Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Nov. 18, 1911, edition 1 / Page 4
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liOVeMBcH 18, i9 The Charlotte News PubttshAd Daily »nd Sunday bj THR IVBW9 Pi;»LI«HINO CO. W. r. D*wd> Pr«il4»«t «■* G*». Sl*r. City Editor Buatnaaa Offloa ,i£! Job OAca ***” J. C. PATTON Editor. A. W CALDWBLL City Editor. A. W. BURCH Adv. Mgr. HUBjlCRIPTIOIi RATBS nw Okarl«t« N«wa. Oatly and Swday. On# jr#ni ♦#••♦•••••••••••••••••• AA 6Ul motttlui Thraa nontlw * On* montk OiM wa«lc •ante/ Only Oaa yanr X® Six nantkB •.««»••••••••••••••*• *«« Tiiraa montM ■ t^mm ntWamC* eemifWaeKly. On* y««r Bis MentlM Sc T^raa iHOiitfcB «»«»»«»»«»*»—» Tha attanOoo of tlia poUHc la ra- »l>*ctf«Uy Inrlted to tha followln*: iB futura. Obituary NotJce*. la »M- raortam Skatcljw. Card* .rommimicatloo^ -»Pou«tinf of a private eniarpriae of a poUticai eaiK^ldata acd Uk« mattar. will ba charcad tor at vn^ rate of live cents a H^a, Thara will Sh* ro deviation from tb!s ruia. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1911. KANSAS DISGRACED. It in hard lo conceive of the wretch. m*ho for any piovoc.'tiion, could at* tempt a crime tni «li8i;>a».'e(ul. so cow ardly. as that commiited by a Kan sas nioh on a ?ady school teacher. Yoti have read the daily newspaper report’s and are perhaps conversant ulth the hiptory of the case. If joii have n»>t. this review linn) (he Greenville Pied mont will ex|)lain the natiire of the dastardly deed of a hunch of coward ly rutflan.'s: "One of the patties connected with the affaii, who, by the way. entered a plea of guilty. declare« that he will ap'end every cent of his fortune l>e- fore he will ro to jail. He is a rich man &nd will lie ahle to keep the matter In the courts for a long time hut we hope that Kansas has not rei>cbed the point where a man can buy his freedont. Here we have a plain case of a rich man defyinfc the taw. Whether he will he successful In his defy rensains to he seen but we t'ust that he will not. “From newspaper accounts and they til ai^ree, it seems that the young woman who was tarred was very pretty and very popular. A number of tha young women In the town In which she was teachine: became In- ian«Iy j -alous of her and began to make I’lans to kill her poptilarlty. rhe;- inld certain young married wo- nen that the young teacher was “tak ing on” with their 'husbands. They rold these women that she was fur- •.hermore boasting of the fact. Of ;our*e, this stirred the young married a omen and they proceeded to go on ha warpath. When the yoting hus- oands heard that abe wa^ boaatlng •that she had been “taking on” with them this, of course, aroused their anger. The girls also told their aweet- bearts that the teacher had been boaat' Ing that she had them “at her feet." ■o to speak, and urged them to resent It. "The result was that the town was •oon worked Into a frenzy. The young husbands and sweethearts held a m«etlDg and decided to wreak ven geance upon the young woman they had b«en led to believe was doing so much talking. The most cruel torttire WM decided upon—-that of applying tar. "Tha young woman was invited to A danee near the town. Kn route that nlfht the was intercepted by a band of men, taken from the buggy and carried Into some nearby w’oods. There h«r clothes were torn from her Uody ftnd hot tar poured on her." ON CEflMltliY By Associated Press. Berlin Novl8—With the aetlement of the Franco-German negotiations con cerning Morocco and the removal, so far as France and Germany are con cerned of this potential menace of war. a violent campaign has been oi>ened by wide sections of the preas and political groups against the gov ernment for having, as it is charged. Indulged in prolonged negotiations, upset the credit of the country and brought Europe to the verge of hos tilities onlv to score a full fiasco and reap the pettiest of profits for the abandonment of its rights in Mowcco. “Jingo” papers, influential national liberal leaders and broad classes of patriotic Germans attack the govern* uient for closing the bargain without having obtained a slice of the Moroc can empire. Other parties and papers assail it for saddling itself with what is described as a vast area of pest- ridden and gold-engulfing Congo swamp and jungle, worth far less than the suiall cessions of German colonial teriitory in Toatoland «nd the Kamer- oons which France receives in the set tlement. All parties- except those which must stand or fall with the governiuent in (he coming elections, are wildly in- iii>euant with the government and with Poreitin Minister von Kideilen-Waech- ter over the outcome and the “Moroc can Hasco” promises to swing doz ens of seats as a campaign cry. For- eittu attention, too, has been so largely concentrated on the latter details of the negotiations that the opinion that Germany has suffered another diplo mat i- defeat Is widely expressed. From the jxiint of view of the Ger man Foreign office, how'ever, it is felt that the question of the success or failure of Germany shotild be decided onlv after reviewing the general course of Germany's Moroccan policy and eliminating misconceptions as to its alms prevalent l)Oth here and abroad. In the fiist place. It is insisted'in in spired quarters that the acquisition of territory in Morocco has never been, in the present negotiations as In the earlier diplomatic struggles, an aim of Germany. Secondly, that France’s predominant political influence in Mo rocco was fully recognized by the Franco-German agreement of February 9, 190A, and that the «etabllshment of the French protectorate by the new treaty is therefore no loss for Oer- man>\ which, in the third place. r»- wiveB the thorough going guarantees ofi commercial and economic equality In Morocco and the practical means of enstiring and protecting this open door to her trade, which has been the main object of German diplomacy since it recognized that its policy up to and after Algeciras has broken down. The cardinal principle of this policy, launched in open opposition to the A*nglo French idea of disposing of Mo rocco by private bargain without con sult in»i Germany was that France could obtain no rights in Morocco with out the consent of Germany and the other powers. Strict and, it is now admitted, mis taken adherence to this policy led to the rejection of a profitable Mopoccan bargain offered by Rouvler after’ the fall of Delcasse and to Algeciras. Here Germany theoretically established her principle, only to find herself standing alone as Its sole defender, England, Italy, Russia and Spain being pledged in various degrees not to oppose France and France continually finding new and always well-justified reasons for. pushing on Its gradual absorption of Morocco. Not being willing to risk a war Avei^'few monthv to check the various steps of this absorption, Ger many threw overboard her first prl»- ciple and admitted France's political interests in Morocco, receiving in ex change a paper guarantee of the open door and commercial equality. Germany, according to the official German Tlew« soon found it necessary Many crimes have been committed to supplement this paper guarantee In Worth Crolln. »hich were coward- '>!' ad«iu.te and detailed m«terW sate- BAKING POWDER Mkmohitmtjf Pmrm Used and praised by the most competent and carefoi pas try cooks the world over The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of ' Tartar—mttde fliOlli grape* large increase of colonial territory and in addition has sidetracked one of the most pressing dangers to the peace of the world is. It sis claimed at the foreign office, so much clear gain for herself and the world. TO PElmTyii- excessive number of officials and func tionaries of all kinds, of whom there are nearly 1,000,000 in France, 664,000 being In the pay of the state and 278,- 000 in that of the departments and cbtnttiunes. These figures do not In* clud« the employees of the state rallr roads and Industrial enterprises, such as tobacco and match factories. In spite of, or rather, because of, the ex cessive ntimber of ofBcials, the admin Istratlon is not conducted in a satis factory or expeditious, manner. Most men have a deep-down feeling they are saving the country by belong ing to their political party.—^New York Press. By Associated Press. | Paris, Nov. 18.—To penetrate un known wilds of Brazil, Venezulea, and Columbia, to discover and trace to their sources unnamed rivers, and last ly, to seek to find the habitation of a supposed tribe of mysterious Indians are the objects of Doctor Hamilton Rice, of Boston, who will sooli .leave Paris on a tour of exploration to South America under the auspices of the Royal Georgraphlcal Society of England. { The doctor’s previous visits to the wildernesses of northern South Amer ica have convinced him of the exis tence .of a strange tribe of Indians somewhere in the direction of the source of the Orinoco. The women of the tribe are said to live apart from their husbands in a secret city the greater part of the time. Doctor Rice will start well equipped for extensive bacteriological examina tion, and hopes to contribute valuable data on the diseases prevalent in the districts he visits. With the excep tion of an attendant, he will be the only American in the party. He in tends to make up his exploration car- aven just before entering the wilder ness. or at some city like Bogoto, and he will carry cloth, mirrors, beadft, ac cordions, caps and gloves with which to pi^y his helpers and barter with the natives. These are the articles which experience has taught the ex plorer appeal most strongly to natives of the far inland. It perpetrated by degenerates, or by men stirred past the point of endur ance by the act of a degenerate. No •uch crime as this attack upon a lady has ever disgraced the name of the state. The tarring and feathering of a woman, because of wrath started by a bunch of fossipB, just about. reaches the limit of total depravity. For a bunch of men, calling them- •elves prominent, to take a defenseless girl and submit her to almost incon ceivable torture Is a deed so black as to merit only the extremest punish ment the law knows. THE GREENSBORO RECORD. Tha Greensboro li«cord Is twenty- one years old today, it Is old enough to vote, but for years It has been a reg ular voter. The Recard is one of the bewt and ok'est dailies of the state. Its editor, Mr. Reeae. Is a good writer, a sound thinker and a gentleman who usually says what he thinks. He re fers to the twenty-one years of serv ice In the following; “The Record is twenty-one years old today. We have made no promisee that we have not fuifllled to the beet of our ahiUty. Starting as a fonr- page, flve-column sheet, the paper has enlarged as occasion required, until It Is now seven ^olumns, eight pages. The primary ob.«ect has been to btilld up Greeniboro, and the surrounding country, for, like the late Dr. Benbow, who was always honest and upright as well as frank and open, what helps th« town hel^ us. OtH" purpoc.e la to keep right on along the same lines, meriting In the future, as in the past, the pat ronage of the people. They have treat ed us well and we have tried to recip rocate. We thank them.” The noisleat feature of political life just now It the stillness of Rooaevelt. Dick Bivens, editor of the Ansonian my: "These fu*zy wu**y hats have an unfinished look about them." If the truth were told it Is likely that there is also an unfinished bill about some of them. Henri Cheron, In, a report on the Budget for 1912, which will shortly be presented to the chamber of deputies, calls attention to the growling burdeh of taxation in France, which, inc^dlng State, departmental and comipunal charges, amounted In the year 1001 to over $26 per head of the population as compared to $22 in 1903. Since 1907 the increase, for which the figures are not yet communicated, is described as having been still more striking. M. Cheron also calls attention to the guards arid an agreement fo'r Franco- German co-operation in certain African undertakings which were contempla ted, it is asserted, under the agree ment of 1909. Negotiations to this end were well under way but with the fall of the Briand-Plchon ministry, it is claimed, negotiations were dropped, Germany found herself balked in the efforts to renew them and found the new French cabinet embarked instead on the expedition to Fez and the im mediate millltary occupation of the Moroccan empire, an adventure which Germany warned Frence openly in ad vance to violated the Act of Algeciras and restored to Germany its full lib erty of action. This brings the recital to the de spatch of the German gunboat Pan ther t() Agadir—an act which, it has been steadily maintained in ofilcial quarters, was in nowise designed to “stake out a claim" in South Morocco —but. It Is now admitted frankly, was Intended primarily not for the protec- Hon of empertUed Germans in the neighborhood, but to produce a resump tion of the Interrupted “conversa tions." In this it was promptly and theatrically successful. The result, the foreign office claims, far from being a defeat or fiasco, has carried to a logical conclusion the P'raneo-German agreement of 1909, giv ing France the free political hand therein contemplated and to Germany and Incidentally to the world at large adequate protection for freedom of trade, whether the country remains a French protectorate or is ultimately absorbed In the French colonial em pire. That Germany has obtained a •AVEJ CHIUO FROM DEATH. “Alter our czina nad suffered from severe bronchial trouble for a year," wrote G. T. Richardson, of Richard son*! Millst Ala., "we feaied It had con- sumption. It had a bad cough all the time. We tried many remediea without avail, and doctor p raedicine seemed ag uselMs. Finally we tried Dr. King’s Nev Dlacovery, and are pleased to say that one bottle effected a complete cure, and our child is again strong and healthy. Finally we tried .Dr. King’i New Diacovery, aid the pleased to say that one bottle effected a complete cure, and our child la again strong and healthy." For cougha. colds, hoarse ness, lagrippe, asthma, croup and sore lungs its the most Infallible remedy that’i made. Price 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by W. L. Hand A Co. Puts an End to Stomach Misery Indigestion, Gas,Heattimm and Dyspepsia Go and You Ful Fine in Five Minutes, = Every family hfere ought to keep some Diapepsin in the house, as any one of you may have an attack of Indigestion or Stomach trouble at any time, day or night. This harmless preparation will di gest anything you eat and overcome a distressed, out-of-order stomach five minutes afterwards. If your meala don’t tempt you, or what little you eat seems to fill you, or lays like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartburn, that is a sign of Indigestion. Ask your Pharmacist for a 60-cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin, and take a little just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching; of undigested food mixed with acid, no atohaach gas or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach. Nau sea, Debilitating Headache, Dizziness or intestinal griping. This will all go, and, besides, there will be no sour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous od ors. Pape’s Diapepsin la a certain cure for out-or*order stomachs, because It prevents fermentation and takea hold of your food and digests it just the same aa if your stomach wasn’t there. Relief in five minutes from all stom ach misery is at your drug itore, waiting for you. These large 50-cent cases of Pape’s Diapepsin contain more than sufilolent to cure any case of Dyspepsia, Indi gestion or any other Stomach trouble. —ON— Wit did not anticipate 'SH cent cotton When we placed oar order for Self Player Planoa. TlM stock on hand must be sold be fore December 31st, and in or der to dispose of them will make tpeclal terms. See this stock while it Is complete or write for particulara. Ghas. M. Stieff Manutactarers of the Artistic arid Otitff 8elf-Play^r Hiahos, SOUTHERN WAREROOM 5 West Trade Street, , CHARLOTTE - - N. C. C. H. WILMOTH. Manager. (Mention this paper.) IV High School Boys For your first suit with /oag trousers wear # "Widow Jones MODEL FORTY Atlilede Style ■ Ptg Topt——Tum-upt Cast: A litUe more than Knickeri Muck lees than Men’s Vf u tifhtttn ftart. Made In Bestoa BOVr CLOTHING SALE Prudent parents, looking ^ for the i right thing—at the right time—at the right price—will not be disappointed with this week’s offerings. A CAP—FREE BOYS* SUITS, $2.48, $3.00 AND $3.50. With Every Suit Sold at $2.48 and Up. Big line • Boys’ Suits, all colors and sizes.. $2.48, $3.00 and $3.50 SUITS JONES” "WIDOW Not a very kind of a sui these are mo expertly cut and Mixtures saving over Boys Novelty Suits, sizes 3 to 10. Sail or and Russian Blouses, Blue Serge and -all colors.... $1.48 to $4.75 For boys, made especiallj^ for. boys that are hard to fit, mp.Je with Full Peg Pants $7.50, $8.50 and $10'00 Boys’ Overcoats and Reefers, at.. $2.48, $3.00 and $3.50 Boys’ School Suits, in Blue and Fancy Serges and Worsteds, also Cash meres, made with Peg Top Pants at $3.98, $4.98 and $6.50 Boys’ Hats and Caps 25, 48 and 9Sc Remember, a Cap Free with every Suit, $2.48 and up. They are m all sizes. The special j BaGBBI^SiSSm ia! Sale Many a man with^ a $10-a-Week sal ary talks wisely of the business uncer tainties of a presidential year.-^Atlan ta Journal. “Papa, what do the papers mean when they talk about anybody beinjg scooped?” “To be scooped. Willie is to miss getting an important item of news or to hear of it after everybody knoWs it." “I see* Our janitor is always scooped when the weather turns cold, isn’t he, papa?”—Chicago Tribune. Specials Reffvilar 50c and 60c Candy Continuing through Monday 35-cent Initial Stationery WOC^ALL & SHEPPARD ' DRUQQlSTt. ‘telaphones 69 and 166. ATLAS COUPON Seven consecutive coupona, %hlch appew la The News each day. whe* brought to The Newti om«e, acpouiiNl^d by 95 cenU. will en title reeder of the Newt to lUnd.itONAMy‘B isio Censns AtlM of t^ Werl«^. aa adrertiaed. Ou^f^wii mUf muat edd 26c to cover tranaportatJon chargea. Valuo of the AtlAg $6.00. Violet Perfumed and Berated Talcum Powder Handsome One Pound Cans 25c Many new are asl those popular eted all the Silk s: Reese & Alexander, Druggists Comer 4th A. Tryon Sta. To Any One in Need. To convince the public that Thies’ Salve is one of the best made and will do all that Is claimed for it, 1 will give enough for treatment free to any person suffering with sores, burns, felons, boils, ulcers, wounds, or infiaminatory diseases, who will call at Q. O.'Thies’ store 1413 E. Fourth A. THIES. ThIeV Satve at All Drug Stores, 25c. 1.10 For ’'feO Cents Purchase 6 cakes of Palm Olive Soap for 60e and get a 50c Jar Palm Olive Cream free. We furnish coupons frcKS. Tryon Drug Company 11 N. Tryon. Phones 21 and 1043 Hand-Painted Adds to 'the b^uty of any Dining RoOm. Pickard’s is by far the most artistic line on the market. We have just opened a full assortmemnt of the newest shapes and designs which we are dis playing in our cases. Will he glad to show anyone interested. ma Garabal^, Bruns & Dixon JEWELERS AND SILVERSMITHS BLAKE'S DRUG SHOP on the Square. Preeerlplions Filled Day and Night. There’s A Reason Our Candy trade is growing. Dolly Madison Home-made Washington Candy at 50c a pound and Whittman’s Pussy Package itt $1.00 IS THE REASON John S. Blake Drug Co. 'PAenea 41 amJ 300. Refieterwl Nurtea’ Directory. Shoes The line that c4ine In this week Is something to be pj'oud We are always atrons on Boya’ Shoes that look a little better, las^ a little longer and cost no more, but this last shipment leads anything we have had this season. Excellent l>€st of cut these Pettic each. Our price Black onlj Latesi We have pies in Nec things almo We sped and 50c. See -what Trefo We are ( these f They gel pair for th. 13.50 for th ' ji! y We are Rlove that faction as t ED MELLON CO. “You Can Always Get It at Melion’s” (fr
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Nov. 18, 1911, edition 1
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