Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Sept. 23, 1911, edition 1 / Page 6
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~lp*[^-- ;:-^v 6 THE CHMT''TfE Ni!l?t. SEPTEMBER 23 19i[ ■^?:vr-'‘-•:>:t >; - ■■ vf ^■■■?^--- SERMii fiKSlNOELltPtIimD.D. TBAT BEAU OF YOURS. Text, "It CMM to p«M at mldnJcht that the man waa afraid and turned himself, and. behold, a woman lay at hifl fe«t,”— Buth ill. I. The flrl In the text was the eeeker. Brery woman to. Thot saylsf about a T»i«Ti belns “the cooQtierlng male” to true enough, but a woman makes her cholco. A man may not make a sec ond adrance without her consent. A millionth part of a glance permits him come or bids him depart. She’s train ed to It from childhood. She has a queer, subtle, psychic something that will make the laborer take off hto bat or the king renounce hto crown. The flash of her eye, the dawn of her amlK the flutter of her skirt, may giray a man or nation more than the thunders of Sinai. That’s the magnet the Almighty hath giten her. Woe unto her when she drops her weapons! She’s helpless as a wounded bird. The line*— “What !■ your fortune, my pretty maldr* "My face la my fortune, sir.” she "aid. are true. It’s much of her capital sure ly, but her purity, r.omanly reserve, her very physical self. Is a much larger part. When they’re gone the beauty soon goes, raid fhe’s a misera ble pauper. When has given a kiss or permitted ^ liberty ?he has dulled her bind'*. Still, she's bom to marrj", and thoose sb'' raust. .V mis-' take is fatal. If a man blunders he goes to the lodge or club; with priass and pipe he forgets liis woes. If a woman blunders chances are nothing but a funeril will heip her out. The Silken Cords of Lev*. Say, girlie, if you knew your power over that young man you’d be as tounded. If he truly loves you he will go through fire, snow and water for you. In the full flush of courtship he will do your will though the sky fall. But it’s his nature to be both Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde. lie will flatter you, he will give you handsome gifts, he will sacriflce his .nil for, and the next moment he will tempt you. Be ing a man. he craves ownership, but you’re not his property, even though a diamond gMsteus on your finger. Stand by your colors. Prove to him that you’re sweet and modest and clean. Draw your line. He will not— he dare not—cross It. It's your peril, fie will rpsppct yon for it. Down (l>-ep undenioath you're the type of woman be wants. Whatever or how ever a man may feel after marriage, •coretly before raarringe he Is delight- pd to feel that "th.Tt little girl” c'»n tr-ike him do anything. There’s your }irne, y' ung woman. Consecrate the rose on your check, the sparkle of your eye. all the charas of womanhood vhlcb he Is so eager to iwssess. ’Make ^Im pay n price for them. Let that price he none other than the upholding of his nobler self. Fish to Leave Alone. Marrlsge at best is uncertain, but there’s no use itslstiug on having a ¥otten apple. When you hear girls ^ay of a young fellov.*, “Ob. my, ain’t Jie Just irresistible?” “He don’t care how he spends money on a girl so long’s he shows her a good time”— that’s a good type to leave alone. A Weak man needs as much watching as ft bad one and does as much damage. Jf you must marry him do it quick before h«» goes to jail or skips the own. 'You don’t want to be disgraced before yoti are married. Don’t marry IB rake to reform him. It cao’t be done except on the stage or in Action. If he won’t be decent for his own sake and his mother’s he won’t be for yours. There’s no magic in a -marriage cere mony. You want to start a home, not a Keeley cure. Don’t marry a scoffer of religion. You don’t want a fanatic who is 80 pious no one can live with him, nor do you want a sneering skep tic. He’s a shallow man who doesn’t respect the sacred things of another. Don’t elope. Occasiotially parental tyranny demands radical action, but runaway marriages—ninety-nine out of a hundred—mean abandonment, dis grace. divorce and hell, so the deser tion and divorce Judges say. Your Beau Ideal. Of course you are seeking your ideal and you will expect to find him—until you are thirty. Strange to aay, you would tire of him or he of ypti before the honeymoon would wane. * What Is your ideal—beauty? Remember Ju venal, "When the gods would torment a woman they give her a handsome husband?” Besides the beauty man will be vain and selflih. Rave over bralDs? But he’s a dull bookwonn or has all the rasping Irritability of genius. Remember Carlyle’s Jane? The college athlete? Next to society divorces and the stage «tatistlcB show the woman who marries an athlete to most likely to apply tot a divorce. The soldier of fortune, dashing and hand some? But he has a debonair way (ft slipping off with some other roman tic maiden. leaving nntiald bills, bro ken hearts end unwelcome offspring. Mighty queer, but the picture in the comic papers, uproariously funny for ages, of the man carding the crying baby 1s nearest the rMl Ideal. It rep resents the domestic spirit, the fellow who loves home, willing to share the trylnir things of a woman’i life, the man who loves you In spite of your faults and endures thing* for yonr own dear sake. The other Ideal, half dare devil. half Mint, part scholar, part Don Caesar, to Impo^ble and exists only In matlneea and summer fiction stories. OUR HOME MAKING Blobbs—"Guzsler says his wife al- s^ays has the latest thing out.” Slobbs —"Meaning' himself? You know he ttever gets home till about 3 a. m.” , Lots of men don't make as much noise in th« world m the ckittaos they wear. An Old Fashioned House Bungalowed And Made Pretty and Livable at Small Cost. ‘ Ben and I had boarded since our marriage some three years before, but we never intended to keep to that makeshift sort of living and had been constantly on the lookout for a house that we could buy for a little money. It must be within easy distance of the office, not too large, nor so cramped that it would not answer for aperma- nent home. We wanted enough land to give us plenty of light and air on all sides, but not so much that we would require a man to care for the place, and above all it must be thor oughly sanitary. We began by looking at new houses, but the ones we liked were always too expensive or too close to the neighboring dwellings, too far out of town, or too .far from the station or trolley which amounted to the same'thing. Then a friend suggested buying an old house, and renovating it to our taste, but other people told us that that was usually more expensive than paying considerably more for a new house, so in the end we had to rely upon our own Judgment, and the edu cation in home making that we had gradually acquired from many sources Perhaps the most valuable facts were those that fixed in our minds the things to be avoided. . The House. In our various wanderings in the suburbs we had many times passed an old stone house of the style that pre vailed before wooden homes became the fashion, and had admired its sim ple lines and lovely garden gay with hollyhocks and other old time flowers. An oak of massive girth shaded a tumbledown barn at one side of the place, that would make an excellent chicken-house with a little propping and fixing, but the place was not for sale we heard on making inquiries. Imagine our surprise then when we saw in the doorway an auction pla card and found that after the “Ven due” the place was to be sold in the same fashion. We secured the house and much of its furnishings for a vary small Investment and at once started to make it over on simple bungalow lines which accorded perfectly with the exterior and would fit in exactly with our plan of living. We tore down »uost of the partitions on the first floor, made the kitchen half its original size, and had a splendid large living room, a small square entrance hall, and a dining room that could be all thrown into one by their wide doorways. The work was done by local masons and carpenter^ and was substantial enough but rather rough as to wall finish. The woodwork was good for we had t^en able to use most of the old trim which was in excellent condi tion. The cast as managed was small, but unless we had known what our proposed scheme of decoration would accomplish the result in the rough state would have been forbidding. The house must he thoroughly sani- sary and easy to care for. We had de termined. so we decided to use the washable wall hangings that come in all corts of different finishes and col orings. These hide any defect in the walls and the line in the new plas tering would not strike through and stain the decoration as with paper hangings used over new walls. The ceilings throughout the house were covered with the same material in the dull ivory white finish so much used by decorators. On the kitchen walla we used a tile pattern, in Delft- blue and white, and had the woodwork painted in white enamel, but left the old oaken doors and fioors in their natural color, after they were scraped and cleaned. Our furniture was prin cipally old mahogany so we determined to fit up the living rooms and hall in the soft light grays that go so well with. white woodwork and mahogany and from such an excellent background for pictures and china. The hall was in grey burlap, the living room in a grass cloth effect, and the dining room in two-toned figure design—an exact' reproduction of an expensive French paper. r Up stairs there were two large bed rooms and one small one. The other small room was turned into a bath room, for we had installed an excellent plumbing and heating plant in ,the old house. The sleeping rooms we huhg in dainty plain tints of blue, buff, and gray. The bath room In a tile pattern of swallows, green on a white glazed ground with a green and white lino leum on the floor. The woodwork on this floor was an old white enamel and we planned later to replace the doors with birch, stained to mahogany with glass door knobs, but this like many other plans we had to defer until later. We were ready now for the furnishing, but that *is another story. JEANNETTE VAN RIPEN. ATTACKS SCn«90L PRINCIPAL A severe attack on school principal, Chas. B. Allen, of Sylvania, Ga., is thus told by him. “For more than three years,” he writes, “I suffered In- descrlbaple torture from rheumatism, liver and stomach trouble and diseased kidneys. All remedies failed till I used Electric Bitters, but four bottles of this wonderful remedy cured me com pletely.” Such r«;sults are common. Thousands bless them for curing stom ach trouble, female complaints, kid ney disorders, biliousness, and for new health and vigor. Try them. Only 50c at W. L. Hand & Co. AN INDUSTRY THAT IS NO MORE. From the Kansas City Journal. In, the early days the principal oc cupation of the Harper county people was hauling buffalo bones to Wichita, sixty miles. Thirty thousand pounds could be gathered up in a day, with the whole family at work, and it would take two more days to get to Wichita and they would get from $7 to $10 for the load. Senator Hemingway, of Indi ana, was one of the bone maulers cind lived in Harper county, near Danville. GLOVES YOU WEAR. For a person with a hand that show* conspicuously it is far better to buy the suede or lisle in ^preference to the shiny kid or the silk, as both these latter have a tendency to draw the gaze to the hands, when if they are correctly clothed they will never call one’s attention with a sort of circus barker effect. As there Is never any severe shange . short glove fashion one who wishes to take advantage of the off season buying need not be at all Imor- ous that the vogue will call for some thing extremely different In this Item of apparel. "Lots of things look easy lo manage till you try them,” remarked Wise Guy. “Yes, aeroplanes ind wives, lor Instance/’ added the Simple Mu*. The Kind You Have Always Bought* and 'which .has been in use tar over 30 years, has borne tiie siarnatnre of and hM been made under his peiv sonal superrislon since itsinliAney* Allow no one to deceive yoaJn this* All ConnteilfeitS; Imitations and** Jnst-as-srood'^arc but Experiments that trifle with and endanger ^e health ot Inihnts and Children—Experience against Experiment* What is CASTORIA Castoria is s* harmless snbstli^te for Castor OU« Pare- Uroric* Drops and Soothing^ Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium» Morphine nor otiier Karcotie substance. Its as« is its sroarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness* It cures l>iarrhcea tuod Wind Oolic. It reliAves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healtny and natural sleep* The Children’s Panacea-The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Sean the 8ignatitr« of Tbe Kind Yon Hare Bougiit In Use For Over 30 Years. JVC ess.*mon ^eaiPiiNr. •tukkt, new voiik crv. YT 1^ C* .11. Tj 7 Gnaggs—“You seem to forget £10k€ ^TUltfl Jlj€11€V€S i promised to love, honor and obey.” Mrs. Gnaggs—“And you seem ' Tn TTrkl/iinn forget that you promised to endow X^ULlUil^tne with all your world’y goods, so I guess it’s an even break Atlanta. Ga., Sept. 23.—Governor Hoke Smith is a firm believer in the idea that Georgia farmers should hold their cotton until they can get what they regard as a reasonable price for it. This > morning Governor Smith contributed $100 lo the fund that is being raised . to back the “hold cotton” movement by the Farm ers’ Union. The governor says that he is confident that the crop this year will be a good one, but that he is not disposed to believe the reports that are in circulation regarding the “bumper” crop. He further says that the present prices on cotton are be-' ing fixed in Liverpool upon the sup position that the crop this season is to be a bumper one, and that this es timate is not a correct one. It is the desire of Governor Smith that Geor gia farmers should receive the full value of their cotton, and that the present price is too low by several cents. John T. McDaniel, treasurer of the Farmers’ Union, called on Governor Smith this morning to thank him for his recent letter to Governor O’Neal, of Alabamk, in which Governor Smith urged the Alabama farmers not to sell their cotton and to reflect upon the importance of co-operation. The general opinion at the state capitol is that if the farmers of Georgia will hold their cotton the state in general will be greatly benefitted thereby. SEABOARD AIR LINE. SCHE3DULE JAMES KER, JR.. T. P. A., Selwyn Ho tel, Charlotte, N. C. J. B. WYLIE, T. A.. Selwyn Hotel, Charlotte, N. C. . Trains Leave Charlotte—Elective April 9, 1011. NO. 40.—5.00 A. M.—Connects at Mon roe with No. 38 with through coach, picking up parlor car at Hamlet, to Ports>mouth-Norfolk; Wilming ton, Baltimore, Philadelphia arid New York, dining car service and vestibule coaches to Washington; Pullman sleeping cars to Jersey City. No. 48—7.30 A. M.—Local for Monroe and points south. No. 133.—10.00 A. M.—Local for Lln- colnton, Shelby an(J Rutherfordton. 'No. 44—5 P. M.—Local for Wilming- 1 ton; connects at Hamlet with No. 42 for Columbia, coaches and sleeping cars, arrives at Wilming- ! ton at 12.30 a. m. No. 47—4.45 P. M.—Local for Lincoln- ton, Shelby and Rutherfordton. No. 132—7.25 P. M.—Handles local sleeper for Portsmouth, Norfolk; connects at Monroe with No. 41 for Atlanta and Southwest with through sleeper to Birmingham: at Monroe with No. 31 fast train with Bleeper to Portsmouth and Norfolk and Jerse-y City, connects at Hamlet with No. 92 with through vestibule coaches to Washington. Dining car, Richmond to New York. Pullman sleeprs to New York. Trains Arrive at Charlotte. 133—9.55 A. M., from the East. No, 45—i2.01 Noon, from tlie East. No. 46—10.00 A. M., from the West. No. 132—7.05 P. M^, from the West. No. 49—7.25 P. M., from the East. Husband in Jail; Wife Faithful. Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 23.—In order that she may be near her imprisoned husband Mrs. Susan Arthur, of Rich mond, Ky., together with her three liitlec hildren, has come to Atlanta, friendless and penniless, and will en deavor to keep the wolf from the door as best she may until the day of her husband’s liberation from the federal prison in this city. What will be done in her case is a matter that is sadly puzzling the state and city authorities, for she is without funds and has her children to care for. Her husband, a prisoner serving a two year sentence, is powerless to help her. She and her children may be sent back to Richmond. CREATOR IN COURT. From the Milwaukee Free Press. Francessco Creatore, the bandmaster whose altercation with James Munsell, insurance agent, resulted in their both being arrested, was fined $1 and costs in District court, while Munsell was found not guilty. Looking like a general with his staff of^ officers, Creatoe entered District court surrounded by a score of his bandmen, all resplendent in their uni forms. “That man is a liar,” shouted Chea- tore, in excited tones, as Patrolman Schultz told of the scuffle that had taken place on Third street. “But he,” and the fiery little band master waved a finger at Munsell, “he called me a foreign rat. I spat in that man’s face, yes, two times, I admit it.” “I never called the man that name,” said Munsell. “You lie!” shouted Creatore. “I suspend sentence on payment of costs,” said Judge Neeleni after the testimony had been taken. “There was ^ome provocation for Creatore.” “But your honor,” said atlfcrney E. J. Yockey, “this ” “Then you are not satisfied?” asked the judge. “No, I'm not,” replied Mr. Yockey. “Then I fine him $1 and costs.” All women are addicted to chin music, but there is no reason w iy a woman with a double chin should talk twice as much. FOLEY'8 KIDNEY REMEDY (LlquW) Is a great medicine of proven value for both acute and chronic kidney Md bladder ailments and for annoyn^ urinary irregularities.'It la eBpecia^ ly recommenced to elderly prople for Its wonderful tonic snd reconstructive qualities, and the permanent relief am' comfort it gives them. L*. McCon nell, 117 Catheriire St., Elmira, N. Y., says: “Ffve bottles did the work for me most eftectively and beyond doubt Foley’s Kidney Remedy is the most rel.able kidney medicine ever made, Bowen Drug Stor*. No. SOUTHERN RAILWAY N. B.—The follb^lns' schedule fisurea published only tut Information and are not suaranteed. 3.20 a. m.. No. 25, daily, Birmingham Special for Atlanta and Birming ham. Pullman drawing room sleep ing cars. Observation cara and day coaches to Birminetium. Dining car service. 6.10 a. m., No. 31, daily, The South ern’s Southeastern Limited, for Co lumbia, Savannah. Aiken, Augusta and Jacksdnville. Pullman draw ing room sleeping cars for Aiken. 8.30 a. m.. No. 8, daily, local for Dan ville. Richmond and all interme diate points. 6.00 a. m.. No. 44, daily, local for Wash ington, D. C. 6.40 a. m.. No. 39, daily, local train for Columbia and intermediate points. 7.15 a. m.. No. 39, daily, local trainfor Atlanta aud intermediate points. 7.00 a. m.. No. 16, daily, except Sun day, local for Statesville and Tay lorsville, connecting at Moores- ville for Winston-Salem, at States ville for Asheville and beyond. 10.05 a. m.. No. 37, dally. New York. Atlanta and New Orleans Limited. Pullman drawing room sleeping cars and Observation cars. New York to New Orleans, Atlanta and Macon. Dining car service. Solid Pullman train. 10.15 a. m.. No. 36. dally. United Stales fast mall, for Washington and points North. Pullman drawing room sleeping cars. New Orleans and Birmingham to New York. Doay coaches to Washington. Din ing car service. 10.20 a. ni.. No. 28, daily for Winston- Salen>. Roanolce, and local ppints. 11.10 a. m., No. 11, daily, iocal for At lanta and Intermediate points. 3.00 p. m., No. 46, daily, local for Greensboro and intermediate points. 4.50 p. m.. No. 41, daily except Sun day, local for Seneca and interme diate points. 6.00 p. m.. No. 24, daily except Sun day, local for Mooresville, States ville and Taylorsville. 7.30 p. m.. No. 38, daily. New York, for Washington and points North. Drawing room sleeping cars. Ob servation cars to New York, Din ing car service. Solid Pullman train. 9.30 p. m.. No. 35, dally. United States fast mail for . Atlanta. Birming ham and New Orleans. Pullman drawing room sleeping cars New York to New Orleans and Bir mingham. Day. coaches Washing ton to New Orleans. Dining car service. 10.00 p. m.. No. 32, Daily, The South ern’s Southeastern Limited for Washington, New York and points North. Pullmau drawing room Bleeping carS for New York. Day coaches to Washington. Dining car service. 10.30 p. m., No. 43, d^^ily, for Atlanta, and points South. Handles Pull man •Sleeping car Raleigh to At lanta. Day coaches Washington to Atlanta. 2*’ P’ daily, Blrmlng- nam Special, foH Washtngton and Pullman drawing Observation Wo 1,1° York. Day coaches to AJoining car service. New York trains of Southern Railway will arrive and repart from ftal Mihhatfen termi- stventh to Railroad. reservations and at be obtained Street? South 'Try^. R. H. DeBUTTS. T. P» A. R- I. veiJnon. °- H. F. CARY. & "• =• E. H. COrE»tAZV.'’£''i:“&. & EXCUSE ME! E^awnBy M.MYER HEY'THE1RE‘TH15,I5 NOT a SlGNRTUREi!' 'tDl/VE ONiy MRDE SEVEN UPRIGHT STROKES,!? f 50 I HRVE-' BUT JUST a MOMENT- I hrv;e not FINISHED IT YET '• YOU SEE I FORGOT TO HDD FOUR HORlZONim- LINES lAEW Ha-HH'DflT^ n3CX)D0NE MlsmH HILL.’ ER: MILL OPERATIVE ARRESTED J. F. Williams, some time past an operative in Springstein Mill at Ches ter, S. C., was arrested by officers Gib son and Jackson on a warrant sworn out by Superintendent Adams, the charge being theft of cloth from the mill. The officers searched Williams’ dwelling, and a sack of odds and ends, about, 150 yard£ in all, was found Williams pleadeu guilty. THE SELWYN HOTEL EUROPEAN Only fire-proof hotel in Char lotte; supplied entirely with wa* ter from its own deep welL CAFE OPEN Av^ NIGHT. Water analyzed J ily 6f 1911, by Director State Lathoratory of Hygiene anci pronounced pure. Pure Water nbm our Artesian Well. 303 1-2 feet deep, for ssUe. 6c gallon at Hotel. lOo gallon in 5*gali«j lots. i>eliyered in Charlotte or at JSL , R. Station. EDGAR B. MOORE, Proprietor. Let Us Remouot Your Diadmonds in latest stylo platinum lined Tiffany’s Mount ings. gives the stones additional brilliancy and does not turn dark under stones. All sizes, and remounted by expert workinau. Garabaldi, Bruns & Dixon THE For Rent 1 10-rooin House 09 N. Tryon St. 1 6-room House on W. 12th St. 1 6-room House, cor. College and Stonewall Sts. 1 5-room House o.n S. Church St. 1 3-room House on S. College St. . C. Me Nelis No. 33 East 4th St. *Phon« No. 604-J. Stone Lined ' Refrigeraton is as easily cleaned as d Cbiha Plate, tt is tbd par excellence of modeq Itefrigeratora. See them at our stor^ J. N. McCausland & Co., ■ 221 South Tryon Street ^ N.& W. Railway la IX, Ailli J0r2U aui L.V. CUariotle s>o. Uy. 6.5u’om. X.C6 i»m L.V. Wmaton W&\v 2,^5 1-v. Mart'viUe Ar. 11.40 am! «.26 pm- Ar. Hoanok*> KdtVi L.^. a.ift Addition-, train* leave Wlnsion-Sa- lem 2 I&. m. daily. ^ ftoa^joke for the East ^ esc PuUmsua Hleepers. X>tnU*s U you are eonalderlns taklnir k trip to CalUorala or the ' variable Romi4*-Tr|p Fare. M. «aav vuusiaerins xaKlnflp wl •*»* Coaet, out jaHable Romi4-:Tr|p Fare, In formation is yours for the aeklns with w, a. BEylLLi,, 11. BRAGQ. ***• Act. Job Phone f530 Taylor Nursery Bied This arrangement Is the most conr Plete and convenient ever devised for the mother nursing a young baby, and it it comfortable for the child. You can hear ©very move of the not suffer tue inconvenience of getting out of bed. Place the Taylor Nursery;| Bed in any shape you want to meet; your own convenience and the baby snug' and comfortable. Write us ^ a descriptlvia catalogu*^ , Lubin Furniture Compan^^ . \ everything |N FURNITURES CaR^den, * Mills will si 1 after a j Jionths putt and machint Haw Rive ite Mills No ed operation curtailment for a great ] Simfisonvi jlaflufacturii ready to ch« the The neces ready been i Charlotte, HosUins Mil lias been c months, resi day morninf Lynchburj in the Text w'eeks ago, Mills Btarte after short ing the sum Kockingha Manufacturi old looms ai This compai 456 ring sp and 56 card duction of p Maryville, Hosiery Mil and treasur to invest al burned plan Theb uildiq brick const $12,000 witl El Paso,! Indiaan Dra wants price has complel Crete buildj which its j! operatives •: South Be tury Cottoi $200,000 ha president; ent; Henr treasurer. Montgom that the : Montgomar practically cause of 1 will resumi days, thpre to 175 or 10,000 spin Greenvill Manufactur Shoals is men overhi the recent] Cotton Mill operations product is and ply ya Greenvill rectors me utacturing orders fo which insi the size o1 been annoi soon upon signed mil CharlottJ S. N. Boyc for the Da following 1 bankruptcy mated at Cliffside, been runn some time but a few gates burs down for mill starte Raleigh, ment of tl ceived a 1 sistiiig of 1 and extra al&o a thr ery is heir dents. Silurla, ing been years and the name completed stallation be ready 1st. Tho and tha w day and Calhoun men Bruc last Week mill and shape. T] ployed um conditions policemen ■'^ork alr« eral evil China > closing factory at moved frc in order t, rents the belonging hauled bj Sinai fac heavily le cer arrive Maryvll Hosiery ]y and treasi about $40, ^8 been ■’'^111 be 30 tion, and equipment sist of 15™ ing 200 capacity Chattan mond ” start 30 Hos fa L tt J nfacture future. for the p' Will be a. emplo: ^t is said ^ large s
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Sept. 23, 1911, edition 1
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