Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Aug. 3, 1907, edition 1 / Page 3
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As , coioreil, was brought to uitt-l d ye-t-rcUy from Mooresvllle by ,uty Eheri.l Diat-in, of Moorcs .1). This negro is on ol ten who ,e In court hore this week, all of :u from Uooit-sville, for shooting ps. Each (submitted paying a fine !i of 110. A Mooresvllle man stood 1 v ti er e. g.od for Thompson on the condition k tl.at the negro go to work. But in- eUad of his going to work Deputy Sheriff Dcaton found Slim attending a negro plvnic at Davidson College in Brest style. As Thompson was led ' through the streets here yesterday by the deputy sheriff it was evident that the negro had been in high lite. It was found on Thompson's arrival ' ' here yesterday .that he is wanted in .Charlotte for cutting a woman there , with a razor and for creating a dis turbance " at a negro camp-meeting two years ago. He will probably have - another hearing next week at th re opening of county court by Judge ' Justice and it is also probable that he 1 ' will- spend several ' of the coming weeks on the roads of this county. f - Mr. J. W. Lawrence and three eons, i Mesnrs. Boger, Robert and Brevard, i - od Messrs. can snerrm ana nuuen (Hill left yesterday for a ten days' trip i, through the country to the moun k talhs. ' 4 , 4UUV4I, lllbUlt-WII 'IB ,) as, . ... V w - L " men's tournament at Wilmington next week by Statesville jjeople and a J large number will attenji from here., i . This morning Mr, J. A. Walker left with thO horses, wagons and other ' equipment. . Mr. .-Jim Ramsey and ;, Will GadtherX hope tcgo this evening. Among those who . will ' leave to morrow? evening are Mr. C. -W. Corf - nor, -cMef of (he fir department, and . Mrs. Connor, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Gadther, Mrs.. Will Oalther, Mrs. J. A. Walker, Mr; and Mrs. J. D. Day vault, Miss Nell, Carson, MaJ. R. L. Flani gan, J. E." Boyd, Benjamin Cornelius, Burette .Walker, Rowland Harris, Ti Leinsten Jim" Harbin, Clyde Morr'fc Jim Carr, John Ouy, - Jr., and Frank ' Cowlcs. ' j Miss Paninie Alderman went to Greensboro yesterday to. take a course i4 professional nursing. . The Statesville Military . Company, the Iredell Blues, leave . Monday for ' the encampment at Morehead City. About fifty will go and they will be in 5 charge of Capt.. J. E. Diets, August ' ( . 12th they will go to Jamestown. Gen, J F. Armfield, of Statesville, will - ' have command of all the State troops ! at' Jamestown. - I Messrs. Zimmerman & Lester, of ! Wlnston-Salom, have delivered the i ' plans , for , the . Patterson-Anderson i buildings on West Broad street. They .wlll be of brick and terra cotta, S4x ! ,.'. 110, and three stories high. ' News was received here yesterday , , f the critical illness of Mrs. Henry , GUI at her home at Olin and her ! sons, Messrs. William and George Gill, ; , of Chicago,, were telegraphed to come 1 ; home. , A representative of a carnival l . here to-day trying to secure rights for Ms company to show here next week, .j . ' Mr. W. T.'Watt, who has been in , i Waco, Texas, for 40-odd jvars, but -j. is well known to the older residents ; of, this section, Is back at his i old ) ' (home- for a visit. At present he Is j ' spending several days with his broth f er in- StatesvIlkvMr. n, P. Watt. La 1 ter he wlirgo to stony Point, where he used to live, and visit old friends ! and relatives there. MURDER AT SALISRURY. ' In Proteetinjr the Inmates of the Row- S an Pest House, Mr. It. W. Owens is . , Miot fry an unknown Intruder JVho . escapes. H , i bpeclal to The Observpr. Salisbury, Aug. 2. News of a tra i , gedy on the outskirts of town reached here this morning, and by the time p , the authorities proper were notified of ' it an unknown man had made" his es t cape after .mortally wounding Robert i W. Owens. - - Mr. Owens is Keeper - of the pest , ; house at the most solitary looking r -praee in one county,- more than a mile ( , lrom the public square. Yesterday v -evenlng the strange fellow described tis of swarthy Complexion and about 3 f years old appeared on the grounds of the house of detention and made lm 1 . proper proposals to the women there ; . They gave the alarm and another man, ; ty name caenaenin, reported the mat ter to Owens. He started in pursuit t. ' of he fellow who -was loath to teave . . and, overtaking him, had words with tolm. Owens went- back for ihis pistol t and coming again upon him ordered him to leave, which the fellow refused to do. Owens, fired upon him three i- -times ana tne stranger emptied hi ; pistol at Owens, the last bullet strik- - ing him in the abdomen ahd killing him. He lived, however, -about ten , i hours, being shot yesterday evening about 7 o'clock. ' No trace of the strange intruder has I . yet been discovered and' the coroner's ! Inquest decided that Owens mot death t at the hands of an unknown assassin 1 " The dead man was about 64 years i . old and leaves a wife. He will he 1 hurled 1ft his home township, Frank . Un. - , ATKIXS PROPERTY BOUGHT. ' Afbevillo Acquires a " Valuable Site L for a lush School The Purclias V Price JHld to Have" Been About , ?30,000. ; - Ppeclal to The Observer. xAeheviUe, Aug. 2. The Asheyllle school committee this afternoon cios ed negotiations with Bishop Jamos Atkins for thepurchaae of Bishop Atkins' college property at the Tor ner of College aVd Oak etreeU.- The purchase price has not yet been given out but It is saltl to be 130,000. Thin Khool committee will expend about tlO.OOO cm the property! remodeling end improving It, and will then con vert It into a high school. - ' The property Is recognized as one of ' the' handsomest in the city. It was for years conducted by Bishop Atkins as a college for young women hut for the. past three or four years has beenMn disuse. Two' years ago Bishop Atkins decided to sell at auc tin and the property as a whole was bid in by John S.' Huvler, the New Tork -candy maker. The bid, how ever, waa rejected. ' t LONG" LIVE THE KING' Is the popular cry throughput European countrlf! wnile In Anvrlcai the cry of the pwwnt flay is "Ing live Dr. King's New Ii.cov.rv! King of Threat and Lung Remellos!", of which Mra JulU inder . Talre. Truro. Mass., ayt: "It nev.-r fsils to give immediate rpllef xml t' qtiifkly cure a courH or cold." ' Mm. Paint's uplnlon it shared by- a majority of tli Inhabi tants of this country. New Dlscoory turis wsak bines and sore throats after all other mmMles have failed; and for nuhs and colds It's thn proven remedy. Guamntesd hy al! dniggista Kl, and II. iriai Dome iree. ":T i 1 . i )unt, Tvt,'n'y-t' t'i X . . fan try. SKiate open.- - 10 And hourly tliere.iflt r i:xv::..'. i of weather bureau Earthquake Recorder 'Government Eailjinj? A. 10 Special Kxhibition by the FIsk Jubilee Singers at the Negro ... Building. 10:30 to ,12:30 Mexican National Band Concert, Reviewing Stand. 1 Preparation of . large weather map from. reports from all sec tions of the country. Government Building A. 11 Onran . Recital. Edward J. Na- ., pier, Auditorium. 1 Biographic and Stereopticon Exhir bition. Scenes on' Indian Reserva-, tlon with lecture. Interior De partment, Government Building A. 1:30 to 2:30 -Piano Recital, Mr. Jos eph Marez, Auditorium, 2 .Biographic Exhibition and lecture, , Scenes in Yosemlte Valley, Gov ernment Building A. , ' 2 Lecture on Aertal Navigation, Mr. Ludlow and Captain Lovelace, Aeronautic Building. 2:30 to 4:30 Phlnney's United States Band, Auditorium. - - 2:80 Uhtted States Life Saving Ser vice Drill at Station. 3 Illustrated lecture "Reclaiming tha Desert," by Mr. J. -C. Watts, ; U. S. R. S., Interior Department, i Government Building A. " ' 3 Special Exhibition by the Flsk Ju , bllee Singers at the Negro Build- , - lng. . ' - . 4 Illustrated lecture ' "Yellowstone National Park." by Mr. E. c cm- ' ver, Interior Departmeht, Gov " ernment Bulldlnir A. - 4:30 Cameronrs" Slide for Life On the Warpath. ' 5 Lecture on Aerial Navigation, Mr. .. Ludlow and Captain - Lovelace, Aeronautic Building. - 6:30 to 6:30 Mexican National Band , Concert, Reviewing Stand. " . 8 Phlnney's United States Band Cort-cert.-,Audltorlum. 9:30 Cameroni's Slide for Life On 4 ; the Warpath, . r s ' 11 Warpath Closes. , ' ; , r , i , n Carrie Nation Docs Her Usual Stunts at Oxford!, s ,,( Spfclat to The Observer. Okford. Aug. 2. Carrie Nation reached Oxford Wednesday, having come to deliver an address at the an niversary celebration at the colored orphan asylum near Oxford. About 1.00Q colored people were present, ex cursions having Tun on all roads. .By invitation of tne Oxford Fire compahy .Mrs. Nation made a speech Wednesday night in the court house. The noted apcaker made her usual talk on whiskey, tobacco and cigar ette and the dispensary. She pro claimed that thd nice new granolith ic side walks put down by dispensary money, would not . stand. She had harsh language for the tobacco trust, Roosevelt, Republican and Demo cratic parties. She had much to sav about her own life and exnortnpe with drunkards. She made a strong effort to sell hatchets and realised 335 for the fire company.- . Spencer People Must Use City Sewer. Special to The Obscrvor ' Spencer, Aug. 2. The board .of al dermen, of Spencer has passed a com pulsory sewer ordinance requiring all persons residing or doing business in the central portion of town to con nect with the municipal sewer system within 60 days. It Is set forth. that the ordinance is passed In order to preserve the health of the community and to protect the water-shed adja cent to the artesian well from whloh the public water supply Is taken. The board also proposes to extend the or dinance to other sections of the town at an early date. A flflne of 350 will be Imposed upon all who fail to com ply with the new law. The water now used by the town Is pronounced by the State Department at Raleigh aa being first c)as and the Spencer aldermen propose to preserve its purity. Genius Bunched in Philadelphia, Life. , ' A peculiarity of Philadelphia that never 'fails to .Impress 'the New Yorker is the conrentratlon -of - Its creative intellect within the radius of a few ' "squares." ' , You can stand, where Chestnut street' cuts Broad and cast a stone to the home of almost any Phlla delphlaa whose fame as a bookman has traveled beyond Camden.. Owen Winter's workshop on Chestnut street Is but three blocks from the ferry. and his home but a little " further, west on Tine, ' John Luther Long's Walnut street office is not far away, and if you follow Walnut to sixteenth you - v4ll pass he home, with its physician's office . and literary ''den" combined. of Dr. a Weir Mitchell. Only two blocks west is the abiding place of Dr. George M. Gould, ., whose five volume' of . "Biographic . Clinics have compelled an ever widening critical attention, while the "Fire side SDhinx" of Mlsa Agnes Rep plier sits inscrutable at Nineteenth street and Chestnut. , Nor must one omit the human en cyclopedia, Talcott Williams, of pine street, who does not Dotner wnung bonk, but who knows about every thine and who tells it modestly ;in simple brevier type. The literary "ahrinpr of the future can do Phihv dclDhla, en -ute to New , York. while stopping over for luncheon and never miss the time. ' " Morse's Long Swim, pall Mall Gazette. . a' remarkable swim by an eight war-old horse, says a Kildysart tele gram, is occupying the attention of the looal inhabitants. It aDDeaxs that a farmer named Mors-an Macmahon, who rives on small Island In the estuary of the Shannon, took the horse by boot to the mainland, and after working it all dav turned it loose In the evening with a number of other horses. 1 When the owner awoke next morn In, whnt was his astonishment to find the fa,ithfu1 atvlma peacefully grazing near Ats stable, it was wet, as From a swim, and there Is not the slightest doubt that the horse had swum all the way from, tine mainland to the isirvna, a distance of aMttle less han three miies. 1 A HAPPY MAN "Vmos F. Klnir. of Port Byron. N. Y.. i, .-ftr of ngi; sino" a sore on his log, which hsiMmuDled hi n the greater r" iif hl life, his been inttrly hraled lV Rueklen's Arnica Salv the world's greet healer of 8rcs, Bun , Cs, - Wounds M rn. Quaranleeo oy all druggists. Pries 26. THE FIRST REQUISITE OF BEAUTY The first, reoiilnlte of l-eauty is a clear complexion. Orino Invatlve Fmlt Syrup lnr a sallow blotched comnlexlon as it stlmulnls the llvr and bowels, and ths ye become hright and clear. You owe It to rur frloivls to take It if your complexion Is had. Ortnn Laxative Fruit Hyrup 1o not nauseate or s;rlpi and is very peasant to iaa. - neiuss suosu- tutcs, R. H. JorCan tc Co. 1 , $ r I -i t: i .i J . - t , V. . rl.ilt ' I . . -r tj .t I. i, S..1 to Tf.'j Ol.rvpr. Greon.-boro, Aug. 2. The Greens boro r.uiiding and Loan Association was organized yesterday afternoon by the elation of the following officers: Prewident, J. W. Scott; vice president, J. M. iMUUken; secretary and treasur er, K. u. uienn; solicitor, r. iwo- good, jr.; directors, J. W. Scott, J. M. Mllliken, R. G. Glenn, F. P. Jlobgood.. Jr., C. D. Benbow, A. L. Bain, W. I. Undenwood, J. T. B. haw and H. H. Lowry. The board of officers unani mously adopted a resolution that tne officers were to servo without pay dur ing the coming year. The association utAi-ts nflr under favorable - circum stances, with c-ver $50,000 capital stock already subscribed. At a "special meeting or tne county commlssioneri vesterdav mornlnx a settlement with Sheriff Jordan was made, after which the sheriff took alt of his former deputies to the Clegg Hotel for dinner. The men enjoyea the -dinner Very" much and1 the best Of humor and good fellowship pre vailed. . Charged with taking his employers horse and buggy from the stable and driving: until a late hour in the night, Herman Sellars, a negro hoy who drives tor Dr. Boyles, was given a hearing before Justice of the Peace D. H. Collins yesterday afternoon. He was hound over to Superior Court By telling the proprietor of ther etables where Dr. Boyles keeps his horse that the doctor wanted it. the boy secured possession of the animal Wednesday night and did not return it until early Thursday morning, wnen it was rouna that the horse' had stepped on a nail and verv seriouslv hurt its foot. The doctor obtained a warrant for the hoy and he was carried before tho mag istrate for the hearing. -,' . ; The Rev.(R. E. Porter, formerly of this city,- but now ol Santiago, cuDa, who has been spending some' time here with relatives, left last night for Rockville, where on the evening of August 6th, he Is to wed Miss JUiza beth Honey, of that place. The cere mony will be, performed at the home of the bride. Mr. Porter and briJe will Ball for Cuba Ausrust 9 th. and af ter August 15th, their home will be in El Christo, Cuba, ' ' Rose & Western, architects of this city, have -been employed to make plans for the buildings to be erected on the fair grounds at Salisbury COTTON BULL FOR MOCKSVTLLE A 50.000 Plant to bCv .Built .by a , Stock Conipany-Annuai suwonic J Picnlo Next Thurwlay, Wiltcliead Klults Being the Sneaker. Special to The Observer. Statesville. Aug. 2. Dr. M. D. Klm- broutrh. of Mocksville, who was in Statesville yesterday on professional business, stated that a stock company has been organized in Mocksville to build a cotton mllb for that town. Among the promoters are Messrs. E. L. Gaither, T. J. Bylery and J. JU. Sheek. They Intend to build a 350,- 000 mill and it stems to be a certain ty as half that amount has already been- subscribed. The annual Mason lte - picnic at Mocksville Thursday will be attended by some Statesville people, Mr Whitehead Klutta, of r Salisbury, and others will Bpeak. Music will be fur nished by the Winston Cornet Band. There will beexerclses by a chapter of orpnans from the Oxford asylum. A large crowd attends this picnic and home-coming every year. Tins DAY IN HISTORY. 1492. Columbus embarked . in the - carrack Santa Maria, with two other vessels and 120 . persons, from the Isle of Saltes, against Palos, in Andalusia, to find a Western continent. 1777. Fort Schuyler, at the "head of the Mohawk river, Invested by the British, about 1,800, un der St. Leger. The ' garrison consisted of 600 Continentals, under General Gansevoort, who maintained their position till the ' British abandoned the siege and returned to Canada, leaving . , their .. tents . standing; their: artlltery and ammunition and provisions fell into , the hands of the Americans, 1785. About 1,000 chiefs and war riors of the Western Indian . tribes met ' the . United Stales commissioners at Greenville and signed a treaty of peace adding a large tract of land to1 the United States. - . 1804. The United States squadron, under Commodore Preble, at tacked the shipping and bat t'erles of Tripoli. During . the action the' Constitution . was . much injured; 13 were wounded and '1 was killed; three of tha enemy's boats were captured and three sunk. 1812. Privateer schooner Atlas, of Philadelphia, captured in one hour BrltUh ship Pursuit, lb . guns, and Planter, 12 guns. The latter was recaptured. 1814. Fort Erie invested by the British,- upwards of 5,000. v 1814 One thousand two ' hundred British . crossed the Niagira to attack Buffalo, but were re pulsed by the 250 riflemen un - der Morgan and compelled, t recross. 1819 Barrows' Straits , rediscovered ,by Captain -Parry. - He . pene trated .to Melville Island.' The . lowest state of the thermometer was 65 degrees below zero. 1862 The . Confederate . General '- Jeff Thompson , defeated near Memphis, Tenn. 1862. Generat Halleck ordered Gen eral McClellan to evacuate the Peninsula of Virginia. , . 1864. General Hood attacks Gen eral Logan's lines , at Atlanta. ,Ga., and drove them back, but in the evening Logan ' regained his position. - v 1864 The citizens or Pennsylvania, at a special election, approved , an amendment to the conatttu tlon- allowing: soldiers to vote.. 1004. Senator Fairbanks notified of vice presidential nomination, 1905 Fifty-four new cases 'of yel low lever and five ' deaths at New Orleans. La, , - 1906. Chicago Nationals wo double , neaaer in 5 Philadelphia, both games being shut-outs, 1 to 0 1 end 7 to 0. New York won, Pittsburg lost. Whore Catarrh gufforrrs Win. Many of the best business chances have been lost through the weaken ing influences that follow' ' in the wake of catarrhal complaints. It Is impossible for, the sufferer to cope with this subtly malady year in and year out. Permanent cures are the only real relief. Thousands 1iave found-' Herring's Catarrh Cure Just such business helps. Get It at At kinson's Drug Store, price One Dollar per bottle. ME LESSON FOB SUNDAY Third Quarter. Lesson V. Lxodus Xt, 1-13, 31-39. . The description of the tabernacle is philosophically accurate. It . .proceeds from within outwardly.-' 'The heart of all Is shown first ajid at once. It is the ark. This is the throne or the In visible, for whom the whole structure Is reared. He' seats himself between the wings of the Cherubim, and his feet are thought of as resting on the lid of the ark, the burnished plate of gold commonly called the mercy seat, and on which the blood of the Paschal lamh is sprinkled mercy is at his feet! In the ark are the stone tables of the law. It signifies that his throne Is set upon law. Justice and mercy are its pillars. Such an ineffaible throne-room ' must needs he screened from vulgar gaze. Se next comes th mystic veil, shot with threads of gold and embroidered with angel forms, it signifies , the unapproachahleness of God. Just outside of this shrine, the squareness- of which signifies pertec- tlon, stands the igolden altar of lncenss (prayer), indicating tKe nearest possi ble point of daily approach to God. On one side is the golden taDie oc snow- bread, on which are placed the fruits of human labor as a type of dedication to the service of God. Here it is as if Jehovah came forth from the inner shrine of unapproachable retlremtent to banquet with his people. , It is the symbol of communion and fellowship. On the other side stands the golden candlestick,- its -sevenfold branches In dicating the perfect Illumination of the Spirit In the outer court stands the altar of burnt offering, which signifies that there Is no entrance to the holy place of illumination and communion without a sacrifice. It seems to have been caled a most holy altar, not so much by way of comparison as by way of warning. Standing where it did in the court it was more exposed to con tact from the people than, for example, tne altar or incense. They needed a reminder of its holiness. Finally, the outermost article of tabernacle furni ture was the laver of brass, which of oourse, signified the cleansing with which acceptable worship and success ful service must certainly begin, and which was in itself an adumbration of New Testament baptism. These splendidly significant ohjects from one to the other of which the worshiper advanced,' either in person or by proxv of the omclatlnar priest surrounded by a curtain wall scarcely Higher than a man's stature, and com monly supposed to measure one hun dred and fifty 'by seventy-five feeThe second court is usually estimated at forty-five by fifteen feet, In turn divid ed by the veil so as to leave the holy of holies fifteen feet square. Israel t had been six months indus triously collecting , the material and making the tabernacle. It was not too long a time to get up such a building, with its profusion of curious, costly, and elaborate workmanship. Every skilled art and artisan known in that day was employed. It waa easily the most elaborate and beautiful symbol ism in the world, and aptly called the mother of all cathedrals. It was finished and dedicated at the precise date, in order that It might he ready for the celebration of the great est religious function of the nation the Feast of the Passover. The cere mony of dedication is exceedingly slm pie, hut at the same time appropriate and significant. The orderliness and precision are superb. On the first day or the nrst month the tabernacle is to be erected. Then each article Is to be set in its respective place with nice precision, from the ark 10 the laver. Then the oil, rare and sacred, com pounded according to tho apothecary's art, is to be used for consecrating all both persona and things. Oil was used in the Orlenf upon the human body to give It strength or cuppleness. When the various articles of the taber nacle furniture erchwas touched with oil by tne omciating priest, it is to sig nlfy that they should be found and made efficient to the end for which they are devised Finally, Aaron, the priest, chief, and highest of air who are to officiate In this lovely shrine, has his ceremonial washing, anointing, and vesturing. Jehovah honored and accepted this splendid shrine in the most remark able and significant way. The cloud of His presence filled it to Its outer most curtain , wall. It wi so full c God for the while that man could not enter, It is said "the lory of the Lord rilled the tabernacle," ' ANALYSIS AND KEY. l.Tubernacle Described. Philosophical method. From within out. 2 Ark, th heart. God's Throne Supported by ta " hies of law. Justice and mercy its pillars. Veilt signifies unapproachahleness of God. a S.- Altar of Incense rprayer) 4. Tafole of show bread (fruits of la Ibor dedicated). . I. JCandlestlck (perfect Illumination). Altar of Burnt Offering (no en trance to placev of communion and Illumination without sacri fice). 7. Brazen Laver (cleansing essential to worship and service). Tabernacle six months in making. All arts employed, 9. The Dedication. The people's offering. The Divine acceptance, , TPE TEACHER'S LANTEttN. Lost in a mase one may easily be so If he dwells to much on the details and minutiae of this curious structure. One can easily lose his way tn the wil derness , of. golden stave, and silver sockets, curtains blue and scarlet, and ram and badger skins. Valuable time may be frittered away tn estimating the size end relative proportions of the courts. . One can easily convert tho tabernacle Into a Kew Garden laby rinth. " The truths for which the tabernacle stood were really few and simple, and at the time of Incalculable value. The Divine immanence Is one. , Taber nacle literally means dwelling. This rorreous pavilion was Jehovah's home. GM tented with Israel. . He was beginning to tech them by this significant object lesson, that he was not afsr off: not In the height or depth or across the sea. but nleh. . , St. Paul speaks In a certain place of the rpek which followed Israel in the wilderness. One might say a whole mountain followed them, Not merely the rork in Horrh, sign of refresh ment, but Sine I, Itself symbol of the Divine presence, was with them. i , ' f ,i ' , Atonement. rtanslng, Divine illumi nation, communion, prayer the are the additional truths for which the tabernacle ana its furniture stood, , , J , ! There was a tabernacleln ts.be? nacle. Above the curtain walls f this portable temple the starrr Davlllon of , Cod. was t retched,, and. the,. haaveus 4:5 tto.,1 li.- IIOTLL3 MID "In the Land of the Sky" BILTMORE, NEAR ASHEVILLE, R C Just the Place to Stop on Your Way to or from the Exposition Recognized as the leading hotel in the mountains of Western North Caro lina. No scenery in the world wilt compare with the view from thHs hotel Mt Mitchell and Pisgah In full view. Adjoins and overlooks the BUtmore estate. Dry, Invigorating climate, magnificently ; furnished, cut sine unsurpassed.' Orchestra, golf, 11 very, . beautiful rides and drives. Coach meets air trains at Biltmore station. Open all the year. Write o wire for booklet . EDGAR B. MOORE, Proprietor &e BOTETOURT NEW fire-proof hotel containing 160 ; outside roomst situated in the "most exclusive residential section overlooking Norfolk's beautiful harbor and Hampton Roads On main car line to all parts of the; city and Exposition Cafe, baths, elevators and all modern conveniences, Boat line to Exposition 1-2 minutes walk European Plan S. B. VALENTINE $L pep day & up Manager NORFOLK, VIRGINIA kept telling the glory of (fod, and the firmament showing his handiwork, One glory of the tabernacle was that it waa the people's gift to God. God might have made a tent for Him self, and have stretched it In the camp of Israel without a man's lifting hand to help htm; hut it pleased Him to ask His people to make it for Him. There was co-operation. God gave tho pat tern; .the people built according to It Their interest In It was immeasuably Increasedby , that fact. TEach made his . ownH contribution. Mr. Moody once said ho was glad they were asked to give goats' hair, because he said any boy could find a tuft of goats' hair In the thicket and bring that. Hlsh and poor could co-operate, each giving according to what he had. ' Absolute . originality and unique ness are not claimed for the taber nacle. Moses saw the plan of it in the Mount but he may also have seen the plan of It in, Egypt, No hopeless conflict in that. In point of fact that there is resemblance be tween the plan of the tabernacle and many ancient temples. They also have their series of courts and holy of holies. Church buildings are to be suited to "the conditions of the people. Tabernacle in the wilderness, tem ple in Jerusalem, log meeting-house in the woods, cathedral for the city each is acceptable to God. Moses Implicitly awaited God's command lh reference to tho time and order of erecting the tabernacle. . . It has been welj said that the Epistle to the Hebrews Is the com mentary on the tabernacle and its services. TURNER MILL OFFICERS. Ex-lieutenant Governor W. D. Tur ner Elected President of tho Com pany A Model Factory Village Will be Built on the Catawba. . Special to Tho Observer. . Statesville, Aug. 2. A meeting of tho stockholders of the Turner Mills Company was held i.i the Loan and Trust Building yesterday and the fol lowing directors chosen: A. A- Bhu ford. W. D. Turner, J. B. Armfield, V. W. Turner, T, F. Connor, Samuel Turner, C M. Steele, C. L. Turner and E. G, Oalther lion, W. D. Tur ner was elected president; C. M. Steel, vice president; 'executive com mittee, Messrs. A. A. Shutord, C, M, Steele, and W. W. Turner. The elec tion of secretary and treasurer was postponed till the next meeting of the directors. The authorized stock of the com pany is $1(0,000. It proposes to be gin business with 1133,000, $105,000 of which is already subscribed. The wate-r pawer of East Monbo has been purchased and the company will build an up-to-date cotton mill there, Just across from the present Monbo mill and on the Iredell side of the Cataw ba river. This Is one of the best wa ter powers in this section," - The company will take special pains to build especially convenient and comfortable residences for the employes of the . mill, and . proposes building a model factory village. To Mr. c. II. Lester, of Statesville, has been given the work of superin tending the construction of the mill. Actual work will begin by Septem ber 1st. Three hundred and fifty horse power will be developed for present use. A two-stogy building sufficient ror jo.uoo spindles, will be built. - Another Big Mill to be Built, Special to The Observer. c Fayettevill, Aug. 2. Tha Freder ick. Houston Company, operating Cumberiana Aims on Beaver Creek, win at once erect another mill of large capacity. Mt will be built of re-lnforced concrete. net a sample of Dr. Snoop's "Health Coffea" at our store. If reaieolTea di. turbs your stoma rn, your heart or Kid ,v. than try this claver rotfM imita tion. Dr. Shoop has elosely matched Old Java ana jwoenn cones in navor am at. vt It has not a stnale arum rwl ceffes in It Df 'Shoof'i Health Coffee Imitation s made from pure toast ed grains or cereals, with Malt, Nuts, to. Mad In a mlnitt. No tafioua waiL you will surely like It Bold by Miliar vaav,ss, jMiM-ri .i cnAT.LOITZ IT. 0. REC0IIT3. THE VIRGINIAN HOTEL Corner Freemason and Granby Sts. Everything New. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. Rooms 75c. to $1.00 per day. 1 Pilsener Export lager Beer Beer is purer than water or milk. It never contains any disease germs. It builds up the diseased system, strength ens the weak and keeps the healthy healthful. Try our Pilsener Exnort Klt for price , VIRGINIA BREWING CO. Roanoke. Va. JJOVt EXCURSION RATES VIA THE KEA BOARD HOT springs, auk., and re turn, one first-class far, plus two dollars round trip, account Inter national Typographical Union, Au gust 12-17. LOUISVILLE, KY and Mtunt. one first-class fare, plus 25 rents round trip, account Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias (colorad), Au gust 21-24. LOW WEEK-END RATES to Jackson Springs. Wilmington. Lin- colnton. Shelby, Rutherforlton. Hickory, Ienoir, .mowing jfwk and Chimney Rock, N. C. Tlckt ts sold Saturdays good ' returning following Mondays of each weeif. MONTKAULn, tjshn.i end re turn, one first-class far, piu 5 cents round trip, acciunt Women's C'onKress, July 3l-August 16. PORTHMOu tit va., account Jamestown Exposition. Very low Tuesdays and Fridays, limited seven days from all points, - Rati from Charlotte $7. SO, round trip fifteen day tickets $12.40. sixty day tickets $13.45, season tickets, limited until December X5th $ls.l5. Write for Exposition . Booklets and -Leaflets giving . list of hotels and boarding houses, SUMMER EXOTRSIONfICKETS sold dally to all summer resorts In North Carolina and Virginia and resorts In the North at very low rates. For time-tables and any addi tional Information, see Seaboard ticket gent, or address MMLS KElt, JR., c r. A., Charlotte, X, C, C. II. OATHS, T. 1 A.. Raleigh, X. O. files M aitck ana ewtaia relief from Dr. Bhoop's Mio Ointment, rieuse nets It is wni aione icr f'iis, and its action ia noidttve and certain. Renins, saliiful. lrotrudtng or blind riles disappear like rnaslo by It use. Larce nlckl-cmnd Rlaas tare 50 eenla Sold, by Bur well A vuaav usuu aiiera i ..., 85 i Ii.r jSorfo .t. 7:f) a. ni. Pullman tleerir and Cy eta iriffinn to Ai. iti. 8.1-S a. rn.. No. 7T, daily f'r To. 't Chester, Columbia and local i""i.n. 6:45 a. m.. No. 44. J.Uy. tor m ton and points Nor;, !!! rnn cr and day tui,iifi, At.an t wa.minijion. 7:25 a. in.. No. lft, dallv ereont fi.ir: r for Statesville, Taylorvin arl o. I points. Connects at li:sorevi!i it Wlniton-Ealem, and at btatesvl., it jUheville and points west. 10 a. m.. No. 33, daily, fop Col'n and Augusta. Hanfl Puliman r Nw York to Augusta and av coacit-w. wamingion w - Augusta. iJlrUr.f car service. 10:06 a. m.. No. SH. ftaftv. foe Wntilm. ion and points North. Fuhmatt Drawing Room sleepers to New York and Ktcii- mono, umj iccae new urieans ta Wahlnrtorv. "Dining car service. Con poet at Greeruboro for Wlnston-Salein. tteMgli and Goldstar. 10:10 a. m., No. 11, flatly, tor Atlanta, and local stations. Connects at Spanac- burjf for Hendnrsonvllle and Ashevti!. 11:0a a. m.. No. to. dallr. tar ttnaiv. fusion and point Nerth. Pullmin Draw ing Keoni dMper to New York, ia soacnes Jacksonville to . washlngtuu. Dlritnn car service. 11:00 a. m No. . dany, for Winston Salem. Roanoke and local stations, U-.OJ.a. m.. He. tt. dally, New Tort: and New Orleans Ltmtt( Pullman Traw1n Room ileplng cam Ofcserratlnn Iiml Club cars. New Tork to New ana Pullman Drawin Room leo Irs ear, New Tork to InrmlAcham. fctolid Puliman train. Dining eat service. J:10 p. m. No. 41, daily sc.pt Sunday, fbr Seneca, 8. Cm and local polnta. ; l; P. m. No. I, dallyeacent Sunday, freight and passenger, for (Siaster. S. C, and local points. 0:4o p, m.. No, U. Hatty tor Washing ton and points Iwortk. Pullman slrep er, Augiixa to New Tork. Pullman deeper, Charlotte to New Tork. Day coaches to Washington, Pullman sleopor Sallsoury to .Norfolk. Dlnintr ear servloe. 6-60 p. m No 12, dolly, for Richmond and local station. sIIims Drawlm Room sletper. Charlotte to RlenmnC 1:V p. m No, H. dallv except trunday. for Statosvllle. Tavlftravuti. n points. Connects at Stataevirte for Atte- ' ville, Knoxville. Chattanooga, Mamnhia and points wL :S5 p. m., No. . dally, tot Atlanta. Pullman tleeper and day coach. Char lotte to Atlanta. and Mew Orlean Limited, for Washin;- ot ana paiat norrn. ruuman urswing Room sleeping cars, Otxrarvatloa ana Club car to New Tork. Dining car ser vice, flolld Puilmat train, 9:SS p. m.. No. 35, rtally, for Atlanta and points .South, Pullman, Drawing Room sleepers to New Orlean and Bir mingham. Day coaehet Washington to) Na Orleana Dining car smviu. tO:'S p, m.. No. dally, for Columbia, Savannah and Jacksonville. , A!!ma Drawing Room simper and day coaches, Washington to Jacksonville. Tickets, slaaplng car reservations, and detail iiirmnt!on enn be obtained at tloktt office. No, 11 South rrryon street. C C. H. ACKERT, , Vice Pre, and Oo. Mgr., S. H HARDWICK. P. T. SI, W. H. TATIXB. O. P, A., , Waihlngton, D. t R. VERNON. T. P. A.. , ' Charlotun. N. C. ce a da Ann JL-fiuumvu "The Exposition Line to Norfolk." These arrivals and departures, as welt as tho time and connection with other companies, are given only as informa tion, and are not guaranteed. Direct line to the principal cities North, Knst. South and Southwest. Bchedulo taking effect May 6. 1907. subject to chanae without notice. Tickets for passage on all trains are told by this company und accepted by th passenger with th'i understanding that this company will not re responsible : for failure to rtin its trains on schedule time, or for any such dlay as may be erclsed to give correct time to connect ing lines, but this company is not re sponsible for errors or omissions. No. 40. dally, at i:'it tt. in. for Monroe. Hamlet and WilmlnRton, connecting at Monroe with 23 for Atlanta, Rtrmtnxham and the Sonthwent; at Monroe with U for Raleigh and Portamouth. With M at Hamlet for Raleigh, Richmond, Wash ington. New york ana tne n.aac. No, 733. dally, at 10 a. m. for Lincoln ton. Shelbv and Rutherfordton without ; changn, connecting at Lincolnton with C. & N. w, ISO. 19 tor MicKory, ienoir, ana western North Carolina points. No. 45, dully, at i p. m. for Ruther fordton and all local points west. No. 44, 'tally, at 6:10 p. m. for Monroe, Hamlet. Wilmington and all local Points. ec meeting at Hamlet with 43 for Col urn tla, Savanna!) and all Florida, point. No. 132, "tally, 716 p. m. ror Monroe, connecting with 41 for Atlanta, Birming ham and the Kouthwest: with 34 at Ham let for Richmond, Washington and New York, and the East with SZ at Monroe for Richmond, WaBhlnston and New York, end the En at. with 32 at Monroe for Ralulgh, Portsmouth and ' Norfolk. Tli rough sleeper on this train from Char- loito, m. i;., to I'onsmomn, va., oauy. - Trains arrive in Charlotte as ioiiows: . Mo. 41. daily. K a. m. from Rutherford ton and IochI points, no. ins, v:4& a. in., aauy, irora points North and 8oulh. ' . r. . , VI tilt . - J . tx..1 mlnaton and all local polcv No. 132. 7 p. tn,, dallv, from Ruther fordton, Shelby, I.lncolnton and C, A N, W. Railway points. No. C. 12:15 a. m dally, from Wilmlntf- tcn, ilmnlet and Monroe, also from points East, North and ffouthweat, con-, Connections are made at Hamlet with all through trains tor points North. Pout li and Bouthwvxt, which are compos ed of veHtlbula day eoaehs between Heitsmouth end Atlanta, and AViut Inns ten and Jacksrnvlli. and sleolns cars tttween jefsey City, HlrmlnEham and Memphis, and Jersey City and Jacksou vlll. Cafe oars on alt tnronah trains. , or information, iime-iaoies, reserva tlon on Seaboard descriptive literature ecply to ticket asenta er address JAMES KER. JR.. C. T. A.. 23 Betwyn Hotel. CharJptte. N. C WEEK END RATES VIA Southern Railway Southern Railway announces that effective Juno 1, 1907, ana continuing to nd including Sept, 1st the fol lowing Week End rates will apply from Charlotte to points named; Aahevtlle, N. C . . .. .. ,. .. $.8S Black Mountain, N. C 4.3$ S.60 Marlon. N. C. .... Morsanton. N. C. . . .- .. 1.85 Connelly SprlngN N. Ci 1.80 Hickory. N, c s.u 3.60 4.15 4.85 (.60 6.10 Tryon, N. C ,. .. .. . . . - Hendersonviue, . w. .. , Brevard. N. C .. . . Ike Tosawar, N. C. . .... Hot Springs, N. C. .. Riacksourg, a. c. ........ Shelby, N. C. .. .. .. . .. .. X.'i 1.7 numei ivruiun, vt. v .. 2.S High Shoals. N. C, ., 1.03 1.05 S.20 Lincolnton, N.C . . Cliffs, N. C .. . , . . Lenoir, N. C .... .. .. Jackson Springs. N. C 1.S9 1.85 Taylors, 3. C. (for Chlo Springs) 3.10 Whttestone, 6. C. 2.(3 Waterloo, S, C. ,, .V .. .. 3.40 Taylorsvilte, N. C. .. ., 3.S3 Blowing Rook, N. C. .. .. .. .. t.2 These Week End Tickets are toll for all trains Saturday, and for fore noon trains Sundays, good to return not later thaa the Monday folio in date of sale, except that tickets t Taylors, Whttestone, and Wateilvi, 8. C are good to return Tup-: -following date of sale, and tirU-- to Blowing Reck will be seld Frt ' - and Saturdays only, good to re . . Tuesdays For further Information c&'.l any Agent Southern Railwv er v r i 1 v. ii. ayv i;. r. a., , , -, Va.iic-,o. r -CI Vernon, X. .
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 3, 1907, edition 1
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