Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Jan. 20, 1907, edition 1 / Page 12
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i::th XV ( f I Un s New : .mil) from Hie nlms ( the ; - I Can:"." Tin M-rvlcfH were ripened by a i.i;irr bv llin ItfV. II, '-. Johnstone, ii vi;ii ruu of the grey. Miss Lulu Ab ernethv prfli J at the iRn and a v. il trained, excellent choir render- ,1 -several appropriate selections. Thfl '" iirnt. "How Firm a Foundation," was a favorite hymn with General Ae, and wan sung at hi funeral, v . Mr. Alfred Nixon read General Lee's farewell address, bringing tears to .many .eyes..?. Judge W. A. Hoke. In a few happily chosen; words Intro duced the speaker of the day, Mr.tO. Max Gardner, ot Shelby. Mr. Oard- " ner'S style and words were both force, ful. He is an .ardent and inspiring speaker and his eloquent words held the close attention ot a very large auriienee. even to the little children. As Judw Hoke predicted. Mr. Oard -ner ta a-youo man of, whose future rirr North Carolina will Do proua. ' The speaker recalled many of the , beautiful characteristics of the great AMir and rave In outline his Ufa hlstorv. brlnirlng out beautifully, and with the vividness of a. picture, that Morning point In Lee i career wnen within his stately home at Arlington he declined Lincoln's offer to make ' him commander of the Union army, and gave his sword to his beloved Southland. '' ' ; sv Mr. . Gardner spoke of the valor, i and self-sacrifice of the Confederate soldier, and paid a graceful- and ex quisite tribute to the women of the South. ' Tha Daughters are Indeed to be . congratulated on their choice of an orator for this occasion. Crosses of honor were distributed ta nineteen veterans by the chapter. 1 i'fci-ip Tha large audience joined In sing VKHSspT American and services were con ?tM4 eluded by a benediction pronounced ''riKiby n' R z- Johnson. .-i.'i'iV" With ' their, usual 'hospitality the . Tlaiirht!- nf the. f 'onferturacv enter- talned all the veterans at an elnbo rate luncheon served at the Com- merclal Club. tjOflKBlRG CKLKBRATKR. ' Judge Charles M. Cooke, Deliver Ad :V .' trcM at Memorial KserrlseH l-Ymr f" .; .Hundred Hchool (liildren Attend. , V Special to The Observer. .;;;,.,Loulsburg, Jan. 18. Represpnta--',' tatlvea of the old and the new flout h i Paid a beautiful tribute to the mem , T7 of the great chieftain, General ' i' , Robert E. Lee. The exercises were V under the auspices of the local chap- tar Daughters of the Confederacy, and were held In the court house. Four kundred pupils of the local schools f marched In a body to the hall and were followed by the old soldiers in column. This gathering of youth, Strangers to shot and shell, and the '4;XVld actors In the great tragedy eug ; gested something of the pathetic as "';.,'-as they sat side by side to listen to the eulogy of the Mouth's old-time " nobleman. ViU' The exercises were opened by a ip" hymn by voices from all the choirs r. In tha town, followed with a rerl ;.'.'. tation by MIks May. Ml Jones, of i f the Loulsburg College faculty, read n General Lee's fan-well ml tire, after which Mr, W. H. Iluffln happily In- -A" troduced the orator of the day, Judge vv' Charles M. Cooke. Ills address was ' able and eloquent. At the conclusion -..i; df the address, lie v. George M. Duke VjtJtj, pronounced the benediction, bringing :.,',; to a close a most Interesting and me- morabl occasion, memorable not only !? "J 'j for the Interesting exercises but for ':fA'',ne Immense crowd in attendance. tWi 8KRVKKH AT HALISBt'RY. . . Hon. John 8. Henderson Delivers Ad V; . dresa on Life and Character of Lor -Other Kpcuk and King. Special to The Observer. Salisbury, Jan. 19 The graded : C ,' school this mornlnlg drew a food Salisbury crowd to Its celebration , t- With the Daughters of the t'onfeder . acy of the birthday of General Kob 'Ai rt E. Lee. Hon. John R Henderson - Made the address on the life and ,V character of the Hnuthern Idol snd , V Mayor Hoyden presided. One of the ' v; 'V attractive features or tin. morning " f ' th ''olo '"''l'" t'onquereii Han- y-sj-i:;' ner," by Mrs. Nelson Taylor. Penn- V 'r Sylvanlan, who sang the song hs amil ' ?- fully as If she belonged to a conquer ' country. apl. John a Ham say )Vr related u personal incident In his cs ' 'r feer as a soldier under rieneral I.ee ''' and declared that the Fenerni soldiers ; ; t loved him a the Houthern people did. "y Miss Bessie Hendersnti rehd "The Conquered Bunner." a sentiment much like the sons", and an wlltorlal from The ixuidon Times or A trt1 ;t, V 115. In that tribute to the Houthern ' soldiers they were declared the equsls y'; of Napoleon's army and couta boast of as many brilliant victories. The , choir sang "Tenting To-Mnht." "The Bonnie Blue Flag" and Maryland. My Maryland." The hol ceremony. In Which th- teachers and school Joined, , was Imprisslve and Inspiring: LKE DAY AT HF.lnsVILI.K. Rorklnaliam (Tiaptrr Daiixhiers of t'onledrra'y Have Kxerclses Held In City Hall Dinner to Veterans. Special to The Observer Reldsville. Jun 19. To-day. the 199th annlvrraary if the birth of Robert Kdnard l..r, the peerless . leader of the troops who ore the ;'.. gray dutina the conflict between the HI a tea. and a mui reroKnlxed the world over as a trt lu ro, observed bv the Rockingham Chapter. Iuuh ' .,. tsrs of the Confederacy. Kxerclses .' , Were held in the . itv hall and nearly , ' the entire membership ui the Hcales. - U : iBoyd Camp of Confederate Veterans, . ''. together with a o.m attendance of V , Other eltllena. were present. Ad- , ' ',lresaes were deliver cd. music was furnished by the best local talent, and :J 'l' lunch was served the old soldiers 1 at the conclusion of the exercises. " Tha nlversl eommemsrstlon of the data of Lee s birth throughout the ,. North as well as his native Houtbland , . . Is but a flttlns; tribute to this soldier of the age. this Christian -ntlemsn of character and Intesritr, ot whm ; fbe country is proud. f jTHK DAY AT CHAI'l l, HILL. Adlresea by Mctnls-rs UrrHy taw-ally and KxnrUes by Liter a ry SWicictlcs Mark Xotcd Oiraiiion. , Bpactel to Th'e Observer, Chapol Hill. "Jan. 19 The iooth anniversary of the birth of Robert E. ' Ix-a was celebrated here to-day In a fitting manner. There was holiday In ; . atl departments of the University and .at public exercises In the chape) held under the auspice nf the local chap, ter of. the Daughters of me Confad eracy. There were addresses by Pro. feasors Ed. TC Graham, of Charlott.; w. K. Remsrd and Dr. Thomas Hums, all of the University faculty , To night the two literary societies are holding special sessions to'commeme rsta the life of Lee, Messrs. C C, rrnherdt and W. K Bernard are the principal speakere at these meetings. Arrangements were made to have 1 Jltor 3. W. Barley, of Raleigh, to d. l'ver a public address a the life and . ' srscter of Lea her to-niaht, hut MrK i tVjr ws kept away by sickness. G. N. 1 , ' i.iu, ot 1,0m I S r, I m !; v -era A.! -i-.. on A ?rori4te Miihlcal I'roKruiiinu". r'peclal to The Observer. 3reeiiKl)oro, Jan. 19. The memory of Gen. Jlobtrt II. Loo was ronored In Greensboro to-day, and the ccnten hlal exercises were exceedingly fitting ana appropriate. : The address on the life of General Lee was delivered by G. 8. Uradshaw, of the local bar, who paid a beautiful tribute to the( char scter of the Houth's idol, A pro. srramme of appropriate . music wa rendered.1 ; Half a hundred veterans and the numbers of the local chap ter of the Daughters of the Confed eracy occupied aeata In the centra of the hall the Smith memorial, build Ing whjch ; contained a large audi . j Memorial '' ExMrlsc(i "at Pittaboro.' Special to' The Observer Jri " Plttsboro, an.'" U. Appropriate exercises, commemorativo ot tha 100th anniversary , of the birth of Gen, E, , Lee, ' wera held at :; the home of Maj. H. A, London to-day under the auspices of the Daughters of the Confederacy. ' The stores on Main street 'were decorated in Con federate colors, as was the home of Major London. Tha ' exercises ' wera opened with prayer by Rev. , C. ' p. Jerome, short talks by old veterans and sketches read. These, together with appropriate music, made up the programme. - During the services from 11 to 1, all the. stores were closed. , " Celebration at WUson, . Speclal to The Observer. Wilson, Jan. H. The anniversary of the birthday of General Robert E Lee was appropriately observed here. The Jesse . Barnes Camp of Confed erate Veterans and the John W. Dun ham Chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy Jointly held exercises in the library. - ' NOW HAS BROOM FACTORY. Livingstone College Adds a New In dustry to Ita , ListMr. KlutU Wins Recognition In LeartNlatnre- Clarence Neighbor Ilohbcd? Special to The Observer. Salisbury, Jan. 19. Livingstone College has a new industry, a broom4 factory. The cyclone of 1905 badly wrecked the Industrial building and the college is now recovering from that misfortune. It has done well everywhere. The first broom was ms,de yester day. The best machinery has been Installed and Dr. Goler purposes the supplying of the whole city with his students' products. The brooms show up fine and will undoubtedly receive a steady sale here, where the college has friends. Livingstone has again purchased printers' supplies and In the future will do Its Job work, which Jias been done very generally by the Salisbury offices. The magazine and other periodicals of the college will be printed there. There are two printers In the faculty, Professors Aggrey and Wallace, and there are several who have done newspaper work. That institution yesterday received ... . . , 1. , .u a line piano ana piaceii ii m i"" musical department, which Is un der the direction of Professor Fran cis Jacob Holland. He teaches piano and voice and his own tutelage cam from musicians who studied under I.lxt Livingstone has done great things In the past year and th treasurer's report shows that the re- celpts for one year have been $5B,- 18IMK and the expenditures !)&,- 0H7.71. State Henator Whitehead KlutU came In last niitni irom naicign ana will' spend to-day and to-morrow with his parents. Mr. Kluttx de clined an Invitation to address the Leftlsluture to-day.' Mr. KlutU will In a few days address the Senate on his telegraph bill, which provides, under penalty If violated, Immedl- late delivery of messaRes. I he bar Imtry hill, one of the best Introduced 'this term, was lost, but he has hud a favorable report on others and will i tight hsrd for them. j Mr. Kluttx Is now on some of Hie 'most Important committees snd con sidering his being a new Senator and Ian uncommonly young one. he bus had remarkable recognition. Here are some of those committees: Chair man of the trustees of the university and levlsal of the laws, two of the most Important ones. He is also on the committee on Judicial districts, gume laws, constitutional amend ments, military affairs, Dally Jour nal and engrossed bills. Mr. W. 1. Miller yesterday found. In Henderson's woods. Clarence Neighbor, who Mild he had been lying in the woods since Wednesday night, when he was beaten, robbed and tcfi for dead. He was dis covered In a tangled mass of bamboo briars and Ills bead and face were literally pummeled Into a pulp. Neighbor had been on a spree that night and says he had In his pockets I .20. He declares this was taken from him Who his assailants were does not appear and they have fled. Neighbor's story Is discounted partly hy the officers. Mrs. Cowan, they say, declares he has told her a different one, and It Is believed that he whs in a brawl and beaten, or that lie fell from a freight car. A UIO ( UKTHIXJ STORE. t . r Building of V. Wallace Sons. of Salisbury, Has Floor Space of 40,0(M Square Fret. Special to The Observer Salisbury, Jan. 19. There Is In Salisbury and ready for Immediate use In lis entirety, a wholesals cloth ing and Jobbing establishment that deserves to stand out In bold print for the curiosity it Is. V. Wallace & Sons have Just completed their three storv house with a floor capacity of 110,900 square feet, undoubtedly the largest establishment In the two Car ollnas. To say nothing of the Immense trade of this atore, it Is In a class all its own. Ilk I ho Sslwyn Hotel. It Is equipped with a fire department, an Idea of the Junior partner, Mr. J. V. Wsilsce, who Is the ex-ehlef of Sal isbury's volunteer department There Is an ppsratu that will 'enable thfl clerks to tight tbe Are out without oslllng for the company. A fire-proof bflrtee spans the two stores that front rm Msin and Fisher and should a nre break out. the major portion of the stock miaht be transferred to the annex. It has two electrical elevators anil on the outside is a platform from which a car load of goods may be removed en these elevators within II minute. There I her also sn auto mobile shed, which Is soon to house a flne machine. They will visit their trade' throughout the country In It and will drive frequently to place as fir away as the South Carolina eiU, where Ihey do a great deal tf Work,- ' ... v . t These men are rarrylng such a Job bing stock that they have contracted for the tlr output of th Marl- Doreegn cotton Mill for 1907, l y .;.it.ii i i i ;: f ot. !;..! i Is Alined 1! ' ! : y t U'HiulnKtol Vai to Keck Leer ults. .Special to The Observer. Wilmington. Jn. 19.. Advices are received here- that the United State training ship Wasp will arrive in port Monday , and remain a week. ' i he Wasp Is out from Norfolk on recruit ing duty, and will endeavorhere to secure enlistments for the United States navy. . The Wasp comes - by Beaufort, and will spend a few days Vnere. , The boat ', in command of Captain Croghan, and Is something over ?10 feet long, carrying num ber - of guns. Khe sailed irom Nor folk yesterday. !'-?: The bill by Morton, of New Han over, In the House at Raleigh yes terday Is especially aimed at Wilming ton, which has ; long . suffered from no division. of the races on the street cars here and on the suburban lino to Wrlgtotsville Bound and Beach. Large-numbers of negroea , here work in the fertilizer factories near ' tne city and come to Wilmington at night and on aSturday afternoons, their clothes reeking with filth from tneir dai v occupation, maklnr it flectaea lv dlsSrreeable for those whose olfac tnries ar : easily : assailed. : Morton nromised on the stumn that tie would inave a bill passed to, abate the nuis ance, and his bill yesterday is con strued to -mean thaf he ;whi reaeem himself in , this respect. '- All arrangements . are com pie tea for a very elaborate observance . or t.pa' centennial in Wilmington to morrow noon. There will he a paraae of the military and veterans just prior to exercises in the Academy and a lunch for the -old sowiers at tfhe W. L. I, Armory after the formal part of the programme, the Daugo- tnrs of the CTonreaeracy neing inn hostesses. - Dr, Henry Aiexanaer White, of Columbia, S. C, wno wui deliver the address upon me occa sion, arrived to-day, an is a guesi at the home of Mr. James BPrunt, FORMER LEGISLATURES. Home' Political Luminaries ecen Through the Telescope oi lime. R. B. Creecy. in Elisabeth City Econ omist. ' Time la & arrest maanlfylnc glass and Its magnifying power is increased in proportion to me amwn tect is removed, men in the distant part stalk across the stage, and glanU those days become laminar oo- erta. "Wf sometimes invna mai our estimate of the past la all an Illusion and that the great men of that period that look so majestic In the distance were no larger than the leading men of our own times. As we look In the distance and see the old legislators of North Carolina, the Legislature of lil looms up in the distance ana bines with brighter lustre. It was ho Legislature in whlclj the Doay met in the "Governors fatace, ai he foot of Favetteville street. The State capltol had been destroyed by lire the summer before. As we look back upon this body through our telescope of time, we see bright luminaries In the body that we seek now in vain. The great feature of that Legisla ture was the rebuilding of the capl tol, an effort, was made by Fayette villo to secure the location of the cap ltol at that place and remove It from Raleigh. There was a formidable combina tion of Fayetteville and western North Carolina to effect that object. Raleigh was In a tremulous condi tion. Fayetteville- and western North Carolina were represented by Louis D. Henly and Charles Fisher for the removal of the capltol to Fayetteville and William Gaston and William H. Haywood were for Its rebuilding at Raleigh. There were others of lesser note who were conspicuous in the strife. We look over he Legislature , now and find no such men. but fear It Is an JIluHlon caused by their nearer view. Where Is Oaston now In the House T Where Is Louis D. Henly? Where Is William H. Haywood? To our imag ination Echo answers Where! We hope they are here and that "distance lends enchantment to the view." - TAKES MEHANE PASTORATE. Rev. R. T. 1lston, of ;affney, a ., Cinncs to North Carolina. Special to The observer. Caffney, . C. Jan. 19. Rev. R. T. 1. 1st on has accepted a call to Me bsne Presbyterian church at. Mebane, N. "., and will leave (Jaffney in a s''.iort time for his new field. Mr. I.lslon Is one of the mqat scholarly men wno has been In (laffney; he Is also a. most excellent preacher, and If. the people of Mebane are looking for a profound scholar and a line preach er, they have succeeded In finding what they wish. Your correspondent never Writes anything, no matter bow unimport ant it may seem, unless he Is In a position to verify the same. The story of how Jtfnnny Kirk arid "Red Kye" captured the bicycle thief has been doubted in certain quarters. Your correspondent has the state ment of Sheriff Thnmss and Col, A. W. Doggett, Oaffney'a Hercules, (and It will not be exactly healthy for any Individual to doubt any statement which the colonel mskesi that It Is true In every particular. Liquor and Ivor?. Wilmington Messenger. It Is hsrd to say which is the lesser of the two evils dope or liquor drinking. We are Inclined, however, to agree with Hhe Greensboro Indus trial News in what it says: x 'The Legislature has tackled the dope,' proposition, and well It may. If we were called upon to advise a boy to drink either some of the so called 'soft drinks,' which are reeking with the most Inslduous drugs, or strslght. old-fashioned corn whiskey, we would be strongly tempted to side with the white lightning.'7 Tbera I certainly more danger In the "dope" habit being acquired by the young men of to-day, because of the respectability hal Is thrown around the places where It Is served. The dope dispenser has th advantage of the whiskey dealer. In that his place of dealing nut the deadly drug is con sidered more respectable. High toned men, and constant church attend ants, deal out the dope In their drug stores men who would think them selves disgraced were they seen tak ing a drink nf whiskey or beer In a saloon yet they are creating In the voting men whom they serve an ap petite more deadly anyhow, equally as deadly as that acquired by fre quent visits to the Honor shops. TRANSPORTATION. MetAndhurgh Wilson In the New York Time. Sister has an auto ' Hut til wigon green. Careful folk skiabetdl When she strikes the srtn. . Brother for his outing Hua a moilr hoi ' Chugging through the water Hsailng all afloat ( ' 'Mother ha a' carriage 1 ' '' ! Aed a pah" of bavj When ah take hr airing , Lordly dual thr ral. JiM now father trv'a ' Nnn hav heard him slats ' See we hear him mmitr Thai ne psy th freight , c I-V SAVOYARD. Is the Democratic'. prty tnoil bund? The m inaubli&hlo cvld n w that it in sftiile. ' It-has no ubo for any man wnu rises above the dead level of mediocrity.' It is In the hans of Its Cleons, and Arlstldes Is1 doomed to the (ostracism. VV hen i look at the situation In Texas I recall the battle of Roth well Bridge, as sir ?f'J.t?r. Bolt narrates It In the de lightful : romance of "Old . Mortality," Henry Morton would have gained the day for ' the Presbyterian cause (bad hla advice been taken, but fanat ics an fool looked on him as- an Krastlarr and would not support him at-th only point on th field where It VAi TIAHlhU lA'taalf .f.na. . M n the Duke of Monmouth hurled the veteran' of-- DaleU - .against the feeble force ef.7 Morton and the day was rained for th Kna-liah' Crown. Then 'It; was that Ch stern Camer onians, gloomy and fanatlo, headed by , Ephralm Macbrlar and) Habak- kuic Mucklewrath. cot their: com mander, Morton. - In - their custody, j condemned him to death, and would have executed . him f, it ; Clavertiouse 1 naa : mt erne up, put, tnem io. tne sword, and rescued his gallant and generous adversary on the field of Mar,-: - x"!A.t; I - defy any ' man ' who Is familiar with "Old , Mortality' to look with unbiased . eyes on the : situation : In Texas and. not discover a t striking parallel in the military career pf Henry Morton and the political caT reer of Joseph W. Bailey. Bailey's fault la not that he borrowed mon ey from somebody, who 1 had It to lend: hot that he gave legal counsel to , man In Ot. Louie named Pierce. No; nottilng -of the kind. What. they have aaralnst Bailey la this, sim ply this, and ' nothing more: Bailey is the most Intellectual man in the UnhXt States Senate, the greatest cunswuuonai - lawyer ana in obi formidable debater in that body, and the best equipped man in all Amer ica to engage. In an academic dis cussion of political principles In that august forum, the United States Sen at. That Is what Is the matter with Bailey, and all that is the matter with him.1 Thle huttudlnarlan Dem ocratic party will not suffer such a man a that to remain m punuc nie. Envy, Jealousy, rivalry, prejudice, Ignorance these are the pack now after-Bailey, . and it will be next thlna to the miraculous if they don't get Mm. Personal Integrity .4 never looks so much like personal Integrity, civic virtu never looks so much like civic virtue aa when this kennel- envy. Jealousy, .rivalry, prejudice, and ignorance put them on and set up a barking that would drown all the thunders of Olympian Jove. , I have heard it In this town the baylngs of little minds and It Is heard in every political capital the world round. Christian and pagan. Do they point to a vote Bailey has cast in either House of Congress they object? No; though I can point to a score oi mem inai i oo- Ject to. Do they traverse a word he has uttered in either House or on the hustings, or a line he has written In legislative reports? Not one, and they say that as a states man he Is simply lde-al: but that he had some sort of business transac tion with a man named Pierce, and that Pierce had trafficked with the Standard Oil Company. It seems that Bailey bought Barney Glbbs farm, and they want to know where he got the money. He also bought a farm in Kentucky, and ' they are ready to charge that as a rascally transaction. , It was the Eighteenth. Congress, I believe, that elected John Qulncy Adams President of the United States. The vote of Kentucky de cided It In Adams' favor, though the people of Kentucky had cast 20 votes for Jackson to one for Adams. Henry Clay caused the. Kentucky delegation to give the vote of that State to Adams, for, like thousands and thousands of the very best men In the country. Clay did not believe that the government was safe in the keeping of a man of "Old Hickory's" temperament. Adama appointed Clay secretary of State, and Imme diately the crv went up that it was a bargain between the two.' that Adams had sold and Clay had bought the chief place In the Cabi net, and tns price r was the vote of Kentucky for Adams' When 'the Pres idential election failed In the elector al college and was determined in the House of Representatives. Every body who knows anything about it now is convinced that It was a slander, though It Vj cost ' Clay the Presidency; but old Kentucky never faltered. She stood by, her greatest son till she pillowed. his manly, form to Its final rest In her bosom at Lex ington. And they are 1 after John Sharp Williams, ton. WhyT Because he Is the foremost man in the House, just as nsiley is- the foremost man In the Henate. It was such political peanutery as that -which caused a great British statesman, Shrewsbury, the ablest minister of .William HI, to exclaim: "Had I a son I would soon er breed him a cobbler that a courtier, and a hangman than a statesman." There . was a political party In Knglund that called them selves "Patriot" They ' turned agwlnst that grand old parliamentary leader. Sir Robert Walpole, and helped to drnr him down.- The old statesman vividly described ,them af ter this fashion: "Patriots, sir! Why I oan make a tain d red of them in a night. I have only to refuse an absurd request for plsxe and up starts a Patriot." ' i ' John Sharp Williams has but to refuse a coveted committee assign ment and up starts an enemy. It is jiot that William Is not the sheet capable man, certainly tho greatest debater. In the House, a man of vast acquired knowledge, a ready speak er, a holy terror In the other side; It Is not that he Is not alt of these and SelwmM00ml 0HABLO Will Open Tlmrsdtf fan 31, New, iAfodcrn Fireproof arid Luxurious in; !aU Ap. 10 Bath ''J:: American plan, $2.50 per. My upwards, . rf) k v - 5 j- u naer; management v , -' I Piedmont Hotel, Atlanta, Oa. - ) V : , Hotel I3ellciief Boston, Mass. HARVEY h WOOD, Hanaging; Directors. 4J $ Advice of the largest coffee dealers 0 thehWorlcl is always to buy the old- ) l)y )V fashioned Arbuckles' ARI03A Coffee inr - ' " sJ J packagefcy( Don't u for a pound of Mocha and Java, or huy btKe pric, fot CxHet uchiates and you cannot get the tame coffee for the tame price all the time, ; omVsi you pay too irmch. lor It Most of the so-called Mocha and lava Coffee is sJmnlv ' maaqucracling. and is not oearly. as good :Jof the Bragflian Coffeet most guitable to lookt there it no difference between loatted Java, and Brazilian Coffees j many pgople rJrinV BraTilian but pay for Javal 'v " ''y tlua Arhuctles costs you less. It U trnVtale fo believe that a high price guarantees V quaEiy. When you buyucldei ARIOSA Coffee, you get a full one pound package of the leading Coffee of the i Coffee for the money. We have built up a butinett exceethng the combined businesses' of the four next largest coffee nnnt " ' in the whole World. If yeuf dealer wui not supply the genuine, write to V ' Wjooe iwoa, n Yori'ciW 3 ' more, but; ha : hasv wounded some body's vanity. Whoever ; saw him come out of a debate second best? iobody They say ?he talks too much; The test of that la the floor and vthe galleries. He never , emp tied "efther. and a thousand ' times he haa filled both. ;f W hen v the : great Bdmund ; ' Kean A returned y' to ' his wretohed garret where Lis faithful wife had . been : praying , , for. ' hours for his success on t!he- night of, his London debut at " Drury Lane, the loving woman met him and In a voice husky with anxiety, aaked: . f'What. oh, what, Edmund, did the Duke of Beauford say t'l "Ja . the Duke, of Beauford. By O Mary the pit rose to me!" and so It had, and that very nignt jvean waa cn nrst actor of the world. I cannot say so much for John Sharp as a statesman, "but l have seen ,. then pit rise to him," and expect to see it many' a time again,, even at' the more, dlgnlned north end ot the CapKoL . I believe it Is a duty every State owes to the American people to send to the two houses of Congress Its ablest and Its best men.- When the brilliant, the knightly, the accom plished and gifted Carmack went down I asked if the hour of Bailey or Williams would not - strike . next. God grant that It. waa not prophecy, but It looks a little like It at this writing. It lav an Injury, ff not an Insult to all the other States far one of the sisterhood to send an in ferior man to Congress when an able man Is ready . to take the place. When the name of Maine is heard we think of Evans and Fessenden, Blaine and Reed; when it 1a Mas sachusetts, Webster, and Choate, Sumner and Hoar are In our minds. South Carolina suaaesta Lowndes and CaVhoun, HayntJ and McDuffle. Kentucky was . made Illustrious by Clays. Marshalls and Brecklnridges Old Virginia' gave us more, perhaps, than all the others torether. Their name.la legion and too numerous to mention. I But now Is the ae of small men. Ah archmediocrity is more than Caesar,- and thinks he Is loaded down with Caesar fortunes. This Is Ms day to howl, and he Is doing it in cessantly. He . comes from all quarters North and South, Eaat and West. And I say this mindful that there are numerous first-class men In the Senate and In the House; but the tendency, especially in the Derm oeratic party though it Is scarce perceptible In the Republican party the tendency Is to put mediocrity to the fore. Nobody can avoid see ing; that, and until the Democratic party men da Hs manners It will never carry another general election for Congress or for President Do Yon Think Charlotte Is Chinese City? Greensboro Industrial News. From The Charlotte Observer we learn: The management of the local f freight department of the Southern Railway has received tha bill of lad ing for the new equipment for the Charlotte' artillery, first Battery North Carolina FleM Artillery. The equipment, which weighs tsn tons, was shipped more than six weeks ago and Is expected to arriv In Charlotte any day. It consists of four automat ic breech-loading steel guns of I 3-10 Inch bore; four limbers and caissons; a battery forge, supply wagon, sad dler's -chest and outfit, carpenter's chest: complete outfits of wheel and lead horse harness with bridles, sad dles and halters, and every other part of the complete outfit of a regu lar battery of field artillery as used In the regular army. . . r That outfit .'has a business sound to It. certainly, and onr neighbor, In blissful contemplation . of lta new treasure, will probably forget that it Is now the Queen City and remember only1 that some century and a -quarter ago It was a hornets nes. . A THOUSAND DOIXARS WORTH OF GOOD. ' A. H. Thtirne. a well-known eoal op erator of Buffalo, O.. write: "I hav been aft Noted with kldw y and bladder trouble for years, printing gravel an4 tone with excruciating pain. I got no tellef from medicine until I began taking Foley's Kidney Cure, then th reault waa surprising. A few oe start th brick Ilk fla ton ana now I hav no pain serosa my kidneys and I feel like a tie w man. It.hss done me ft.OOO worth of good." R. It" Jordan V Co. v - "v TTU, N.i 0. h ' -.it- ... r V, '..iK coffee for you at ArbucUeV ARIOSA. the taste and health of American people CONFESSIONS MAKE TROUBLE. "SanctlAcatJonlsta", "U AVImtlng : Prose Nlytea In BuncombewConfesslona of bins Produce Various Results.. Special to The, Observers , ;4 ' . Ashevllls,, Jan. H,Accordlng -to John Banks, ot. Big Ivy township. Buncombe county, . the sa'ncUfled re. Hglou Sect has 'capturedT that sec tion of the county. :iJohQ Banks .made h is tri-weekiy excursion '. to ' j Ashe villa ; to-day, and ; 'declares that the "SanclflcaUol8ts,,' are ? ttost active in Big ivy. "s Heii says, that they- are holding greaj meetings arid that many or (ne'C people. ; of TWs : eighborhood have become Identified with, the sect. John f Banks, howeveV doesn't "k a prove of the 'Sanctlflers," as he terms them.i-.He. aays that they are Inter fering to some extent, with the peace of the neighborhood, and when asked io explain wny ' and bow, declared that the "sanctified" preachers" bad impressed the new converts the necessity of making, public confession of their past wrongs; that soma con fessions had been made and that In one instance a confession load brought about the separation of a husband and wife. Continuing, 3 John Banks said:- "I know one man that got sanctified and ba came to me and says: 'John, I owe you two dollars,': I told him that I guess he waa mis taken; that . I never loaned him no' money. He then confessed and said to me that elgfot year-ago When me and him was in town and I got full as a tick he tuck two dollars outen my pocket He gave me one dollar. said he wduld pay the tother dollar, but I squared-off with him and we called It quits." John Banks says that the people eome of them at Jeast are considerably Interested,' In the Banctmcationie, and fnat rne fears trouble will follow. It Is now believed that the nesrro who committed criminal assault on the 7-yesr-old negro girl here this week used a knife. At any rate, the girl -was badly Injured, and yester day the officers found In the room an open knife, the blade- of which waa covered wltJh blood. Tne of ficers are convinced that James Ruck- DeWltt'S Kidney and Bladder THIla drivea tha potion' from th body. A 26 cent box holds a week's treatment Sold by Hawiey's Pharmacy. Use and Recommend 1 ska 1 1 Fmmmmm 1 I I 'I i t H.Laa Csillfk Asstil H ! tai i j .isvuyanui jbisiiiiii uuuiy iivuiaigiaf tgMaui ; Klin: Trc::b cna Km: i twawu m mammma --1- him aU by Rheumatism and Kidney Troubt that ah eH sot stand r ft. TkMsinS. . they pat her aewa a the Boor sh weald scream with palsa I treated her with "-DROPS'c-saa today she runs sreuod a wU tad happy neaa be, Ipreaaribe "ft-DROPS" tor say paUeatsT aad as It In aiy Taeties4H - 1 . DB. & D. BUAND. BrewVm, Oa. wTlteet nbadeemssuffererferaBDiBberoiyearswith Loaabato and Rhraaaatlsai la sty anas and lags, eod tried B th rntdie that I eould father... : freas atedleal works, and also ensulte4 with a nunfeer et th hest physioUas, but found aethlng that rr th Mllf obtained treat 'a-DBOPS." 1 shaQ pteserib it in ay praoUoe for thaata tuaa aad kindred d.leae .. ' ., . .. -v . ' ThoMwhear iu ter In- the ten-rbl tortures sd4 aceoy eanned by KhaaisstlssB will fled alek reltat by is BM of "a-Drasa." It I tbe en ieMdy that U1 alsaest InstasUy rallav thoM eserMlatlnc patas Me4 by thi most dreaded of all dlsaea. - Apply "s.O storaally. -Bub thorauthly ob the afflloted aohlnf parte and It win stop th psla in a vary sort Urn. - Tak ''vatr" astaraaUy, T 0ot a ear It is neeesssry to cleans th blood of Brie . aetd and ether patsonoua mattar aad pal th systeai la a perfaetly healthy condition. . When ; ta: haa bea Soa yea will b Ire fr all rheiupatle peine. . RhuaiaUiails a bleed diseaaa.. aad this treatateat is the raUoeaien for suck aa ailment. , . : ... r' GET A DOTTLE OF SYUSOWS ?!5-DR0PSV TODI If veu ar erforlng with Rheumatism, Naiiralgla, Kidney Trouble), La arlppo, colds. Coughs, Lumbago, tclatioa, aout, Asthma .' Catarrh, Nouralglo Hsadaohs or other kindred diseases. ' ' . - mmm - faWasNssw swvaf eafAea RPriTPnin1! A bottIe mailed tn;e of chsrge to every; ;.. STUff T ,,. I f ''t1! readtrof thit papef upon requeit. , Write todayrs Large Size Bottle (300 Doses) tl.00. 1 for Sale by Drue srtste. v.-' Kf - a TaerOniatUUisf u wNga riLL,-st;srf tsiwusauss, raiua a vis. , Vlllim KKEU'2Tlfi csag f.0.4 rptct. 43). ISO Uka St., Chlcaga I ',- , ..S' the blend U .'By the" er, the Child's father or step-father, is the guilty person ; They have ' a strpng chain of-evidence, and it ia not - Improbable that . the negro' will swing for ils crime. , - ' 4. HM Uthhi Water Is 'natureft sbvereioi remedy for the diseases of natur; especially those affections of the KIDNEYS - It is UghlT endorsed by leading; pEyaldapg and gold at all aroggiattvor direct, . Write da Immediately for ' testimonials, prices, etc EoUl open Jwu lSSep. U Barrla Uthla Sirln ce. ri C I Harris Syrisssja 9jC 'Ajf HjTy mas' .rmmm' '"'- $r BLADDER 1 !uonnRiiftnopP: TEE. TtELL-KKOul EEKEOT FC3 !rcd CIsessss. -ti . a a ew k mlmUm trWtaf a. i 1 1 !l s M M1 :
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 20, 1907, edition 1
12
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