Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Nov. 28, 1911, edition 1 / Page 7
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• / Qi 01 er sea ^ of Oufi or tor tb« FRONT lausland ipaoy It ME\ vuii street ina. ■■ far ■'>* • i « f di ll )7l oal c o A L .1). L CO. 30 r.te News From ^ State Capital weflal to ' “ charged with se- promise of marriage ii . ,n ,‘fv Rowland Lovelac« /^rshelhy today by D«pu* »t' ■ n \[, Cadney. of Cleveland, ,v j^p jj. young white to piRhtecn years old tn WakP county and en- md ^ .';;:-!'p]ov of a lumber company townihlp. u St. Hi vision of naval reienret A m !It Washington, N. C„ sixth Division, succeed- i.jt ,,,ion it Oriental that was i=f f Xtly for falling b.low aments of the department. r-nRnt In command of the ; ' at ^Vashlngton 1. U C. t-"" The division was mustered r Rodman of the Sec- u r North Carolina NaUonal ' no was designated for this , Adjutant General R. L. from the Fifteenth Judicial ^7/t ♦' UP for argument this week ^ beginning Tues- There are twenty-flve ' Yancey. McDowell, Hen- . rford. Polk and Burke , j;ix that constitute the • district. The appeals In rir- ure: State vs. Stacy; i '"rnnclB; State vs. Blake; V orhin: State vs. Murphey; ' U V t ’ penter; Garrison vs. Wll- 'Whi^^ner vs. Railroad; Patton .'"r .it Wr Co.; McBrayer vs. Blan- Tnhnsor vs. Railroad; Simmons rp rmlnp: Roberts vs. Platt (two - ' Thompson vs. Power Co.; , Cr V?. Branch (two appeals); c:(.^'^ol vs. McDowell; Gard- ;a'if V?. McConnaughey; Lyt- - VC v-ip.nfacturing Co.; Hicks vs. ■ i ‘ > ■ o.: Reid vs. King; Morse ^rpvpernan: Sanitarium vs. Insurance Kill be a dally schedule pro- '..n a few days for the new , half mile suburban electric p the city limits at Green- le Country Club and the new ^ '^red acre park that the Caroll* , F^er & Light Co. U to open at ; (,p There Is special service to the r- rinb every Sunday now and - crowds patronize these special , -«*5 CJ fve state cases to be argued on y n the supjreme court this week “ - State vs. Charles Murphy, from rotmty, Is of special Interest, . - • a^r being under sentence to ■•ruted for the murder of ; nmons December 21, 1910. the case in which Murphy be- -arue enraged at the deceased because hf r^^l5ed to give him a drink of whls- v-pv when they met In the public road *• South Toe river In Yancey near Cleo poatofTlce. Murphy c' ,• ^^,3 old man three times. Me set rhp plea of Insanity due to epllep- ti fits nd also pleads defective ver- bv the jury In that It w’a* not spe- “ f d that their verdict was murder •n r-'.o P”"- riesfrf'e. ^ ; h» 'ther appeads State vs. Cor 1 fi-.ini Henderson county, for po- :• n of the water-shed territory for r. inicipal water works; States vs. F-f".pts. from McDowell, is for selling r.iiiBkey. Clean, Dry Heat Clean, dry heat, with no smoke or odor and with no flying ashes or soot— thatisiraatyou get with a Perfection Smokeless Oil Heater. ;RrECTi6 >WOKKUf » TKc Perfection is the mo^t reli able ind convenient heating device vou^can find. It is always ready for use. There are no pipes or flues or wires to bother you. You can pick it up and take it wherever extra warmth is wanted. Every mechMUcal im(»ovenient that experience couki suggest was tlready (»^ciied in the Perfection Heater. This year we have tried to add to iti The druma are finished Forty High Schools Enter Contest • ' The News. Trinity i ollesc, Durham, Nov. 28. ^ addition to the thirty-seven schools .orted as having entered their r'.' !«? as ( f^ntestants for the medal to ■ n at the inter-scholastlc de s I I intest to be held here next ther« are five others 'ivp entered iheir names. " f' five are: Ilalelgh High School, H-'drr.'nn Hlp:h School. Cary High r ' ool, Warrenton High School, Wash- ■ Uleh School. '* ‘ n notHble fact that three of the ' -r ‘o schools now In the list are . o • ide of the slate, these be- ine ( lister Springs Academy, and D-;nv;,:e High School, of Virginia, and '' r: d College Fitting School, of > ■ ‘nhurs:. S. C. ' ' - 'am occupying every hour of ' i ’ '! whilr iliey are in the city Btranpod, but they will be '■ -•!M>'>rtuiiity of seeing all there ' ! Tiinity C'ollege and the city of L ■ iiaii. 1NwV£.ivii^c.H 2a, |9ak \ comfort A special aotomatie device abtolutalv pKveati stnoldng. All puts euily cleaned. GiiUoa {eatt Uats nine houn. Cool handle; damper Daaian eweiywhere; or wriia tor ilwcriptiwi cHCMkr la aar MMcy of tlw Standard Oil Company (Incorporated) NOW ON SALE. One large assortment of French Plumes at the following low priqes: UNIVERSITY NOTES. nonemacher arrived IN COURT. !' A' .fiatc(^ Press. Tenn., Nov. 27.—E. L. N ’nemai.her, who shot J. F. Martin, •“f Rpld' villp, N. c., In a Memphis bo- i .'a'urday. when he found Martin '! 'Ii> .Nonemacher In a room to- —r, T\as today arraigned in police ‘ irt and bound over to the grand I'^ry in $5,000 bond. BOBBIE WALTHOUR’S FAMILY STRICKEN WITH PLAQUE. Atlsuta, Nov. 28.—NewsHias reach ed Atlanta that the wife and children of B>)bble Walthour, the famous cycliBt, are stricken with the plague lying: at the point of death in ® ho'pital at Dresden. Relatives are prf'fjarinjf to cross the ocean to be near them. Willing to Pay—But— "\our wife is very nervous, and stip ranst he kept quiet at any cost." ‘V- dortor. 1 am willing to pay " • r^eht—but—”—Woman’s Home Companion. (By COUNT VON ELPHBEBG) Berlin, Nov. 27.—The Socialists’ overwhelming triumph at the ap proaching general election flor the Reichstag on January 1st, 1912, -is predicted by a special commission of investigators sent out by the govern ment to ascertain the electoral pros pects throughout the country. At present the Socialist deputies in the Reiohstage number fifty out of a total of 397, but the government commis sion predicts that the elections will produce 150 Socialists, bringing that party into a commanding position by combination with Liberals. The confidential report to the Kaiser on Socialist prospects has sent a shiv er through the Court and its bureau cracy. The revival of a proposal for an American and Anglo-German alliance Is one of the results of the recent war scare. The Kaiser favors the idea of a working arrangement for co-opera tion in international affairs between America, England and Germany and has commissioned his only newspaper man friend, Theodore Schienmann, commonly known as the Imperial Press Publicity Agent to propagate the idea. “We want 397 American moneybags and we, must attract them.” This mercenary announcement is made by the organizer of a conference of hotel keepers and others interested in the “Tourtst industry,” which is to be held in January to discuss the best ways and means of attracting Ameri can travellers to Germany during the summer season of 1912. There will congregate at the conference hotel keepers from all parts of Germany, also the mayors of many summer re sorts. The main object of this convention is to evolve some scheme whereby as many American dollars as possible will be sp^nt in Germany, diverting if possible the stream of American tour ists from France, Switzerland and oth er favored regions to the FatherlandV The Princess Sachnowskskaya who has been residing in Berlin for some years has gone to Tripoli to serve as a volunteer aviator for the Turks. The intrepid woman has qualiuea as an air pilot and takes with her to use in war fare fiigainst the Italians one mono plane and two biplanes. The Princess will be the first air warrior on the side of the Turks and by rendering such services she not only emphasizes the fact that in fu ture, battles will be determined by air craft, but once more makes woman man’s equal. She 1b 30 years of age, unmarried, a feminist and a Hussion by birth. I A cylone of Democratic indignation' is sweeping over Berlin as the result of a proposal to introduce grades of ( passengers in street cars, dividing I them into first and second class. Thls| suggested abolition of glorious equality j in the present street cars has evoked passionate protests in many quarters. The proposed innovation is warmly denounced afe a retrograde step and Inharmonious with the progressive spirit of the age. Through appearing in a series of daring dances clad in the scantiest at tire, Mile. Dllany, a French dancer, haa created such a turmoil in a Munich theatre that her arrest follow ed an Interruption of the performance by the police. One of her "turns” was “a dance which the princesses of an cient Egvpt were accustomed to per* form at banquets,” but this terpslco- rean display did not flatter the morals Catarrh of Stomacb Indigestion and Stomach Agony Quickly Ended went to thirty doctor* and Peach hia fee for a prescription for innigtirtion or stomach misery It is ten ' "ant ( g to one you wouldn’t get sifch K prepoription as the one from auh .Mi o-NA stomach tablets are Ho«v can such a thing be? you nat- urally ask. Simply because the man who wrote J' *, Kff'scription from which MI-O-NA - ^ ! are made knows more about ^ ''iiinoh diseases than 96 per cent, of lie nhysiclans in America, and he for knowing, r.f * set a large box niado from this doctor’s •>. nJ cents, are you J, 'ip .o contlTnie to suffer? Sold by Uerv ' ^ druggists ev- Speelal to The Newi. Chapel Hill, N. C., Nov. 28.-Pr^- dent Venable represented the Universi ty at the inauguration of Chancellor Brown, of New York University. Upon his return to the Hill Dr. Venable an nounced that the Rt. Rev. Arthur S. Lloyd, D. D., had accepted the invi tation to deliver the baccalaureate ser mon at the commencement, 1912. Dr. Lloyd was for many years Bish op Coadjutor of the Protestant Episco pal Church of Virginia, and is now president of the board of missions of hlfl church in New York city. His coming to the University in June is looked forward to with the most pleas ant anticipations, and he will be heard with keen interest by the University and its guests. That the University is conitantly in close touch with the state at large in the considerations of its -vital prob lems is further instanced by the pub lic addresses given by three of its professors during the past few days On Friday night Dr. W. C. Coker, of the department of botany, lectured un der the auspicee of the Moravian Ex tension Course at Winston upon “Lu ther Burbank and Methods of Plant Breeding.” Professor Collier Cobb lec tured before the University of Ala bama on "Lessons From the Landes for the Reclamation of Swamp Lands, before the University of Georgia on “The Saving of Dune Lands by Afores- tation,” and before the Georgia State Normal School on “Normal School Training and the Industries of' the Home.” Dr. Louis E. Wilson, of the University library, is in attendance at Durham upon the meeting of the J^orth Carolina Library Association, at w'hVch he Is to review the progress made by the various libraries of the . state during the year and to propose 1 plans by which they can be m^ide more serviceable in the future. All arrangements for the Pennsyl vanla debate have been made. The pre limlnary contest for positions on the debate will take place on the night of November 28th, and the debate will be held in Gerrard Hall on the night of Dwember 15th. The debate tvill be the fifth with the University of,Penn sylvania, of which, up to the present, Carolina has w^on three and Penns’yl- vania one. The question is that of the extension of forest reservation by tho national governrnent^ Carolina defends the negative. From now until next Thursday the cry of “On to Richmond” will constant ly be heard on the campus. The foot ball season this year t : been the most successful of many years. Six games have been w'on and one tied. The stu dent body has strong hopes of win ning from the old rival, Virginia. The teams are about evenly matched and as a result a splendid game is looked for. .75 Values . . . $ .49 $ 6.00 Values . . . $3.98 1.25 “ . . $ .69 $ 6.50 “ ^ . . $4.29 1.50 “ ... $ ,98 $ 7.50 4& ... $4.98 2.00 “ . . 3.00' “ ... $1.39 $2.15 TT $ 8.50 44 . . $5.98 4.00 “ . . $2.69 $13.50 44 . . . $8.45 5.00 “ ... $3.29 $15.00 44 . . $9.98 All of our $7.00 to $10.00 White Beaver Hats go at $3.98 SEE WINDQW DISPLAY LILES-NIX COMPAiNY CHARLOTTE’S AUTHORITY ON WOMEN’S WEAR 17-19 West Trade St. ' Phones 776-777 THE RIPPER” KEEPS NEGROES OFF STREETS. JACK PINS. of falling 28.—Fears TO REGULATE LENGTH OF LADIES’ HAT I J Atlanta, Nov. Z8.—ur. viotim to “Jack the Ripper” havd Brown, of the Fulton ^one more to clear the Atlanta iton in the general assembly, streets of negro women at night than probably introduce a ^11 thep reaching and legislating 6n next session to regulate the lengtn Hii of ladies’ hat pins. Several more or less serious acci* 28.—Dr. Atlanta, Nov earth. Six months ago, in certain sections permitted. Now it is the rarest thing to see a negro woman alone after dark exciept on actual business in the brilliantly lighted business sec^ tion. Atlanta of the city, the streets were crowd- dents have occurred Atiant ^ nestroes, largely women, up street cars and elevators until midnight whenever the weather in other large cities, and the hat i unm .miamg pins worn by fashionable women htre sometimes measure 20 inches or more in length, and protrude beyond the wide hat bands. The hat pins were brought forci bly to Dr. Brown’s attention yester day by a personal experience, ur. Brown, who is an eye, ear and sometimes when a man ouys specKilist, was treating a underwear he gets fleeced eyes she 1 Odd that it is the story without any head, and drove a long that bores us. through one of the doctor s ^^Ser . Qdd also that when a man is “down Dr. Brown is in no sense c°ntem-! against it.” plating the introduction of the bill better to swallow your wrath t(T “get even” with the i than to have to eat your words, who jabbed his finger. He j matter how entertaining he may that, was a mere accident, out dentist is an awful bore, brought the general proposition to looking for a good open- his attention in a striking way, and j a jiofe.—Boston Transcript. A LARGE PLAIN / Colonial Bed Room Suit flippancies. Sometimes when a man buys that he feels he owes a duty to the pub lic. A number of states in the union already have legislation regulating the length of hat pins, so the con- templated bill cannot be classed in the category of “freak legislation.” A Terror. “Some o’ dese reformers,” said Un- i cle Rasberry, “makes me think ^ of 'Rastus Pinkley’s dog. I says to 'im, ‘Rastus,’ I says, ‘is dat dog good foh rats?’ An’ he says, ‘No; he’s mighty ■ bad foh rats.’ ‘Does he ketch ’em an’ 'kill ’em?’ ‘No,’ says Rastus; ‘he don’t ketch ’em ner he don’t kill ’em. But if dey come foolin’ around him I he’ll mighty near skeer ’em to death!”’ —Washington Star. According to the Agreement. “Look here,” said Blithers, angrily, “you bW this car to me last week; guaranteeing that it was odorless, and now it smells like a benzine trust. “That isn’t -ths car you smell, said I the agent. “A’s the gasoline.”—Har- i per’s Weekly. — >. j " Atlanta, Nov. 28.—Atlanta is going Rooster—“The trouble with you, to have its “fashionable military Owl, Is that you keep bad hours, company in the fifth regiment of the jj^l-y^Qdy ought to go to bed about cniarH Tt will hm kno'wn as g^jjd get up just before day* Ujjht.”—Life. ‘ “PEACHTREE SWELLS” WILL FORJVI “FULTON BLUES.” A TREACHEROUS TROUBLE Charlotte People Point the Way Out Kidney diseases are very dangerous. They come on silently, gain ground rapidly, and cause thousands of deaths ^ _ that could have been prevented by w\th a mantel wrapped around her' proper treatment in the beginning. Urk of attire she was hustled off to Nature gives early warnings of kidney 4oii disease—backache, twinges of. pain when stooping or lifting, headaches ►f the princesses of antiquity^ and v\j WATTERSON WILL SPEAK ON ARBITRATION TREATIES. ■ Atlanta, Nov. 28.—The ratification of the arbitration treaties between the United States and Great* Britain and Great Britain and France will be the^pubject of Col. Henry Watter- son’s address at the Atlanta audito rium at the great mass meeUng in the Interest of peace which will be held December 24th. Dr. George Brown, secretary and treasurer of the Georgia Peace Socie ty, Is taking an active interest in the preparations for the event. Time Limit Expired. Mrs. Knagg—“Perhaps you recall U was on a train that we first met. Mr. Knagg—“Yes, but it’s too late now to sue the company for dam- a’ges.”—Boston Tranecript. and urinary disorders. If these symp toms are unheeded, there is grave danger of dropsy or fatal Bright’s dis ease. Doan’s Kidney Pills have earned a reputation for their effectiveness in kidney troubles, and are known and recommended the worid over. Char lotte testimony proves the merits of Doan’s Kidney Pills to our readers. J. V. Nabor, 1415 ^th St. Ext.. Char lotte, N. C., says: “Some time ago I was suddenly attacked by severe p^ns in the small of my back. I suffered so severely that I could not sleep and my work was a burden. In three days after I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills I was able to work and I have been well ever since.” ^ _ For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milbum Co., BuffaJp, New York, sole agents for the United States. _ , J Remember the name—Doan s—ana take no other. National guard. It will be kno^n as the “Fulton Blues” and will be com posed almost exclusively of young “Peachtree swells.” The captain, Har rison Jones, is a well known young man about town, prominent in social and club life. This company will be mustered in . ery shortly, and efforts will be made to make it one of the crack organiza tions of the state. Ohiiciren Ory FOR FLETCHER’S CASTO R I A Children Ory FOR FLETCHER’S cASTO R I A Children Ory FOR FLETCHER’S CASTO R IA COUQHING AT NIGHT Means loss of sleep which is bad for the children and hard on grown per sons. Foley’s Honey and Tar Com pound stops the cough at once, reUeves the tickling and dryness in the throat and heals the infia'med membranes. Contains no opiates and is best for children and delicate persons. Refuse substitutes. Bowen Drug Store on North Square. INJECTION ^ BROU Gives Prompt »nd Effectual IUl»e without inconvenience ^ * ^..5*5 MOST OBSTINATE CASES No other treatment required. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. KING’S GRADUATES are above par In tbe buainess world because of their ^croosh traiiUi^ and BUpOTor Qualifications. We do not tolc>rate lax. methods, incompetent teacben or shprt, superficial courses of study. Success Is our alni and mo«o. II you want the best basin eas ahB stenographic training that ex perience, money and brains can provii3» write for our handsome cata loeue. No vacation. Enter any time. CHARLOTTE, N. a ^iifeo^iiAieo OR RALEIGK, N. a Now in our East Window for sale at Auction. How much will you give? Look'at tho suit, get one of our envelopes, pl*ce your bid inside, ?nd the suit will go to the highest bidder. Make your bid today. It costs you nothing to bid and if you get the suit, pay us one-fourth when suit is delivered and balance iri three payments thirty, sixty and ninety days. No Member or Employe of . the Firm Allowed to Bid./ Lubin Furniture Co. Every th! ngf for tho Horn© ^ All the proper fixin’s for your Ttianksgiving Dressing are here. Suits, Overcoats, Hats and Toggery Our good wearables are so stuffed full of quality and so well spiced with style that they will tickle the taste of the man with any sort of an appetite lor good choice dressing. Suits and Overcoats yj 112.50 to $27.50 Hats, $1.50 to 15,00 The latest Pumishlngs at prices that will please. " Yorke Bros & Rogers -A
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 28, 1911, edition 1
7
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