Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Feb. 5, 1906, edition 1 / Page 2
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I fi' "rT -i "The Hair to the Hoorah. announc- t, as an American comedy by Paul Armstrong, will have ltanrat produc tion here at , the Academy of MubIc t-n;rht. The . new . play, comes from ihe Hudson Theatre, New-York,' where it had longhand successful season, i x tendintf . from early. Lent until the jose pedals blew away In mid-July, and i later ; brilliant , engagement of four weeks at the Hollis tureet The mre, boston, and, the Illinois Theatre, Chtcage-.- , j j .. ' " ''"' v- .The title which"" ho A 'hit Of mys- tery for the uninitiated . la explained I in the-'fact that . the - "Hoorah" la an t immensely . rich gold mine and " the '"Heir" a male infant.. Around the in v. fanW husband, a wife, a motner-ln-; law,: a Japanee valeVeome miners, a. V mnn and w i's are still at odds, a. litiy'is born which la toasted by the miners as ''The Heir to the Hoo rah." Of course the - baby, bring about a reconciliation on its christen? Ing day when the friend of the father present. It with "a cradle, one piece carved from the trunk or a redwood tree, by . hands that . Deed not ; have toned." f . - v The scene of the christening brings ft . 'couple of other little, romances to a happy issue also.:! The rich widow toe stows , her heart, her hand - and her rnlneon . a.' Harvard man who went West to recoup.' as ,. h. mine" foreman, the: fortunes : which ' had been broken tn that famous little crooked, street in New Tork,,"aton end of which is a graveyard ana at tne; other the river." AJ so the chrlelenlnr sees Bud Young? reconciled tohls fate ' the fhvteee ol th maiden, aunt who 'has LIFE AT JACKCOK SrilttGS NATCKK ., DISPENSES OZONE V A if -"ft 1 1 ' -et 4''"' if 1 , w?vvy fifty if i 4 vr. A r A K(-irt In tVntral , North Carolina, t iHiliRhtfully JxcatHl, Wliioh is Be f romlng I'opHlar -i-jie l!ea!th-Gir-.' ins; Vualiths of the Water m : Foatnro Tliat Attract Many VM 'ai. tors' ' Silver f , Medal ' Won at - tit, IjohU ,Kipoitioi--SIany Improve ' meots " for tlie : Comfort and Ooo A Yfnlenre of Gumts Wow! Under Way, To the Editor of The .Observers 1' ' A Tte rr.c. 1 1 Jane I'ej ton, In "Tlie Heir to the Hoorah.1 i '-4ewptin!her, a widow and a maiden t been the nightmare of his dreams un , aunt, Mr. Armstrong is said to have Mil he meets the lady and finds her , , woven 'a very merry story. J a pretty young girl Just escaped from - Joe Xacy, a rough diamond of a man : 'the genius tutelary" of Wellesley. ; .and part owner of the Hoorah mine, j Kirke LaShelle, who has given to the . has Just married an Eastern society stage so many good American plays , girt named Geraldine Kent. The mar-'in adequate investiture and with sjn- 4 rlage is one of convenience and hasigularly happy cast, made the produe heen .rranged toy a scheming mother-itlon of the "Heir to the Hoorah", Jut In-law who has expweted a wedding j a few weeks before his untimely death. V settlement of I1W.0W. This kindly He chose Guy Bates Post, who will N disposed dame by her continual crltl- j be remembered hest as Steve In "The isms of the miner s crudities of - speech and manner, and by her at tempted Intrigue between her daugh ter and a former Eastern sweetheart, has succeeded in separating the man and the girl. So Joe leaves the new palace in the little mining town In charge of his wife and mother-in-law and starts off for Europe, Ho returns to bear some etories of his wife and the old sweetheart, which, to his t red it, he does not believe. But while Virginian," to create the leading role. Joe Lack, and completed the remain ing characterisation with more than his usual happy faculty of getting the actor to fit the part. The cast also includes Jane Peyton, Ernest Lam son, I,oulKe Rutter, Colm , Campbell, Ben .8. Hlgglns, Nora O'Brien, Wil fred. Lucas, Wright Kramer, Florence Coventry, Biinsley 8haw, Casslus Qutnby and other well know for past enective stage work. V ' I " 1 - . . y.. r. Ait. ,,, I ,l r . ' !' ... . : -V ' T" ... . . But, us time rolled on. the virtue of the water waa .known to the State generally, and now, after nearly one hundred year of use. it s still doing business at the same old atand. In the same a-ood old way curing tho same old diseases, and a number of the new ones, too, that were, unknown when the spring first "opened for business." The analysis, as given by the depart ment at - Raleigh.-whows- potash, soda. (sulphate, chlorate and r carbonate) lime, magnesia, silica and iron, and Is said by physician to be one of the .best all-around prescription tor be round. The sliver medal ror general excellency, offeredr by th fit. Louis Exposition, was awarded to this water, which mean a great deal, and inci dentally show what' .wisdom that "committee on water" exercised. The season, is Just getting well under way.. there being a number of visitors here, com I ti from the four, hoints of the compass, and others, from every where, writing for terms, or advising when to expect them, -l . .' - There are the usuaj form of amuse ment, golf, tennis, croquet, riding, driving;, flshlnr. hunting, etc.. etc. THE HOTEL 'MAJfAQEMBNT. , The management of the . hotel leave nothing to e deal red, Mf. Robert Ir-. vln. formerly or the ', uuuiora, at Oreensboro. I doing; all that mortal man can do for the comfort And plea-, uro if his guests, and. best of an. suc ceeding. HI excellent wife 1 Indeed his helpmeet, doing ber. part-: well in entertaining. , those , who come, v and msking them reel at home. , Mrs. Adam", the housekeeper, and Mr. Kankln. the steward; - know and perform their dutle In such an fxcel lent manner that even the moat criti cal can And nn cause to eomolain. The j . - - - - n lit rtvn'i niu-i, wiirre ine mornfln. 'nnrmnu uiu ruumv. DrHrr vtfciuiK ' v-: j?iny'A. Clave of Passion" will be the w!t of this and forelim countrlo flceH. halls, and. Sn fact the- entire ' , attractioti. The story f the play Is , congregate. Then (the interior of (house, I neat end clean, and the din . most mertu.g as it depict diplo-i military prison at Foi-t Vever. Va.. t Ina- room -the lsce where most Deo , ,..-mv w .i ini.,BM,. , i carries Hti ntmny to tne nome of inora' tue klcK,' I moflet of general excel . one through sn attempt on the honor Clairmonte, the fairest maid who ever , lency. , The food t,' t ay h least, st .rw ,r'r. 4urin ,M! embassy I hired a man on to hi ruination, i flrst-class, .the waiter pnllte, attentive .'.i.,thiice to the ceiebraied Lotus. - (and competent, ao that it 1 delight f,(w -r-r;- -r- - , i to answer tne can -of tne oeu "inre rent was there all Hrhfc mnA w had time day." ', U - If there be a man, woman or child In this land , to-day desirous of long life and good health, let them come to "vn cpnngs, ioore county. Htat of North Carolina, ' - i'. v , J- t It I well to be explicit, a 'to direc tions, else the seeker might run afoul of" seme other Jackson , Snrinar. Where anything but health and life are hand ed out. Bat if he or she will come here, arm this pure water, breath this pure air, land eat this excellent And ex cellently; prepared food, a-ood health -endlong life wilt, most certainly, he i;ne-B. uaiten altogether there la not a spot 'within the confine of thl or any other State, where nature ha been more lavish of her gift. Trues, there are' , many naturally beauUfuf spot in thi hraad land of ours, and many other where the hand of man, siistalhed and strengthened bv a bund ant means, fcnd uided by an artistic, skillful hand: has done much to aid the work of natureVbut here the han diwork of Ood I seen lit a beauty Im possible to. describe, yet a beauty that makes an. impression one. never for get. Life there is; yea, abundant life1, In flower and shrub and tree, life that pulsate and throb with the spirit of Him who cave them, life, and" yet amidst all thi bustle and throb of na ture, there is to be found a eweet rest; and peace no other pot can give. :-. ' . Situated among the and hills or the j nnuuie section oi me buu, i is too 'low down" for the rigor f the wm-i ter further west, and too "high up" for the extreme heat and humidity of the. summer, further east.v . v . OZONE FROM THEJ PINES. While tt la a fact, and a ad one! that the bulk" of the timber . throusrh thi section ha been cut, the owners of thl prqperty were sufficiently wise to leave number, of these long leaf i pines to make the surroundings at tractive, and furnish that osone so I necessary to good health and happi I ness. Here and there throughout the j entire property ojf eight hundred acre are numerous 0ne old pines, boxed for turpentine, It 1 true, but still tall and straight and graceful, bending back i and forth to every breeze, and elnglna i the soft, sweet" songs of long ago, Here and ythero, too. are xroyjiiLOf the ; beautiful youngster of the same fam ; 4ly, not, so tall nor i so strong- a their parents, but worthy eons of noble i sires, being moulded by nature into the same graceful form, learning: to Sing the same sweet songs, but, let us hope, exempt from the "boxer's" ruthless hand. How soft and sweet this at mosphere', ' how v invigorating; and full of -life and health. One has but to stand on these sand-covered, - tree covered hill, and draw into hi lutlg thl pure air, to feel equal to any task, mental, physical, age, and spiritual too, for it doe make one a better man, In every respect, via the home of Mr. McKenile, of Maxton, former editor or The Scottish Chief, there is the regis ter of the old Presbyterian church at Jackson Springs, established in 1817. Thl register wae kept by the Rev, Hugh McLaurln, former pastor of the church, and In kddltion to the general record of the shurch. Incidents and happening of the neighborhood , were given, together with certain historical facts. . j The one fact of greatest Interest to this generation is the fact recorded there that thi spring; wa discovered In the year 1812, about the time we had our second difficulty with old Eng land. , , The reputation of the epring for sev eral year we purely local, the inhab Hants of this immediate section using; It largely to the exclusion of drugs. VIRTUE OF. THE WATER. -.made by our own proccc3 f.om t"ct J 1 ;3 . -knalt. Non-Intoxlctlrj, pdatilla sr.i r' vuuucnui iuuic properties. ;'i'vt assistant to nature, - '.ful' fl V "-may b defended upon in" convalescence.'-: It Is ' edually beneficial for tho aged," ybune or mlddle- v", aged,' 'Taken during colds orgrippo if la very rerthenliig,'.. It rnakes you feel like life is i . i OH BALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS FEHR'S MALT TONIC PEPT; loclsville, Kyi Slave of rasKloq." with game Ash, and here the Nirorods of the land can find the port they like best,; -, " In an article of the length accept able to- both editor and reader it i Impossible-to give an adequate descrip tion ,of a place like this, even if this pen was in the hand of a practiced newspaper writer,- which 1 not "the case,, and thl lead me- to ay that this article is not written for pay,, nor primarily, a an advertisement Tor the spring,, but solely that people in and out of this State, who now knownoth Ing iof ' thi reort. may know ome thlno; of 4t virtues and attractions, from On who has tried both. , . : The water Is not a cure-all. nor do It -friends claim it a auch. - - It I, however,. invaluable as a remedy for diseases of the v liver and kidney. rheumatism, dyspepsia and such trou bles. it t. specially fine backed bv this Invigorating atmosphere and de lightful climate, for men and women In a "run1 down"' condition. ' -. Heretofore. tt has been known a a summer : resort,, there being . large crowds here throughout the warm sea son, butits fame Is finding its way in to the old sections of the north, and her people are ehrewd enough to know a good thing When they eee it. jacK dn Springs is only 11 miles by rail and 7 by private, 'conveyance from that noted winter - resort of the Tufts, Plnehuret, and 'partle are constantly being- formed at each place to aoend the aay,,Of 'veral day -visiting friend. at th othsr. -A cordial welcome awaits all who come, except those suffering front con sumption, it being deemed wise by the management- net to receive Come,-drink this water, breathe thl alr. eat to food and ret ' Jackson Springs, Feb. 2. I. "iZ . BOOK NOTICKS. . ,, . vTh Blue Vockade, a story of South ern Confederacy, by Flora McDonald WHllam: Umo, cloth, hana"om iet-ter-pre -attd- binding; Neal Publish ing Company. New York; $1.60. , The time of Christmas before the war. The place 1 Belmont, a coun try place near ''Winchester. Several r nrenarlng for bed. eating- eweetmeat and discussing the young men , members of the house party. Among; the guests there Ib a Northern man whose trl-colored cock ade has roused the indignation of Pauline Rhett, a f?lrl from South Car olina. She y she cannoe see why her friend's brother had to bring that Yankee home with him! "Mr. Appleton is no Yankee, Pauline," returns her friend Belle, in reproof; "he 1 a Philadelphlan," "I'd like to know the difference!" cries Pauline curtly. - And two year later, when Belle 1 complaining about Pauline' being engooredf to a Yankee Pauline say calmly, Mr. Appleton to no Yankee, Belle, He Is a Philadelphia" Though Pauline is engaged to the Philadelphlan. she is snot sure her heart 1 with him, for Charley Holmes lovea her to, and he wears a blue cockade. The war goea on, however, a if h were quite certain, a way war nave, and Holme rights away bravely, trying to forget or, to .get i fctiiaA. h itoem't care which. Belle Harvey and Carrie ilason, Pauline's cousin, et arrestea wnne xrymg iw cross the Federal line. nd have ex citement' and adventure and . soldier ing, to fhelr hearts' content. Paul ine stavs at home and wonder why he ton't happy and prevails upon her parent to consent to ner marriage to the Philadelphlan. Then home comes, the Confederate soldier, not having; succeeded, in gen Ing killed nor, forgetting, and a sudden Jealous moment shows the spoiled and capri cious girl where Jier heart Is nest ling .under the blue cockade. The story Is interesting ffecause not crowded with historical figures. nor .made wooden by the thrusting in of historical matter.' It Is told for the sake of the group of lovers, not to add glory to vthe name of the breat publlo men,: of the day. It is a love-story, and a a. love-story it hold the atentlon.p-'i ;: ! . v" prosaic dally living of average ": men and women. This 1 not the novel at its best nor the novel in ita . es sence, The slow development of Char aeter under the etress of ordinary Irv ing, with one'e kind that the,' es sence of the' English novel and that is ' the sort 1 of "plain - tale in plain prose" Mra ' , Harris has' r wrlten jn "Among the. Meadow." f'. The eight or nine Kentucky people whose development Mr. Harris ha traced aire . in no way remarkable. either In the thing they do or In the thing they desire to do. - They ve lives of more or less -dallyefSclency, transcending their Jdeas or. sinking below t them a w all do, growing slowly to broader aceptanee of the fixed and Teal. That Is all there is to It, but the story has the charm in herent uv the plan, the homely. - In her calm,' steady seeing In her fideli ty to. the little commonplaces that make up life as tne sands make up the seashore; In the modesty and can dor of her style, in the dlrectiness and slow haste of -her narration;. Mr. Harris is very1 like Jane Austin the Beloved. This is not psychology, not sociology; - it la unornamented story telling, No , higher' praise can be written of this hit of photography, To read the tory I to walk in the daisied meadow when the burden of the day I past and the far stlllne is intensified by the lowing of cattle or tne tinkle" of sheep-bell. , G tcrj to i that . Seme of tho L ,ney N. C. jTt- : t it: L -: - . - . H iv,l 1.011 . awk- : e) i - : . i hivo htr !v r:nt cut. cr no;,' making are r 3 fell; . : I lew City Lhtirr Plr.t, . Concord N. C. Yadkin Dcvclccnt Co. Whit- YlCCa:. ctt I! Trrr-n - rn Phnt,' - Albemarle N. C' Water Wc:h3 Pusirinrr Phnt. .Charlotte N.C. '-Pembroke Pl;nL- Mill, Pern-; ."broke, N. C. . Vermont Mill. Ec-cmerCityN, C. 'City Lirrhtinff Plant. Dallas. N. C. Barker Chcmi--; cal Co. Ingles, Fla. - City Plant, Davidson, N.,C -, Henderson Cotton Mill. Henderson. N. C. ."Irene, ' 1 , miu, uan:ney,,. u. JeaK, vvaiuj; j.icKae, Rock.'. . i , v:, Jngham, N. C. -Marion M'f 'g Co.' Marion, S. C, and -X ' ; , omers, ana otners, ana omers: , :; , : : -. - . ;: s ; v t-'We name some of the very recent installations for v " ' : 'which we, haye made the switch-boards, Ve not -' 1 only make switch-boards for our, own contracts ' -it- - ' 11 TSL.11 -1- 1.- ,!.bnt for others as well ";; Full line electric supplie3 r"- t &ktA'hmp& stock. ?vai '"?- i - .: tmib'Du-a:: torjpiwvs conpnriY r.-V ElectricaiContractors CharlottQ N; C I RALEIGH OOLVMBIA NASHVILLE Chiefly from Castle of Spaltt, by Sophia Chandler, illustrated by H. E. Nelson; Neale Publishing Company, New York Price not stated.-. This is a sort of potpourri, a Jtig of all sorta ' It Is punctuated with frequent rows of ; period-marks and dashes to indicate long leaps In the fhought and is quite in the feminine style. The mechanical appearence of the book .ls more- than worthy of Its matter, and the pictures are will done. There, isn't much, to it. .,. no more .our papers, trouble ubout attending t The company. . Under the personal s. He also showed me a'eupervtoion of Mr. Irvln, i making a His Own light Plant. " Milwaukee Wisconsin. 'rJSiJVr','t "n4 MPri pHerif number :-,ot .-Internar Improvement Hotel -and save. m. a ii ,f " u" mmna or electric ngni,; -.-; ' anc. In hotel , '.VgUtrnA fit eh StMnll lnl 0... f Ut I find It very handv i cetiMie 1 losl no time tn taking tne tip, idea fm frJnd ofmlne It f i "n,? Why, of coue It honest, i vTSSai UoX L "&VXf A.! W the light he can use "and m. ul ,t ' u Instead of electric light' water arrangement, and 1n ,fac I donhTv to make us. ' 'imply P""1" b on theferythlng necewary to m.k. the tel. like this of wturHe Jut ii, snd ot ' 1 ,n P the modern and flrt-cl. i U ;,! I S h..mli, m use. -r " . . t by steam throughout, and In ad fTV "feZTi:.'. ..r JiwMi if the apparatu isn't good, why wis f swrr-'fmVhr" a right use hi own.-If X M. An. ,: 11.1 Z:,.. i.i"lLT.i my own soap . dish Instead 'Of , w make AV had some paper to look evsr and I moved near the aJrehaft, I eap 4e , better thaa that he sold,- end Went to his satchel and took out an- electria bulb. I cany thl for lust such orra- By rishia I ourht to chare the hotel for the use of my device." , 1,1 1 ... in 'vAt,;T,l:a:: Dr. Preston 'W. Search.' of 'Cin cinnati. Ohio, who Aattvrit h hA. elon ae hls, h light here in the , 1 Adf.m? f J t uest who Just m in to sleep and fil?1 College i v thl evenin at out again the 'first thing, la the 7: v,vv. "w tne atner linar. but amtuoinuk x,!, a. f ,.'., - , t .uinin;, j (.r tnan ai-rand(powr lamp, and Old maid would be scarce and hard mi l carry a J-fande power light with j - " to mid, . T: "w VtMuia they be made to e. hotel heated addition mdst of the room have open fireplace so tnar ir nesirea ina xuesta ean nave delightful lightweod fires." The hotel W OUUl gpuD in ivp m iui)iiij( mu, and from It balconies a beautiful view Of, the surrounding country can be)had. At tne root or mis nui, 4ui in rroni or the hotel, t. the. epring, basy atl, the time, forcing it way up through the solid rock. Winding around the hill U one bt the most beautiful little; streams to be found anywhere, it clear epark Ttner water rushing along over the sand and the white pebbles with the rapid ity ht, noise of a mountain, brook, t ' v MANY IMPROVEMENTS. - The company I building a splendid dam In the rear of th hotel and when thl i completed and th water turned1 on, a lake covering some forty acre ' Among the Meadows, by France Allen Harris, lime, 'cloth, tastefully decorated ; Neale Publishing Compa ny, New York: $1.8(1. To put aside all, th stories of high tragedy and romance and to take up a plain narrative of every-day people la a rare pleasure, a felicity experi enced to seldom that It appeals to the imagination as a luxury. The last thing t the present-day '. story-teller does I to report life as it I lived by the general run of humanity. He seek out the extravogant, the gigan tic; he manipulate sword and war ship and buried treasure, Crimea and terror and- danger; anything nut the Word Studies,; by Edwin S. Sheppe, superintendent of schools, Enfield, N. C; B. F. . Johnson Publishing Com pany, Richmond. ' Thl is a valuable hook for ad vanced work In schools. It is well able fo stand on Its merits before the committee for the ; selection of books for the publics echcols, without consid eration of the fact that it is put out by Southern " publishers and writen by a North Carolinian. , j ,( ,? . V The House of a thousand can dles is a cracking good novel by Meredith Nicholson, published by the Bobs-Merrill Company, and to be had at Houston A Dixon's for $1.50. The pictures are by Christy and the rest qf the bok; not speaking of the text, comport. with, them It is the tory of the will of on ec centric - grandfather, whereby he leaves to the hero a modest fortune with two proviso: he 1 to live so berly one twelvemonth on "the estate and la not ' to mary . a certain girl. The executor is a scoundrel and an ancient enemy of the hero'a More over, the old gentleman has been re nuted to be. worth many . times ' the assets ; found by tbje - executor. He ) ha been a crank about architecture, so that the house in question - had been built with all sorts of tunnels and secret passages and the belief Of the executor and the denizen of the countryside was that millions . were In It.. The hero was snblected to "re peated attempts on his life. At vari-" ous times he surprised men at sound ing the; walls and " pillaging the li brary. . He was distrustful of the ser vant. So one adventure follows fast upon the heel of another. Meantime, he meets the heroine in the woods he who Is Xorblden him in marriage falls dead in love wttb her. become wildly jealous of , the cAmjwtwi, uu iiiuv . uv9F f. '.-.,. eevri situation which augment - hi jeal ousy. He follows her on Christmas Eve -'to Cincinnati!, thus forfeiting nia inneritance. He wilt not. howev er, yield to the scheme of hi rival tamely. He and an old time and an other newly made, friend, v together witn tne am diruous servant, defy the law and undertake to "resist an attack on the house. His old friend ' has found a secret chamebr in a tunnel and In It a vast value in notes a- gainst the executor. -The battle la a lively one really of breathless Inter est ana is at the point of tragedy wnen tne granaratner. wno had been merely feigning death, reappear to view, nana in nand with the heroine And they are happy,' etc., seeing their enemies fallen ana ; their , loves con ummated, t . It 1 a most Improbable mixture of realism and romance, but on doe not think of technicalities In the ab sorbing rush - of -th narrative, 1 1 It auest its interest rnan which there i nqtning o it, r i ? PRACTICAL BUSINESS CCLLEGEf 1 Incorporated $SO0,O0.00. Estab. II-Teora. Stroni- ns men.-.'No vacation. JSnter anjr'.time JW also teach BT MAIL.' '-" .wi.ivii, -.-.j. ..uoiuo. hivuj ovnuuituutirs zreev , to . tnos n wno take - Book-keeping or. Short-, , hand, w will give scholarships free ' in .Penmanship, - Mathematic. Busl... ' ne Spelling. Business Letter Wnt.V5 ina,-- t-unctuation, ete.,u the - literary.' branches that will earn, fe . you ,'-' 4 for tuition tn bank until course is completed and position Is secured or give notes and pay out of salary.' In thoroughness and reputation IX P B. C. Is to other business college what Harvard and. Tale are to academies. CAPITAL' STOCKi!. Not the cheapest, but preeminently the "BEST. '? Thu m k largest, oldest and beet Equipped f schools;' In. North5 Carolina , peelUya, provable TACT, ', l.OPft , former student:' holding' poaldong in North CoroUno. ' posttions' guaranteed,; backed by written' coa ? . tract) Shorthand, Book-keeping. TjpewrlUng and BnglUh,- taught1 .WfftoVAdW KIN G ' S BUSINESS C O IX E G B ' Charlotte, N. C, er Kalelgh, U,C. . . , w 't , i 'r P A HIGH-GRADE COLLEGE FOR YOUNG LABXttS. Modem In all' respects; $360,000' college plant;"; fire-proof huUd-' . Ing; .ideal suburban location; park ot 20 acre offer alt the Allure-'-, menu of a free, open-air. life in this, delightful climate free from I noise, dust and smoke; overlooking beautiful - Charlotte and eur- -rounding country. Physical culture and out-door games.' Car line , -connections. .University specialists and experienced, teacher at th v head of all department. Limited to 100. Boarding Students..' , Betablished reputation for thorough work and good health- . . r nnuBomeiy juuBiratea oaiaiogue ana iuu mrormatlon address TIIE iCllflRLOTTESOPPLY; COLIPAllV ' WI 'ARB SOUTHERN AGENTS FOR TINNED ' ' WIRE. 1 GERMAN HKDDLES AND HEDDLE Feskett BUhop Steam, Trap Carried In Stock; ale Card Clothing and f CtHAlOATTnC 'Vfc. V"?' BIRMINGHAM "..I TWm0 A RAnrejL,'-:,''' SPARTANBTjRQ Ferrer. in "A' high-grade College for Women, equipped with every modem infe. r fV:v.'-BRIDGES, D. D President.' .pVrSJhli to.tombtncd ililbe. formed, Where - boating, and f , I'ht, In ur-f Ji, Jordan A Co, , , i content This lake will also he stocked J : V . " " : : V ;vfiv'i! H-mV f, ; ' i- 'i ' - - -? V; 11' - ' -' lAJSURAPJCE FOR T..- ; Why " not ' Insure yourself against ;( those ; dreadful Sick .' and .' Nerrons V,; unbearable f 'Vj , V7 ' , r: ' C Then thre:.eom t every woman lAMPf1! "';,"'r-i Mmt wh?n h, Inrltfc,- " Otit is To- pleasure to herself or to - these around her, ' s SCOTT'S NURnLmGmEnrjn Qatckty reUeve such- a condition taking away all ptn and re store the nerves to their normal balance, . - 1 1V 1 60 Cents. ' Free sample by mall on reauest. - JNO. M. SCOTT & CO., Chariciio, . C 'Wholesale Agents. ' A P O LICY That covers aU cliseasei (No" Exception) and" also prth ; ' V ; "uw nuoi ouub aujit oiugicttt opera uuiia anas, pays ur eralmdeinnitr for permanent disabilityr Issued bytH-V-T r'v ' MARYLAND CASTJALTY. COMPANY.. . ,, ', j-. '",', '.I ' Jr' ,frSOirniERN STATES TRUST COMPANY, t'i'f VJ vV ' J ' ' iv - General Aewnta. ; ,.'UiM?''(i,lii HARVEY LAMBETH '"i- Manager Xnsurano Department.'' 4 "It."" V pun jureoL xooacco iirbma and tasie is guaranteed by R. J Reynolds .Tobacco iny only un derthis; tag: 1 t " 1 4 -IS1, f h - f Compa f ' J ' X V.r M-"- . 1 . - f J"r " Cut out tfcij dvcrt:::ntt and cezd, to- Tot-cco Co.,7ir:-c-Ci!:r3f I I.C., tni t!;cy vill ca htz a 5 r.zrr!j cf tiij totzeco. ' li If f
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 5, 1906, edition 1
2
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