Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Aug. 3, 1908, edition 1 / Page 7
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CHARLOTTE DAILY OBSERVER, AUGUST 3,-1908. PEOPLE'S COLUi.in ... AU .advertisements inserted , this column rato of ten -coats et line . of, six words. No ad taken tr lem , than 20 cents. Caeb in advance i WANTED Tl boarders ; eloss: In ; N. College Su Telephone 18S8-U - WANTED At once, nrst-class ham maker. State wcs expected., uncoin Htrmu Co., LincoJnton. ,-. t. WANTEr-Oood stenographer. " Young v man preferred. ' ? Adaress ft esre b rtrvw ... .'V '-- " ' . 'V'-wi VTicn-Twii high-class young doctor. i ood chance lor right kiad ef men. For particulars address 'Doctors,"' care Ob- server. - -WANXEQgrLJve drug clerk, hard worker, . twoSFr experience. "Saiol," care Obeerver. ' y WANTED Toung' man wfctb one or two ' years' experience in a drug store. Good -j Opportunity to learn the business. Give ' reterenoa, , Address "R." care Observer. ' WANTED A thoroughly competent and '' experienced stenographer. Address im :' mediately in own handwriting. Box 147, 'Charlotte. - WArTTED Position in a bank. Good hafacter and liablu. Willing to start . at Um bottom. Have taken book-keeping course and ain now employed. - Best ref erences. Address "H. H.," care Observer. 1 WANTED One first-class colored barber '"" nt once. None other than- a good "''workmen who tully understands the best. uess need apply. Address Cumberland ' Hotel Barber Shop, Jas. H. Green, Mgr., : . Fayetwville. N. C. v WANTED For U. S. Army, able-bodied, JJLClUsena of United States of good character mnd temDerate habits,' Who . can unmerriea men. noiwcni ,o uw speak, read and write English. For toi-:- formation apply to Recruiting Officer. 1 West Fifth 9t., Charlotte, in. .; oouui Main SU Ashevthe. N. C; National Bank Building. Shelby. N. C.J 401 South Centre St., Statesvllle. N. c; Kprings eu iain!, . Lancaster. S. C. or 1674 West Main 8t., Spartanburg. 8. C. FOR SAliE. FOR SALE At once, nice lot near Ellss Kuk Hood investment. Tele phone 367. F. H. B.radlejL FOR SALF5Cotton mill castings. 25 to 311 ton. best Offer, Immediate shipment, laurel Bluff Cotton Mills, Mt. Airy N. C. FOR 8AIEehlnirles and laths. Write me for prices. B. B. Abernethy. Con nelly Springs. N"- C. anSCCIXANtOT7& WHT AREIv'T YOU our club member? Queen City Dyeing & Cleaning Works. PHOTOGRAPHS and good A 8 It. at Raders Studio. No. W. Trade street. LEFT in Episcopal church -yeelerday. a white gauxe fan with blue forget-me-nots and Ivory sticks. Finder, pleaise leave at Observer office. GOING WEST? Oklahoma. Write us far information about city and farm proper ty and business opportunities. Alexander and Alexander. Real Estate. Box JW4, Oklahoma City, Okla. AS TO MIND IS BltTJTES. Elephant a Mvhanical Engineer, While Monkpy is Mere Imitator. Saturday Evening Post. . "The elebhant is the mechanical en gineer among animals." and Dr. Frank . Baker, superintendent-of ' the Wash- lngton Zoo. "No other member o the ''.fcrute creatfon postiesses any such me chanioal dexterity. One is almost tempted to say dexterity of manlpu lation. Inasmuch as the trunk is used like a hand. An elephant will learn . not only to carry lumber (a purpose , for "which the pachyderm is frequent ly employed in the Orient), but to do many things that require delicacy of - touch, such as untying knots. I have known ono of these animals to spend many hours night after night trying to remove the holding-pin from the shackle. "Here is one point wherein the in telligence of the elephant differs strikingly from that of the monkey. He Is extraordinarily persistent, pur suing a single Idea with a patient de termination rarely found even In hu- ' man beings. The monkey, on the oth er hand, is always the brute described by' Kipling, with no continuity "of thought or purpose. His special and unequaled accomplishment is that of an equilibrist. , Respecting the quali ty of his thinking, wo do not really know very much, mairr-of his aetiema that seem most intelligent and. hu- man-like being mere Imitation. "It has been asserted by a recent writer that domestication causes the brains of animals to deteriorate. In support of which statement it Is urged that horses which .have run wild in Australia have become remarkably In telligent through being obliged to think for themselves and get a living , for themselves, though what they gain In this way is acquired at the expense :, of beauty- and other qualities which make horses valuable to man. Horses that give up thinking and submit to their master's orders, it is argued, are , the most useful, and therefore mosf likely to be enceuraged to perpetrate tneir species under conditions of do mestication. "All of this may be true, but I con . fess that my own observation does not endorse it. The dog. undeniably v is much more intelligent than the wolf . Trom which it sprang. As for the .horse. Us mind seems rather to be -. developed than otherwise throurrh In tlmate contact with man, Its Ideas and interests, Deing modified thereby. I . have seen at the soological park In v " 1 vi. iw ismvui wjia norses v rrom tne steppes of western Mongolia. , ana . it aid not strike me that they were particularly clever: -Yet these norscs nave never been domesticated nitnerto, the first ones known to civil ization oeing captured, flftv-twn in number.. by Khlrgla rough riders, and forwardecLJii 1900 to Hamburg, where . a m mem were delivered alive. ; "Unquejstlonsbry. however, domoatl cation does affect unfavorably the In telligence of some animals notably . that of birds. The .farmyard goose i Biupia creature compared with the wild goose, which is a noble fowl, and - hardly to be recognised, as " the same creature." .-z'.. Boutelle-VVhltev a (xHIeUsvlUe. Correspondence of The Observer. . Collettsvilla. Augi. A-beautTfui una impressive wedding took place Wednesday evening. July Jth, at the home of Dr. and Mrs. William White, When, Mis Mdge Pressly White be. cams' the , bride of Mr. George H. BoutelK of Bradenton. Fla. After tne ceremony, performed by Key. Dr. Rufus White, of Charlotte, a re. ceptlon was gives, after which the ; bride and groom, left for Lenoir. From Lenoir ther went to Blowing Rock, thence- to i Bradenton. - Fla., where they will make their home. Out-of-town guests t were Misses Lottie aad Jlmmle Green, of - Bran. , ford, Fla.; Miss Mary Miller, of Lin eolntonr Miss Lola Mundr. of Den ver; Mlas Annlspola Estia, of Lenoir, . and Misses Miller, of Lenoir. 1 -AS:-!?; ; BT A PRISOICEK OP HOPE, " Did you ever go about among your rftlenda.r-Mekingrltke-rtnTtPiogeBeno, not for an honest man, . buU tot a pappy woman f . No matter- how you burnish, your ' little lamp, how you trinvJlf . wtck arid feed It Hungry flame, the tight falls oft times, most times, on, faces that nave not w wm any shin at toy.- i Now seems to me that the Joy of living la our blessed birthright. The gift of. Hfo includes the gift of Klad- ness. Why should not an - wen? It is not br our own desire that we are here, creatures, guests, children what vou will of, the - Power that creates and-controls. ' "Ram call : it " evolution, T And others call It-God." That all is well with us seems to me not so much a matter of .faith as of cool, clear reason. There is a beautiful faith that put into the rea soning a 'wonderful life and 'beauty. There is no reason why God should not be meaning well by 'ue. What could He be holding against us? There Is the old, old story of Paradise Lost Moses told it and Milton told it, and we all tell It when we make choice and set up a will that is not In harmony with God's will. And that Is the trouble. Leaving religious sen timent tout of the Question, why should we be afraid to trust our in terests to the Power that brought us into existence? Why are we unable to recognize the benefit of perfect narmony wun tne inrst. iause : as , inuaji, w c iui v. God. There is nothing of Vital im portance in a name. There It much In what the name stand for. That is what we need fo find our way to. Some of the most religious people are the most unhappy. That is not the faulc of religion. There are per sons who insist upon walking straight out of Paradise the moment that they catch a glimpse of the way. They regard it as a family trait, a sort of weakness that must be lived down to. They get through their little inter view with the tempter, taste the for bidden fruit, hide themselves from Our "Father and hurry Into paths of their! own seeking. But there lived a man who sent the tempter from him. a man of great power who dwelt always In the pal ace of peace, a place that lice lb the heart of Paradise. It seems to me that we may each 3nd this place and have it always for our own. I used to hear people talk about submitting to God's will. t never quite liked the Idea. Submit Is such a weak, negative, passive sort of word. It seems so like a matter of policy, of compulsion. We might submit "to an operation In which we had little faith, or to a decision that we could not alter, or to authority that we dared not set aside. Put how could anything of this sort help us to be happier when it comes .to the will of God? We have to submit whether we like It or not. I am afraid there Is no good to, come from Just giving up. That is why the Idea xf . paBS&e-?ubmjsslon .seegs 1vry weak and feeble. It is why tnose who should be in the palace are wait ing outside the walls. It seems to me that the whole sit uation Is altered when we accept the will of God as our own. , When we put awav the will that we had and trust God's will. Trust is not passive. It Is the dawn of faith. Tt implies a sort of testinc. a kind of understand ing. If you trust anything, you have CHUse to believe In Its trustworthiness. Have you heard good people say "Thy will be done" as If they were yield ing 'themselves to the1 tortures of the Inquisition? Aad then, have you known "Thankful hearts that take The bread of pain, the bitter cup of woe, And dare to feel content for old Joy's saKe Among the thorns where roses used to grew. Since He who knoweth best has willed It so These are thev who live even now In Paradise. The thorns are not evil The hand that shaped snd set them makes no mistake. None. We all know that there has been much maudlin talk about faith and love, and we cannot deny that much that passes for religion Is a pitiful mixture of sentiment and superstition But God Is and we are. A relation exists between Him and us. We rec ognize him as the source of all things We find the law of a beautiful har mony everywhere. There is a sense of kinship. When-In the silence our sou la cry out there Is response. We know that God Is good. We feel the thrill of His love. He Is Our Father Then all Is well. Th happy people are not those Who have every wish gratified. We find some strange dwellers in the pal ace of peace. Women who know all that sorrow means. Mm who have knowledge of grief. Many who have laid down one by one beautiful hopes, darling ambitions, hearts' desires, Has not this deep wounding hurt? God only knows, how keenly. Bvt through It all IB a clear, pure Joy, It must be right. It is a grand thing to feel sure, to know simply, as you know that .you llwe, surely as you recognize your own Identify that God has a will concerning you, that you are included In His, plans, that He is taking care of you.' of everybody, of everything, everywhere! Do the peo ple who know this find much cause for complaint? It seems to me that we Used to feel in duty bound 'to mourn and make great outcry when sorrow came to us. Are we learning a better lesson now? When I was a little girl they took me, one day, to a funeral. The hor ror of It was something terrible. It was a woman who had died, a very lovely woman, and I had loved her. Her home, was a beautiful old court try place, On that dreadful, day the pictures were turned with their faces to the wall. The tall mirrors were draped In linen sheets. ' All the clocks were still. The blinds were closed and every curtain drawn. Women, black-robed and shadowy, tiptoed about -or sat in long. silent rows against the walls. Sometimes they whispered shrfjlly, and sometimes they sang hymns, in these trymns there was no not of lor-. had alwavs been required to learn hymns on rainy days ana Sundays, always except wnenine nesutirm old lady begged me off. So I knew a good many, and some of theae shadowy, whlspery women nsa hesM me making brave effort tossing them. I have never been able to understand why they wished to add anything to the awful horror of the .occasion. : But horror seemed to be what they were after. They found me coweriac in abject terror Just inside the doorway. I had never hesrd that a child might refuse to obey. ' Imagine a " little trembling creature wailing out: t "And am I bom t die,, T "To lay this body down, ' And must my trembling spirit fly ; r : Into a world unknown?", ' - That was what they had me sing. The hymn grew more terrifying as its gruesome Urn's went on. The small voice quivered ana tne : cia nttie body shook with fear. Everybody Was weeping , bitterly. AU this an-' , guish wo owed to the memory. !f the sweet woman wfroi&d died. It waa prdper respect When my. ordeal was" over I sat alone on the back steps. Out at the barn men were working. - I r emember the sound ernhe planer and the yeU low curie that -they cut'lrom tne ey press wood. They were making the. ceffln. I-watched them with aatrange fascination. There were little- groups of women at work upon the white lining:" They were cutting- .. Uttle aotcbes all along the edges of, long, narrow strips. Piles of awful black .stuff lay upon the work bench. No body spoke cheerfully. There was no smile on any face. It seemed, in truth, an awful thing to die. Now and then there came to me the sound of bitter weeping and wailing. There was a room closely shut and the mourners were In it. 1 felt that I had once known these people, but they were strangers now. We stayed all night. Everybody stayed. The horror deepened. The dark was full of it. m They sang weird ly, low and mournful hymns. The rising sun brought no better day. It was terrible beyond description. For many days the house was like a tomb. The children wore dressed in black. The piano wa closed. There was no mention of the sweet woman who had died, is it any wonder that we learn ed to fear death? It seems to me that we are learn ing better now. Is there anything that we need fear? Is not all well? Shall we not be sure that everything Is all right? Not my way, not thy way, but always and always the right way. What is a disappointment again.-t the sure knowledge that all Is well? Is It not reasonable, ra tional, logical? Is it not best to find our place in the great plan? To be in harmony with the Power that we call Righc, Truth, Love, God! Surely this i wisdom. Of a truth is it strength. It seems to me a great pity that we are always afraid, that at every turn ing of the way we expect harm to come upon us. We are fearful of changes and before a mystery we are terrified. Disappointment undoes us and in the power of grief we are help less. Trifles vex us and we burden ourselves wlh many cares. It Is as If we knew of no guiding, shielding, un erring hand. It seems to me that we, are -missing a great deal. Through the wilderness of our great unrest we shall be carried safely. But we might be resting aloup the way. We might he taking comfort and giving comfort. It is our right. ' We all know the woman who scarcely dares to acknowledge a hap piness lest it he snatched from her. The woman who finds nothing Just right, who is sure always that there la worse to come. This s the woman who cannot be convinced that what she has is better for her. now. than what Bhe had. She wonders what evil each sun is to bring, what misfortune Is folded in with the hours of every new day;, She i-sjM'ots her fr'end.8 tq jjrpve false and her enemies powerful. She is sure of the worst that can be Im agined. The other day I beard two women talking, and one was wise and the other was foolish. She who was wise had been telling of a. new happiness that had come to her, end she who was foolish said: "Ah. but you don't know. It may not last. I tell you. you can't be too careful In a world like this. It's an awful place. I have lived a long time, and I've been considered fortunate and greatly blessed, but It's a eorry game, this that we call life, and not worth the candle. And I who listened heard' walling up from the- past one of the hymns that even the beautiful old lady could not save me from: "We must suspect some danger nigh When we. possess delight.' The pity of it! What made them teach us such pessimistic foolishness? I wonder why? Shall we not forget It now that wo ought to he knowing bet ter QCTKT SUNDAY AT PAIItVTEW, The CandMalr Attend CliiuvlWl)U cunhcs lion a party's Opinion Itet- gartiing National Banks of Oklaho ma, and Will Treat It Further in Ilia Nex 8peo-h. Lincoln, Neb.. Aug. 2. 'Attorney Genersl Bonaparte's opinion delivered yesterdav. holding it to be Illegal for national banks of Oklahoma to eon tribute toward the guaranty fund for tho protection of depositors or to avail themselves of the other privileges of the fcftate banking act, was the subject or a good deal of discussion here to day. Prominent Democrats f Lincoln freely averred that, following o close ly on the heels of the Standari OH reversal in Chicago and the contempt rases against the labor leaders in Washington, the opinion of the Attor ney General still further strengthened the Democratic party In the present campaign. Mr. Bryan himself gave expression to the effects that the opinion will nava in the coming election. "It ae- oentuates the situation." said he. "and emphasizes the necessity of legislation jrameo from the standpoint of the de positor ratner than from th stand point of the banker." He would talk no further on the subject but said that he wou'd give it liberal treatment in his speech at Topeka, Kan., some tlm during the present month. The usual Sundav aulet crevalted at ra'rview to-day. In the morninr Mr. ryan, accompanied by his wife, went Into Lincoln and attended the services at Westminster Presbyterian church, where Mr. JBryao said he heard splendid sermon, the text being; "How Shall We Escape St We Neglect So ureal aivatioa7" ..-' Having t radically got Ills accent nee speech fl his hands, MT Bryan Is directing some of his- thoughts to his farm. His principal object of inter est Juat now la a large field of alfalfa from which In a few days he enect o gamer a mira crop f the present season and -which he calculate wtll yield "till another,;; Threw tSoldWs Killed n Peking Fire. Peking, Aug. S. Fire In the Ger man guard section of the city at half past- o'clock to-night burned the tables and mess rooms and exploded a Quantity of ammunition. . ; Two German and one French sol diers were killed and eight German and five French soldiers were severe, ly and. four - soldiers and civilians lightly- wounded. EXCKIAENT HEALTH ADVICK. Mrs. M. M. Imviscii. on. Ct tiiffortt Ave., Baa Jose. Cat., says: 'The worth of Elect rle Bitters a general family remedy, for . headache, biliousness and torpor ef the liver and bowls tm m pro sounead that I am .prompted to say a word In Its faror tor tha benefit of thoaa reeking relief from such afflioilnna. There la more health for the dlgetuiT organs In a bottle of Electric Bitters than in uny ottier 'remedy I know f." . Hold under guarantee at all drug stores, loo. GER3CAX ARMY SIAXECVETtS, Nearly a Million fcoldiers to Engage in the Mimic Warfare at Various v Points In the Km plre- Publication -- of tlu Official Orders, Mailed With VDeUEtc; .; y li: 4, Berlin,! Tuesday. Aug-. 2. The pub lication of the 'orders for' .the army maneuvers in the fall t this year, In which nearly a million men -will be engaged la various parts 61 Tfie cOufFT try, has, aroused the most extraordi nary Interest In civil as well as in mil itary circles. ,'The strength . of tne army is to 'be increased for the time beJngy no fewer than -$",T2 men from the reserves, who with the standing peace army of 626,i 4 men, will bring the total undeg arms at the end of August up to 896,588. who will fight tactically against each other corps by corps. . Cavalry, artillery, infantry, engi neers, motorists, balloonists, field tel egraphists and telephonists, cyclists and all the brandies of the service which look after supply and transport,, intelligence and communications are to undergo searching tests. Tho exercises which attract most attention are " naturally the imperial maneuvers in Alsace-Loralne. as this will be the first time since the swar ef 1879 that maneuvers on such an ex tensive scale will have taken place so near the frontier. The fifteenth and sixteenth army corps will there oppose each other in mimic war and undergo severe tactica'l aivd'. strategic instruction un der the immediate eye of the Emper or. Each of the corps is to be made up Of three divisions .of Infantry and a division of cavalry with the requisite for artillery. The Infantry regiments are to consist of three 'battalions of 800 men each. Two of these regiments will form a brigade, two brigades a di vision and three divisions an army corps, eo that each corps will possess 28,800 infantrymen at once, while the staff will have at its disposal for emer gencies a reserve Infantry regiment and a reserve battery of artillery. The cavalry division attached to each corps comprises 10 regiments. Some instructive siege operations, with attacks by heavy artillery on field fortifications such as happened during- the Kusso-Japaneee war are to be executed. (-- The garrison and coast artillery are to undertake lengthy periods of de fense exercises along the coasts In conjunction with the navy. Each bat tery has had 3S0 live shells issued to It for shooting practice. SOUTHERN FORCED TO BUILD. Corporation Comiiilsskm ;lcs Dur ham 1 telief in Mailer of an Under ground Crossing Ilec. C. .1. Thomp son III. Special to The Observer. Durham, Auk. 2. City Attorney It. O. Everett has received from the tSate corporation commission a ruling In the matter of forcing the Southern to build an underground ay at the tlreg BOn street crossinR of that road. This has been pending for t-omc time and the decision of the commission Is sat isfactory to the ofllcials here and 111 mean an end of the matter unless the railroad people appeal. Tbcvulty aakefUihat th U4dM-grotw4 eroding of Gregaon street be made a thirty-foot street 1th two sidewalks, and in the petition to the road agreed to stand $760 cost on the proposition. The road could not agree to what the aldermen wanted and the appeal wag made to the corporation commission. The order Is now made that the street be madev as asked and that the city should pay $1,000 as its part of the expenses. This is agreeable to the city officials, so it Is learned and there will be no further trouble unless It is made by the railroad. TFor several years there has been an underground crossing at Gregson street, but It was narrow and there were upright beams In the centre of this narrow way. As the population Increased the under ground way became a nuisance rather than a help. Then came tho petition Of the city ' It is ja III that the underground way to e made as provided for In the or der of the commission will cost some $7,600, the olt standing for $1,000. a Is a very Important crossing, however, and the people have been clamoring for better accommodations for a long time. Recent Improvements In that section mane the tindergrouncl cross ing more Important. Rev. r. J. Thompson, pastor of the First Baptist church, who Is soon to leave for Atlanta to accept tho pas torate of a church there, was taken vi olently 111 Friday night and was con flned to his bed all of yesterday. His" condition Is such that he was not able to flu his pulpit to-day and there were no services there during the day, with the exception of Sunday school. Next .Sunday is his last Sunday with this cnurcn as pastor, and ho, will preach his farewell sermon then If he is abjo to do so. WILL TORN UP RV AXBRV BOY. Wild Son Who Was Irft But Small Amount of Properly Tried to De. " stroy the Will. But tho Pieces Are ; Still Preserved. Special to The Observer. waynesvllle. Aug. 2. Cant. R. A. L. Hyatt, clerk of the court here, told your correspondent the other day of an old will, that he has in the office here. It Is dated In 1817 and is torn Into many nieces. but the pieces are sewed together so that the paper can be read easily. The will Was. not probated until within the last lew months. There la a little nlorv connected with this document that is a little romantic, The testator, Edward Hyatt, was one of the earliest settlers ot this county. While being a pious man himself he had one bey that was wild and reckless. When tee old man made his will he cut the wild boy .off from a great deal of his patrimony and gave most of bis property to others that suited him better. After the death of the old man the will u 'read In the presence of the children and friends. The wild young man asked to see the will. It was handed him. and, in a passion he tore It Into pieces and threw them upon the floor. A negro slave afterwards collected the pieces nd they were sewed together: and that is the way tbe will appears now. It is We pre served with that exception. Schooner Founders Oh? Cspe Lookout; . , ' Ck-can Liner Saves Crew. w ' New Yerk. Aug. 2. New of the foundering of theschooner Charles K. ftehulj, off Cape Lookout, iV. C. snd the Teacueof the-eaptain -and seven ef the" 4-rew by the steamer KanaJsj wireless message to the Associated Press. The schooner' wss bound trom Philadelphia to Charleston, 8. C, and was laden with coal. She waa sighted helpless) oil Lookout lightship by the Kansas City; which took off the crew. The Kansas City left New York on July 30th for Savannah. Tbe Charles K. flohull was 4k four-masted schoon ef and hailed from Philadelphia. v ,V -- That's It, Kxadly. . . Durham HeralJ. . . . ' - But it is not the .rat that hurts but the discrimination. It does not hurt one to pay what all have to pay. Do You Live Out of the Qly? ? - Even if you live outside of CharT6ffoacT not thrnk- that you ' cannot take advantage of. our dry cleaning and dyeing ! departments. ' When you have work of this nature to send to us, give tt to our laundry agent. If one Is convenient; If not, ship it, to us by-rnail or by express, and write us telling what you de sire done. We give this work the same careful, thorough and prompt attention that we do that of our local patrons. Price list sent upon application. Charlotte Steam Laundry Carolina's Leading Dyers and - Cleaners, Charlotte, N. C. PROTECT YOURSELF against poor fits and poor tailoring by placing your or ders In our hands. Our name stands for at I fac tion in every detail. Two-Piece Suits TAILORED TO TASTE $20.00 to $10.00. .ABANISSr1 INCOtPORATl0Va f Tics? Hundreds of them are' here the smartest styles of the season. Jriht ties. Somber ties. Plain Ties. Fancy ties. ' In fact every kind of tie will be found here when you come for the kind you want. 25c. to $1.00. The Tate-Brown Co. ' . WeMakeShirU l'H414't'rll'-r'tri'tr i t AjJLKLEj, iCEMENT, PRESSED BRICK And everything else J I tliatV Builders' Sup X plies. Best quality ma- I X 4 fj ! '1 1 e 1 TlZ-atViT-a-fr s4a liveries and tho right t $ prices. Inquiries so- Jicited. B. F. WITHERS i ' Distributors Everything - BUILDERS SUPPLIES. 5 i h xtsxsf zj O" txvrv I VJf OROINARV DRIMKIliS WATCH II ENDORSED BY HIGHEST m 11...... ..... I. t- rta,uno tin, am. id vu, ctwm mMMnimmm mm M, e mwmii n they are so blended by nature as to be of the greatest benefit to the patients. It Is absolutely pure, keeps fresh Indefinitely - and la retained by the most delicate stomachs when other waters art rejected. ji Write for book of testimonials. C Sold by leading druggist In Chrsloue, N, C by Itawley's Pharmacy. pM'Dougall 'Sr Cabinet Special features: Flour Bin with sifter attached. Sugar Bin, Pplra .Cabinet. Tea and Coffee Canisters. Aluminum Extension Top, Plate Racks, Want List, gliding Shelves. Metal Bread Box. Recipe Cabinet, Table specs 40x39 in. Trimmings, Brass. The modern home new provides for every kitchen convenience. Anything that saves time and labor and aids economy and cleanli ness is not too expensive for nu. The Mt-Dougold Kitchen Cabi net does all of this and more.ftoo. The prices are reasonable, US 00 ,$20 00. IIS. 00. $21.00. $90.00, I35.no- and 40 OA Can you afford to be without one? New stock now on display. Parker-Gardner Company McCoy's Himlts MA T. McCoy THE HOME Stylish Livery I.SREXGER AND BUGGY SERVICE ' ' o We have the oldest and largest Livery Stables In the South and keep for hire the most stylish Horses and Vehicles. - 'Dealers in Horses, Mules, Vehicles and Harness, v J. W. Wadsworth's Sons' Company pftndsri Tee la the perfect artificial Ice, - Corrects that hot. tired feeling.- , . . ' : . - Customers wants receive careful and prompt attention. i J, 'PIIOXE ! OR IX. ' j ' ' V - '. Standard Ico & Fuel ' Gomp'y FOrtTICtU.0 UTrllA WAYlft JV 74 MEDICAL AUTHORITY . s4rf nt everywhere. FOR SUMMER COMFORT i That the "Dixie" Is the most con venlent. most durable and most sightly Mosquito Canopy on the market Is an acknowledged (act. We have a large stock ef these for either wood or metal bed, and can place one on your bed on short no tice. Price $3.00. No charge for putting them on. We have the "Climax" Canopy also for those who want their net swung from the cell ing. Price $1.75. V & Company FCRNIfiHERfl. a.
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Aug. 3, 1908, edition 1
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