Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Feb. 13, 1909, edition 1 / Page 13
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THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, FEBRUARY 13, 1909 3 Telephones Become Wireless On Border Line vet nt episode of the saving , on the s-team.-Oiip ltepub-;.-!. tor the general reader, a i i.velopnu nt in the devices i. r salVu,iiiU-dinp; those who i th ltiuh tV.at was not id. and it will iindouhtdly iiMieKeii the investigation of . inr iiiHii'iice. the layman ; !! tin' wireless telephone ive performed the same w hi eh served, in the case ;iiii to brin.t; all the able-I'-Ht N within a radius of 2l( i;T iri1; to iH aid. Some ex i;:r!ined to believe that the i. ; phone in its present state , p'in'iit eould have done the m;e ouiers ko so lar as ; inii.lit have done it better, vi i. ntilie end of the problem , l,.i been to have the dec r n( roiis enough to carry strong as to be impossible -U".!l dis- tre microphone, which ,.iit el the telephone used to i :.U"iii iri the current so as ;!ncta:i!ions that reproduce oice. The difficulty is, .. at the sending and not at end. The dots and dash wi:eless telegraph are made n and shutting off the . !,K i,t. but in the telephone i. e. iired Is to let the current :. t'lleet It throimh the use of :.p!:nlu , .:-ci. t in eded in wireless work ti 111- t i ttWld l-f li rv. ,n 4- I. ii iiu i n ri in iiri i 1 1 :i ri wives are used and would microphone of the ordinary i: , t;i;M!v. Once the current however, the resulting va . i; !o reproduced at the re 1 with comparatively little :' th.- Kuropoan experimenters o have M)t results with the I. , . , . Vi rt i .i I lint it tr 1 .-...11 1 : tliroih a distance of 200 in tli is country the claim ii I ' -1 r" i i 1 V tiin"f llirjn 1 ",ll mihu . ' . - v ....... . 1111117,1, , " lletuiblic was not over 40 : nom the nearest shore sta ': wireless service, either of '!:'hiiij ll!limd tY t It v w.i 'iM have made it service jet Has Wireless 'Phone?. .11 in ine vessels 01 ine pacmc v. (.11 the way home from its ?!i. world, are equipped with - t. b' phones. These, however, stod for a distance r." about aud so far as their opera- ! .( n reported have nut prov- miirir that the wireless tele- ;:s now developed, would have ', '!;!ough the distance prevail '! case of the Republic, there '-. on : j to wneiner u won ri :v"l any better. It eliminates, tin necessity of an expert !'. Ati.xme can use a wireless r 'I who Is equal to the idio- io'iid have been no need for oi!u ( .f .Jack Minns aud his de- ill ii' tfiwl rPllrt filnfiln rrti.' v.. A . 1 - I.Ull.llllt 1 VU! i.ii'l.-himen could have taken uion te brain, such a. sufferer was accustomed immense doses. demy at o2 and teen years of his r, 'In- talking. Hut there would ' n ,1'IM US JHMl ll UUUIUS III 'phone at other stations as ..til. .1. A- , . . i won i ue leiejirapn. cen- . .T . U .. I t k .1 in vm mi uie luiuer-iii on ury !M1 W r Iml in tho n iri bec '!m to Is no ri-otection. t :is th.. wireless telegraph has -i ' in ie Tt nn unit :itinni landsman dos not take in- iin ii i ill. i.'UVIitl JUIUIIU '"miiiv;ttivcly little. All that tho .1 . 1 I. . 1 i ' woiild-iie rescuer its location i anu lonpiuuie. i nis win ii - ii-ition to b? fixed within ''It ordinary weather condi 1 bf- ship misht be sighted. F.ut . l III! UltllllJI V W tl 1 11J1 ns il' not. always . nor indeed n. prevail. Sea fos. that, mys- i - 'ii. iii. iiu;u llifliiuulll.lll. v"t' 'Ii" Londoner, has adequate ni'iy arise to baffle the - : 'id have the strugujlers prop- i K'liK-ti.ins that is worse than :-' powerful H the pall of sl iiUh it sometimes casts that I ' r.ntl ..r.1 1...1T.. - . , 1. 1 r ...in n:il iM-us ill iiuueciiu, :' 'i' ii i' case the distajice of a 1 1 a thousand miles would be. i M 1 W 1 1 . i il'frri r . 1 Vi 1 1 Ktvi n nini I ''- ' HI k t I L III'J "!1 has bf en invented and is t by man lij;ht ships to give of shoals. It consists, at the in, of a bell, closed to keep ater, and with .'i clapper op ' eonipressed air or electricity. i- submei-Rfd benenth the sur a distance of ten feet or At th. receiving end. generally i- a diaiihragm. also submerg- i ci ive the wave sounds and 'hi-, they are carried by tele- nttaelimrnt to the ear of the through the denser medium Mn.ind waves carry much fur n tho air. There are recorded 'he signal bell being heard a distance of 1" milf .itsh.ps of the United States ie nearly all eoupped with n.'il bell?. Kacb tmc reneats -nal which indicates Us station !"1 fi;:ain. constnntlv dnrintr n- "' ioz. aiiij those ships which ' ;li'' receiving diaphragm hear it. ahie ,f (his device consists in b',,,f. that (he direction from which -MMiii comes can be a.-j accurately ' "'ini rn thougn It were a visl -pot ,,t i.ht. Two ships equipped ''h sending and receiving could ''!"i " etch other through a dis ' (,f ' or miles without dim bid the Republic been nrovid i on.. ,, tle ijrnaj volls and its with the receiving apparatus Ii H e been ni crronincr. Und hi and t'ne Republic been so there need have been no col- " 'li I'n si place. For hundreds of years past the ex tent of the borderline between insan ity and genuius has been a matter of dispute with doctors, scientists and deep thinkers, says an exchange. The lives of famous men, and even women, of the last two centuries, how ever, seem to furnish striking evidence that there is a very strong link be tween genius and insanity. And even in eases wnerc - ac.tna ns.in tv - woe I not apparent there are many instances v.i siuiusfs wno sunereu irom a va riety of ills and disorders which in reality were symptoms of brain disease. tnarles Dickens, it is well knownt as he advanced in years, suffered from sleeplessness, gout, incipient paralysis and loss of memory, and ultimately died at 3S from effusion of the blood Wilkie Collins was from nerves that he to take laudnum in Thackaray died sud- for the last four life was continually ailing and subject to certain painful spasms. Charles Lamb was confined to a lu natic asylum for six weeks about his twentieth year, the period at which he wrote most of his sonnets, and all his life was subject to stammering, violent hertdaches and was constitu tional! nervous and timitl. Edgar Allan Poe more than once attempted or threatened to commit suicide while under delusions of perse cution, and George Sand confessed that she also at times felt tempted to take her own life. George Klliott, too, suffered greatly from fits of depression, while Sir Wal ter Scott complained of certain hallu cinations and thought he saw the im age of his friend Hyron after the lat ter's death, the image, after examina tion, proving to be nothing but the folds cf some drapery. Sir Edward Landseer, toward the close ot nis lile, snowed signs ot in sanity, while the eccentricities of Tur ner were quite of the insane order. Among the eminent artists it might be mentioned that Sir Thomas Law rence suffered from a symptom of brain disorder; David Wilkie lost the power of attention arid ultimately had a nervous seizeure which made his speech incoherent, while Romney suf fered so much from the hallucination that his talent would desert him that at the height of his fame he thought of relinquishing' art altogether. Referring to famous poets, it might be mentioned that Cowper tried to commit suicide on several occasions, was an inmare of a lunatic asylum lor eighteen months, and died insane. Southey sank into a state of imbecil ity, in which he died: Shelley was known as "Mad Shelley" at Eton, while it was a curious fact that the maddest of all poets, "Mad Jack By ron," who led such a wild, dissolute life, always dreaded insanity. Several famous men. by the way. have lived to dread insanity. Swift who, before he became a celebrity, was called the "Mad Parson' and who died an imbecile, was always haunt ed by the dread of going out of his mind. i Doctor Johnson declared that he ' had been "made all his life, or, at least not sober, ami so great was his fear of insanity that at times he must have been on the brink of mental derange ment. . The lives of famous musicians like Wagner. Pach, Handel, Mozart, Beeth oven and Mendelssohn, all tend to bear out the contention that insanity and genuius are closely allied. Then again the whims and fads of that famous French author Balzac were such that they could only have originated from a disordered mind. He would live In a garret under an as sumed name, sleep from 6 in the even ing until midnight and then work from twelve to twenty hours at a stretch, dressed in a white robe of a Domini can friar, with a black skull cap on his head and surrounded by a dozen can dles. The stage, too, furnishes examples of insane genius notably. Edmund Kean. whose mind became unhinged at 4" years of ase. Julius Brutus Booth, the father of Wilkes Booth-, who murdered President Lincoln, played insanity at the age of 35. it was while playing a tragic part ! in Boston that he suddenly dropped ! into solloquial tone and apropos of ! nothing, said, "Upon my word. I don't S know." To the murmurs of the house j he responded with a ringing laugh. The manager then rushed on from ' 1 1 1 . T . . . 1 V. . 1 i - ..cfi uujini me Eteues ana it'u iiiiu ou, i while he shouted, "I can't read I am a cnanry oy i can t read : l ake me i to a lunatic asylum." i'or some time atter this isootti was i an undoubted maniac. tool and Genius Although real happiness is a mi nus quality in tne world, says Kesare Lombroso, the Italian anhophologist, there is no doubt that it is felt by two classes of beings, namely, fools and geniuses. Among ordinary men gen uine happiness is rare and is invaria by followed by ennui, if not by satiety. Carlyle declared that genius consists in an "infinite capacity for taking pains," and on .this definition Lom broso constructs his theory that, com plete exercise of one's intellectual fac ulties anu in tneir development an invariable case among those endowed by nature with supereminent mental gifts. The genius in which melancholia is almost an intermittent trial, is always conscious of his own value, and, con sequently, feels no fear in so far as his own theories or teachings are con cerned. In regard to these he is in variably happy, no matter what be his other tribulations, and in the throes of his inspired work he has mo ments of ecstasy the like of which is not Known to common mortals, rnese are the periods when his "demon" the Socratic daimon asserts itself, and during wihch his human personality is wnoiiy superseded by the transcen dent being that prompts the expres sions of his soul. As a reaction there comes meiancnoua, and tins is a sa lient characteristic of all geniuses and great thinkers. Goethe declared that his life was passed either in extreme joy or in .extreme melancholy. Every increase of knowledge declared the German, brought an increase of sad ness. remaps nappier tnan tne genius is the fool in the last stage of demen tia, savs Lombroso. For. continues the Italian, with this fool his happine is permanent; witn tne genius it is me teoric. This kind of fool is distinguish ed, however. He is the harmless dreamful fool, the poor creature whose mind is so weak as to be unable to provide itself with even an obsession , and which cannot concentrate upon any particular idea for, any measure able length of time. Such a mind can not hold impressions, and consequently has no memories the real source of unhappiness. The paranoiac isa wholly different kind of fool, and is not al ways happy. He imagines himself to be great, and becomes unhappy when people remain indifferent to his great ness Megalomaniacs, too, invariably imagine that they are the victims of persecution, and those who suffer from cyclic folly are happy only during the time in which their folly lasts. In the succeeding phrase their misery is of the most oiatiable kind. f"wm I COLD ' jjWmwMJH- PMMMm m and Keep Warm m AJUEWIS MEDICINE Ca,SlL0U!S i K ovr s i W. U. Hand & Co., Charlotte, IS. C. SEABOARD S?.J fii . K WW o ffj ;n $Zu.i)U. reliable anrl corroct information, as to I W v.1 C Kt.t. i tk.." t T ST Vk O 1 Special Low Rates VIA New Orleans, Mobile, Pensacola, Account Mardi Gras, Feb. 18th to 23rd. New Orleans Rate from Raleinh $26.75. Wilmington $26.75. Char lotte $23.05, rates on same basis from other points. Mobile Rate Wilmington rates on points. Pensacola Rate Wilmington from Raleis $24.25. Charlotte $18.85 same basis from other $23.35, Raleigh Chavlott $22.90, $18.40 same rates from other points basis. Tickets to be sold February 17th to 22nd inclusive, good returning to leave New Orleans as late as February 27th Mobile and Pensacola as late as March 1st, and on payment of fee of $1.00 ticket can he extended until March 13th. LAYMEN'S MISSIONARY MOVE MENT, Presbyterian Church of the U. S., Feb ruary 16th to 18th, 1909. Birmingham, Ala. Rate from Raleigh $17.80. Wilmington $18.25, Char- lone $i.;.ou, rates on same Basis from other points. Tickets to be sold February 14th 15th, and for trains scheduled to ar rive in Birmingham forenoon February 1 16th. Final return limit Februarv 20th. Extra Pullman cars on train will be operated through to Birmingham from North Carolina points where bus iness will justify same, and special train will be operated from Atlanta in connection' with No. 41, arriving in Atlanta morning of February 16th. Write at once for rates, schedules, and Pullman reservations to the undersigned. INAUGURATION PRESIDENTELECT W. H. Taft, March 4th. Washington, D. C. Special low rates Schedule in Efl'eet (. IS, 190$. jj:iu ?;m lv. Charlotte ho. Kv Ar S: pm 1 : r, 0 sun. L,v. Winston X&-YV. Ar. 1 pin 1:".S pm. J-v Mai t villo X&W Ar 11:40 pm 7:25 pm Ar. floanokc, X&W l.v .:.' am Connects nt Jioanoke via Shenandoah Vallev Itoute for I-Iascerstown and :'U points in Pennsylvania and New York, Pullman sleeper Jtoanoke to Fhila dflphia. Additional trains leave Winston-Sa lem T:;:0 a. m. daily, except Sunday. If you are thinking of taking a trip iju want quotation.-?, cheapest iari-s. reliable and correct information, as to routes, train schedules, the most com fortable and Quickest way. Write and tho information is yours for the ask ing-, with one of our complete Map I'oliiers. W. n. Ilevil. II. F. Brncrc. Gen. Pass. Agt. Trav. Pass. Agt. Koanoke, va. The Last Straw. Frank Daniels, early in his career, was principal in a small company that was touring "the provinces." Business had been poor and eating had become a luxury. It was only the cheering knowledge that the new opera house at. Ticonderoga, N. Y... had been al most sold out for their performance that kept them together. "Wait, till we get to Ticonderoga," the manager would say to any one who faintly suggested the price of a break fast. Finally they did reach Ticonderoga. It was eventide, and a rosy glow illu mined the western sky. "Ah, me." sighed Daniels to the stage driver. '"The sun may set in other places, but never as it does here. Be hold you " "Sunset!" growled the driver. "Sun set Thet's the opry house burnin' down." Everybody's Magazine. SEABOARD Aia Line Raiux&Tj These arrivals and departures as well as the time and eonnee'-ons with other companies are given only as informa tion and are not guaranteed. Direct line to the principal cities North, Kast. South and Southwest. Schedule taking effect Jr.auarv U. 1909, subject to change without notice. Tickets for passage on all trains are sold by this company and accepted bv tiie passenger with the understanding that tins company will not be responsi ble for failure to run its trains on schedule time, or for any such delav as may be incident to their operation. Care is exercised to give correct time f connecting lines, but this company is not responsible for errors or omis sions. Trains leave Charlotte as follows: N'o. ts. oaily. at 4:M a. m.. for .Mon roe. Hamlet and Wilmington, connect ing at Monroe with for Atlanta. 15ir nnngliam and the Southwest; with 31 lor Kaleigh, Weldon ami Portsmouth; with C3 at Hamlet for Ualeigh, lUch mond, Washington, New York. Xo. 1 Co, daily, at 10:05 a. in., for I.in cointon, Shelby and ltutherfordton without chunc'e. Xo. 44. daily, at 5 p. in., for Mon roe, itamlet. limington and sill tot al points, connecting at Hamlet with 41 1or Columbia, Savannah and all Flori da points, and Xo. S4 for Raleigh. Rich mond, Washington and New York. Xo. daily. 0:40 p. m., for Monroe, TIIE BEST COAL IS TIIE CIIEAPST COAL. BEST. PHONE 19 OR 72. ONLY from all Seaboard points, round-trip i connecting with 41 for Atlanta, Rir rate from Raleigh $9.20, Charlotte! ITi,n.1h?i ",mI V" tj'(,i:t'nvi'sV uii train -.-., i , c?n , :it Hamlet tor Richmond. Washing- sii.io, uiiuugi.on $11. mi, uui nain, The man who would rather than be president generally preference gratified. be right has his He who follows the com panions. Dutch. crowd has many it Mi;, i; II 'II" ' M d IVvi.l; From New York World, April 8, "08. Enjoyed Last Two Months Living For First Time The following statement was madei bv Mr. S. J. Simpson on lnursaay fternoon in connection with the Cooper preparations, wnicn nave created a sensation, throughout the West and now being widely dis cussed in New York. Mr. Simpson, who lives at No. 079 President street, Brooklyn, said: ArrTrrtinr to tiiv exoerience. this man that I am convinced that the success this mail is having in New York is richly deserved." In a short interview Mr. Cooper said: "I have been in New York little less than two months. So far as I can iudge there are now about fifty thousand people taking my pre narations. Before I leave there will I be not less than one 1 hundred thous rvioner is iustified in nis claims t ana. as tne number is increasing very hia modirdne will actually put I rapidly and people are lust begin mod condition. ii SEARED WITH A HOT IRON -a!(lf j i,y overturned kettle cut h a linifebrulsed bv slammed door nin-i.ii i . 1 y a gun or in anv otner -till-, tfll.nr . - A . w t .....is uveutfu ai ouce is muck- S A T' I. ! r .i 1 . . . '" ai .-,aive to suuaue lnnam T'n and kill the pain. It's earth's '"mo lu-aler, infallible for Boils. Ul- '.' t Sor..:i. Eczema and Piles. the stomach in have had chronic stomach, trouble for several years past. Mv stomach seemed to give out completely in August, 1906.. and I have been able to eat next to nothing since. "I have not taken the slightest en joyment in living, I have been so depressed by my condition. Neither physicians nor medicine helped me, and it was only by the most careful diet that I was able to retain any food whatever. For the past seven months I have not eaten a particle r.? rv!.t in ihp most skeptical frame of mind possible I called to see Mr Cooper about two months ago while jhe was in Brooklyn. I nau not me smallest hope ins meaicme wuum v.t.ir. mo us T bad civ-en' no hope dur- r,cr th'nast vear. T obtained some of the medicine and . began its use Todav I am apparently as well as ever. I obtained relief so rapidly that it is positively wonderful. I am in good spirits, eat heartily, sleep ton anil Xew York; with "1 at Monroe lor Kaleigh. Portsmouth and Norfolk i hrougn sleeper on this train from t harlotte, X. C. to Portsmouth, Va daily. Trains arrive in Charlotte as fol lows : Xo. 1:J3, 10:0," a. in., daily, from points Xorlh and South. No. !.". daily, 11:15 a. in., .from Wil mington and all lo ul points. No. 132. daily. (J::!5 p. ni., from ltuth erfordton. Shelby, l.incolnton and C. & N. AY. Railway points, Xo. ":. 11::in i. m.. daily from Wil mington. Hamlet and Monroe; also from points Hast. North and Southwest, connecting at Hamlet and Monroe. Connections are made at llanilet with i O.v.w.irl. ...... r.... v,-,,-.!. .-...t-i. basis from all other Seaboard points,; ;('1J(1 Southwest, which' ure "composed of limit on tickets same as for Civil-j vestibule day coaches, between Ports iqrla mouth and Atlanta, anrl Washington ItllJ.-l. I.,..l-o.r,,-lllt, ...,.J .lunninf ..o.-c The Seaboard is arrangmg to operate j, . .iww' c'lt,-. Kirtninham and special service, provide extra coach-! Memphis, ami Jersey City and .lackson- es and Pullman cars trom points on!vi1'"- .l:f" !VS on-"Jl YV'Llv' ., , . . ... . ,- Tor information, tune tables, reserva- lts line W-here business Will justify Ufons or Sa board descriptive literature applv to ticket agents or address. JAM ICS KKR. JR.. C. P. A.. 32 Selwyn Hotel, Charlotte. N. C. a.zu. lienaerson i..io, uxiora .jo rates on basis from other points. Tickets to be sold Feb. 2Sth, March lst-2nd, 3rd and for forenoon trains arriving in Washington March 4th, final return limit to leave Wash ington as late as midnight, March Sth. For military companies or parties of 25 or more traveling on one ticket round trip from Raleigh will be j $6.50, Charlotte $8.10. Wilmingtor j IS.60, Durham $6.30, Henderson $5.60, OxTord $5.60 rates on same Standard Ice (L Fuel Company M. A. BLAND, Vice President and Salet Agent. New Model Style 507 Ivers & Pond Piano TteMZ&lifrft for I La Ar2s2 4 ttn SweHnesa tad Pmritj of To A Ideal Piaca for tk horn. Cttci icrr itnm. Hja3 Strew PARKER -GARDNER CO. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Th Sol and application for Pullman reserva tions, coaches or Pullmans for spe cial parties should be made to the undersigned. In addition to this the Seaboard has double daily fast Ves tibule train service from its princi pal stations to Washington. C. H. GATTIS, T. P. A., Raleigh, N. C. JAS. KER, JR.. C. P. A., -6t Charlotte, N. C. SOUTHERN RAILROAD fig- and lining to learn what my preparation does. I expect to fully prove before I leave New York the claim I made when I arrived, namely that stomach trouble among highly civilized races and that it is responsible for ninety per cent of all ill-health. "My medicine does nothing but regulate the stomach, yet I have peo ple come to me daiW and tell mc that it has relived them of many and various ailments not generally recognized as .due to stomach, trouble. "It is easy enough to. verify this statement. An hour spent in listen ing to what people who call to see me are saying, who obtained my medicine some time ago, will prove what I say beyond a doubt." Cooper's New Discovery is the medicine which made such a wonder ful record in New York. It is on sale at leading druggists everywhere Should your druggist, not have it no tify The Cooper Medicine Co., Day-) TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of a power of sale contained in a certain deed of trust executed to me by T. A. Dun can and wife and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Mecklen burg County in book 233 at page 338, default having been made in the pay ment of the indebtedness thereby se cured, I will sell at the Court House door of Mecklenburg County on Thurs day the 25th day of February, 1909, at 12 o'clock M., the following described real estate: One five-room house and lot No. 14 In block No. 25 in "Oakhurst," on the Westerly side of Thomas Street and fronting on said street 50 feet in width and carrying with it that width in a Westerly direction one hundred and eighty-two and one-half (182) feet to a ten-foot alley, and to have the use of all the alleys and streets in "Oakhurst." This 26th day of January, 1909. HERIOT CIARKSON, 1-26-tds. Trustee. Fire! Fire ! Fire ! And it will surely sotno nt this it nca of tin ye?. S9RtroT?.r.R toot Store. Dwelling, Furniture, M?.ekiiir7 or Merchandise. Ton av rsre lndsmnitj against loss if yon hava one of th pollcieg issued ny me m companies representing $40,000,000 asset witi long reputation for fair dealing and prompt ftettlemeota. Rob't D. Moore X. II. The folio-wins Hehediile iires DiiMislied only as informntinn are not guaranteed. January 4, 1!HM. 1:20 a. 111.. No. 32. daily, for Wash ington anrl points North. Pullman Drawing1 Iloom sleepers to New York. Dav coaches to Washington. :;:30 a. in.. Xo. 29. Oaily for Colum bia. Savannah and Jacuson ville. Pull man d rawins room sleepers to Augus ta and Jacksonville. Day coaches to .I:ieksoiiville. :':',0 a. m.. No. S, daily, for Richmond and local points. 5:52 a. in., Xo. 4 1, daily, for Washing ton and point?1- North. Day conches Charlotte to Washington. Pullman sleener Atlanta to fialeish. 6:':0 a. m.. Xo. 25. daily for Colum bia, and local points. S:00 a. m.. No. 16. daily (except Sun day) for Statesvule, Taylorsville and local stations. Connects at Moorcsville for W inston-Salem, Statesville for Ashoville. 7:15 a. m.. No. S3, daily for Atlanta, Dav coaches Charlotte to Atlanta. Sto'ps at principal points en route. 10:05 a. m.. No. 36. daily for Washing ton and points north. Pullman drawing room sleepers to New York. Day reaches to Washington. Dining car ser vice. 11:00 a. m.. No. 2S. daily, for Winston Salpm. Koanoke. and loc;ii points. lf:05 a. m.. No. 37 daily. New York to New Orleavs. Drawing room sleep er. New York to Atlanta. Solid Pullman tr.'tin. Dining car service. 11:35 a. ni.. No. 11, daily, for At lanta and local points. No. 40. .".:00 p. in., daily for Greens Vrnrr. nrfrl local noints. 4:?5 r. m.. No. 27. daily for Columbia and local points. 5:00 p. in.. No. 41. daily except Sun ibv f'-.r Sptiprii and local points. t'i:05 p. in.. No. 24. daily except Sun-rl.i,- for Statesville. Tavlorsville. and local noints. Connects at Statesville for 'Ashoville, Knoxville and Chatta fi-ft0 n. m.. No. 12, df.Slv for Richmond and local points. Handles c!,-.i.p(.r. Clrtrliitte .o wasuin riin-lAt la tn nirhmond. 7:35 p. m.. No. 3S. daily. New York nrd New Orleans i.i'iiiumi hm n inrrtfin Miirl noints North. Dra'.vinrf mora sleepers, Observation and pars to Xf.v York. Dinin;-? car vice. Solid rullman train. !i:35 p. m., N". 35. daily, for Atlanta, and points South. Pullman drawing room sleepers New Vork to New Or i.wn v,.H- Vork to Kirminuhain. Char lotte to .Atlanta. Day coaches Wash ington to New Orleans. Dining car ser vice. Tickets, sleeping car reservations, and detail information can be obtain ed at ticket office, No. 11 South Tryon C' H. AKERT, V.-Pres. and Gen. Mgr. Washington. 1. C. S. II. HARDWICK. P- 1'- , Washington, D. C. rj m m m i ir-ir irr- K m m x OLD KING COLE iwyn EUROPEAN Roems fl.50 pr day and up. Room with artvata feith 2M aar day and up. CAFE OPEN DAY AND N13HT. Pricai Rcaaonabla. 119 ELEGANT ROOMtt- 75 PRIVATE IATHS. located In the heart of Charlotte, convenient to railroad atatloa, etreot cars and the business and shopping centre. Cater to nljfc clxB commercial and touriat trade. EDGAR B. MOCRE ProprlataN Pullman rton and Club ser- 66 is now supremo. To Ret the ri:;ht kind is the fiuer-tion. "It all looks alike to mc," fcays the man who doesn't know. It is not. however. We can sell eoal to burn fast, or slow. Give us an order and bo convinced. QUEEN CI1Y FUEL COMPANY ETISA Good Bunch of Horses and Mules We received 0 Horses and Mules on February 11th. and by February lath we will receive another shipment of almost 30 head. You will find K0 good youn? Horses and Mules in our stables by Feb ruary 15th. Come and get, first pick. We sell on reasonable terns. . With each dollar purchase (lime or f-oshi. we will Rive you a coupon a chance on a IIS.OO Hancock Bu?gJ and a $7.00 that entitles you to Studebakcr Wagon. J. W. Wadsworths Sons "VEHICLES AND HARNESS.' Presbyterian College For Wome n OKAItkOTTB, N. , Special Rates (o New f uplf. REV. J. R. BRIDGES, D. D Pretid 1 1 1,1 v Mlall tc Shcppard's. wen and am better in every way. ton, Ohio.
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 13, 1909, edition 1
13
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