Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / April 13, 1908, edition 1 / Page 6
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CHARLOTTE DAILY OBSERVER, APRIL 13, 1003. QULlGE cr CflBlST .V r.OCLTJ rXA'UMJE TO IX3IXOW - Dr. W. C KlncaM, Jator ; of 1 trrt I'T-r-bTt8rin Church, I'raea however, shows the Intensive side' of V?la nitnn uu wrfiwt lf.pontrBl. Hi perfect poise of bis -emotional . Emlnen Balrtjnjnatster Callf-d to REV. DR. - H. E. KIRK CALLED. powers, the prfect balance at His nif-nui and moral qualities. Because l we lack this courare of sell-repres- 'lls Chrirt s lXHJower, Out Xyfm ?'n Zl . the Fa- of Thw-I-eaticr He TvJl .Tkii- Meos Toward ienisaH-m mm chics ---- r-':z . . v ...... r-,-..-- because they do not know how to hold 'ouragw II-e Kxcmplii1Mj Chris's -huriKirr Not Merely Pasters and 2 leek, But Divinely t and MagnlQ- tinuj A cure. -jhi matchless courage of ; Jesus Christ If an aspoct of his character vhiB the Church has slighted. The courage of Jesus - Is not a - phrase which frequently occurs la Church literature. . We have, talked of Him bs a suffering victim ol persecution. We have told - of . His patience. His forbearance. Hi auhmlasiveness. His aneekness-o-ail noble qualities and di vine. -But these do not exhaust the content of Hie character. It wasac tlv as well as passive." .Rev. Dr. William Mbrrls Klncald was the speaker, the First Presbv- terlap church, filled by an attentive conKwagaUon. the J lace, "The Battle face at Christ" the suggestive subject. The occasion being Palm Sunday, the aazUvessary of the Saviour's entry in to Jerusalem, the preacher -chose as his theme the . picture of the calm, elf-Doaaeffsed. unterrifled. Christ as, with"' faer of-Iron determination heJ turned his steps-toward his ultimate fate. "Look on that face and be ln ei.ired this was the minister's ap peal. "The text was X,nke t:61.MAnt it canie to pass when the time come their tongues. Newspaper discussions are Interesting; from this point - of view. -.- Many here - reveal inherent weaknesses, for nothing so betray littleness of character as being thrown easuy on ones Daiance. A. I Next in the picture of Christ pru sentea oy tne lexi 13 luusiraieu im courage of endurance. This was not the courage of the stole, .who bore pain with selfish Insensibility, but of one who gave Himself to save others. It Is the vicarious element in const a suffering which gives it . the . glory which shines across the - Intervening centuries. No man llveth unto him self and no man dieth unfo himself and no man sunerein unio - - minavii. Frederick Robertson, who with Spur geen, was among the ersatest preach ers produced by England In his time, as he neared the end of his earthly ex istence, suffering from spasms or ex rrnrlatlnr - naln. had Leonard "" da Vinci's portrait of the face of Jesus' Christ brought Into his room that he might gaxe on it and get fresn cour. agor : ' . ENDURE AS SEEING That is the hlchest mark of ' the (n ol d ir ot t be- cross, . to endure as seems mm wno is invwiuw. .haths should oe recelved-UjLlfsc apd mine must be set eteadfast- h steadfastly set hU face to go to Jerusalem." ' The occasion which Is celebrated a Palm fiumday, said Dr. Klncald, In augurated the final stage of Christ's sacramental Journey. His unconquer able fortitude, his mora than mortal heroism, here finds expression, as if . by a supreme girdling of the will He renquers all shrinking 01 his wui. Even as a man sometimes clenches . ! teeth In a great .crisis, so H - hardened 'His fact when He went to f face His cress.-It is told of Oliver ' Cromwell that on the eve of any err eat battle, where his men were uu- I oertaln of the result of the conflict. - 4 Vaxiously-thaywould scan the face of t their leader ere the clarion call of the i busrles summoned them Into the bat 1 tie.. Then.' "Bee that Battle-face." they would cry one to another, and the 7 glimpse of which they got of that set. " Iron countenance so Inspired them that It made defeat Impossible. "Be hold, then, the battle-face of tne Bon of God.. ' See Him as He passes wit a the majestic step of a conquerer in , to the city of His death. It Is to - this picture of Christ pressing on with firm determination to His duty that I ask vou to take as the type of the Christian's attitude." I. INDIVIDUAL JERUSALEM!). Every Ufo, the speaker continued, has its Jerusalem. Each one of us ' was created by God for some definite fanrana towards whose accomDltsh- . ment we are traveling. Each one In SU appropriate pik mutm w uv something for God and humanity ".""..which nobody else csn do for him . ana mat wj-j.niui. i ui o. uurm, a. i.t. t .kniiM mt ttla atmi. - looking ever at the battle-face thai ' his eyes rnsy caicn lomemmi 01 in i Inspiration there. There Is always a touch ot the mhllmt In the war a true, man meets na 1 .a. A net. ,u wi mil exDetience which so effectively inmaske character as the way a man Meets death.- Everyone has seen sraen go down Into the valley or the , shadow with courage and calm unsus tpeed. Sir Wltr Scott, when faced . by bankruptcy In old age," merely ' said: "Adversity Is to me a tonic and a bracer." Bo steadfastly did that BK rSTaU. flVUI IIIDt V sa vs a . Anil vet how all such.esrthly types ; fade away into utter insignincanre do i " f owe the spirit with which Chrtet fac ; the oroee. ironowing step oy ; stes. wonder dies away Into love be i: fore It The text s a reyelatlon first i of crurage and second or constancy of courage. His quantles or submi ion and meekness have been extolled - as they should have been, but these 'reflect out one siae or 11 is nature, " which was as active as It was passive. 1 On the trip to Jerusalem Jesus ex hibUed a courage as marked as was the divine self-repression shown later, - 11 a snewea in nm umi pvci ini cour' are of decision. . "He took up the lcros wilfully. He evidenced the curage vf conviction; and thn cour sLa-e 40t elf-repreaslpn, too. He ao cepted the scandal of the cross. The . tronrsjre of endurance was hers too , xemplflel. in that, despising - the ' - ehsme. with more than mortal hero- im He endured the agony of the . tomI 1 ' BHOCLT REPRODUCE COURAGE. a. 1. - . -, -1 t jnire,- ems- hp -rriuc ia uur uaiijr experiences in the world of to-day, a fresh experience of the courage of k tnhrlst. Mere opinions to-day . mas auerade under the guise of con vie Hops, when there can be no claim to TBonlmlty between the two. We need the 0ery baptism of the spiritual . courage Che kind that hardens Itself a. a.lnirf m n ana atMls Itself in nit the forces of evil. Decision Is the w a v 1a itlviMnli an ai-ak -not driven Into the kingdom of God It begins in the simple act of decls : elon. and yet how many men and the Initial step! The crossing of the , Rubicon Is a very simple matter. And - 'trot when Caesar and his nosts had crossed It, it was the turning point In his career, because It was the de " eislve step. , The crossing of the Ru- ticen Is new the symbol of decision ' lnan the courts of opportunity. Ev ry life has Its Rubicons separated -. '. t Ineradicable lines between the r things which are past and the things which are te come. - ' . n 1 a.t-a iL. I . . (I . a ivomuty vne emu ei wo win re' alv m. larrer decree -of reanect If dreeeed to the will, urging the serving ' of Christ than wilt the appeal to the Tteart The old cry of "Only believe' to be brave, wno is wining evtaa. ; Jesus Christ with steadfast face turn ed toward Jerusalem, to take the first tep of decision and turn toward his - aervice? ' - - -' ' CONVICTION NEEDED TO-DAT. Comictlon In modern life has be- comi ao. effeminate "term, prejudice and opinion are usea aa synonyms, wblle in reality there Is no word in the lacruage. no word la any lexicon which is its synonym. .The courage of conviction is the sigd manual of a hero. And yet where are you men and women of conviction to-day? .If -n appears, you Jaoei mm a crank. V.hen he speakv you pour on him 4he xlkl ct contempt - "Cohvlctlon U the r 1 fcade of courage. The true he ro's of the cross are the men and -tvr.meo who dare to' stand for their r -evictions of duty and Christ-like - 1uct and are serving Christ where t..e fre 1 hottest. - .... f f-rrprslon is shown by Jesua " ' a ir.ep before her shearer Is " II pre Is touched the passive T'ro orh'r fhafes rereal the ac. 7 ct t:,a !.. :.-.e maaiiood. ThuJ Iv If iwe are tdendure the disappoint- I ments and the trials 01 me. uia you ver see a man receivo an Insult with out a word and no sign save the pal ing of the fac under the skinr Tnat la strength. He who. possessed of strong passions, yet remains chaste, he who Is sensitive, snd has manly powers of resistance and yet can , re ceive rrest provocation without re- sentlnK It and can forgive he Is a strong man, a spiritual hero, - The words of -the text reveal also constancy of spirit Many men are able to be brave at times, exhibiting either physical or moral courage. But there are few that can plod along dcy by day without wavering, .when courage elicits ne-appaauaalroma company of onlookers. But this Is tlw eon-taney of Jesus Christ - Emotion alism If the dry rot of our religious life. Often we mistake feeling for steadfastness. "May God give us one and Jill, as we" contemplate the face of Christ turned toward Jerusalem, more of constancy!1 - - CEXTEXXLL CELEBRATION. Centennial of - JcBemon Davis Birth to Be Qnerrred All Over the South A Letter From Mrs. Cornelia Branch Stone, President General, V. D. C. - Mrs. I. W. Talson, president of the North Carolina division of the United Daughters of - the -Confederacy, has Just received 'a, communication rela tive to the centennial celebration of Jefferson Javls- birthday, June Sd, which she desires every chapter in the State to consider (carefully and act In accordance -with the wishes of the president general, .Mi's. Cornelia Branch Stone. This letter, Is as fol lows: To the Division and Chaptera of the Daughters of the Confederacy: Tou are again reminded of the near approach ot the one hundredth anni versary of the birth of our beloved chieftain, Jefferson Davis, the one And only President - of the Confederate flutes: and it is urged that each chap ter will celebrate June 3d, In such manner, as to make it a memorable oocasion to every citlsen of your coun ty and State. Let your programme for that day speak In loving memory of his unblemished character, his up-, right life and the schools, public and private, and in your chapter meeting, a close study of the public and re ligious life of Mr.-Davis, as shown in the '"Memoirs" of Mrs. Jefferson Da vis, and Mearn of his patience, and fortitude and suffering from - the "Prison Life of Jefferson Davis," by Dr. ihn Pastorate of tlie Second Pres- . bvtertaa Churcli Call Hearty snd Vnanlmou-e Belief Held Tlat He Will Accept. The congregation of the : Second Presbyterian , church by unanimous vote yesterday morning decided it tender a call. to Rev. Dr. H. E, Kirk, pastor of the Franklin Street Pres- byterlaun -church, of Baltimore, uo, to become its oastor, succeed Ine; Rev, Dr. Martin D- Hardin, who resigned some time ago to accept the pastorate of the Third Presbyterian church: of Chicago. This action was expeotea and altogether in " accord with the recommendation of the committee ap pointed several months ago to secure a pastor. The official call will ,te forwarded to Pr. Kirk at once and an early visit from him will unquestion ably follow. It Is the beHef.or tne committee, as well aa the leaders and rank and file of the congregation, es pecially with such as know something of Dr. Kirx. tnat tne cnorcs is a fo-t..-..!., aw. While nothing of a direct and definite nature has- been secured from him as to his action, It Is the belief of the committee that he will, consider the call : favorably and th-Jt he will accept. . . Dr. Kirk s a Tenneeseean by birth, a minhKter of-plendld-training and exoerlenoe. and one of the foremost If not .the very first of the puipU- oratora- in tna-auuierarresoyierian Church. For a number of years be labored In Alabama and has always beea-regarded-aa one of the most In fluential of the younger member "Of the Southern General ASsemDiy. xio Is liberal In his views, polished . in manner, thoroughly up-to-aate. fine mixer and a solendid ' pastor. Hhould he aoceDt the call Just tender ed him and move . to Charlotte, the city, as well as the Second church, wilt he most fortunate. The belief Is .held that Dr. KJrk will consider the call favorably for the reason that- the neid offered in Charlotte Is one that Is more advan taa-eously located with reference to thm rtananal liMmhl- than the Bal tlmore charge. Dr. Kirk is one of the leaders In church evork and - la destined to become a man of para mount Influence In Its affairs. Char lotte belna a Presbyterian arrows; hold an in .the.. very., centre of the territory of the Southern Church of fers great advantages Mr. j, B. Cothran, of the local committee, re centlv went to Baltimore to see Ur Kirk. He was assured that the call would be earnestly considered. That the financial equation will have lit tie to do with the decision Is evl denced by the fact that within the past few year Dr. Kirk has refused repeated offers which carried with them greatly enhanced salaries. As soon as Dr. Kirk receives the official call, he will communicate with the committee regarding his visit to Charlotte. MEMBERS MEET TO-NIGHT. Plans For New Club House For South. era Manufacturers' Club' to Be Dis cussed To-Night- The meeting of the members of the Southern Manufacturers' Club this evening at 1:30 o'clock In the club rooms oh South Tryon street promises to be one of the most Important ever held In the club s history. The pur. pose ot the meeting -Is to receive the ! report of the building committee re- cently appointed, to devise-ways and means of raising the amount needed lo erect a suitable club home and to i examine and discuss the preliminary designs for a building which will be submitted by Mr. W. G. Rogers, of I the firm of Hook. A Rogers, archi tects. At a meeting. last Monday night It! was unanimously decided that a suit able club home should be erected and with this In view. It was decided to take up the options already secured on the Fox and Stephens lots on West Trade street' their aggregate cost be-1 Ing $Jt,890. -The committee appoint ed to raise the funds and do other Im portant work Is composed of Mr. W, S. Lee. Jr., chairman, E. W. Thomp- t J rr.vi. "The Ws and Fall n. T- Wade and others. All of the Confederate Government" hy Jefferson Davis, wl)l give you the true history of that time, and will tell of the great service of the men whose memory we honor and cherish. Division presidents are requested to urge - upon the chapters under their edmlnlstratlqn, the proper observance of these provisions, and 'to notify the chairman of their committees on chapter extension, that to all chap ters organized during the year 1I0S which may be named for President Davis or any member of his family, or for either of his three homes, "Rosemont," his childhood home; 'Brlerfleld" and "Beauvolr," a gavel will be given, made of Beauvotr wood, with silver name plate. As a deed of commemoration and f dttCAWon.chapters-are-requested place ""Pictures rof-Jefferson avis-ln the publlo and private schools during this yesr. The presentation should te accompanied by such fitting ceremony as will Impress the students of the schools with the greatness and gran deur of the name you seek to honor. Again,-1 ask your loyal support and co-operation In the work of the gen eral association, that, for the sake of our dear cause, the year shall be fruitful of results. More than ever is your support - needed with .- strong, earnest hearts end willing hands, for, overwhelmed by a great sorrow, groping dimly for the light I ask your loyal aid In the great purposes of our organization. For the loving sympathy extended, may God bless you. CORNELIA BRANCH STONK, president General, U. D. C. members are urged to be present at I Mne meeting to-night. CR.IG-KITCHIN THIS WEEK. MIL JOHN T. WALL DEAD. Prominent Cltisea of Anson Passes Away Suddenly at O'clock In the Monilng ITooilnrnlly OoiuuHjtod. , News was received in tne city yes terday -of the death of Mr. John T. 'Walt - a prominent citizen of Anson county, at his home. Pee Dee, yester day rnornlng at 6 o clock. His sister, Mrs. W. A Smith, of Plnevllle. ac companied by her husband and a niece of Mr. Walt Miss Willie WalL a student In the Presbyterian College. left yesterday afternoon for the home to attend the funeral. The death of Mr. Wall came as a shock to his sis ter. It Is thought that the cause must have been rheumatism 'of the heart or something of that nature. Mr. Wall was about 42 years old and was a prosperous farmer of his section.- - He was quite well known In Charlotte. He Is survived by his fath er and mother, Mr. and Mrs. 8. G. Walt .as well as by his wife and five small children, one flrl end four boys. eeetdes Mrasmlth, Mr. -.Wall had an other sister. Hrs" J 6hnPurcelJa"of Arcner vity. Texas, and Miss Blahche Walt of Rockingham. Five brothers. Messrs. ilenry Wall, of Llleavllle: Walter and Charles Walt - of Pine Bluff. Ark.; S. G. Walt Jr and Fred Wall, of Pee Dee, survive also. Mr. Wan married several years aero Miss Lucy Battle, a daurhter of Ir. William Battle, ef Lllesvtlle, He was member of the Methodist Church. His death will be regretted by many. Two Aspirants For the Gubernatorial Nomination to Sneak Here Tuurs-j - day Night. ' Charlotte will have within her gates this week two of the candidates for the gubernatorial nomination . at the coming State convention, Mr. Locke Craig, of Ashevllle, and Congressman W. W. Kltchin, of Roxboro. Mr. Crajf win do nere ror mo purpose ot aeilv- erlng the -commencement address Thursday evening at the closing . of the Piedmont Industrial- Schoot . of I which Rev. J. A. Baldwin Is principal while Congressman W. W. Kltchin I will-make -a. -latraIght-out-.no lltlcall tptech at tba-court-houae. llnior- tunately they will speak at the same hour, at 8 o'clock, which will prevent many citizens who would otherwise like to hear both. It Js possible that Col. Ashley Horne, who Is campaign ing In this neck of the woods Just at present, win run down from Newton for ths day. If he does, the three Mpl rants for gubernatorial honors will all be here together. RUMORS OF CHANGES AFLOAT. Mr. Horace Baker May Become Gen eral Manager of the Southern Mr. E. n. Coapman's Successor. ,y. Railroad men all along the line of the SoutUorn are discussing the pos sibility, rather the probability, 'of General C. H. Ackert's leaving "the company as he has desired and sought to do on a number of .occasions. Mr. Horace Baker, formerly ot the South ern, now of the Iron Mountain, Is said to.be slated for the position should Mr. Ackert resign. Another change of Interest will be ths .appointment of Mr. W. S. Andrews, now assistant to Mr. Baker, formerly suerlntendent of the Danvtltej-Va. division of the Southern, to the place now held hy Mr. E. H. Coapman. All of this is nothing more than round-house talk as yeT'and consequently impossible of verification. According to the stories In circulation,-the second change Is consequent of course upon the first .. 1 m 1 f Rev. Harris MaUinckrodt the Speaker ' The first of the Holy Week meet ings at the Young Men's Christian As- ' rotation will take place-to-day from 1J:$ to --1S;S - o'clock. - Thai speaker will be - Rev. Harris MaUinckrodt- rector ' of St Peter's Episcopal church. Dally meetings will be held this week, at the, same hour at the T. M. C. A. These services are held under the Joint auspices of the Episcopal and ': Lotheran churches en4 4h" Toung Men's Christian Association. All men' are invited to attend. ; The meetings wm cioae promptly on tne hour An nounced. ! . ,' . - . , ; - - - PLENTT OF THOI'M B . Ts caused hy sisgnatlon nt the Hver and and' blliousnese and the eolaon that brings Jaundice, lake Dr. Klng'a New I. If Pills, the reliable nuriflera that ), the werk without arlndlns ar rlntn at all drug stores. . ' CUT WIFE IX BACK. John Coletree, Colored, Has a- Spat uiin his supposedly Larger rac- s uoop ioto a City Xegro. - ' John Coletree,-an Intelligent darky oz zs- or Zf is a prisoner at the lock up, as the result of a misunderstand ing with his wife, Etta Coletree, whom he stabbed In the back with a knife. It took place Saturday afternoon-," Doro'estio infelicity waa the cause and domestic Infelicity Is the result likewise, r . r- , v , : "I tried to git her to come home," said John a trifle sheepishly and yet in something of self-defense. "She had a friend she Insisted on biingln' along.v He had her by the arm and she thro wed up some sass and so on, and In a passion J - Cut her In the back." . ; . . ; ',--' f r-A A physician was - summoned and patcned . up the colored woman's maltreated back and she Is as good aa new again. - John, who iaid be had been working at Philadelphia, Pa., up till a few weeks uco when he re turned to this, hls home, seemed to think that he had done little out of tne ordinary in resort In a "to the knife." not as a cure for some dire disease but for differences of opinion wiin mil conjugal. mate He thought perhaps, he had acted a trifle hastily, but apparently the tight did not ap peal to him at belna- 'ln any sense either a violation of his - marriage vow to honor and protect or uu chivalrlc. "She throwed up some sass' and she paid the-just penalty What ever may be his theories on the use of the knife In the realm of science. Coletree- evidently belleves-with firm ness that It may be effectively eranlovri ea to discourage the social evlt - Was Prominent TenneascearL Mrs. W. O,' Gaffney returned yes terday from Bristol, Tenn.,, where she, went to attend the funeral of her father, Capt . W.-F. . WllUams, a ; prominent, citizen of that ctty, whose ' death - occurred very un expectedly last Monday night. Cap tain Williams visited his daughter In Charlotte several - years . ago - and , was quite well Known here. He was a veteran, captain of .Company ' A. Fourth Virginia Regiment and one of Bristol's nost Influential citizens. Dusky Stevens Arrested." Duekv ntavna m Mn wku. ai.i well known In the city, who has been married. ; was arrested liit ni-hf t the Southern Railway passenger sta- uon.iavnir alter s o ciocK. on the charge of loitering. , She said she was going to Spartanburg, a C, and was waiting on a train. - It will probably oa inunea, nowever. tnat aha hat been loafing about the station for a numpsr 01 aaya. Services Testerday at - Emacocal . jnurcn. - -- interesting Sneclal aervleea war held yesterday morning at St Peter's Eplscopai'church 1n - celebration - of Palm Sunday. . The Holv Communlnri was administered at 7:10. The morn- li.g prayer, litany and sermon took place at 11 o'clock: The music was of an exceedingly high order and was mucn enjoyea by the large congrega tlon which was present . Recital at Elizabeth To-Night, V An Interesting occasion will be the recital given to-night at 8:30 o'clock by the students of the Elizabefa Col lege Conservatory of Music In the col lege auditorium. - The friends of. the Institution are cordially Invited to be present The programme, ' published yesterday In full, is a very promising one.- - . . - u:. THE OLD HE FIRM OF GHLS. M: SflETf carries a record of ' 66 years of honorable, fair and square dealing. If, you buy your piano from this time honored firm, no "mat ter how much or how little you wish "to pay for a piano, you will always get full value for your money. 7 v i Chas M. Stieff jiRnaoturefpr The Artistic Stieff, Shaw and Stieff Self-Player Piano. ; SOCTHERI WAREROOMS ." ' 6 W. Trade St, , CnARLOTTE, N. C. 7 , 0. H. WILM0TH, Mgr. Harmony ' . 'Let na' make youF SUMMER TROUSERS to harmonise with that serge or worsted coat you're , going to wear, v ; ' ' - The great rang of summer patterns in our woolens rives you a' wide field to choose from. . SUMMER TROUSERS . ' .00 to. 915.00. ' - . SUITS . ; 920.00 to 950.00. TAILORED TO TASTE. HCMWoaArtuNsW, GET, YOUR CLOTHES FOR I The ROTARY NEOSTYIE Wliat is itt V .; A device for ranid jind 'effective duplica tion from an - original, either typewritten 'or sketched, : defines in a ' word the Rotary Neo style. ; ; ;.y"' ' It is characterized by a simplicity of opera tion enjoyed b v no other mechanical con trivance as yet devised for such a multiplicity ' of uses. ... ... '" Come iii and see one of these .machines - in .operation. ',V ,". Pound &J.!oore Co. 229 So. Tryon Street -L 'Phone 40. Easter is f almost herel .-"X " Are you : prepared for this great occasion! j Have you picked : tout -your new. suitt. . r ; : Better not leave the choosing until the last moment and then - be 5 forced to take : the best that's left. ; . ; ' "We're ready now," if . 7ou:arei- : v. v. Our! Prices : '"" A$18.00 to $35.00.i The Tate-Brown t Cor "'' -.-', jl -' ' 11S ? If Ton Fall to Sea Our Show. - -- : ' . .. ;I P. Sprtni Clothes' For . ; ; . Men" and Young Men Y :v i ". -ttjv i - , . . . - Tou wtl fall to get the greatest value, for your money ever of- , 'fered In this town. We meaa J every word of this and are ready to prove It by the clothes ' themselves. ''." .. 'V:' :".sT"-. .Ti Faahlooabte' Sack' Suits V r7 For -ISater:t v:'5i'V. In . single and double breasted !::'- styles. . ; . '. . ' - 910.00 to 9S5.00. ' , . '.Frock Coats and Salts ' ' -: Fc Easter,;" r7.' L : I' v9is.oo to , 933.00. : : Stylish Sprin i Trousers, . The very newest ' weaves - In cas8lmeres-and worsteds ln ' light and medium effects - ;.. . t'; : " 9ao' to 911.80, V Z-X'. ;,lBlch'..Cirtivat "- ' -'J- For Easter, r . . Exclusive designs In. plain ; colorings and fancy stripes and , " hovelty effects,-." - ' Derby, Soft and Silk ' Hata, ' Straws and Panamas ' of the - latest ' vogueat right prices, -' Largest ' and most complete ; ' stock of men's .wearing sp- pare! In the Carollnaa. ..",. .. ," -t; r U'-- 't- Mall orders filled rn day-'of . receipt r X ' : r." . . REMEMBER MELLOJTS CLOTHE8 FIT. - . ' 1 mm ! OF EASTER UlilB and other blooming plants, timed aK " most-to the hour for being in ' full .bloom on Easter Sunday. .. Have yonrs RESERVED to-day., ,:- - Orders for the decoration y ef : , Churches, - for furnishing Cut Flow s ers. Ferns -; and Blossom Plants should be given In. ADVANCE::. ;r ir Can we have your order T ":" eJ Dilworth floral Gardens. GOLDS. GLORY 'Club House Potatoes . Boil potatoes with their jackets on. Drain and keep till next day; Peel and cut into .cubes. Stew three; cups of the cubes with two table-" .spoons .. ),- ; ' Golden v6Icry Cooking Oil and cream enough to cover. Add salt and a. : Cook slowly ortv-five minutes. '-. , This is a tedious f) recipe, but the results justify 'the trouble.'- ' SAVE BUTTER, use Golden Gory Ccc!dng Oil : All Grocers.4 teca fcrtcn-lfcj Co. . v-", ' . ' Charlotte. N .Cl , .- ' 1 THE- STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE - t .' -sj. e - ' -, 5M0KaFSe ? . v . JwSv' ,. ' i v-;- "-. " ; ' A SYMBOL Of QUAUTY ChirVregistered'--Trade-Mark h covering the CELE BRATED 0. 0. B. POCAHONTAS SMOKELESS COAL correspondsN to the Sterling Stamp on ; Sil ver, as the United States Geological 'Survey has made it THE STANDARD FOR GRADING ALL STEAM FUEL. v ' .. ' C C. B. POCAHONTAS SMOKELESS la the Only .imerican Coal: That Has Been 6fr ficially-Indorsed By the Governments- of -Great Britain, Germany and . Austria, anJTiTthe Favorite Fuel With the United States Navy, Which ; Has -Used It Almost Exclusively For Many. Years. AUNEQJIALED FOR THE GENERATION ; UNSURPASSED FOR DOMESTIC v ; v , : PURPOSES. ?' Shipments During 1907 . . . . . . ; . : . ,' '4,900,000 Tons We are now prepared to name prices, effective April : 1st, 1908, - and ; upon application f-shall be pleased to quote for immediate or future delivery. CASTNER. CURRAN a BULLITT S01EAGMTS. . , R0AS0KE, VHtONIA. SPACE VERSUS PROFITS - - , ' . . - . - .- - , This is the case before u$ for decisiom '0iur. De-t; cision:"- You, give us the space and we will give you the profits. -Will you accept f A continued growth of our business, has mad6 it necessary for us, to en- j Jarge our quarters. . TheYontractors trill begin work V in a few days and we must have room for them io r' work. " : r , V . f Cut Prices on Big Stock of Fine, Goods r; in order to' secure the needed space in a short tinv.' This reduction will be on itock on second. and third . " floors, as that is where , we jneed rpom, nd sale will r continue only as long asisf necessary to make the needed. room. - J ' '. :.'- .y r' Watch this space" for lists of! "Greatest Values" ; . you nave ever seen. ; iiii ? Smlft
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 13, 1908, edition 1
6
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