Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / April 28, 1908, edition 1 / Page 9
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
ic Ceoirit k W It's the Little Things WANUU A' ANTED A number of young men i , :anl -rs; line location; in four blocks , i square; hot and cold water; good i com and board or table board aii ,110. Address II. A., care News, or plume 1420. 28-lt WANTED Board and room. State 1 1-mhs and location. X. Y. Z.. care Nonv.s. 27-3t WANTED A lady stengrapher; al- o to assist in keeping books. "Star," i::h' News. 2S-3t CIGAR SALESMAN wanted. Expe rience unnecessary. $100 per month :.!i expenses. Peerless Cigar Co., To ll .in, Ohio. 25-5t WANTED For U. S. Army: able lnnlied, unmarried men, between ages of IS and 35. citizens of the United States, of good character and tem-jiHi-ate habits, who can speak, read and viite English. Men wanted now for torvice iu Cuba and the Philippines. For information apply to Recruiting OMicer, 15 West Trade St.. Char lone, X. C; 20 South Main St., Ashe vlile, N. C; Bank Building, Hickory, X. C: 417 Liberty St.. Winston-Sa-lor.i. X. C; 120 North Main St., Salis bury. X. C; Kendall Building, Colum bia. S. C; Haynesworth and Conyers Hdlding, Greenville, S. C; or Glenn Huilding Spartanburg S. C. 4-2-eod 3mo. WANT TO DO your screen repair ins. Workmanship guaranteed. Phone II U9. A. E. Cohen. 2-eod-tf WANTED Your orders for electric fans and to bid on jour construction work. Ideal Electric Co. 17-tf WANTED Your machinery repairs. Prompt service, first class work and material guaranteed. W. G. Jarrell Mob. Co. FOR SALt OK RhNI. FOR RENT Half of furnished of fice half block of square. "Quid Nunc" care Xeks. 28-lt FOR SALE Splendid lot Wilmoore, West Park avenue. Bargain. Terms to s ait purchaser. Large discount for cash. Address No. 10, care News. 2!-r.t-eod. FOR SALE Nice family horse, 8 years old, gentle and good driver. It. F. Smith, rear of Elizabeth College. 27-lt WELL-FURNISHED rooms to let to gentlemen. 11 W. Vance. 28-lt FOR SALE OR RENT Eight room uuilcin dwelling, corner 5th and Mc Dowell, c. M. Carson. ,27-3t TOMATO PLANTS for sale. Hender ?r,n's Champion Ponderosa. 800 North College St. 'Phone C29. 28-lt FOR RENT New house just com pleted. CIO No. Graham St. Gas and electric lights, gas range and gas wa ter heater, 7 rooms. 'Phone 69. J. W, Shenpard. 2-1-tf FOR RENT Seven-room house, No. 210 E. 5th St. Jasper Miller & Son, 204 S. College St. 21-3t-eod FOR RENT 6-room house, 315 W. lUi St., furnished or unfurnished, with modern improvements. 28-2t A FEW OFFICES to rent. In new, Law Euilding. See L. W. Humphrey, eecretary. 17-tf FOR SALE First-class repair work at reasonable prices. W. G. Jarrell Mch Co. FOR SALE CHEAP Good second hand Remington typewriter. Can be seen at News office. 2-tf MISCELLANEOUS CAN SELL hotels and restaurants wood by car delivered cheap. 'Phone 1UG0. 68-6t FOR PROFITABLE Investment, pay ins; 15 per cent, address "C," care News, for personal interview. 27-tf THREE nicely furnished rooms for light housekeeping. 11 W. Vance. 28-lt WE SIGN everything except Notes Timmons & Butt. Opp. Gem Hotel. 'PHONE 10G0 for dry stove wood. Dilworth Wood Co. 28-6t DR. F. O. HAWLEY- Office, Room No.5 City Hall; residence 9 N. Long St Calls answered In city and surround ing country. Office 'Phone 737.; resi dence 'Phone 743. 24-tf MEN Our illustrated catalogue ex plains how we teach barber trade in lew weeks, mailed free. Moler Barber College, Atlanta, Ga. 25-Gt THE Brown Hill Mining Co. will fell the whole mining outfit, or any K'lt of it, at a great sacrifice. Address M. Virnoche, R. F. D. No. 2G, Mat thews, N. C. 28-lt UNIQUE ENTERTAINMENT at First Baptist Sunday school room Tuesday night 8:30. Very funny. 25-lt ENJOY a hearty laugh at the B. B. entertainment Tuesday night at 8:30. 27- lt ROOMS and board for men, close in. 9 North Caldwell. 'Phone 1961. 28- 2t QUEEN CITY Laundry, 243 West Trade. Shirts 10c; collars 2c; Cuffs 4 n. 3-31-tf B- B. B. ENTERTAINMENT, Tues day night. Come and laugh. 27-2t IS that Count-Try One DIIQI l rx . . oMi.ti will sell at anr- artheaTnnmy 21908 tthtawik) w p i homasville Female College a heate?sOUSbeSd an,kUcben nite, neaters, books, school furniture a late wm h' GtC- J18 of cash. 28-lt rEE10c Package Conkey's Lice Powder and 25c Poultry Book" Bring S. Davis, Charlotte. 4-28-36t WHITE VESTS are comfortable when we starch them just enough to be not too stiff. 'Phone 800. Will send at once. Sanitary Laundry. UNIQUE ENTERTAINMENT at First Baptist Sunday school room Tuesday night at 8:30. Very funny NOW is the time to clean old Elec tric Fans and buy new ones. See Harkey & Page, 243 West Trade. 'Phone 921. 30-tf COME to the B. B. B. entertainment Tuesday night at, 8: 30 prepared to laugh. t 27-lt THE B. B. B. Entertainment at the First Baptist church Tuesday night at 8:30 will drive away your blues. 27-2t PARTICULAR people always 'phone 800 because they know our collars are the best. Sanitary Laundry. , FASHIONABLE Dressmaking N. Graham St., on car line. 22-Ct SCREEN DOORS and Windows We will go to your house, take accu rate measurements and make and place screens for your door and win dows that will fit. We make them in our own shops and guarantee fit and quality." Carolina Manufacturing Co. Phone 31. 20-tt PANAMA HATS cleaned and shaped into the latest style. M. Kirshbaum, the Hatter. Established 1898, Char lotte, N. C. 22-tf ELECTRICAL If you know an elec trical contractor or dealer we will pay you $2.00 to secure his subscription for the Electrical Record. Our present solicitors are making from five dol lars a day up. Electrical Record, 123 Liberty St.. New York. 27-3t FUNERAL OF MR. NEISLER. Remains Taken to Richmond, Va., for Burial. The body of Engineer Sameul Neis ler, who was killed early Saturday morning when his train crashed through a trestle near Atlanta, Ga., was taken to Richmond, Va., and bur ied there yesterday afternoon. Soon after the accident Mr. Neisler was taken to a hospietal in Atlanta, Ga., but died before his wife, who was at Abbeville, S. C, could reach him. His brother-in-law. Mr. James Puller, of Atlanta, was with him. Mr. Neisler was thirty-four years old He had been married only a little more than four months. His wife, who is an accomplished elocutionist, is well known in Richmand. He is sur vived also by his father, Mr. S. J. Neisler, of Charlotte; a brother, Mr. Thomas Neisler, of Manchester, Va and three sisters Mrs. E. T. Dyer, of Charlotte; Mrs. La Moyne, of New York, and Mrs. Andrew Shakespeare, of Philadelphia, Pa. He had been for many years in the employ of the Seaboard, and had won the esteem and confidence of the offi-, cials and his fellow workmen. His home was at Abbeville, S. C, where he was loved and honored by a large circle of friends. He was a member of the Brotherhaad of Locomotive En gineers and a member of other orders. Nell "Dolly Grotrox always was an unusual girl. You know she married a foreign count." Belle "Nothing un usual about that." Nell "I know; but the wedding occurred nearly a year ago, and they are still married." Phil adelphia" Record. KEEPING fcPEN HOUSE Everybody is welcome when we feel good; and we feel that way only when our digestive organs are working prop erly. Dr. King's New Life Pills regu late the action of stomach, liver and bowels so perfectly one can't help feel ing good when he uses these pills. 25c at Woodall & Sheppard's drug store. NORTH CAROLINA WILL HAVE A COMPULSORY SCHOOL LAW. . SOME OTHER STATES ALREADY HAVE. FOR WHAT? v To give the coming generation Educa tion and Knowledge. OF WHAT? Of how the past generation was far behind the times and never had your chance of knowing. WHAT', that the next generation will be su perior to the present. BECAUSE Thev will know this is not the proper wafto say their & Z Y X W V U TSRRQPONMLl K JIHLr F E D C B A. And have knowledge enough when feeling unwell to spell MRSI JOE PERSON'S REMEDY and SnS enough to know it is saving LIVES MONEY and WORRY; CHIL DREN spell it for your parents MRS. JOE PERSON'S REMEDY. For sale by all druggists. : 2511 THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, APRIL 28, i ASK FOR GRADING OF N. ALEXANDER ST. The Board of Public Service Leaves This Matter to Street Committee Aldermen Will Be Asked for An Ap propriation of $1,304.10 for Extend ing Sewerage in Piedmont. The question of grading Alexander street from East avenue to Fifth was one of the most lengthy matters tak en up yesterday afternoon by the public Service Board, and while every member was of the opinion that this should be done, the matter was referred to the chairman of the street committee. Dr. Whisnant and other property owners on this street petitioned the board to have this work done as they wanted to build some houses on it. These gentlemen offered to donate as much as two and a half feet of their property. The street is now only twenty-two feet wide. An esti mate of the engineer placed the grading and macadamizing this street by using new macadam ' at about ?900. By using the old macadam and curbing this cost can be reduced about 25 per cent. " As stated, the matter was left with the street committee for them to see if they would have enough of the old macadam which is being taken up to do this work, as it was not deemed wise to put the city to any too much cost. The chairman of the sewer com mittee, Mr. John R. Pharr, reported that the contract for laying a line of sewer on Poplar street through 'the Woodlawn property had been let to Mr. W. S. Stancill, whose bid was $867.20, being the lowest of four bids. Mr. Pharr stated that he thought the committee did well to get a bid as low as this, and the con tract was approved by the full board. The matter of lowering the sewer on Second street so as to make it possible to connect the basement of the new Y. M. C. A. building, came up. It was estimated by the engineer that this would cost R267.72. It was recommended to the Board of Alder men that this work be done. Mr. Pharr also reported on the cost of laying the proposed sewer line in Piedmont, which the people in that section had asked for. He sta ted that this would be $1,304.10. At tention again was called to the justice of this work, as the Suburban Realty Company has already put down about double the amount of sewerage asked for -in this case, and has given it to the city. Mr. McDonald said that this property was within the city limits, and that this work should be done. On motion the Board of Al dermen was asked to have the work done. A letter was read from the railway authorities in regard to complaints as to the bad condition of the cross ing on Poplar street and also as to placing a gate or watchman at the Sixth street crossing. After some dis cussion, it was ascertained that there were existing contracts between the railroads and the city as to boarding the first crossing and guarding the other, and the whole matter was left with the chairman of the street committee, and he is to notify the railroads that they must carry out their part of the contract. RECITAL AT ELIZABETH. Miss Blanche Roberts and .Berte Hutchins Heard .By Appreciative Audience The recital given last night at Eliz abeth College by Misses Blanche Rob erts and Berte Hutchins afforded much genuine pleasure to a most high ly appreciative cultured audience. The programme, though essentially heavy was well arranged and most interesting. The first number, a sona to in a minor, one of the rarer works of Schubert, was played by Miss Rob erts who displayed throughout the pro gramme much fine musical feeling, and excellent taste in phrasing the other numbers, a concert, C. minor, by Bee thoven; Romance, by Schumann; "Hark! Hark! the Lark!" Schubert Liszt; and "A la bien aimee," by Schutt, gave evidence of a versatile talent and power interpretation quite beyond her years. Particularly beau tiful and clear was her tone work in the "Romance" and "Hark! Hark! the Lark!" Miss Hutchin's numbers were the famous Prelude, by Rachmannoff ; Minetto Scherzando, - by Stavenhagen; the Moonlight Sonata, by Beethoven, and a concerto C major, by the same composer. These great compositions were most masterfully rendered and in point of volume and roundness of tone and brilliancy of touch, Miss Hutchins displayed unusual ability. The most notable work was done in the prelude and the Beethoven sonata the chords being unusually full of firmness and clearness in both com positions. s A pleasing break in the program was made by the loudly applauded readings of Miss Austin, one of the graduate students of the school of expression. The graduates, Miss Roberts and Miss Hutchins, in their almost flaw less work, reflected genuinely the spirit of the excellent instruction received at the college. J. S. Bache & Co.'s Daily Letter. New York, April 28. Cotton again sold into new low records today and even after notices were out of the way showed no rallying power. The ses sion was very dull after the first hour with the trade local. Cables were weak and the weather map was clear from Texas to the Atlantics. Ellison reported continental mill stocks as 303,000 larger than last year, and said prosppects were unfavarable owing to over-production of goods. The Journal of Commerce said Ar kansas has had too much rain, but the general outlook was flattering and la bor is plentiful. A Chemnitz cable said there would be no short time and our advices from Greenville, S. C, are that there will be no shut down of mills in the Pied mont section. Favorable wather may send cotton still lower, but we are getting near a point where it should be bought on a scale down. J. S. BACHE & CO. It is a very easy matter to add to a woman's happiness. It doesn't cost anything to tell her she is pretty. Rubbing with liniments, blistering the affected parts, the application o, plasters, and other means of external treatment, are usually helpful ii relieving the pains and aches of Rheumatism, but such remedies do no reach the CAUSE of the disease, and are therefore in no sense curative Rheumatism is due to an excess of uric acid in the blood, brought about b indigestion, poor bowel action, weak kidneys, and a general sluggish conditio! of th system. The circulation deposits this irritating poison in the diff ereu muscles, nerves, tissues and joints of the body, and soon the painful symptom. of Rheumatism are produced. The pains at first may be wandering and slight but as the blood becomes more fully saturated with the uric acid poisontht disease grows worse and after awhile gets to be chronic. The slight, wander ing pains now become sharp and cutting at the least exposure to danipnes or night air, or any constitutional irregularity, the bones ache, the muscles are not as free in action as before, and where the acid poison is allowed tt remain in the blood the joints often become so clogged with corrosive sub stances that they are left permanently stiff and useless. Rheumatism can never be rubbed away, nor can it be conquered and driven from the system rUntLY YE.Uk. 1 ABLE and flesh, and the sufferer obtains relief that , , t , is permanent because the real cause of the disease has been removed. Special book on Rheumatism and any medical Advice desired free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA, Tickets For Thursday's j Game on Sale at Central Tickets for Thursday's game, the first of the season Have been placed nn cnlA nt thf Central hotel This was dene in order to avoid confusion on the I ffvmiTirts nnH in order that thnso wW wish to buv their tickets before hand may have that opportunity. There are only 150 reserved seats and these will be disposed j)t to first comers. The opening game Thursday will be attended, no doubt, by a record break ing crowd. Many of the merchants have agreed to close up their places of business on that afternoon between 3 and C o'clock in order that they and their clerks may see the first game of the season thereby starting enthusi asm with the first ball. DEBATE AT ELIZABETH. Several Other Important Events Sched uled to Occur Next Month. A debate between the Euchrestian finfl tho 'TJintelinn liternrv enpiotiea nf Elizabeth college, will be held in theja college auditorium cn Tuesday even ing, May the fifth. The program is as follows: Invocation, Piano solo; by Miss Watson. Address of welcome, by Miss Shaw. Query, "Resolved that disputes among nations could; be settled by ar bitration rather than by war.'" Misses Young and Austin, of the Eu chrestian, will defend the affirmative side and Misses Harper and Hedrick, of the Diatelian, the negative. During a piano solo by Miss Bryan, the judges, Drs. E. E. Bomar and J. P. Matheson and Rev. Harris Mallinc krodt, will make their decision. Excitement is, running high over the special collegiate basket ball tourna ment which will be; played May 8, 9 and 1 1th. The teams are about equal ly matched and the games will no doubt prove very interesting. The line up is as follows: Special, Lill Satterwait, manager ; Clara Carpenter, goal; Dora Howe, for ward; Annie , center; Mary Taylor Sasser, guard; Bertho Peck,, guara. uoiiegiates iviamie lviccauu, . , uard. Collegiates Mamie McCann, manager; n,ana narper, sum: "mime McCann, forward; Zula Hedrick, cap tain and center; Bert Dotger, guard, and Hazel Albright, guard. w With as much interest are all look ing forward to field day on Saturday before commencement. May lGth. The features of the day will be drill??, rim ing, jumping, relay races, tug of war, etc., besides tennis and basket ball in the afternoon. BOYS IN TROUBLE AGAIN. Cash Robinson and Frank Hargett Ar rested in Covington, Ky. Cash Robinson and Frank Hargett, the two young white hoys who were tried at the last term of court for the larceny of some money from Mr. Jackins, of the Southern Express Company, and who were allowed to go on their good behavior, are in trouble again. This time it is the far away city of Covington, Ky., where they have been arrested for vagrancy. The bovs left, here immediately after court. The news of their arrest was received today by the police depart ment. - "TT IS CHILDISjS- "Kidney Trouble" is a term seldom used in Medical Works. The techni cal term they use is from the Greek and means "inflammation of the kid neys," which is the real difficulty with kidney troubled people. It is childish to attempt to treat inflamed kidneys with kidney irritants. And yet thousands do it every daf, and kidney disease that does not get well early takes a chronic form that was incurable, the deaths now reach ing 170 per day. The ordinary diuretics are kidney ir ritants and drive the kidneys for a short time. This does not allay in flammation in them-r-rather the re verse. Can you see why the old kid ney medicines were not only futile but at times harmful and why physicians have abandoned them? . It was the life work of the late John J. Fulton to reverse the old method of irritation and replace it with a new action upon the kidneys that absorbs and allays kidney inflammation, and for the first time in the world kidney disease, both in the acute and chronic stages, is now yielding to treatment. An the means of doing it was an actual discovery, for up to the appear ance of Fulton's Renal Compound, physicians and pharmacists knew noth ing that would reduce inflammation in the kidney tissues. ' Literature mailed free. - : JOHN J. FULTON CO., Oakland, Cal. Woodall & Sheppard are our sole local agents. Ask for Bi-Monthly Bul letin of late recoveries. 908 yr CAM HOT BE . MlRUBBEB awai until the acid-laden blood has been cleansed and purified. No other medicine does this sc effectually as S. S. S. It dissolves and re moves the impurities and sends a stream of rich, strong blood to the affected parts, which To-day 's Markets Hay ward & Clark's Daily Cotton Letter. New Orleans. La., April 28. In the Present battered and demoralized state of the market the collapse in Liverpool where futures are five lower against two to three up as due and spot prices ten lower, sales small could not but assert its full force here. The sharp break in New York may or relatively small tenders also favored bears and opening trades in our market this morning were at a decline of about 15 points. Liver pool cabled "short time extending, be coming important." There was some good buying here on early, depression, probably stimu lated and based on former experience that on tender day the technical po sition gets clearer that interests and control pass into different hands which frequently means new life and change in tendency. Whether things will take such a course this time remains to be seen. So far all old time standards, facts reason and logic have been drowned by the pessimistic current of senti ment and events. We see today the strange spectacle of old crop contracts linked with an 11 1-2 crop selling on the basis 01 seven and a half cents. Cotton in the interior, speculation willingly subscribing to eight and quarter cents for next season against all possible adversities to the crop and "with all such attractions, no sign of support by either trade or capi tal. Such a demoralized and disorganiz ed state of affairs has not been seen in many years. Where to place the blame for it vith infallable justice is beyond any one mind, but we con sider how during the past six months decline in prosperity and shrinkage in enterprise have been going link by link until they now embrace the entire active business world, then the drastic reform measures and snirit divided by our central ad ministration on short notice, without 1 . .. j:n(!tmont mrl nllnwins- time for adjustment anu . . financial panic, had certainly much to with it. HAYWARD & CLARK. New York Cotton. High. Low. Close. April 28. May 8.1C 8.03 8.0810 Ti,, S 8.20 8.2021 Aucr 8.27 8.18 8.1820 Dec 8.31 8.20 8.2021 Spots quiet, 10c, 10 points off. Clos ed barely steady. Liverpool Cotton. Liverpool, April 28 Receipts 9,000, American 11,000; sales 6,000; specula tion and export 500; middling 5.17; middling yesterday 5.27. Close. Jan-Feb 4-47 Apr 4.2 Apr-May 4-64 May-June 4-c June-July 4-C4 July-Aug 4-?4 Aug-Sept Yft Kent-Oct 4-4 Oct-Nov 4-52 Nov-Dec 44 Dec-Jan 447 Chicago Grain and Produce. High. Low. Close. WHEAT May 9SV2 96 97 July 87 86 87 Sept ..'8512 83 83 CORN May 67 66 66 July 63' 62 62 Sept 61 61 61 OATS May 53 53 53 July 45 45 45 Sept 37 36'' 36 PORK May 13.00 12.95 12.95 July 13.32 13.25 13.27 LARD May 8.10 S.07 8.10 We Will Buy. 5 Ozark Cotton Mill stock. 5 Modena Cotton Mill stock. 5 Clara Cotton Mill stock. 18 Imperial Mill stock. 20 American Trust Co. 10 Henrietta Mill stock. 10 Commercial Bank stock. We Will Sell 5 Little-Long Co., 11S.50 10 Fuller Gin Co.. 81.00 40 German American. Pref'd. 98.00 50 Pacolet Pref'd. 100.00 100 Highland Park, Pref'd. 100.00 15 Gaston Mfg. Co., stock, 101.00 If you want to buy or sell securi ties list 3rour wants with us. SOUTHERN SECURITIES & TRUST , COMPANY. 15 So. College St., Charlotte, N. C. STOCKS ACMSOfl Atchison Pfd Baltimore & Ohio 84 Canadian Pacific lots-? ( Chesapea & Ohio Chicago fe Alton Chicago b Great Western. W : Erie.. Erie Pfd 34 nvci lKiaua , Illinois Central Louisville & Nashville Manhattan Mexican Central Missouri Pacillc Missouri Kansas AT New York Central Norfolk & Wet-tern, Ontario & Western it; io4y2 : 15 ' . 4ti.. . " .101 Pennsylvania 121 1 Reading iuyi Reading Pfd St. Paul 1277. Southern Pacific 7fc ! M southern Railway loVi Southern Railway Perferred i. Texas Pacific isw Union Pacific i;;7 Wabash n Wabash P'fd 15 amalgamated Cooper (i0J-i Brooklin Rapid Transit . . Colorado Fuei A Iron 25'-i Con Gas :. Peoples Gas 92 Sugar l-T'-i Bloss Iron Bt eel Tenessee Coal A Iron United States Leathft United Htate Steel mxA CJnited Htates Steel Prelerred iui Western Union . fyi Virginia Carolina Chemical Va. Carolina Che mica PJ1 Northern Pacific 132"-s Smelters 71 Anaconda Copper .'. Charlotte Cotton Market.. (Corrected by Sanders, Orr & Co.) Good middling 10 Strict middling 9 Middling 3 Tinges and stains 6 tc Sc Charlotte Produce Market. (Corrected by R. II. Field & Co.) Chickens spring 20 25 Turkeys per lb 13 (jlli Hens per head 40 (Lt!45 Ducks 25 Butter 12(Tf)15 Eggs 14 15 TRUSTEE'S SALE OF LAND. By virtue of a power of sale con tained in a certain Deed of Trust ex ecuted to me, dated October 16,. 1903, and recorded in Book 184, page 24 of the Registry for Mecklenburb county, default having been made in payment of the debt secured by said Deed of Trust, and in complying with the terms thereof, I will sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder -for cash at the County Court House door for Mecklenburg County, at 12 o'clock, M., on Friday, the 29th day of May, 1908, all that certain piece, parcel and tract of land lying in the county and State aforesaid, and bounded as follows, to wit: Known as "Lot Number 19 and that half of Lot Number 18, which adjoins said Lot Number 19, on the Southeast in Sonare Number 24 in "Dilworth" near the City of Charlotte as will ap pear by reference to the Map of said "Dilworth," published by the Charlotte Consolidated Construction Company, the said lot fronting seventy-five (75) feet on the street known as "Boule vard" in "Dilworth" and running back with that width one hundred and fifty (150) feet, and beginning at the point where the dividing line between Lots 20 and 19 intersects with, the Boule vard, thence Northeast parallel with Cleveland Avenue 150 feet; thence Southeast 75 feet; thence Southwest 150 feet to the Boulevard; thence Northwest 75 feet with the Boulevard to the Beginning, being the same lot of land conveyed to W. G. Cruchfield by said Construction Company, by deed dated October 13, 1903 and duly recorded, reserving, however, an alley way reserved in said deed, ten (10) feet in width and extending across the rear of the above described lot, and selling, together with the lot above described, the right to use in common with other lot owners that certain al leyway extending as aforesaid, across the rear end of the lot hereby convey ed and other lots in said Square, and also any other alleyway set apart for the use cf lot owners in said Square. This 2Sth day of April, 190S. A. Q. BRENIZER, 4-2S-oaw-tds. Trustee. Increase Your Income by buying good dividend paying stocks, for cash on our easy monthly payment plan, at present low levels to net yov from 5 to 14 per annum Dividends belong to purchaser from first payment. Send for particulars. James McCrea & Bro. 52 N. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa. $10.00 Deposit, Balance Monthly. THE GAS CO FOR 35 DESIRABLE RESIDENCE LOTS On West Avenue, Fifth and Sixth Sts. H.M. IRWIN No. 908 W. 5th St Phone 1483 9 Dr. John R. Irwin Office: 2-f South Tryon St. Woodali & Sheppard's 'Phone: Office 69. Rsedtcence 125. For the HIP, VEST, OR COAT POCKET the J-P LOOSE LEAF MEMO. BOOK is the Cleverest, Neatest, Sim plest and Most Practical. It is Light, Strong, Durable and easy to open. You couldn't put it out of order if you tried. We have these books In all sizes. Pound & Moore Go. Commercial Stationers and - Office Outfitters. 229 So. Tryon St. 'Phone No. 40. 539 The Call OF THE South FIRST Read the wonderful book by that title. SECOND Tell your friends to read it. THIRD SUPPLY (in less than a week) re ceived yesterday. Get it now. Price $1.50. Stone & Barnnger Go. Booksellers and Stationers. We make a specialty of filling pre scriptions, repairing and adjusting frames. TORIS LENSES recommended, once tried always used. Ask for one of our eye glass clean ers. E.D.Pueti&Co. 39 N. Tryon St. TO INVESTIGATE, REFRIGERATORS See Our "STONE-WHITE" "The Chest With the Chill In It." COLDEST AND CLEANEST. J.N.McCausland&Co ove Dealers Roofing Contractors. 221 S. Tryon. too Early SALE 35
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 28, 1908, edition 1
9
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75