Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Feb. 18, 1907, edition 1 / Page 8
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... c:iACKK:rsco:i:ii:NT i r.i i days i i lly cecum : : , ovc the .General .Belief .That "l'i'i -U-x What Mtllo Moral Snpiwrt li.c Ti nclitr trt'ls iii Home Communities- II in Opinion of Parsimonious l olka Who llrt ums Tlu'lr financial - Support the; Trials or tho Country . 1m her .Aim Hla ..View .on ,the juiiiuruau yowKion,..;-,.-, t-j -m ,'. : ; BY CORN CRACKER. Thl U to Inform all and sundry - that your unregenerate scribe atlll hath a being at thla place. - It is further reported that ' h teaches Ave day each week, chops cora wooa till late bedtime each night, breaks mules ' on Saturday, take pictures and - teache ; a. Sun- day school class on" Supnday. At other intervals ha plays '. tha fid dla and half ! soles shoes, Certain of the ribald are telling that In order to keep busy he should milk, churn v and build fires where he boards. ' Verily, the. unntutored look on mw wwiici mm ' iUlOIJ IMJ IHUI tal provided for with the remainder of the lame and the laay. But CHfTsMa Ilia t lirM vtiAnl mnA tha -nicest and best arranged building for To-day I was. at Rutherford in a May., 10, 1x07, that his Excellency Gov. Glenn, and Hon. J. T. Joyner . are to meet the people at Ruthefoad- exercises and observance of old sol diers' day, the school children are to fee present, and an educational rally S i vm puiieu uii mu iu wiim ' every educational man's heart. While on the sube of education, It Is surprising how little moral eup- ' port a teacher gets in some commu nities. My own experience has gen erally uecn ssuinai:iory, uui limit timid girls have, been shamefully 4 W . I. I . or fall to call attention to how a oeterie of capitalists employed two young ladies to teach, and Instructed them to "were 'em out If they didn't I n mmA (hin'muilu r Vi cint last appeal of despicable cowards and busy bodies to the law, because the unruly were punished. While the State solicitor justly kicked It out of court, not even allowing- It to go be- ;.wiv Hiaiiu Jul;, it int(viiru iiv ? prophet nor yet the son of a prophet to foresee the demoralising effort It " had on discipline of schools. Two - young ladles, in knowledge of writer, have failed to govern schools, and three, In all, have been asked to re sign. ' A modest young lady shrinks from being hauled before some mag- latrate whose name should be necessl- anil tKjiti Mtlmf riatf tlnm At. doing .her duty, or appeal and be cited to a higher tribunal, before a morbid and gaping crowd, In many counties of thin State, and Rutherford Is of the number, the tsaehers of he public schools sre nearly all ladles. In a community where people sre enlightened young ladles are Ideal Instructors. 'Nobody can get the good will of a little, im pressionable child like a wlncome young lady. Hut In a region where they don't know the wur In over, and and wwhere some loud-mouthed bully fa the Ideal citizen they need a prtise fighter with a fist like a ham of meat, m stroke like the piston rod of a ftiogul engine, and a build like a burglar-proof safe. The only trouble Is, that a prhe fighter would not con alder the salary and is, therefore, not available. y Plenty of man In Rutherford and Cleveland counties would cheerfully pay 110 to see Jeffries and Fltx simmons swat each other that would raise a wall of mortal agony If they Were taxed three more mills on the hundred dollars worth to enhanre the causo of popular education. ' In ft former communication 1 ad verted to fact that enrh child In the Commonwealth of Kentucky bun aet apart for education an annuiil fdnd or 1340 per uplta. Me It further known, that It In an inviolate fund for nny other purpose. Not a cent n t tan be used t.ir buying wood or building houses, and yet fuel la furnished and building lire erected. The houses are tin well hetttod, and the building are an well equipped as they are In Nurth Carolina The mate of North Carolina, we are proud to ay, nas no extabllMhed church, and If any of our religious bodies, how ever orthodox, were to ask the Hlate to build a house or worship and provide fuel for warming the rung ri-itiit Ion, a righteous howl of InOignnilun would be raised, and your Knrle Com "nick er would be howler-ln- hlef. Under present condition he In u vigorous and pronounced shrleaer agalnnt tak- ins inc piusnce eei apart to puy teachers ror any such puriioacn. lis thinks that the building fund H better than what we 'had brfnro lis bene flcent provlalotis. I have knuwn any diatrlita to lo without the money for nrie and sometimes two terms of school to build a houne. This was an outrage .n children of school age In that section. Then there Is too much anift In everything paid for by public money. Many of those houMrn were built with no re gard to light or ventilation, at an out rageous coat Horn man would get contract and build a hovel ihnt didn't fsce the sun, moon, earth, nor the aevrn stars. Then, In the name ( mvect charity, he would furnish i in commu nities where wood w a' iilmut all they had, and could be bought for 7R rents per loud, he would put down K0 cubic feet Inxt.ad of m, and charge two dollars a cord If nny r nvn Utrancc wan rained by lea. her whom he was careful to nee worked from eight to nine hours per d.iy for 120 per month, let teacher and pny him It for board, he culled fur renlgna . Uon Of the bigglty and ungractou Wretch. And If the ungrateful loafer uggested sjch an suduclous Idea an people voting a tax to supplement the school fund he wanted the lngrate to die without benefit of clergy? Why Is It that the fruits of (hs tariff never go Into the school fund I am "ln" a high protective tartX, any way, but If It in a nsces evil. .and promotes proaperrrC" F, does one of It find its w ko 'the coffers of the poor devil wrwrepares the' future ministers, dicto-v lawyers. nnmnicn ana rspisinn a inausiry? The men of Rutherford nounty, ex cept myself and a rrlppio or two, tiave abandoned the nulling- of teach ing free schools. They saw that laying running at lit per msnth, laying brick at '111 to ITS per month, ma nipulating a Jackaaw plane at 100 per month, and Just one man to cuss him;- beat teaching at 121 per month four month Ip the year and every body cussing htm. Rom of them are operating merry-go-rounds, other yet are at the lucrative calling above mentioned, 'while others arf keeping storaand respected by all I have been teaching tl years, and not even aa umbrella laid up for rainy day. . i Te com par member of th asm family and bow much they accumu late, I have a brother who make ne claim to being well educated. Hut he Is one of the best lumber Inspector lei the United fit a tee, and I paid f 110 I r month and all ; etpensec ' - H wears diamonds and tailor-made raiment, while I wear corduroy and uie a wart on my neck for a collar button. He rides In Pullman cars, and I bump along In a smoker or In in a caboose of a' freight. My only hope is when I become too Intlrm to teach that The Observer, v Yates Webb, Bill Crawford and the Kltchln boys will see that I get a pension. I don't expect anything very princely, put .certainly-ought to 'have some thing. If I' did have a. few millions, I'd certainly endow a home for super annuated teachers, : '?'.. ' The army and navy ' retires' Its ser vants with good pay, -the North' and South each' have soldiers' homes, and the churches retire, their superannu ated ministers with , fund to meet the enm penury or old agv. .. . . - . 'At I have never been stingy with advice, allow, me to air 'my views on the; railroad question.' It has' been some' time since I owned a road, or even had a controlling Interest In the shares of stock, I tried to .tell a, rail road magnate once how to operate hla road, and he rung me off with the remark that hla time was worth $60 per minute while mine was dear at fifty cents a week. My opinion Is that roads in North Carolina could carry first-class passengers for 2 1-3 cents per mile, , and , school teachers and other second-class - passenger for cents. But t .m further Inclined to believe that railroads frequently have to pay exhorbltant damages. When they broke my seventy-five cent corn sheller, I felt that they ought to pay me 5,000 for breakage, and 110,000 for mental anguish. But I had no money to put up as retaining fee,, and I have since bought a corn-sheller at home. The merchant from whom I bought It said tie didn't know what in the devil X wanted with It; that It reminded him of buying a pocket- book on time. The crowd around seemed greatly amused, but I saw nothing funny about It. Speaking of railroads and corn shellers naturally suggests cotton and the Southern Cotton Growers' Asso ciation. While some papers, captains of In dustry, mill ' men and a pack of blanked fools that know nothing and, therefore, talk more and talk louder than anybody else are Inclined to wax merry at the granger, I believe In the fight that Harvle iordan and his lieutenants have put up. Cotton Is certainly king and binds the nations over to keep the peace, To decry all rich men Is arrant foolishness, but no reasonable man can object to formers getting a good price for their labor and I products, Since cotton has been from 10 to 11 cents, farmers have bought more machinery for till ing the soil, purchased better horses and mules and more of them, built better and more elegant houses, bought more tooks, musical Instru ments, -sent more boys end girls to academies and colleges, and taken more Interest In popular education and good roads. As a consequence, mill men. bankers, mordants, ana, in fact, all clases have prospered. If people have money the ywlll spend It for the comforts and luxuries of life; but when cotton Is five cents, we see a general stagnation In the arteries or commerce. Of course there are fool ish and Intolerant farmers, but I see nothing wrong In their getting a good price for their products, when thler prosperity helps to make all classes and conditions prosperous. Zeb Vance used to tell of a very voracious fish that ate all the others In reach and then fell to eating each other. While some farmers re un- reasontble fanutlcs and churls, there arc commorants In' tho commer cial world, who have no Idea of the Ive and the live policy. Another thing that makes me wearjr Is hear ing some North Carolina farmer cusn Texas because "It won't stick." I don't believe the millennium has dawn ed and was prepared to see men plant more cotton than they shcAild, and more than they agreed or pledg ed themselves. But enough have re duced acreage and held cotton off the market to achieve results. Men will see tho error of planting too much, and will learn tft control the sale. When this result In achieved we will w linens such a state of prosperity on the Kouth never before enjoyed. SIXTY HJXONDH BY ELEVATOH. Tower Tenants of New Singer Ilulld Ing to Iteach and I-are Their Ey rie Olllces' by Mean of the Safent and Most Iteinarkable Cars Ever CoiiniruclcO. HtM-rl.iJ to The Obsorvcr. v... Vnrb Puh IT Aii Interest ing- chapter In the construction ot the new Hkysrraper wonder tho 41 stoi y Singer Building at Broadway and Liberty ntreet has just been conclud ed wllh a aeries ot tests made by Ar chitect Krnest Flagg and staff of en gineer, to determine the absolute safety of the massive elevstors to bo Installed. The tests are pronounced natlnfactory In every detail. Of the fifteen elevators to go Into the womleiTul structure, tour will actually scale tho Ill-foot tower, a fciit without a parallel or precedent In elevator building. Not only will they convey panscnger to and from the eyrie ofllces without a relay but, what In rven more astonishing, they will each rlne or descend 41 stories In Una Uttin (0 seconds. This la faster than any elevator ever ran on schedule, and each car Is guaran teed to run an swiftly, sarely and ev enly with a full load a with on passenger. Heretofore the most Improved hy- vtovalnrs have always ODerat- d more slowlyoften stalling between fiiior -when crowuea. uui ins win T.r.tl.n nlmiilnn l OOSl TUCled for the Klngt-r building, nru so powerful that each than a maximum' capacity of J.fiOO pounds, or approxiiistely 81 per sons. When the Hliker building was first projected the levator problem was the hardest l bo solved. Con tractors, englneyea and architect al most unanlnaawy agreed ther such a giant tWer, In fact, was not feas- iki.. 4'X MitlH nmvmr hm hiitIL fn r- puy to (itch critics, and s a tribute I to ins crw u ivi .-mwui.ii w concern, the Blnger Compsny ha or dered temporary elevators insiaiiea at once. This has , never before been done. In constructing an office build ing, and It will cost -many thousand dollars- fortune well expended In that It will afford workmen on the tower the same protection that ten ants will have. That elevator suitable for such a lofty Journey are not built In a day I attested by the expenditure of sev eral thousand dollars experimenting, in anii-iiatinn ot tha new era In sky scraper eonstrurtlon which this build ing mark. Over oo mn nava neen in Ik, task, besides a con gress of consulting engineer. Ai U WB necessary io rescn a iinsni some 10 stories above the present sky line of New York, an entirely new system waa Imperative tnd the one to bo Introduced in the Blnger building la the result How, It 'will be asked. Is the ab- Use a little KODOL after your meal n it will, be found to affoH a prompt i4 sfftoUnt rslM. KODOL. near! 1 prosimstes the digestive Juleee. tts what you eat- It ts said en a iuarsntee4 rlif plsn, t fall her by COTXON 'AND WOOLEN MILL MACHINERY ; AND POWER PLANTS '', Charlotte, N. C. WE HAVE LEFT IllinllaileilMolv ma Iod r alftards and can furnish with these" one set "40-irich Picker Ma chinery compTete. v'J5j;;?-i Drawing with Metallic Bolls arid toilers. Write or wire ,; '. .. . f.V ;. Greensboro Supply OEEENSB0E0, N; 0. solute safety of passengers guaran teed? NO one has ever been elevat ed 18 or 20 stories above ground but has anxiously asked this ques tion, and the following reply Is. nec essarily more Interesting to one as cending twice as far. Each car, made of copper, cruci ble steel and special forged steel, will be supported by wrought Iron and steel safety frames and girders to which the lifting cables are attached. Thla frame will be provided under; neatn wttn an improvea aouoie act ing wedge clamp safety device. Should the car exceed & pre-determined speed In either direction. It will slowly but surely and securely be clamped to tha guides. Every car Is equipped with an emergency lever enabling the operator to bring them to rest in a fraction of a second, and at the same time, with no disagreeable or alarming Jar. An electrically operat ed brake Is provided as an auxiliary for safety. This Is brought Into ac tion either by opening an Independ ent switch In the car, or on failure of the electric current from any cause. Special oll-cushloned buffers are ao arranged at Xhe top and bottom of every shaft that the car Is brought to a gradual positive nrop at the ex treme llmrts ot travel beyond the terminal landings. The 68 tons or steel and copper used In these remarkable elevators has all been made by special analy sis. The tower elevator expresses will run 30 stories In 80 seconds without a stop, or about one-half of the time required by the best express elevators to travel 12 stories to-day. MIOl'LD rnOTECT THEMSELVES, Former Mecklenburg Man Make Knsrffestlon Anent tlie Recent In rcndlary Hunilf( of Hani In This County. To the 'Editor of The Observer. In to-day's Wilmington Messenger an account Is given of the burning, on Monday night, of the barn of Mr. Victor Ballon, who lives near Pine vllle, Mecklenburg county, resulting In a total loss of 11,080. This account Is copied from one of the Charlotte papers, and gives thin an the sixth barn that has been burnt In Mecklen burg within the pant few weeks, all of which burnings are supposed to have been ot Incendiary orljcln. As I was raised on a farm In Meck lenburg, I am naturally In sympathy with the farmers who have been so unfortunate recently an to lose their buildings, red, etc., and In some cases their live stock, through the mischief or a band of negro fire Mends, who, from the bent Inrorma tlon I am able to get, seem to be or ganised Into some sort or society for tho csrrylng out or their devilish work. It Is needless to say that thla sort ot business can last but a short time, for the good peetple of Meek lenburg will not long stand Quietly by and see their property wrecked and ruined, and their own lives Jeopardised at the hands of this band of barn-burning thieves. Hut, In the meantime, until these tire brands can be brought to jus tice, and the full penalty of the law Imposed upon them, the farmers should do something to protect them selves against loss; for It Is obvious from the record that has been made within the past few weeks, that this work will be kept it. tor a time at least, and It occuts to me that one or the best measures or precaution would be to Increase the Insurance on their barn and outbuilding, as the cost ot additional insurance will amount to a small Item as compar ed with the less or their buildings, which In the case above rererred to was a practically new one. And while the operations of these barn destroyers have born confined to the lower section of the county. It Is pos sibly only a question otrtlme before they will begin their work In new fields, and for that reason every farm er In the county should do all In Ms power to protect himself and his neighbor, and at the same time use every mean at hi command to Im mediately place the evil-doers within the clutches of the law. J. W. L, Wilmington, Feb. IS, 1107. OtmiERN COTTON MILL STOCK I Quotation by F. C, Abbott A Co, BIH Asked Ahhrvlllo Common It Allien Mfg. 0 M 1 American Spinning 114 American Hplnnlng, pfd 10 Am. Warehouse, pM M Anderson Cotton Mills - ? Arcade M Arcadia W Arista as Aiicwrlght Mill - 123 Arlington , .. .. 1M Atherton, N. C. 100 Avon Avondsle 110 Augusta, Oa .. . I.eiioo inm 110 Bibb... - Lt'CKIEflT WAN IN ARKANSAS. "I'm the luckiest man in Arkansas," writes 11. L. Stanley, of Bruno, "ainoe the restoration of my wife's health after Ave years of continuous coughing and bleeding from the lungs; and I ewe my good fortune to the worM'a greatest medicine, Dr, Xing' New LMtcovery for Consumption, which I ksnw from as perixnee will ear consumptlM If taken In time. - Mr wife Imorevee' with first bottle an! twelve bottle completed the eure.M Curse the worst ' cough and MiMs mr snanav raftma4. At all 1ml. let Me. as 110. Trial Vottl free. mi mi 4mm V J .' V', ''ki'iy', '':'b 3 .TT.T.a'X?' Bonnie., ,. ... Brandon Cotton Mills Brogan Cotton Mills, 8. C... Brookside... , BloomneM a.. ... Cabarrus.. ., .. .. Cannon Mfg. CO Capital City, ,pfd,'. Chadwick. N. Q pfd Cherry vllle,,.. X ... . Cheswell, 8:: C, Pfd ChaiwelL C.. Pfd Clinton.. ., Clifton Commoa . . Clifton pfd Cllfblde.. . CMquola Cotton mills .. .. Courtney Converse.. Cherokee Mfg. Co Columbus Mfg. Co Cora Coxe.V. Darlington .. , Dallas Mfg. Co., Ala Dover Yarn Mill, N. C Drayton Dllllng.. .;. Dillon.. ., f&gle ft Phoenix Enni.;N. C.,.. Elmlrs, . pfd '.I Easley.. .. .. Kdenton, N. C Enoree Knoree, pfd Brwln,. pfd .... Eureka Exposition.. Fairfield Florence.. ... Fountain. N. C asffney Mfg. Co Gaston.. . Gibson Gluek Glen Lowrey. pfd Granltevllle, 8. C Gray Mfg. Co Grendell Greenwood 101 121 12 . lOti r- 100 - Id - 101 - - 100 i 10) 155 - 118 ISO 102 140 101 100 118 133 m tot 120 - 76 - 100 103 05 s 1U 125, - - 10JV, 138 140 , 110 in a 104 1 . Company 200 -70 78' 130 14 93 ' K - W 07 - 7V4 160 -125 -118 121 92 136 140 - 101 100 - - 185 110 - - 101 Oi 38 07 101 98 994 - 139 - 10 107 - - 91 108 83 - 168 150 - - 98 113 - 9H - 103 - - 100 - 100 186 -190 210 91 94 - 106 101 -102 - 131 160 -100 102 104 - 10$ - 9 120 - 1.1 - 108 - - 80 - 102 - 178 - 183 - 103 - 860 19 -173 - - 103 lM - 211 - 100 - 101 127 - 58 128 100 20 300 90 91) 90 101 113 109 81 68 87 - 90 - 102 146 180 181 141 190 -100 100 - , 90 94 80 -26 -10 12 - 101 Hhrnland Park .. . Highland Park. pfd. Ilartsvllle 't ...... Henrietta Mills Heskine. N. C. Hoskins, N. C, pfd Huguenot, pfd Innwn Mills, 8. C Inman Mills, 8. C. pfd.. .. John P. King, Mfg., Co.. .. Kesler King's Mountain, par SO.. .. Knoxvllle Cot. Mills Lancaster Cotton Mills Lancaster Cotton Mills pfd.. Lanett Ingley Mfg. Co. Laurens Linden, N. C Liberty Limestone Ixckhsrt. S. C Iray. 1901 Louise Mill. N. C Louise Mill, N. C, pfd I-owell Lumberton Marlboro Cotton Mill Manchester Mills Mills Mfg. Co Mills Mfg. Co., pfd.. .. .... Mndens Cotton Mills Mollohon Mollohon pfd Monoghan . ..... Monarch, ft. C Monarch. 8. C, pfd Mooresvllle. N. C. .. .' Newberry Nokomls, N. C .. Norrls Mills Olynipla. pfd ' Orr Odell Mills Ossrk I'aeolet MfK. Co pscolet Mfg. Co., pfd Pee Dee , Pelser Mf. Co.. ..' Piedmont Mfg. Co Pelhsm. Ga., pfd 1'elham. Oa.. Com Plodmont Wagon Work... .. Pell City fell City, Ala., pfd.. .. Poe, W. V. Mfg. Co Richland, 8 C. pfd Roanoke Mills fUlelgh Koberdell Richmond Spinning Co.. .. Rlversldn Mfg. Co Riverside Mfg. Co., pfd.. ... Rocky River .. Saxon ,. rilbley, Oa Social Circle Southern. N. C flprtnsnteln Btaresvilla Cotton Mllla. Rillsbnry Trenton. N. C. .. Tryon, N. C , Tiiranaii. 8, c .. Turspnu, 8. c, pf). Tunes rorn Toxaway ., ...4 ..... I'nlon lluffalo 1st pfd .1 .1 ... t'nlnn-HulTalo 2nd tfd.. ..- .. .a, . . I'nlon-IlufTalo Com. ., ,'. .... I'nity, us VnjM' victor wu it ... Victor Mltla. 8 C. .. ., . .... Walhslla. 8. C Warren Mfg. Co., pM. . Warren Mfg. Ce.. ,. ..i Washington Mills i... Wsshlnaton Mills, trfa ...... - ISO 108 -97H - 10 87 127 1 Wsre Shoals Wkcsssett.. . Whitney woodruff .. Weoesld.. Willis inston,. bank rrnrri Atlsntlo Nations! .. ,. ,. flattery park. Ashevllla.. -.. m 140 III HI n 172 140 140 Charlotte Trust Co.... ,;' Cltliens Natlonnl, Oaetonla ,. Commercial, Charlotte (new). C'sbarru Bavlog Bank (par VI,. ., ... first National, Charlotte.. ,, First National,) Morganion ., First National, Osatonls.. H III Merchants' A Farmers, I Char- lotte.. ... ...,, ', National Hank. Oaffney..,. Pslmetto Bank A True Co., People's NstionaL Winston . Irt) IS Stuihern Loan and Having ' Bank. Charlotte.. .. , Smiihern Stale Trust Co.. . 17 rtJ; eavmg e- Trust '; BONDS. . ., mu vis . 121 ' lulH . C a 111 .. .... ... . C. 4 tat added 111 IH 101 IS ISO e 12$ .. .. .. .. .. as .. ., ,, N. ,C. R. It-Siask. ex. Int.. MAIN OPFIOSt Couth tryon ot.. .oharlotts, n. o. Iii IT! I Ctrolvlnjf Flat Cardi, . RUwy Heads, . V ; Drawtaf Frames, ; 5plnnlnf Frames, Twisters itnd Spoolers QuUler aai Racls.' : , - Looms; . , Jf. M. BANDT, A." Bl,' Ph. B. . ; '; Assoc, M. A. M. So. C. E. J Hydraulic and Sanitary Engineering a Specialty. Water "Power Develop ment and Estimates Made. : Room 61 Benbbw Arcade, Greens' : boro, or Laarlabnrtjt N. CL HUBBARD BR03. ts C0n BNOTIX QtfARlB, NSW TORK. ICXMBXRS OT New Torlt Cotton enange, New - Orleans Cotton Ex ekange, Aaaootate' Members Liver pool Cetten Exohange. 4 ORDERS SOLICITED For the par ekase and Ml of cotton for future deHvery. Cerreependeaee lntrlted.v Looiis Crompton - Thayer Loom C0e Worcester, Mass Alexander & Garsed Southern Agents Charlotte. JV. e. Manufacturers'and Jobbers fluently find It necessary to hart Banking Faculties In ad dition to those offered by local baak. , ... THE First National Bank OF RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, ' With Sl.OSO.ooO.00 Capital Earned Snrpln ISOO.OOS.OO S5.50,0.OO Deposits SS.SOO.WiS.0 Tatal Itesomvca Offers Just the Additional Fa. dlltiee Resjaired. ino. B. PvrceU, President, Jno, M. Miller, Jr, Vloo Ptta. dent; Chas. R. Burnett, As sistant Cashier: J, O. ionltn. Assistant Cashier. y JAMES E. MITCHELL CO. COMMISSION MERCHANTS. Cotton Yarns and Cotton oiotns. -' - - -m . mm HVM1VI X STL PhlUdelphla, tsaandlSI Chestnut St, . nwivn, is Dosnner 8ti New York. No. IS eomard Si. Chariot fe, S s. Tryon St MILLER & CO. BANKERS AND BROKERS, St Broadway, New York. Members: New Tork Rtnrk change, New Tork Cotton Exchange. New Tork Produce Exchange, New Tork Coffee Exchange. Chicago Board of Trade, New Orleans Cotton Ex change, New Orlean Board of Trade. Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Liver pool Cotton Association. ; Execute orders for the Durcheaat ni sei of cotton, itocka, grain or pro vision for casn or on margin. .. special attention to order bymalL Phone or telegraph. . . F. a ALEXANDER, Southern Representative, ' Box SIS, Charlotte, N. C. ' Come and look at our magmccnt line of Dia mond: We handle nothing except tho Tcry best It's a gftod . InTestment, as Dia monds' are . advancing v in pilce'-'dailrV'f? mmiimm&rrA'ji?&lry Dobbiies Repairs Stuart .-. v7. C:;.;,ier, '.'cnzl and cc;jT;;ACTc:i r;: K ; blubbers, ' ;Vv intermediates, , I ' "' ' Cavlas! Frames ' - Jack Frames JEN C U E S; ' QQ TTON YARNS ' ; '': ,r 7 . w" - t' OFTl43E8rirr--. - ' V , Pawtveicet, n. L, and Plilladelphla. Vm. Philadelphia Offloev Marine Merchant' Puildlng, W mA, pelllssy. Manager ' and Southern Renre -cnutire. , , -:,., -. , , 0. A. ROBBIfsS ecmnatn EtynncENTs tow rl' GENEBAli 0HABLOTTE, ISIOH'CRADC SPINDLE,! KI1S Bait 00 wad Ore., Imbricattaf Greaaea, ReadjrOCteed Patsla, Cold Water Patetau Aaent WatUee' Dmdna, Compowada. . GEO. B. HISS: OIL CO. ' CIIARLOTTB, n. o ":- . J. SPENCER TURNER CO. comnssidN merchants. CVnCBtl Mew Tork, PUOadetphia, OUeag at, Lassta, U Yarns and Cotton Piece Goods. r PAULSON, LINKROUM & CO. G ST-IS LEONARD STREET ' ISO CHESTNUT 8TRKKT V . SIS MONROE 8I1UXT . . iilliam B. Charles OSSbs Charlotte HjC Bestesi Maaa. and Amsterdam N. X .Mala Office Amsterdam. N. T. Single Lift Jacquard with Independent Cylinder Motion USE HALrOflPS JACQ CARDS. THOMAS UALTONTS SONS, PhlUdelphla, Pa. ALEXANDER A GARSED, Southern Agents. Charlotte. N. C Prospective Builders Before beginning your building operation a, yon would do weO ' to correspond with us for price on aU aorta of Building Matcrlala, We carry a fuU line of Flooring, Celling, Siding, Interior Trimmings, Saah. Doors. Blinds, etd. Always , prepared to fnraitb you money. ' nCTTON A BOUROONNAIS. Hickory. N. C. ' . L SOUTHERN QUEEN GRATE V.' ,. ' OUR LEADER, -i r- y ' ' It It's Oratt rou want,' or Mental 4 Tils, na or write for, cata logue... K . . t- J. . II. Wcarn & Company ,;:,iV.'. ', Chartotta. N. C . PUBUO ACCOUNTANTS AND ' y. f i;;:,-iM' AUDITORS ;;,; BROWN & HUNTER Audita of Banks. Trust Compan)' :.: ""and .General Trader- '' ' ' 1S1S11 Cmnlrs Banding, EH 0 mANCM epFiegi v CQUITALS BUILDINffl. ' ATLANTA. CA . ei , . ; Automatic Feeders, - . Openers and Trunks'; ; Breaker, Intermediate anf Finisher Lappers,; KIrschner Carding Beaters . i ' IUIWU uauaMViS)., Waste Pickers, etc Dsif Ctoclr rirvera. ' ' " ' ,1 . ,f if, n SPIWWIAIC C O. .coTxoif mhia powkii niinq. machoterv. NOBTH OABOLDTA. LOOM, INGINC AND VALVE . . . . . . NEW YOIUK . . PBTLADKXPHIA . . . . CUICAO COTTON TARNg. COTTON COOPS, AND COTTON WASTB. the beat materials, and can sare A. D. SALKELD & BEO. ' COMMISSION MERCHANTS, SS-7J Leonard Street, NEW TORE, SBUsansnjas COTTON TAI11H, -. , , DBPT '- i ' Predlc Vietor & Achelis. HUGH MACRAE t$ 00 M Bankers C)lhiaeoa iloutheni stooaritlM . WILMTNOTON, N. a.- - . Waahugtott, D. 0 eOl Colorado Bid ' y Cotton Mill Stocks . RICHARD A; r BLYTHE, ; Commission Merchant. . ; r ' ' ' eBMssssAssssafa " ' . ' " ? : V' , COTTON WARPS AND TARNS. I j No. Ill ChMtnut Streat, ' - : "'", rnniADaXPHXA, ". . i . SS XfU, D'OHER ts C0- . 00fMT!t!tTON MERCHANTS . 1 . t . ilAnviM - - . - r ; Third and Cheetnat Sta, ' ; , Mariner and Merrhant DUJi. . unuiiiua ju ra, ,,, ,.1, v I I i
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 18, 1907, edition 1
8
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