Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Dec. 29, 1918, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
LiflTiiULE EUEfIT Tremendous Ovation Accorded by Great Crowd. STIRRED BY HIS SPEECH Dwlaret for Concert of Power : for Peace Against ."Balance of Power? to Upeet II London, Dec 28. Speaking today In the hlstorla Guild hell t cere monious fathering of Great Britain's moat distinguished statesmen. Presi dent Wilson reaffirmed his principle that there must no longer bo a bal ance of power which might unsettle ' the peace of tht world, hut that the future must produce a concert of power which would preserve It . The President's reception ' at' the Guild hall was so spontaneous and hearty that It carried an unmistakable ' noto of friendship . and admiration. When he arose to speak there was a prolonged outburst of handclapplng and cheering, and his talk was fre quently punctuated by applause. At 1 S i Character Is the Basis" of Credit "SETTLE UP" It fa not" at all pleasant to be worried with a dozen or so petty debts. It destroys one's efficiency and badly hurts credit. Should you need money bor row It from the MORRIS PLAN and repay the loan in fifty equal j , Mi weekly installments. , we lend money In sums of H from $25 to $5,000 at elx per g cent and, on personal endorse- u ment. Liberty Bonds or other se- If curltles. Why not ask or write Li for the booklet 'whloh fully ex- 1 plains? ... ( ,4 . i y i PJ i Hie Charlotte ' i . V. b holding with British statesmen, and r.Tll TfHlC 131 AMI Dm address, ss It was delivered to liwAlltlO A liill H; day, was interpreted in American ja? quarters as confirming the previous v v Company I? , intimations that these conferences fhAt.i , : had been satisfactory from the Prest- capital, 175,000. I Pi dent.g vjewp0nti at I....... ' At tn ouUet of h,!l e-reM Presl- Im OnerrUl, 1 reaiurer y ' dent Wilson declared he did not fancy Academy of Masto Building. I that the welcome of Paris and Lon- don to him was ourelv nersonal. hut :asmaX:Bmmm:mm!mm:M ..'..tiitttiiiMii-.'. "r..7rr."miiitii... iiiiiiiiiMMMiMHHiiiiiiiiiiMmMMMiiiiiii: 3 S Victor S Machines Victor Records- 5 Begin (The New Year 5 -;" ' V- s WithaPUno S . "i- ;'4t."" ' Z In Your Home '' mm '..' '" SS S Tou have been wanting one S 3 for a lonfe time; now make your S wish eome.true. , s ' S "V ' S Let us show you how easily s 3 it can be done. 5 F. H. ANDREWS 1 MUSIC HOUSE J SIS North Tryon St niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifi Brnp hot blast : is resutar money saver. The circular overdraft jHot Blast T'rr permits' more heated air to f- !e over the fuel surface than ta Jt "r, arrangement and con sumes t .l fwj in soft coal, there lr "1"T to per cent of the fuel L.ttuc.erwlse wasted. . r.: I; :i fzn Co; r-l f J"J VAt District,-. J . t u Phone 28S7 :iLH1jP?) mm s' e c! .;. -Un of a;tfe- tle sa Csr'iK'e ri"e with one accord anJ cheered, and It kept up the applause aoi cheerln as he passed out. The President was given a notable ovation on rising to begin his speech, and some of the points that won re newed applause were his tribute to the armies of the associated govern ments and his declaration that peo ple throughout the world wanted peace, and wanted It Immediately not, however, by conquest, but. by agreement of mind. -The distinguished government and other official received by the lord mayor before the President's arrival included Premier Lloyd George, Field Marshal Halg, Foreign Secretary Bal four. Admiral Sims, former- Premier Asqultb, Andrew Bonar Law, the chancellor of the exchequer and the ambassadors of the principal allied governments. - After President Wilson's arrival all were grouped on the dais, the lord mayor in the center and the Presi dent on. his right, next to the Duke of Connaught The Royal Artillery band In the gallerynlayed American airs, ushering President Wilson in with "The Star-Spangled Banner." ; r v Away WUh Old Order. In the course ot his "speech the President declared the soldiers had fought to do away with tht old order and establish a new one. The old order, he said, had for its center the "unstable thing" called the balance of power, determined by competitive interests, "jealous watchfulness" and an "antagonism of Interests." . The suggestion for a concert : of power to replace the balance of pow er, he remarked, was coming now from every quarter and" from every sort of mind. The concert to come, he r declared, must not be a balance ot power of one powerful group of nations set Off against another, but "a single, overwhelming powerful group of nations which shall be the trustees of the peace ot the world." The minds of the leaders of the British government, the ? President said, were moving in the same lines as his own, and their thoughts had been that the key to the peace was the guarantee of it, and not the items of it The Items of it, he. added. would be worthless unless a concert , of power stood back of them. No such potent union of purpose had ever been seen in the world be 1 fore, he said, as that which now e i manded a concert of power tor pre j serve the. world's peace.' -t- - ' Whereas It had been the thought of students and academic men. he now found the practical minds of the' I world determined to get it. "I am particularly happy that the 1 ground has been cleared and the foundations laid," he continued, "be 1 cause we have already accepted the Kama, bodv nrlnclnlna. Thnwt nrln. clples are clearly and :, definitely enough stated to make their applica tion a matter which should afford no fundamental difficulty. . Want Peace Now. "The peoples of the world want peace, and want it now, not merely I by the conquest ot arms, but by agree .ment of mind." , Such an achievement, the Prest i dent characterised as this great, may jl not say final, enterprise of .hu manity, There had been Just a hint that the President's address would be the key to the ! conference he has been rather .that the voices of the people were expressing not oniy emotions of grauncauon tnat the ngntlng the flKhtlnsr had ceased, but also their conception that the peace to be made must guaran tee that , the war could not be re peated. ' "It now rests upon others to see that those lives were not lost in vain," the President added. The President concluded his ad dress amid a great demonstration, and then proceeded to the luncheon at the-Mansion house with the lord mayor. Reception Without Parallel. The oldest observer In the Guild hall today declared no reception ever accorded any dignitary there ap proached in spontaneity and volume that which greeted the President's ap pearance and the address which fol lowed. , t , The procession from Buckingham palace to the Guild hall was through a crowd that cheered continuously. As the President left the Guild hall after his address th crowd in the yard took up the cheers that had been echoing within the building. The President, with Mrs. Wilson, entered their carriage, and as they drove through the lanes of boisterous hat and handkerchief waving throngs some one proposed "Three cheers for Wilson." They were given with such 1,500,009 mm Of Killed 25 per cunt of the French army has been kille din battle, another 25 per cent have been seriously v, wounded, This terrible sacrifice of half Its mag niflcent army has been freely made by heroio France that liberty might live, The world, and .especially America, owes France an enormous debt of gratitude, not ohly for this, but for the discovery by French peasants of a perfeot remedy for stomach, liver and intestinal disorders "which ,1s, re ported to have saved many thouftartds of lives the world over, prevented In numerable surgical.' operations and alleviated Incalculable suffering. Geo, H. Mayr, a leading Chicago Chemist Imports the Ingredients and sells this remedy in America underthe name of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy. It is a simple, harmless preparation that re moves the catarrhal mucus from the Intestinal traot and allays the Inflam mation which ' causes practically- all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose. will convince or money refunded, John 8, make Drug Co,, LlggettWordan Drug Store. Charlotte Drug Co,, and drug gists everywhere.iAdv. . , , i ' DON'T MISS -OUR BARGAIN TABLE of after Chrlstmai small 'toys, odd china' 'for.'dojly, few, do!U,'J Kids Buddy Cars, Etc, Vn Also shades. a. , few small Bilk ' lamp 20 West Fifth Street. ' 3 ',.1 K'.-r.t the .ea'y an-1- r. afeHiii. dj.lnt sni! i and bowed TEXT CF FHLwIDENTS ADDREC3 IN GUILD HALL London, Dec. 28. The text of Pres Ident Wilson's speech at the Gulldj hall this afternoon is as follows: "Mr. Lord Mayor; , We h4 come upon times when ceremonies like this have a new significance which most Impresses me as I stand here. The address which I have just heard is most generously and graciously con- celved. and the delightful accent of sincerity m it seems like a . part ot everywhere to be heard, , I feel that , a distinguished honor has been, con V i:,-5 and '.j ferred upon me by this reception, and I beg to assure you, sir, and your as sociates, of my very profound appreci ation, but I know that I am only part of what I may call a great body of circumstances. . v. . ... "I do not believe that it was fancy on my part that I heard In the voice of welcome uttered In the streets of this great, city and In the . streets ot Paris something more than a per- sonal welcome. It eoemed to me that f r1!0 JPi? !k: ' Hi!iiJ!!fw 0 ,J which one could dUtlnguWi a singular combination of emoUons. i There was surely the deep grateful ness that the fighting was over. There was the pride that the fighting had had such a culmlnauon. There was,jf.'m;; jfiritCTt that Urn. third n!! ?.lyiJ imK?-MF,?JSi Bumors of the proposed removal of MIIUI .UIIICTCillCUlO MIV MBU V 1VUVOOCU with rising admiration as they moved from culmination to culmination. , BusIimmm Not Vet Donct. . ' . : "But there was something more In It, the consciousness that the busi ness la not yet done, the conscious ness that it now rests upon others to see that those lives were not lost in vain. -.: ,' ',-' . "I have sot yet been to the actual battlefields, but I hare been with many of the men who have fought the battles, and the other day I had the ' pleasure of . being present at a session of the French academy when they admitted Marshal Joffre to their membership. That sturdy, serene soldier stood and uttered, not the words of triumph, but the simple words of affection for his soldiers and the conviction which he summed up in a sentence which I will not try ac curately to quote, but reproduce In its spirit It was that France must always remember that the small and t me weaa coma never uw m uie world unless the strong, and Uie great always put thrr power and their strength In the service of 'right. , "That i the after thought .. . the thought that something' must be done now; not only to make the Just set Momenta . . , that, of course . . , but to see that the settlements remained and were observed and that honor and Justice prevailed In the world- And as I have conversed with the soldiers I have been more and mora aware that they fought for. something that not all of them had defined, but which all of them recognised the mo ment you stated it to tnem. Theytrlous. In his opinion an Industrial fought to do away witn an old order crisis was imminent,- the revolution and to establish-a new one, and the becoming more and more the agita center and characteristic of the old tlon of delirium. He feared the ex order was that unstable thing which tension of the bolshevlst movement in we used to call the 'balance .of pow- i Germany, if that country were obligee! or, a thing in which the balance was to make too great sacrifices. determined by the sword which was thrown In on the one sida or the other, a .balance which was deter mined by the unstable Jealous watch fulness and an antagonism ot inter ests which, though it was generally latent was always deep-seated. .4,y . "End Now and Forever.w "The men who have fought in. this war have been the men from the free nations who are determined -that that sort of thing should end now and forever. It is very interesting to me; . how frm everv ouarter. ! to observe how f rem every quarter, from every sort of mind, from every concert of counsel there comes the suggestion that there must now be not a balance of power, not one pow erful group of nations, set up against another, but a single overwhelming, powerful group of nations who shall be the trustees of the peace of the world. ' "It has been delightful In my con ferences with the leaders of your government to find how our , minds moved along exactly the same line and how our thought was always that the key to the peace was the guaran tee of the peace, not the items of it; that the items would be worthless un less there stood back oi tnem a per manent concert of power for their maintenance. That Is the most reas- surlng thing that has ever happened . in the world ;, . . - "When this war began the thought I of a league of nations was indulgent- f lv considered as tne interesting thought of closeted students. It was thought ot as one of those things that it was right to characterise by a name which, as a university man, I have always resented. It was eald to be academic as If that in itself MM.f condemnation . rsomethinr that men i 2? HimSi. ?nSrlP AJ5SnZ could think about but never get V.l9T e-th mntiofti leadlna minds of i BUppliment pies- and. pudding.. They the wprld determined to get it f ' V Never WitneBsed Before. u No euch sudden and "potent union of purpose has ever 'been witnessed in tne worm , neiore,. v. v yww. wonuer. therefore, gentlemen, .that : In common with those who repfesetit you l am eager to get at the business and. write the sentences down?" And that I am particularly happy, that the ground is cleaned and the foundations laid , ( for we have already -accepted the tamev ; body . .Of . principles. Those principle are clearly .and definitely enough stated- to make their appllca tlon a matter which should afford.no fundamentals difficulty. -, . - ' ' , "And back ot lis is that imperative yearnihg.of the world to have all dis turbing questions quieted.' to-have all threat against peace silenced, to have juat men (.everywhere come together for, a common object v The peoples of .the world want- peace and they want it now, not merely by conquest of arms but by agreement of mind. 4It was this incomparably great ob ject that hrqnglit me overHoua. it has never before , born decmel oxconablo for n President of the United Statw to leave the . territory of . the United State, but I know that I hove the support ot the Judgment of my eol loasrues in the , government or the United States , iQ wyin that It was my-paramount luty to turn, nway oven, from tlie imperative tmsks at home to lend such counsel and old as I could to this great, may I not suy final, enterprise of humanity?", : PROFESSIONAC BONDSMAN ; CHARGED WITH BRIBERY ,.SV finecWI to Wo Obecrver, s v " .Asheville, Dec, lit.rC. C. ;WIlHs. Erofeeslenal bdndsmarf,was arrested y the police this afternoon on the charge ot offering a bribe . to Desk Sergeant Hugh Sowers, in c6nnectlon with a forfeited, bond,, .Willis, who makes bonds for pay, had gone on two bonds for $100 each, and the prison era failed to show up. " It was duflntf the settlement of thlf -ease "that afetables, baked potato', ' cabbage and brige of 120 Is alleged to have been! green pepper salad, cheese crackers, made to the dealt serireant , . i 3 1 Li I I Fct.Cc:3.tD.Li:u,t When. At Flace City All "Hst Up." Special to The Observer. " "Asheville, Dec. '28. Letters written htr fArmi Frwln a attnrnav. ta I Congressman Weaver, applying forithe armistice was signed, 14 British -v . .k 1. . .1. it,, stsamshlna with a. total troon canacitv ot the it SJdMr - hYve K-oueht to Shr the thm h.w,- ..,... rt jt j 1 fc I he has, had no official information of any charges against him, but that he had been advised once before that efforts wodld be made by First As sistant Postmaster . General John C . Koons to remove him, if he failed to acquiesce In the reappointment ot two clerks dismissed from the Asheville office. ' - ' I . "Jl" XI ;rfumlM,i .,im.nt clerks 1" the local office, and his re- fu to recommend the dismissal ot Frank Blrkemyer, against whom some of ; the 8ame clique had attempted to prefer charges. The first assistant postmaster gen-, eral, it is stated, was once chief clerk the Asheville postmaster have aroused the liveliest sort of speculation here. HARDEN SAYS 'SUPERIOR STRATEGY OF THE FRENCH GENERALS DEFEATED HUNS German Editor Says Foch Is Far Above Ludendorff as Mili tary Leader; Hindenburg a 'Figurehead.;' N . Paris, -Dec 28. (Havas) Maximil ian Harden, the German editor, in an Interview, has declared to the - corre spondent of The Temps that Germany was beaten- by the superior strategy of the French1- generals. "Marshal Foch, he declared, was a military leader far above Ludendorff, who had never been victorious nn fh front. as tor von Hindenburg. the editor characterised mm as little more than a figurehead Harden expressed fear that the loss of Alsace-Lorraine would be for Ger many a wound like that suffered by Prance, , but he hoped that the bor ders would have no great importance m the future. . He considered that the former em peror was not directly responsible for the war, but tlrat he was a great cul prit, for he should have been able to avoid the catastrophe but had not the courage to say "no" at the last mo ; ment. Concerning the present situation In uermani, xiaraen oeuevca 11 very bo RED CROSS KNITTERS TO "STACK. NEEDLES" NOW '; mini. ' ' Washington, Dec. 21. America's army of women knitters, who dd not cease work with the signing of the armistice, today were ordered by the Red Cross to "stack needles," thelp task accomplished. An inventory ot ' " f?"' ' hand t0 meet. ?he nea ' h nht- ing men in this country and abroad and of Red Cross relief commissions. 'More than 10,000,000 sweaters, socks, mufflers, helmets and wrist lets were turned out in the IT months preceding the overthrow of the cen tral powers. Virtually every man in the army was given woolen acces sories fashioned by the tireless fin gers of thousands ot women who chose that method of aiding to win the war. . THRIFTY MENUS BY BIDDY BYE. To paraphrase the typewriter's fa mous message: "Now is the time for all canned things to come to the aid of. the housewife." Eggs and meats an poultry are still but occasional luxuries for the average purse. Fruits and vegetables are more limltej In each, ,k- Ume, to , -r? " .- lar and on storeroom shelves. ; AH the good things from last summer s gar den now furnish forth the feast. String beans, young beets, peas, asparagus and other summer delicacies, relieve were stored .against this season's need - - tiunaay. - Breakfast-i-Wheat cereal, with sllc-' ed bananas and milk: toast, cocoa. : Dinner Broiled shoulder of lamb, with green: peas; apple and cranberry jelly, baked sweet, potato, fruit salad, cheese, coffee. r' - Supper Oyster stew, wafers, apples and nuts. . j ' . ' Blondoy. - - ' j. Breakfast Buckwheatjpftkea, maple sirup, coffee. . . -...,'... . LunchBean eoup, orn sticks, canned berries, cookies., k. ' 1 - Dinner Cheese . polenta, tomato sauce, string beans (canned), green pepper and cabbage salad, fresh gin gerbread, tea. y T ' Turadayr -" ' -, Breakfast Stewed j, apricots.'., oat meal and cream and sugar, toast, cof fee. " ' , ... Lunch-Bolled eardlnes, on .toast,' stewed prunes, cookies, tea.'7 ' - . Dinner Cream of corn soup, boiled tongue with vegetables, lettuce salad, canned peaches and -cream, coee.r' Wednesday. i BreakfastBaked apples,- cornmeal sqrapple, sirup, ooffee. . ' , - : f ' '.Lunch Escaloped potatoes, apple, celerv and' nut salad, tea; DinnerVegetable ,soup, "country sausage cakes, boiled hominy,' sliced oranges, coffe. -, . v Thursday. - t . -,. ; Breakfast, Stewed prunes, boiled rice and milk, toast and coffee. , , , Lunch Maaaroni and cheese, apple sauce, cookies. ' . w i Dinner Panned fish, creamed , po tatoes, spinach, with- hard-boiled egg. tapioca puddln. " - t t . - . , ... tYkrny. - - i Breakfast Halved' " granef rult, creamed codfish, on -, toast, coffee, t - i Lunch -Baked beans, brown bread, canned fruit - .. : Dinner Cr'eam'of. tomato soup; veg-'i etable. nut roBst with cranoerry sauce, cauliflower (canned), salad,; Indian pudding with mftplo sauce. ' Rasurday ." Breakfast Apple eauce, corn muf fins, creamed chipped beef, coffee, , , Lunch Salmon salad, wafers, cupcake-) with fruit, tea. Dinner Liver en casserole with fruit gelatin, coffee. Xt'iV urk, 1. I';. . : ... 1 fovcrn.. .'t wl 1 be alia to l "-t to the I'nited i .ates between.. Sj.i'uj and 4 1, '0 Amen.:un troo:.j H ves sels under the Lnsll-sh t.iJt during January, it was announceU here to day by T. Athly Sparks, director gen eral of the lirttiHti ministry of ship ping, on nuthorky of a cab!gTm from the shipping controller in Lon don. Itwas further announced that in addition to the Mauritania, due here tomorrow on her second voyage, with 5.000 American soldiers, since have bee? offend to the ! United States government, and will mnv-!tween now and January 10, " .in. e 1 tea given mrs. wilson; l? by mrs. Lloyd ceorce London, Dec. 28. An event not on the prepared program was a tea given at 6 o'clock this afternoon" by Mrs. Lloyd George In honor of Mrs. "Wil son, at which the President was pres ent, x-.---- -:--v--v - :- The tea was arranged informally by telephone, the premier's wife InvKIng the wives of heads ot government de partments to meet Mrs.- Wilson. " Mr. and Mrs. Wilson arrived shortly be fore S o'clock and returned to Buck- Ingham palace a halt hour later. Pre mier Lloyd George, the Earl of Read lng and Chancellor Bonar Law also were present. v' vrv "' . WILSON, MAKES HIS LAST APPEARANCES IN LONDON (Continued, from Page vOne.) come of this great aity and you have reminded me of what has perhaps be come one of the habits of my life. "You have said that I broke all precedents in coming across the ocean to Join In the counsels of the peace conference, but I think those , who have been associated with. ; me In Washington will testify that that is nothlnr surprising. - I said to the members of the press ji Washington one .evening that one of the things that had interested me moat since I lived In Washington was that, every time I did anything perfectly natural it was to be unprecedented. , . Breaking Precedenta. ' ' It was perfectly natural to break this precedent, natural because- the demand for intimate conference took precedence over every other duty. And, after all, the breaking of prece dents, though this may sound strange doctrine in England,, is the most sensible thing. to do. .'The harness of precedent is sometimes a very sad and f harassing .trammel. ' "in th" case the breaking or prece dent is sensible for a reason that is very prettily Illustrated In a remark attributed to Charles Lamb. !One eve ning In a company ofhls friends they were discussing? a person who was not present and Lamb eald, in his hesitating manner: : " 'I .h hate i that fellow? "Why, Charles,' one of his friends said, 'I did not know that you knew him.' Oh, he. said, 'I, L I, d-rdon't , I can't hate a man I know. . . . "And perhaps tnat simple, Inat fractive remark may furnish a secret for cordial International relationship. When we know one another we can not hate one another. . V i "I have been very much ' interested before coming here to see what sort of a person I was expected to be. So far as I pan make out,-1 waa expectea tobe a perfectly bloodless thinking machine, whereas I am- perfectly aware -that I have in me all the in surgent elements of the human race. I . am sometimes, by ; reason of long Scotch tradition, able to. keep these Instincts in restraint The stern cove nanter, tradition that Is behind me sends many an echo down the years. It Is not t only diligently . to pursue business, but also to seek this sort of comradeship, that I feel, that It is a privilege to have come . across the seas, and, in the welcome, that you have accorded Mrs. Wilson and me, you have made us feel that compan ionship was accessible , to v us in the most delightful and enjoyable form. "I thank you sincerely for this wel come, sir, ' and am very happy to Join In a " love feast ? which is all the more enjoyable because there is behind it a background of tfagical suffering. Our spirits are ' released from the darkness of the clouds that at one time seemed to have settled Upon the world in a way; tnat couia not be dispersed. The sufferings of your own people, the sufferings of the i people of France and the infinite suf-i fertnir of the people of Belgium. -The t whisper of grief that has been blown all through Hhe world ' is now silent and the sun of hope seems, to spread its?, rays and-to change tho earth with a new prospect of happiness. So, our Joy is-all the more elevated because we know that our spirits ire now lift ed out of that valley. v , ' TO VISIT HOUSE BUiLT BY , ; HIS FATHER AT CARLISLE 1 Carlisle.' England, . Dec. 2. This bustling railway center was busy to- . , ' FOReRENT. f , ; ' ' 'j.'" vv ' v . ' - -S-room bbus. 1121 K, 7th St, furnished ... - 35.00 5- room house, 806 N. College St., with furnace ., . 60.00 -roonv house ili N., College Street .. -...'. 86.00 6- yoom house; 509 K. Ave,.. 87.50 S-rOorn house 06 E. 11th St. 25.00 5-roora house'. 1J E. 4thSt. 12.50 Storeroom 217 N. Tryon SU ; ; 80.00 t storeroom SOI N. Tryon St.. 60.00 Storeroom 407. E. Trade St. 60.00 I ARTHUR HENDERSON t Real Estate and Fire Inmiranee. 31t N. Tryon 6t - Phone 589 i ... THREADING A. NEEDLE easily Is not so much dependent upon steady" nerves as 'upon per feet, eyesight, , .-' t ' . ' . If 'you. '.find; difficulty Ih thread ing a, needle or performing similar difficult :.f eats chances ' are ten to one that you need glasses!. . 1 -Properly vfltted glasses, will en able 'you to' thread a; needle, read line -print, or see perfectly at a dis tance without effort. ,- r . - . j ' i - They will give you full degree of comfort because they're correct ly made and fitted for ypur partic ular case. . t . . J ; F.G. ROBERTS ipt Optometrist ,i 34 H. Tryon Rt. Upstalnr - ' '. Phono 3S2e lit f -v I the room w4il :i !, 4 I: c. j 1 r 1 i llev. 1. i ward 1 , owi, Lowther i treet Cot: erf. a I r c t .s urr" 1 x ..3er rt celvi'vl a r;e- -u, frcr afternoon statin that i Li." :. t.e l r would attend st-rvlce tunaay. . The Cavendish houe, at 8 J .War wick road, is two stories h!sh. It stands behind four holly bushes and is now owned by Edgar i ayer, a bank er, who lives : there wilh. his family, v Mf. Bayer bought the house be cause It was the only one obtainable in the city. He had no idea, he said today, that It was of historlo Interest The room where President Wilson's grandfather-conducted school -is now used as a .dining room. . . PRESIDENT MAS ' 1 , , ' BUSY, BIRTHDAY (Continued from Page One.) when the health of the President was drunlt . American aire , were played during the . lunch and the "American and British anthems, when the toast to the king and the President were drtfcik. : - 1 , The lord mayor escorted Mrs. Wil son, the President escorting the wife of the lord mayor. . Mrs, Wilson wore a violet velvet -gown ornamented with embroidered silk motifs of the same color with wings of violet. same color with -wings vt vllet 5 The . lord mayor in proposing the health ot the President, paid tribute to him as a man .and statesman... He declared his presence In Europe was the sweeping) away -ot'a -policy never before departed from on the other side of the .Atlantic He drew atten tion to the flag presented by the late Ambassador Page and referred to the friendship and sympathy the Amer ican people" gave to England even be tore America entered the - war." - ; Field Marshal and Lady Hal and Admiral and Lady Beaty sat across the table from President Wilson. - ; President Wilson divided his con- - , . , .. . . . . . . . ..-! .''- : ."; '''-;' .,- , ' -. j. S- 7J v . - . ' :'.. i -i ''j t ; . 'i 'A.r : n ' ).t 1 - 4 l ,. , (( . - -f'C ', v. r ' - . 1 " - .. - 4- 'vrfli'.l " ' , . ' I. ' ' ' . A . i n. . ' "f. H ... .i-'i'W i I ' ;) . . , V I ': '.. , v L . t" i&V.V -V.1 , r V j . 1 , ' .-. k . j :r ; '1 f.-.:" t. , -s : ' ' " - -, .; . 4 s . . cnargeo, ' ;v2i7N. In the Boys' Shop "Second Flbor Special Sale Bdys,; Overcoats I and; Knee'Suits? at 14 Off . .... .. - " ... - . .. " T , ) ' '' " ' $1.25. Blouses 79c- J , i s '.Colors ,:, Guaranteed Thi Tate Mi A- i l i;rr; i ( o 1 1 v. .a (hook tied to their :a;'l as ..t in the 1 ners :u. -i v Com and 1 A p.- the Fres center. Arthur J. Ealfour, tie fore'jn sec retary, in receiving the American cor respondents this aftenoon., said res ident Wilson's visit to EnglanJ had been not only a spectacular success but had gone to the hearts of the British people and would have Inter national results of the largest Im portance to the whole world. WILSON VIGITU H0M2 CF " HIS GRANDFATHER TODAY v Carlisle England, Dec. 28. Pres ident Wilson Is expected te , arrive Carlisle about 8:10 o'clock Sunday morning. He will be greeted by the mayor, who will Introduce him to th leading clttsens. .The presidential' arty will then go to the Crown and., litre hotel to be shown records bear ing on the associations of his grand father. Rev, Mr. Woodrow, with the , The President wilt then vUlt the house where his grandfather lived, and. will attend a brief service In the . Lowther Street Congregational church. He will then return to the hotel. He will sign the freemen's roll of the city and an. engrossed ' copy of the " resolution conferring on him the free dora of, the oity will be forwarded . later to him In a casket , ' v " " SEM TJS YOTJB - , Multogrtph Work . We Give Yon Prompt, Aomrate Rerrles OKFICH SPECIALTY CO, Charlottfl, N, C. . t Tha Method by Which" : vWo; Guarantee Permanent Service from CpermaVtte r: , Storage Batteries 1 U rimplemm lease thd Aattety to yoa T"Btboiif !h, cost, of. any food battery When the charge hi exhausted, or, re-, . pairs are needed, brinf 6e battery to - - as, , We will exchanie . it for a folly veneci paacry. . - , i - . nil,'. , ' . t t ... InfreitUett the merits of this Sopo nor Battery. i H. L MORROW . :- Distributor : Tryon." 1 Charlotte, N. C - Br6vin Co. t J '"',;. r i v " . .- '
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 29, 1918, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75