Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Feb. 7, 1911, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE CHARLOTTK NEWS, FEBBUARY 7. 191 U. s. Department of Agriculture WEATHER BUREAU WILLIS L. MOORE, Chief. 2. o.ru 1 r. r>[' -;h'" j t ( ,/N I '•••.. 3 0,3 “ai \ ’in' > ■> -> ——A -/A r^.-, "7 f r 0 ^■0.^ k V Sports 3 0.0 SiUDCL i icdican- sutfl Of neater Q elordy; A cloudy: (g)raiu. (|)8now; @rwort eUaw. Arroim fly with tho vrlnl. inch* for pa»! I J .econa, Si-li.iur r»mfall. if it j:ii'd, wind velocit,y of 10 miles pe* hour or mow. 'X^^o^o^o } ♦ : -^HER '> •-J Vic;-.:ty. I . '-..r" t'l’ai’-'i'.i or a^’olma. f.>l- 1 ' '• \\ Vl^ ^ • iditiors. : :••;■:.! M.'nday! ! ;i> i)' >\f (i ti) \!l:',iiti‘ rii\ . -.vitl; I • ^oiv I ■I h; i', li' \\i :cr-, I : ■ :t'i nf I 'lv> i .u :. i..' ;^no^vs r : :■. Si. i\\ \va;- . • - Ml. I'ast port.' ii. M ,1 -; »■ -1 a'ld !' ^ >mi(! am Wi!i- ; ' .-.»;'\vfar. has iiU)>i Xortlic’n ’1.' '! til.,' l);'kntas. ■ t ■ ■ '. |.: t'SSU i‘0 I .••li a !i inu), .1 i:-. liiu!i'-r :orn-| ‘ Ui'n wiallicr, ’.'lit' r'tiii...H. !t will j ■ :.v. ii' warm and I '■ . M! Mu- ai'ii! • a'lu r as it p>-n-. !• A '.iiiti--. j I . -i. .•■r il lo pxtcnt j . ^ I nud I t I in 1 iU‘. V i; . il. r oxropf in; ■It and th(' :i|i-l . h !; liu'u raiii- ! •-on n^■pr tiic '■ ■ A l;-!iti( and Ni’W ’ i !^a\>' f:'ll*'ii ill i;p’'or and -ri lower Ohio !■ " with ]»vd)ably at riiarloite for . 1:0 niarivt'u rhanj;o viAHTIN, Observer. A EAT HER. Wiestling Game is To Be Boosted By Wrc-ulois Iro'ii all parts of the t.otimry art* ^oiii;: lo hold a tourney b» lort' .’I'.auy nu'uihs i a\’o i)asscu and d« cidr an’!',nr Th* nise!vt s wiiai v'eight rt tnaii will ha\ e u; n:akt' in (.rder to be clas.'Cd a liuli; lu a'y woigiit. .\ud tiu’u. I'.avin.i, drtcriunu'd ihf' weighi, i.L the grapnlt r.- are tvoin.LC lo grai)|jlo ;n oai'nooi wiiii r;i( ii otlu-r until, by •j. ' pi'cci'sv; of cli.nina’ion. t'i;‘ chani- )i n v.ill i)t' fmuui a''d the tiilc he ] stoweci ujion liini. { 'I'hi- propmdl' )ii (liat conrronts the V. restlers betweou ihe weighis of 20i> pv)unds and abotu 17i'» ponnds or over, iy v.’iiat in i^:yK‘ thein^U’lvf'H. And in , oi'dfr to ^-.et on a niati-h liu'V have to 1^0 to ihe '^{idkMv'e!:^)^ division. One lnui(h\ti and tii'i>-eight punnds i:; \> hat a iniddlevv cight wrestler has to make. It' lie inee;s one (jT the light henvy\.oighls it is always a handieap aft ail’, the heavier man agrc(‘iiig to ihrow him so many limes in a pre- ^•eribed I'mit. ’i'nat i! is a bad rule wh.ieh does not 'vork boi li ways is siiowii liy the tar-t that ih' lieavyweight grai'plers w;!l n.'M i a^r. e •) a iiL'i.dicap 'vitli the men wo \vti.j:h within 20 to 2> pounds of their v.eight. T't r instanoe. when Cyclone Bunis, Is2 jtonnds, v/res- tled .'oe Turner, l',S ponnc's. he had to agree to throw Tuiiier twice within an hour. And "I'urner won beeausi' he re mained a^vay from Hums. Reverse the condition of ahairs and l?mns would have lo work o nthe offensive as vv'el) as the defensive with rTOto'.i. Haeken- schmidt, or any of the other big I'ellows. None would handicap him. Is it right? f)i course it ix-n't and the sooner a class is formed the better it Vvill bo for (iveryone. And, sa.v, the town tha' gets such a tourney wili be some fortii- nate. ■ Frank Gotch To See Big Match ] fYc-n • I'. l\b. 7 . 'h Carolina and :i iiu cloudiness . d bv rain late : i:r ; moderate A ! Over the South. ' .Mi :as-.^ipi)i:—Rain to- ;ln•^, colder Wednes- . th winds shifting •1: -day. i"f . — Forecast: and \V('dnesday. I 1 I'lor in north por- l-j:ht to moderate ‘ !: (!'; on the coast. 't ' and Wednesday :■ fdnnsday. ' :h ".t nerally fair, ■anhei'st iiortion; tai.', colder in I t and Wednes- ; ' tonight in west '' ■ it^ -'lay exci'i)t in . 1 n. 1 tun; light to ' ■ ! winds o nthe •oni-lit fair, colder: f Mldcr in southeast Frank G(>tch. the champion wrest ler o;' the world, is to be present at the ringside when Hackenschmidt, the Russian f.ion. and Zbyszko. the I’oHsh giai'.t, meet at Madison Square (Jardea Thursday night. This proi)- ahiy means the making of a match, for the world’s title between the win ner of the coming contest and the low'a farmer. According to the arti cles of agreement betw^een Hackeu- schmidt and the Pole, the former must tiirow Zbysr.ko twice within an hour find a. half to win the contest. Shouk- Zoyszko go on the defensive and not be thrown, he would be de clared the victor, but that w^onld not show him up as the best man and would hardly .iustify Gotch, under such condiiioi'S. in side-tracking the Lion, However, should he take the aggres sive and succeed in pinning Curley’s champion to the mat once be will be awarded a decision and possibly get a match with Gotch. Hackenschmidt must gain two falls, while Zbyszko need get only one for a chance with the champion. Tp to now Gotch has not shown any e;reat inclination to give Hacken schmidt a return en.gagement, but the fact that he is coming to New' York to see the clash between the Russian and the Pole shows that he appreci ates the fact that the public will not stand for a “champion” who has not retired from the game, as the minor matches he has engaged in lately prove, yet will not show an inclination to hook ui) with the t6p-notchers. VERY SHDiiTTIME Cyclone Burns, light heavyweight champion of the w'orld, demonstrated his superiority over John Drake, the iron man from Asheville, by winning two straight falls in the Auditorium last night. Using his famous half-Nel son and bar hold. Burns turned the trick each time. Drake staying with him for 40 minutes in the first go ami lasting but 18 minutes in the second affair. The defeat of Drake w-as a some what suriirise to those w'ho have known him a long time and who had the most implicit confidence in his abil- i!y to l)reak even with any man near I’is weight. He went on the mat scal ing 100 while Burns was in the neigh borhood of 1S2. But the Swede-Cana- dian is built all over. And he knows the wrestling game from the tap of the bell. No man near his size has ever wiggled from a half-Xelson and a bar. Once the hoid it gotten, Burns holds it until the other fellow's shoulders are firmly against the mac. j Drake, however, showed gameness. He was perhaiis not in as perfect con dition as his opponent. But for forty niinutes he fought the assaults of (’y- cicne and dieted much aj)plause for Viis work. Much of Drake's work (m tlie offensive w-as a try for the toe l.old, a hold made famous by the gioatest of all mat artists, Gotch. Un- quest ionabl\ the toe hold is a great one. Iitu it is used so often in these days by wrestlers, that before one has been in the business for any length of time, he knows every way to block it. .loe Turner staid one hour with T^.urns, the latter winning only one fall. But then it takes a good big man to Ijaiidle the slij)pery boy whose wrestling name is Rackenschmidt. It is altogether pi(»bable that Brake and Burns will be brought together again. Cnder diflerent conditions the match might be made more exciting. Burns will remain here for a short time, anyway, and he is willing to take a chance with any man in the w'Oiid. That confidence had a lot to do with his victory over Drake last night. The mountaineer hasn’t any too much of this necessary force. ng. in Spanish and ■ t The Alamo all this 7-1t liible says we ! ci^hbors as we love . ■Vf.R, hut you fiu-re were no apart- thn Bible was WMit- ^nrding the Beef oots ks Herbs 'It mf'flirlnal power, are I hl^host efficiency, for *nrlrhlngf the blood, as In Hood’s Sarsa- I '■ rerpived by actual ' irs. Be sure to take s Sarsaparilla f'V in u.«(ual liquid form or : -uiets culled Sarsatabs. NO MORE GRAY HAIR It is easier to preserve the color of The hair than to restore it. although : it is possible to do both. O'l ' grand- i mothers understood the socret. They made and usetj a “sage tea'*, and their dark, glossy hair long after middle life was due to this tact. Our motheis have gray hairs before they are fif ty, hut they are beginning to appre- crite the w isdom of our giandmothers in using “sage t('a for their hau, and are fast following suit. The ])resent generation has the advantage of the past In that it can get a ready to use preparation called W.veth’s Sage and Sulphur. As a scalp tonic and color restorer, this i)rei'aration is vastly su perior to the ordinary “sage tea” made by our grandmothers, and it can be bought for 30 cent.s and $1 a bottle at almost any first-class drug store, or will be sent direct by the Wyeth (iiemical Company, 74 Cortlandt St., New York City, uiwn receipts of price. For sale and recommended by R. H. .Iordan & Co. Race Will Not Go to Savannah Bv Associated Press. '.New York, Feb. 7.—Because of the deadly character of the Vanderbilt Cup Race on the I^ong Island motor parkway course last year and the sub sequent transfer of the grand prize race to Savannah, efforts are now un der way to bring about the holding of the Vanderbilt on some other course than the Long‘Island course next fall. William K. Vanderbilt. .Ii'.. the do nor of the cup. is in Euro);e but motor interests close to the guiding spiiits of the motor cup holding company, which controls the two events, predict todav that these efforts will fail. “The race will not go to Savannan, Indianai)olis or any other city,” was the confident prediction of one man supposed to speak with knowiedge. if the event is not held on Is land it will not be held at all.” Nervous Dyspepsia “I was taken last August with a se vere stomach trouble. The doctor said it was nervous dyspepsia. I took his treatment four w'eeks, but did not feel any better. I took everything I heard of. The first day of December, I got a box of MI-O-NA. I took them that afternoon and the next day and have n’t had one bit of pain in my stomach feinoe the 2nd of December. Feel well, now, and sleep good—Mrs. M. E. Max- field, R. F. D. 2, Avoca, N. Y. MI-O-NA is surely the best prescrip tion for indigestion ever WTitten. It relieve after dinner distress, belching of gas, foul breath, heartburn and all stomach misery in five min utes. It is guaranteed to permanently cure indigestion, acute or chronic, or any disease of the stomach, or mon ey buck. MI-O-NA stomach tablets are sold by R. H. Jordan & Co. and leading drug gists everywhere at 50 cents a large box. Trial samples free on request from Booth’s Mi-o-na, Buffalo, N. Y. Nevada May Be Reformed. By Associated Press. Carson, Nev., Feb. 7.—Nevada’s days as the surviving remnant of the “wild and woolly west ’ are numbered if, in addition to closing the gambling hells, the legislature passes bills now in com mittee doing away with wide-ot)en li quor laws, prohibiting the sale of cl- garetes, ]u-ohibiting gambling in any form and requiring one year's resi dence as a qualification for divorce. Skater Made Record. Saranac Lake, N. Y., Feb. 7. Ed mund Lamy, the amateur skating champion, made a broad jump on the ice here late yesterday of 25 feet 2 inches, breaking the world’s record by three feet seven inches. The world’s record, held by F. McDaniels until now. was made at Minneapolis, Decem ber 23rd, 1897, Avhen he made a broad jump of 21 feet 7 inches. Lamy and his brother started for Rochester yesterday to participate in skating contests. Many of our troubles are God’s dragging us and they would end if we would stand on our feet and go whither he would have us.—Beecher. For everything you have missed you have gained somethmg else, and for everything you gain, you lose some thing.—Emerson. PRAISB FROM GKOR6IA*S STATS CHEMIST. Mr. J. H. McCandless, State Chemist of Georgia, before a recent gathering, gave cmphatic testimony to the high quality of Cottolene. He said: “The sale of this product, and the proclamation that it Is made from cot- tr>n cl!, have done more to bring cotton jjocd oil truthfully and favorably before the public than anything else in recent h'.story.” Mr. McCandless then point-d out why -I pure, refined, vegetable-oil bas?, such is used in Cottolene, is the only as* nirancc a \voman has of a cleau* di- ’•estible cookinir croduct - Pinvellp. N. C., Feb. 7.—Miss Nannie Jordan, of Winnsboro, S. C., is visiting her cousin, ]\IrB. A. C. Stough. at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Garri son, on Main street. Mrs. Stough, .who has been quite ill, is somewhat iproved at present. Mrs. Caine Walsh Dnnnard. of Rich- mon. Va., w ho was called to attend the funeral of her sister, Mrs. T. L. Han son about ten days ago, returned iast Friday. Mrs. Sallie Kendrick Wolfe, of Os- cealo, S. C., is the guest of her cousin, Mrs. M. C. Rone, on Gay street. Mrs. C. P. Hennegan. of Charlotte, spent the week end with her mother, Mrs. F. C. Harris and daughter, Mrs. M. H. Culp, on Fisher street. Miss Nannie Lee, whose illness has been noted from time to time in these columns, died last Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Garrison of this vicinity. With the passing of Miss Lee, one of Pineville’s landmarks, with whose interest she has been closely identified for many years, has passed away one w'ho has been hon ored and beloved. She was a lovable character and her place in the church —the Presbyterian—of which she w'as a life-long member, and where she was a constant attendant, unless providen tially hindered, will be a loss in every respect, religiousl.v, socially, and finan cially. Her means, with which God had greatly blessed her, w’as cheer fully given to every good work in her church and community. She is sur vived by tw'o nephews, Messrs. W. C. Barnett, of the village, and M. A. Alex ander, of Sharon. Hr surviving nieces are Mrs. Ella Parks, of Charlottte, Mrs. Ida Nesbit, of the Providence sec tion, Mrs. Tom Grier, of Matthews, and Mrs. W. H. Garrison, at whose home she passed away. The funeral services were conducted last Sunday by the Rev. Albert Flick, of Char lotte- The song service consisted of the selections, “Nearer My God to Thee,” and “Asleep in Jesus,” the for mer of which was her favorite hymn. Her casket was a mound of beautiful white carnations, white sweet peas, violets, etc., w'hich seemed most ap propriate and emblematic of her life. Rea Lee, J. M. Parks, M. A. Alexander, R. B. Johnston and W. C. Barnett, all of w'hom were her nephews and kins men, by whom her casket was tender ly borne to the hearse, which was followed by an Immense concourse of sorrowing relatives and ^friends. The interment was at Sharon cemetery, w'here she was laid to rest by the side of her parents, who preceded her many years ago. Miss Minerva Garrison, of the Pres byterian college, Charlotte, was called to the bedside of her aunt. Miss Lee, last Friday. Mrs. Ella Parks and daughter. Miss Louise Parks, who had been spending some time in Florida, were summoned about ten days ago. Mrs. H. G. Mcll- waine, of Columbia, S. C., Miss Lee’s cousin, arrived last Wednesday. Miss Emma’ Lee Nisbet, of Rock Hill, and Misses Evelyn Nesbit of Charlotte and Louise Nesbit of Van Wyck, S. C., grand niceses of Miss Lee, were sum moned a few days ago, all of whom were present when the nd came. The communication in Sunday’s is sue of The News by Hon. Clement Manly received the hearty commenda tion of every intelligent citizen of MISS ARNOLD STRANGELY MISSING One of the latest photographs of Nlishe would have long since communi-the pretty heiress, who has mysteri ously disappeared and for whom a world-wide search is being made. She left her home on December 12th supposedly on a shopping tour and disappeared as completely as though swallowed by the grave. Francis R. Arnold, father of the missing girl, is a millionaire importer and has offered a reward of $i,000 for any information that will lead to her recovery. Mr. Arnold believes his daughter has met with foul play, asserting that Decies. By marrying Miss Graham, cated with him had she been alive. Thousands have been spent in a vain effort to obtain information as to the whereabouts of the twenty-four year old heiress. Be at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors- and let every year find you a better man.—Franklin. The saddest failures in life ai-e those that come I'rom uot putting forth the power and will to succeed.—Bishop Whipple. WHY SUFi'ER'r it you nave rheu matism, catarrh, kidney disease, sklii disease or any troubles arising from impure blood, give Rheumaclde a thor ough trial. By purifying the blood Rheumaclde neutralizes the acids, starts the kidneys into health action and helps to build up the nerves and the entire system. !theumacide is put up In liquid form, also tablets. At druggist;} 25c and 50c bottles. Tablets by mail 25c. Bobbitt Chemical Co., Baltimore, jfd. The world is held back from true progress not so much by the badness of bad men as by the obstancy Qf good men who have stopped growing. —Anon. Vote Today in News Bond Election. CATTEL M0TGAGE3 DEEDS DEEDS OF TRUST MORTGAGE DEEDS LEASES WARRANTS (Various Kinds) INDICTMENTS MAGISTRATE’S BLANKS (Many Kinds) BA>KRUPTCY BLANKS ATTACHMENT BLANKS We sell blanks in any quan tity. Call at The News Job Office, upstairs, for anything you need in this line. We solicit the privilege of supplying your needs in Printed Stationery. Prices Reasonable —Delivery Promflt. ANNOUNCEMENT Since a few of our students haA-e recently taken positions, w'e have a limited number of availalile desks for select yotmg people. That it pays well to educate for business, is strongly attested by the decided success of a multitude of our graduates. Every graduate is assured a good position. (ImsorporatAd.) Charlotte, N. C. and Raleigh, N. C. Phone 1530-Job Printing P. L. GARNES SUPERINTENDENT. 'Phone 1530. 29 South Tryon Sto cefvfiiMT B. ftllMCMtAVtf 4 The Useful Raiacoat Every man should have a Raincoat, it is suitable for cold weather, made with Mil- tary Collar or not as you like. New Coats received for February Sale. $15 to $25 Heavy-weight Overcoats a big reduction. London Slip-on Coats, $7.50 to $10 Yorke Bros. & Rogers
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Feb. 7, 1911, edition 1
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