THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, AUGUST, 13 I9II
lintss OF MB. KEESLEII11
, .; ; vertd by Mr. E. L.
- I' tn Ilf tho North Caro-
Hi’ii l>)an Association,
iUw'.ual convention of the
~ ]r.s Huilding and I^ian
. i\tl Kai’ida, August 3rd.
ADDRESS.
,1 •, motnbers of the Unit-
Ladles and Gen-
.1 ;he twenty years cover-
' 111 history of the United
1 : .1' (if Local Building and
hi'iiuis, 1 doubt not that
, luises of this grorlous work
iM.. discusrsed, and espec-
I's annual conventions.
•; t may be, it has seemed
' - tune to emphasize the
s great mation of ours of
:i il features, which are be
lt* prominent year by year
Us (>f the league, and In the
> >'! the various state assocla^
•.m; The same.
. ai U' that few people, and
I 'u (if rhoj-,' beyond the cir-
I 'luorned in one or more
(' : li!iniis. have given any se-
, mik: ' as to the real value of
il b- n in our unique system of
1' for this reason, my
1 hsive chosen one of the
' . ; are elements in our make-
• subject of my remarks at
. average mind the aseets of a
conbif>t in its financial
... ir> abili'v to buy, to borrow
i .1- back, no matter at whose
>ur by what system of taxa-
T; tuo, unfortunately, is the
iv.’ individual worth is ea-
\ .i b;*- rhf generality of mankind
world • »or T11 thinking people,
• •• IT, and to the most of those
:a-!np in movements having for
- . al the bot'orment of mankind,
- :i binadii and a deeper elg-
r 'P 'o tho vkord "nssert,” wheth-
; i iicJ to the nation or to the
: , • man questions the right-
■ honorably striving after
:: riches, nor does any
. • in ascribing power and
r^nod to him who posses-
"•illa to so use it. But, if
'• 8 or a aation's capital
i solely by its bank ac-
" .Ldeed will it one day find
I fs nf these great states
think, the greatest
.\iinment on the earth, are
; r-.e wealth already ac-
f'-.3' being daily created;
' rl"hne&3 of its soil, nor
. ; i»* of its mineral resourc-
le The inventive genius
, , n >r the successes at-
> i" commercial activities;
'n ti'e proud possession
- f>! gold with which, if need
. d i;aT'ioship after battle-
iuir'''.a>t' mtiniiion» ot war
at cl t>: s* i-i:re fighting
.]nr7ilor from the four
. h. Ail these may
- : if ihfv be not
■Mo citizenship, a
of country sd
ail times be
ay down life if-
■fiii? cause, or
■ onemy, no mat-
■ and its partsr
, and vulnera-
• rr generates this
. i ;i r.ation's great-
la nun in a coun-
. .-^-roly it is the
‘ ■ anii j'.iat laws, a
.. .i .id .'iiiL-irration of
• 1 iv nt and hon-
‘ ; n i;phalf of the
' .• • all other fac-
r r . r and influence,
' . . .^ufh ns ours,
I ' '..lO t'l ericf.
i luphatically
. . . 1:1.'! 'f). with every
■ ( \ . !\v firm and
•’i ii!^ Mifh nuKht and
'.i.- M't'tT lellow in
' ''.‘ alt 11, \' ith unprcce-
■ a . a’loi'. of jii.v.cr and of
■ ; ■ of tho doy every-
■ i : 'lu, unrest, and
;.(;d on 'lie part of
• i a['i>arrnT on every
. e\iuf-nt tliat some
tj ■ r.f i.s nt! s.sary to coun-
. ' ; influence of these
thf‘n. F ask, have
I • . • ar- n^'W at work to re-
i.d; i' lis'^ If the poor be-
: ’i\inE. Instead of get-
•. is sf-arinr. higher and
i.r* d fl'K iiliicp ronfront-
- in s. t a meas-tire
; •: ah'! «'f happiness are
' Tr a:.d more numerous,
■■ ia» is to prevent this
i"M alijd'fiaching the sta^e
; iiiii rrcords of this won-
ii Mii its ijeginning to
» :r. " i.at movement of
■ I vlnt system of gen-
a.ik; liifthofl or plan of
beneficent finance
lu-iirated for the wage-
■ * ; ooi n’an everywhere?
'f-n none, my friends,
i. . aVP the local building
■ ' ,a»ions. who.se interest
' '« ^.'I'horfd together at ‘hi.?
;i!:d in this goodly city, to
. '.• s I kn(»v.' this
iii' !;, hut when you search
lating such efforts that
' riiif'atpd with greed and
■ oil will find it all nar-
til this single lino of right-
!:‘ard all the foregoing
!, r;o doubt, are wonderiuf?
■ nlngs have to do with
n our finance as an asset
"n. .\ow, let’s see. With-
i :fi!i:*'nt going into any of
')f our uniqque system,
•lu )»()or man’s friend,” I
I all 1,. neflfent effort hn»
' fr.'iternity, of fraternal*
i^ermoating its exer-
-ian> associations coinpos-
fitial organization hold lo-
’ • f)n vent ions annuc^lly.
’ n;t. d States lague is do-
of the best people in
^T.ites are thus brought
n s if iation with each oth-
- '>1:*' is doing his utmost
to serve the common weal of man
kind.
Observation is teaching us daily,
yes, I might say hourly, that the nu
merous conventions and assemblages
of men, and women, too. which seems
to be the order of the day throughout
the land, are fruitful of great and of
lasting good to this country. ’Tis w’ell
for the people of one section to meet
and mingle with those of another. Not
only are new ideas imparted and re
ceived. consert in action, legitimate
and pust, secured, and other more or
less direct benefits obtained, but it is
healthful to find those dweling hun
dreds of miles distant, separated by
climatic, economic or political differ
ences, finding a common interest in
great movements, and thus cementing
a friendship and a fraternal feeling of
incalculable value to this home of
ours.
These sayings, my friends, are true
as applied to business, political, re
ligious or scientific ?jatherings. I
ask you if you recognize the good
flowing from these sources, how' vast
ly greater Is the benefit to a common
country of a gathering such as this.
This, to my mind. Mr. Chairman, rep
resents the highest, most practical,
most enduring type of beneficent en
deavor. Most others of which we
have knowledge have flourished for a
season, then disappeared forever.
Their short lives evidenced the fact
thnt they were perhaps, beautiful in
sentiment but impractical, theoretical
or visionary.
When strong, intelligent, patriotic
men unite their efforts, even in a
small community, to better the finan
cial conditions of the masses by plac
ing this avenue in their vision, there’ll
be an awakening that means some
thing.
When good men and true devise
plans and systems of finance which
establish something of an equality of
opportunity between the rich and the
needy, there’s a creation, which the
humble mind can grasp, and which
will not. cannot die.
Yes. when men are willing to give
their time, their talents, their practi
cal experience in the affairs of life to
the establishment of a financial sys
tem. which w'ill fire the soul of an
humble toller with an ambition to
rise in the walks of life, to be some
body, a system, which not only prom
ises success, but assures it. then they
have set in motion an ever expand
ing influence for good, which will, one
day, I trust, envelope the earth.
is the feeling of fraternity, of a de
sire to do something for the other fel
low, which are essential elements in the
great Building and L«oan movement,
not of inestimable value to the coun
try?
When men respect, admire and love
each other: when they have a com
mon interest; w'hen they get together
to ftirther a great and beneficient
cause, there exists then and there an
element of priceless value to any gov
ernment, no matter of what kind or
character.
What is it, Mr. President, that is
bringing the east and the west, the
north and the south, into a closer
bond, and is today wiping out what
ever of bitterness remains from the
fou” vears of sacrifice and of dread-
f:il strife from ’61 to '65? Is it not
this manner of knowing each other
better, of visiting our neighbors in
Ohio, or Massachusetts, of Michigan;
of taking a peep into Dixie, and dwell
ing for a moment within the borders
of the Palmetto State, or that of the
Long l.>eaf Pine?
We do not realize how much is be
ing contributed to this happy and
peaceful condition by these Building
and Ix>an conventions, this fostering
and furthering of a financial scheme,
which is to become the real emanci
pator of the poor man throughout the
wide, wide world.
\Vhy, my friends, when we of the
south meet upon their own soil the
men of Ohio, of .Michigan, of New
York, Massachusetts. New' .Jersey, In-
di?'n?.. Kentucky, Nebraska, and of
other states; when we see their zeal,
and enthusiasm, and self-sacrifice for
the good of mankind; when w’e par
take of their hearty cordiality and en
joy their gracious hospitality, do you
not know that we return to our
homes better and happier, and in
spired to do our very utmost to ad
vance our comomn cause? When you
honored Carolina and my home city
by your 1910 convention, can you
doubt for one moment that our people
were touched by your interest in our
country, delighted to have you within
their gates, and that they parted with
you, after your brief sojourn, feeling
that it was indeed good to grasp the
hand of men with like impulses, with
kindred ambition, laboring in the same
vineyard, striving for the same goal,
and that the beterment of mankind?
Why. when we get into the enemies’
country we find them friends. Where
the uniformed expect coldness and ha
tred and incivility, he is astonished at
the cordial greeting, the brotherly love,
the courtesy on every hand. Truly, my
friends, we be brethren still.
Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Da
vis have long since been gathered to
their fathers, and is our country less
glorious for their having lived and
died, each true to his convictions?
riysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee,
Stonewall Jackson and George B. Mc
Clellan have joined a host of brave
comrades on the other shore, and is
there one in this presence who does
not feel that their careers were exam
ples of a warrior’s life worthy of emu
lation throughout the coming ages?
Nay, my countrymen. It Is no longer
necessary, thank Giod, for eiher of us,
vou of the great state of Michigan or
me of the Tar Heel state to forget our
loved ones who fell at Bull Run or
Gettysburg, at Cold Harbor or Spott-
sylvania Court House, to become
friends and to love each other under
a common flag.
Is the Sunny South a part of this
great Union, and is she loyal to the
Stars and Stripes? The first fallen
hero of the Spanish-American war was
Ensign W'orth Bagley, who fell at Car
denas Bay, May 11, 1898. He was from
the capital of my Carolina home, ^nd
was but wenty-four years of age.
Do those who dwell north of Mason
and Dixon line accept our friendship,
and are they willing to bury the hatch
et and smoke the pipe of peace? Lis
ten to the New York Tribune—“It is
worth while to remember that the
south furnished the first sacrifice of
the war; Ensign Bagley was a na
tive of North Carolina. W’ith his blood
he has sealed the Union in arms of
the north and south. A people who
once fought, against the Stars and
Stripes send one of their sons as the
first sacrifice for the honor and glory
of that flag. There’s no north and
no sotith after that. We are all Worth
Bagley’s countrymen.” Hear the
Springfield Republican: “The loss of
life in the Cardenas engagement was
our first sacrifice of this sort in this
w'ar. I./et us not forget that the first
American officer to die for his coun
try w'as from the south. In view of
the great and tragic past, this fact
possesses an interest that unites the
hearts of all Americans. In the red
blood of the young Carolinian, the
north and soiith have sealed their per
petual reconciliation. Then, too, Char
lotte, the Queen City of the Carolinas,
gave Lieutenant Wm. E. Shipp to the
same cause, tie fell at San Juan,
Cuba. July 1898.
Does the southern soldier love his
comrades from far away? What does
our own Joe Wheeler say in bidding
farewell to the 33rd and 34th Michi
gan? “When your country called upon
the bravo men of the west to rally to
the standard which waves as the em
blem of American liberty, you were
among the first to respond. You made
no request but to be given the post of
danger and honor.” In language equal
ly comemndatory the same old hero
bade a last farewell to the troops un
der his command from Ohio, District
of Columbia and New York. These men
made history in w'ar for freedom’s
sake. We are making history in plan
ning ways and means for our needy
brother’s sake.
The survivors of the Blue and the
Gray and marching, arm in arm, acrose
the fields of Manassas, which once was
red with each other's blood, the work
ers in the vineyard of interesting and
unique finance are building up the
waste places by planting in the valley,
on the hill top. everywhere cozy cot
tages from whose sacred portals the
fragrance of happy homes is wafted to
a heavenly habitation.
Does anyone question that a powerful
degree of brotherly love is created at
each of these magnificent gatherings?
Who is not keen to observe that every
delegate goes home inspired with
greater zeal, with renewed energy and
with additional determination to do
something more and do it better for
his less fortunate brother? Is this
not the spirit of fraternity, and w'hat
element Is more needed in cementing
together the common interests of an
illustrious people? Do we not thus
for the first time, perhaps, realize that
other sections of this beloved union
posess good and patriotic en and
women as well as our ow'n?
Does our country begin to realize the
value of this work? Is sufficient en
couragement given it that it might
spread its wings and be a blessing ev
erywhere? Must the government of
France, illustrious in war, progressive
in peace, surpass our own in grasping
the real significance of this movement?
She gave us LaFayette In time of
need. Another of her distinguished
sons is with us today, working with
you and me to further a grand and glo
rious cause. May an abundant harvest
await us *ill.
PENNSACOLA SHUT
OFF BY STORM.
Atlanta. Ga., Aug. 12.—Pensacola,
Fla., Is shut off from the rest of the
world this morning as a result of the
storm w hich swept that part of the gulf
coast yesterday afternoon. Reports
received late last night were that the
wind was 90 miles an hour and that
it was the worst blow’ since the fam
ous hurricane of September 1906.
All telephone and ‘ telegraph wdres
running into the city were down this
morning. Efforts to get in touch with
wireless telegraph failed in the early
hours.
DEATH RIDES IN ROLLER CHAIR.
Atlantic City, Aug. 12.—Seized with
an attack of heart failure w'hile in a
roller chair on Tennessee avenue,
Jacob 'f. Murraw, a wealthy Philadel
phian, died before the arrival of
two physicians, who had been sum
moned. Murraj, with his wife, came
to the shore some weeks ago for
the benefit of his health and in com
pany with Mrs. Murray he set out
for a roller chair ride, but 'lad pro
ceeded only a short distance from
his hotel at No. 137 South Tennes
see avenue when he was stricken.
The attendant hurried the chair
back to the hotel and when the two
physicians arrived they found Mur
ray dead.
Some people never sympathize with
the under dog till they are pretty sure
he is going to get on top.
ri
• "A '* '• '/ '/xj
MRS. CHARLES G. GATES
Mrs. Charles G. Gates, wife of the son
of John W, Gates the “bet a million’'
financier, who died in Paris. Gather*
ed around the bedside of the aged
capitalist are his wife, son and the
son’s wife, who is shown here in her
latest photograph, sent over from
Europe.
GARDEN CITIES IN ENGLAND.
The damp climate of Great Britain,
which permits luxuriant plant life
even in deep shade, and the Influenco
exerted by hundreds of years of con*
stant contact with the gardens of the
great landed estates, have led to the
evolution of the garden city in En&*
land.
The Garden City, as we know It to
day, was insLitutecr about thirty years
ago, as a housing adjunct for a great
industrial enterprise. In 18S7 the firm
of Lever Bros., soap manufacturers,
bought some land between Birken
head and Liverpool on w'hich to build
homes for their employes. The first
houses constructed w'ere too costly to
be profitable and of late years the ex
pense of maintaining roads and parks
has risen so that on an, investment of
$1,500,000 there is no profit after the
payment of fixed charges, but Mr. Le
ver believes in carrying on the enter
prise because employes living in a
community which promotes good
health are more intelligent and effi
cient.
Fifty years ago a young man walked
the streets of Birmingham. England,
on Saturday afternoons looking at the
squalid workingmen’s houses and the
dirty unkempt yards. “Is it any won
der,” he said to himself, “That with
such demoralizing living conditions,
the workmen instead of coming home,
spend their wages drinking at the sa
loons.” The man was George Cad
bury, now one of the proprietors of a
great manufacturing company, and the
town of Bournville, four miues from
Birmingham, is ihe result of his ef
forts to secure good living conditions
for any one who might desire an at
tractive home in a district so designed
that there is plenty of room and fresh
air for all the inhabitants. Only forty
per cent of the houses at Bournville
are rented by employes of Messrs.
Cadbury Co. Mr. Cadbury having
wisely decided that there should be
no obligation on the part of his em
ployees to live in Bournville and also
that the colony might be open to any
one.
The houses in Bournville are attrac
tive brick structures with garden^ in
front and behind. The Village Trust
offers prizes for the best kept garden
and for the finest fruit and vegetables.
With this incentive, the gardens are
always neatly cultivated, and it has
been estimated that the produce raised
reduces the rent of eA'ery family in
Bournville nearly half a dollar a week.
There are tennis and football fields, a
swimming pool, and a gymnasium. The
death rate in Bournville Is five per
thousand, while in Birmingham, only
four miles away, it is fifteen.
The Bournville boys of tw-elve are
three inches bigger around the chest
than their city neighbors in Birming
ham. The enterprise was made over
In 1900 by George Cadbury to a per
petual trust, which will carry out his
ideas. The undertaking is on a strict
ly btisiness basis, the net profits of
about four per cent being devoted to
the building of more houses.
A dreamer looked into the future,
and curious as it may seem his
dreams caine true, for Ebenezer How
ard, whose “Garden Cities of Tomor
row'” opened the eyes of tiie public to
1 he possibilities of town development,
has lived to see realized most of the
essential ideas of his enterprise in the
Model Cities of Letchw'orth, about
thirty-five miles north of London.
In 1902 a tract of 3800 acres at $200
per acre was bought by the First Gar
den City, Limited, 1200 acres being
designed to house a population of
about 30,000 people. The remaining
2600 acres are devoted to an agricul
tural belt which encircles the town
and which shall remain inviolate. A
limit of tw'elve houses to the acre has
been established and a conscious ef
fort has been made to provide housing
facilities, for all sorts and conditions
of men, the rents ranging from five
and siz dollars a month up to forty or
fifty.
A part of the property lying close to
the railroad, but screened by a hill
and a belt of trees has been set aside
for factory enterprises. Already more
than twenty different enterprises have
left London, and found it to their fi
nancial benefit to operate their works
on cheap land where the homes of
the operatives may be within walking
distance of their work.
The directors wisely held the most
attractive portion of the land for a fu
ture civic center. The population of
Letchworth is now 7000, and the idea
is to use small temporary municipal
buildings until the city approaches it’s
final population of 30,000.
The most attractive London suburb.
Hampstead Garden, which is only
twenty minutes from the heart of Lon
don, was develoiied by the Hampstead
Garden Suburb Trust w^hich for $2500
per acre bought from Eton College
240 acres of rolling country border
ing Hampstead Health. The building
upon the property is upon a precon
ceived plan designed bj- Barry Parker
and Raymond Unwin. The land is not
sold but lots are rented for 999 years.
Three very successful Carpentership
Societies have built homes, all of
which must be approved by the archi
tects so that the harmony of the treat
ment may not be disturbed. Only eight
houses are permitted to the acre so
that there are ample gardens and
open spaces. The informal treatment
of the streets, and the placing of build
ings sometimes in groups of two and
three have produced very charming
street pictures.
Within a few years Germany has
learned the lesson of Letchworth,
Bournville, Hampstead, and Harborne.
Garden cities are springing up in many
localities . What are we doing in the
United States? Next to nothing. At
Hampstead they have realized that by
making tenants their ow'n landlords,
the holders of property will not wish
to wring out of the land the last cent
of profit.
There is land within the limits of
most of our great American cities
which is no more expensive than that
at Hampstead and which could be de
veloped on similar lines. Are we go
ing to stand still and watch twenty-
five, fifty, seventy-five or more houses
to the acre, without so much as breath
ing space, sw'eep solidly over the land
surrounding our cities? When will
people realize, as they have in Eng
land, that beauty is just as cheap as
ugliness? Think of the $1.50 a w'eek
houses at Letchworth and contrast
them with our own product. There is a
saying of President Lincoln’s, “For
people that w'ant that sort of things
that’s just about the sort of thing that
they want.” I hope we are going to
want something better than we have.
There is a very good rule that if the
people want a thing hard enough they
generally get it. The introduction of
the Garden City which is so successful
m
the
England is perfectly possible in
United States and its establish
ment w'ill mark a new era in Ameri
can building. *
^ © iPiOb/
GlTBVCX
FRANKLIN M’VEAGH
Franklin W. McVeagh, secretary of the
treasury, who will be an important
witness in the house investigation
of the alleged “money trust.” Sec
retary McVeagh has in his hands
much on the alleged combination of
New York banks and financiers,
which he will probably be asked to
give the house committee when the
probe gets under way.
Schools and Colleges
OUR SPECIAL RATES
positively expire .August 15th. But an unlimited scholarship for $36 now,.
Enter any time. The Inability of our big sc;hool to supply the demand for'
bookkeepers and stenographers attests strongly the efficiency of our grad
uates and the increasing deniciud for office help. Write for catalogue and
special offers.
iVi'^icjPC.JCaTEO
’OR
CHARLOTTE. N. C.
RALEIGH, N. C.
NORTH CAROLINA rviSDiCAL COLLEGE
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
J, P. Munroe, M, D., Pres. A. J. Crowell, M. D-, Sec.
OLDEST MEDICAL COLLEGE IN THE STATE
Unsurpassed Clinical Fr.ciMties.
Seven well equipped laboratories in a new buiiding.
Full corps of professors and instructors.
Fall term opens September 13, 1911.
Study diseases of the SOUTH in t’ae SOUTH.
For catalogue and information, write,
ROBERT H. LAFFEPkTY, i\1. D., Registrar,
Charlotte, N. C.
Trinity Park School
ESTABLISHED 1S93.
Location ideal: Equipment unsurpassed.
Students have use of the library, gymnasium, and athletic flel(^ of
Trinity College. Special atrtntuju g.vcn to health. A teacher in each dor
mitory looks after the living conditions cf boys under his care.
Faculty of college graduates. Most modern mechoda ot instruction. •
Fall term opens September 13.
For illustrated catalogue, address '
V/. W. PEilLE, Headmaster. Durham. N. C.
T¥imYY^C^LE^
1859
1891
1910-1911
JUST JOIN HANDS AND WED.
Tunkhannock, Pa., Aug. 12.—Formal
ly declaring their desire to becom6
husband and wife before witnesses,
Floyd Kisner and Miss Maude John
son, of AVyoming county, w'ere married
by the common law’ method at the
county court house here. They se
cured a marriage license, as required
by law, and then said they would mar
ry themselves by making declarations
of their intentions to each other.
The marriage license clerk advised
them to get a magistrate or minister,
but they declined. Then they formally
announced that they had become man
and wife, kissed each other to seal the
union and left in a happy frame of
mind.
Reading His Inmost Thoughts.
A negro, having won a dollar at a
crap game, decided to spend it on hav
ing his fortune told, says the Argonaut.
The fortune teller led him ii^to a
gloomy room, with dirty hangings and
misty red lights. She took his palm,
traced it with a dollar, spread out her
cards and then said:
“You are very fond of music; you
like chicken: you have won money at
craps, and you have been in jail.”
The negro looked at her with bulg
ing eyes and finally ejaculated:
“Mah goodness, lady; why, you jest
read mah inmost thoughts.”
Oscar Strange
Continued from Page 11.
been heard to agree with Hugh Am
brose.
Quick to outguess a batter, sure in
receiving, accurate in throwing and
an almost uncanny judge of hit-and-run
and base-stealing intentions, Stanage
is alw'ays working his gray matter.
Stanage seldom asks for a pitch-
out. He does not need ten yards elbow
room to get off his throws. He de
pends on a good arm to get the man
stealing. When he does ask for a
wide pitch, the chances are four out
of five that the runner for whose ben
efit, or rather detriment, the wide
pitch is ordered will try to advance.
In three games during the recent De-
troit-Philadelphia series, Stanage ask
ed for a total of five pitch-outs. Four
times he guessed it right and got an
Athletic runner in an attempt to steal.
Once he guessed wrong. But four out
of five is doing pretty well, I thank
you.
When Jim McGuire was catching,
Jim always asked for pitch-out with
men on bases. Jim got the pitch-outs
and he also got the pitcher in a hole.
The pitcher has to get the ball over the
plate then. ■ The batter knows this
generally and counts on a fast ball.
So to feel the batter, Jim always ask
ed for a curve ball. The result was
that in the majority of cases the curve
ball went wide and the batter walked.
Tiger pitchers do not fiiid them
selves in a hole because their catcher
asks them to pitch out. When they
do pitch out, something generally hap
pens. , ^ .
Was Stanage as bramy when he
first entered the big league? No. But
he used his think-tank just as much,
only he didn’t know as well how to
use it then. Six months passed and
he had risen one peg on the baseball
ladder. Six months more and he was
another peg higher, six month naore
and we find him where he is today.
Will he keep on climbing? It certainly
looks that way.
When a woman sighs for the wings
of a dove she is probably thinking of
putting them on her hat.
D R O P S Y
TREATED
Usually from the
first dose swelling
and short breath
rapidly disappear
and in 15 to 45 days
entire relief and
should effect a cure
in 30 to 60 days.
Trial Treatment
I sent FREE. For tes
timonials and a free
treatment write
Dr. Greens Sons
Box O, Atlanta. Ga
Three memorable dates: The Granting of the Charter for Trinity Col-]
lege; the Removal of the College to the g."owing and prosi'frous City of
Durn-Am; the Building of the Now and Greater Trinity. •
Magnificent new buildings with new equipment and enla:-ged lacillties. '
Comfortable hygienic dormitories and teautitni pleasant iurvoundings.
Five departments: Acad’i^.-c; ^Mechanical, Civil, and Electrical IiJugi-
neering; Law; lilducation; ^Jraduate.
For catalogue and other nioimation. address ' "j
n. L. FLOWERS, Secrfttary, Ditrharr,, N. C. |
An Ideal Christian Ilomo School. Preparatory and Colisgiate Courses, Art,
Expression, Phyelcal Cuhiiro, Pedagogy, Buslcess, Domestic Science, M«9?q.
High standard maintained by lari;o staff of experier.cev!, colleso-trjilned in-
Btructors. Takes only one hundred bonrdora endteanheB the Sndividual. UnEiir-
pass’d health record. Brick buikliDga. Steam heat. Excellent table. Largo gym
nasium. Park-!lke campus. Concerts, lectures, tennie, bametball. Write for our
cataloji before selecting the coilcjo for yonr daughter.
HENRY .lEROME STCCKARD„ Presidoait, R&lejjih, N. C,
11 fii
The Presbyterian College for Women ’
To the earnest student the Presbyterian College for women, offiers advani
tages that cannot be surpassed in the South. Large, strong faculty of
able and cultured teachers and unexcelled facilities for college work in
Collegiate and Academic departments and in Schools of Music, .Art and Ex-j
pression assure the student the very best opportunities. ..... |
The Presbyterian College is well known for the wholesome Christian at
mosphere that characterizes the institution. The broad culture, the gentl
refinement and the correct habits of thought that come from intimate as
soclation with teachers such as compose the faculty of the institution are
no less valuable than the intellectual ti’aining.
The college building is located in the center of a beautiful five-acre
campus in the center of the city of Charlotte. Convenient to churcheaJ
lecture halls and shopping center. On car line leading to all parts of city j
and suburbs. These and other advantages of location are ahvious. ^ '
Rates extremely low' considering the advaritages offered,
For catalogue and information, write to ^ ^
REV. JOHN L. CALDWELL, D, D., President,.
Charlotte, N. C. .T ,
FASSIFERN
LINCOLNTON, N. C. . j
A home school for a limited number of girls. CollegOrj?reparaton}-aaA.
general courses.
Special advantages In music and art. No vacancy In the schooMt
the four years of its existence.
MISS KATE C. SHIPP ’ Principdl
_k
LAYING IN COAL
is a necessity. Why not
order now when the price
!S EASY? 'fe-?-
As the prices advance, It
will be harder to pay
the bills. You can save
money by ordering now.
YOU KNOW THAT.
If you don’t know our
superior coal, try it
Our huge stock of wood
is the best.
AVANT
Phone 402.
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