Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Aug. 16, 1906, edition 1 / Page 4
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f f I , I'. C A. T "JTva J rubUshers. : vciy C:y b I-2 Ycx D . .-...,...:...;. pah,.,1 ;i.;v;, .4 On year m.'v""""",-5$ month ........"? Three moutlur '......'?" " I.'-'' ' V .SVt , M M One vesr ....,... .:"' His month ..,.....' ' Three oaths,.. ..v...... .......( FCBUSHERS ANNOUNCEMENT. -v., No. M South Tryon trJr,,phon! . number: Business office. Bell P""" ' 7; city editor office. Bll 'phone.mj aew editor's offloa. Bell 'ptvon , ffli. , A ubecrlbr in ordering the addres et bis paper changed. will elease in gloat th addreee 1 which It I going . at tlia Uma he ask for t eaang to be road. : v. . T Advertising rates are '-furnished on .. applteaUen. Advertisers majr I Mi aura V that through , u column of - thl . . paper they may reaeb U Chartotu and a portlcn of the best PoP'! ,a ' this State and uppe Bouih Carolina. ' " - Thla pa nor, give eetressondents a , Wirt la&tud aa it thins pueHe policy .. . permits, but l( II M ces reepon , ' eiol for thU- vlw. It H mucn pra T ferred thai iwrraaponflanu sign tbslr namea to their articles, seeerlelly in , esse h'r they attack pereon r ' Institutions, - tnoucb tns la not de- msnrtrd. The editor reeerves th rlabt : to fire tha nantee of correepondenta whan they are demanded for the pur ' pewa of personal satlefactton. To re ' ratvo consideration n communication must' be aecomnsnled by tha true ;: name of the eorreapondeot TlirRKDAY. AlOlKT Ik. nniifAl nffnvnn nw EVW Tit ' I 'l-ii n a rr.tmnv rilJL . ,'- la thla paper la publlahed an ad ' reaa by Governor CJIenn to tha peo ple ; of the State, together with In , atracUona to tha aharlffa of tha aa ru counties ana oraera to irve rap Ulna of the corapana of 1 tha B tata National Ouard. The addresa apeak , trumpet-tontoed to the peopl of KArlk fMfAllfia. Th htatmrTtntia aaa orders are brief, explicit and bualaeaa-llke. Tha whola relalei to tha matter of lynch law. Tha wrong of, It and the evil reanlta to follow vpoO'lta application are recited. To prevent it In any given caae, the her iff la directed to aummon tha neareat military company and an armed poaM ta ma all neareful meant to dlaueraa the mob. and If It remain obdurate to order hla force to fire Into It. Cap- . taina . of companlea are ordered to , hold tttemaelvea and men aubjoct to : the - ordera of the aherlffa, and If tha mooa cannot be aiaperaea otnorwiae. - to obey tba aherlffa when they give the .; order to ahoot All tiAtwi Ia flAVrfinp II and l. ' haa failed la no duty devolving upon him to avert lynchlnga and to en force the law. and tha fault . traUon. that might bean avertad, . cannot In Juatloa he laid to Me eharga. for tha maaauraa which ha haa now ; adopted to turn away from ua the opproblum Which uch Crimea fit upon ' ua all. and. from which at! auffer, ha - . - i t- J M - J A I ha lAw.lmrlnv rkMinl tit th fllata ; Will with one voire acclaim Rim. lie- right chord. If hla method ar erltl claed aa cruel, the aniwer la lynch ' law la more rrael atlll and that he , provide for ampla notice to tha mob . that It DlUit dlaperaa or take to ftaelf tht reapooalblllty for fatal conaeQuen cea. If hla method are rrltlriaed aa . cr and one care to yl-ld tha point, ' ana may add that cruelty In the kill- ' Ing of a few lawlea men who refoae 1 to bo wanted were better than that relgtt, better men will be lynched than . tha victim that the mob ha Imme diately la view. It'ta not far from tha lynching of on man to the lynch lag of another and If thla thing goi unreatralned, the mob will aoon find . It ay, after lynching a prlaonrr, to mob th man who denounce the tdo oovernor apaii with power . and aaraeatnea and hla word wilt ;. ring from th hill to the a. The hoar for aurh rpeorh and for action upon it na mrura. lie puaK with . gravity and wlfh boldneaa; apeak la all particular aa becomes the Chief . Kiacutlv of a great Wat. And M " no man regard hla wnrda lightly of ' doubt that he will exe-ut the pur- .: poae deliberately formulated and to . flctal procIamatloB. Again, all honr : to hint! Every rmi'.r ahould welah hla wards, and ertry man who r garda his rutur' and that of hi chll- ' drea ssd hi ritt ahould rally to TjI alaadard, to Ih end that by fu- ', tura obaervaoce f tha law which w y ltavo oureelves made, under whli h we hva elected to lftvand which w lav all awora to support, th taln ' ' 't ha been put upon our flute 11, y b remoyad and our lout preetlg rt-eiortd. Thera Is in cirrulatiou a horrid, lrknlng plctur of the tbre negro ' lyn hed at galltbnry last week, taken a they hung from Aha treo. after the bodlea. had beta riddled with bullet . nd ; otherwieo muuuud, r Many of three picture were prtntad on pot card which wero mailed at th Kail bury poatofflca.' . I'oatmaater Ttamey very properly held them all up and rfrred Id tha Voet office fjepartmenl tha question as to whether or not th iratter I mallabUi. receiving the !rompt and proper reply that it I not. Thl poet 'card1 Im Ideal a undnlou aftcr-tlap of ian ' affair vi,!. h haa been shameful la all ft f !ur.. ' Thra i but alight differ- am In tha dfgrea v depravity of and amoufit of erwiblllty of . who want to handle and clrru ! i fhea "cart) and. thoea who cut T ffr w.iiviilr th flnaera, toe and rt tv-j rifrror while thy bung. ; ltfSMA'S KECOXI KUXTIOX. , . Tho campalisn .far 'election of new Douma, or Parliament haa been opened by tha nuealan government Aa address to tha people ha bcon laued by .tho various Oovernor, M cues trig t greet 'length, upon , tha qualities that must bo .reQulrcd ,cf candldato. They must not. be elo quent, but mut keep their ' knowl dgo, gained, ' by. i long - experience, pondered la their tnlod.Thoy must have great patriotism. Tho must avoid flattering their elector,' but mut lt- ten duly to their own consciancea. In conclusion It la said: . -v, .""Only 'When, Ruaalan' oeoDle elect i majority of such candidate, when each of 11 a rememliera that, before personal advantage. Ilea our duty to th mother country, and . when : w. . preaerve the neresaary reenect tor taw and the legal authorities, only then will be realism) ine rueni aeairea or me mr i nenrt 10 ee his ixKiple happy. Only then will he re-tablllied the now' shaken haDiiineaa ana welfare 01 Russia. , : .. ,'j These, seem strange' things to tell a people who are to experience tha privilege of th ballot, and yet. the advice I timely. The first Douma had (0 bo dissolved owing to Its radical-. Ism', and It Is apparently the Intention of the government ; that , the . aeit Parliament ahall be a more cdnerva five body. Perhaps the first attempt to gl together a representative body In Itusaia waa aa much of, a auocesa and a little of a failure as could have . been expected wbeo' the fact i remembered that the people had never before enjoyed the privilege of the ballot. There Is reason ' to believe that the Czar la good man, and that he desire to govern hla subjects D a proper manner, and It ao he Is cn titled to aympathjr Instead of , con d em nation; he haa a hard task be fore him. 1 ' ? ' NOW LCT THE STRICKEN DEER GO WEEP. . j. , " The Obserwer haa had little ym pathy In its humfllatlon in having been overlooked In tha distribution of Invitations to th reception and dollar dinner, but no contemporaries have been actually unkind about ft except Ing Th Richmond News Leader and Norfolk Landmark. The former says it didn't deserve any Invitation,. and the latter put a mean Imputation up on it In aaylng that "no doubt The Charlotte Observer would be as cheer ful a supporter of Bryan aa the reat of ua former insurgents' if it had an Invitation to thl" big lov-feat and barbecu." Th Landmark rebelled in lit but in 1100 Mr. Bryan para- mounted Imperialism, and the empire and it got ao scared .the emperor would eatch It that It forgot free sil ver and apoatatlsed. Now It has an nvltatlon, .aa a reward for It apoe tacy, and, with the seal of a new re crutt. Is dousing its old comrades of the days of the Insurrection. Tha Ob server's support of Mr. Bryan might or might not have been purchased by the Invitation which It didn't get, but It could not be bought by being bidden to a dollar dinner and a hot air achatsenfeat to , go back on old friend and fellow. Insurrectionists. irimr rioi'K roif txyrro.x-Gitow- . . Ens. There haa been r.o recent publica tion better calculated , to encourage Southern cotton-grower than yester day morning' dlapatch which an nounced the arrival In San Pranclaco pf a prominent Japaneae with the In. formation that while Japan laat yr used over a million balea of cotton only one-fourth of It cam from the United States, whereas the great u- perlorlty of American cotton over that of India and Aula 1 now recognized and "all flrt-cla cottor.-weavar are coming to ue It. Th export of cot ton from the United State to Japan," thl vUltor add. "I bound to Ir.creaa enormously in the next few year." 'oiton manufacture In that country Increasing rapidly and, we have u the dlapatch referred to a strong In timation that th Bouth will soon bo furnishing the great bulk If not prac tically all of tha raw material. If, In addition to thla, Japan would quit dallying with th matter and would t the United State Into Manchuria, n Immense Impulse would oulcklv given to the American cotton trade In the Kant. The larger demand for the great itaple would of course mean higher prlre. The Southern farmer may hope. . t'nd-r the head "It'a He." The Durham Herald, of the 14th, hits an editorial the opening sentence of hlch follows: "A dsy or o so this pnner said that tilllilic sentiment at Hiillalnirv hml been opposed to it there wonlil have been no Irtii-tilnr. snd this Th Chiir- ne observer denoonrss ss nn out- taeeou iiiMi-in other words a Ha. Melt, let's see." The Herald then proceeds to argue It case. It 1 not, however, former, gumrnt, that we copy from ItW hove,, but to say: The Observer has Ihe greatest respect fo? The lnirham Herald and th papers are the best of friends. We hold its editor and pub lishers In the highest personal regard. Aa was stated In the editorial to which our contemporary excepts, we could not recall tha paper the utterance of which was criticised. We had nn Idea in the World that It was Ilia Durham Herald or The Observer's ' language would hsva ,ben different. A "b1 I not defined aa a He. and thouah flrlnar in the dark, at what'paper we did not know, the word aa ued In the edlto rtsl in question was .pot Intended, to carry Ihat meaning.; .The ' matter is one of sincere regret to The Observer, We would not for anything reflect up on The Herald nf offer it our apol ogy for art unconscious offense to it- ' "PVesMaat Melhtn. bf tha Pullruul, , bee raoentlv ' ori Mr. Hi ran Ms j.rWnt ear for use In his -rnnatius tiirouah t'onne..unit ' and u jiiwina uioo asks, 'Will h Mf Th answer la ka will n,,t atM'pt.M'-luiltnoa Tunea, ' ? , . i Certainly hot. ' . rrlvhte cara 'ar tainted.' No talfttfd money for ' th dollar dinner) no tainted car to fly around the country Jn': t If a man Is too lasv to work, he set h!mse4f up aa. philosophy .dis penser. .:,.' f , ; 1 ..v- . ... COIL'lUMCATIONS LlXCIHAG hliHTOM OF DI.SlC.Vbl3 To Cure tlie )! the Caunc Muhi be Jteniocl Jix end How Admin intra 1 luii of I .ttMn. lii(MtiH'lcnt Ja rlca aiul Faulty 1'rtaon -Muimgcnit in .... AscrlbtHl aa JUpouMWo. : ' To the Editor of The Qbaerver: i The dlscusdlon of lynching In our papers recently, and especial iy n The Charlotte Observer, cannot fail to do much rood. Yet there Js one point, in which,, r think, that moat of the papera are wron and that is ln apeaklng of lynching aaa, dlaeaae, Inatead of, what it ia lo fact, the syrup torn of a disease. Thl is a mistake eometlmea made by your.g doctors. xne doctor nnas cis patient wun high temperature; by uaing powerful druga he quickly reduces" it to what Is normal, but than he finds that n haa but touched yet th disease, which was- causing tba high temperature. We mlanC if lynching ia only a aymp torn of a disease, .suppress it without curing its cause, , and perhaps ftr.d that the dlaeaae will manifest itself Ir. atlll -uarller svmDtoms. The cause of lynching Is that the law against crimes ia not adminis tered swiftly and surely.- - In Enaland there is no lynching. There crime 1 punished surely and swiftly and adequately. Where iyr.cn ing prevails it is not so,,- Thla latter proposition could be proved by pub Iiahlna a list of' homicide In each county for th last ti years, and also whether the perpetrators were pun- Ished at aU and it ao how and when. But th common opinion of the entire people, that too many criminals ' es cape eitogftner, and tnat tnose pun ishea are often nunisnea tnaaequaie ly, and after too fong delays, is auf ncient proof. jror tnu . to ' courts besr the blame. But justice requires that they ahould not be blamed for what they cannot help. They have to proceed according Aa law. and are prevented by the law Itself In many caae from doing what the criminal deaerv. We cannot exneet a pet' ter set of Judges and prosecuting of ficers than we have now. Th State DerhaDa will never be aerved by men in auch positions, who will try harder 10 ao ine ining mil is rigni, ana yet the guilty often go unpunished one cause is that the juries ran go often to award a Juat verdict. Seme people nave almost lost raitn in the lury system. Yet it is the best sys tern of trial ever devised by man.; It has been thought that better Juries could be obtained . if the number of persons who ean be rejected without cause or the accused were cut oown from 21 to a smaller number, and the number who can be ao- rejected by the State were Increased from 4 to a greater number, Thl would perhapa make a great Improvement But what la needed moat I that om way should be devised to exclude abso lutely. Ignorant . persona and those whose Integrity Is not above suspicion from being offered as jurymen, at least In capital cases.- I have known of a Jury so Ignorant that th appeal waa successfully mad -to them, tn spite of atralghtout evidence, that "It was an unheard of thing to try a white man for killing a inning nig ger." How often, when It la all-Import ant to a county, that justice be done, a good man Is excluded from a Jury. snd his place filled by a man 01 low Intelligence or principle, because the good man haa served 01. tha jury w th In two vesrs. The courts will never be what they might be until the Jury law is msde better, but that can be done only by taeiegisiature. Again a prisoner is often tneo, not on ail tbe evidence tnst can m 00. tamed, but on such parts of it as are admitted by the rules of evidence. Tht Is, the publlo Judge the accused on all tha evidence, tna courts , on part of IK And a large percentage of tha apoeala and delays are caused by dispute about the admission 01 evi dene. The law of evidence Is consid ered, bv the average iswyer. as about as perfect as human things can be; whereas It 1 lr. fact basea on tn principle that the Jury 1 composed of fools, and must not be allowed to hear certain thlngsf The public hear all thing, and so do th lynchers, and th verdict of both ta often different from that of the courta. There are many of ua who remember ' with whst fear and trembling the Legis lature allowed the socused'to testify In their own behalf, and how many of th older Iswyers thought that this chsnse had thrown aiL the foundations of the world out of rourse. It I on the strength et some technicality, which might ' have been reasonable enouah four centuries ago. hut ia out ef date, though not out of law, now, that ine lawyer 01 me ac cused get him off. . A the negro aid of Judge uaeton when he yva at the bar, "Instead of hanging th man he hung the Jury." A reform cannot be' made by the courts, tna Legislature has neither the time nor tbe knowledge to undertake 11 witn out help. But It eouid appoint a commlselon of ex-Judges and old law ers. who In two years' time could suggest such reforms aa would coma nenrer to bringing the whole truth before the Jury than la done now. and rut oft the many occasions of qulb bllng. . , y . The punishment Is often so many years In the penitentiary. The peni tentiary authorities put tha worst of criminals on the farm. A man sent from Ilowan for murder In tha sec ond degree for 11 years escaped. Nat Crump, the moat dangerous mar. sent In many a year from Davidson, escaped. The SO-year burglar from Buncombe escaped.' Whst .doss It amount to to send a man there for a long term, If when he gets there he Is put not where he Is safest, but where he will make the most money for the State if he I content to stay. If th 8tate cannot or will not keep our convict safer, had w not better esnct from them a proml that they will rv out their term-i,' t .. .' If we ran. find the way. to hav Justice administered surely, swiftly nd adequately, a it Is-dene In Hrur land, we will have cured lynching, not merely suppressed it.- The courta are doing their beet Under the present law. It will take the heat thought of the Btate to make our law ault prea ent conditions. If thl is not don, and for year to com a ia years past, a large percentage of the guilty encspe, then thought will lnerldntly tend to th other extreme. 'The , cat that catche th rat is th khw cst. . T F, J. MITRDOCK. Salisbury, Aug. 14, 10. tlXIXU THE, ItEHPONHIBtLlTxV CorresrMnulent AbMilvra Itulge Tng, Htillfltor llatitmrr . ami (Mvertawr (Jletin, But IMamra I lie Nterlff-of ; Ilowan for the "Mnrtli-ml latw."' ' To th Editor of The Observer:' 11 v I have waltd a week for somebody I say It. and It hasn't been ssld.' I suppose that t must say it myself. - Who prrmittea tn murder or tn tew which was struck down, trampled under foot and spit upon while the gnd people of Ilowan county stood by either ' applauding, 1 complacent or fesr-smlltenT Thl taw. for whoa bringing to birth centuries of civili sation have been In travail, and for whose estabtlnhment millions of men have , shed . blood as for a prlceteas thing this law, whlrh I all that elands between u snd Such day of blood and nlghte of. terror as, make Armenia and the Bueslsn Caueasu a red hell who was it thst stood by tt se thla law don, to death In Satis, bury f : .. ' . ; v t ; -, Let' see. The mllltla captain say h had r order to hoot, "Thati Mm bfforo. a court- - J UlirfB l.dl: ' !IJ M , sreat at-ai or iiiik- ln tlie tly fura vhe lynchhir, qulto a oni deal tha dy sfter, anil sen teiu eil Jlall' to the' penlu-htUry to ths limit ijt the Uw, The ltist item vindicates the Juitife. Solicitor llarninur voted BKulnat re teasing the threw murderer who wero at rirt iirr 1 hh.1 afterwurd turn ed loose to iirococ-d with the crime. He alo convicted vMr. Hall, and has others In soak for, the penltentlery nq tn nangntan' noose, wen done, Mr. Jlamnmr. Jlcrs's . strength vour elbow! . .. ,'. X 1 . Senator Overman-talked some to th mob, too. He1 also had the honor to Introduce Mr.. Hall when that no table genetleman' mad 'hi deathless speech , The' Henator indiscretion brought lu own retribution and h haa paid aufnclently In ' humiliation for condescending to dicker with the scum of th earth who were pelting a prectrat law v to dung. - ' Ana Oovernor Glenn. H say tnat he cannot eend th "military, unless th sheriff, reouost it. and that 8ner Iff Julian aald he didn't need It He say also that when Judge Long tele phoned 1 him . that a mob waa about the jail he Immediately , ordered out two or three companies from wnar lotto and elsewhere : but the negroes were lynched before they could move. These facte rask a full denfensa for th Oovernor. . - -v. Who. then. 1 left of thoe that hold om sort of commission from th lawT . The sheriff. ' And what of him on that night 7 The verldct of all men on tba evidence offered tnuet b that be and he alone I responsible for the dead and mur dered law; the law he waa aworn to uphold; that he was a virtual abettor of Hall and hla murderous follower. I'm informed thl la not the first mob that, haa "overpowered thl ahertO. It aeema to be a habit with him. Why did he not ahoot r Why did he not order hi deputies; to ahoot . Why did he not order the military to shoot? Because, It Is aald. "he might have killed som law-abiding people, some 'rood cltisen who were mlng ling with the mob, trying to persuade It to disperse.". Law-abiding cltlxena have no business being in any ucn company: but. admitting the reason ss valid there atlll remains the fact that the negroes who were lynched were on tbe third flffor 01 tne jail ana that the only approach to It I by a circular stairway which at on point I not mora than three feet wide. A half dosen ' deputies, one determinea man. could have defended that pass effectually against the mob and no good clUsen would have been put in eoparay. ... In Rowan' sherllT law leans upon a broken reed, and the prayerful efforts of Senator Overman, Judge Long and Solicitor ' Hammer should ' have been directed, not to the mob, but to the stiffening of his uncertain backbone. C03IEI.Y DEUCNDANT LX TEARS Mis Bernlcei ' Stevena, Erstwhile t'ltoru Girl, More Itccently a Hal elgti Ktenoicrsiilicr, rincu in Hen rlx County,-Va.. Court Claims to be a Friend, of Nan Iet ten) n, , Special to The Observer. . Richmond, Va, Aug. is. - aiiaa Bernlce Stevens, a comely young blonde walked with majestic carnage Into the office of the sheriff of Hen rico county this morning where she was tried for alleged 1 improper con duct at West Hampton Park on thq previous ' day, r Kew .; would hav thought from her appearanoe that tbe radiant gin, had spent the night in cell In th police station. In fact It would s no exaggeration 10 ear tnar her like had never trod the floor of th court hens In all the year of Ite previous ..bletory. ;T.fair .tyounflf prisoner tried behind"- closed doors, reporters being oarra from tne hearing. The grfl broke down ana wept when she was adjudged guilty and sentenced to pay a fine. Bh told the court that th officer who arrestea her. and who waa the principal wit nsss against her, was a bard-hearted man. and than she awept out or the building with anger written all over her. Mia Stevens has, smiled over 'the footlights In the chorua of many companies and has gathered news for Hie big datiie in Nw Torx ana otner cities, and I recently, rrom itaieign. C, whore sh was ngagea ia tn capacity of stenographer. She say that she Is a familiar mead 01 Nan Patterson, the Klorodora girl, . who recently came Into tbe lime light aa th alleged slayer of Leaser xoung. Rha never met. Evelyn Nbll Tftaw The retty offender left the Court room with tear in nr eye,- aeciar Ing that aho was innocent, . , r ,OOL. PET EltS A CALLEIL Dcwcrlhea HI New riay to the Boy in the Mule l'ei-Jesse Jsmee KuiHUy Ispiiool BoyWTlM Colonel In rDanger. . : : . , Col. Billy Petera. the ' well-known little manager of the Park Stock Com Duny. dropped in at The Observer-of- ore last night after tha performance. We I what have yu on tor io-mor. row," an occupant or tne auie rea ssked. . . . f .-..' ' "A thriller," ne repiiea. . ta tnmier in four thrills. Come out and see it. snd after you have rii bet you so cents you'll say that Jesse Jamc waa Sunday achoo) boyL "What la it -called the reporter 0 77 asked. It i cnlled "A Komane of Texaa and it brlstlo with revolvers, poison and dynamite. .Tber U also a wild wolf la the play, , but you wont see It," ' V.'-'-'l'V ;;- ' " ' -. "Who wrote th piayr- V"J. C Bloom, mv new leading man. He he a good part,ln It and. Judging y hi psl portmances, . n wiu tea those who attend. '. f- . ; "My the war. did you hear about ma nearly getting whipped last nlghtr K'r a foot -l wa ehoaklng my wife In the last act of 'How. Women Love,' when a big countryman In th back part' oruh house Concluded -it wa time to take a hand, 'end, expressing himself rather forciblyl he aurted, for the stage, but waa restrained by hla friend." . v., , ,t.7:-..; ,.,ft'.w, TIIK WEATHER. Wsstilnstnn. Aiis. M.-roroast for Tbursdny and 'PrMsyS ' ' Vlrglnl. North Carolina, South Csro l(na. Ueorgl'.' eastern r'toiid. western Morlds, AlaiMUnnsnd Mlssls.lppl, show ers ThursUuy and Y'riduyi llhl variable winds. .'" ' . . Uxiislsna and eastern Tea, fair Thursday , and Prldnyi . light 7 aouth wind. " ,- !'',..- 1 ; 1 " " . "' Western Tesas, fair In euth, showsr la north portion 'Tlmrsdsy and Krlrtny. Arkansas, fair Thursday and. rrl1y. Tenne-ee, , Kentucky nd W'st Vir ginia, warmer Thursday . and f'riday, with showers. . - , . ,' 1- ,,....,,.;,.( .... '',.. ,,s yjjockh ovrw weather ., r t ' BURKAtt. . . V ChurloU-. Aus. 15.-riunr1 lit! a. m.j titnart t il p. ru, ' '.; TtCMl'KHATl.TtQ (In degree).. I fffstteet leniiterstiir . . ., .. OS Ueril tonipetnture ,,." ,.' . T' Mean temper tore.. ,'. ,. , T I-w ees for the liny ', .. .. .. ,. AM'iimuleted ei for the month 4-1 Accumilnt.'l tp fur tli ynr. 9 I'ttMiriTATION fin Inches). Totnl for th SM lionrs ending 1 p. ui. . (1 1.7 Tetol for tlie miin Aeciiraiilatel w. v for the tnontb .ft intal fur the peer .. pi. :"l Acciimnlnteo: Hci Irnc rr year.., i ) I'revsllliig wlml rtircriion .. .... H. . YV J. l'.t.N,M.Tr, Cbeerver, . WouM iii'iiiit mnial, n:.: r u; 1 ;;o.u i:r:: Sir. J. T. JIoL-oml.c. Yihn lift I ' I t KccU n li. ,iir lit Jii-1 . . 1-Hl.-d No J'pri Iculiiin Ilciclvcil i.iitlM ,NoU-M. Special to The Obnorvcr, - Klkln, Auk:. 10. Last week Mr. J. T, Ilolcombu, a young man about 3 years old, left her for Marlon, 111, wher he expected to obtain work and reside In the future. To-day a tele gram w received spying that he had been killed and that hi bodywa en route home. No particular were glv en In th brief' dispatch and It i hot known how he met bla death.' Tha body will be taken on it arrival her to the home of hi parent in Yadkin county for Intermoat. ;.' Mr. Oeorge Bally, who recently ac quired the property of the bankrupt property of the bankrupt USSS aasrlK re of chalra ,. .within, the fciicin Chair same and manufacture next few weeks. The , Surry Baptist Association meet at White Flatne Baptist church three mllce from Mount Airy to-morrow, A number of people from Klkla win attena. V MUs Clara Bnll haa accepted a po sition to teach In the Dobeon graded schools the next term- Prof. Tyler, of Amhurst College, said recently) "A man esa live comfortably 1 without brains: bo . man 1 sver existed without a dlaeetlve syUm. Th oyrP- tlo has neither rami,- nope or cnaruy.- Iay by day people realise the importance 01 csruig lor inoir '" " ro"i" mi need of the use of a little correctly Ahitln. A fmrreottve , like Kodol for UvsneDsia. Jt flisest wnai you eat. Bold by Ilawisy't fhartnaoy. PEOPLE'S COLULIIJ Tha American' District . Telegrapli Company delivera package, paroela. note, lavltaUona, furnisiiee snessen gers - for errand aervioa at a very tau cost. Tna ooearver wiu son. our aieeeenger. wttboet cnarge, 10 your residence) or place of bnUae lor advertisement for -v tnia roiunus. 1 mono 7 a. onice who I-nloa Telegraph Company; Tnona 43. AH sulvertisflments Ineerted la thl column at rata of ten oenla Una of six words.. No ad, taken for lee than 10'centa. v Cash tn advaaoa vim VVAJfTED. ' 'J. WANTEDAt once, 'a firet-elsss. right.party. Apply by, letter oniy. oww salary efpect WANTCD-Reetstered drugglt. v Give : reference, ng. salary aspected and stat time you can beau work. Addr, ; box rz, -ryvuj, n.. - t. wiMTm-TiM tntin -af reel ability handle h sb-claas Dronesiuoa in uiis late on strsJrht sslary and expenMa. Address, Boa 7L City. '; ' WAfrricn Tour 'seeend-hsnd twist . frame immedlAtel-. Addreaa, r.'Vo ton aHH." care Obeerver. , . ., 1 1 1 1 1 i WANTED About September 1t,'aa ex pertenced men and wife In an all-year- round1 hotel. Han rnuet - mderstan atewardla . and wife housekeeper duties. No children. Salary moderate but sure; a rood . posltoa for th right persons, - Addre. with references ex perience, mUL, . Wm. Hewitt, Heodersoa VU1S, M. V, - t. ... 1 J VrANTED-PlmB for Korth and South Kelly dr Co, u ywyettevUle. N. C " - WANTBD Kxperleneed tenogTapher at Aitce. Anniv.DV letter, otaiei salary and experience-' Queen City PrtatlMto. WANTCD-A tr valine salesman, famll i lar with tha N ana B. C trade ea ell Introduced, line of farming impl menta For 'right man good position assured. Address Immediately, stating salsry deslr!. Rawllngs Implemsat Co us minor, mo. WANTED-North Carolina Resorts.' I will glv U.W -a volume for th fol lowing;' North .Carolina Reports,- In good seeono-nna condition, osnvereo in h letch, vlst MIlHiKa, John W. Hiae- daie. i , .v . - , WANTED-A poeltlon superintendent of Isra cotton- mill ia MOI iorth Csre- linaj. good practical. xperlance in the buaineaa ana can rurnian gooq reference. Apply aupenatanaent, ear ' oneerv-. WANTRD A veuna man as bill he an. hlDDlna clerk, also, t lenrn ststlonerv Dusmess.- i4ueen v.ity rnniing wo. WANTED Ilsrasss-mskera ' Hewlett aranttuim Heme to. wuiea n. g. , intcsxuunDovt.. SALEBMAN -with lx years experience wsnts. poeltlon to get out ei malarial country. , Familiar with North and South Carolina territory. Box 174, Qellls, Oa. ATT.ANTA Berber ' Colleee.. tuition 120. Yiw furnlsu our graduates paying posl- nns in u 'Sh??, paid from street, Atlanta, OOOD harnees-makee wanted., Hartliae Ac Co., Ballalrury, N.C ron baxx. FOR BALK A - eanonV toe msrrv. hole ana rnair. iniiiu ml nsrnees. im.oo ' i FOR BENT Newly built 7-mom houe. all-modern convenience, da F.aat tth sireat: inquire a n. va ia wen. street. . FVR SAI,K--l,W0 ecree good farm land. ten muss east et nanrora; t feghfe'ECr, ber Co., iaaford. N. C e T. i. e:nisn li a. Jermsn leind Jk Timber P"OIt BKNT. furnished, lower floor flat, four Isrse rooms, conveniences. hu- sonaple to right perty. t Address, "Close Id," Ottaerver, . ron SAI.B-Feebee ladelthle Ink Check Wfcrd ObWver. . -, '. ' rroiwjwr. oniy oeen useg rour months, ron niTNT. rOH . KKNT-Nloly famished room. Cheap, to Mouth Churnh street, . ron PENT A good T-roont bous, mod ern conveniences, i ;net Mh street, tmiulre tut North Caldwell atreet LOUT, lX)BT-On Trade street a locket, en reved "Iul." Itrsrard If to Ulwerver office. ' , . . , ASSAYING . cnixncAL ajcaltbe. onra of . eviht crncnimcn. u i. i I.......L..-J U. It-fl X7, lib street. Charlotte. H. C. onS'urhTwuS Nothiiiiy i bea'its ') the-j lite - lii " the' wavViaif nnvtU ?X tsbllshea ana oig paymg euswess, . rer-i- - O ' :T, ; 7 : . ""T " T" ; r-r" ' ties and they, are 1-2 price. Only 5e each; or WAtrrfD-TM uenerai sire exuhiuss- l . . r . ... II. -v,' J-., t-'--f !.-.. vC ' , r Company desire to anrage a atrtotly I - - ,. " ' .. -; r V, OUC tjCT QOZ - ' " J S . ' flrst-class male atenofrapher. Moderate . ?, ; .t; ?f : , v - VV- ed uy man oniy. I - ik .,,,. s w w w , .... ' 1 " "7 I UU y WY lit , . J. - "... "J 1 v .. A beautiful quality and loo!: exactly like sill:. . t . . ,-. 1 f ',: .... - 1f ... ' -.- - i . ri nev ctocjx fli2 (l For; ladies. is ' conildefti tKe: best They, have linen heels, I 1 ' y "I ' ' ' " I I ' r '' ' rr , . . , 1 I " V -,v ' yt, -1 ,: , J V , .1 v , t as , ' ' 1 I s ' J'ew PiHov TopsLitlibgraplied faYmost rizxyf 3 design new' stock tapes iZScandOceach.';-1' . Vhite and B!adt Ifid Belts : : Another new r, lot" at ..,.,,' . ; ;:- lts an 'awful big the price is W and less zc and Not maiiy leftrbutthey Such lieauMu Jao Lanterns At. ' ' 1- . J '.Fl ' f' Pi ':' w-'.. . I l ! I IfFA I MfMHIMA' I IIIIIVL I IIILa'.llllllllllllfl : LJIITJIJiV- I IIU-JO VUlb UlJilllllllCaa I! UIjUJ a novelty.' Made : of "burnt, wood. . Price IS New linen RnLsh Chaiiibray - a In all shades of . blue A'lbcautiful wash (fabric pinKy green; ano rea T::kMs Seersuckers " yla'iSitSmSic- patterns 12 I-2c " v f'ew Cheviots r :-v Thaf good kind for ;.. -. ' , n wears so weu j'Sccteli Pkid ' V.-';,"! Just the ; thing for diildren's school dresses ' t. 11-1 1 T.. ': f 4 4 .' aarK ana iignc colors & -zc , ; That f'rcelCcttcn Tttrfc V We still have some! wool, the patterns are ; ' ; sellers 1 1 KUZZZZZ1ZZ?tZZ2 c 3 ' W t0 HI . nn ano au sizes iv V.,.- t. Hose .-tliat made fbrV' the' xnoneye' and toes arid wear like: you i would like, als6a piUo tops , -All are 50c ' " Also black silk , ., - vV.rvwT'Ac '' than halfeX Ox;.Jc, 5c each I " I . - J i . g r - ,,' js f, r - r. - are beautieso such and ; pink; per yard J 5c. ngures per y ara 0Ce -bbysV waists and shirts 11 ' ' Ti ' ' 1 r? :.,-V- --.' .. : rncc izc v ; ; Gingliems : T; of it left It looks like neat( and they are big at J5ce - - ' , : " I 1 1 ( I .1
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 16, 1906, edition 1
4
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