CHARLOTTE DAILY OESEEYEE, AUGUST 31, 1CC3.
1j
THiuim anndl " . Mil
1
1
BY SAVOYARD.
t i related that on one occasion
Alien G. Tnurman had dined um
tuously and cam into the Senate, no
expecting- anything- unusual to ... taW
rir in the deliberations t that at'
Mm sodv. -Mr. James O. Blaine was
then a Senator from Maine and al'
ixt roe onoortunlty. There wsj
iom ouestion, growing out ot South
ern reconstruction, then a dreg la tn
bontlea) caldron, and Blaine, the dem-
- SCorue ana V" xryn ... "
.iienMr Tharman . to a dispute
upon it. ' "' ' - ' '
They had It hammer and tonga lor
an hour or two- hour with ths re
ult that the plurosd
plucked knight , when the thing was
Thunnanwent into the Democratic
cloakroom, followed by bis worshlp
.r. rn Voorheea of Indiana, and
Henry Oassaway Davis, of West Vlr.
g Inla. He took from tola coat pocket
that historic bandanna and blew on
9 a blast that was beard to the Inner
most recesses of the prow gallery, and
exclaimed: " v ' ," i' ' ,
nova- did thet'd d harlequin
., .t with me?" '
7o, no. Senator, you did splendid
ly and left not a piece or mm. .
-vir mind, never mind," said
of these days he'll
tackle me when I'm sober, and then,
d d him, wont I smash aim!
, lt was the opinion of Sir Edward
Coke that If alt the sages, ancient and
" crated time out of mind, they could
not have produced a work superior to
' (be common law of England. At the
fcar Thnrman was a complete master
' f the principles of the common law
as - our country ever proauceu, uj
Roscoe Conkllng. himself a great Ju-
i rist. declared that when the common
law was mentioned he turned to the
' seat of a Senator from Ohio as the de
vout Mussulman to Mecca.
But it was as a debater of constl-
tutlonal law In the Senate that Thur
man stood highest the equal of any
of them. He wss called "the old Ro
man," not that be waa Cato. or at all
like him; but that. Intellectually, he
was so able and so honest that none
could stand before him. His moral
ytatnlna was weak compared with
that of his celebrated uncle, "old Bill"
Allen, who forced him into the flat
money camp contrary to bis tetter
Judgment. If Thurman, the hard-money
man, bad been nominated for Gov
ernor of Ohio In 187, he would have
been elected: but Allen waa nominat
ed, and R- B. Hayes beat hlra. Thur-
. man would have been elected, and the
following year he would have been
chosen President of the United Statea
Crisow of Georgia, greatly distinguish
ed himself and became the actual
Democratic leader the first session,
Congress adjourned later than ever
before, , with a single exception, ana
the .Democrats made the McKinley
law paramount. .Mill waa tho rec
oanlaed leader on that issue, and h
made a tour ot New England, apeak
ing daily and nightly, proclaiming-
free raw materials for the manufac
turers and tariff for revenue ooly for
their finished products, ror the srax
time alnce Jackson's day, since in
tirth of their party unless It was in
1152 -the Democrats elected a ma
lorlty of Congressmen from the six
New England States. A' majority of
the Massachusetts delegation were
Dfttnoorais. Rhode Island nd New
Hampshire were solidly Democratic
In Congress. There was but one Re
Dobllcan member from Connecticut
In that Congress a Democrat would
have been chosen Speaker if no mem
ber of the solid South had voted. Tbs
total Republican vote was but a beg
carlv 81. and the Democratic plural
ity was mors than twice SS. It was
the completest political victory of our
history the congressional election of
1I0. :., ...v-:.
I believe It was Wellington who
said that a great victory waa nearly
as dangerous as a defeat, and . so this
proved. Nobody can blame Crisp for
aspiring to the Speakership. Ha got It
because Mills! the Roman, was not
favorable to river and harbor bills.
Thomas C. Catching, a-ho did more
to put the Mississippi river In its pres
ent excellent state than all the rest
of them, elected Crisp Speaker, but
that work was the eglnnins; of fac
tion In the Democratic party afteT the
war.
I writs this because a newspaper
man said this lo me the other night:
'I see that (Roger Q. Mills is now in
Baltimore, a patient In a hospital;
1 thought he died long ago, and
would .have bet money that ho was no
longer among the living."
Mills in public life was very nearly
all a great statesman In a parliamen
tary government should be except aa
old has was among the numerous
fairies at his birth and. decreed "he
shall not have tact."
And when he was In Congress If
somebody had handed him a Bagful
of tact he would have been oewuaer
ed, and surely he would not bavs
known what It was (or.
CANADA'S CALL OP THE WEST.
iVom
Eastern
Golden
It wis the domination of Thurman
t a morally stronger man (Allen)
that makes me conclude that Roger
Q. Mills, of Texas, was the real "old
yemiui" o the A rp ''-ne-
the past 40 years. He was ons ma which point they will be distributed
Great Exodns
Provinces to Get In the
Grain.
Et. John Sun.
Testerday the Maritime Provinces
sent their bone and muscle to help
garner the golden grain of the great
west. Over 6.000 of the youth of
eastern Canada started last evening
the long journey to Winnipeg, from
who never wavered, never i:omiromln-
ed, never surrendered. Not ho able as
Thurman, he was yet a better and a
more capable leader. He was not so
. lovable, nor so popular as Thurman.
Sis was Infinitely more like Cleveland,
whom he resembled In many ways.
All lis entered' Congress In 1172, elm
Vltaneously with Joseph G. Cannon. It
wss in the days or reconstruction.
snd Ben Butler sought to make the
South choose between negro domlna
tlon and bayonet domination. The at-
. tempt failed, not because Randall,
Beck, and Lamar conducted a fili
buster unprecedented against It, but
for the reason that Speaker Blaine
was not in favor of It There are two
theories aa to Blaine's motive one
that opposed it aa politically male
In ae, and the other that he saw
danger to his own political fortunes
In the power the force bill lodged In
President Grant, who had a great deal
mors use for iRoscoe Conkllng than
be did for James O. Blaine, and had
Ben Butler's force bill become a law
It Is very likely that Conkllng would
tiave beaded the Republican ticket In
3I7C.
" Bo that as 1t may, the succeeding
Congress was Democratic the first
of the complexion In eighteen years
and It was then that Mills first began
to show the metal of which he was
. made. He joined the Morrison wing
or the party and supported Kerr for
: Speaker, and later he was the natural
successor of Morrison as chairman of
the committee on ways and means
and leader of the House. In 1879
Bamuel J. Randall was the Democrat
ic caucus nominee for Speaker of the
Forty-sixth Congress. Mills refused to
vote for him, and in that same Con
gress "Pig Iron" Kelley gave his vote
for Hendricks B. Wright, a Demo
cratic Greenbacker. of Pennsylvania,
rather than to Garfield, the Republl-
. ran caucus nominee.
. Randall was elected Speaker, Oar
. Held led the Republlcanx, and we had
the strange spectacle of the Demo
cratic leader the advocate of protec
tion and the Republican leader the
- advocate of tariff reform. The deata
throughout Manitoba. Seven farm
laborers' specials were used to con
vey the harvesters. Three of thene
trains were made up In St. John.
Two came from Halifax and one.
from Sydney. The remaining one
started from Point du Chene with the
Prince Edward Islanders, who crossed
Northumberland strait ' by special
steamer.
The excursion had all the features
of similar excursions of previous
years, with few exceptions. One of
the latter was the number of ex
curslonlsts, which was much larger
than Is ordinarily the case. Another
feature which distinguished It from
the average harvest excursion was
the absence of drunkenness and
fighting. The class of men who
formed the living freight of the three
trains which were made up here
was excellent. Some whiskey was of
course in evidence among the ex
cursionists and the crowd was a little
noisy, but In spite of these little
drawbacks everything about the
union depot went smoothly until the
last of the local excursion train
pulled out at about half past 12 this
morning. The first train left at 8:30
p. m., the second tan hour later.
Harvest excursion trains ars usually
accompanied by a number of C. P.
R. detectives, but this season no
plain clothes men were on the trains.
The composition of the excursion
crowds was about as usual. A few
family parties containing- women
and children were to be observed,
but the great majority of the ex
cursionists were men, and yountt men
at that. Until the last train left
the union depot presented a most
animated appearance, being- crowded
with hundreds of . harvesters and
their friends.
The total number of excursionists
from the Maritime Provinces Is
much In ecess of what the C. P. R.
officials expected. Three thousand
was the figure expected. The last of
the harvest trains passed through at
about 5:30 this morning. -
union
man
ffi2 TcrcLufs & Farcafs L?:ti:::l .Bzr.!i
Nsws of ths State
Happening of Yesterday Told ta
, . Parairrsphs.
Hon. Lee 6. Overman will address
the people at Lenoir Tuesday.
Ware's chapel south ReidsvlHe,
has been purchased by the Edna Cot
ton Mills and will bs used for a school
nouse. ,; -
x -
Miss Annie Jones. of Reldsvllle, has
accepted a position to teach elocution
n aula s creek Academy, and has
gone to tnat piace.
To-day will - be a great day for Le
noir. There will bs a circus there,
court will convene and there will be
speaking; by the Hon. Richard N,
Hackett. Democratic nominee for
Congress in that district. .,
If Marse Henry Had the Say.
Houston Post. '
There Is no occasion (or a contro
versy over the birthplace of Marse
of Speaker Kerr, in 1878, followed Henry. He was born in Washington
toy the disputed presidential election
of that year, postponed Democratic
tariff legislation nearly 20 years. Ran
dall defeated the Morrison tariff bills
In -the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth
.Congresses, of which Carlisle was
Speaker, but in the Fiftieth Congress
the Democrats passed through the
Honae of Representatives the Mills
tariff bill over the protest and over
the veto of Randall.
City or Tennessee parents. He had
no choice In the matter, else he would
have been cradled In Texas or North
Carolina.
THE WEATHER.
Washington, Aug. SO. Forecast:
North Carolina, Bouth Carolina and
Georgia: Fair Monday; warmer In In
terior; Tuesday fair, light to fresh north
east to east winds.
On that measure the Democrats East Florida: Local showers Mondav
"went to the country tn 1118 and I and Tuesday, light to fresh winds mostly
wers ceieaiea, ins greatest calamity -noruisasx.
, that has come to the Democratic par
tr sines the spilt at Charleston, in
588. Had Grover Cleveland been re
elected in 1888 the tariff question
would have been settled on Democrat
ic lines ahd the silver question com
posed on (old standard lines without'
a split of the party, snch as that of
,J8. By a narrow margin Cleveland
lost the election, and by a more close
wot the Republicans gained the Fifty
first Congress. Reed was Speaker and
McKinley chairman of ways and
meana The House passed the
Lodge f ores bill to .make it Illegal for
Mississippi to go Democratic, To de
feat that, Gorman, a goldbug. sought
alliance - with Stewart, the silver
crank. Then It was that the 0. O P
. rave as the Sherman silver law. as fine
a piece of politics as ever was turned
out t this capital, but the South was
saved and the panic of 18t incubat
ed. The AfcKlnley tariff was exceed
ingly unpopular everywhere. ia the
controversy that arose over the fact
that Speaker Reed took from Con
gress the right of deliberation. Mr.
, ,
FOR SOKK FEET.
"T have found Bucklen's Amlea Salvs
to be 1 he proper thing U uae tor sore (ml
ss we as for healing burns, sores, cuts
"d U manner ot nrlon," writes Mr
V. b'onp, of Esst Poland, Maine. - rt
t j.rorr thUig.- too, lor pii-m. Try hi
t 1 ur.der s.irnle at aU drug stores
Lt cf-D'.a,
West Florida, Alabama. Mlsalsalnnl:
Fair Monday and Tuesday; Ught east
winos. , ..
Louisiana: Fair Monday: ' Tuesday
partly cloudy, possibly local showars.
light to treah east to southeast winds,
East Texas: Partly . cloudy Monday :
Tuesday local showers with cooler In
north portion; light to fresh southeast to
south winds on the otast.
Virginia: Fair, warmer Monday: Tues
day warmer, light east to south winds.
West Texas: Showers Monday, except
lair in southeast portion; cooler In north
portion; Tuesday fair, except showers In
extreme west portion.
Arkansas: Fair Monday; showers and
cooler st night and Tuesday. -
LOCAL OFFICE U. 8. WEATHER BU
" - s:-:- BEAU. 1- .
Charlotte. :Aug. ). Sunrise l:M a, m.J
sunset :tt p. m. .''.-'; 's .
TEMPERATURE -On degrees). :
Highest temperature. ... ................ .78
Lewest temperature 84
Mesa Uroperatur .. .................. J ss
Deficiency lor the day ................ 1 I
Accumulated deficiency for month .. - '18
Accumulated excess for year ......... 138
PRECIPITATION (in Inches).
Total for 24 hours ending 8 p.
Total for the month 11.61
Accumulated excess for month ...... 8.23
Total lor the year .................... SJ.M
Accumulated exews for year ........ H
Prevailing wind diriin ............N. E.
. - W. J. BENNETT. Observer.
Mr. B. S. Bronson. formerly with
he James E. Clark Company, of
Washington, 1 N. C has recently ac
rented a position with the firm of
William Jack man Son. of . Nfw
York City, and left last week for New
Tork to assume his nsw position.
Te power people at Gaston Shoals
ars again furnishing power and Gaff-
ney, 8. C, Is thankful that such is
the case. For ons night that town
was In complete darkness, but ths en
terprising; manager of tbs power) sys
tem there rlsg-ed up ths old machin
ery or ths town's power plant and
gave light until ths Gaston Shoals
people cams Into 00m mission afaln.
Steauner Cat Whale In Two,
Montreal Dispatch.
The Dominion Line steamship Ken
sington, which has just arrived In this
port from Liverpool, while going at
uu speea near the Banks of. New
foundland, ran down a large sperm
whale.
The whale was first spied when ths
vessel was nearingr the Banks and for
some time it kept alongside of the
vessel. Then it attempted to cross
her bows. It was struck with full
force by the vessel arid cut Into pieces.
trail 01 moon covering; the sea. .
The Up-lo-Date Treatment
1
OF CHARLOTTE, IT. C.
V a. ..,,...,... v
: Surplus and Profits .... . . ...... 1CO,000,CO , :
- Accounts of Corporations,; Finns , and Individuals
Invited. ' , " ' ' :
' We Issue Certificates of Deposit Payable on ;De-
- ; mand 'Bearing Interest at 4 Per Cent. Per v
-t t - Annum if Left Three 3Ionths or "Longer;.
,;v -" ' - . . - . ..... - "
'We Also Pay 4 Per Cent, on Savings Deposits and
, ' 4 . Compound the Interest Quarterly. , ' -K
"VVe TVant Your Business.
GEO. k wiLSOlT, President. V . :-y r'. .;.
JNO. B. B0S3, Vice President. .- - . ; ,
- - 'W. 0. WILKINSON, Cashier.
Very Desirable ; Residence and
Manufacturing Proper ty for Sale
10 l-J seres of land S 1-2 miles south of the city on R. B. and
. macadam on which is located a. modern 10-room residence Barn
lOxSQ feet, gin house with' complete Murray " ginnery outnt double
box press, automatic traropers, etc., three 70-saw gins,' 3-story mill
house with basement, three corn mills and one burr wheat mill,
seed house. 20x60 feet. AUruachlnery run by power supplied by
' the Catawba Electric) Power Company,, whose ,'maln line runs
within about 200 feet of this property. Sixty horse-power in
duction motor, brie power house 30x30 feet Seed blown direct
from gin to seed house on H.-.R. feidetrack, grain unloaded from
car at the mill by elevators All bulldln&s ' lighted ' by electricity..
Everything practically new and in fine condition. We are offertn
this property at about 80 per cent, less than cost.
SOUTHERTi REAL ESTATE LOAN & TRUST COMY
Capital, $75,000.
W, 8. ALEXANDER. -,
President. : '
t Surplus, $100,000. .
R. - A. PUNK, ; . A. M. McDONALD,
Vice President . See. and Treaa.
-Relatives In Reldsvllle have . been
notified of the critic a f illness at Blue
field. W. Va., of Vlr. Bud Miller, form
erly of Reldsvllle.
F. Be m
A great many diseases hays i. been
robbed of their terrors by up-to-date
methods, resulting- from scientific
advancement The once dreaded
smallpox now yields readily to simple
methods and vaccination keeps 'it
from spreading-. Antitoxin has great
ly reduced ths mortality-In dlph'
thorla cases and the treatment hi
many other diseases has shown just
as Important advances. It is ths
same with ths liquor disease. Ths
barbaric methods of former years
have been eliminated bytDr. Me-
Kanna and a simple but effective
treatment now does Its work in three
days so much better than the old
methods did In thirty days that there
Is no comparison. No ons thinks of
the old methods of treating- the
liquor habit now without a shudder.
and the success of Dr. McKanna's
treatment shows that the people ap
preciate ths Improvement, Dr. Mc
Kanna's treatment is positively the
only effective three-day liquor cure
In itih world. There are no dangerous
hypodermics, bad after affects or an
noying confinement to contend with,
and every patient finds as much
pleasurs and Enjoyment while under
treatment as he would In his own
hornet Full . information cheerfully
furnished. - ;
Liquor Cure $50. Morphine Cure $100.
Call on or Address
McKANXA THREE-DAY LIQUOR
CURB COMPANY,
Reldsvllle, V. C -
"Jordan's oa ths Bqaara."
E. P. PurcelL .President
D. A. McLaughlin. V. Pre
The Height
of; Perfection 7
in candy making , has
been attained by Huy;
' ler.-.' ' '
i - Iluyler's . ; Candy is
the purest and the best
Keeps fresh and -lasts
longer. ' -
R. II. JORDAII&CO.
' ' - - - - .
NURSES' BEQISTER
Free of Taxes
. . . , .
T per cnt net income; can
b obtained from absolutely
fl rat-class nrrferred stocks of
aubstsntial North Carolina
companies which we can offer
; yo to-day. . ' V
Can r writs . ' ,o
- Trast Department ,
60UTIIERX LTFK TRUST
i v COMPANY, e
' ' . Greensboro, N. C.
CaplUl and Surplus $405,000.00
E. P. Wharton. President
A. M. eVales, Gen. Counsel. '
Itobt C IkmL Asst Manager.
BANDY MYERS,
Consnltlns; Enjlneera.
Water ' Supply and Purification,
Sswerag, Sewsrsge Disposal, Road a
Streets, Pavements. Water Power.
Hydro-Electric Plants. irrigation
Drainage. Reinforced Concrete, ' Sur
vey Estimates, Plana and Specifica
tions. Construction Bupenntenaeo.
Complets Plants designed and con
structed.
Main Office, 371-77 Arcade Building-,
Greensboro, North Carolina.
Branch Office. , '
Laurtnbarc, North Carolina.
The difference ,'twlxt tweedledee
and tweedledum may not be much.
but the modern legal difference twlxt
a game of crap, at a penny a throw
by a bunch of . dark skin Ameri
can Citizens hid away In a .wooded
piace Knars gambling and a cosy
room full, of human ., beauty; silk
ru fRes,' hair rats, falsa teeth and the
like deck of cards, a ton of coal or
a cut glass bowl. THE PRIZE, that's
innocent pleasure. ,
That's splitting- hairs with
vengeance and a case of skin and
who, not what . , -
SHUFFLE YOUR HOUSE WANTS
to ' -
I - :
F. D. ALEXANDER
He rents and sells. '
GILBERT C. WHITE, C E. f
CunsolUns;- " " -
CIVIL ENGINEER -
Dnrham, N. C.
Waterworks, Sewerage, Streets; Wa
ter Filtration, Sewage ' Disposal;
Plans. Reports, , Estimates, Super
vision of Construction. ,.
BANKING; SE
Ia selecting- a bank, remember that Urge . capital and surplus
form a margin of security that affords absolute protection. -
COUERCIAl NATIONAL BANK
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Capital.. .'. ... ...$500,000.00 Surplus r ...,$ SJ.0,000.00
Total Kesonrces, Including Stockholders' Liability ., ., $3,125,000.00
t
first National Bank
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Oldest National" Bank in. North
Carolina. ... . . -
Government Depository.' . -
Capital and 'Profits $950,000.
' 4 par cent Interest on time de
posits. .Accounts . solldlted-
HENRY JL McADEN. ....
v - President,.
JOHN F. ORB,'
- Cashier. ".
... .-.v-
REALTY-- INVESTMENT S FOR SALE
Railroad sits . wit)) seven tenement houses, renting- for I6S4.00 psr
: year, or about H per cent on investment A bargain. Price
-... ....'''....,,.'......,. ,.... ... $4,150.00
Two tenement houses renting; for 1110.00 per year. Price for ths
two.,j. ....,.- ...... .....v ti. .......... ...$900.00
Flvs-room cottage with sewerage, bath and electrlo lights, renting
for fll.Ot psr month: house new. - Price... ......$1,500.00
' DILWORTH HOME , ,
' Seven-room modofa home, very desirable,,. ..$4,700.00
The Charlotte Trust 8. - Realty Co
Phone m&$Z&g&. E: Trade
HOMES FOR SALE
$4,700 will buy modern I T-room two-story house, Boulevard, DU
worth. '- "
$3,750 for beautiful -home, all modern conveniences, Elisabeth
Heights. '
$$,500 will buy modern T-room, two-story bouse,' East Ninth
street;- lares. lot and good outbuildings. -- .- '
$$,200 will buy a perfectly new 6 -room cottage, . all modern con
veniences, closs In and on shady side of street
'$2,250 for 6-room. cottage. North Graham street extension, splendid
lot, trltli.sLna carteu , . . ,
:c:Em Murphy Ci Com
4S K. Try on.
'Phone $43.
QUICK
SSLE
E 9th COTTAGE
CAN ARRANGE TERMS
Five Roomr-Modern G)nvenienccse
Brovm (k Company.
'Phone 535.
203 N. TryoirSt
Accident, and Health Policies
in the MAJIYLAND CASUALTY COMPANY 5 ar the most
liberal In existence, .though they don't. cost any more Jhan others.
Every on needs a Disability Policy covering EVERY ACCI
DENT AND EVKRY; DISEASE. ' ; .y-' . . r v .
Let us tell you bow we will pay you a definite weekly indemnity
If you should ba disabled BY ANY ACCIDENT OR ILLNESS.
; HARVEY LAMBETH, Mgr. Deptv
j - AMERICAN TRUST COMPAlsTn
AT WORK FOR YOU
Is your money making money for . you? The mora of It yon
' have employed for yon, the less yon need to work yourself. If
yon keep on savins; and putting your savings to work the funded
capital of yoar earning years will gradually take up the burden '
'and you will not need to work at all.
. We pay 4 per cent and compound it anarterly. . .
We nave tew Safety Deposit Boxes for rent. . '"".
Southern Loan : 5 Savi ngs Dank
JOHN IL SCOTT. President "' S. ALEXANDER, Wee Pres.
i W. L. JEXK3XS. Cashier. 1
The American Trust Com
pany invites : Accounts on
the basis of courteous treat-;
.nient and as liberal accom
modations as the nature of
ths 'Account warrant. ;
i :.. ...
OZLcq in
Th3 Tnu:t Building.
THE CHARLOTTE NATIONAL BANK
. " Resources $1,500,000.00
' 'si
I-
-Our method of doing business holds old friends and
gains new ernes. .
B. O. HKATH, President j v .?
- MfO. M. SCOTT, Vice Ylresldent, -
- . . it- J. XL LITTLE, Vice President
- . . v ' W, H. TAVl'I'ir, Cashier.
-Fourth Ward Building lot
We offer for sale on easy terms one of the most desirable build
ing lots in Fourth Ward. Situated at 07 North poplar street,
47 1-2x141 and - 10-foot alley on one side and a 1-foot, alley in rear.
The lot Is nlCeW elevated and perfectly level, and one of ths best '
neighborhoods ih the city. Our ipeclal pries IJ.750. Terms 1500
cash and balancs to suit the purchaser. - .
CAROLINA REALTY CO.
a 3 THIEfe, Pres. B. RUSH LEE, See.
w T) WILKINSON,- Treas. and Mgr. J. P. LONG, Salesman.
ifo.' W. FUth Street, . . - 'Phons 101.
Vcod fibre . Wall Piaster, "Hard Clindi.":
' THE BUILDER'S FRrEND ,
' " Freexlnc does no hurt: natural shrinkage win not crack It) '"-ft,"
water does not make It fall off; hard as stone. Writs for booklet. M11
Jdanufactared by .:.' ' . .. . ' '
CHARLOTTE PLASTER COPIPflNY
Write for Booklet. ''f ' ' Charlotte, X. C.
j0inq, (ioin a-
. Those few remaining- lots 50x200 on Seventh street at Piedmont.'
No wonder, for they are the best lots for ths price asked now offered
In the City of Charlotte.- ' ,' " . , .
Water and sewer mains, electric lights, macadamised street and two
car lines at the service of, home owners on this fine avenue. 1
We have' but nve lots 16x100 st.... . '!. I5l-
One corner, about lJxHJ. ........ ....... 1.0
- Also one double lot iexJ00... .. ....... 11,500
" Prices subject to change after a few more salea
Tou can look all over Mecklenburg: county and find no better bar
gains In real estate. x
...... Easy tecms -or cash discount. , :'.s.-'
F. G.-1CDQTT '& GOtYlP'V.