wu.AJai.OTTE KEWS SEPTHIVIBER 27, 1911 ' FALL MILLINERY I i WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY Ban A CORDIAL SEPTEMBER 27th, 28th and 29th aFfflBBHCTEEnzE::: TO ALL DEPARTMENT STORES, CHARLOTTE. • N. C. . ..Id Social and Personal ,Ey ADDIE WILLIAMS CALDWELL) ALIQUID AMARI.' -iarG a sailor Binging as he leaned amiDst the shrouds, n Tied beneath him, and above : m the clouds, ' I the breezes moaned in answer, -j^ever aappy love may be, the core ot love Ifi pain.” bffezi s learned the burden and uurmured to the land, •-« tailor s wife was Bitting in her ta^e by the strand, iid '»hen -she heard them whl8p«r her heart, replied again. However happy love may be, the core of love ig pain.” ■ :r ^f* the woman weeping and hiur.M to the town, ^oe»ca they told their message, and ill confused It plain— Kovever happy love may be, the core of love 1b pain.” • w ".f-arken, all ye lovers! Be mind ful when ye meet promise naught or little ere Uila proverb ye repeat. »surely phall have proof thereof; ye shall not &peak in vain— •’OWftver happy love may be, the core and the volcee of the main - Francis Money-Coutts. for afternoon tea. of the newer forms for after ' - device is a squat cream Jug sugar Dowl of rock crystal set in frame with arched handle to passing easy. Another useful article is a cake lift- of silver, This is on the order of ice bur The one prong is flat in* of forked. tea strainer bai a ail- handle and reata on a „ crystal, silver-rimmed dish to dripping on the cloth, or tea on the lawn the wicker ta- 8 on n'heels are light and conven- . ^ They are provided with double ir-. ^ filled and pushed to i of the grounds. for porch service are of wicker rims with base of 'i'k ’■are old brocade covered Jrp * The handles on each end antial enough for hard use. inn Iced teaspoons make wedding gift for the ®mer bnde. as they will be In con- «a lunch and afternoon hrnn.v ^Ith hollowed tubes j ?h which the tea can be sipped novel than -ion fr to suspi- standpolnt.- Ainoni •’’E ' eueoiB at me oei- tV; and Mount Hoi- '*• Mr. D. M. Annfleld. UaxtoBU STATESVILLE ’ AUTO PARTY. Messrs. W. C. Miller, H. H. Yount. James Ramsay, Mrs. N. M. Bonner, Miss Mary Lois Miller and Miss Jose phine Clifton, of Columbus, Miss., com posed a Statesville party that spent yesterday in the city, returning to Statesville yesterday by auto. GOES TO BALTIMORE. Mrs. J. O. Gardner leaves tonight for Baltimore to see her daughter Miss ZZada, who is at Johns Hopkins, being treated for a diseased knee. BESSIE DEWEY CLUB. The Bessie Dewey Bok Club will have its first meeting this season Friday afternoon at 4:30 with the president, Mrs. J. L. Chambers. FIRST MEETING. The Barium Springs Orphanage Cir cle will meet with Mrs. L. W.. Sand ers tomorrow morning at 11 o’clock. As this is the first meeting of the season all members are asked to be present. COMPLIMENTING MISS CALDWTLL. Mrs. Robert L. Tate will be host ess at an informal sewing party this afternoon in honor of Miss Lida Cald well, the charming daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John L. Caldwell. TO CLOSE SUMMER HOME. Mrs. H. C. Irwin and Mrs. J. P. Irwin, who spent the summer at Wrightsville, will return home this week. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Irwin have one of the most attractive cottage** on the beach. I ROCKINGHAM -VISITORS. I Mrs. John L. Everet, nurse and children, of Rockingham county, were registered at the Selwyn Hotel yesterday. ^ WAS 80 YEAfiS OLD YESTERDAY. Mrs Jane Davidson, mother of Dr. John B. S. Davidson, and Miss Saide Davidson, celebrated her 80th birth day yesterday. , ^ Mrs. Davidson is bright and alert, her faculties are well preserved and she Is interesting and Interested. Mrs. Davidson is beloved by a wide clr cle of friends—the friends of hei children, for not many of her own ] contemporaries are left MRS. HAM FORTUNATE. , . At very delightful bridge gi^en yesterday afternoon by Mrs. B. W. Mellon, the first pri*e vas won by Mra. J. fi; Qam. MRS. STARK TO ENTERTAIN. As a pleasant greeting to hei guest, Mrs. O. J. Goodwin, of Ham let, Mrs. Bolliver Stark will entertan at bridge tomorrow morning at 10:30. Mr. and Mrs, Gk)odwin arriv^ed last night. THREE CHARMING WOMEN Mrs. James Moore, Mrs. M. C. Quinn and Mrs. James Ramsey, three of Salisbury’s most prominent D. A. R., and social leaders, who came to attend the unveiling of the Locke mounment, return home this evening. There ladies were charmingly en tertained at the home of Mr, George M. Phifer, on North College street. After enjoying the theatre last night, and beautiful lunch was given for the charming visitors, at the Phifer home. TO ENTER WOFFORD. Master L. Falls Thomason, who has been visiting his grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Austin, at Pied mont Park, has left for Spartanburg, where he will enter the Wofford Col lege Preparatory School for ahe com ing year. 4^ MRS. BUSBEE HERE.' Mrs. R. S. Busbee arrived in the city last night and is the guest of her sis ter, Mrs. Henry B. Fowler. Mrs. Bus bee has so many friends here that her home coming is ever a delight. AFTER A ^ LONG ABSENCE. Mr. and Mrs. John G. Bryce have returned from the north where they spent the summer. MRS. MASON AND DAUGHTER' RETURN. Mrs. R. E. Mason and daughter, Mrs. Harry Link, Jr., have returned from Alkalithia Springs in Alexander county, where they spent a part of the summer. Easy to Get Rid of Dandruff VISITORS TO LEAVE. Mrs. W. B. Rogers, of Greensboro, and Miss Jjilly Perkins, of Kansas, who have been visiting Mrs. A. N. Perkins at the Central Hotel, leave tonight for their respective homes. LEFT FOR ATLANTA. Mrs. T. E. Dow and mother,^ Mrs. J. Wesley Meacham, left Monday morning for Atlanta, Ga. Accompany ing them was Mrs. A. E. Kee, of,, At lanta, an aunt of Mrs. Dow and Mrs. Meacham. They will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Goodwyn. Mrs. Kee’s daughter and sin-in-law, and will spend a month in Georgia. Many delightful parties and recep tions have been planned for them by friends. MRS. TATE HOME, Mrs. J. C. Tate and children have returned from Tennessee, where they visited Mrs.,Tate’s-mother. They were absent some weeks. SILVER TEA . MISS ROBERTSON'S. An event planned fdr tomorrow, which is to be of rare please is the Silver Tea to be given by the Thomp son Orphanage Guild at Miss Julia Hcoertson’s. A silver offering will be expected for the orphanage work. The object is one which appeals to^ the benevolent heart of the community. Men are not debarred. The latch string hangs on the outside for any one with a silver passport. Assisting Miss Robertson in receiving will be Mes- dames James, jr.; W. B. Ryder, Jj L. Staten, John G. Bryce, E. C. Register, J. Ij. Sexton, W. S. Robertson, C. H. Murray, L. C. Burwell, P. M. Cave, Frank Purcell, Harris Mallinckrodt, Thos. Griffith, W. R. Taliaferro, M. M. Murphy and Misses Emma Hall, Mary Armand Nash, Margaret Ker, Alma Maxwell, Laura Washington Griffith and -.aurie Spong. The hours are from 5 to 7 o’clock. IN NORTH CAROLINA THREE MONTHS. Col. and Mrs. Isaac Hardeman, or Macon, Ga., who spent three months at Hiddenite, have returned to Ma con. Cob and Mrs. Hardeman are the parents of Mr. Isaac Hardeman, of Dilworth. ‘ Monument To (Continued from Page 1 wo.) Dandruff means- that down near the roots of your hair there is a vast army of little invisible microbes. And this army never sleeps; it wages a war of destruction night and day. It destroys the nourishment that the hair must have In order to grow vigorously and atjuniantly. PARISIAN SAGE now sold all over America will destroy these germs and at the same time furnish the hair roots with just and proper nourishment to make hair grow lustrous apd Itixuriant. PARISIAN SAGE is guaranteed by R. H. Jordan & Co. to banish dandruff, stop falling hair and itching scalp or money back. It is a delightful hair dressing that wins instant favor with refined women. Sold for only 50 cents ^ largeb ottle by R. H. Jordan & Co., and druggists everywhere. Girl with Auburn hair on every cartoon and bot,- lle. MRS. DEVLIN LEAVES. Mrs. J. O. Devlin, of Greenwood, S. C., who has been visiting Mrs. Carl ton Best, has returned home. I was surorised to find that the Locke family was such a large and in fluential one. The Locke’s and the Phifers intermarried, making a/ large clan. There is no Locke here but the bloo'd is here. A grand-daughter of Matthew Locke was the wife of Mr. David Parks. “Why is this marker erected at this place? It is a tribute to what our forefathers did. “In the winter of 1780 Locke joined a company raised in Salisbury by Maj. Davie, an Englisrfian, a law student at Salisbury. In 1779 Maj. Davis was elected lieutenant of Mecklenburg troop of horse. He was attached to Pulaski’s Legion, was wounded at Stono, below Charleston, returned to Salisbury‘to study law. He raised a company in which George Locke was made lleuteant. - * “Locke, Davie and Brandon kept hanging on the British army. Gra ham joined them.” Here the speaker gave a graphic account of the battle of Charlotte which resulted in ‘the flight and pursuit along the Salisbury road. The patriots were a hand full; Tarleton’s army numbered 4,000. Bran don, Graham and Locke were compell ed to flee. .Brandon had the best horse and got away. Graham was overtaken and received-nine sabde wounds and* was left fog: dead. Locke turned out of the main road-into the wood. The late Mrs; Ann Locke Parks told -her grandson, Mr. David Pavks- Hutchison that her • father told her tliat Geo. Locke was killed by the British in this way: He encountered a tree across his path, and when his horse went to make the leap across it he stumbled and fell. Locke was thr.owa to the' ground. The British rushed upon him and killed him. But by his side was found a dead Britisher. Locke died fighting. This took place to the -left of the pond by Kennedy’s Lane. “The D. A. R. of Mecklenburg have erected this monument to General ^4^ocke,” said the speaker, “because he died for this country. He was young and unmarried, the son of Gen. Matthew Locke, who had four sons in the army. “Mrs. Regent, there is a beautiful appropriateness in Rowan county be ing represented on this occasion. “Cornwallis said he wanted to stay in Mecklenburg and Rowan because he found so many mills to grind his corn, but he could not stay in either* “Temptations of a Great City." Best of all* Speolale. Amuae-U. ?7-2t. MRS. SCOTT TO COMPLIMENT VISITORS. In honor of Mrs. Wm. Reynolds ^nd Mrs. Lindsay Patterson, of Winston, who are guests of Mrs. A. L. Smith, Mrs. John M; Scott will give a bridge luncheon tomorrow morning at her lovely home on South Tryon street. The guests will be Mrs. Reynolds. Mrs. Patterson, Mrs. Smith and Mesdames S. B. Jones, Herbert Battle, of Mant-' gomery, Ala.; E. W. Thompson, R. M. Miller, Ralph Van Landingham, B. D. Springs, B. J. Smith, John Van Ness, Hugh Chatham, W. E. Kavanugh, W. S. Liddell, H. A. London and W. B. Ryder. ^ ] “Temptations of a Great City.” Best J Of all Specials. Amuae*U. 27*2t. “Temptations of a Great City.” Best of all Specials. Amuse-U. 27-2t. HOW ABOUT YOUR FALL : CLEANING? Call us before having your cleaning done. We clean Walls, Ceiliog's, Books, Carpets, Rugs, and Windows. Call 'Phone 1292 for prices. THE CAROLINA VACUUM CLEANING CO. 315 Realty Btdg. county because the people were so hostile to the British. They met them with shot and shell and every kind of weapon that could oppose their onward march. “Another reason for the three counties this occasion counties, Mecklenburg, Cabarrus and Rowan assembling here today is be- catise of the inter-marriage of the family of the Lockes , Brandons and their descendants. These counties are one in history. ■■ In concluding Dr. Caldwell paid high tribute to the work of the D. A. R. Said he: “The D. A. R. has a divine mission—a specific work to find and preserve accurate facts in the lives of these heroes. Many of the historical sketches I read about George Locke differed. These inaccu- ries should be corrected, and this should be the mission of the D. A. R. “The D, A. R. is not all fuss and feathers, not all ribbons and badges Its motive is patriotic. It is telling ta the world what our forefathers did. It hasa God given mission, and it will fulfill ia.” Put of Town Visitors. Representing the Locke family, from Concord were. Mr. Locke Er win, Mr. Robert Gibson, Mr, Frank L. Smith, Mr. and Mrs John Alii* son, Mrs. J. M. Odell. From Rowan came Mrs. M. Cl Quinn (a Phifer,) Mrs. James Moora state historian of the D. A. R., and Mrs. James Ramesy, a prominent D, A. R, Representing the State D, A. was the Regent, Mrs. William Rey nolds and Mrs, Lindsey Patterson. j. “Temptations of a Great City.” Bes^ of all Specials. Amuse-U. 27-2t. To the Ladies of Charlotte 1 and Vicinity If you have never worn. Jacob Harris’ Tailored Suits, I want you to try one suit. Why buy your s-uits Ready Made w'hen you have an opportunity to have it made to your order for the same price. I have the most'beautiful stock of Fine Ladies Goods that has ever been seen in this city. I also carry the latest Parisian Styles, All work is done under my personal supervision—fit and workmanship guaranteed. Satisfaction ass-ured or* no money accepted. Do not buy your FALL or WINTER SUITS until you have seen me. You are cor dially Invited to call and inspect my line of goods. JACOB HARRIS FIVE ACRES Three miles from the Court House on long frontage main Macadam road, splendid 5-room cottage, necessary out Jiouses. You thouid see this if interested In such a place. 'THE PRICE IS $4,500.00. A, . C R AIG REAL ESTAE AND INSURANCE Phone 1436. Trust Bulldino. Misses’ and Children | SCHOOL SHOES We.have them In great variety. Tha . kind that look well, f«el well ind . wear weU| from 11.00 TO $2.00. fn all leathv*> Button and BludMrii PeLane Shoe Co.

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