Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Nov. 15, 1911, edition 1 / Page 6
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in Employed Boys' Class at Y. M. C Don’Olfear AJTruss! Alter Thirty Ydari Experience I Have Prodtieed An Appliwce for Men, Women or ChlW^n That Cores Rupture. IBtndXtOtLTrliO. Tf yon have trl«d moit ftYerything else, come to tne. "Where othen fall Is where I hare my greateat •ucoesa. Send sttMhed counon today and I will excuse ME! DrawnBy M.MYER .,0.. h.l«on. U from . P-'o-ISf LVS t tograph of the boy's night school at | makes the^larg^^^^ fees charged be-* the Y. M. C. A. and gives some idea of the popularity of the school among th* employed boys. The teachers of this school are Prof. G. P. Heillg and Mr. Lewis M. HunteK. Fifty-two are now enrolled in this department and others are contemplat- the C\iarlotte Y. M. * cause*of Vhe lacr that the board of ^ The Y W. C. A. and the Y. M. C. A. (Caiise oi ^ Johnson haVe will jointly promote _ a ni^ght Bchort the expense of ing entering. The enrollment association "nigw'sc'iioS 'eiuaction and Mr. C W. Johnson haVe a at North Charlotte for the winter months. This night school will open to- ni*?ht and ^iH meet every Monday Wednesday and Friday nights at T o’clock to 8:30. The teachers will be Miss Lona Squires, who is one of the successful teachers of the city schools operating. All North Charlotte young Monday,! men and women, f Welcome- ing instruction at night aie welcome. This school will be managed branch of the associations schools. as a night (Edited by T. P. NASH, Jr.) “The Bohemian Girl.” The iime-endeared opera of the Irish composer and violinist. Michael Balfe. “• ' as revived ana, ous faults. “The Bo^iemian Girl, appeared here yesterday, worth seeing. With its wealth of rrrop- as it well academy The aboTe It O.K. BtooIkr d£ »tar»haU,M[lo!u who has been curing Ruptnr^pr over 80 y«Ars. If Ruptured write him to>aay. jrott free my lllustrSited book on Buplrare and ita cure, Bhowlng my Appliance add giving yott prices and names of many people who have trlM It and were cdred. It is Instant lelief when all others fall- Remember 1 nse no salvos, no harness, no Ues. ! I Bcnd on trial to prove what I say is true. Yot are toe judge and once having seen my lllustratea book and read It you will be as enthusiastic as my hundreds of patients whose letters you can also read. FHl Ottt free coupon below and mall today. It swell worth your time whether you try my Appli ance 01 not. ^ and artors of ability, and a ftrst-class orchestra to make it a huge success. “Beverly of Graustark.” “Beverly,” and the Beverly hat and great NeVM York hit, “ALIAS JIMMY VALEJNTINE By Paul Armstrong. (Liebler & Co., Managers.) Founded on "A Retrieved Refor- short story by the late O. •The Bohemian Girl." as revived ana j mation,” short story ^ tne ^ nre entcd bv the Abom Grand Tiipqdav matinee Henry. Splendid cast. Staged by Hugh - is „ Ple.e Of ex.raorrtrn.p-lcmy of . Pord,\ T^o. yea.s_,at WaUajK's the- Compa..,- . . . color and action, which liegms in the v'^ry sccne with the dash of the l'..>rsei> up the mountain side above the it. arkllnc c ascade, reaches a climax in the trcniendcus fai’- scene and night when Miss-Eleanor ^ ^ ^ former leading lady with Nat ater. New York. Seats on sale today Goodwin and^C.vril^^^^^^^ . $1.50, $1.00, 75c, 50c. 25 FREE mrORRATION OOUPON C. E. Brooka 697 Brooks Bldg., Marahtll, Mich. Please send me by mall la plain wrapper your Illustrated book and full informatloiwibout your Appliance for tbs cure of rupture. Name. Address Chap,” will where! Beverly Calhoun. It is a low crown hat of heavy whij^ iKain.t'ihVsyps.v abandon and not ot. It “/S^rbHin"; Aroi tid '-OST^A color 1- set the shade "'into fhe ed?e about an inch and a qiiarter erakeman’s Wife Fails lo Catoh e“.4Sus^kre »“dels^b.ndot p.l^ the quieter but more gorgCDus i,.ievpr1v draned over the crown so that :„i H0„rs;’ tr.n, the o„em of .l^^ovrthe sides is a heau- Envelope and Many Search North Adams, Mass.. Nov. ?=',;co„d"°'The “ool".- is re!IL“whSre Fr«? WhUe Tthis'cTt; a braUe..,n «ev. J. C. Xoser. B ^er. held sta?e BCttins, costtmlng. and caietulb tiful silk ve P ,hat though simple running between Troy and Bostt.n, . as : yesterday morning at Holy Tnni y af^dcd Hsht otfccts on a scale rare!> [formmg ^,3 family, the police and nows- ] eh„rch b; naper men looking for an envelope assisted by Revs. G. L. containing a little over $100, which ^ Deaton. —=- j. n*v Jail he threw to his wife as his train syed | tremefldotis crowd was out to pav They Land ..mmy .. Jail he^thre I respects to this grand man^ In the The waving of his d^ildrer and his (j^ath of Dt. Moser the church Ws lost tv.il Tvii-o’s nrt.'^n- i « nf ito rrtnnt brilliant men nnd the The stage ai*^dcd . , attemi tpd. while the action is intro ducod almost entirely by specialties. Krw -ore thrilling or startling ef fect p is ever sccurcd than that J''bi^h e^-'comranies the exhibition of the T i ,an Whirlwinds, so-called.a wonder fiil Arab Acrobatic troupe w ble Iv and all to.sxether. until the eye was lost in the maze and the audience for got Its composure. To venture ^ -or- eign an act was certainly a daring Idea but it has been more than suc cessful. and will be remembered long after the other details of the perform- is ** ' more than beautiful. SENSITIVE FINGERS. Land Jimmy Valentine But a Good Girl Gets Him Out. tty 1UU1U1U& - by Pastor J. H. Wannamaker, " ' Miller and W. Possessing fingers so sensitive that answering salute kept the wife’s atten- * one of its most brilliant I. he could work the combination on any- ^ gjjg did not see the envel- family a loving husband ^d fathe . as alive with them, in ^ery impossi- J® walk away with the ^hite realized this and wa/ed le contortion and feat of , singj | Jimmy Valentine frantically at h«r. The more he wav- to the penitentiary. But it was his more enthusiastic were the "allantry to a woman of prominent answering salutes. connections' that secured his pardon — and led to his reform. This is the m- pLUGTUATING PRICE OF teresting theme pf Paul Armstrongs BUTTER AND EGGS, play, “Alias Jimmy ^ which [usic Fri- '"c^JcVb- SnSc‘rhy, though ler two sea- Nov^ -rPrilt e^ual The play comes here after two sea- {i%fr^^h:uStT«Xhere‘Url £ 4 Co.. bring tie original to/af'when' iframe Known third act. me IS suddenly ’ cut the prices to the figures which upadACHE ! prevailed on last Saturday. the The board, which is under invea^ the government, cut tne and the fllmy- r-^arve’^u?] effective, w ♦ ir, attirt " Traidens who flitted about in the thiraag. variegated colors made a striking picture. , , Staging, costuming, and special ana mechanical features have been carried out on to pretentious and spectacular a plan, in fact, that the product, which ehould be a frame to grace the picture Its purpose is to shadow forth, is Itse the most handsome part of the conabi* nation. The ceremony is very factory in numbers. The chorus is tinusually large and well-trained, and the singing in chorus was the most en- loyable incident in the musical pro gram. But the principal cast was ab solutely as unimpassioned and inca pable a selection as ever made a trav esty of opera. From these we except Blanche Morrison, who alternates with Anna Hull in the leading role of Ar- line, the Bohemian Girl. She bad remarkably flute-like voice particularly pleasing in work. Among the others there wa not a pa-ssable voice. If any v-ere who might have ^rider dif ferent conditions, the possibility was .polled by colds. The songs were poor In quality cf voice, but worse m quality of expression and Interpreta tion. There was apparently no at tempt at consistency In the parts, and any histrionic ability was lost In the ihuffle. The most stlrHng lines and tragic situations were executed Indlter ently In an even, lifeless fashion, and fell flat with a' thud. The most painfully,lacking esMntiai lo the highest success of the perfOTm- ince, however, was a flrst-class orch.es ^ra. It seems an unaccountable over light, that in a venture in which so *nuch has been invested the music ihould be entrusted to immediate, ua practiced, first-sight rendition. And yet, in spite of these two serl- Seats are now on sale at Haw’ley’s. CAUSE BROMO Quinine, COLDS LAXATIVE Hod-Carrler Count at Convention. | and 28 cents to the Saturday price of Special to The News. ! 25 and 27 cents One of the mostS) The prices were sent up on the day in attendance at that the cold wave struck Chicago. Atlanta, Nov. 15. thl^’natiofal^fab^or drnvrnTion’'Tn'ses-1 ‘“united ’" States District Attorney here is the hod-carrler count, l james H. Wllkerson said the Cavalier DomiiSck D'Allesandro, ot; committee of the butter and e^gg Rn«ton who is president of the hod- board would be given a chance to ex callers' union He was knighted by plain its action Monday m the De«th.Qf Young Man Mr. Malcolm Whitfener, aged ^ years, died Suntiay night at home, Mr. James Whitener. The body was buried today^at Zion cburch. In the country. Moral Effect of Morphine. Morphine stands unequaled as a pre venter of the moral sense. Whisky may disturb -the imagination and ]udg ment, coijsihg many foolish and un_ wise actions to follow its use, but morphine strikes deeper and a person whom the father of lies must recognize as kiiidred to himself. Stories that^re the creation of ^ disturbed brain, told in a manner to appear so intrinsically true that the stories become works of art, are what you will obtain from the habitual u^r of morphine or cocaine. I know noth ing that will appeal to one of these sufficiently to enable-you to an honest reply to any question of mo ment you may address to him. If y should receive a truthful reply it will be by accident.—North American Journal of Homeopathy. ’ j m SOf^VQU HAD vmRTS THPiT MRTTEa? ocE- ir sHofcn 'tOU PIPNT SUSPECT ME OF BEIKO ft PPST OR OF, THOSE \sfHY''VOu Have DSSTBiSYEDHN ILUJaiOK I-‘ jMUSlClRN? V>7HB.TIS rrflu., flBourf VeUr'WHRT ILUJSIOK) f PERHAPS I SHOULD iv YOUR. ERRS .. DONrWFnCH' 13 DES-OWYEDTHeKy ISflY.'THflT'rtJU HftVERey^EflLED flmcr-’mAT 1 NEVER. DIP a»uspEcr- OUT rr NOMINATE WILSON, URGES JOHN SHARP WILLIAMS. Senator Says He Has Seized on the Fundamental Idea, Prevent Privi leges by Law. Charlottesville, Va., Nov. a letter to Dr. Hiden Ramsey, ot Asheville, N. C., president of the Woodrow Wilson Club of the Univer sity of Virginia, Senator Jolin Sharp Williams, of Mississippi, writes m part: . '' , “I believe that we ought to nomi nate Woodrow Wilson and I believe that we can elect him. Southerner by birth and tradition; Northerner by en vironment and long service; citizen of the world of scholarship; he is at once intensely an American, and yet full of the spirit of modernism, which promises to urge the whole world forward in as pirit of daily and weekly better appre^piation of gen uine -demoeracy—spelled with, a ‘D’ /and a little ‘d’ both. Election at Key West, 1 “Woodrow Wilson has seized Kev West, Fla., Nov. 15.—The muni- fundamental adea that if you cipal election held here yesterday, ac- pj.e^,ent special privilege by law, you cording to returns completed early t(> have cured most of th® evUs dav resulted in the election of J. N.|of whfch men have a right to com- Fogarty as mayor over J. B. Maloney pj^ln. What first attracted me to Mm by a majority of 500 votes. j was his emphasis of an idea, uum KING’S GRADUATES aro a.bove oar in the business world because ot their thcrough training iorue. No vacation. Enter any time. CHARLOTTE, N. a m&DHPomiixo OR ’^ALEIGri, Is. C, big the once Vintnr Fmanuel of Italy, because fit chancery hearfngs this week in the his eminent sei^ices in America l?r government sulV to dissolve he uplift of the hordes of his coun^ board. trvmen who have immigrated to ■ — A^^rica. The count bears his title thEY PREFER TO gracefully and is one of the most SLEEP ON THE FLOOR. enthusiastic labor leaders in the con- , ention. By Associated Precis. "cream! ' . ‘ the ^eopl^^^^ today die Quickly Respond to a In vaudeville, which b Sissoms, of Te^l. . tions of Hokara Which Leaves the Wheeze which has usld an kxe on all' ' - ■ ■- - muddy and PIMPLY IONS COMPLEX- Cold Julius Tannen Is may account for the * follows. Mr. Tannen was exposed to furniture in his house and he the night air in an automobile r^ f^^r children now cently. Next day he developed content themselves with sleeping on attack of tonsilitis. Eat a ^he floor. Sissoms stopped here be- cream.” said some amateur tween trains today and aired his It's fine for the fevered chords in tween tmM your throat.” ’ h^ds were unhealthful and so Mr. Tannen found himself a n^e tho g little ice cream parlor and sat himself down at a table and beckoned to the prettiest waitress. “What flavors have you?” he asked. “Strawberry and vanilla, said the girl in a husky tone. " Tannen, sympathet and you that Mr. lanthropist matter. should investigate the is personal.* Behind every corporate abuse is some man or some set o men guilty of having committed the abuse, some one man guilty of having initiated it. other men it.” guilty of having consented to Condition. ' Hokara contains no grease or acms, is antiseptic and cleansing, therefore it Is a-truly scientlfiQ massage cream and skin food. FERRELL MATRIMONIAL CASE PUZZLES ATLANTA PEOPLE Coco Cola Bottling Co. Chartered. Special to The News. Raleigh, Nov. \5 __The Lumberton -Ah,” said Mr. Tannen, sympatnet- ^ ^ Lumberton, ically, “and you have tonsilitis, too? Coco ftK 000 cani- “No,” _ and vanilla.”—Cincinnati Star. said the girl: ••last straw^,:ry -f^SjSSZVaTsatscriberby'^^^ sie C. Hutaff and others. X housands of ladies are oaly too [Special to The News, glad to uUlize something that would Atlanta, Nov. 15.—The Ferre 1^^^^ assist nature in restoring their, face Limonial case Is bolding and hands to the flush of youth; and L,f Atlanta* people Puzz^j, as one to these Hokara will prove a Godsend, Uelopment re- It Is guaranteed to clear the com- mg succession. Letters have . —la as plm- ceived by Judge Nash R. «royiea wrinkles, 1 from Gaffney, S. C.. indicating £18 11* ib glABVi — I ***{;, XT«Cs'h plexlon of all blemished, sucb as pim- ceived by Nasn pies, ,b!.ckheads, freckles, ® him ^ Sold by R. H. Jordan & Co., under hast Thursday saying he ™ ^ guarantee of satisfaction or jour Rev. W A. Ferrell, w^ an moW back. A liberal jar for 25c.; Ltor who simply wanted to clear tne larger .i.e 60c. and $1. • |name ms name as Rev. W. A. Ferrell was ar rested on complaint of a young lady, the man having answered anony mously an advertisement she placed in the paper asking for a position as bookkeeper and oflEering to marry her. The case was dismissed as the man s proposition seenwd to have been sin* Last Thursday another gentleman presented himself to Judge Broyl6s with letters showing he was Rev. w. A. Ferrell and declared th|it the first man was an imposter who had used his name without authority. Tne judge gave him a letter of exonera- ^^°Letters just received indicate that friend of thef real Rev. Ferrell, who was in fact tried in Atlanta, came to Atlanta, and obtained the ex oneration by deception. A picture was sent in one of the letters—a minia ture of Rev, W. A. Ferrell—^and It is pronounced by the judge and court attendants as a photograph of the mrfn who was tried here for his' want- ad wooing. BIT BY CAT/WITH RABBIES. Made of Forest Roots Dr. Picrce believes that our American forests abound in most valuable medicinal roots for the cure of most obstinate and fatal diseases, if we would properly investigate inem, and, in confirmation of this conviction, he points with pride to the almost marvelous cures et- . fected by his •• Golden Medical Discovery which has proven Itsetf to be the most efficient stomach ^nie, liver invifioratop and blood cleanser known to medical science, Dyspeps a, or indigestion and torpid liver yield to its curative action. The reason why it cures these and many other affections, is clearly shown in a IMe hook of / t> k i extracts from the standard medical works which is mailecT/w to any address by Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buftalo, N. Y., to all sending request for the same. Not tess marvetoas, in the onparalM^^ cures it is ctmstantly malting of woman*s many peculiar affections, weaknesses and distressing derangements is Db> Pierce’s Favorite-Prescription, as is amply attested by thousands of unsolicited ^ ^tmte» fui patients who have been cured by iU oHen after many other advertised medi^ cineSf and pbysicians had failed. \ x ' Both the above mentioned medicines — ^rom the glyceric extracts of native, medicinal roots. The processes employed i by skilled chemists and jjnarmaci icmes art :h botdc-wrapper. Don’t accept secret nostrums as substitutes lor these mcdicineroF KNOWN COMPOSITION A Delighted Purchaser of one ofoi« tells us ‘T am heating seven rooiD,| with the amount of coai I ,| dinarlly consume in one srate I en times the space heated on | same coal consumption.) He is just one of the many ple^| users of this wonderful stove, ibat doing likewise. THE FIVE RADIATING ^^1 FLUES is what does the er stove has them. Let us sho y | J. N. McCauslanl & Company “THE STOVE MEN" 221 South Tryon Street rasily adjasted to fit the body; con venient to perfection, combining strength, durability and beauty; the acme of comfort; that’s the Royal Rest Chairs. We have, a large stock and * shall be' pleased to have you mi£ke A careful comparison with other makeSt on for this purpose. Both medicines arc entirely free from alcohol and aUoAer harmful, habit-forming drugs. A full list of their ingredients is printed on each bottle-wrapper. Don t accept secret nostrums as substiti [By Associated Press. Celumbia, S. C., Not. 15.—Samuel T. Rodgers, a farmer of Mullins, B C., and his son, Lacy Rogres, aged 8 are undergoing Pasteur treatment at j^e state laboratories here, an exam ination having shown that a cat whiQh bit them la*t week, had rab bies. A strange cat entered the din ing room while the family was' at supper and when the boy offered it food the animal sprang at his face i and* bit him viciously, biting the fath er also before it eotil4 be killed, "RsbtheBution and We ar« the moit reaaenable !n me4» ium and Fine Furniture, "THE ~Pi/S// 'BUTTO’: Lubin furniture Evefythlnjf for* th®
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 15, 1911, edition 1
6
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