Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Dec. 18, 1904, edition 1 / Page 15
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t CHARLOTTE DAILY .OBSEIIVER, . DECEIIEEE 18, 1C01 AN ABLE PENtfSYLVAKim ouuuoat or chauscey r. black i nn rf that RriUuuii Ooteri of Edito rial Writes Who duswrMi jhni Char lea A. Dana in the FaUnuest Dys of Hm New York Sun TtiO Man Who Helped howb is. nra. aon to Redeem the State From Re publican Corruption A J Sosuhlng . Rebuke to Tncle Joe" Cannon The Horn of America's Greatest Lawrer. y - maa tht Last Master of -urocide, i , Pgasses to Best. ! .Written for The Observer. , l xorK ana lore, courtly r mourning ' V 41.- Jt . W M Ik.l. UU 4U4lMlllk.J i eon. Chauncey Forward Black'a clay . ' V lie In a casket at Brockle awaiting J the black-Dlumed chariot ana tne clow treading horses. It Is noble shell from which the life U flown. The men tal powers of the departed were of the . blaThest order. He was a greater man than the "world appraited him. He mom by his gifts, honestly. He was a . worthy son of great, sire. "8vo : yard," who wields the most elegant . - pen of all the Washington correspon dents, and who would be as famous as Motley or Bancroft If he wrote his history or American politics in a solid volume instead of in desultory chap ters for this newspaper and that con siders Jeremiah S. Black to have been ther greatest of American lawyers. This Is high praise, considering John Marshall, Webster. Calhoun, Everts. Edmund. Garland and men of their stature, but it Is not the estimate of an extravagant Judge. In his knowl edge of, and ability to apply the law, . - there ean be no doubt that Jeremiah Black was Its sovereign master. As Secretary of State and Attorney Gene . ral be rendered the Democratic party 'high, service. He was a great Jurist, 'great statesman and a great Chris tian. In middle life he went down to . Philadelphia to sit at the feet of the preacher who was moving that city. um m comauueu, tuier iieauina v-auip- bell, that the Carpenter of Nazareth was the Son of God. No man so thoroughly demolished Bob Ingersoll as , did Judge Black in their famous con troversy. His son, who is about to be laid In an adjoining grave in Prospect Hill Cemetery, was not so notably a national figure as the father. He hard ly bad the same opoprtunltles. Jere miah S. Black lived before Democracy had yet yielded its long lease of power. He was the ablest man of the Buch anan administration. Chauncey F. Black has lived In a day when of Re publican ascendency, and his Influence In sa11Hji wikm fwnmA at anil rSfin 1. early convinced himself that his fath er's political creed was right, and to the end of his life he was 65 years of age he wae a vigorous champion of Jeffersons school as opposed to Ham ilton's. He was fearless in advocating his principles, ret he was so uniform ly courteous : In his demeanor that he had almost as many admirers among his enemies as among his friends. He could be as a David to some Jonathan, whose creed he never hesitated to anathematise. He was on the ticket of the Democratic party as Lieutenant Governor with Robert E. Pattlson for Governor when the best people in the state rose up and smote the Kepubii can machine for its corruption. He afterwards headed the Democratic ticket for Governor and reduced the tremendous normal Republican ma jority in the State to 43.000, and this. too, when he was pitted against Beaver, one of the purest and ablest , men In Republican ranks. Afterwards occurred one of those inexplicable things in politics. Pattlson and Black were nominated together again, and Pattlson was elected while Black was defeated. Mr. Black has always been a leader in the Legislature and In national con ventions of his party, and as president of Democratic clubs for eleven years ne renaerea nis party in tne nation distinguished service. But his best work has been as a Journalist. Charles a. jjana was attracted to tne virne strength of Mr. Black's style and to the solid substance of bis thought, and secured him as one of the brilliant edi torial coterie that made The New - iotk sun scintillate, in nis spienma library and study, where all the walls were book shelves, first at "Willow Bridges", and afterwards at beautiful "Brockle," his father's old homestead, Mr. Black spent, the happiest days of his life. Mr. Black confined himself to political subjects. He received munifi cent compensation $5,000 a year, it is said for the matter which he sent In three and four times a week to The Sun, and he only severed his connec tion of ten years with the paper when called on by his party in the State to don his armor. I went out to "Brockle" to get from Mr. Black what proved to be his last puoiic utterance, run Deauuiui nome en the hillside, overlooking the city from the southwest, sat back in a grove of great oaks radiant in their autumn foliage. Half way to the house a magnificent Spring, the cool water of which is pumped through the residence, flows from a cleft in the limestone rock. The house Is of brick, of simple, but solid, architecture, and of the olden style. Mr. Black showed me through and about It. He gloried in the peren nial freshness of the English and Japa nese Ivy which clung to the kindly old mansion with loving touch as the fair Shunnamlte damsel cherished the old King of Israel, because he was so venerable and so good. In the ball way there stands a superb bust of the former master of the house done In Carrara marble, life else. I thought, ss I looked at the beautifully shaped head of Jeremiah S. Black, massive r and supported upon pedestal of broad, manly shoulders, with Shakespearean brow, with eyes set deep In the shadow of thick eyebrows, with mouth of per fect shape and lips of delicate carving, that there must have been great beauty along with the strength of that . face. The walls of hall and parlor traits of the ancestral Blacks and of eminent men of earlier days. The . mantlepieces were of marble and above them great gilt-framed mirrors.. From the dining room walls hung pretty de signs of curious needlework done by the women of the Black family in Revolutionary days. An old, rusting bell depended, from a beam on the rear porch. No doubt In former days It had summoned the hands from' work on the .farm far up the . slopes of Webb's HU1, on the lower reaches of which tne nne old homestead is built. But its clapper has long been silent and it doubtless remained In Its place merely as a reminder of the old times. ..-.v..,. ,x - . What Mr. Black dictated was" a re : ply to Speaker Cannon, who bad Just made a campaign speech In Tork. For . some years the city has been seeking , to secure from Congress a publto build . Ing hlch shall be of a memorial char acter In honor of the:; Continental rVmnrAM Which - u) - In th -m court house here when the British, dur ing the Revolution, held Philadelphia. Cannon had said In his speech that If "the Reoubllean candidal In tKl. t flTMiinnni niirnrt : wnn : m-sks . a : man, - was returned to Congress, he (Cannon) would use his influence to i give York the memorial building, ntl ; mating that It the Democratic candi date was elected the city could not . have the building. - This, incensed Mr. Black and he denounced "Cannon's base bribe' in - scathing' words that j glowed red-hot with Indignation Mr. rapidly up and down the length of his spacious library, his words keeping pare with his rapid strides. It was in teresting to observe his process of th KIntr, whl. li wee quick, and at the f - J ; r . t f , language was complete. He never hesitated for a word and tarely substi tuted one. He bad not progressed far with his denunciation of Cannon be fore on understood why Dana, of The Sun, was attracted to hint, Mlack and Mr. Pattlson could net agree well together, 'Black was a much abler man than - Pattlson, but by ho means equal to him as ""a practical politician." He could have gone to Congress from this formerly strong Democratic district. If he had de scended t "wire-pulling, or even If he had attempted to gather around htm a following of wire-pullers,, but be would never do it. rattison wanieo re-nomination after bis first term, but Black secured the honor In the- Stats convention, and was defeated at the polls by 43,000 majority. Hhls friends Insist, and Black agreed with them, small majority for Pennsylvania Into Democratic victory If he had come out enthusiastically for his rival. Beaver defeated Black, and at the end of bis term Pattlson was again nominated for Governor and Black again for ueuten ant Governor, although the Pattlson forces sought to prevent the tatter's nomination. Pattlson was elected and Black was defeated, and it Is asserted that this curious result was because Pattlson knifed Black. - . . When Pattlson died I sent one of The Gasette's bright young men out to Brockle to ask Mr. Black for tribute to the -ex-Governor's memory. Considering the rather strenuous rivalry that had existed between them, and the fact that the speaker felt that he had suffered unjustly from the de ceased, the following expression) or re gret, while It is brier, must yet do con sidered generous and magnanimous "This Is not a time Jn which to dis cuss x -Governor pattlson s puonc services in detail. That he sought to Improve political conditions In this State all Pennsylvania will probably agree. Where he failed, how and why, are questions for the political historian or reviewer. In the early part of his political career I was some what concerned, having been twice candidate with him on the State ticket, and his death Is to me as shocking as it was unexpected. I feel naturally very profound sympathy for the family and many personal friends. His private life was a model of all that is correct end pure." The Black family Is one of the most remarkable in the history of American politics. The ancestors of Jeremiah 8 and Chauncey F. Black were strong men who did the State some service in the earlier and critical days of the re public, and there is a young man in this city, the peer of any lawyer here, who bears the name of Jere S. Black who eschews politics and who argues before a jury like his granaratner, The oldest citizens say, as they listen to his Impassioned pleas: "Do you see how Jere Black runs his-hand through his hair. Just like the old Judge used to do." In the "Scarlet Letter" Hawthorne paints the picture of an exquisite flower that grew in the filth and mire of the Jail yard and In the gloom' of the prison walls. In the appalling corrup tlon of Pennsylvania politics, a man of the pure life and clean hands7 of Chauncey F. Black can HI be spared. HOWARD A. BANKS. Tork, Pa.. Dec. 5, 1904. . SUPREME COURT DECISIONS. (Reported by Jos. L. Seawell.) BRITTAIN vs. WESTALU Appellant From Catawba. New trial. Where a principal gives his agent money to make a purchase and the agent purchases on credit, the prlncl pal Is not bound unless he receives the goods knowing that they were pur chased on credit, or subsequently rat' ifles the agent's act Declarations of an agent are not competent to prove the agency. SMITH. Appellant, vs. BRUTON From Montgomery. Reversed. A married woman can dispose of her land only by deed, with the written assent of her husband, and by decree or Judgment of a court of competent Jurisdiction. A married woman, though a free trader, cannot, without the Joinder of her husbund, legally consent to have her title to land determined by an award of arbitrators. EARNHARDT vs. CLEMENT, Appel lant. From Rowan. No error. Defendant's exception to refusal of motion to non-suit Is deemed to have been waived If he introduces evidence and does not renew the motion at the close of all the evidence. As the Jury does not render a gen eral verdict, but responds to 'specifics Issues, It is proper to refuse Instruc tions whlcfh conclude "the plaintiff Is not entitled to recover." For the doctrine of election to apply. it Is essential that the testator should not only devise his own property, but that he should profess to devise prop erty oi tne -aevisee. Where a testator had agreed with one to bequeath her absolutely and unconditionally certain shares of bank stock In consideration of services rendered by her, but Instead be queathed the stock In trust for the beneficiary's life, she is not estopped, by receiving the dividends, from su ing on her contract to recover the slock. A person may make a valid agree ment binding himself to will his property In a certain way, but such contracts, especially when attempted to be established by parol, are regard ed with suspicion and will be sus tained only when there is the strong est evidence that they were founded on valuable consideration. In an act Ion on such a contract the trial judge is prohibited by Section' 413 of The Code from expressing an opinion , as to the weight of the evidence. I: I M If isd lit I I II IA I II II fill 111 I : II VI II III Wsl 11 ft I II llll II I'll If . lull I I i t kuhiimu wn i i.rcwKii mm (Showing new Addition by which the Capacity of Plant has been ? increased to A MHeHiNEfff MINUTE Remington Typewriter Salesrooms Encircle the Globe: NO. aHXaiOA Nsw tork Akron Altwn Add Arbor ' Ardmoro AtUnu Autlu Btlttmbr Bittl. Cmk BiDfor Blnnhncnton nirmlngbam Bloomlurtoa I)otu Botton Uuffila Butta Canon Cadar Rapid Cbarlfaton Oiarlotle Thiittanoofa Chtcafo Clndnpatl ClfTeland Colorado Sp. Columbua, 0. nallin PaTinncrt Dayton rwntaon nTr Di Molnca Detroit Dotar. nL ' Dnhuqno ntilMti rimlra FA Paoa Erl rt. Worth OalrmtAn Oraod Rapldi JiarrUburc Hartford Helena Hoiiatoo lodlanapoUa Itbara Jackionrllla , Kalamiaoo Kanaaa Cllj Klntnton Lincoln I.lttle Rork Ixa Angrlea I.ouUrllla Macoa Manob cater Mcmpbla Ml)n'auk4o MlnnVapolla Mublla MontKmrj Naahillle Newark New HTen New Orleana Newport Norfolk Oakland Ogdi'n nklahnma Oninlia Tadurah penaacola Teorle I'hlladelphla Phwnli fltlabura; Tortland 12) . Portammith lr"Tldenc Ihiehlo ttAlelt-h Remllnir nirhraond Ilooheater Bacramrnto Salt l.aka CItr Sao Antonio San Frauclaeo Han Joan SaTanncb Bcranton Seattle Sloui Clt.r South Btmd Rpokaue Hprlnflell (2) Bt. Joerph St. Loula St, Taul Sfrncuao Tacama Terro Uauto Toledo Topekn Trenton itlca Vlckaborc Waco, Tel. Washington Wattrtown Waterbury Wheeling Wllllaniaport Wllmlna-ton (2) Worcester Jiinean Toronto Montreal Halifax jlamlltoa T.ondfn fitfawa Qnehee Sf. John St. John's Vancouver Victoria J Winnipeg Mexico Monterey liuranru Ouadnlalnra Cblbuabiu Ta.niple fl. L. Potoal Saltllle Campeacbl' Merida Harana Cardenaa C'lenfuagos (Jlbara Matanaaa I'lnnr d. Rio Pto. Principe Saguft la (I rands Santa Clara Batitlago Ran Jnnn Jlarbndoea Manaos Ornro I'ara Itlo de Janeiro Sao Paulo Santiago lalcahuano 'JVa liruen ValdlTla Valparaiso EUROPE London Aberdeen Aberj-atwyth Aaliford Haubury llrlraat nirinliighatn llrailfont' Ilrlghtoii nrlstnl Leerla Leln-ater Liverpool l.lanelly lmlouderry Maldaton Muncn eater ManaOald Rorbefort Toulon Touloua ijaocl Berlin AH r."l.1'-0" :r'ia Bremen Hamilton, Bermuda I'urton-on-Trent i nmnnage Rellie Ouatemala I'annmo Shn Jone Tegucigalpa B0, AMERICA Antofagaeta Arequlpn Diienoa Aires CaHao Corneal CM lan Coneepelon Oeorprtotrn Guaraqull Inultuo Lima (nrdllf Cardigan Coventry )art mouth Dublin Dundee Knaf bourn Edinburgh Kxetor Claigow Cloueeater Oreat Yarmonth Cuernaey Ttarmw-gate Hudderefleld Mull IpNWlch Klnp'a Lynn Leamlogtou Newport norwlch Nottingham I'lymuutb I'orlamouth Preston SoarlMrnugb Sln.ffleld Shrewabnry Southampton Stewartstown Swansea Tiiuntnn Tnnbrldge Wells AValaall Woreeater York Psrla Tavonna Ileitlers Horrteaiii CnrrasKooft rinvrs La Roehelle Llhtmrio Lille Llniogra Lorlent Lyons AfnrsMllPs Mor.tpelller Nantes Nnrbonnw Nlre Nlmcj f rialuu Colognf Dortinttnd Dresden Dusseldorf Elberfeld rABOU f'rsnkfnrt Hamburg Hanover Koulgsberg Lelpaig Mannheim Magdeburg Munich Nuremberg Stettin Ktraaaburg Stuttgart St. Petersburg Moscow Astrakhan llnku Kkaterlnburg Ivanovo Jelets Kaaan Kovno Kharkov Kief llelatngfora Minsk Mnghllev MJnl Novgorod Odessa Orel Orenburf Pens Perm Koatnv oo Don Samara Sara pnl Saratov Simbirsk Smolensk Vtn VsronleJ Tllnt Warsaw Turin Bologna Flore ilea tienoa Milan Nnnlea Palermo Hum Venlca Vienna nudateat flraa Pragua Trieste Baael Geneva Lueerna Zurich Madrid Barcelona Bilbao Malaga Seville Valencia Llaben Oporto Brusssls Antwerp Charlerol Grind l.lega Amsterdam Ornnlngan Hotter dam The Hagua Copenhagen Aulhorg Aarhuus Stockholm flolhenburg Malum Kundsvall Cbtiatlanla, Bergen (h.intlansand Troudbjem Constantinople Athena Salnnlca Sofia Vsl.tta Bona Oran Tnla Addis-Ababa Djibouti llarrar Cap Torrn Bloemfontein Mulawayo Durban Eaat London Johannesburg wiinneriT RlngwIIIUmatows Tashkent Krugersdorp Tlflla Pletrrmarlisbnrg Tomsk Port Kllsabetb trkntek Host Kei" Shanghai Caaloa Fooehovrv Hankow Tien Tain Pakln Klao Chau Tnklo yokobata- Kaba Manila Is, Las Palmes Canary AFRICA Alexandria Cairo Alglors Pretoria ASIA Smyrna Beirut Calcutta Allahabad Ilnmhay Madras Colombo Simla Rangoon Slngapora Penang Roerabaya Batavla Samarang CberllioB 1'alembang Banka Sa Igon iialphong Blngmi Vlaillv C Mell. mi.. Wducy Newcval'i Adaliilde Brlalmkj Perth Hobart Dnnedln Cbrlstchnrea Wellington AuckUnd Napier Invercarglll Oomaru Wangaaul Itonolnlu Aid ur.:3oa Contemplate for Thirty Seconds the Work of Thirty Years i REMINGTON ' TYPEWRITER COMPANY TROXLER vs. BUIliDINO CO., Ap pellant. From Alamance. Affirmed. If the court can see from the facts alleg-ed that more than one cause of action Is stated, it may submit such Issues as are. raised by the . pleadings, as to causes alter fd. In sn action to compel re-conveyance of property. alleged to have been conveyed by plaintiff through misrep resentation ss to the existence of a corporation which would erect a bulldlnr on the property conveyed, and thereby enhance the value of plaintiff's adjoining- property, it Is competent. In support , of plaintiff's allegation of fraud, to Introduce evi dence of fraud In procuring the char ter of the corporation, the purpose of such evidence not being to invalidate the charter..-, Boulty will cancel a deed procured by the grantee's fraudulent represen tation to erect s, building- on the land, and thus enhance the value of , the grantor's adjoining' property, where ft appeared that such representation was the consideration moving- the grantor to make the deed, sod that the gran toe never Intended to comply with the' promise to ; erect the . building. - In such esse, , the judgment should ' merely direct a re-conveyance of the property on repayment by the grantor of s. part of. the; .purchase pries re ceived, less damages assessed by ths jury, sn should not .direct a sals' of ths import?. '.:- Kf" '-'-IL'ei ! a, u hailwat. troducing evidence and not renewing the motion at the close of all the evi dence. In an action ugalnut a irrllroad company for damages for alleged neg ligence of defendant in killing plaint iffs intestate by backing a train on him- In an Incorporated town, evi dence is admlBlljl" to show that greater care must be exercised while ; moving ca'i-H in a Urge town th.in In , a small one. ? Chapter 56, Private Acts 1S97, ten- ders void an Implied contract by u j railroad conductor to assume all ilfks To I'.stablUli a Soldier's Death. Atlanta Constitution. "It's a grewsome case he's on." Fa Id Assistant Manager Oweim. at the Pied mont an he initialed i short, dumpy, mooth-fai cd m.in. "He's n of the number who m:ik a living by uneiirth Ing aecretf. "I'p In Vermont there In a lawsuit on now In which ii fortune is invol ved. Hefore the civil war a farmer near Montpeller hud two sons, us the atory cornea to me from Mr. Tanner, that's his name" Mr. Owens contin ued as he glanced at the register, "and both were In tho t'nlon army. Both ihciui.i 10 mo company a rule imu a had (ikmAl(,R whetl lhey dropped clvil-flag-man need not be stationed on the han apparel for uniform. The end of front car or a backing train, when a the war brought one of the sons home, train is being made up or shifted In j The other lost hi life while pushing the yard. (Johnson's army back Into Atlanta and Refusal to Instruct the Jury that a : was, when the Union dead were gath- railroad company wu not guilty of i ered in after the war. given a resting negligence as to Its conductor in fall Ing o station a flagman on the front car 'Of a backing train, which ran over and killed the conductor, was not error; and it was proper in such cks to submit to the Jury the question place In the National Cemetery at Marietta. The old man died a dozen years ago, and within a short time the son who followed Thomas. Sherman an others Into Atlanta went to Ms last rest. ' "When the surviving son died the if negligent, whether, notwithstanding ; t. thi -T t AY" , ' , . ted in a lawsuit, the helra of the sol- coniributory negligence, ; wh fa diSpUtlng the fndMl negligence was the i rght8 of the BoIdlei. who as rB(lng rt VaMiggSkin-' taUOO t-'L I II LvD lrLl O -iCaill LAS3ITKW vs. ,S r. Appellant TVom r'Vaks.;. No error. exception to refusal of motion to fWn-fult In wsivel by defendant's In- TlUJEaiY. vs. UAND.-From Nash. Three appeals. Specific performance of a contract for tbe sale of land by one who owns a part thereof can be enforced only us to the interest of such part owner, and ifiB Interests of other owners for whom, he may have been authorized to contract. In such; case, the vendee, while he cannot be made to accept a deed for only s portion of the land, may com pel the vendor to convey his portion. But whers It appeared that one owning a,, part of land contracted, for the sals of bis interest only on condi tion of a sale by the other owners, specific performance will not be en forced. . Specific performance rests In the discretion of the court, and will not bs denied by reason of mere technical ities, but will be granted with a view to effectuate ths Intent of the parties. ' Specific; performance ..cannot be had against an Infant though an infant's contract for. the sals of land may be enforced, If ratified after his majority. A married woman's land omn be con veyed under an . executory contract only byacompty ln with, the provisions of Section MM of The Code,, which provides for due proof an acknowl edgments to husband and' wife and privy examination of wlfs.v etc. ? TOR A 4 yiURSrSTENf , COUGH,' Plso's Cure for ConsurtiDtlon is an effectual rem. I My. , . , . .... ; . , , . under the shadows of the Kennesaw. In the course of the litigation it be came necessary for the defendants to show that the soldier who gave his life to help Sherman Into Atlanta is really dead. It must be shown be yond all ooubt that the form resting In the grave at. Marietta Is the remains of the man' who once lived in Vermont, and to do that there Is a possibility that the grave made forty years ago may have to be opened. As I under stand, the soldier ressttna; In the ceme tery at Marietta-was slightly deformed in one hand, and It Is that deforma tion which, if the grave must be open ed, will establish to the satisfaction of tbe court of the Green Mountain State the rights of his direct descendants to their part of the estate." DON'T LOOK HACK. Are' Your Kidneys Well?; . Brlght's. Disease, Dlabetls, Rheuma. tlsm, Oout Gravel, Dropsy, Inflamma tion of the Bladder, Bad Blood and Nervous Troubles caused by Sick Kli neys.,, .,,.;V ' ... .r.l R. H. 'Jordan etvCo., the well-known Druggists of this city, know by experi ence that BINDIPO will cure all forms of Kidney and Nervous Troubles, and l)enver Post. In climbing up the trail of life, though truii bleu may emliai rass you, Though cluiids of (llHuppoliitment may ol);uic your moral skies, Tliough 1 horns lie hidden In the path to wound your feet and harass you. And hostile winds may lUw retarding .. ' dust Into your eyes. Keep plodding on with steady nerve; If you should for a moment stray, get baek onto the track; Keep praying that the coming day may hrlng you Mutiny skies again. Ifour eyes tlx on tho beacon ligh and don't look back. The bfa MJ i way up yonder gleams, though lo els .it times may urtull It. The litht of hope is shining on the sum mit of success. Though It may sometime vsmish from yooi slt;til, you may be certain it. Again will flash its cheery lays to ban isn your distress. The gaunt wolves of adversity from glnony lairs may howl at you. And .linking fears your bosom may most mercilessly rack. The grim Mends of discouragement from darkened nooks may scowl at you, But hold :t grip upon your nerve, and don't look back. When rest the darkest clouds of life the cheery -"in will shine again. The fieriest storm will .spend its force and leave a smiling sky; Around the wloiet-fettered oak the flow ering vines will twine ugain. The longest lane of woe will havi a . turning bj and by. If you should slip and lose some ground, strive hard to gain your place again, B not appalled when obstacles confront you on the track; If wearied, stop and blow a bit. then strike the same old pace again. And set your teeth, and bulge ahead, and don't look back. THE GOLDEN LEGACY. Lippincolt's. My mother has no gold to share. Nor land nor herd nor merchandise. My brother has her silken hair. My sister has her azure eyes!) To m she left no comeliness That to tho form or face belong. But oh, one tift I do possess , The blessed heritage of song. Long, long ago, in cradle days. ,; Her stweet voice would my heart beguile. When I could nothing do but gaze Into the heaven of hor smile. ' . , 1 learned the songs In later years.. Oh, memory, thy luto, and tears ; Must meet and mingle- evermore. . will" ruaVantfOi' l$lr ,n cases.--. ,. 'Twas 'Hush.' ray babe" as fades the .a. a,, .'a..-...' ii a , a .. ! v IIBIU , -ni;yuB auoTtv.io iry,u-'t ineir . T Wr W softlv. sweetlv croon- . Iilskt ?lt '-costs' yotf nothing if tfc: don't . Then "Afton Water," ''StUly Night" v J n . jji r .. Phe sang them with such tender art-- Sent by real? to any-address, prepaid.!, Th ar"t that only mothers know- ' on fficeipt.of SO ."cents. ' t Boxes $2.50,1 -And ti.nl thn tunes errnm.l my heart, uuuer a positive g-uarantee. I.lso it bud hroi In v J g-"J""" "Ll"" LIUlllllLiaWBfMBisggSBM The Higis Trcatmcr; Under this treatment lh , 'JiijKi is cured by natural ogeuie s A medicines are used. The "tj.". treatment embraces everythius - J is curative; nothing that . Unv v;vt. ; or destroys vitality. ' ' ' , Hundreds of sick people hava : restored to health by this mertt e . Many of them had been pronounc ed "Incurable," but, nevertheless they are now well. If yon sre In terested In the cure of . disease.' write me for free literature which explains my method. I .will - also send numerous testimonials from well-known people whom I have cured. Do not postpone the mat teryou may forget it. Write, to day, --.i .tff.y andrew c. Bjaas;-'?-.'.-218 East Washington Street,- Grsensboroi, N.; C -' UBJES AXeL HEADACHES. The perfect remedy for Colds, Indlgestten, I Periodic Fains . Brain Fag, eto. Prereaie TratS 1 efigt ftTtTTfn sua end Bios Hsaaaeaa. flraoasHtaarvaa. I a a w -m w m m- m it a aanuivaa. - . - . inaiinnnaws. Rich arid. Attractive Furniture fttfhoose.fom,, from r ttyou fcan'make your I " icxit like a palace, n T v LUBIN FURNITU3 - r i i-'t -::'"!' 'r'--v'v- " " - '"' " ' '' Every woman's, pride Is to have her home furnlnhsd v U isfy this desire.'in both Quality and price. If every tx?h v where she can b3t Fur- 'I
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Dec. 18, 1904, edition 1
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