6-room house, 216 N. Myers, $20.00. 5-room bouse. B20 N. McDowell, $13.50. 4-room hous**, 608 N. McDowell. $10.00. J. P. A 1.. L. HACKNEY. Phone 312. 6 W. 5th 8t THE BID FILTER IS AT SPENGER- GDMES TONIEKT Not yet, but soon. The big power-pressure filter is not here, but soon will be. It is in the Spencer yard—Southern railway—and is due to arrive here this evening. The minute it lands, 'be it noon or night, Saturday or Sunday, the work of unloading will begin. The work of hauling will follow. The brick and ev erything ready for the installation is on the ground. Superintendent Vest will superintend the work of unloading and hauling. The work of installing will be super intended by him and the water board. Before another week the water from Briar creek will be flowing through the mains and the municipal Temple of Janus can be closed. Inscribed across the big filter will be the words on Grant’s tomb: “Let us have peace.” Subscribers Asked For 10 Per Cent Payment PLENTY OF ROOM AND THEN SOME Both inside and out of this home and it’s not far out. Has seven large rooms, gas and water, on car line, ten blocks from square. One lot 55 by 140, adjoining lot goes with it, 70 by 110 all for $3500.00. Now don’t stand around and say, “Wonder where it Is?” but let us show it to you before some one else snaps it up. Unioo Loan and ReaityCompany 16 East Trade 8t. Phone 349 Morrla E. Trotter, Secty. A Treas, Local subscribers to the stock of the Interurban Electric Railway have received a communication from Mr. R. B. Arrington, secretary of the Piedmont Syndicate, for a ten per cent payment of the amount of their subscriptions. The sum is to be pay able in New York funds at the Na tional City Bank of New York on or before September 1, 1911. The money subscribed, $300,000, is all up, «ays President Keuster, of the Greater Charlotte Club. The com pany is to make ten calls, 10 per cent each. This is the third of the 19 per cent calls. The calls are made every 60 or 90 days as the company may find necessary, REWARD FOR MOONSHINERS. GREAT INTEREST IN THE PROPOSED HIGHWAY. Special to The News. Asheville, Aug. 19.—H. B. Chase, secretary of the Huntsville, Ala., Good Roads Automobile club, has written to E. C. Chambers, president of the Buncombe county Good Roads Association for information concern ing the “Good Roads Week” which has just closed, expressing the hope that the people are aroused and that good work has been done on the Central highway. He asks it the high way is to be pushed through to the Tennessee line. He thinks that a first class road from Chattanooga will be finished to Knoxville probably before the Memphis highway is com pleted, and goes on to say that if the Central highway will connect at the Tennessee line with the East Tennes see roads it will open this entire territory to thousands of tourists from the gulf states on account of the fact that the poeple of his sec tion expect to have a North ■ and South highway completed from Bir mingham to the Tennessee line with in 12 months and from Birmingham to the gulf, the latter to be pushed through at once. By Associated Press. AshevlUe, Aug. 19.—^United States Marshal, W. E. Logan, has been in structed by Attorney General Wicker sham to offer liberal rewards for the moonshiners who shot and seriously injured Deputy Collector R. E. Henry while the latter was conducting a raid last Monday at Gilreath, near Wilkes boro, this state. At the time Henry wag wounded two horses ridden by his assistants were shot and killed. Two arrests have already been made and others are expected to follow shortly A message received today stated that Henry, who was shot through the left lung, was doing farly well, and his recovery is regarded as probable Coming—“In Hands of Imposters.” Three reels. The feature picture of them all at Amuse U next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Special ad mission 10c. Coming—*Mn Hands of Imposters.** Three reels. The feature picture of ^em all at Amuse U next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Special ad- mlaalon lOo, A NOTRE DAME LADY’S APPEAL To all knowing sufferers of rheuma tisms, whether muscular or of the joints, sciatica, lumbagos, backache pains in the kidneys or neuralgia pains, to write to her for a home treatment which has repeatedly cured all of these tortures. She feels it her duty to send it to all sufferers FREE You cure yourself at home as thous ands will testify—no change of climate being necessary. This simple discov ery banishes uric acid from the blood loosens the stiffened joints, purifies the blood, and brightens the eyes, giv ing elasticity and tone to the whole system. If the above Interests you, for proof address Mrs. M. Summers, Box B, Notre Dame, Ind. These tiny CAPSULES ire superior to Baisam of CopailKi, Cubebsorlnjection8>anii, RELIEVES in 24 HOURS ’ tile same diseases witli- out [MIDY He hath no need of property Who knows not how to spend it. —Tennyson. LINVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA. them all at Amuse U next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Special ad mission 10c. HAY FEVER, ASTHMA AND SUM MER COLDS. I Must be relieved and Foley’s Honey | and Tar Compound will do it. E. M. I Stewart, 1034 Wolfram St., Chicago,, writes: “I have been greatly troubled: during the hot summer months with Hay Fever and find that by using Fo ley’s Honey and Tar Compound I get great relief.” Many others who suf fer similarly will be glad to benefit by Mr. Stewart’s experience. Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound is effective for coughs and colds in either chil dren or grown persons. No opiates, no harmful drugs. In a yellow pack age. Refuse substitutes. Bowen Drug Store on North Square. Illustrated booklet or rates will be mailed upon application. Motor cars may reach Linville via Lenoir and Blowing Rock. R. R. tickets should be purchased to Edgemont. For further informtion, address, JAMES P. VINING, 16-30t LinviUe, N. C. Coming—“In Hands of Imposters.” Three reels. The feature picture of them all at Amuse U next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Special ad mission 10c. CAS'TORIA For Infants and ChildrexL Th( Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Sis&ature of Improved Passenger Facilities South ern Railway. Effectite with first car leaving Washington, D. C., Friday, August 18th, and first car leaving Spartanburg, S. C., August 19th, Southern Railway w ill inaugurate •Pullman Parlor Car service between Washington, D. C., and Spartanburg, S. C., on trains Nos. 35 and 36, which will be of great con venience and comfort to passengers using this most popular train. R. H. DeBUTTS, Trav. Pass. Agt., 17-3t Charlotte, N. C. STORAGE HOUSEHOLD GOODS and MERCHANDISE. Negotiable Receipts Issued. Telephone 1578. American Brokerage & Warehouse Co. Charlotte, N. C. SPECIAL SALE For this week, or until present stock is exhausted, we will sell our high grade Stock Feed in 75 lb. sacks, a* $1.25 per sack. You can thus sav^ 25c on each sack you purchase, t- buy some of our nice groceries at low prices. ALEXANDER BROS. 218 East Trade Street. Phone 2561. WE GRIND OUR OWN CORN MEAL. 30c Peck. W. M. CROWELL, Phone 1062. 200 E. Morehead St. A RELISH YOU WILL LIKE Smoked Scotch Herring in glass jar; 15c, also shredded cod fish in giasi. Large shipment of dried figs in gla: 25 and 35c, also mixed jars, dates an. figs not stuffed 40c eacti. Fancy Ra sins on the stem 2 lb. fancy boxes &0c. MILLER-VAN NESS CC. “The Place.” GINGER ALE Just. received another cask of Im ported Cochrane & Co.’s Belfast, Ire land, Ginger Ale. 8. Fv. LENTZ, Fred Cochrane, Mgr. 'Phone 251. aUSCELLAAEoUS FOR SALE 28^ acres, has good 4-room houst;, barn, 6 acres in wooa, good Nvater, auu IS on macaaam. A real uice utut; home, oniy o miles out. SHOEMAKER & WALLACC Phone 444-J and 243. 225 North Tryon. Auto Tires REPAIRED, VULCANIZED RECOVERED Inner Tubes Vulcanized. We guarantee they will never leak 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. Mosquitoes jj Have Arrived So you can’t afford to allow them to torment you with their germ-infecting bite for a single night when we can furnish you a fine steel frame net as cheap as $1.75. DIO □ let us FIX VOUR KEF'RIGERATOK V\ e can leli at a giajice Judt wliai It and at a inhlu^ expense mane It goott and serviceauie. fcJenu aioUo your ice cream ireb/«r. We cau Ha mat, too. C. h. SHUMAN, ’Phone 111. 200 N. College St. THE GEM HOTEL AND CAFE. Up-to-date dimug room, seating 10J yersoub, a luuc^i counter unequaiea in bouth. Convenientiy located gix boutii Tryon btreet. Suictly inuropeaa. MOVED. 1 have moved my Terra Cotta Pipe Yard to £ast 5th tit., between College St. and the Kailroad, in the Heart of the City, where you will find every thing in pipe and tilings. Flue pipe, Chimney iining. Wall coping, etc. C. V. Furr, Office and Yard, East 5th St., Between College and Railroad. Professional Cards DR- WM. PARKER DENTIST , Garibaldi, Bruns &. Dixon Bidg, 12 S. Tryon (Note Change of Location.) 'Phone 1403, Day or Night. Dr. H. C. Henderson. Dr. L. I. Gidney HEND£i;WON & QDi\£v; DENTISTS. Office, Hunt blag., ku2^ N. Tryon St. 'Phone 216. Office 'Phone, 326. Res^lence 962- J l,\V, DENTIST. 7 109 Realty Building, Charlotte, N. C. OSTEOPATH. REGISTERED. rt* F« nealty ttuiiaing. Hours, to 12, 2 to 5. 'Phone, Omce, 3:^0; Hesidence 371-J Consultation at Office, gratis We are agents also for the “Dixie”, the finest canopy ever put on the market, $3.00 either wood or metal bed. Phone us your order and we will have one over your bed in a few minutes. W. T. McOOY & CO. The Big Store’ Typewriters For I have on hand at all times all kinds of typewriters—kept exclusively ,for rental purposes by the day—week—month—or longer. Each rental type writer is kept properly cleaned, qiled and fitted with good ribbon. I rent nothing but first class machines, which write like new ones. My rate is $1 per week—or $3 per month—delivered anywhere in the city. (I do not charge one man $4—another $3.50 and another $3)—my rates and terms are same to all. I guarantee to rent as nice, (or better) class of typewriters as anybody in. the business—and allow 2 months rent to apply on pur chase of any typewriter you buy from me anytime In the future. If I send you a typewriter which is not satisfactory I will take it up and send you another. My business is conducted on merit. JONES—The Typewriter Man—Biggest Dealer in Carolinas. Offlco 225 North Tryon Street—Phone 243. F.LBONFOEV; ARCHITECT. Supervision of Construction. Office, 211 N. Tryon. Room 4. HUGH W, HAR^ ATTORNEY. L4W Building. Charlotte, N. C. J, M« AlcMi ARCHITECT. Rooms 505*506 Trust Bulldir.g CHARLOTTE, N. C. N. & W. Railway Schedule In Effect June 11, 1911> 10.20 am Lv. Charlotte So. Ry. 5.?- P®- 2.05 pm Lv. Winston N&W 2.05 p *• Lv. Mart’viile N&W Ar. 11.■10 am. 6.25 pm. Ar. Koanoke N&W Lv. a.li Addltionn-1 trains leave Winstvn-Sa- iem Z n~ m. dally. , Connects at Roanoke for the and West. Pullman sleepers. cars. 3 If you are considering takin^ trip to California or the CoaBl, " variable Round-Trip Fare. Ttie formation is yours for tlie askiiio. one of our complete Map B'olf^rs. W. B. BEVILU M. F. BRAGG, Gen. Ease. Agt. Trav. Pass. M ftoanoke. Va.
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 19, 1911, edition 1
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