U h.LLQYr DAYIL-ON C.li:i) HOMG TALK. I .(ij!ii4y Wmiled to Know llrlfflit i J.iily YcnrIny Morning Mhtit I. ad iun Horns Wlih Ir. w. s. Davidson Some Hoped That tlio Descendant of a Mrimw Had Bw Sent to the Roads While Others Dt'dml 11 1 Acquittal -AH Sort of IVo! Interested The fcpeeeh ' Mado by Mr. Maxwell Recalled Ilia JlaimxiH Adilrens on the Ooora M loon Th Jurjr System l Said to be Good Tiling. ,)U ' VQ.'jf Hav4 you heard 'what they ' did with Pr. Davidson?"- asked a gentle V nan of leisure of an Observer report er, who had Jut left his home and ' started ui street, at Jl o 'clock, yeater day morning; "Nope, for I am Just out Hare rdo?" ( "Uh"( fcut I read the story In the rooming paper with a great deal of :.: Interest That was all news to me. 1 tia4 Maa that mn manv (VtarXnttn people'' drank liquor. More than 1, tOO prescription in 45 days la start ling." . The interested citizen and the scribe cam to the parting of the ways. As the reporter passed In frpnt of one of the city's moot attractive homes a lady appeared on the front steps and asked: "What have they done with Dr. . Davidson ?" , "I have not heard," was the reply. "I hope they won't hang him.' "1 s the Jury still out on the David ton case?" Inquired a preacher. "I think so. It begins to look as If they might bo going m acquit him." 'That would be a raiamlly," added . the minister of the Gospel. . At the Belwyn Hotel the newspaper man met Mr. K. L,. Baxter Davidson, Who mado such an intercntlng witness on Tuesday. "Would ynu mind saying that Dr. Sinclair Davidson's monkey, who has been very III for several days. Is bet ter how and would be Kind to see his friends." "Certainly." "You have heard about tho Jury?" sked Mr. Davidson. "Nope. What did It do?" "Failed to agree two for acquittal and ten for conviction." COULD NOT AFFORD TO ACQUIT. "I knew that the Jury would not acquit. Dr. Davidson," said a lawyer, at the squi.re, "for an officer of my church was on it and his preacher faced him." "Why, that should have nothing to do with a Juryman doing his duty," declared a hy-stander. "Yea, but a man Is human. He does not like to meet his preacher If he has done something that he knaw the preacher had his heart set against." "But I don't think that a preacher has any buslne in the court house on an occasion like that," said the lawyer. "Why not?" put In a merchant. "He is a citizen." "Certainly, but I believe that It hurts him, not the prisoner at the bar. 'It weakens him aa a preacher of In fluence." It waa evident that a prolonged ar gument would follow. The news gatherer moved off. "I had no Idea that tho Jury would convict," said a loafer at the Central Hotel. "I mu sevi-ral fellows on there who like to take drams. I knew they would stand out for the sinner If they had any ground at all." "Yes, I looked at one man there and took a bet that th Jury would not convict," declared his rompnnlon. "But Dr. Davidson Is an artist at writing presrrlptlons. We all know that. I had never dreamed thnt there was such a demand here for prescrlp tlona" This last remark was made to pro voke a little laugh at the expense of the prohibitionists of the city and it did not fall to take A HIGHEK AROITMKNT YET. "You may talk about the Jury sys tem If you like, hut It Ik all right," said a lawyer. "Let us look at this case! That Jury was not trying lr Davidson for Issuing prescriptions generally but Jn on particular After hiving heard the texilrnony 1 ronfr thsf I fall to see the clar chko that the Mat is said to have made It a question of 'veracity between H K. Henderson on the one lio and K. I,. Baxter Davidson, Pr W H Davidson and Mrs. Moiiie Wilson on the other "If two Juror liellewd the three Instead of the on,- thut W lh Ir affair I m glad thy ln-ld nut I am a great believer In the jury I would feel perfectly safe In the hands of a Mecklenburg Jury. "It Is not a (ju-Htlon of whether the two. If that be the corre t figure, were right or not, but what Is more Interesting in that they thought they were right and held nut agalnt preachers, lawyers and fellow Jurymen It I plainly evident that Dr. Davidson does a thriving ttilm-- In whiskey prescriptions but the question In 'Was he proved guilty beyond Moult In this Instance'1 All 12 Juror did not think that the State made 1 1 1 rune clesr." Kverywhert one vi-i,i yi-nterday be had to answer nw (!.. n about the Dsvldeon cnw Some uanierl to hung the descendant ? a -ikTi' r In h'rt j order, or, geret.il prim l -n, while Other" wm, Id h:r.. I., , i k'l.Ml to ee i him Hcijultt.d "utrifc-'it Him another' group was pkiKH-d with t'o- dog full. I All hnnds talked No on unit to the "poor u n . . f t ii I,;-...) f. ' fender" an 1 fT-r d t . . --. f o him or begged bl'ii t turn 'i n Ii'. evil j Ways, but mnry 7 1 .;!. r. in i;nerl I at home and .i d. : ,. tl.. lury did not "nd hi-ri t" the ,ii Hni oil' down Till- li. ii, oiiir the more, Various minded The Pi-hter heurted fellows, who take thlnt, and Mcnl as i they (time. mp ui.y ii i.,y picking OUt the rldlrul'Ml- f i or . s of the' case. Thty m-n- like ih photo.' grapher In Mark T inn's M-uy of ilie The Man Who corrupted liadlehurg ." They And tacts and imidcnt to tickle their peculiar funny bones. lilt. MAXWKMK HKNS ATIOV A I . SPKK'MI "Did you hear thut ieh of ("nl Billy Maxwell's ?" iiU.,) a vounger re- i " i -ji b "hi' r our. "Nope: why?" "Well, It was one of the most forre fal arguments to a Jury that 1 ever t: listened to. It was full of substan'-e, Plilleul UTTdRm An. I ,.HMi.tl,.na l . ' U,Mtl Un...,l tU. II.., t , a, ww - - w .- .-it.... . (1 1 ' p. , - ttA fxmA it In tnlm " ; "WDf, ynu m 100 youv to rru Ml U1IV I rantAUl miiAY rr ha . M.r .a..j it t Y':"WaH. 1 thought so, for that was tha funniest speech ever mads by a :; -.:'' ., A CARD, t This Is to ertlfy that all drurglsts r vthortseii to rfun4 foar monny if iiMr" Honey and Tar fills to eure your eeucb or coll It stops the roust, NmIs ts langa aaa prwrata mrVmu results fmm a aoli. Cure U grippe eixifH and viwOUi pneumonia M ooeumptioa. Contslna 9 ttat, Tha ganulna la in a yllow peckior. ItafUM ubstttutaa, A. u, Jar4ta A c,.f mm Charlotte man. Cider.)'. ''.:oiuj have hot forgotten It." "lie made a scorcher ye'.tnrday. The , prosecution " had declared that the, conviction of Dr. Davidson ; would cause rejoicing from one end of the county to the other. Mr. Maxwell ridiculed ; this suggestion to .perfection. Ha told about the happiness that there would be, throughout tha county that one more fellow man had been convicted and sent to tha bad and declared that ona man," and only one, Mr- Dooly, could do tha eubjoct Juattca in story. He pictured the good, Christian peopla of the , county Jumping up and down because ona of thelr fellow had been convicted of a aerioua charge."' , ? U "How much you reckon Dock made out of them scripts?" asked ona fel low, :I: i '. " "About 1700, answered a lightning calculator. "Oosh. I b'lleva TU itop tpalntlng and study medicine." ' . After all, tho feeling is or two aortal that harbored by tha "wets" and that cherished by tha "dry. If an elec tion, Instead of a trial, had been held Dr. Davidson would ' have been sent somewhere that , but few good descendants vf Signers ko. In elections the ma jority rules, but In trials tha whole bunch must be as one man. Mecklenburg Juries are non-partisan. WHAT MIGHT BE INFERBEb. Mr. Maxwell Did Not Intend to Re flect on the Solicitor Who, He hays, la an Honorable Man The Dlltcr--nce In Hendersons. Mr. W. C. Maxwell stated to an Observer reporter yesterday that he had not made any attack on Solicitor Clarkson, as might be inferred from the report of the Davidson trial In The Observer. On the contrary, he said, that he had stated that he did not mean to charge the solicitor ot wrong doing and that he was unwill ing for the Jury to suppose that he did for he declared that the solicitor Is an honorable man and Is Incapable of entering Into such an agreement with tho witness. Mr. Maxwell was not striking at So licitor Clarkaon. In the same story of the trial the Initials of the witness appeared to be "J. E." in one place. On aeelng this the friends of Mr. J. E. Henderson, who claims to be one of the hottest pro-hlgh-bltlonlsts in seven States, went after him with gloves off. They wanted to know what he had bten doing with prescriptions. Anybody but a dummy could have seen that the linotype machine had let down a "J" Instead of an "It," but Mr. J. E. demanded a retraction. Here it la. One ran look at Mr. Henderson and tell that he never got a prescription for liquor. Real Kxtate Transfers. Messrs. H. O. and J. E. Marsh have sold to Mr. K. B. Johnson for $3,000 a lot beginning at tho southern Inter section of Kleventh and Pine streets. Mr. W. T. Wilkinson for a consider ation of $400 has transferred to Mr. E. C. Stllwell a lot In East End. Mr. 11. C. Severs haa bought from Mr W. R. Alexander a lot on Western Heights, a suburb of the city. The price was $ 1 37. Dr. C R McLaughlin has sold to Oeo. J. Miller for $3,100 a lot begin ning on the north side of West street at the pouthwest corner of L. J. Walker's place. Mrs. Julia J. Potts has sold to Mr. ! W. S. Hall a tract of land In tho coun ty for $2,600. Charcoal Stops Gas On Your Stomach Wonderful Alworblng Power of Char coal When Taken In the Form of Stuart's Charcoal Iozengea. Trial Package Sent Free. Charcoal, pure, simple charcoal, nb- 1 sorbs 100 times Its own volume of gas. Where doe the gas go to? It Is Just absorbed bv the charcoal tho gas ills- , appears a id there Is left a pure, ; fresh, sweet atmosphere, free from all I m pun t Ion and (terms. ; That's what happens in your stom ach when you take one or two of Htunrt'n Charcoal Lozenges, the imM powerful purifiers science has yet dis covered. You belch gas In company, some times by accident, greatly to your 1 own humiliation. That Is because there Is a (treat amount of gas belntf form ed In your stomach hy fermenting food. Your stomach Is not digesting your food properly. Gas Is Inevitable. Whenever this happens, Just take one : or two of Ktuiirt's Charcoal Lozenges rljtht aftir eutlnK, anil you will be surprised bow quickly they will act. No mon belchlngs; no more sour rlclriKs. Km nil you want and what you want, and then If there U any KS K"loX to lie formed, one of these wonderful little Hbsnrbers, s Stuart i Cb.ur''al I.ojunne, will take care of ' all the (as. And It will do more than thut. Kvcry 1 1 u r 1 1 1 1 of Impurity In your stomach and Inti-ptlmn Is going to b. carried awny hy the charcoal. No on" seems to know why It does this, but It dneH, und ilm.p It wnnili'ri'ully, You riotlrr the dln'rin e In your appetite, general good f-i lln. and in tho pur ity of your blood, rlwht away. You'll bnve no mure bud tasie In your mouth or bid breath, either from drinking, eaiinij or srnoklriK Other people will nothi. your bad bn-.ith iiuhk'r thnn you will your self Make your bn :it!i pur, fresh nnd meet, so when ym t;ilk to others you won't (llsaust them .licit one or two Stuart Charcoal Lozmikcs wU miiki' your hreath w, nnd ninke ou feel bettr all ovi-r fur It. You i.in ent all the union nnd odorous foods you want, and no one (gn tell the dlfTi rence. Ilesiden, charcoal Is the best laxa tlv known You can take a whole hoiful nnd no harm will result It la a wond'-rfully easy regulator. And then, too, It filter your blood eviry partli l of pnoii or Impurity In your blood I destroyed, and you begin to nolle the difference In your faee first thing your clear complox lon. Hluart's Charcoal Losenge r made from pure willow charcoal, and Just a Utile honey U put In to make them palatable, but not too sweet They will work wonders In your stomach, and make you feel fine and fresh. Tour blood and breath will be purified. We want to prove all this to you so Just send for a free sample to-day' Then after you get ,t and use it you will like them so well that you will go to your druggist and get a IGc bog of these Hfaarfs Chsrcoal Lo. ngea . Bead us your same and addrese to day and we will at ence send you by mall a sample package free. Addrwi cod. .; . ; .: lla In- p- in 1 i 1 I.o- ' ) , After tlio tiilii.iicyn in; 1 j,.c in His Recon t RoutuU dio I'uit round Home Very IntereMlnjr I uet 1'hla ' Well-Known City osiieer JleeW Jto- huffa on His . Jiamlric About tlio ; city is Taken l 'or IiiMurance Agent V and Hue Man, , : : - ;- Col. J. R. Winchester, care-taker of Charlotte's pets and assistant . build ing Inspector, has Just completed his rounds In the residence section of the city. ' Ha haa gathered om very In teresting Information and had singular experiences and dona the town a great deal of good in, condemning chimneys arid : flues. ''X Y'l'-x-'Xt''h, .. In .talking with an Observer man yesterday afternoon Mr. Winchester aid:' I have inspected, outside of the fir limits, 4,6(2 bouses, distributed as follows: 1,804 in the First ward; $21 in tha Second; 971 lit the Third, and 1, 059 In tha Fourth. In my ram bles I disapproved 4S1 chimneys and flues, 134 In the Flrsf ward; 1(6 in the second; 124 In the Third, and 37 In the Fourth. "Why Is It that In the Fourth ward there are 105V houses and only 37 bad chimneys and flues? That has pus-? sled me but I believe that the houses In that ward ar generally owned by neonln who live in them. "I found 180 brick houses In the four wards, outside of the Are limits, 45 In the First ward, 63 In the Sec ond , 21 In tha Third and 48 In the Fourth. "Inside of the fire limits there are 223 brick buildings, making a total of 414 in the city." "Did you have smooth sailing In your rounds?" asked the reporter. "Sometimes I did and sometimes I did not," was the reply. "I caught tho very old Nick at some places. Sometimes I wanted to laugh and sometimes I wanted to swear. "I went to the home of an old ne gro woman and told her my business. She stuck out her Hps, planted her self in the door and declared herself against any sort of Interference. She told me that she owned her home and that the city had nothing to do with' it. 8he told me to show my warrant. Finally, I had to brush her out of the way and go In. There I found a stove pipe running through a piece of plank weather boarding. "At one home, where white people live, I came near not getting in. The lady of the house sent me word that she had all the flues she wanted. I told the servant to tell her that I was a city inspector. She then explained that she had all of the Insurance she needed. "I tell you I had it up and down but after all it 'was a very pleasant experience. J,And what were the provisions of your uncle's wtll?" ,, . , fc "tk.i i .hmiM hov nil ho left after the payment of his Just debts." "Ah, very good of the old man, wasn 5t It? What did he leave?" "Just dents.-' Believe In ofners If you would have others believe In you. A little learning makes a man dan gerous company for himself. It's the highest standard of finality. It's a natural Ionic, cleanses and tones your system, reddens the choeks, brightens the eyes, gives navor to all you eat; Ilolllster's rtocky Mountain Tea does. H II Jordan & Co. The Tate-Brown Co. Furnishings, Hats Men's Garments Our Spring Hats meet every ne cessity supply evry occasion with appropriate adornment Soft Hats for comfort, sport or travel. Derbies for a touch Of formality, $6.00 $5.00 $U.OO $3.00 Agency Dunlap A Co. The No. 6 South in w mi Wo are prepared to show you what is new in Knox Hats in either Soft or Derbies, new shapes and colors, $3.50 and $5.00. STETSON HATS $3.50 to $5.00. New Neckwear in beautiful and exclusive patterns in the correct width Four-in-lland, also wide-end bows. Neliee Shirts, Plain White or neat Figures and $1.00 and $1.50. Me Bros! lits ".-p--ft.s ;.;.! ,-4 Colo Accnts v i,vy. t I 1 .1.' of r from i . ! ; T I .by t i.i , . I ' ' - 1 ! '1 IS I :i , i ami e-u. .-. i. and i ul-V'a hU slmultl l.e i,o ..-u at the Hrnt sikh of o ger, as it coifjfin trresularltle and t: cured many old in of this oihbuku, Jr, Bodn-v liinm-rt, itoek Port, Mo., writ we: "i eurtHied widi enlarged proatato Bl ind end kidney (rouble tor years and after taking two bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure I feel better than I have for twen ty years although. I am now M years old' R. H. Jordan Co. . is the best piano made and ' acknowledged standard piano of the world; . It : is the greatest piano ; value for the nrice mid. and conse quently the cheapest piano relatively. Its market value after having been used, de preciates less than that of any other make ever produced. The mere fact of the possession of a Stieff piano puts the seal of supreme approval upon the musical taste of its owner. CHAS. M. STIEFF Manufacturer of the Artlatlo Stieff. Shaw end Stieff Self Playing Pianos. SOUTHERN WAHEROOM: S West Trade Street. Charlotte. N. O. C. H. WILMOTH. Mgr. i mmmsm. II Tate-Brown Co. Tryon Street. gGood t. "1 : Unfix Jlxti-'tm,-mw.M ; -v iv -1 . - .. Vh:th:r .it; kz L J f t. 4 Whether it b , -1 . ' ' If th ficf .'ffiaf mm -a m wvmii vll. ' 1. 4 o ,l . OUR QLOTHING ii U Z t f r ft ' N ' i T H 1 'l, ' , .ill-lilfrllwllill"!,!. ED. MELLON Library IKg We have some beautiful colonial style manogany par lor tables for $12.50, $16.00, $18.50 and $22.50. Trade at McCoy's we lead in low prices on good goods. W. T. McCOY 4'4i44il&'' u . ,ri . . ' xne latest ana pest st vies, are nere ror your ins fcc"wu oeauuim , aesigns and colorings, the quality the very best; prices the lowest consistent,, :r 5 - Royal Axminster Carpets, $1.75 per yard. Roval Wilton Caroet s. $1.75 perwd. ' Imperial Velvet Carpets, $125 per yard iiiX Axminster uarpeta..5io per yara. Ingrain Carpets, 60 s, 601 Coco Mattings, Hem p Carpets China Mattings, J apan Mattings, Stair and ' vs Hall Carpets. ' New stvles in all kinds and grades of -Rugs, from the small Door m w t rnn in Tirn - ' We mto a'spebialtv : of Church Carpets, Club puui ' tv nip -us lur Bauipit-a ana esuuiaics. , I I". ? 'Fl. 7 f ( 19. ? . w '3 1 ' If ' i r i it You want to see the handsome line of Neck wear that we received yesterday All the New and UP-TO-DATE SHADES arid COLORS Come and look at the line. It's what .you want and Center Tables When you need a table for your Library, Parlor or sitting room, don't overlook the McCoy Furniture Store. Our showintr in fnhlAa'ta rvnA nf fhft hfisf. wp riftVA ver offered, and prices are low. liiiwugitiiy xuuiULxy xauie, tbo. men tup, cu uiouo I and highly polished, just the thing for your drop light in tne reading room, price oniy jpiov. See our handsome mahogany tables 30x48 inch top, regular value $35.00; our special price $28.50. Golden oak library tables $10.00 to $35.00. Golden oak center tables 75c. A heavy round table for $2S.O0. SOUTH TRYON STREET. ... . A. . . A '-ffi V- ft a 1 o 75c. and $1.00 per yard. iu i y a a rrir 111 rra t r nnuwr V a. A & O, quality considered. Carpets ' , ' ( : ? , n rnnm i .. r. . Carpets. Colleee Society Car-; ; t