Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Nov. 7, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
hnapp: r.:Er.:oniAL is : .TO DE: E8TADLIS0ED 3 j Children Cry cr Flotchpr'c cmaiuslF(!j)P Friday and 7. Ttczc3 A Ecrly CI lci!i!r.t2!i fo Visit C;tM:S:rg In ;V . : Tuis" E:!::il ; I few . 'Mi !v;(Tro):i; I ; .- , . - - S&tifiridyh : idling ; .- - i . f . ' - 'l. .!.,'"-,' v- ".v 'r.l ' ' j v-' 1 The Kind Yon Have Always Bought, and Iblch haa been in use " for oyer SO years, has borne the signature of. ' - and has been made under his per- i6tffl?&Z .sonal supervision since its infancy. ' "V AIlow no one to deceive you in this. AIL Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are bttt : Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health, of -Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA .Castorla is a ? harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goiic, Drops and Soothing1 Syrups. It is . Pleasant a It -? contains neither Opitim, Morphine nor other Narcotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms " and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the r Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep . The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend 1 GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS i Beara the Signature of 9 The F, M Yoo Hare iftvays Bought Use For Over 30. Years In thk etirrau AWT. TT MVMNAT STMCrr. MIW TOMK CtTT. 3 TREES HOST YIELD TO THE RDTBLESS STEP OF PROGRESS . Erecntive Board Hears' Protest Against Destruction of Towering ; Etais on North Trfon Bait Rnds - No Alternative at Hand. , :.;J , ',- A strong delegation of North Tryon street dwellers graced the executive tooard last night . to present the case of the city vs. th trees, defending the. right of the latter to escape the annihilating axe ; of the imperturb able wood-chopper, all . of the old 1 trees having won so many friends .that it will be hard to see them fall before the; march of progress. " , -. The arguments of the delegation were fruitless, however. Although the North , Tryon street people had gone a step further and had brought ' in ' a landscape artist 'who said - that these ' old trees were the " beauty of North ' Tryon and were worth .more thiin all tha m rH p-rn aiAaura lira that could:be ;laid, the argument still fell on daf ears. . "Wet want to me the trees," was the united 'view of the members of the committee, ''but we cannot see how this, can be done if the street vis to be graded as it should be.. In the' same - connection It might be - stated 'that the large trees ; on by the woodman's axe and are .fast disappearing-from the places which they -have occupied for many years as landmarks that were - there, . some of them, ; when Charlotte ' went no farther! than .Brevard 'street,, and - was a "mere wayside village. The board considered various types of ' street-sweepers for half an hour after having heard the North . Tryon street . delegation, . and. finally "' ap pointed. Messrs. Allison and Davis a committee' to decide what the . city needed .and what, type of sprinkler was -most.: desirable. , - --- . . y A request was received from the Charlotte Band, formerly the Wood men's Band, ' asking for a room in the Auditorium in which toV prac tice. The board - referred . the peti tioners to those in charge - of the renting of the building for the city. A proposition was .read from the City Engineers' Corporation of New iTork looking ;; to the Y establishment of a garbage disposal plant In Char lotte, the cost to be tased on popu lation. The letter was ordered filed,' as the city may have something to say in the matter later on- if the cash to bjUild a new crematory is ever- available. - : ; ; i;.';Y' , r ; H017 HARK T17AIH AIDED DIS OFFICIAL BIOGRAPHER A TIBET 6TAMP ' ' t. . r: THAT; IS 'TJNIQUE. - '-,. m --t . (Prom The 'London Chronicle.) . A philatelic - curiosity z; i has Just, reached this ; country from Tibet. It Is a postage stamp designed and exe cuted apparently in anticipation - of the retyrn, after his long exile in In dia, of the Dalai Lama to ' rule- once more over the land of the Lamas. -. Of ruddy purple color, .the stamp is very crudely .. designed' and printed and Tears traces of the divine ruler's long residence in India,.- It has evi dently drawn its frame and spandrel ornamentation f rotn : the same value of th Edwardian 1-anna stamp of India. ' In the place of the central portrait, however,- there is the mys terious looking beast lOfentined as the white lion of Tibet; Possibly by an error of drawing, the 'white lion is shown in color on a whlte ground. , The inscriptions are., in. native and English characters the latter, reading, TMKt Pnstftsre. r The native charac ters are interpreted as at top) Pod . frig" tetter ' :C The-Hu-r-postage , ; or stamp, Ittar--anna, Kang---)ne, v , - One California; 'electric mpany bvsb t nA ixmre to a terltory 200 miles long and from TO to 80 miles wida. The production or .Kentuclcy. whiskey has ranged from 6,ow,uw w w.vmw Ions a year. ,.T.',: . "Writing of his association with Mark Twain Albert Bigeiow Paine, the authorized biographer of the hu morist, tells in the November number of jHarper's Magazine how the work was begun and . the ' part which Mark Twain himself played in Jt. "On i Tuesday, January 9 1908, writes Mr. Paine, "I was on hand with a capable stenographer, one who had successively and successfully neid sec retarial positions with Charles Dudley Warner and Mrs. Mary Mapes Dodge, and was therefore peculiarly qualified for the work in hand. ' : "Mark Twain, meantime,, had been revolving our plans and adding some features of his. own. He proposed, to double the value and interest of our employment by letting his dictations continue the form, of some earlier au tobioeranhlcal chanters, besrun In 1885, and continued later in Vienna and Florence. ' He said he did not think heJ could follow -a definite chro nological program; that he would like to wander about picking up this point and that, as memory or fancy prompt ed, without any particular biograph ical order. I could also suggest sub jects for dictation, and ask particulars of any special episode or period. I believe this covered the whole ar rangement, which did not require more than five minutes, and we set to work without further prologue. "He dictated : that morning of mat ters connected with the history of the Comstock mine; then he drifted back to his childhood, returning again to the more modern period, and closed, i think, with some comments on cur rent affairs. It was, absorbingly inter esting; his quaint, unhurried, fashion of speech, the unconscious movement of his hands, the play of his features as his fancies and phrases passed in mental review and were accepted or waved aside. We- were watching one of- the great literary creators of his time in the very process of his archi tecture. We constituted about the most select audience in the world en- Joying what was, likely enough, its most remarkable entertainment. When he turned at last and inquired the time, we were all amazed that two hours and more had slipped away. ine dictations thus begun contin ued ' steadily from week to week and always with ' Increasing - charm. We never knew what he was going to talk about, and it was seldom that he knew until the - moment : of belnnine: then he went drifting among episodes, incidents and periods in his irrespon sible fashion the fashion of table conversation, as he said -the meth- odiesa method, of the human mind. "It was. not for several, weeks that I began to realize that these mar velous reminiscences bore only an at mospheric relation to history; that they were aspects of Wography rather than its veritable narrative, and built largely sometimes ' whollyfrom an imagination that, with age, had dom inated memory, creating details, even reversing them, yet , with a perfect sincerity of purpose on the part of the , narrator to set down the literal and unvarnished truth. It was his constant effort to be frank, and faith ful to fact, to record, to confess and to condemn without stint. . "If you wanted . to know the worst of Mark Twain you had only to ask him for it. He would give' it, to the last" syllable worse than the worst, for his imagination would magnify it and adorn .it with new iniquities, and if he Vave it again, or: a dozen times he would improve upon it each time, until the thread; of history was al most impossible to trace through the marvel of that fabric; and he would do the same for. another person 'just as willingly, ' s : . "Those vividly real personalities that he marched and countermarched before us. were the most convincing creatures in the world, the most en-, tertaining, the most -excruciatingly humorous, or wicked, or tragic; but, alas, they .were not . always jsafe to include in a record that must bear a certain semblance to h'story. They' often, disagreed in their performance and even in their characters, with the documents in the next room, no t .learned by and by when those records Qiseniangiea oegan to rebuild the structure of the years.'' - - ' , , . Mr. Thomas A Early of Washing ton is expected to arrive in the city in the course of the next few days to assist local enthusiasts in the work of canvassing ' Mecklenburg County for funds proposed to be applied to suit able '.memorials to the late Dr. Sea man A. Knapp and also to' assist in stirring interest in and directing at tehtion to the' approaching' Knapp Ag ricultural Day which has been .desig nated as November 27. , ' Dr Knapp ? was the founder of the demonstration work which has been of such 'substantial benefit . to the farmers of this country and .he also established the idea of ' organizing boys' corn clubs which' likewise have come into prominence and have con tributed greatly1 to interest and rival ry in the produo 'on of this crop by the young farmers r of America. The 148,000 teachers and the 7,0 90,- 000 pupils of the South are being urged by their educational . and agri cultural leaders to assemble 8,000,000 farmers, their families and friends,, in the 89,000 school houses, on' Novem ber 27 for an hour, in order to survey and , review their agricultural re sources and achievements, and to ex press and review their appreciation of the services of one of their great ben efactors; Agriculture is ; worthy of this consideration, for the fanners of the Nation have this year produced ten billion dollars worth of crops to feed and clothe nearly 100,000,000 people here, with a surplus for other nations. , Knapp Agricultural Day is the . of ficial designation. The South wishes to honor the memory of Dr. S. A. Knapp as the founder of the demon stration work and the boys' and girls clubs. This is fitting, because 100,000 demonstrators are making larger crops, on their 'farms and corn club boys are attracting world-wide atten tion by growing more than 225 bushels oh' one acre at low cost. The indica tions are that several of the 75,000 boys will thi year break all records It Is fitting, because 25,000 girls, in the harvest season, are filling pan tries with wholesome food and selling the surplus. It is ad duty, : because Dr. Knapp - taught a new ! method in agriculture and .the lessons must be more widely impressed and unfail ingly transmitted. Representatives of England, Russia,' Brazil, South Africa, Slam and Argentina have come to learn them.- vy,." ::s:-i:,f:-Aiil'j There is to be a Knapp School and a Knapp Farm, near .Nashville and in connection with Peabody College. When ' 1150,000 is collected for. the farm and school building, $250,000. will be added for endowment of the School of Country Life by the Gen eral Education Board. No other such institution - exists. ; It will , start " out with the purpose of reaching and helping every school and farm in, the South. , This Institution will be a lab oratory, a. clearing house, and an as sembling place for agricultural and educational ' workers. Eventually it will have . demonstration schools in each State and county , teaching its lessons. It will be a working, living memorial, but in a conspicuous place will also appear a life-sized statue of Dr. Knapp. ' - 59 Suits Onfo-'-A clean-up purchase by our NYotkfyiiyer.rlWB be arranged in two lots, at prices that will demonstrate to you the superior buying- advantages o this firm. As c these-uits were ) purchased at a great sacrifice " we will offer them to you ac6prdirigIy--V Your Choice -of Lots - $9.75 mi $13:75 LITTLE-l ONG COMPANY. the conspicuous CITIG ENERGY OF OKLAHOIIA CITY jt ... .j - ? The Argentine Government plans ; to place.; one . of . the most powerful .tele scopes in the world in Its 'National ob servatory.; a- .Backed Jby a 150,000 endowment vfud,: an English university has establinh & I- chair 'of coal, gas and ; fuel industries ' LIES. RYAN IS NOT A SLAVE (Baltimore Evening Sunu.) Not a f ew people will sympathize with Mrs. Thomas Fortune Ryan's re bellion. Against the slavery of society etiquette. - She had the courage dur ing her residence in Washington, from which she has just moved away, to have printed on her cards: ? j i'Mrs. - Ryan neitner receives nor makes visits." This was a bold emancipation procl amation that ' thousands of other women would like to make, and would make, if they were , brave enough and rich enough. What are called society obligations" sometimes become , as irksome as serfdom. Thank. Heaven for one woman who frankly declines to be bored by uncongenial company. Who refuses to waste her time in an endless round of society "gayety," or melancholy, as It might often more accurately, be called, and who' insists on spending her r life in the way it seems best to herself. - Mrs. Ryan, at least, is not the slave of convention. : .... -4 STINGIiESS BEES WILL HEREAFTER MAKE HONEY. (Prom The Toledo Blade.) The honey of commerce is the prod uct of a creature with a passion for work in the fore part of him. and a red hot stiletto in the rear. He is industrious enough to be written down In the books of the proverbs and he is ill-tempered enough to make even children respect him. He might be de scribed as a-cross between a steam engine and a carpet tack. -r.".-v-: An English apiarist- which is soci ety language for beeman has been experimenting with bees for a number of years with a view to producing a worker that vou can stroke and tease Pand rob with impunity, the charac teristic of the ordinary bee which as sures him room according to his size having been removed.- He says, this Englishman, that ' his labors have been crowned with success. He , has developed a species of bee that- will suck: the : nectar from every nodding flower, as assiduously as the old fashioned -bee... But he will not get on the high horse. He will not draw his knife: on you. - He is as stingle'ss as a 4 Penrose investigation of the Oil trust. . t: - . .1 'T-v-': - We're not certain whether we'd care to have this unarmed; bee supplant the ' present rough rider style of bee." We've' come t6 have a fondness for the' pictures of . those beemen showing colonies of bees swarming over their persons as other , folk permit their offspring to swartri ever them.' And' we're sure the beeman would 1 miss those pictures themselves. toiLF-- a riirs ad (Louisville Courier-JournaL ) , . Oklahoma City is a conspicuous ex ample of civic energy and enterprise, The city is 23 years old and claims a population of 72,000. The census of 1910 gave it about 5,000 and aa It is growing fast: the claim probably is not greatly exaggerated. Much of the constructive develop ment of Oklahoma City has been brought about in the last 10 years. One of the most important steps tak en was the consolidation of the sev eral commercial organizations into a chamber of commerce which has been active and enthusiastic at all times in working, for civic progress. . By raising $800,000 Oklahoma City secured two large meat packing plants which give employment' to some 3. 000 people' and which have spent something like $7,000,000 in building and equipping their plants. The funds for this purpose were raised by the sale of city lots in ' the vicinity of these large industries. ; A railroad extension was secured by raising $75,000 for a terminal site. Oklahoma City had to tear down a school house to do this, but .in a two days canvass by the chamber of com merce subscriptions; payable in one year in . four, instalments of three months each. Were readily secured to the amount of; $75,000. :,, vv-..- ,t,, - When Oklahoma : City wanted the State capital it agreed to , provide lands from which a sufficient revenue could be obtained to build, a fine Capi tol, on tnis nasi tne state voted by 50,000 majority to move the capitals When the Governor wanted $100,000, to start the building Oklahoma City raised It by a bond issue of $260,000 with which it also secured a new rail road and 200 acres of parks and play grounds. Incidentally it gave the State 686 acres or land, worth 31,400.000. for Capitol building purposes. The Oklahoma City plan of doing things may be recommended to . other cities . which are seeking to Increase their population and their commercial importance. It costs a lot of money to do such things, - but - who will deny that these expenditures have been a profitable Investment for Oklahoma City? bbxjjul&st wedding . ' 'I I (NGREENSBORO TONIGHT. , . , (Special to The Chronicle.) t GREENSBORO, Nov. 7. Many prominent young' men and young wo men, of the State are gathered here for the marriage tonight of Miss Mary Pry -and' ; Mr. Pierce C. Rucker, the event tos be solemnized in the First Presbyterian church. During her pre nuptlal season Miss 'Fry has been the honoree of a number of - delightful events and since their arrival her bridesmaids have been entertained elaborately, receptions, dances and luncheons going to make the da yand night a continuous- round of festivities. Miss Pry is a daughter of Capt. J. W. Pry; president of the Greensboro . Loan it 'Trust Co., "and an attracthfe and lovable young woman. Mr. Rucker Is GREEK SPIRIT V ? . ELICITS APPLAUSE OF THE NATIONS v X -' Y- '"' 1 1 A: " : ' i . ' - y (Birmingham Ledger.) ' A fine spirit' of National patriotism was exhibited by the 60 or more Greeks, who left Birmingham a few days ago en routft P their native land where they will enlist for the war. against Turkey. Each volunteer was enthusiastic in his- mission and all were imbued with thet love for, the home country Many of the Greeks . who came : to the western world, to make their for tunes have built up flourishing busi ness institutions here - and have ac cumulated property. They have pros pered through their industry and in telligence and have made good use of their opportunities. It required not only courage, but tne spirit : or seii sacriflce for them to dispose of their properties at more 'or less personal loss and travel thousands of miles to support their fellow men at home in a war with, a foreign foe.. . That f kind of Spirit excites the ad- i ;w,n. miration of the world. It is the spirit U 1. W ..-WTWV M. O ' f -V . . . T Charlotte Transfer Company Baggage, Passenger i.and Freight Service. "ALWAYS ON THE MINUTE" NIGHT OR DAY. jJAKE MARTIN, Mgr. Phone Nos. 298-1919. thi scify. , , , t A Campaign lie.. ., , Y- (Prom .The Argonaut.). 4 , ' ' One .of the curiosities of the House of Commonavery rarely seen was Earl Drax,: or.f many years membe for a Dorsetshire borough.;" Once X a- gen eral election "on the day , previous to the nomination he put out the follow ing address to his constituents: "Elec tors of ,Wareham! I understand that some', evil disposed person has - been circulating a report that I wish my tenants and other persons dependent upon me to vote according to, thevr conscience. This is a dastardly lie, cal culated to Injure me. I have no wish of the sort - I wish and Intend that these, persons shall vote for , me.": ' SURGICAL TREATMENT ; ' FOR CRIME A FAILURE. - (The Springfield Republican.) It is painful to learn that the Mil waukee young man who was reformed by surgery has backslidden. He Was in prison at Green Bay ' for burglary, but was released on the testimony of surgeons that his , criminal tendency was caused by the pressure of ; bone on lus brain. The bone was removed. but , he committed another burglary. The scientists examined k him again and found- that the silver- plate In serted: to replace tne hone was re sponsible.' -This was adjusted, and for nearly a year he kept straight. But lately he was convcted of stealine from his employer and Jias been sen tenced to , five years in. the peniten tiary, it is a blow to aurgery, hnt It is not unlikely that he belonirs . in a hospital rather than a, prison. -The' aiagnosis may nave oeen -sound, even though the cure failed: If his Derver- slty was really due to a mechanical cause a morbid condition- might pos sibly have been set up which removal of the cause would not cure. , In the old days remedial surgery was both simple and efficacious because it was applied at the neck; both the soclaL and the surgical problems of today are more complicated. A prison sentence for the victim of an injured brain, may not be absolute justice," bat it is at all events an improvement on .hanging for theft, with no. inquiry .into mo tives, or mental condition. WATER IN MINNESOTA 1 - STREAM FLOWS TWO WAYS. Minnesota possesses one of the rar est geologic curiosities in the world. This State; has . at 'least one stream that flows ' two ways. In . northern Minnesota -there is an area" of land so flat its waters sometimes flow into ; Hudson:" Bay and sometles flow into the Gulf of Mexico. Somewhere on this flat are is the exact watershed between the great bay and the great gulf to - the ; south, ' but . it has - never been exactly , located. The headwaters of the! Mississippi River are located in' this area. There is a continuous waterway from Hudson i Bay to " the Gulf - of J Mexico. The waterway -divides North America into two conti nents ;not joined - land at any" point.' ' Sometimes certain lakes :; in this northern' Minnesota area discharge at both ends - at . the same time, .water running from one nd into the Red or Rainy River? to Winnipeg Lake and thence to Hudson Bay, and from the other end- int- .the Mississippi.'- ' An investigation -" "i water sup ply of the rivers that eross the inter national boundary line -has just been completed by the Geologic Survey. Tof Remove ' Sallb wness, ; ; ; I Blotches or Wrinkle (Prom Family -Physlciah i Y;. Do VOU -I realiXA 'that - iuat ;- hnu'fh that coatse, muddy ' or , discolored complexion there's an -exquisitely beautiful skih of youthful tint and delicacy? .If -you could only bring this complexion to the surface, v dis carding the old, one! You . can in the 1 ! easiest, simplest, most ' natural manner Imaginable. Just get " an ounce of ordinary mercolized wax at any drug store, apply- nightly ,- like cold -cream, removing it mornings with warm water. The wax assists Nature by gradually taking off the lingering particles of dead and half dead surface skin, causing no discom fort whatever. ' Ordinarily it takes from a week to ten days' to complete the transformation.. 'Cutaneous de fects, vlike . pimples, . blotches, r liver spots, moth patches,- freckles, of course, disappear j'wJth; the old skin. Nothing else that t ikhow: of will ac complish, such wonderful results in so short a time. ' Pine line's and even the " deeper wrinkles often appear at an early age. : In such cases nothing is better than , a face bath made by - dissolving 1 oz., powdered saxolite in Vs pt. witch hazel, . This ,1s remarkably effective. - - a a . 3m . a center or culture ana science oi t government, i vThe name' of - Greece is almost as old as history Itself,, and the achievements of her people in-literature, m art; in government and in military action have been the marvel of the worldvfor1 age's.- f. 'iT ' The motives of the men who sacri ficed their personal interests here and turned 'their , faces towards their na tive land in times of stress Is an ex ample of high f purpose which -might will serve as an example to the rest of mankind. ., . 1 -, ... ' .. , . - ,;; t 4 ; Industrial Teaching. Y. (The ' Christian "Herald. ) . , . On my next visit -to the school a lad declaimed "Catallne's Defiance to the Senate." "Here is where I come in," thought I. ,"I will have a little private . talk ' with the . teacher and tell her what Mr." Orchard says-" This I did. - She sent him a note asktog permission to lead her; flock at due intervals into his orchardvfor object lessons in fruit culture; confessed her Ignorance of the art, . and suggested his co-operation. He met the school in his orchard,- gave ithe first lesson himself,' offered prizes for persever ance -and .efficiency and wound ud with refreshments and -music from a graphophone. Other orchardlsts fol lowed his example. That school has become , the - star Institution , of v its community, and Its most - distinctive and popular feature is the course in fruit culture.' Its scholars know how to plant to. prune, to worm, to spray, to hoe and to plow trees; and how to gather and pack fruit for ship ment without wounding and skinning trees and without bruising fruit. To whatever section of our country the fruit goes, the receivers are benefi ciaries of that little school. "What I did "for that section anybody can do for another by studying Its needs, its school, and approaching its teacher. preacher : ana leading citizens in the right way.. , AVer's Ghcrry Pectoral No sense in trying this that thing, for your cough. Cart- fully , deliberately select the best cough medicine, then stick to it Ask your: doctor about Ayer$ Cherry Pectoral for throat and lung troubles. , Our Alphabet Changirtg. ' Alphabets are suffering a change of form at the hands of modern sign painters. For many years letters have held certain distinct forms, which gave them their names . and - classes. Sign painters, however, are,' cultivat ing the artistic side of their trade, and from various signs . displayed all over the city there seems to be great unanimity of opinion among them as to-the appearance of certain Jietters. in. one of the. alphabets. This new idea seems to be a tend ency to fill In and "balance" blank spaces, points out The . Philadelphia Record. It was first to be observed on. the letter "L." The painteii saw fit to add a frill about the middle or -the- space between the base and tne upright. Next the letter "O" of the series was attacked, and the orna mentation went in the middle, mak ing the familiar le'ter resemble an old Greek "theta." "A" and "V" and "Q" have been the . latest to be touched up. ' M .... If the idea spreads much further the entire alphabet will change i face. - " ' It is sweet to think that the war on sugar Is" nearly over. WW - Y W 1 1 j ' i ; - . :YS" I f M i YfY i " J i f . - Factory Loaded Shot-Shells "Nublack" and "New Rival" " - Loaded vIlh Dlcck Powder The continued favor of " Nublack" and " New Rival'? black powder shotshells among a large number of hunten,is due to their, improved ; construction and "sJoading, which result in improved velocity pattern and penetration- In. these qualities, "Nublack" . and "New Rival" shotshella.are unsurpassed. Loadied only with standard brands of powder; shot and wad ding by machines which areabsolutelv unfailing in fhftir nneration: "Nuhlack" nnr! -wimV oViY are maae extra strong to stand reloading iney ana tne corxuauon on tne neaaa patented f WSw'J eamreailb3fbrexpa satisfactory shells be ' surelto asli ior rvY-tAj --m -Y. 5aY Y-: SrM Winchester enn&iare mad& far! Chester ammunition fbiPtili I Y makes of rfirtarms y i . m Jtw - atv w rr mm . -.-rf ' f r.
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 7, 1912, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75