Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / June 26, 1909, edition 1 / Page 4
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f "7 . J' 4 .. . CHARLOTTE, DAILY OBSERVER, SATURDAY, JTOK 1500. 7 L i .i Ti k ii . .uhj . ji.'i ..in t 1 . ' H ' ' 1 , ' . I . - ' ' I J. r. CAXDWK1X. I r. A. TOMPKINS. Publisher. EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR OXIT CWE FIRST DECIyVRATlOX. There ha latefy been manifested a disposition to bring forVard rival to I the Mecklenburg Declaration of In dependence. Out In Tennessee they lhave what is known as the Watauga lru.i.ratiAn i h rin.iffi i m ii I v of ,X 1 till, it, ...... - - SCBSCRIPTIOX PKlfK: Dally Om iim w 00 tx months Thre months - Setni-wenay One yeai i 0,1 Six month i Three months SATIHOAV, Jl Nfc 10. WAIT FOR COL. KAIRBROTHLK. In peking up tor ti home town of Ihirham from the bench t I'ur ham Judge Biggs was doubtlesp i iret -ty well within the fart? The citv which made .North Carolina sruoiung tobacco famous has long bad ;t crim inal record advertised ril(iroportlon ately as criminal records Jo, and everybody kriuxs that under trie most favorable circumstances runs ot good cempetea with news of bad at a great disadvantage Judge Htjt;-. citing a ingle murdf r c ase w hieh. though w ith OUt any features especially notewor thy, had come up in the State- jircss fifteen times, Cellared that Durham compares well with other places of IU lie for behavior and for su'-' -e-M in the punishment of crime. Not l'ng ago another ounty had behind bar eleven alleged murderers and very lit tle was written or said about it All Judge Bigg.'- .-tat.rr ents were mm h to the point It Durham can show a fair record for punishing homicide committed h white men. It will de serve honorable mention amon; coun ties far and w irie But Judge Higs cannot deliver Ihe flna.1 word. I"arned Judge and clone observer though he b. Col Al Kalr brother, now writing for Th- observ er from southern California, is the highest living authority upon the sub ject of Durham. We bid our readers watt expectantly to hear what he will ay. NO C.U'KK FOR ALARM ! Report says there 1st an oil well In Texas which spouts hot oil. This will ! cause ull the more alarm to Ihoae people who believe the rinding of oil so near the surface of th. earth In so many parts of the world Is an in dication that preparation is being rap- I Idly made and, in fact, is drawing to ' completion, for the destruction of the j world by Are. They are uneasy over ; so much cold oil being discovered here and there, throughout the world, but when It comes to finding the .inflam mable material already heated their dread that the final day Is near at ' hand will be all the greater. They j might console themselves with the thought, or perhaps only the hope, mat this report has no truth In it that is only a sensational Texas story manufactured for the purpose of drawing public attention to the Texas oil fields, which are being exploited by speculators and promoters If It be true that hot oil wells have been found we don't see that it should cause any additional anxiety to those who believe the end of the world will come through general combustion caused by an oil saturated earth They should .bear in mind that there is no more danger from a saturation with hot oil than with cold The hitter will do the work as effectually as the other. They should not let the dis covery of hot oil wells increase tliejr uneasiness. i (plans for local self-government. It , jdoes not in the least contemplate sep jaration from Great Britain. The Wa ,tauga men did what President Taft recently noted as conspicuous among the Mecklenburg men's claims to praise that is to say. when need arose the showed their self-governing in stincts in a practical manner. But :he two occasions differed widely as widely as mere geographical isolation differs from ronselous rebellion. The Wataugans, cut oft by distance and high mountains, did no more than shift for themselves. We gladly con cede them su.-h credit as they are due, at the same time noting with satisfaction that their deeds were don on soil then and for a long time af terwards North Carolina's. The Panvlle Register, vocal in this same connection, puts forward Bacon's Rebellion as antedating the Mecklen burg Declaration by more than a cen tury But when on earth did Bacon and his followers ever declare their independence of Great Britain ? Bo t.ir from having too much British rule, they complained solely because they had too little. The royal authorities, as Hacon believed, were tacitly In league with Indian tribes which ha rassed the colony on the west, refus ing, lest their own individual inter ests as fur traders through agents anions the Indians suffer, either to provide organized defence or permit any one else to provide it Bacon's troubles arose from the fact that In desperation he finally attacked the Indians without authority. He was a loyal subject who acted Insubordi nafly under extreme provocation. That he had to tight the authorities for cloing this few could have re gretted more Xo Mep remotely sug gesting a tlevlaratton of independence w.is taken, even If there had been. It would, as an isolated act unrelated to the great events following generations later, have possessed none of the Mecklenburg Declaration's historical significance. Bacon's Rebellion may resemble the Alamance Regulators" uprising In North Carolina, also In spired by grievances against colonial maladministration; but It certainly does not resemble the Mecklenburg Declaration. The Register and one or two other Virginia newspapers have also talked in a vague manner about "the Fredericksburg Declaration" and "the Flncastle Declaration." We as sume rather confidently that the reti cent tone Is well warranted; that these sn-valled declarations, even granting every claim made, amount to Just about nothing at all. But It remains unto The Petersburg Index-Appeal, which can never forgive North Carolina for being last at Ap pomattox, to quit company with such plodding liiBtorians as The Observer and butt in among the prophets. The Index-Appeal predicts that ere long North Carolinians will propose a ciph er solution of the national Declara tion of Independence at Philadelphia, proving in true Baconian style Jeffer son's conscious Indebtedness to the Mecklenburgers. or the Inscription on Jefferson's tomb may tell the story, .fust as Haronians find In Shakespeare's c pitupli ii confession that Shakespeare did not write Shakespeare at all. Could any newspaper be meaner than our Petersburg contemporary here shows itself The chnrlcslon News and Cour ier's bad eminence is endangered. IIOKR SMITH'S UST SHOT. Of course C.o. lloke Smith vould not go out of office as he does to-day - -without doing something sensational and giving somebody a parting shot BAD BREAK' OK. HEMFHTIX. Hem IX.D. lays ninlf Opaw to 6 Trre Criticism by Writing "A Histor ical Myth." To the Editor of The Observer: The sympathetic Dr. Ht-rophUl, re ferring to the deserved honor con ferred on the admired Dr. CaldweU. speak of the "Old Man" as a bright and shining light "the mildest man- i nered man that ever scuttled snip or cut a throat, or Invented a histori cal myth." I am about to 'burst w ith astonist ment not to say indignation! An 1. indeed, doctor. ou will be greatly concerned to learn that, by actual measurement, my girth hath expenJ ed not less than four Inches and a half. I shall not expatiate on Dr. Hemp hill's natural and kindly reference to his former townsman, the accomplsh ed tfteed Bonnett, on whose trial as a pirate, the learned Jurist, Chief Jus tice Trott. had to warn the Jury that "his being a gentleman did not ex cuse him" and whose mild manners and polished gentility and elegant car riage made him an ornament of his profession: but, sir, was It a greater offense in Bonnett to murder the King's subjects than In Dr. Hemp hill to murder the King s Knglish? A historical myth' Forsooth, sir. I deny it and I do affirm It is ' an historical myt h." Some years ago. sir. under similar provocation, I took up the cudgels In favor of "An Historical Header." against another gentleman who once SOME OP EX&IlT JTlEIECESSOBS. YOtXG MAX PlgAWEftBa. The Yellow Attract iota ta the Sooday Ftoy Cttrlre, of States-rill. School and Its TartedEmUrkg. Home OeAonaibly to Go to Hta Vew Tnrk fi,.n- si Work, But Mytrtmwly Disappear ? L . , "i Had Troohk, witH Some e- There hare bean several cases in , cron am ytf piacy is Feared. Statesvllle. June 25. The oiaap- resulted In marriage, ! Prance o Foy Curlee.. the l Wear ot this sort, made m!0, "n MJjKn.lMJ!: yL w fiirvfr kmci cawuia w known since Tuesday, is causing his parents much distress. Tha boy ha for some time held a position at the Statesvllle Safe and Table Company and left horns Tuesday morning. tween grown up Chinese Sunday school "boys" and their young white teachers have The first match Brooklyn twenty years ago, caused a stir, but that was because of Its nov elty. In 1903 three Chinese married their teachers in Brooklyn and no no ticeable protest waa ms.de. There is s Chinese Interpreter In wearing hig work clothes, presumably the New York courts whose wife to go to the factory to work. He taught in a Sunday school. He is called at the factory a short while Chan K. Kew. He tame to America ' later for what money was due him, when he w as 14 years old, attended having previously informed the fore the Moody school at Xlount Hermon, men that he was going to give up his Mass., and went into church work . Joh. and left the factory immediately Eventually he Joined the Central Con- 1 afterward. He had said nothing to gregational church in Brooklyn and parents about giving up his Jon there he met Miss Mae A. Voorhees. I"' K"'n wy n wne" fd They were married at the home of hom TUBJ "' hn ?? TXZTV, VoV MOnre 1'?- untilTestePday; I ?7. ,bV" thC i n, learned yesterday that a boy and after the ceremony the orthodox i anwfrlng th. description of Foy shower of rice was not omitted. Kew Doar(i(.d the -narlotte train at Barium ! presented his wife with the deed to an Xuegday ani lt is thought that he I apartment house at 1,229 Degraw 'jwent to Charlotte, although his fath ! street He had etudled law, but being . e is verv backward, has barred from practice here because he : never been away from heme and be was an alien, he became an Interpreter j inK easily embarrassed could not be in Chinese cases. j Induced to go to strange places. On the evening of October 1. 1903,1 jr. Curlee says he knows of no a young women missionary called at j reason why his son nhould have run the Gates avenue station In Brooklyn a way from home and he feared at graced the cultured and literary cir-i ann asned to see Charley Bhue. first that tne boy migm nave mci cles of Charleston, and although he j "I am his Sunday scnool teacher," with foul play. He had recently had absolutely refused to surrender. It she said "My name Is Dot Livingston." , trouble with some negroes. The boy was only. I trow, because of his Captain Buchanan told her that! has been saving his money for some clHsruev obstinacy I ensney was charged with a serious i time ana naa ou or ou nn. .. And h-re now after the lanse of , offpnce f"t a fourteen-year-old pcii. now years. Dr. Hemphill breaks out Dr. Hemphill, the dean of the profes sion, who is to deliver the lecture at Harvard. Yes. at the very hub! With in the pure atmosphere of Beacon Hill, where the great Allston. turning from the fragrant myrtle of the Ash ley, sought the coveted laurel; and he calls It "a historical myth." No, &lr. I assert that it is "an historical myth." and in this cause I shall be ready, like Boniictt'a gallant contem porary, Governor (ilhbs. of Albemarle, to "fight him as Iiiiir as my eyelids shall w ag" noi w ithstanding he looniB up high above the horizon in the pan oply of an LI...D Nor am I without hope In the, un equal conflict, for I recall that little "Iavld took a stone no bigger than a button. And slew old Goliath as dead as any mutton " XXX. NEW THKORY ADVANCED. Sam Peels the Onions In One Song and Polly Iutsi the Kettle On in the Other. To the Kdltor of The Observer: Are not you gentlemen of the press mixing up two teakettle stories, (me Is a song which runs as follows: "Now farn vou peel the onions And wash and fix the Maters We'll serve them In those I'hlny platecj platters Tut on your bran new boots And those trowsers with the straps Cousin Jedtdlah will take a shine to you, perhaps Knr Jedtdlah and Aunt Sophia and Azarluh Are coming here to tea. i won't we have a Jollv time. Won't w have a Jolly time, lerushy put the kettle on We'll all take tea " The other is a sort of nursery Jin gle which goes as follows: "Polly put the kettle on, Polly put the kettle on, I'ollv put the kettle on, We il all lake tea. Sukey take lt off again, Sukey take It off again, Sukey take It off again. We've all had enough." Perhaps a separation 6f the two stories as above will simplify the ar gument. The first Is New England, the latter of no particular locality. HKLKN "The polic e ought to have spanked her Instead of paying any attention to the charge." said Miss Livingston. Miss Livingston was one of many well dressed women who appeared at the station house with cakes, pies, cigarettes, roses and sympathy for twenty Chinese laundrymen who ha I been arrested on the edges of Brook lyn because of stories told by voting girls. The missionaries overran te station house and argued that the Chinese couldn't be guilty, for they had attended Hunday school; and even if they were the blame should be on the girls for overtempting them. Said Captain Buchanan filially: "I believe that you folks ought to keep out of this case. It is disgraceful to see a lot of women here pleading for Chinamen against whom there Is evidence of a shocking crime. 1 cannot prevent you from coming here find weeping over the arrest of Chinamen, but I think you would be better em ployed at home doing housework." The young missionaries eventually left the police station upon a sus gestion from their superintendent that they had been Indiscreet and should be looking after the girls under arrest Intend of carrying solace to the Chin ee, hut they swarmed Into the police court a few days later. The evidence presented there moved Magistrate Furlong to say; 'The Chinese Sunday school is sim ply a makeshift for these fellows to acquire a knowledge or English. 1 haven t any patience with this maud lin sentimentality which induces mis sions and Sunday schools to send their young women teachers with fruits, flowers and cigarettes to these accused Mongolians, and I deplore the sickly condition of American woman hood that permits Itself to be. led Into such folly and to place itself in so false a position." Most of the prisoners were l!s-charged. The Selma News thinks there Is something wrong between the man who writes the paragraphs in The Wil- ' nf of hiS last omc ial acts was the mingrton Star and women in general and it has come to the conclusion that he is either a confirmed bac lielor or has a mother-in-law, and that paper then quotes two of The Star s squibs making flings at women. We wonder What The .News thought of yesterday's Btar in which three of the seven edi torial paragraphs it contained were of the same character. There may e something in the supposition The Durham Herald is of the opin ion Jhat the activity of soma police men and other officials in "pulling up negroes for small offenses has a ten dency to make criminals of them when to become criminals was not i their intention." We are of opinion that there Is a good deal of truth in whaf The Herald say. It also sug- gests with much point that if it is' a good plan to grant conditional par- j dons it might work as well not to in flict a chalngang or penitentiary sen tence for the first offense w here only small crimes are concerned. i removal from office of Chairman M I.endon. of the State Corporation Com mission, because the latter did not de cide a freight rate case in accordance with the (5overnor's views. At the time the decision was made it seemed to us to be a peculiar one. or. rather, the reason given by the chairman for deciding as he did. seemed peculiar. But were the de cision based on erroneous ideas of the powers of the State commission we cannot see how that w as just cause j Kpeaks. There Is no rank in sincere tJood 1 toads. Charleston News and Courier. The people of Caston county. North Carolina, have recently voted a tax upon themselves of $300,000 for :lie building of good roads in that county. They have taken knowledge of Meck lenburg county In which 180 miles of mHcadam roads have bsen hullt with in the Inst fifteen years. In the coun ty of Charleston, as we have said he fore, w hich was established one hun dred years before Mecklenburg county was discovered, we have to-day only about ten miles, short measure at that, of good roads. We do not think that anything could be added to ihe force of this statement. One of these days there will be some other people coming who will possibly do for u.s what we ought to have done for our selves long ago. surely. In a town of about 25,000 white people, most of whom are In fairly good circum stances. It ought not to be a difficult matter to raise by private subscription a sufficient amount or money to build twenty-tive miles of good road Quite Beside the Question. Norfolk Landmark. "The Norfolk landmark Is wrong again, as It is not a question of rank between the two persons of whom it for removal of the commissioner. Cer 'tainly a Judicial or quasi-judicial offi ! eer Is not removable from office for ! displaying bad judgment in the ex ercise of d isrretlonary powers or for mistaking the law governing the case in which he makes a decision. Were that the case It would invest in a Gov ernor having the power of removal the absolute determination of the law and full control of the discretionary power in every- case which came be fore a tribunal in his State. The re- jmuval by the Governor of an official because the latter does not decide a thinks particular case according to the Gov- friendship, although lt Is probably- worth noting that we got it first." Charleston News and Courier. So far as the readers of The News and Courier are concerned this Is like throwing a kiss in the dark. The fel low who throws it knows what he means, but no one else does. We did not ask anything about the rank In sincere friendship; we asked which is the ranking degree, Lltt. D. or LL. D. One man may be made a lieutenant before another Is made general, so we can't see what the matter of time has to do with it. HAS K I LI .ED 90 BEARS. Son of "Big Tom" Wllnon. Also Kx-M-rt Trapper, Vlails YllmirtOll1 Wilmington Star. An Interesting visitor, MY A. O. Wilson, son of the late "Big Tom" Wilson, of Murohison, Yancey county, the latter being1 known as the most daring mountaineer of his time in this State, has been spending a few days here and like his father has made a I phenomenal record as a trapper and bear hunter in the Black mountain, where he has spent practically his whole life and has killed 90 grlfzlies In his time. Mr. Wilson lives within five and a eiiarter miles of Mount Mitchell, the highest peak eat of the Rockies, and his father. It v 111 be recalled, found the body of Dr. Mitchell, who lost his life while exploring on the mountain, whb h now bears his name. "Big Tom" died about two years ago with the unprecedented record of 114 hears, which he killed In the Black mountains. His son Is fast climbing up to that fine record, and a is. has no equal in this State. Mr. Wilson killed his last bear last fall and since he arrived In Wilmington had word from home that another big one which he had been after for some time, had tieen killed by one of his relatives. In his travels In the mountains, he has had fine success, and strange to say he has always been fortunate enough to keep out of reach of these danger ous beasts. He c an well be called the "king" of the western trappers and bear hunters. For a number of years he has been in charge of the Murchison timber land, or Green Pond land, which con tains 13 000 acres and Is ow ned by eastern North Carolina capitalists, a number of whom live in Wilmington. This (riant forest la a reserve and contains unusually 'arge specimens of trees, one of which Mr. Wilson says measures 33 feet and 3 inches in circumference. Mr. Wilson has been visiting Mr. J. V. Grainger. Mr Clayton Giles, Sr.. and other friends in Wilmington, and with his son. Kwart Wilson and nephew. Theodore Wilson, have enjoyed thefr s(ay on the sencoast. They left last night for Murchison. thought to have taken with him. Ol'lt WOXDERFCL CLIMATE. Cotton and Tobacco Growing on Last Year's Stalks. Wilmington Star. The Pender Chronicle, of Burgaw, N. C. mentions the Interesting fact that on the farm of Mr. J. P. Wells, near Walha, Pender county, he has grow ing' nicely about 100 hills of cot ton sprouting from last year's stalks. The sprouts are in a field now planted in corn but which was In cotton last season Mr. Wells attributes this un usual growth to the mild winter, dur ing which the cold was not sufficient to kill the old cotton stalks from which a crop was gathered last fall. He has fertilized his second growth cotton and Is giving it every chance to do its best. The result seems to be promising, for the second growth cotton plants are higher and more vig orous than are the growing plants of this season. The Chronicle also mentions that on Mr. A. J. Johnson's farm near Warsaw, he has a stalk of tobacco which sprouted from the stem of last vear's crop and is growing very lux uriantly. The stalk Is near the garden fence, being somewhat protected. The sprouts came out on the stalk -about two inches above the -ground and are much larger than the tobacco plant ed out this year He Is saving the stalk and will gather the seed and try them next year. fttumnMHininiimunni(t m lots of belat win oe a grei Remnants and odd lots will W closed out to-day. Added to thes will be two special laces One table assortment of fine Valenciennd and Round Thread Laces, and tk' values are 8 and 10 cents, but are selling them to-day for 60cts per dozen yards none cut wl New Cotton Mills, The Caucasian. If all Ihe rumors that are now afloat materialize as to the new cot ton mills that are soon to be erected I In this State, we will be ahead of any place In the world In the manufac ture of the fleecy staple. Almost every week we read that new com panies are being organized to oper ate mille In this State. The Davie Record announces that a $75,000 mill will soon be erected at MocVville, and it also states that New England capitalists are contemplating building a mill near Hickory that will employ between five and six thousand people. And speaking of rumors, it has been reported that the Dukes Intend branching out into the cotton mill business, and are contemplating build ing a number of mills In this State, and probably one at Spartanburg, and that each one of their mills will cost a million dollars. cer nev Another lot of 15 and 25 Laces in great variety, all meshes and patterns and the Id will be on bargain at the mi end price of 10c yard. Deetli Must Be necRlstered. sMMesvllle landmark. The Landmark Is publishing to-day the summary of an act passed by the last legislature which requires the registration of deaths occurring In towns or cities having a population of 1.00 or over hy the last census. The purpose, which is a proper and ad mirable one. is to provide for a State burein of vital statistics. The act Is now In force and as Its enforcement is made compulsory on the towns to which It applies. It behooves our towns which do not now require the registration of deaths and few towns In the State do to get busy and pro vide the machinery for its enforcement. iis Want to Take It Back Vow. Eh? Charleston News and Courier. The Charlotte Observer tries to turn our suggestion that girls ought I to be very careful about whom they ! marry to very good account by say- j mg "Just so. We suggest that as manv of them as possible marry North Carolina boys." There Is some merit in what our contemporary says. We do not know the "boys" of any State that need so much the refining Influ ences of South Carollnia educated young women as the bys of North Carolina. This would be consigning! our girls, however, to missionary work, for which some of them are not ea- i pecially fitted. I Pickens County, S. (., farmer Su-uck by Freight Train. Special to The Observer. Greenville, S. C. June 25. Thomas O. Jameson, a Pickens county farm er, ST years of age, was struck by a The Ashevllle Gazette-News there ought to be a kind of (3ary so- irnor i idea of the law, or, mayhap Clety to take charge of tho 4mri- .it was in this case, in accordance with freight train on the Southern a few . .iris Whose parent, have no, .ense 'his wishes and prejudices, is some- from g5 enough to keep their daughters from i thing happily almost unknown in this ; r,roken tTl two places. He wa doing missionary work in the slums of country. President Roosevelt was se-, brought here to a hospital for treat the Chinese sections of our cities lt verely censured for criticising a Fed ts hoped that the tragedy In New eral judge because of a decision in a York' Chinatown will have good re-(certain case contrary to his ideas of ulta in opening the eyes of those w ho Iwhat the decision should have been, are thus exposing themselves to dan-;hut he would not have dared remove i ment. His condition is critical. Won ger. In electing as its president Rev. J O. Atkinson, editor of The Christian 6un, the North Carolina Press As , aocJatlon did something altogether ad nirable. It recognised the great part Valeh the Church paper edited with -. ability and devotion, all of them jrtajr in the State's life; and it also r. reaefBtMi the great personal and . Journalistic worth oil Itr. Atkinson. .Mioses Pemberton and Haigh Fire Prise. To the Edltwr of The Observer; There seems to have been a mistake aa to th nriaea (n nnr rron t flnral that judge had he had the power to , parade. MlMM je8n Pemberto and do so because of that decision. I iuia Halgh, who drove a tandem, re- Whether Chairman McLendon s de- ceived first prise. X. cision was under misconstruction of1 FayettevlUe, June 25, 1909. the law or an improper exercise of dis- j rnquewionahly! cretionarr power hi removal, in the i xr . I ra t a ii ham .vno. ! If "fighting insanity" justifies horn- circumstances, was an outrageous act on the part of the Governor It was. however, his last opportunity to fire a shot at his political enemies and the railroads nd he. true to his char acter, took advantage ot it. iclJe. as haa been pleaded in a case at Charlotte, X. C.j then every murder Is justifiable except when it Is commit'ed for the purpose of robbery or luat To man kills for reverse or vindication ' until he become fighting road. Tlte Klamath Project. National Geographic Magaxine. In the land of "Burnt Out Fires" the region which will long be remem bered as the last stronghold of the Modoc Indians is a remarkable agrl culutral district known as the Kla math Basin, which lies partly in Cali fornia and partly in Oregon" and em braces several hundred thousand acres. The first unit of the important na tional irrigation work at this point Is completed and several thousand acres of fertile land are now receiving wa ter from the government canals. Of all the Federal works the Kla math project is perhaps the most un usual hy reason of the fact that it involves irrigation and drainage in unusual combination. A considerable portion of the lands to be Irrigated is to-day covered with the waters of navigable lakes. These waters are to Oe drawn off and the exposed lake beds are then to be subdivided Into farms and irrigated by .the -government canals. Nothing Wrong IWth the Blackber ries. Monroe Knquirer. The distressing Information is sent out from Louisiana that a number of negroes in that State have died from (the effects of eating blackberries. Now. somebody Is trying to scare somebody. Tf the negroes are dying In Louisiana from eating blackberries It Is not be ause there's anything wrong with the berries, but simply because they ate too many of 'em, Just as a man can kill himself drinking too much pure water. Not Very Flattering. Louisville Courier Journal. The Georgia notion that the only way to keep the white race up ii to keep the black race down doe not flatter the Caucasian. A Tennessee Theory. Chattanooga Time. The Charlotte Observer I grateful that the doctor of North Carolina are going to give active attention to the "hookworm disease." We. had sus pected something to be the matter with our neighbors in the old North State, but we had never dreamed it was the "hookworm:" we thought a superabundance of Glenn had some thing to do with It. !as we close our doors to-night ! has been most wonderfully patrori iized, and it's very gratifying to tH management to know that theij has not been one dissatisfied custd mere Not being able to serve promptly, was unavoidable account of the unusual crowd, arij for vour oatience and consideration we are grateful. Remember.it closes To-Night Evidently Tp to Something. Washington Herald. The Columbia State la praising North Crolina poetry. The Charlotte Observer should beware. We do not know- what The State is fishing for. but It is evidently playing desperately for something. The Iincoln Lithla Inn. Inoolnton, K. C. imor open Ut the pabllc. The beet Lit hia Water, Flrst-cUsa ao oopninodatlotu. ItllUM I M . :- '- --v " .t. v. V "
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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June 26, 1909, edition 1
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