Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / April 8, 1908, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 THE CHARLOTTE NEWS APRIL 8. 1908. Improvement Shown In Internal Commerce A slight improvement in the indus trial and coinmerc.al siiuaiion oi the country compared with January ia shown by the February report on inter nal commerce, just issued by the bu reau of .'.tatistics. of t'ne dcnartinent of O'Jo gross tons, were over 300,000 tons in excess of the corresponding 1907 figures. Figures of coal and coke traffic dur ing February over 7 leading eastern roads, including the Pennsylvania Kail road companv's lines east of Pittsburg loimm iee an. i labor. line die voi-; ami Kritl die Baltimore and Ohio and nme ol leading commercial movements ; th- New York Central railroads, S.121, m most cases tar .-mailer than a year!,-;,, tons while about 20 per cent below ago, the coal, iron and building tiades : m-., i,vi,,:,rv. 1M07. hVmes show, how- evei, a larger average daily movement lO li.'t moiltll Ot lliUitl,.,., ,1, ,,;,,. tlic i.inpoHir.n' mrmtil 0 - of the rail-! j-,-v .?is .iim.-u fit with '7r. ftfiv tons. iepori lienor results lor the month as compared with the II r month of the year. The traiiic activity ways for the first time since last Octo ber likewise shows a slight change for the bettor. Receipts of live stock at 7 interior primary markets daring Februarv, ),- t'iSO, o74 head, sliow a daily average i below thai obtaining for the preced ing month, though being in excess of the February, 1!M.i7 and i;0:. figures of :i.:'.12,r.:j:j and ;,.::!::. ns-j head. All the markets in question show larger re ceipts than a year ago. the increases being especially notable in the cases of Chicago and Si. Paul. This increase is due, however, exclusively to the lar ger number of hugs received. 2,.'!I1, (;;I7 head, compare;: with l.M (," 1 head repmted for February, I'.iUT. Receipts of a!! classes of live stock for the first two months of the. year totaled N,210.."72 head as, against 7.1 7t','i,s7 head reported for the cot -responding 1!07 pe riod. As in t lie case of the February receipts, the larger total is due exclu sively to the increased receipts of hogs, the figures for the other animals show ing smaller totals tor the two months than a. year age. Shipments of packing house products from Chicago during the month 221,, .V!2,7;!7 pounds, compared favorably with like shipments for February, I!u7 and lV.iut;. of L'tis.r.ui, :;;!(; and 211,27-1,-".12 pounds, the principal increases over last ear's, ihmies appearing un der t he head of canned meats, cured meats, hide-; and lard. Shipment?, for the first t w o months of the year, -1 ;?.", i;i,lt'.0 pounds, are slightly below the corresponding I'.m.i; figures, owing to smaller shipments of fresh and pickled beef. Shipments of canned meats for the first two months of the year, 14. r2S..2r pounds, compare favorably -with like shipments during the cor responding P.m.) 7 period., 12,271,200 pound.--, though being r.tj per cent be low the canned-meais shipments dur ing the fir.-r two months of l'HJ!.;. Grain receipts during February at 1." primary, 4S,2J:,7.M bushels, show a heavy decline belli as compared with the figuies of the j)i-ecediag month:; as well as the corropou'litig li:u7 and I'.'iOO figures of tjl.rit7.-I17 bushels and S-'S,402,2:-!N bushels, the decrease in the total being due mainly to the smaller receipts at Chicago, Kansas City. -Milwaukee, Minneapolis and St. Louis. Extivmelv ligin receipts of coi n, 17,-! irD,7M-i bushels compared with 2X.025,- I'M bushels, and lower receipts of: Avlieai, 12,4t;').r.M bushels compared "with 15, II 2,(',1 bushels for Februarv, la07, account for the smaller toial. i drain receipts at the same markets for the six muni lis, of the crop season , beginning September 1st. ! !::.:: : S.i;;.". . bushels, were our 1M million besh.el;. ; less than for the six mtnohs of tin-; preceding season and 12 p r cent be- j low the 1 Oi.t",-'. season receipts, the de crease being due mainly 10 smaller re-! ceipts of corn and when:. j Live stork receipts at four principal ! Atlanta:- seacoa.M cities, Boston, Xev." : York, Philadelphia and Kail hom e, dur ing the month or lour weeks in Fobni-j ary, aggregated )!, :.f;2 head com- : pared w ith r,.p.21i) "head receiver dm--1 nig t'ne same pi riod ia li.ffT. Of the to ial receipts during the month, at the i four cities named, 00,70) head wire cattle, 2.7,210 calves, 4;2,2.10 hogs, and Have Ice Plant In Your Home ? ibis increase is due to tne larger uai ly shiiments of bituminous coal and coke, the average daily February coke shipments being about 10 per cent heavier than during the first month of the ear. The estimated coke production at i Connellsville, including the lower dis I met. during the four weeks ending i February 20, 71 M, 232 net tons, while i 7.7 per cent below the corresponding Pi07 figures, shows, however, a slight i ly larger weekly average than the pro- iluction for the first live weeks of the year. The weekly average of idle ov- : ens lor tne nrst nine weetcs oi uie InventorS. S. Miles Mak ing Ice in Small, Un complicated Machin e s Without the Use of Ammonia- I 's Possibilities. Making ice without ammonia is a pos sibility, according to an invention of Mr. S. S. Miles, an old gentleman whose adopted home is now in Greens boro with his son. though he came to this state from Ohio over two years ago. A Tar Heel in The Far West A GREVT INDUSTRY'S BRANCH OFFICE HERE ear, 10, number of active ovens, 1J,27S. Production of anthracite and coke pig iron during the month, 1,070,721 gross tons, though almost a million tons below the February, 1007, output, was however, in excess of the Janu ary total, the average daily rate during February being 37.222 tons as compar ed with 2,3,718 tons in January. In creases as compared with January to tals are reported, among others, for Pittsburg, the Mahoning Valley, and flte Central and Northern Ohio dis tricts, also the works located in the soul hern states. Activity in the building trade during the month appears to have been live lier than during the preceding three months, The value of building permits granted in f0 leading cities in various parts of the country, $25,118,508, while 33 per ceni below that reported for February, 1007, shows a. gartifying in crease over the low totals of the pre ceding inree montns, me improvement Mr. Chas. Brewer Talks to His Paper The Fargo Forum About a Visit to His Old Home in Mecklenbu g County. A former Mooresville boy and a Da vidson College alumnus who has made a success in the far west is Mr. Chas. Brewer, who recently spent a couple of weeks visiting relatives in this sec tion. Mr. Brewer is managing editor of the Forum, published in Fargo, It is a snappy, sprightly Mr. Brewer sends The News a It is not white paint on that array of piping that projects upward from J North Dakota i . . i : i . ... 4 "i d t -it ' Reach out your hand and touch the l couJ' of the lssue or Marcn 30th. While pipes and you will find that the white! 111 an interview Mr. Brewer told one covering is ihe white frost produced!01' hls reuoi'ters that he found flowers bv the low temperatures of the ice! in I)loom m souttiern gardens ami machine. A small, simple invention it seems to be. Mr. Miles was very kind in show ing his machine to a News man. He picked up a thermometer which show continues larger than theltl1 that tn? temperature in the room was t.o degrees. I hen he plunged the thermometer into the brine surrounding his ice boxes and in a few seconds the mercury had touched zero! There is no ammonia used in making ice accord ing to Mr. Miles' method, lie said that his process, which is covered by two patents, is both uncomplicated and cue.: p. i tie maciiine wnicn tie was section of the machine shop, had a ca pacity of about 1.5U0 pounds of ice in using, which occupied only a small 24 hours. Its cost to a purchaser will be $750. He makes machines of any size and has turned them out of a size which he could sell for $200. Elec tricity in any house could run these machines. A five-ton plant he sells for 51,800. The secret seems to be in the sub stance which the inventor uses in the The National Biscuit Company Started an Agency in Charlotte More Than Two Years Ago, Mr. W. P. Johnson in Charge Its Successful Business Principles. On December 1st, 1906, the National Biscuit Company opened an agency in this city. That this agency has been both a convenience and an advantage to dealers and consumers, goes without comment. Under the able manage ment of Mr. W. P. Johson the agency lias made rapid progress and the pro ducts of the National Biscuit Company are to be found in every store, large and small, in the city. A visit to the agency, located at No. 21 East Third street would show that the policy of the National Biscuit Com pany is that of cleanliness and purity. There is the logical reason for the pop ularity of Uneeda Biscuit and other packages put up by the company. Their production has marked a place in the history of the baker's art. Put up in er 4 yards. The weather report in his pa-l thaoo, n ,h imr,.,rttiM per that day said: "Snow tonight." f the u(1 style Jf manufacture and Showing what a country of magnificent' acki have bee enUrely eliminated, distances ours is. ,;ti,; ,,.,0 ,.,.. All the elderly people out there seem to have been settlers. Two prom inent cittzens funerals are reported, and in the head lines both are said to be pioneers. A local item deals with the wolf bounty and says that wolves are get ting scarce in Cass county, though still plentiful at various places in the state. A few extracts from the interview with Mr. Beaver will be of interest lo cally: "Down in North Carolina I met R. J. Cochran, a former Fargoan. He taught school in the western part of the coun ty and was for some time a reporter on the old Republican. He is county su perintendent of schools in the famous old Mecklenburg county in North Caro lina, and is prospering. He sent his regards to many old time friends in this state. "While looking over some old fami- place of ammonia. Mr. Miles' idea isi1' PaPers at mT former home I found that hotels, cotton mills, large indus trial plants, etc.. etc.. should use this device and make their own ice for j being especially marked in the cities tneir coolers, and tuns remedy ice fam- i of the central western section of the in?s, the melting and quick disappear- country. ate of ice, and the like. He is ready I Renorts from 34 car-service associa- to yel1 1ie right for the use of his ma- (ions shows a total number of cars han-1 chine to the various states. died during the 20 days in February,' Whether the machine is to come 01 i,.i.,i,om as comparea witn 2,.-iJu,ni j "ij"" ue maiKei m competition witn ;4 sheep, the iucre ses being most ogs and sheep. notable in the ease of Receipts for the fi-.-t two months of the past vcar, !. 773,7 is h--ad, are over half a million in excess of like receipts in 1007 Xew York and Boston show ing the largos) iiiL-reuso.; over the 1007 figures. Grain r.nd Hour 1 '-feints at the four for til.- month aggre aisln is compared with ::,022.I10 .bushels re- and P.HH these, four cities were , as a. gal 11 st 2,0.r;,2'.7 I for Februarv. 1!K7. aggregated 8,(120,327 ed with s,.-,00,G74 bush- ears and 2,370,447 care handled during February, 1007 and 1000. While the February figures are below like Janu ary figures of 2,05 1.41 S cars, the aver age daily number of cars handled (lur ing the shorter month, 06,823, compar ed with the corresponding average for January, t;tl,17f cars, indicates a slight improvement in traffic operations for the countiy as a whole. Th American Railway Association, fiom reports of 102 roads, is also able ; to note a slight improvement in the i traffic situation, the number of idle : cars show ing small though continuous decreases from 3'3.02o under date of Febiuary a, to 322,." 13 en February 10, and to 21-1,002 on March 4. The im nrovenunt does net seem to have ef t'tcied equally the various classes of tratfic, as can be seen from the chang es in the number of idle coal, gondola, and hopper cars used in the transporta tion ot mine products mainly. This number reached its maximum, l.r.0,G34 cars, under date of February f, de creased to 134,217 on February 19, but increased again to 13!),233 cars under date of March 4. While the figures show a slight improvement, for the country as a whole f including Canada) the southern and western sections of the country, also the states of the Mis sissippi valley show a large car surplus for the first 'week in March than for the last week in January. The better showing for the country as a whole is due to the smaller number of idle cars reported from the eastern states, and the middle and northwestern sections. the original land grant from the Brit ish governor of the Carolinas to prop erty my parents later owned in Meck lenburg county. The papers were made out in 17C0 and are of historic interest. "North Carolina, especially Meck- lenhursr eonntv lvic the p-rtntocf- rmh- I ct J - - - ' ' n - - - . 1 ' - 11c roaa system m tne united states. Under the Alexander law short term convicts are worked on the road gangs and the country roads are being mac adamized. There are abuot 200 miles !of the finest built roads in the world the big ice-making factories or not, remains for the future to show. Mr. Miles is rertainlv inn Vine ino itnwn ot Harmon's shop and it is "real ice that!In that county aml the construction is tastpn nnni nn v0f..oon;,no. ! being carried on at the rate of about of n fAvprort mnntt, at 1. tt:i ui'a dozen miles per year. I enj ol a fevered mouth. Mr. Miles chin? off a piece for visitors to eat. The inventor spent 40 years of his life in making ice-plant machinery at Cleveland, Ohio. per year. I enjoyed an auto ride over some of these roads with 'Squire Hilton, the father of the sys tem, and he showed me the great ad vantages of the plan." Tuft 1 o Visit Cincinnati Cincinnati, O., April 8 Republi cans of Hamilton county are arrang ing for an enthusiastic reception to Secretary Taft on the occasion of his visit to his home city tomorrow. The secretary of war will be en- 10,000 MEN TO BE SET TO WORK, The General Electric Works at Schenectady to Rume in Full. It is announced by the General Electric Company at Schenectady that the company has secured a $1,000, 000 order from the Chicago Railway Company. This is the largest elec trical order placed since the business depression set in last October and is pronounced evidence ot the gen- resumption of business. While tertained by the Cincinnati Chamber', eral of Commerce in the early afternoon. In itself an order for $1,000,000 worth ami win attend a reception and ban mentioned (tin gated S,3S;,.V,s 18,002,010 and oeived during wheat receipt s :. 2,27,0,807 basix ! bushels record. Corn receipts ljusiieis conij Case cf Emma Goodman. By Associated Press. W innepeg, Manitoba, April 7. The Canadian government instructed the police to escort Emma Goodman to The the boundary. If the United States re- iuses to allow her to cross she will be sent to Russia, although she claims to be a United States citizen. St. Paul, Minn., April 7. An ex press messenger on the Soo Line, arriv ing from the international border, re ports tht the United States Immigra tion inspectors have detained Emma iriain ami Hour receipts Goldman at Noyes, on the interna cities during the first tional boundary line as she was re els, while the flour receipts, 1,100,t;.r2 barrels compared with 1,032,022 bar rels received during February, 1007. The aggregnti at these four Aid Society Officers. At a recent meeting of the Home Mission and Pastors' Aid Society of the Second Presbvt.eri.-in rhnrrh the llowing ladies were elected to office: Mrs. Jno. R. Irwin, president; Miss Sallie Phillips, first vice-president; Mrs. II. H. Strauh, second vice-president; Mrs. R. L. Erwin, secretary; Miss Essie Smith, treasurer. Guzzler--"I didn't get to bed at all last night." Wigwag "What was the trouble?" Guzzler-"Too many night caps." two months of the year, 3t;,r,03,or,0 turning to the United States from Win- bushels, were below the corresponding j mpeg 1007 and 1000 figures of 40,-14.1,007 and 55,8.12,004 bushels, the largest losses being shown by Boston and Philadel phia. The aggregate wheat exports from these points for the first two months, 8,171,171 bushels, exceed byf() lar uie receipts 101- tne same period. 5,000,613 bushels, being 47 per cent in excess of wheat exports for the first two months of 1007. Corn exports from these four cities during the same period aggregated !i,003,C30 bushels, while the exports of flour during the same period were 1,180,022 barrels, marking an increase over the 1007 fig ures of almost 3,0 per cent. Sight receipts of cotton for the first six months of the season beginning with September 1st, 0,211,810 bales, were about 17 per cent below the cor responding figures of the preceding reason, 11,033,332 bales, though about half a million bales i excess of the 1905-fi. The United States census of fice reports 11,201,103 bales of cotton ginned for the present season compar ed with 13,303,207. and 10,723,002 bales for the 100G-7 and 1003,0 seasons. The ratio between sight receipts and the quantities ginned was 81.8 per cent for the current season as against 83.1 per cent for the 1000-7 season, and 81.8 per cent for the 1003-0 season. Amer ican spinners' takings are given as 2, 5S5.S20 bales compared with 2,101,082 and 3, 130,532 bales for the correspond ing months of the 1907 and 1000 sea sons. Of the total takings, over 53 per cent are credited to southern mills. Anthracite coal shipments from east ern producing territory for the month totaled 4,503,750 gross tons compared with 4,563,720 gross tons shipped dur 4t,t Ev,i,runrv 1 '(07. Sliiuments during the fiist two months of the year, 10,122- quet given by the Phoenix Club in the evening. It is expected that during his stay here Secretary Taft will meet in con ference with several of his political managers in Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky. ii is understood to be the secre of equipment is nothing new for the General Electric, it is nevertheless most cheering under present condi tions. The General Electic also announc ed three smaller orders aggregating a quarter of a million, two from Bra zil and one from the Manchurian tary's intention to proceed from Cin-' Railway of Corea, cinnati directly to Washington. Marie Burroughs Weds New York, April 8. Many leading members of the theatrical profession were present today at the wedding of Marie Burroughs, the actress, and Francis M. Livingston, a prominent insurance man who is also known as a writer of a number of popular short stories and plays. The wedding took place at the bride's home in West Ninety-third street. Mr. and Mrs. McPherson in tend to sail Saturday for Europe to spend their honeymoon. Marie Burroughs, before her retire ment from the stage seven or eight years ago, was one of the most popu lar of American actresses. She is a native of San Francisco and at the age of 17 had acquired a reputation as a public reader. In 1884 she be came associated with the A. M. Pal mer Company at the Madison Square Theatre and scored an immediate success. Later she appeared in "Hazel Kirke," "Esmeralda," and "Mrs. Winthrop." One of her most interesting engagements was as Queen Quinevere in "Elaino," with Alexander Salvini. In 1807 she was associated with Stuart Robson, and in 1901 she starred with Maurice Barrymore. The first time a girl is disappointed in love she is very much surprised to find that her heart isn't broken. Spring C-flio mors Impure or effete matters accumulated in the blood during the winter cause in the spring such disfiguring and painful troubles as boils, pimples, and other eruptions, also weakness, loss of appetite, that tired feeling. The best medicine to take is Hood's Sarsaparilla, which thoroughly cleanses the blood, and effects permanent cures by giving healthy functional activity to the stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels and skin. JsarsatatJS are Ilonrs arsajmnlla in olioc-olntetl talilc.t form. Thoy have i.leiitu-ally the sr.uiH .-urativo proportios as tlio liquid form, liesiilos acrunu-y of (lose, coiivniiieuee, economy, no loss l,y evaporation, hreukago, or leakage. $1, of tli-ajjyixlii or promptly of us by mail. :. l. llooiioo., JiOwou, Mass. Mrs. L. Bickford. Gossville, N. H.. says: "Kvery spring I was completely prostrated, run down, from dyspepsia and that tired feel ing. But 1 Lave found Hood's Sarsaparilla helps me from the first dose, completely restores good health and strength." The foreign department of the com pany reports that the supply orders areway ahead of last year. As the result of the receipt of the four days a week during the past two months will be triven full em ployment. Before the order, now se cured, are filled, it is more than big order, the 10,000 employes of the company who have been working only probable that many orders shall be received and in consequence the works may be kept steadily run to their utmost capacity. The order received by the company includes over 300 four-motor car equipments as an addition to the street railway service. The Companhia Docas de Santos, operating the largest system of works in Brazil, has ordered about $200,000 worth of electrical equipment. Two years ago the General Electric Com pany contracted to equip a large power station for this concern.the transmission line of which is just being completed. The order em braces the complete equipment for a new substation consisting of six large 40,000 volt transformers, a switch board of 23 panels, wire conduits, etc. This concern has also ordered over six hundred arc lights, a number of lighting transformers and induction motors to be used about the large docks. The substation will also sup ply power to other enterprises about Santos. An order comes from Japan for three 1,000 kw. a. c. generators for use on the Manchurian Railway in Korea. The Sao Paulo Light and Power Company of Brazil has ordered 25 double motor car equipments and a number of small transformers. Two 50 kw. compound marine tur bine sets have been shipped to Olon gabo, P. I., to be used on the dry dock "Dewey." The foreign department reports or ders for foreign supplies to be far in excess of last year. The situation is a very good indi cation of the returning of business to the normal condition. chasers of crackers or biscuit had no choice but to buy from an open box or barrel. If they happened to be clean when they left the barrel, they were more or less broken by the time they had carried them home in a paper bag They were more or less stale, depend ing upon whether the barrel had been open for one day or many. Such is the condition that the National Biscuit Company has overcome in the produc tion of Uneeda Biscuit, and from the fact that they are made of the best material the world affords, by meth ods of baking that have been brought to an exact science, Uneeda Biscuit is today the leader of all soda crackers. For this reason they have been adopted into practically every home. Aside from Uneeda Biscuit, there are numerous other delicious products of the bakers' art, such as Graham Crack ers, Social Tea, Zu Zu and Lemon Snaps, Nabisco, Cheese Sandwich, But ter Thin, etc., all put up in the same dust proof package ana all bearing the In-er-seal Trade Mark. The Evening News of Fall River, Mass., in its issue of February 27th, last, has the following to say of this vast industry: "The National Biscuit Company, fol lowing the lead of the steel trust, has encouraged its employes to purchase its stock, and of its 7,500 stockholders 2,395 are employes, it appears by the annual report, dated January 31st. Un der a plan allowing employes to ac quire preferred shares for which they pay by installments, 7,933 shares have been secured, exclusive of a very large amount of both common and preferred stock held by the directors, officers and principal managers. Such a plan of making the men who work for a corpor- jation its part owners, vitally interest ed m its prosperity, should have bene ficial results. How much of the suc cess of the National Biscuit Company is due to this partnership it is impossi ble to tell, but it is not well to under estimate it. The company is 10 years old and in the period of its existence has increase thevperiod of its existence has in creased its annual sales from $34,000,- 000 when it was started to nearly $42, 000,000 in 1907. Here is an interest ing paragraph from the report dealing with this topic; which it gives us pleas ure to reproduce: 'Our increase in sales is not due to the fact that there is a less number of rival manufacturers of biscuit than there was in the first, year of the ex istence of this company. On the con trary, the number has increased. We have frequently stated that the policy of this company was not to buy out competition, nor to attempt, by a ruin ous war of prices, to crush the same, and to that policy we have steadfastly adhered. We offer our goods for saie at a fixed price and upon stated terms, available to all grocers.' "To succeed not by the trust method of running competitors but by making the best goods, and by extending their sales by all fair means of advertising. t T i "i , 5 c . . . . . ) ,ii .ii'! .... . i ii 1 T i . i .i 1 i .i .i that the National Biscuit Company has I T followed. Everyone is familiar with its advertising and its products. If this article is in the nature of a free ad vertisement the News is willing for once to wink at its usual rate against such a thing, and to let the company make the most it can of it." Builders Hardware -AND Allen Carpenters Tools ardware H Co, 9- & I i u f You can lay it yourself. It's not hard work and it dosn't take !oht. Affer it's done, it's done for a long, long time. Storms won't hurt Congo Roofing, wind won't rip it, heat won't soften it or make it brittle. It can't rot, rust, corrode, creep or leak. It is the "Never' Leak Roofing." Write for sample. That will tell the story better than words. B. F. WITHERS, Distributor, Charlotte, N. C. LOOK m any home lighted with electricity and see how comfortable and bright it's made by the mellow light. There's no heat, no odor, no noise no anything that's disagreeable, but evarythiug that appeals to your sense of what'3 fitting and proper. As to the cash end of It we ask only that you ask us. R. G. Auten Co 'Phone 1307 or 1308. E. B. RESPESS Civil Engineer. Railroad Location, Land Surveying, Plans and Specifications for Sewerage and Municipal Work, Construction, Superintended. Oce: Carson Building Cnarlotte. 'Phone 1348 and 1409. R. N. Hunter. 8. L. Vaughan. Hunter & Vaughan DESIGNERS AND BUILDERS Charlotte, N. C. 'Phone 84tt 312 East Fifth St J. M. MclVlichael ARCHITECT Rooms 505-50G Trust Building. CHARLOTTE, N. C. RELIEVES WHEN OTHERS FAIL i i j Unwritten interna.tinn.nl law mav vet establish the principle that a diplomat j book: that tells all Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it. Prevalency of Kidney Disease. Most people do not realize the alarm ing increase and remarkable prevalency ot kidney disease. While kidney dis orders are the most common diseases that pre vail, they are almost the last recognized by patient and phy sicians, who eon tent themselves taith doctoring Vie "ffecls, while the orig inal disease undermines the system. "What To Do. There is comfort in the knowledge sc often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to bold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant ne cessity of being compelled to go often during the day, and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its yonderful cures of the most dis tressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by drug gists in fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle and a is not Xo be judged by his count. Washington Star. bank ac- Success veils the evil deeds of men. -Demosthenes. Some men are born great and some go into the grate business. about it, both sent free by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing- hamton, N. Y. When Home of Swamp-Koot. writing mention this paper and don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y. i t a Before U Buy or Rent FOR SALE 2 lots on N. Davidson St. 1 house and lot on N. Tryon St. 1 house and lot on N. Graham. m & FOR RENT. Three 7-room houses on s Church St., all provements modern t ? 9 im- 1 t t 9 202 S. Tryon St- Phone 604.' If you have property to sell, list B in this office- If your have houses or stores t& rent, let me do your collecting and save trouble and worry. The place to Insure your properU Is in this agency. R. L COCHRANE INSURANCE AND REAL AGENT. ESTATfi cNELIS Hackney Bros, Company il,? Pla,ce to get Pro"iPt service for ffeattag Hn f FlumbInS and We carry a full line of Supplies. 'Phone 312. 6 West Fifth Street. 4 4!4H!444 4- 4- One of Charlotte's finest "And you say the folding bed shut up on you last night?" asked the boarding-house lady. "Sure I did," replied the new boarder. "You must have experienced great discomfort?" "Not at all. ma'ra. You see. I used to be a policeman, and I'm used to sleeping standing up!" ONE OF CHARLOTTE'S FINEST insurance offices Headquarters." Is at "Insurance MORE WATER "And the name is to be" asked the suave minister as he approached the font with the precious armful of fat and flounces. "Augustus Phillip Ferdinand Cod rmgton Chesterfield Livingston Snooks." t "Dear me." Turning to the sexton: A little more water. Mr. Hawkins, if you please." MORE WATER is needed In Dilworth and then the citizens will get better rates which will be good news at "Insurance Headquarters." 0. N. 0 Butt 8, CO (INCORPORATED.) Insurance Headquarters. Allan's Magnetic Cough Syrup Cures Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Made By WOODALL & SHEPPARD 'Phone 69.
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 8, 1908, edition 1
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