Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Nov. 8, 1912, edition 1 / Page 4
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v Subscription Price By 1111. payable: strictly . cash STRICTLY ADVAXCS2. IS One Year.. r. m r eu juuuuig, . t. . Three Mentha.. One Month.. .. .$3.00 . wi fta V ' V art .25 Cntered as second-class xnitter : at the postoffic . at Charlotte, N. u. s TELEPHONES. Editor.. .. .. .. .. .. V.. Managing Editor.. .. City Editor. . .. Business Office . . . . . .. - The Evening Chronicle Is served to am home &t oar carriers ior o u -s week. r : ,t . K -."V,: "-.'"v . -. S067 234 134 78 Charlotte subscribers to The Chronicle who fall to : get the pa per, are asked to 'phone 2831 and a copy will be sent them at once. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1912. A MUCH NEEDED REFORM. A certain amount of noise is a neces "sary concomitant of industrial pro gress: In a new industrial city, such :as Charlotte is, there is too often an inclination to regard all holses as in dication of progress and prosperity, and therefore the more noise the bet- ? ter some unthinking people are pleas ed. However, in the large cities dur- ing' recent years strenuous effort has been made with marked success to re duce all noises to a minimum and no longer, are 'any except the noises that are unavoidable, tolerated ' ; There is a tremendous amount of unnecessary ; noise in Charlotte. The ; industries of the city would thrive just as well, and no one would be incon venienced or made to suffer if the un ' necessary noises, in proportion prob- .4 ably more than half, were eliminated. Somewhere about 5 o'clock in the . morning the whistles of factories and s able period, despite, the city ordinance - that forbids the blowing of a whistle for more than one - minute. Trains ' coming into or departing'from the cits . sometimes blow their way for a mild ;.f or more. One of the greatest nui sances i is the astounding yofume of useless noises made by automobiles. The best automobile engineers declare, : tfiot mnfnuT linos' rtr fflt tVlA - power of the engine and some manu facturers in response to the modern protest against noises are making au tomobilea that have no muffler cut off. Good automobiles wun consiaer- tract attention to themselves make so little noise that it is seldom disa greeable. ' ;-' , '. There are at all times and in every ' section of the city many people who are 111 or nervous and whose recovery to normal physical condition is retarded or absolutely, prevented by needless ana uisagreeauio iiuidco. At mo , pitals particularly there are always patients to whom quiet is essential, yet notwithstanding noisy automo biles and noisy trucks disregard all humanitarian instincts. And some phy Isi clans themselves, to- be perfectly - frank, are not among the least offend ers. "J- v '. Here is an tjnportant reform that could be undertaken and accomplish ed in Charlotte without inconvenience or cost to any person or concern and which would make Charlotte a much pleasanter place to live in. In fact if Charlotte would make itself as nearly as possible noiseless,, that fact would be, one of the greatest advertising points the Greater Charlotte Club could use In its boosting and advertis ing campaign. A few fines imposed and the needless noises would he no more. , PROGRESS AT LTIiESVIIiLE, Carolina Education. - While 5 North J M. C. A. The building will have club Carolina has perhaps produced - ho facilities, ' facilities . for bathing and poet of commanding worth, a " great I the gymnasium for exercise, and dor- many writers have at t;mes. ventured mitory xacilities. Out of ?60.000 re- into verse and have - given us some- I quired the. workers had about $45,- thing worthy .of preservation, writes 000 "subscribed .up to nocri yesterday. SEW BOOK OF TAR nv)rr. POEMS. BE PATIENT, POLITE AND GIVE North Carolina Education has pub- CHEERJFXJLLY, ' iished a valuable little book under the" The. ladies, of 'this city are in tiie title, j; "North Carolina Poems with midst of the activities of a camptJgn an Introduction, notes and biographl- to raise $60,000 o erect a new Young cal sketches by Dr. E. C, Brooks, the Women's Christian Association build able and versatile teacher of .pedagogy lng. ; : The new building will practical at Trinity College and editor of North ly be laid out on; the same lines as the Carolina -Education. Prof. J. 'A. BIv- Y. M. C A. building. :-. This latter is ins,. State superivisor of teacher train- one of the prides of the city. Modern ing and an educator and literary ciitr conditions of' city life-makes a similar ic of note, has high praise for the new J building for the young women even Cotton Oil 3C11 and Cotton. Factory (Wadesboro Ansonlan.) - The town of Uiesville is on a real Doom. SOmethine- ntin t.n the onirit which caused it to rise so suddenly irum a -disastrous fire a1 few years wbo. unis calamity, as it appeared then has- really ,v proven a . blessing Mr. Blvlns in his appreciaUon of the it would seem doubly important that ciS ll SvUy ai new book. Prof. E. C. Brooks, of the business interests of the city and the time. The town was quickly re- Trinity College has made an admira- J men generally should come to the aid oulit modern- brick stores and - of w 'spifinn - TTrnm ' : 'nowononpni L. "1.. xt ;nrv "Ces replacing the ancient .wooden - . ..- h StruCtUres.--'-,Thi i- nrA(rrftilv"lMn magazines and" occasional volumes he la finished up now once ' and for all, of the town really surprised them- has collected the best and "most repre- The ladies have( had the subject in selves, and having rebuilt in such .a sentative poetry to. which, as a State, handfor, the last 10 or 15 year OutJ we van iay , cibjih. a.wu coueuuons 0f ; collections in the past tney : nave i enterprises that - will assure further North Carolina i poems have been uot jo boueht and naid for. If it rowttl by making the town less de- made prior to this:' Mary Bayard should fail this time, it would entail SUri TlVe even rtCtl ' agrl A cold-pressure cotton oil mill is assured V for the town, a large part ui. mo vapnai , naving . Deen .: sud scribed by local men. The proposed mill is to cost $25,000 -and: $19,000 has been subscribed already. A cot ton, mill .to cost; $250,000 -4s .believed to be on the way. ;' The : promoters of these ; enterprises are among the men who - have made LdlesviHe the progressive town it is today. -They realize the otmortunities for such Industries , sinca- the Yadkin River Power Company has : completed Blewett Falls. . t Cotton gins and other machinery in the ' township are being operated , with current from the Falls,"; only a snort distance away. Lilesville is situated on -the Seaboard Air Line Railway, ; and - a line has already, been surveyed con necting it with ; the Atlantic . Coast Line at a point about half way be tween Wadesboro 7 and Morven. The Afi C. L. surveyed' this line, it is be lieved, with a view of hauling bal last from the large pits near Llles- AFFAIRS IN NORTH : CAROLINA Daily Indents, Facts Apt! Ccmment Gatbercd From Tt: ; Newspapm 01 Tfie State -. , Clarke's ood Notes (two volumes). long and discouraging delay: published in 1854; and Rev. Hight C. Moore's Select Poetry of North Car olina published in 1894. - In September, 1911, i Professor Brooks, who is editor of North Car olina . Education, began to ; publish in that journal a series of poems by North Carolina ' writers. The .present collection is , the logical outgrowth of that beginning. The thirty-seven au thors in the collection are represent ed by 102 poems, The authors are arranged alphabetically. One of the best features of the volume is the short biographical sketch given of each author. The material for these biograptical sketches was obtained through correspondence with persons interested and through the ransacking of k books, many of them curious and rare, bearing on North Carolina- his- The.new Y. W. C A. safeguards young women coming to the city; it helps those who are-already here. It makes an entirely proper place : for the young ladies of any family to go at any time. ' It facilitates soda' in tercourse under proper regulations and restrictions, and it fosters Chris tian civilization in s many particulars. We know, it is unpleasant to be ask ed to give up money, but wh3.t is the use of working for money if It is not applied to beneficent purposes some times. ; A' community' in .which mon ey can be r made is necessarily . one where the most : beneficent influence" and surroundings . are. , Therefore, when the successful man contributes to this T. W. d. A. he Is not altoeeth er giving, but is contributing to the f u l " conditions that makes to his own kent them rmm hnuinr tv. tory and literature. As the editor says DrosDerity; Therefore the business to- necting vUne at the time. - But If in his preface: "Many who. wrote en- tArt- anri m, fihr,,M aa to M13116. continues to grow, and cbm- tertainingly are now almost in obliv- It that what la yet lacklnK ls prompt. grTliSK'SS! axus vmo x.i., o cv ly - and cheerfully given. Those who - wunecuon wiux tne uoast iine. to give a biographical sketch of each author ' in . order that the name may not entirely perish from the earth. ; Another excellent feature . is that immediately under the subjects of some of the poems is given a note of explanation to make the meaning of the -poem clear. ; The book is admir ably indexed both as to poems and authors. One . fault - of all collections is in herent. Many excellent things must of necessity be left out, - The reader may look, in vain for some favorite and may call the wisdom of the editor In question for passing It by. But there must be some underlying prin ciple that guides an editor's choice in such matters.": Bearing in mind the teachers of the tate and their needs, Professor i.. Brooks : selected mainly run from the" collectors or treat them disrespectfully, surely don't f know what they are doing. ' The town is In a rich agricultural section and its future seems bright. '.'V ? . , -;. .v.:: Big Order of Shade Trees. ' ' (Wilmington Star.) The largest . single" order of shade trees ever shipped to Wilmington ar rived yesterday. These trees are being placed at Winoca Terrace by Mr. Will Hehder. There are nearly a. thousand of the beautiful silver maple, these trees being selected for their shade and beauty. Mr. Rehder If a man smoked only after a hear: lV: ty meal he'd go along time between at intervals of 20 feet apart and be smokes if he lived in some boarding tween the trees the. magnificent nyarangea nower. These with grass WAR ON THE HOOKWORM. Nearly 100,000 "r Persons" Treated Fufty-Four Counties in the Ranks. (Raleigh Christian Advocate.) The quarterly - report of Dr. J. A.' Ferrell. State director of the hook worm -campaign," showB that' during the' past three months the general practitioners of the State have treated 2,512 persons, and - that the six dis trict- directors in the county free die pensaries have 'treated 14,560, a total or 17,072 for 'the three 'months end ing September 3 0. These with the 81,658 . treated in the State up - to June 3 0 make a total of 9 8,73 0 per sons treated to date. To date 148, 993 microscopic examinations ; for hookworm infection have been made, Fiftv-four counties have made local appropriations to make v possible rthe free treatments. Definite surveys ct the infection have been completed in xorty-four counties and Sanitary sur veys of fifty-six counties have ; been made. : The work during the quarter has been confined to the western ana mountain counties. 1 It is now swinging ? toward the eastern and central counties. - , . Big Poultry Show For Burke. (Morganton Messenger.) ' - , The members of : the .Burke Poul-' try Association are preparing for the biggest show on the r 20-23d of ' this month that has ever been held in this part of the .- State. It will be re membered that last year "they , pulled off the most . creditable show that was : held. ; in' the State. This year they- are making, desperate efforts to even eclipse all former shows. This will attract a large ' number of poultrymen from all parts of the country and be a great advertise ment for the town and county. Let all join In and help make it a grand success. ' PICAYUNES , (New Orleans Picayune.) If the Lord would answer seme wo men's prayers for youth, 'how young j they would appear. houses. Drink may weaken a man's intel lect, but think hdw it strengthens his breath.:' : , lawns ; between the" property lines, the sidewalks and streets will make this one of oprmost beautiful resi dential sections. :. v ; Regardless of how one may regard it, woman suffrage is comings By th election Tuesday four" - more , States were added to the list of States where women are citizens and voters, these being Oregon, . Michigan, Kansas . and Arizona. The American suffragette is a different type from her rambuncioug English sister and the trend of af fairs in the , two : nations show ; the wisdom and sense of the American woman, who is steadily and surely winning suffrage in State after State, It will not be -10 years before the good women of North Carolina will be demanding and receiving suffrage. A-woman's journal has an article on "women as wives." , ine iaea those poems that would possess aa in- J seems feasible. ceresc ior ,xne scnuoiroom. tie xnere- j fore ruled out dialect and love poems. . Some women think they have not Those that are reproduced deal with said anything until they have talked various chases of nature, typical North a half an hour. Carolina scenery, stirring events In our history, subjects of fancy, etc. Our best loved and most widely-known poet, John Charles McNeill, is repre sented by his inimitable "October," "Away Down Home," and others. In a hasty glance , over the table of con tents we see the titles of many favor ites; that fine sonnet of Henry Jel rome Stockard's, "Washington," also his poem, "Sir Walter Raleigh;'"Hat- teras," by Joseph William Holden, L"The Bells of Trinity" and "North Carolina to Charles Bratnley Aycock," by Plato Tracy Durham; "Poe's Cot tage at Fordham," by John Henry Bonner; "Under the Pines," by Edwin Wiley Fuller; "The pilot" and "Roan oke," by James Biddle Shepard;"The Alabama" and "Regret," by Frances Christine Fisher Tiernan; "Swan-nanoa,"-by an unknown author. v No More Tail-End Primaries., (Wilmington7 Star.) No " more Democratic' primaries at the tail, end of a campaign. It lost the Democrats many a vote. yesterday. Now for a legalized primary system to supplant j . the soap-box 'V variety which has made enemies for a law ful plan for direct nominations by the people. - How grateful we should be that the fashion of lining the stomach with buckwheat cakes has returned, " v "Two drinks a day will supply a family .. with flour," remarks an ex change. The writer must mean the saloon-keeper's family. A San Francisco man has been ar rested for fooling with a widow. It serves him right, but it must be ad mitted that his genius commands ad miration. : ; Old Man. Joe's Philosophy. ' . (Greensboro Record.) ' - It's all over, even to the shoutfhg and no Democrat has cause for com plaint If Kitchin's friends are " dis gruntled, we see no caus for It. Simmons simply got the votes and plenty of them, showing that the peo ple wanted him returned. Progressive StatesvUle. ; ' (Statesvllle Landmark.) Having spent $100,000 in - street Improvement work in less than two years, Statesvllle . is keeping i pace with Iredell County, which ls spend ing $400,000 in road truilding, and both the town and county may now proudly proclaim their rank with the most progressive of ? the South. With : the paved' streets - and side walks Statesvllle has put ' on a dif ferent appearance, and with, muddy streets a thing of the past is now truly "The Best Town in North Carolina," as was claimed before the street work began. . " . :: 'ii-:n ;- . . " He Was a Scotland Boy. - . (Charity and Children.) A Tar Heel boy at Columbia ; Col lege, New, York, made a speech on the streets of the great city recently that so pleased the public that he was sent by the speakers' bureau of the" Demo cratic National Committee to Lake Canada In the northern part of New York State to make a speech for Woodrow Wilson. The young man is R- I McMillan, ; better known as "Roy" and he halls from Scotland County. '".- :z i I ., The handsome and convenient new Y. W. C. A, building will form an ideal gathering place for the several departments or sections of ; the Char lotte's Woman's Club and other local ...... : organization of women who are ac complishing things for the city and for their, members. V v ' With President Woodrow Wilson present the next . Twentieth of May celebration in Charlotte will be an event long to be remembered. Char lotte ls going after the President as if It meant to have him on that occa sion and much- hope and confidence Is expressed that he wllLcome. '. v : ,,-'". - Those two .Wilmington men who were played for suckers by a pair or New York swindlers deserve., little sympathy regardless of the amount of their loss.'. Men who try to get money through such methods as wire tapping generally get .what they de serve. . . , . - -" The prophet is- not without honor save in his own4pountry. Mr. Iredell Meares, Progressive candidate for Governor, received ' 52 votes in hia bome city, -Wilmington ' k A Kentucky girl was 'killed by lightning while dressing for her wed ding, which teaches that there is such a thing as a girl being . too attrac tive. V-V "V'"-'-' Z': The convention of the Medical Association at ; Jacksonville, Fla., next week will be the most im portant and valuable meeting of its kind ever held in the South. When the leading medical men of the coun try devote themselves to serious-study and discussions of malaria, the hook worm, pellagra and other ' diseases that claim their victims by the thou sands yearly the cause against these enemies must advance. The medical arid sanitary experts of the - United States government have practically banished yellow f ever " from . the face of the globe,' principally by going af ter the mosquito. The Panama Canal Zone has been made more habitable from a sanitary point of view than any city in , North Carolina, through- the government's fight on the' mosquitot bad drainage, etc. Malaria everywhere must be' fought the same way. The, fight against the hookworm: is being prosecuted with intelligence and vigor, in North Carolina and other States, and sooner or later the cause and remedy for pellagra will be discover ed. . . Children are' . sometimes forced by their 'parents into a marriage .not to W-..i. I their . liking. It is almost certain that ouuiacru i such marriages will end in friction- matches, i BRIGHT AND BREEZY . The Charlotte Y. M. C. A, building has been one of the greatest assets of Charlotte ' since it was erected. The new $60,000 Y. W. C. - A. will be an even greater asset because - Y. W. C. A. buildings are scarcer. Every Char lotte citizen : who can afford to give anywhere from $1,000 down to ,$5 or less should not fail to have a part in the enterprise. A new pie-counter will be built and a new procession of pie-hunters will begin to move ' toward , Washington within a few months. : ... v . The coal consumption of the world has 'just about doubled .. . every' ten years for the, last century THE CASTLE IN THE AIR. (Baltimore American.) In the humdrum House of Things That Are, ' We all must dwell awhile, But, if we lived there all the time - We'd soon forget to smile; k- -So, once in a 'while' we hie away To Our Castle in . the Air, : And "for a time we're happy In that place so sweet and fair. ' , --,, " For the prosaic House of " Things That i Are . . . y Is" fastened to the ground Where grindstones,-built for noses, " And all horrid things are found. ' But the Castle in the' Air is bright ! - And filled with hope and Joy, And while you live within, its gates . Grim sorrow won't annoy, t So take a little Journey lo The Castle in the Air, Run away from Things That Are -t And from all sad'nlng care; For in the Castle in the Air "'s - Is Happiness ; complete ; So when You're sad and lonely. ,. Guide thenoe youd . weary feet. Her Preference. ' .'s (Boston Transcript.) Agnes Would you marry a man to re form him? EthelNot if I could get .a . man who didn't need reforming. ' - A Tame Story, (Boston Transcript.) First Commuter I bought this book, What He Told His Wife at the news stand. Thought, it might be' spicy. . Second Commuter You're off l If it were, the title would be What He Didn't Tell His Wife. - ' 1 A Sad End. tv-'. . V (Liondon Sketch-) ' ' First Friend of "Victim (quite casually). Well, ole Bill's day's work's done. Comin out o the Crown, I s'pose, when it 'appened? ' - Second Friend of Victim (No, 'e wasn't. Don't -I keep tellur yer 'e ' was just crossin' to the Crown? - First Friend of Victim Wot! 'e 'adn't been in-theAJ. ijor. 'or Tibial SOUTH CAROLINA NEWS. Florence Wants Commission Form. (Columbia Record.) - The addoptlon of the commission form of government is being advo cated at Florence, and a mass meet ing will be held" there Thursday night at which a number of speeches will be made favoring the move. - Councilman . W: F. Stleglitz has been invited by Mayor H. Z. Gilbert to tellof the workings of commis sion government in Columbia and he has accepted. . His speech ; will; be in the nature of a business talk in which statistics covering municipal improvements and the advancement of the, city will be the principal topics for discussion. Mr. Stieglitz said it was his intention to eliminate oratory, poetry, periods and classics, giving the people of Florence a real businesslike argument. The election to decide whether commission government shall be adopted :ln Florence will be held Tuesday, November 12. Practical Demonstration. I s (Anderson Mail. ... J-. S. McPhaU ,who lives only a short distance, from the city, is one of the most successful farmers in this or any other county, as far as that : is - concerned. He raises : good crops . of cotton every year, whether it is wet. or dry, but of course, makes more some years than others. This year he "had 16 acres planted in corn, and has gathered close tot 1,000 bushels.";. He has : sold enough to pay f or7 the fertilizers and the ex pense of " raising ? the corn, and has enough left to feed .his stock. I What, one man can do, others can. This is a practical demonstration of what Can be done in this county, and any one else can do it who will go at it in the1 right way. ' ' , v Mr. Pons Confident. . : (Chester Reporter.) Francis : J. Pons, , the ' ; race meet promoter, ' has been giving out inter views in the ' North in -which : he states that, a big racing meet will be held in Charleston this Winter South Carolinians . were under the impres sion that "the recent Legislature suf ficiently amended the law to cruard against . the repetition of a per formance which other States . have long since outlawed, but Pons must feel that the' law is not going to be enforced, or he wouldn't be making such statements. " And Why Not? . (Charleston Post.) , It has been discovered that no matter- how enthusiastic women ' may be at a political meeting, they refuse to cheer. And nobody should expect them to. . " C Plan Modern Farm Life SchooL j (Newborn Journal.) s ine work of drawing the plans ior tne graven vcounty Farm Life School has been placed in the hands of one of the architects , employed oy me state ana wvi begin at once. There will be. in addition to the main buildings, a number of small cottages located on the' grounds for tne use or the students. A land-' scape gardener . will draw plana up ior tne grounds. ' , ' " ; - ... . ". . j . A Good .Corn Farmer. (Lenoir News.) Mr. Jesse F. Greer reports making u Dusneis or shelled corn on on acr of land the past season, at a net cost or szi.97 or a little less than 28 cents a bushel. - This is good mrm- ng ana otners should do likewise. How to Run a Resort. . (New Orleans Picayune.) : . Switzerland is a small European "u" y wun less man rour million muaouants. it is chiefly mountain ous in its topography, and being a sort or rugged reeion abntttn- t ritories of France, Germany, Austria cm iuuy, ii nas Deen allowed to re main independent, not being desired as a possession by any of them.' While the population is Industrious and kept busily occupied yith various luuusines, me most profitable busi nessis the keeping of the hotels. Ac- t s Pilgrims - Progress. auiusc- j Majf. amission lOc. The boy's appetite ls often the source of amazement. - n you would have such an appetite take Chamberlain's Tablets. They not only create a healthy appetite, but strengthen the stomach and enable it to do its work naturally. -. For sale by all dealers. - ATTIL!CTIVEROTJND TRIP RATES ' id ciJ'XilJiiKN RAILWAY. j.a.2u cnariotte, N. C. to Wash ington, D. C, and return, account of I lueeung or united Daughters of the Confederacy, Washington. r ?.. tsI vember 12-16. 1912 - 'PIP If At rtn ooIa i ixoyemDer tn to 14th inclusive, final iciurn umit jjecemoer 1. zi.ut unanotte. . N. C., to New I uneans.riA, and return, account r armers n ational - Congress of the unuea etates, JNovember 7-L2, 1912. Tickets on sale November 6, 6 and 7. 1 n 1 n a -i . ... .... ' xiis, unai reiurn limit to reach origi nal starting point not later than mid- uignt or JNovemDer 14th. . zi.so unanotte, N. C., to Louis ville, Ky., and return, account South ern Educational Association, Louis- vuie, ivy., xviovember 28-30, 1912. j. jcicets on sale November 2 6 and 2 7, iv xt, -nnai amit- to reach original Biarung point returning, : not- later tnan mianight of December 8, 1912. $17.15 Charlotte, N. : C, to Jack sonville, Fla., and return,, account soutnern Medical Association, Jack sonviiie, November 12-14 191 2. Tickets on sale November 9, 10 and I ii, nnal return limit" to reach origi nal starting - point, not later - than I mianight or .November 18 1912. : $8.25 Charlotte, N. ; C, to 'Atlanta. 6a., and return, ' account National ' .commercial Gas Association, Decem ber 2-6, 1912. Tickets on sale Nn. vember 30 th - and - December 1st and I ror trains scheduled to reach Atlanta. ua , Der ore. noon or December 2. fin- I al return limit to reach original I starting point not later than mid- night or December 10, 1912. T $10.95 Charlotte, N. C, to Atlanta. Ga., and return, account Southern 1 Appalachian: Good. Roads Association. November ; 2 0-21; 19 1 2; V Tickets on I sale ' November 18 and 19 and -for I trams scheduled to arrive in Atlanta. Ga., before noon of November 20, iviz, nnai return limit to reach! original starting point not later than midnight' of November 23, 1912. ' Reduced .rates in same proportion i rrom . otner points. For :- detail v in formation apply to Southern Rail way orace, Np. ii South. Tryon street. unanotte, jn u., or write : " W..F. LESTER, C. T. A., - ' Charlotte. N. C. R. H. DEBUTTS, D. P. A.,-'- - CnaxOotte, NC- Growing Gii!i!ren fteed Good Bovels , .' v ; . ' j'r ''.' ' . '' s . . Give a -Mild Laxative "Occasionally to Insure Regular Bowel 'Action.', v ab' ehild grows older it .requires more ana more personal attention from: the mother, and as c the func tions of.- the bowels .are of the utmost importanceto health great attention snouiaw Deo paid -to them." -: f . , Diet is of great importance, and the mother should .watch the effect-- of certain foods. JajZ ood4 will constipate one and not another,, and so we . have a healthy food .like ; eggs causing bil iousness to thousands, and? a whole some;, fruit: like bananas, constipating many. It is also to be ' considered that the child fa growing, and . great ohanges . .are .taking place ; In the young man or young woman, The system has yet settled , Itself to its later routine. " . - . ' . : y-r',,-, A very, valuable remedy at V this stage, 'and one which every growing boy and g-irl should be given often or occasionally according to the , indi vidual circumstances, is " Dr. .. Cald- well's Syrup Pepsin. This ls a laxa tive and tonic combined, so mild , that it ls given to little babies, and yet equally effective in the most robust constitution At the first sign ,of a tendency to constipation give a small dose of Syrup Pepsin at-night on re tiring, and prompt action will follow in the morning. It not 'only acts on the stomach and bowels but its tonic properties build ; up and strengthen the . system generally, which ls : an opinion shared by the parents of Do cia Wood, . Linden, N.' C..and Mrs. - vv ' '.'TV v & vy , I - DOCIA -WOOD Rarah Rwl K9K t i . n. Ville. Fla.. and thousand? of i TU't'lBO Will T- . " you to cathartics, salts and pili3 as the effect is only temporary. SmJ sin is only temporary. Syrun P can be conveniently obtained of. j rar "iljr nis and c j . jvui iaJnllv i AVAr . IIRAd . Hvrim . . . 1 Wftnl rl H Ira tt malm . - ....w -,v '"! personal tT of it before buying it in the re ?CI1U addn WDCfc "Ail VAKJ LU LJTm VV , B. (V well, 414 Washington St, Montlcel 111., and a "free sample bottle will mailed you. Results are always m. anteed or money will be refunded cording to r-the report "of the United States consul at' Zurich the industry is so important that the tips given in hotel employes by visitors is esti mated at $700,000 a year; ; , , V . The thousands of tourists who come annually -to Switzerland have given great Importance to Swiss hotels and have made hotel keeping one of the principal industries of the country. Durine recent years unusual efforts have been, made by the railways, re sorts and municipal and, can tonal gov ernments to attract tourists to the A.U pine regions. Formerly the jrreat ma jority . of visitors came during the summer season, but at present Winter sports have received great . Impetus, and the tourist season may now be said to extend through the whole year.;-- ,' .:.., . -. As the number of visitors has in creased and the length of the season prolonged, more and better accom modations have become necessary. In 1894 the aggregate capital Invested in Swiss hotels was about $96,500,000 while the present fisrure Is consider ably above $154,500,000. It is esti mated that the number of, names i pearing on the registers of all 8w hotels would amount to 2,000,000 a nually.-"Many names would, of conr appear several times. If the to' number of: da"-s spent by tourlstg the ' hotels were added together t result would be between 12,000 0 and 13.000,000, whereas the estima of 15 years ago was 10,500,000. ' Statistics show that the actual nm ber of tourists in Switzerland ig 351 000 to 450,000 annually, about 20 p cent of whom are Swiss. Their da hotel expenditure is, on the averai 12 francs ($2.82) each, or a lea 160,000,000 .francs ($28,950,000) year. If the amounts spent for Jew ry, souvenirs, postcards, railway fan etc., which aggregate about 50,001 000 francs ($9,650,000), are addi thereto,, the annual Swiss income fro tourists may be estimated at 200,001 000 francs ($38,600,000). - The greatest pains are . taken please visitors, a fact which short teach useful lessons to the people 1 American resorts and cities whoi chief dependence is on visitors. .m M en, Little Men; Tall Men, . Short Menf Fat : Ment Lean Men, Rich Men, Poor Men, Men of Moderate Means; . : : : : in fact men of all sizes and shapes and in -all walks of life are among ; our customers : and they will come back". When you get an Adler Rochester or a Griffon Suit or Overcoat Vou get a guarjantee of dollar for dollar value and perfect satisfaction in every tt spect Its the same with any article you buy from us, and we are prepared to clothe you from skin out 1 See our line; of half stiff bosom a Bates-Street Shirts Itfs the Shirt for winter and a new one r . ;. . - .... ....... 'v for everyone that f ades7 regardless Investigate the ': ClosedCrotch lln ion Suit Greatest improvement for comfort ever made in wearing garments. . Our Tailor Shop Is a Busy Place GIBSCrJ-WOOlLEV COMPAfi FOB MEN WHO KNOW
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 8, 1912, edition 1
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