Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / June 6, 1909, edition 1 / Page 4
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. . - - . v W '4 CHARLOTTE, -DAILY. OBSEEVtt, SUNDAY, JUNE 6, 190a:V Clietfljartotteetonifr. J. P. CAXDWEXI rablishen. EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR SUBSCRIPTION MUCK: year v -fctx months Tbres months Seui-vreeiay On year 8ix month . . . Three moDih t 00 4.90 2.00 $1.06 .60 PUBLISHERS' AXXOl'XCKMEXT "No. 34 South Tryon street Telephone numbers: Business office, Bell 'phone 78; city editor's office. Boll 'phone 134; news editor's office. Bell 'phone 14. Advertising rates are furnished on application Advertisers my feel sure that through the columns of this paper they may reach all Charlotte s-na a portion of the best people In this State and upper South Carolina. This paper gives correspondents as wide latitude as It think public pol icy permits, but It 1b In no case re sponsible for their views It la much preferred that correspondents gn teir names to their articles, especial ly In cases where they stuck persona or Institutions, though this is not de mulled. The editor reserves the right te give the names of correspondents when they are demanded for the pur pose of personal satisfaction. To re eeire consideration a communication must be accompanied by the true sum of the correspondent. A subscriber if ordering the address of his paper changed, will please Indi cate the address to which it Is going at the time be asks for the change to few made. SUNDAY, JVXK 6, l0t. FOR A CLEVELAND MOXCMKXT. Chlcagoans have started a $100,000 j fund to erect a local monument to Orover Cleveland. Chicago, where the dead President strongly upheld law tuid order against anarchy, might well hasten with a Cleveland monument of It own. but the chief Cleveland monu ment tielongs elsewhere. It was for the whole country that Orover Cleve land upheld law against formidable attack, preserved credit against at tack still more formidable, and In all matters pursued the statesmanlike course without regard either to pop ular outcry or to party defection. Orover Cleveland, cursed for a panic wherein he had not the slightest share, laid broad the foundations of future prosperity. Cirover Cleveland began that war on predatory wealth which Theodore Roosevelt, with much less temperateness and sanity, revived lat er. Orover Cleveland broke down sec tional boundaries and restored to the fionth the South thanklessly and un wisely deserted htm when his need was extreme its ancient power at the council table. Grover Cleveland stood four-square against temporary delu sions mT)st dangerous In their nature and proved himself equal to one of the gravest crises which American his tory has known. Well said Senator Hoar, a partisan who placed truth be fore partisanship, that the American people should long thank God for Orover Cleveland. The country owes hrm dead more gratitude and amends than It did or could pay him living. In the national capital there should rise to his memory a truly national memorial. PAYTXO POLmCAIi . DEBTS. Charity and Children expresses Its views upon political debt-paying, with obvious reference to North ' Carolina conditions: y ' "It is all right for a man to be true to bis friends and. all other -things be ing equal, to give tbera the preference in his appointments: but when other things are not equal it is wrong to foist upon the people a roan for the sole and simple reason that he has bees useful in carry ing out the political plans of the adminis tration. This thing -of paying political debt with public office, without the least regard to the fitness Of the applicant, has become a trifle too common.- Of course, It is the way to build up a machine, but the people are not particularly Interested in political machines. Public office is a public trust and not a personal and pri vate snap. Take the late management of the penitentiary for example. It demon titrated Its fitness by putting the State's business on a paying bast, changing it from a burden to a revenue-producer. Under the new administration these faith ful public servants are put out of office and a new management Is established. It remains to be seen how they will conduct the business, but It Is a fearful risk to change an efficient management, who have proved their fitness by their fine service to the State, and entrust the In stitution to new men who may or may not iow themselves capable of manag ing It All this for what? Why. because the old officials saw fit to exercise the privilege of voting In the primary as they pleased. Here Is the State, that must foot the bill In case of failure, helpless to remedy the matter In which it alone Is the responsible party. This debt paying business on the part of the ad ministration Is carried a trifle too far. It is time to call a hair. The people may go hang, but the friends of the Governor must be rewarded It is a matter mat ought to engage the attention of the publlr a little." This appeared before Governor Kitchln had filled the vacancy on the State Supreme Court bench. The Governor's appointee is well qualified in every way for the place; so were other lawyers in the State whose names had been proposed as Judge Connor's successor, yet it was the fair general opinion that from among the lawyers whose friends were urging their a-ppolntment and who were qual fled to fill the office acceptably Gov ernor Kitchln would choose the one whom he owed the greatest political obligation. While the Governor's ac ion in thin case calls for no adverse criticism from any one, it Is not alto gether wholesome that under condi tions brought about by State politics the public should assume as an al most foregone conclusion the appoint ment of Mr. Manning. As for the penitentiary matter, I has been alleged, with what founda tion in fact we do not assume to say that the former management made a good ""revenue showing at the expense of the properties and hence did noth Ing great, after all. NOT BORN IX SOUTH CAROLINA. The Macon Telegraph, whose his torlcal accomplishments have moved our admiration before now, quite agrees with us about "the Marion po tato myth" that story which repre sents a British officer as resigning In despair after he had beheld the hardy patriot make a meal of roasted pota toes; The Telegraph goes on, more over, to trace the myth back. "We really think." it observes, "that the in cident on which the potato story was based happened not In South Carolina during the revolutionary war but In Asia Minor nearly four hundred years before the Christian era, and the pa trlotlc morsel was not a potato but an onion. Ageslluus, King of Sparta, being railed on to assist the Ionian Greeks against Artaxerxes, the Per slon aggressor, conducted a splendid and victorious campaign in the do minions of the latter. On one occa sion a beaten Persian general came to arrange terms of surrender dressed in his bravest finery, with white horses and camels and elephants and a great train of attendants, and, in stead of finding Agesllaus awaiting him In equal state and pomp was OCT OF THE OL.D RUTS. "The farm equipment stores have old more scythes and harvesters this year than ever before In Anderson county," says The Anderson Dally Mall. How much -better this sounds than an announcement that the far mers had bought a greater quantity of Western meat, hay and flour than In any previous year. It means that h. irmn or. Iir.lf..!. . K.l, 6 'amaiod to discover him meanly cloth OTnr tr not n A r n H i n nllr!i' t.n j ' .7 ' . ed. seated on the bare gTound, and cowon as a means oi iiveunooa They ,, .. ... making his midday lunch on an onion, apparently Intend to raise home sup- . , , ... r, ., . v The Persian general, unlike the Brlt- plles, "living at home' and making , . . . . ... Ish officer in the Marlon story, did not cotton more of a surplus crop. Where . ..... . announce his Intention to quit the you find this state of affairs you find' , . , . . . , . I service in despair, but Is said to have also greater prosperity among the far- i . " 1. V rir.l.l.H th fnup that V. I u Motion could not hope to prevail in war against the stern and hardy Spartans who cared nothing either for creature comforts or vain show and lived only for victory In battle.'' This suggests Col. Mark Twain's story of "The Jumping Frog," which a learned man declared to be slightly over three thousand years old. It was found long ago that Swltxerland's William Tell story Is an ancient myth existing In some form among nearly all Teutonic people And so with many another story of the kind. Where historical anecdote is concerned his very wise majesty's remark about nothing new and the Bun needs no emendation whatewr. Biers, and among all other classes. Our people are beginning to learn that Y While cotton is king, still there are Sorne other farm products of just s gre-at Importance to the farmers atul , ' through them to their neighbors in the to ems and cities of their sections. What The Anderson Daily Mail says Of -Its county is more or less true of many other counties in the two Caro- ' Unasvfeut there is not yet enough of this breaking away from former methods and getting out of the old ruts. We want to see It increase, for we know that it contains great bene- flts for the whole Southern station. V v, TIME-TABU-". FOR THE TARIFF. " ' If Cenator Aldrlch only can make - the Senators keep their seats during the ten-hours sessions he will there- 4y.'do much toward hastening com pletion of the tariff hill- And when thf till goes to conference If he can keep the conferees of the two houses working night and day the compro mises necessary to brine; the matter . ..to-conclusion wlll.be quickly agreed . upon- Then the bill will move on to the next stage its veto or approval by the President. This will be settled in short larder, and if it is the latter we shall have an end of tar iff, revision, until the meeting of the SlXty-second Congress, when, perhaps, the, personnel of that hedy, especially as regards the popular house, will be so changed from what It Is at present that the contest of this session will have to he gone all over again. Should the President veto the bill, there .would almost certainly be no further action at this extra session. "No matter how far ti e airship flies we note that It usually mann'-: to come to srlef There's a l"t got t.. he done to airships and Mooihuuni1 before they get to be really effective ' -Greensboro Tele gram. We object to this rnupimg the air ship with the bloodhound. The airship is in the creative stae. its powers have not yet been developed and its possibilities are beyond even present md for cn.ARijyro.x xoises. The nightly mooing of the eows In Charleston ha ring become a nuisance which The Charleston News and Cour ler feelingly but helplessly deplores. we come to the rescue with inform tion obtained try way of a reader's let ter In The New Tork Sun. "City folks sojourning at a cool, sequestered re treat." says this timely adviser, "were driven to the verge of distrac tion through insomnia caused by the braying of a donkey. It was the cus tom of the inconsiderate beast to send his deep, far-reaching, penetrating, melodious (?) notes out upon the stil ly night from midnight until near dawn. This continued until a recent arrival, being made aware of the trouble, replied quietly but with full assurance, 'I will stop all that' To ward evening this gentleman repaired to the stable and with a strong cord attached to the donkey's tail a rock so heavy as to make it impossible for the animal to raise his tail at all. The donkey did not bray that night, and later the gentleman explained the philosophy of the matter as follows 'A donkey plays both ends against the middle, and it Is impisslhle for any ass to bray unless both head and tail are up.' " Why shouldn't Charleston In duce Its cows to cut out their mooing by the use of a similar device? That it would give as good results with cows as with donkeys no observant person tan doubt. We recall that some years ago a Charlestonlan complained of sleep-dls turblng factory whistles and The News and Courier quieted him with the averment that more people In Charles ton were kept awake by roosters than by factory whistles. Now for an anti crowlng device which we heard about somewhere once upon a time. At night put the roosters In a pen so low that they will And reclining comfortable and In any event will be unable to do the stretching upward on tiptoe which their best efforts require. Thus man aged, the rooster becomes as gentle a songbird as the nightingale, never once disturbing his neighbors' sleep. If the vocal activities of the lower animals continue to make Charleston's1 nights hideous, the fault will certainly not be ours. Whether District Attorney Jerome nominates himself, Is nominated by Tajtnmany, or is nominated by the Re publicans, we suggest unless he does tot run at all that the opposition unite on Col. John Temple Graves. A :ampalgn fight between Jerome and Jolonel Graves would be a whirlwind affair that would whirl sure enough. It Is said that there are only twelve officers In the British army who can speak the German language. How will the rest of them surrender when Kaiser William's armies make that long-expected invasion of his uncle's Insular dominions? Mr. Thomas U Hisgen, the Hearst presidential eandldate last year, .utt the Hearstltes some time ago, but there still remains Col. John Temple Graves, who, especially from a- politico-musical standpoint, is worth full ten of Hisgen. GIjENN RIGHT; SIMMONS VRON This Opinion ExpresMed by .Mr. H. K. Rtd, of the County, on Uie suuior of the Tariff. To t lie Editor of The Observer: Please allow me space In your val uable paper to express my Joy at find ing that the mass of the people are beginning to realize somewhat of the abominable lniqqulty of a protective tariff. We have recently heard calm, thoughtful men express the opinion that if the common people fully un derstood the Iniquity of our present protective tariff, that there is no pow er on earth that could prevent them from rising In their wrath and going to Washington and overturning tne government. This may be an extreme view, but they would at least see to It that no man who favors a protec tive tariff should ever again hold any office whatever in this country. Beyond all question Glenn is rigl and Simmons is wrong. H. K. HEID. 0, 2 v til : l . I MBS,HUKLEY K0VV RELENTS MR, HVRIJEY TO LYXCHBURG. Weil-Kuovm Charlotte Man Under In dictment For Assault With a Dead ly Weapon Upon Ills Wife, tiecures New lioiKumen and Leaves th City Mm. Hurley Relents and Wires Messajre of Sympathy and Forgive iieaa liule Probability That Case Will Now Amount to Anything An Art Intensely Human An Incident Tlutt May Be Pasxed Up But Oik That Will Not Be Forgotten. Mr. Dennis A. Hurley. ,who is under a $500 bond for his appearance at the August term of criminal court to an swer the charge of assaulting his wife. Mrs. Katherine Jordan Hurley, with a pistol with Intent to kill, left Char lotte Friday night on & northibound train. BeTore leaving the city Messrs. C. E. Hooper, J. W. Wadsworth, P. M. Cave and Samuel Powell signed the bond fixed by the court, for1 which Mr. T. C. Guthrie, Mr. Hurley's at- ttrney, had pledged himself. Although Mr. Hurley's physical condition was greaJ. I y improved when he was discharged from the Charlotte Sanatorium, where he had been under medical treatment for the past week, his nervous system was somewhat shattered. It waa hought, however, that he would leave the city Thursday night, but for several reasons, possibly that of arrantfi ng the bond, he postponed his departure for a day. Friday after noon he received a telesrram from his wife, who is In New York with her mother, whither she had gone last Saturday night. In iwhlch she ex pressed her regrets that the affair d created so much notoriety, and voicing her sympathy, gave assurance hat if he were to go to her in New- York she iwould receive him. The frlendj) of Mr. Hurley are under the impression that after spending a week or more wltb. relative In Lynchburg. Va., he will undergo medical treatment In private sanatorium.-! of that city. It would not be urprlsing to thorn, however, to learn that he went directly to New York to Join his wife. A TRIAL HARDLY PROBABLE. At any rate the case against Mr Hurley will hardly ever come to trial. It Is not probable that Mrs. Hurley will testify against him arul otherwise the State will hardly be able to produce sufficient evidence in he case, to make it morth while to be presented to a Jury. .Seldom has Charlotte known such a sensation as was caused when It was announced last Thursday morning that Solicitor Clarkson would pre sent Mr. Hurley's case to the grand ury, which was then in session, so that some action could be taken Af ter the details of the case 'became ublic property little else was dls used in the dubs, homes and on he streets (ft the city. The action AX CLEAT X EAR-POETRY. Verses Discovered In Uie Vault of the Court House at Lincoln too Sup posed to Have Been Written About 1814, Though Undated and Un signed. To the Editor of The Obserrer: I enclose copy of a poem discover ed in a package of old papers In the court house vault. The original is undated and unsigned. Reading be tween tne lines I conclude it was written In the year 1814, during the second war with Great Britain. It may interest The Observer as a spec imen of ancient near-poetry. I esteem it worthy of local interest and perusal as a laudation of General Jackson. Mecklenburg's valiant and most dis tinguished son. A. NTXON, Llncolnton, June 3, 1308. Come all you good people and hear me relate Concerning Great Britain and her dismal state; The Lirlttsh and savage they malts a great show. But brave General Jackson has laid many low. It has been but lately as I have heard tel A number of British In action have fell. It was General Jackson on liberty's side. Klll'd eleven hundred and then was not tyed. It was near Pensecola this battle was fought, The British begun it but little they got; The British commander says what do they mean. Such a hero as Jackson I never yet seen. In connection with th VA. Dale Monday we will ad few specials from th departments. Hi J Li e ofl Wash Good For his metal from cannons like thunder doth fly. Which caused th to dye. And they British general was first for to yield. He says he will fight him no more in the Held. e hosts of Great Britain One lot fine Dimity in daint y little Colored Dota, ures and Rosebuds. An assortment on one Monday at 12 l-2c r 1 . i ci'ii f j;. it .1 wue ioi oiiiv urgancue in an tne new Figures Rl and Dots; very sheer and clingy. Special for x day , ,. , 18c, An assortment of those pretty Striped MormtoneSi You would think the price double what weasi 25c. yard, on display H 30 pieces Striped, Checked and Solid Colors Linens ing; some a yard wide, 35 and 40c. values, but if day the price will be 21c For he look? like a man that was raised in the dirt. Though he'll whip the British In his hunt ing shirt; N Although that their coats they were bordered with gold. He'll drive them before him he won't be controlled. His arms are extended, he works them by slight. Slip into their camps arid sells eggs In the nlKht. His hat It was ragged, his coat It was thin ; The Hrltiah and Savage they did let him In. . . 1 He ranged through their camp as I nave been told. I'ntll all his poultry by art he had sold; His army lay mutal until It was done, Then took Pensacola without firing sun. Come all of you that got wives and sweethearts at hsfhe. Remember the hour when you will return And If your companions naer more shall Tou rest In the arms of a sweet liberty. One lot of soft, drapy Mull with Colored Stripes, j Farewell to all comrades I bid you adieu, The Joys and pleasure you will not pursue. ood spare General jackion untu it i I A ereat assortment of Lawn 8, Batistes, Organdies, fine and stylish. Monday at 12 1 2c. f. done. CoiM-erntwc CWfly Um Old Man. Evening chronicle. Under the head of An Abie sudsu ute," The Norfolk landmark pays this tribute to a rather Industrious in- ilvidual: "Not for the sake of a mere passing compliment, but from a deep sense of what is justly due. The Land mark takes the liberty of congratulat- ng Mr. Caldwell and The Observer upon the admirable manner in wnicn Mr. Klutti has met the responsibility. The editor who has to stand compari son with a writer like Elder Caldwell is at a serious disadvanage, and the fact that Air. Klutt has proved equal to the situation is evidence of the stuff hat Is in him. Like the late Presi dent Cleveland, whom he so much ad mired, Mr. Caldwell is a great Judge f bright young men, and his skill in recogslzlng and encouraging them has been an important factor in tne re markable success of The Observer." Mr. Klutti has had a rather stiff con tract to fill, but he has done It in a way that is entirely deserving of the notice The Landmark has taken of It. f the grand jury In nnding a true ill against the accused vu surpria- ng and much speculation has been en- ered into as to whether or not Mrs Hurley woulJ testify against her hus band. Owing to the prominence of Mr nd Mrs, Hurley developments fAi the case have been watched by the Jhtlre community and the telegram received 1 y Mr. Hurley from his wife and his departure from the city came eome wliut as the closing episodes of a sen sation whuih has held the interest of the community for more than a week. ACT VERY HUMAN. iMrs. Hurley's step In dispatching the message she did Friday did not become generally known until yes terday. That It excited the liveliest discussion goes .without saying for If was nothing mere nor less than the beginning of the end, foretelling, as it did, the result of the criminal ac tion which Solicitor Clarkson insti tuted In Superior Court this week and In which the grand jury returned a true tolH. There Is one conclusion push the case to a successful termina itioTw. It will be another case In whlcn the old fk-otlsh verdict of "not proven" will nave to be Box of Shoes Found Near Railroad Track. Chief of Police T. M. Christenbury has at the police station twenty-five pairs of children's shoes, found at the crossing of Park avenue and South Tryon street. The goods were In the original shipping box, which had been broken open. It was found j near the Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta Railroad track. It is thought that the box car in which the shoes had been placed was broken open and the package taken from it, the thief. Deing unapie to use the goods, throw ing them to one side. in all Colors, Stripes, Figures and Flowers; va! 12 1-2 and 15c, but the whole aggregation is on table in rear of Trade street store for. . . 10c, i For The Observer. A TWILIGHT FANCY. By one of Carolina' daughters, In lov ing memory of the best of mothers. I, am sitting alone by the fire-aide. ure&mlng sweet dreams as of old. Recalling bright scenes of my Hay-tide And forms that now be still and cold. Out from the lire light's bright gleaming. Come trooping the friends of my youth 11 ... ? i neir races an loving, and beaming) With goodness and kindness and truth Silk Dress Special rp-tnrnAH XrtA vsf after all V t. lefrra.m was Intensely human, evl-I 8e ,old Uay were we" wortn llv'n. dencinw. as it did. the (Tenth of th, r", "lv "eia no terrors untold. love which a woman may hold for the man she has chosen for '"better "Barter" Woe Id Have Been to Client's Interest. An interesting development in court the latter part of the week was the 4l.nA.HiAn Fv,uri Vi v t ii H o- Cn ii n .- I 11 of expectations, while the bloodhound a( nf .ihr,n, t0... white a through centuries of attempted devel opment is the same howling failure that he was when his time began. painter, accused of retailing liquor on two occasions. In the lower court the recorder stated that he would find the defendant guilty in both cases but If the attorney would let his man serve Swinburne left a very comfortable I the sentence without appeal he would eytate, but we regret to sav that he K,v n,m 811 montns in one case ana j,j . t. . I suspend Judgment in the other. o,a not owe ,t lo nis poetry, taitnr ;,aB.yw retorted with soma heat that I cident after Incident, the culmination r. a. iioore, or i ne uoiasDoro Argus, he wnulri nnt barter awav his r-1 ent's or Tor worse. w title the mepsa- is reported not to have carried with It the direct Invitation to "come at once-' It was worded In such fashion as to pive the impression that should he come a welcome would not be with held. Mrs. Hurley had evidently read of the action of the grand Jury, of the stand taken by Solicitor Clarkson. and of Mr. Hurley's con finement In the local hospital. In the face of all these troubles which he brought doiwn upon himself and troubles which fell so heavily upon herself, she relented. AS TO THE FUTURE. Mr. Hurley is doubtless with rela tives In Lynchburg. The case against him will come up for trial In August. Should it re called, and should he return to Charlotte to stand trial, an acquittal .win doubtless be returned. There will remain, however, on the walls of a certain suite of rooms in the Buford Hotel nvute and porten tous marks to tell the tale of a homi cide narrowly averted. Neither can the verdict of a Meck lenburg Jury erase the memory of the awful tale which Mrs. Hurley herself told to intimate friends as hollow- The eyed and tear-stricken she recited In- And friendship meant utter believing Tl'V,tl I . .. niitria were ail maae or pure goia. ' Of course Senator Aldrlch objects t the . evidence of production cost which our State Department obtained from the German government He dis like any data which, may Interfere with Arbitrary tariff-making sod there will never be a genuine tariff commis sion to make Investigation Into tariff matters if ha can manage fctherwise. recently put away $82,000. but we re-i'iperty after that fashion. Judge gret to sav that he did not owe it to Council! suspended Judgment In one .... . A. , rase and gave the man. who has a his editing. Both gentlemen acquired . famny, twelve months tn the other, their fortunes by Inheritance, Editor j Moore from a relative in New Tork. The spring crop of eggs is estimated to be 15.000,000 short. Won't some body please pass a law or otherwise induce the American hen to take a brace ? "Even a blind tiger can see things sometimes," remarks The Greensboro Talacram. It is verv often not n.r. jiy "so !lnd are Its hunters. llooervelt Party Uoes to SoUk District. Kijabe, British East Africa, June 5 The Roosevelt expedition left here at 1 o'clock to-day for the Sotlk district Between Kijabe and the objective point there is a waterless tract that it will take two days and a half to traverse. Water for the expedition will be carried in ox wagons in charge of a Clyate settler. The moon at present is full and the nights are bright: this will enable the part- to travel day and night with scarcely a atop until water oh the other side is reached. coming with the attempted murder by one who had vowed to love, cherish and protect. The city will not soon forget. To Kxhume Body to Ascertain Cause of Death. Abilene. Tex.. June 5. Xudge Blanton to-day ordered that the body of Tom Barnett, who it is alleged was killed by a mob, be exhumed, to determine whether Barnett's death was caused by scissors wounds In flicted by himself or by bullets fired by the mob. The criminal term of Superior Court ended yesterday afternoon. A week of civil court will begin to-morrow morning, followed by the special week of criminal court. Unknown was the anguish of lovlns: Unknown that hearts soon are crushed; rnai inenasnip may fall in proving. Ann the dew from life's flowers be brushed. The world seemed so full of God's beauty, His loving-kindness His power And that blest old mandate "Thy duty," Ennobled each day and each hour. For my own dearly loved mother Had taught me life held no unrest. oave tor mm who would stifle and smother God s spirit which dwelt In his breast But now I return to my dreaming. And tell you the faces I saa That shine from the fire-light's gleaming Ana uve once again Just for me. First, there is mother, dear mother. With a smile, a caress for each one. Ever ready with belp for some 'brother,'' Ana to soothe us when day was dons. Was ever a gift sent to mortal. More gracious, more bright from above. (To heaven's bright "mansions" ths por tal) Than the gift of a true mother's love? Her face looks so lovely, so winning, ' As I 'gase through the mists of past years, I forget I have ever known sinning Or my soul has been drown 'd hi tears. Dear Phantom Stay! Stay, why leave roe? v- Sweet mother from out my dead past Oh! wilt thou g and thus grieve me? And am I alone here at last? Tea, alone here alone I am sitting. The dear ghosts that clustered around, Hsve gone, like butterflies flitting Above some fair fiow'r of the ground. Oh! -e of little faith say y The dead can return Mm aoce?' I believe that mine often are near roe. -. And love mo as much as of yore. ,j Monday morning we will put on sale twenty beauti it j rr cci n Tiara Dresses. Chd mcBociiiiic! tt-uu j.i.LLCLa uut-i iw of lot Jewelry A' few more of those . 20-year Gold Filled lj Watches, Elgin and Waltham movement, open j and huntinz case every one a guarantee u j t.ii, ief ..$10.50 iiccpci, ana vvalucj mcy tooi MHHHItMHI n I It m 1 1 Mil I M Ml I 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 I hi '';' t: - '-..
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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June 6, 1909, edition 1
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