Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / April 28, 1906, edition 1 / Page 4
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4 f CHARLOTTE DAILY, OBSERVER, AVWU 23, 19Q6. 4 V ; J. P. CALDWELL I patush Every D3y b Use Year. ' SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: DAILT. On year 6lx. njoritht ... Tbre months .18.00 . 4.00 . too '2 " BEMI-WEEKX.T. i- l Ou mr ' . niw ntha ............. i 11.00 to Three month a ,J' "PUBLISHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT. No. St South Tryon street. Telephone Humbert: Business office. Bell 'phone 78; city editor office. Bell 'phone. 134; news editor's office. Bell 'phone. 24. A subscriber In orderin the address of his paper changed, will please in dicate the address to which It la coins at the time he asks for the change to be made. Advertising rajes are furnished en application. Advertisers may feel aura that through rhe columns of this paper tbey may reach all Charlotte and a portion of the best people In this State and upper Smith Carolina. This paper rives correspondents s Wide latitude as It thinks public policy permits, but It Is In no case respon sible for their views. It is much pre. ferred that co-respondents slim their name to their articles, especially In cues where they atUclc persons or Institutions, though this Is not 1e S ended. The editor reserves the right ' give the names of correspondents when they are demanded for the pur pose of personal satisfaction. To re ceive consideration a communication must he accompanied by ths true name of the correspondent. 6ATCIMDY, APRIL S, 106. AtXiLECT OP OFFICIAL IHTIF.8. : "When Congress convened last De- cember, Mr. M. R. Patterson, re-elected to represent the tenth Tennessee district, did not appear to be sworn In. Neither did Mr. Williamson, of Ore gon. The latter bad good reason for bis non-appearance as he was under arrest because of his participation in the Oregon land frauds." Hut Mr. Patterson, as has been before stated, Is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Tennessee, and has btcn devoting all the time since the first Monday In December last not his time, but the time be longing to the people of his district . , to Stumping the State In the Interest of, his candidacy. The other 6ny Speaker Cannon announced that here- i after ho would regard 191 a a quorum, the name of neither Patterson nor Williamson appearing on the roll of the House. This brought Mr. Patter son to his senses and he Jumped a train for Washington and hail himself worn in as a member of the House, We don't know anything more about this gentleman than Is contained In this recital, and the fact that some of the Democratic papers in Tennessee are saying that if he Is nominated for Governor be can't be elected; but the question naturally arises, How can a nan who thus flagrantly neglects I ho , duties of one office expect the people to believe that he would (Uncharge those of another if it were given htm? The case of Senator Carmack, of tho same State, I equally bad. He is try ing to save hi seat, for which ex Governor Taylor Is contesting, and has not made his appearance In the Senate during the present session of Congress, but has been fur thre months am still Is engaged In a ground scuffle In Tennessee with his antagonist. Meantime both he and Mr. Patterson have been drawing their ".salaries with mauhleps regularity. If there has been in recent years a ses sion of Congress which demanded more Imperatively than the present one the attendance of every Democrat ic Senator and ltepresentative It can not be recall"! at this moment, but these Tennesseeans nb.uvlnn their pub s' to duties for months at a time in or der to look after their Individual In terests. The people of thili- ft ate are certainly an Indulgent folk If they- for give this. A MISl'NDKUSTOOI) li; IMON. There appears to be considerable ml. Conception of the scope of the r-ent divorce decision or tho .Supreme o.unt f the United KUiU-s. it him been Widely understood that thin .ie- M,,,, renders void, absolutely, all ill -ir x nf couples residing In different st.it'-sj When such divines were m .i nt-. j that, for Instance, ijj a wife moves to 1 Virginia and there secure tl dlvoicej from her husband, llvlnj- In North ' Carolina, the divorce x. Ipse dixit. In- j valid. Not so, aecoiding to the latest! jfnmjrrutuun ui mc ancision. J l oniy renders the divorce voidable. Kither party may take advantage of this de cision to have the divorce invalidated, but In the absence of action on the Isrt of either it stands. There Is a J. 9W& desl of difference. Still, this is 1. g movement toward a stricter obswrv , Xgyxs of the marriage laws; and It is of Interest to note In passing that one - ytWwr (South Carolina contemporaries f v e Stat .In which divorces are unknown ,-fafer much of the credit for It lo J'tUtlee White, of Louisiana, an sp- ,.;poinMS i rresiaent Cleveland, n,i t Jttl MeKenna, of California, an up. polnte of President McKinley, both Of the Roman Catholic Church, which tef.KUJIs fare aa a flint against divorce. , ,Th Barnum A nalley show, it is announced, is to make a Southern sprlnf tW The result will be Ints. esttng. for some eight or ten years " this show ntaao a todr through tLisNMMtloq St this Season and Ut re sult was anything bat Unsocial sac cess. It stated that tho Eoutli was no place lot ircu in ths spring. If this trtp proreg gucce'ssfuHt trill show a great change In flaanciiU conditions 3-ers, TARIFF CONFESSED. funny proposition submit ted by 'eome Republican In .Congress lad Mid to have the support of many of the tariff standpatters, ; to suspend the tarttt on structural steel and other building material tor the relief of the people ot : San1 Francisco to, enable them to re-build more cheaply. ' The Mew York Evening Post treats the proposition deltghtfullythns: "We are unable to follow that line of reasoning. If steel and lumber are to come in duty free -. tor suffering L San Franciscans why not for Phlladelphlans or Bostonians who have been burned out? Are we not all equally good Ameri cans 7 Do Senator Culloro and Represen tative Madden want to see the lumber market of San Francisco glutted with the pauper products of the British Co lumbia forests? Do the hearts of these statesmen no longer beat for the red wood of California and the fir and cedar of Oregon and Washington T Ballard, close to Seattle, boasts that It makes more shingles than any other place In the world. Yet this feeble infant Indus try is to be strangled merely because California is In hard luck. Senators IxKige and Aldric-h must see that the huge sawmills of Puget Bound are as sacred a vested interest as the Massa chusetts and Rhode Island factories for cheap Jewelry. Pennsylvania must rise to the defence of the steel works or Pittsburg. The Colorado Fuel and Iron Company must cry aloud for the aid of Its friends In the Vnlted States Senate. "Mr. Cullom has forgotten that a cheap coat makes a cheap man. and that a cheap house t therefore a curse to the country. It Is equally obvious that ex pensive building material means high rents, and high rents are the prime cause of our physical and moral well being. San Francisco and the cities of the Pacific coast have always enjoyed an automatic protective tariff. The mere cost of transporting heavy manufactured goods across the continental divide has tended to raise prices. Speaker Cannon will explain that the resultant additional cost of living not fertility of soil and productiveness of mine Is the real basis of California's prosperity. Clearly. thi?n, the logical thing for the standpatters in this emergency la to apply their princi ples relentlessly. The Dingley tariff Is a good thing; and there cannot be too much of It. Then let us show our sym pathy for California, not by abolishing the Dingley duties, but by doubling them on all building material intended for the stricken city. Protection is the greatest on any community: let us give It to Call- fornla In full measure, pressed down and ! shaken together and running over. The proposition can be supported by every argument now urged In favor of a pro tective tariff." This is the reductlo ad absurdum, but does not the protective tariff ar gument, followed to Its last analysis, lead inevitably to It? The proposition, as The Evening Post says In another editorial, fathered as It Is and sun ported as it Is by stand pat Influences, "gives the whole case away." It seems that the Atlanta preacher was not the only one to declare th.it the Kan Francisco disaster was an outburst of the wrath of Clod against the people for heir sins a declaration, by the way, that Is almost as old as the world Itself. In this connection we find the thirteenth chapter of Luke quoted to disprove tho contention of certain preachers referred to above. It is as follows: "There were present at that season some that told him of the Galileans, whoee blood 1'llate had mingled with their sacrifices. And Jesus answering said unto them: Suppose yo that these OollleHns were slnnera above all the ial lleans, because they suffered such things? I tell you nay; but except ye repent ye shall ail likewise, perish. Or ttxwft eighteen, uxm whom the tower of Hlloam fell, and slew them, think you that they were sinners above all men thut dwelt in Jerusalem? I tell you nay: but except you repent, ye shall all Likewise perish." This seems to go a long way toward vindicating the people of San Frun cUeo of the charge that they an- re sponsible for the eurthquuke. In the first Issue of his paper, The Georgian, a new afternoon publication In Atlanta, Hon. John Temple Graves withdraws from the race for the Unit ed tUates Senate, which he entered Home time ago against Ken. i tor Ba con. Mr. llravea believes he would have won tho fight fur the Senate, but he declares that out of love for his .State and Its people, he feels the call t'i-Jhc editorship of 'i Her' which he and oil i d is stronger upon hi loathe editorship of 'the great tiewspa- thers have found- liu than any mere political ambition. This Is laklioj ii high stand and Mr. Urtivcs is to bo ( ongrlulatt'il upon his decision. There late ninny obstinate people, however. who will refuse to believe that th lor of The Georgian could ha fealecl the Hun. A. . Itacon. .,). i In. When the ( hlncse merchants of New ; Y-.ik linn.-, 1 over their contribution to 1 .San Kiamlsio they were nsked If It I wmm to be devoted exclusively to tho relief of their countrymen in the un fortunate rlty. mill the spokesman re piled: ,.o. for all; for American man, ioo." 'Somewhat pathetic, this," re marks The New York Evening- Post, "coming from almost the only race none of whom may become an 'Ameri can man', too."- Ye, and the one race wh.rh Is the'most harshly treated by our laws and Immigration regulations. 'hatlotte wilt next wek hive the pleasure f entertaining a number of the State s brightest women, who will be In attendance iijtoii the uifciing of the Hlate Kederstlon of Women's Clubs. The members of the local Wo men's Club areactlvely at work pre paring for the coming of tho visitors and The Observer hoes that their so Journ In the feeding town of the mate will be a pleasant one. A recent writer In a Virginia paper deals with Pocahontas as a myth and Is being jumped u pen for it If he finds his antagonists getting too pinch for Mm he should tall Mouth Carolina flalli to his assistance. ' got U up on xposlng myths, s - - 1 laFTECt, op ,i ihatTs fur WALSEB S NORTH CAROL!?., pi , J f GEST, VOL, IT. ; C " , k The North Carolina Code of J90S, which fake account or all the stat utes passed, amended and ' repealed since and . brings the statutory lav up to date under a somewhat dif ferent plan and a, new numbering of sections, Is necessarily a confusion to the busy lawyer, accustomed to' re tort to digests in the preparation of cases. Walser's "Index-Digest of the Criminal Law Contained in the De cisions of the Supreme Court of North Carolina, Volumes 125 to 138 Inclusive, and All the Criminal Statutes In the Revlsal of 1905,' " the references be ing to the sections of the new Code, is a most timely publication and la doubtless welcomed by the, profession. This second volume follows the plan of Its predecessor, the efficiency of which was testified to by Its quick re ception and continued popularity. ' The print IS better than that of the first volume, the binding Is of stout buck ram, and It carries 233 pages. It should not be' understood as limited to the decisions and statutes since the pub lication of the other volume, for, as the authors say, "The Revisal of 1905 made it necessary to Include a digest of the entire statutory law of the State." It will prove a savior of the profession, from much otherwise neces sary tedfum and toll. The volume is the work of Messrs. Z. V. and Z. I. WalBer, of Lexington. The Wilmington Messeneger ex-. presses the opinion that if Senator Simmons' amendment to the Southern fast mall provision of the postofflce appropriation bill Is adopted it will mean "no appropriation for the fast mall." We very much fear that this opinion is well grounded and greatly regret the introduction of this amend-' ment. If It Is adopted by the Senate the bill will have to go back to the House for concurrence in It, and this fast mail paragraph got through the House by so narrow a margin that any Juggling with it is likely to defeat it. It is greatly to be hoped that the Senate will see fit to reject the amend ment and the fact that that body has more breadth than the House affords ground for this hope. overnor Glenn and delegations from North Carolina and other States made a not her move for the Appalachian forest reserve bill In Washington Thursday and it is hoped that some thing has been accomplished In this important matter. It. Is noted, how ever, that Speaker Cannon gave them no encouragement. A Pails dispatch says that 20,000 ln fanliy, 10,000 cavalry and 10.000 police will be on duty In that city on May 1, Willi a view to quelling any disturb ance Inaugurated by strikers. This seeing to Indicate a pretty bad condi tion of affairs in and around the French capital. , rJf "' "" .' . Aorl roadlnR Mr. Woodworth Clumlkrtetters from Panama, we have arrived - at ' the unwilling conclusion that much that the Hon. Poultney Klgetow wrote was true, whether his Information was secured by personal observation or otherwise. It Is observed that the volume of business of Wilson's Great Moral la stltution has assumed such propor tions as to make it necessary to seek larger quarters for It. This Is what Is called "making the dispensary a sue cess." The coal strike may now be said to he actually on in I'ennsylvanla, the strikers having begun to blow up coal trains by placing dynamite on the track. The next reunion of the ITnlted Con federate Veterans will be held In Rich' mond. This Is a fitting choice, since the Virginia city was the capltol of the Confederacy. Kleven persons were killed by a Tex as tornado Thursday night. Hince the San Francisco calamity, things of a minor nature like this are scarcely in tending. liltK AT ATIII'.IU'ON MILL, Blaze Which Marled MyNlcrloiiHly In the- Picker llmmi Yesterday Morn ing n( I o'clock Docs Da ma ge to : amount or .iNut az.nnn. j A tire that did damage, to the amount of between $1,600 and $2,500 was discovered In the picker room of the Athertou Mill yesterday morning at 4 o'clock. The Are was first seen by a mill operative living In a near- by house. The mill whistle sounded the alarm and brought the members we" organised fire brigade iroin ineir nomes. j tie inert under the direction of 'Mr. H. B Sargent, general -manager of I. A. Tompkins Co.( worked witn a will and, after almost an hour's toll suc ceeded In extinguishing the blaze and getting all of the cotton out of the room. Mpeaklng with an observer reporter last evening Mr. Hargent said thst the Are would no doubt have assumed larger proportions If It had not bIen for the system of automatic sprinklers In use. He said that the sprinklers kept the fire under control until his men could get to the building and get the fire-fighting equipment. The origin of the fire Is not known. If was started either by spontaneous combustion or there was a smoulder ing spark In a bale of cotton before It was placed In the room the evening before. The blase was extinguished without the assistance of the cl:y fire department. The (oss was partially covered by Insurance. v Win! Is Vrlxw Aslniry? The Oreenitboro Telegram of yet day said: . "bor Ashury. a brother of p. M. Asbury, of the Cable Piano Company, has not been heard from since the ah Francisco earthquake and his brother here end other relatives in Charlotte are anxious about him. He Is a trav. ellng man and makes Han Fraiiclsca headquarters, 'it is believed, however, that th young man has overlooked ths matter of writing his people to assure them of his safety and that he will ps nesra trom at flistant data.' TBS D t'JXP DJtXOX AFFAIR. , The Negroes) Are' Wot Satisfied Wltb. the KeauJt ol the Operation- Tlwy Desire to Know What trier J?octora Found TUa Controversy j Waxes The Dump iMxon affair did' not end with the operation at the Good Sa maritan Hospital s Wednesday :. after noon; the colored , population of tho city is not satisfied; the result of the use of the knife la still, in doubt;: the doctors-nava not-told iall they know. Veaterdav 'mnrtili u Tr C .. M Strong went up-to his office ' he: was followed Dy a huge colored woman! whose face was covered with perspi ration and troubla. j.?., "Is dls you, Dr, strong?" she sulked. after catching r breath. ; "Yes. this U me," answered the doc tor. ...v.-.iv . "Well, doctor, my name Is RachaeC an' dey say dat I tuck an' tricked dat nigger what you cut open ylstiddy. sn' I des com to git you to go dawn yonder an toll dem niggers on Stone wall street wnat you gut out er ner, Dey say dat - you gut de frog but didn't git de snake. I des want to know wnat you gut. De Lawd know dat I ain't done no thin' to her." Rachael wag d reused In her best but loojcea little . worried. Her 1 race seemed to be a little darker tout usuat. : . -,: The caoka of the City talked nothing but Dump Dixon and her trouble yesterday. One woman who had bo come worked up on the subject. In discussing It With the lady for whom she worked, eald: "Miss, dey found mo In dat nigger dan dey wux lookln fur. Dey tell me dat dey gut a shake, er frog, er grub worm and er cooter. Ain't dat awful?" Old Van, he Who drives Santiago, and WUHam Qorrell, met yesterday and discussed tho find. "Dey say now flat wuj one of dem Cystoomas dat Dump Dixon had In her," said "Van, who is a neighbor. "Er what?" asked William. "Er Cystooma." "What's datT" "It's a tad pole des' 'fo' he 'comesj er frog. Youee seed er many one wld long tall an little short hlne legs. Tare, dat' what It Is. No wonder de nigger suffered so." "I 'clare fo' Gawd, what's gittin In de niggers dese days nohow." said William, and he caught up his night stick and started on his way. INSURANCE MEN ORGANIZE. Underwriters of State Organise North Carolina Field Club. At a recent .meeting of a number of special agents representing fire in surance companies doing business in North Carolina held at Ashevllle the North Carolina Field Club was or ganized with 24 charter members. The club was organized for the purpose of promoting, better practices In fire un- derwrltlajand to create a closer per sonal relationship among company rep resentatives. The officer's were elected as follows: Mr. Jordan S. Thomas, of Charlotte, special agent of the German-American Insurance Company, president; Mr. Jefferson Pearce, of New York, special agent of the North British & Mer chandise Company, vice president; Mr. Eugene Chlsholm. of Charlotte, special agent of the Piedmont, second vice president; Mr. Robert G. Hayes. of Charlotte, special agent of the Na tional of Hartford, secretary. Any company representative doing business In North Carolina is eligible to mem bership. BASEBALL A PLENTT. Tho City Baseball league Is- Having Nome Iively tiaincs. The 3 S team and the 3 Bs of the: City Baseball League met for the first time on the Wilmoore diamond yester day afternoon. Rain, hindered the progress of (he game, and In a meas ure handicapped the players. There was not very much snap in the game. however, at intervals several good plays were made. Wlshart, for the 3 Be1-knocked a three bagger, and cre ated the only sensation of the game. The 3 Ss from the very beginning had the lead and maintained it throughout the entire game. The score was 14 to 12 in their favor. This morning, at 10:30 o'clock, the D. A. C.'s and the Junior Baraca's will play off tho tie game of Thursday. The score at present Is 4 to 4. in the sixth Inning. The result will be watched with Interest. The Stars and the Boys' Brigade are scheduled for a. game this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. (iiarlotte Pipe to San Francisco. The Charlotte Pipe & Foundry Com pany has just received an order for a shipment of pipe to San Francisco. The order Is small, a two-car Jot, but the destination makes it Interesting. The shipment will be en route perhaps two weeks, the freight amounting to from $800 to $1,000. "Ill blows the wind that profits no body." Charlotte citizens recently sub scribed, a neat sum for the aid of the suftel-ers In the stricken city. A re turn Is being secured in a very sub stantial wav. Mustn't Do It No JIo. Yesterday while some llnejnen were at work on a telegraph pole one of them dropped a heavy iron cleaver on top of a negro's head. The imple ment struck with a murnea thud but bounced off and fell io the ground. "Humph, say white man, don't do dat no mo," said the negro as ne roiled his eyes upwttrd and nxed them on the guilty fellow who wfas 20 feet up the pole. "Had that been a white man," de clared a spectator, "there would be a funeral or-morrow." I tali road News of Xocsl Interest. It is not likely that the new- train from Salisbury to Ashevllle will go on before the 10th of June, when th summer travel begins In earnest. Ths new train from BlacksDurg to Marion will "make Its first run next Monday. The changes that will come "here to morrow are: train No. 35 will leave here at 10:26 at night Instead of 10:20; No. $ at 3:30 in the morning Instead ot 4:30 and No. $7, for Columbia, at S:45 in the morning Instead of :06. A Charlotte tehnrrh. The following from the Biblical Re corder roncerjitng Dr. J. Q. Adams' church will be read 'with interest by unarioue people; ; ' , 'The pnicnard M.ernonai enurcn. Charlotte, is the strongest third church In the State, and will compare well with, any church in the Stat. They are Urge givers and at th front In everv nnd work. Brother Adams la a brave and true leader, and his peo ple are ready to be lea. - Attention! iMecklenburg camp. Confederal Vet. erane! You win assemoi in your, nau at :S0 o'clock this morning to U tend the funeral of Comrade i. liar vy Wilson. ' ;v , J. p, sosssaman, Lieut. Commander. , H, D. Duckworth, adjutant , Now Is the time to take Holllater'a Rocky Mountain Tea. i lt cleans your system of all impurities. ' A" wonder ful spring toiilo. A family bene factor. St cents. Tea or Tablets- PL I SIrak'!Ttomp8oit VTT ' 10.' ' The manr. Charlotte frtenda of Mr. and Mrs. Percy . M- ' Thompson, . of Ooldsboro, will regret yto learn that Mrs. Thompson is very ill. Keiative ot Mr. Thompson heard late yesteraay that Mrs. Thompson was In eatremls. Mr, and Mrsv-.Thompson made unar lotto theirs noma for aeverai years. - ' ABOUT 1 RHEUMATISM. A . " There are few diseases that inflict more torture thane . rheumatism and there is Orohahlv na. disease for whien such. veried and useless lot of remedies have been , susceeted. to - say taat it ean cured Is, Jthereforev a bold statement to make, but Chamberlain's : Pain Balm. whleh enters an extensive sale, has met with- - great . success In - the treatment of tnia disease, ime application oi rain Balm will relieve the pain, and hundreds of aniffsrers have testified to permanent euros by its use. way suner wneo rain Balm affords such quick relief and costs but a trifler For sale By s, H., Jordan people's' eoLur.in The Obatirfse wUI md A, D. Ti Keasenrer, wtthoat 3argV t yonr phuse of tmslnese s veshMoc lor aUves-tlseoMnts t lb ; this oiaxnn. 'Pbne A. . D. " T. Messenger- Scrrloo, Ho. 5; or Ohsorver, o, 7 a. Ail aa vertlaements inserted in tins column at rate of tenccntg . pev lino ox six words. No 'tuL. taken foe loss than SO cents. Caan in advance. WANTED. WANTED By young man, position as Clerk In rroCerv or aeneral store, Un- aerstanas oooK-Keeping , ana accounts. No objection to leaving city. Address Clerk, care Observer. WANTED Clerk, young man, with ex perience, familiar with the retail cloth ing business. Good opportunity for ngnx man. Town (,000 Inhabitants. Hebrew not objectionable. Address "Nob Hilt, care Observer, Charlotte. N. C WANTED-Balesman to sell Linseed Oil ana Paints as Side line. Commission only. Address box 27, Richmond, Vs. V ANTED 3kvd second-hand boiler ot 75 -to 100-horse power, also 7S-H. P. Corliss engine. J. P. Delllnger, Cherry ville. N. C. WANTED District managers for the Conservative Mutual Ufe for excel lent unoccupied territory in North Caro lina. Liberal non-forteltable renewal contracts. Our double Indemnity policy is the greateet seller on the market Conservative Mutual Life lasuraoos Co., Charlotte, N. C. WANTED Experienced grocery special ty salesman - by large manufacturer having well established business. No applicant will be considered who Is not now employed, and who has not been with present employer at least three years. Splendid opportunity for the right man. "urocer," care uoeerver. WANTED Bids on about 5,070.000 feet timber. Particulars given on request. i. v. Hicks, m. v.. iunn, is. u. WANSTED Drug clerk, one to three years' experience. Write to "Carrier 7." Charlotte, . C. WANTED Good white barber with own tools at once. C. M. Nolen. Gastonla, N. C. WANTED Experienced druggist; good opportunity for right man. Address C Q . Box 123, Charlotte, N. C. WANTED Traveling salesman. Must furnish references and Invest n. 000.00 In first-class per cent, bonds. Salary and expenses paid, experience not re quired, we teach business at our mills. The Wheeling Roofing & Cornice Com pany, Wheeling. W. Va. WANTED for next thirty days, con tractor! make bids to build Presbyterian church, BfnnettavlHe, 8. C. J. A. Drake. WANTED A second-hand newspaperf outfit, suitable for getting out an upte- care Observer.' ?, WANTED-Pirst-class book-keeper and stenographer, for large cotton mill lo cal a near epray, pt. u. salary i.wu; none but first-class men need apply. Ad dress with reference state experience, A C. Phelps. Spray, N. C, w a nteiW)ii million feet of nine fram ing and sheeting boards. Write for price r o. t. ears. Hoanoae L.umDer io.. aox 48$, Roanoke, Va. .. MISCELLANEOUS. SPECIAL BALK of 1,000 white carna tions, flrst-daes stocK, to cents per dczen. Also aaelea plant In full bloom, SO cents to COO each on Saturday. Dil worth Flower Gardens, op-town .Office. WXPERIENCED traveling salesman, familiar with the N- C. trade, desires to make a change by May 1st. Address Traveling Salesman, car Observer. BIDS ARE DESIRED by the Weetern Cnion telegraph Company, for paint ing their poles Inside 'th city limits. For particulars call at Western Union, local office. No. 30 8. Tryon street. READ OUR special Sideboard offer. Lubin Furniture Co. BOOK-KE BPER and thoroughly expert enced all round office man in large cotton mill wishes to make -change. Also has knowledge of stenograhy. Small town preferred. Address "Book-keeper." car Observer. BOMB MONEY to lend. N S3. Call 'phone SAN FRANCISCO'S KHrthoimke. Are and great disaster - Are and volcano in Callfor- nia and st Vesuvius. . Big book. Fully Illustrated. Only I1.0O. , Extra terms, Freight paid. Credit given. Outfit free. Ziegler Co., 216 Locust St., Pblla.. Pa. HANDSOME SIDEBOARDS at almost your own price.. LUDtn jrurnuure uo. EMPLOYERS Do you want quick re suits when you need .men and women to hii nonitonsT Tell us your troubles. we will be glad to help you out. The New Co-operative System, inc., Hign Point, N. C. from Charlotte- Pou4tryarTOw-l.iy and to-morrow 3. F. Jarntsen A Co. cnarrtntti nicrTtmerWLet us Snd veu a position. Results are sure. Give full particulate. The New. Co-operative BiS- iem,. inc., ain v BITT NOW A nice Siderswd at manu facturers' prices. LAiom r umnure vo. OFFICB 80T WANTED-Adrrss Box FOH ItKNX FOR RlENT J deslrsble offices in Trust building. Information at ' Southern 8tates Trust Co. . : TOR RENT Deslrsble store room pear square, roseession givn 4 une tm. se dress . C, ear Observer. FORSA1JE. i.1 i n ii i r FOR BALK-Thre lghty-hene return , tublar . boUere, ; . ssoond-haed. Calvin Mfg. Co.--.-- c ;--v; sVOST. LOST STRATBJD, 'stolen or borrowed, Charlotte Drum Corps Baton, Please return to Observer off lc, ASSAYING cbsmicai ANAtvrtm v 4 1 1 r.:::ii man llMf .W I sjtr 'Ctortetts, !!, Cb I r mm 1 . ," m mm 3liirter,.tc:iarslMi-lies; 3oms. unaeRvear. Msoena Carters, Hats, Slices, Vliite Vests,Cdd Pants, Etc is ; WHAT vou The Best Shirt Colorcdl or White JNegiigee $100 to $150 Full Dress dr Halted Bosoni 100 v JI. & I. Pure Pure Cotton in all shapes JOc Neck Wash 4-in-hands in white arid all colors,' ii those new fabrices ... 25c" Silk 4-m-hands and Qub Ties 25 anH 50c Socks The Shaw Kriit, in any style.... 25c Imported Lace and Fancy, as well as ' plain I5c to 50c Underwear Gauze Shirts and Drawers.. ...25c to 75c Scriven's Genuine in brown and the lat- est patent Full KSittted Insertion Drawers ......; Suspend Genuine Gayott Braces... 50c Good American Braces 25c Fulr Elastic Qossback Brighton Garters all Best 10c Garter-sold y Hats 'TOworth Nobby Furs. $150 . Hawe's Soft ,br Stiff... Stetson's Soft or Stiff Panamas, nobby shapes "Dilworth" Yachts The New Fiber Hate: Shoes Oxfords or High Cuts Patent, Vici and Gunmetal... $3.00 to 5.00 Wash Vests Beauties in Wfiiteahd. Colored $1 to $2;50 Odd Pants The New Styl$; Pants in neat and tail- v V predjttei to $6.56 Too. The :swellest stock we ever sold any sea son; v: You 'should' see ;how - they fit and what style: you gaU......$J0.0O to $20.00 f iisissss 1 1 , , . - ji "I V ' j i ui t,-" fit I I , 11 At . vvv i nvs crs want; to day Is the "Emery" Collars in all shapes 2-2c Ties $1.00 Peppcrell Jeans : 50c ers Suspenders 25 and 50c colors 25c . .. 3.00 $3.50 to 5.00 $5.00 to $10.00 $1.50 to $2.00 2.50 I a. 'j 1 1, 1 1 t - 'f "MIMeessies .... ',""' ' ' ' .- ' " ''v
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 28, 1906, edition 1
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