Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / March 3, 1914, edition 1 / Page 9
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9 On roCKb BONDS MONEY T7 r mane CXoXoXoXoXo! 1 :iai and Commercial GRAIN COTTON PRODUCE C ; : w w w' - w r w vs SS Sr' XSVS VSnSAS VsAvSS? VSsAi . ' -r -- S roc market a I . ? i: -' :! N-. -V Ilaveu : :i the son--.i,ni. Dur--.o.it'n'.'iecl -to''n c it . . - At noon. rc about yes-1 n press - !'-.--nc. T - v. ... : .. CHIOAUO KARKETft. 1 .:!0 A. M. r, r.e cpen . irn charts Nation nn.-i cases C U'V'C;! one ,: -aics ;-v L'St. Last saU; - , " " e c ci a a- o a. i t'-'a 44 6.7S " V?S:'..S L'--j '.i - 01-s . 20S:-j os - 1.3-T- , i-r: 2 bi3e 12 147 , 12?5? . 3b . 1)109 . bU?i , 1 05-i , IS . u?v - 102is , 112 ls . 1115 '. 134 's 5;s 25 L - ' 63 6 5 ' 3 36 . JIM j 2 0 II? . 165 - '.tC'-c 20"-; "4"k . 3 . in Chicago Grain. Chicago, March. 3. -Wheat hardened on. an upturn at Liverpool and con tinued domestic crop damage reports. Opened h shuJe to l-al-l ay sligbtly gauieii ;'iirthcr: then begun to react. Bui! activity lifthvi cura. Oponod from i-i lower to a sixteenth' cnc higher, followed by a moderate rise. Oat. s Iris her. Hog.- strength carried 1 provisions upgrade. First sales wer 2 --2 to 1.5c a"ooo lust night and there na; a sub eeiuent ascent- Wheat sagged on estimates that farm resen us are 4,000.000 bushels larger than a year ago. Closed n rak 1-2 id U-Ui.7-S net lower. Corn gains di-appearel later on ligures shoeing stocks 0!i. hand here had greatly en larged. Closed weak at 'J !i to 1-2 net ; decline. ; Chicago Cash Gram. ! Chicago, March o.Cash grain: ! Wheat Nc. 2 red, b? 12; No. 2 i hard P3al4; No. 2 Northern 34 l2a 1-2: No. 2 rspring ?! t-2y?D 1-2. " No corn. Oats No. 2 white 41 l-2a42: stand ard 40 U-4a41. Rye No. 2, S3 1-2. Barley -I-OaTO, Timoth;- o.'V5a5.2-. Clover 10.75al3.T5. Pork 21.&5. I,ard 10.35. Ilibi 10.62 1.2all.25. NEW YORK COTTON Ne York..' March Cotton "as nioe. active this morning, but busi ness continuc'i more or less restricted oing to limited wire service, and trading camo chiefly from foreign or lo cal .-ource?. Cables were abont as due hut Liverpool was a seller hero and there as also scattering liquidation. After opening steady " higher to 2 lower, the market sold about 2 to 4 net ioer. Messages from New- Orleans show ing lower prices there and a few Southern selling orders served to un settle the local market which ruled " to S net lo-or about noon. All montlio except March made new low record ,s for the season during the early afternoon, selling about 10 to 1 i net lower under continued liquida tion and bear pressure accompanied by rumor- of freer snot offerings. Close New York Spot Cotton. New York. March 3. Spot cotton closed iuiet; middling 13.00; gulf 1?.2.5. Ciesc .New York Futures Ne-v York, March 3, Cotton futures closed barely steady. High. Low. March 12.10 May 11.82 11.65 Uib il.S'3 11.63 August 11.86 11.5S October 1.42 11.30 December .... .. 11.44 11.3$ Close. 32.09 11.65 11.65 11.53 11.30 11.34 WHEAT May ... July .,, CORN May ... July . OATS : May . July . PORK May . July , LARD May . July . RIBS May . Julv . i a 1 High. , 94 ?i , S9U , 68 - 6TU . 41 . 40A 21.50 21.35 '21.37. 21.45 Produce Lo'. Cloas, 67iA 6TU 40-i, AOfr 40U 4 OH. 21.35 21.43 10.62U 10.571 10.5TSs' 10.S2U 10.77;! 10.77 ; Z- J :. E MARKET. Z. B'akeiy.) . to 16 . H to 13 . 17 to 18 . 25 to 0 . 15 to 25 .52.25 to 2.50 .2.6o to 2.63 to $3.a0 7 to 7-1-2 . . , , 11.45 11.37 11.3TU' . . 11.57 U H.50 11.50 Chicago Provisions, Chicago, March 3, Butter irregular, creameries 23a30. Eggs nigher; receipts Ss603 cases-, at mark, cases included 27a2S; ordi nary firsts 27a27 1-2; firsts 2Sa2 1-4. Cheese unchanged. Potatoes, receipts 3S cars; unchang ed. Poultry alive, unchanged. "Chicago Live Stock. Chicago. March 3. Hogs, receipts 15.000; stroaar. Hulk of sales S.55 2 8.70 Light .4 S.50 0j 8.72 Mixed i.45 -'cj- S.72 Heavy . . 3.30 a 3.7o Rough ; S.30 3.45 Pigs 7.60 $.60 Cattle, receipts 4.000; slow. Beeves 7.2u 3.75 Texas steres 7.10 -a 3.10 Stockers and feeders.. .. 5.50 a S.00 Cows and heifers . . . , 3.63 (a- S.oi Calves 7.00 U 10.75 Sheep, receipts 22,000, steady. Native 4.S5 ft 6.25 Yearlings 5.S5 7.30 If NEW OFI'-SANg COTTON 3 33& Xetw Orleans, Marci 3. Opesisg steady four to six points dotrn, cotton fell to a level 7 points down around the Srsr. call. Seilisg was cased oa in creased receipts t ports and good weather. Half an. hour after the open ing, prices were 4 points down. After the decline vras widened to 7 to U points predictions of & large March export movement brought a reaction. At noon prices were tvithia 4 points of yesterday's close. Heavy celling orders sent prices 14 to IS points net lower by 2 o'clock. New Orleans Spot .Cotton, New- Orleans, Marches'. Spot cot ton steady 1-S lower; middling 12 7-8; sales on the spot 3,100; to ar rive 500. Low middling 12 11-16: strict low middling 12 5-S: strict middling 13 5-16; good middling 13 11-16; strict good middling 13 7-3, Receipts 7,633; stock 231,S"7, . New Orleans Futures. (By Barbee & Co.) New Orleans, March 3. Cotton fu tures closed steady. Spots 12 7-S. High. Low. Close 12.34 12.25 12.2627 12.35 12.20 12.2122 12.39 12.21 12.2223 11.49 11.37 11.3339 WILL INVESTIGATE FEASIBILITY OF PINE VILLE'S PROPOSITION The Mecklenburg county board at its meeting yesterday afternoon des ignated Superintendent William Mc Claskey, and Messrs. J. C. Reid and Plato B. Price of the school board a. committee of three to investigate the feasibility of establishing a farm life school at Pineville, This action followed the reading o? a letter from State Superintendent J. Y. Joyner, in which lie stated that it rested with the, county board to determine the lo caion of the school, after a, given dis trict had complied with the require ments of the law in making its bid for the school. This the district-of Pine ville did recently when the board ad vertised for bids. The committee w in report at the next meeting of thy board. The board voted money to supple ment the school fund apportionment in Pinevilie. District No. 1, to length en out the term to the six months compulsory law requires, the citizens having already started the movement by a private, subscription. It was re ported also that the school census gave the district only 72 school popu lation, although there were more'than that number in actual attendance. An unofficial census gave the district en rollment. Members of the board expressed the belief that it would be found on in vestigation in a number of districts over the county that the census had not been accurately made, This re ulted, they agreed that since the ap pcrtionment to the county schools was mad9 on a basis of the school popu lation, the county came something short of the amount of money due it for school purposes, while the city, having a more accurate census, was the gainer, to some extent at least. March May July- October v. a M L" a " I morey rat 1 3-4: -: l-2a'M. la 4 12: ster- .);- 4.3.75: CHARLOTTE GRAIN. (Corrected Ly Cochran & McLaughlin) Oats . . . 58 to 60 Cera 11.00 Patent Sour 55.25 to $5.60 Straight flour .. -.54.63 to $5.01? London Stocks. London, March 3. The stock mar ket finished rather uncertain owing to the statement on the Mexican situa tion by Sir Edward Grey not being available before the close. s- " -Tu-rent:t. e - . ' d: saies 'eeetpis L- K :. :.",: ' jj ii fi K 4.25: Cah ; Wheat ; - -i -d V'i 3-4a?3 2 white 63. ' -: 2 white 41 FOR LAMAR PROBE ASKS -ORE SUBPOENAS -Counsel for r-;ges that the ' oration has ' ' railroads ' -h' ate being ::it rotate eom- ;' asked for w. Perkins, president of ''"r Oliver and CUSTOMS RECEIPTS FELL DEE Br- Associated Press. Washington, March 3. Customs re ceipts for the United States iu Feb ruary foil off slightly ntor-. than Sll', 'JV.UOO compared with the same month of' 1913. This is the most marked dis crepancy in such receipts -er months of iyi:jv that has '..pen noticed since the new tariff became law. It was pointed our. thai millions of dollars' worth of sugar is in bond in New York, New Orleans and other ports, held for weeks to take advan tage of the 23x per cent reduction in duties in force today. Customs offi cials here, too, called attention to the fact, that despite, this falling off, the administrat ion counts upon about $50. 000.000 a year from income tax. They are hopeful that the tax and the in crease expected from the new corpora tion tax will more than offset the re duction in customs. All receipts for the current month of Fbruarv amounted to $ 13,633,357, compared to $34,503,419 in February, 1913. ?$!?& &J a LIVERPOOL COTTON 3 ? :m- Liverpool, March 3. Spot cotton in fair demand prices steady. Middling fair 7.67 flood middling .. 7.30 Middling . . , 7.03 Low middling ,. 6.67 Good ordinary 5.35 Ordinary . , 5.33 Sales 8.000, including 7,000 Ameri can and 500 for speculation and ex port. Receipts 74.000, including 66,700 American. Futures closed barely steady. March ,. .. 6.61 March-April 6.61 April-May 6.37 May-June 6.56!; June-July . . . . 6,o2 MEETING AT SH0PTQN IN INTEREST OF THE SPECIAL SCHOOL TAX An interesting meeting was held last night at ihopton High School Academy concerning the special school tax which is being promoted in Shcp ton district, W, W. Watt of the county board of education, delivered an address of vital interest. His talk was followed by an address delivered by County Superintendent McLusky, which was enjoyed. This was the nrst time the Shopton community had had an oppor tunity of hearing Mr. McLusky. Mr. Plato Price and Mr. Baittie Faires also made interesting remarks concerning the object of the meeting. Much interest is being taken in the special tax and the day of election, which is the 10th of March, is looked forward to with eagerness. 1 1 lj II U, S. Department of Agriculture. Charictte, March 3, Pair tonight, not so coid: fncreasir.g cloudiness and sightly warmer. U r. & partly clccdy; cloudy; rain; asotr; report sisda. Arrows 57 with the wind. First fies. 'owe iengsrstnrs y&tz 12 bours; ggcond. precipiUeoa of .Oi ?3ch or mere for past 24 hoars; third, majdnmm wind velocity.- liTBUZM i f ii r n si i t5 ft j tUtli H i ! b El, T .11 ' Stricken Cities 'Continued from Page One.) FOUNDER OF GEORGE JUNIOR REPUBLIC SCORED BY JUDGES By Associated Press. New York, March S. William K. George, founder and former head of the George Junior Republic at Fres ville, N. Y., is further scored by the findings of three informal judges in a report made public" here today. The present investigation was conducted under joint auspices of committees representing the Freeville Institution and the National Association of George Junior Republics. It concerned itself with three charges, two of which the judges sus tained. Oa a third a charge that George was the father of a girl's child a Scotch verdict of "not prov en1' was returned. The charges sus tained were that George had made im proper overtures to a girl citizen and that he went to anothei girl's room at night where he made an examina tion of her person. The judges who passed on the charges were Joseph H. Choate, Jr., Samuel Seabury, state supreme court justice and Miss Lillian Wald, a so cial worker. An erroneous report from Ithaca Sunday night said that the judges iu this hearing had rendered a decision acquitting George. July - Aug Aug-Sept Sept-Oct Oct-Nov Nov-Dec Dec-Jan , 6.47 6.37 H 6.25'v 6.17 !i. fi.lo 6.1 .Tan-Feh . , 6.12 SOUTHERN SPOT COTTON - Savannah, Ga., March 3. Spot cot ton steady, middling 12 7-S. Memphis, Tenn., March 3. Cotton spot steady, unchanged; middling 13c. CHARLOTTE COTTON, Charlotte Cotton 13 l-i3 r h ART FAILURE. 'f.z 3. Return--' ofaciaticir at . .. "J a life long -"T"1 Cornwall, opiseopal church, ii-fu-f. disease. He ,,.;-'l,i!!'r (1' 'b- Parish ;; ;;,n Avon, England. baptized. Shark Brings Prophecy of Early Spring Boston, March 3.--An early spring was predicted by Boston tishermtn when they learned today that a shark had been hooked off the Middle Banks. It is declared that the appearance of sharks in these waters is a sure sign of an early mackerel season and oi spring. Steamer Howard Released. By Associated Press. Baltimore, March 3. The Mer chants &. Miners steamer Howard from Boston, which grounded off Seven-Foot knoll, Chesapeake Bay, during the storm yesterday, was re leased today and proceeded to her dock here. The vessel was not damaged. Cotton Seed Oil, New Yote, March 3. The cotton eed oil market closed steady. Spot 7.10a7.o0; March 7.13a7.16; April 7.19 a7.23: May 7.29a7.30; June 7.29a7.42; July 7.49a 7.50; August 7.57a7.59; Sep leruper 7.5Sa7.62; October 6.35a7.10. Total suletj 5.600. WRECKERS fvlUST WAIT HIGH TIDES FOR FURTHER WORK Ev Associated Fress. "Norfolk, Va., March 3. With contin ued northwest winds on the coast there were again today insufficient tides for wreckers to pull on the Brit ish stranded steamer Rivers-dale at Little Island, south of Cape Henry, and it is apparent that no further work can be done on the Riversaale until the off-shore winds cease and high tides prevail - Captain Lorimer, of the Riversdalc, who last night arrived here with ten men of the stranded vessel's crew, to day paid these off. Thirteen of the Riversdale crew were left aboard the vessel. MR, LITTLE SELLS INTEREST IN LITTLE PLAN TATION IN RICHMOND Mr J. P. Little. -of Charlotte, told his interests i the Little planta tion in the upper part of the coun ty to his brother. Mr. A. J. Little, savs the Rockingham Post. Continu ing the Post says: "Mr. J. P. Little, who is a partner in the Craig-Little Real Estate Company, expects to make Charlotte his permanent home, an dcontemplates building a hand some home at an early date." Cleveland, O., March 3. President C. W. Soniers, of the Cleveland Americans, said today he had signed Pitcher Fred Bianding, and that he is in his way to join the Naps at Ath ens. Bianding previously had signed a Federal League contract. Cotton receipts yesterday 16 bales at 13 1-4; same date last year, 58 bales at 12 1-2. Receipts today 47 bales at 14 1-4; today a year ago, 20 bales at 12 1-2. MORE GOVERNMENT CONTROL OF RAILROADS FAVORED BY A. P. TH0M Br Associated Press. 'Washington. March 3. Alfred P Thorn, general counsel of the South ern Railway, testifying today before the house commerce committee, said he believed the federal government should have exclusive powr to pro vide for regulation and issuance of capitalization by railroads in inter state traffic. He contended that to allow this power over interstate roads to both the interstate commerce com mission and to the various state rail road commissions, would be an unnec essary and annoying duplication of a great work, and that it was exclusive ly a federal function. CCL GOETHALS TO SE HONOR GUEST, By Associated Press. Washington, March 3. Coi. George W. Goethals will be the guest ot honor and receive the National Geo graphic Society's special gold medal at the annual banquet of the society here tonight. President Wilson prob ably will present the medal and Sec retary Bryan vill be the toastmaster. The inscription on the medal to Col. Goethals reads: "This special medal of the National Geographic Society is awarded to George Washington Goethals to whose ability and patri otism the world owes the construe tion of the Panama canal." would drag anchor and be dashed to pieces. Tugs are standing by. In the city and its sub-arts 12 per sons are dead from the storm. Two other persons were killed, by fallen electric wires in Newark. Loss Runs Into Millions, The loss to business interests, rail- fSoecial to The. Rresnsvora News A i roaas, ana the cost to the city and Mount Airy, March 3- This section public and private corporations for ia in the erip'cf the most terrible bliz- snow removal will run into millions, zard in ths history of the mountain ! "Wire communication with point3 section which has" done considerable south and west, while far frcm normal, damage to property to say nothing cf was improved today. Telegraph ' and the suffering owing to the extreme cold telephone companies today sent out weather. Wrth a clear sky the wind hundreds of men in all direction to re hegan blowing from enow-covered pair poles and wires, mountains Sunday morning at 3 , Ths Lakewood-Atlantic City Express o'clock and continued to blow yester- with 100 passengers aboard is stalled day, reaching a velocity, at intervals, in a cut near Red Bank, N. J. It ran of b0 miles an hour. The mercury at mto a snow dritt m the cut on Sunday sunrisee yesterday morning stood at 1 night. Wrecking crews working to re- above, and everything is literally fros- lease the train estimated it might not en. i be able to resume its trip before The ouarrv is closed down on ac- night or tomorrow. Many of the pas- count of the stone being frozen and sengers are invalids on their way to pipes curstsd. Neither of the three fur- Atlantic City. niture factories could operate today Vice President Snowbound. and large portions of roof have been Vice President Marshall was snow- blown from them. Smoot's mammoth bound at New Brunswick, N. J., from bark shed and the Granite. City Mills 11 o'clock Sunday night until 3:30 are unroofed, besides hundreds cf Monday afternoon. He spent the night small houses and handsome residence- in the car. The vice president said it se being greatly damaged. Two modern was the first time in IS years that fronts on Main street, those cf the he had been absent from Mrs. Mar Gwyn Drug Company and the R. J. Gal- shall. Mayor John Purroy Mitchel is low ay Company, w ere blown out last snowbound at Lake Placid, N. Y., T! 1 rh t anri thp tliimSfn TA trlAm HinfT-. Via ncn t TTVirl a-rr nicrht T? ailrno H u.uw w ....... - - ' , . . , .IVl ij. . TC.iiL X 1 ,UU J i.WUL. 1VU111UUU is several hundred dollars. For the traffic demoralization in the east will first time since the establishment of result in heavy losses by theatrical in- rural service from this office, the terests. routes were abandoned today, for no The charitv organization societv man could have faced this terrible rnade miblie a statement todav in wind and weather. The graded szchool which it was estimated that more suf- could not teach yesterday, owing to ferine anions the Door resulted from the inability of the heating plant to ren t-ae 5torm than any other in many der the building comfortable. Only years. It reported yesterday that it about luO pupils reported tor scnooi, ta(j 2,731 families in its care, 548 more but they were sent home. tkan last year at this time. Other While the gale was at its height rhsritahle orzanizstions reoorted in- yesterday morning, at 11 o'clock, an creased numbers of appeals for fuel alarm of tire sent hundrc ds of citizens ancj fc0(jt and the fire department to the resi- " ' Albany, dence of W. D, Moore, on Pine street &!banv. N. . Marcn 3. Conditions e THE VEATHER. ? Weather Conditions, The severs storm which passed northward up the coast, is centra i today off the New England coast. Snows and diminishing high winds continue over that section today. The high pressure area following this storm, i3 located today over the eastern part cf the Mississippi river basin, where fair weather prevails. with rising temperature, there and over the southeast. A slight barometric disturbance over Texas and Oklahoma is causing cloudy and unsettled weather in the southwest. Only moderate tempera tures are reported from the western states. The indications are for fair weath er in this vicinity tonight with not so cold; the lowest temperature to night will probably be about the freezing point. Wednesday, increasing cloudiness and somewhat warmer. O. O. ATTO, Local Forecaster. TEMPERATURES. i o t SB a Is I approaching normal will not be re- to find that only a a chimney cad turned out. stored in this eection for several The wind is still blowing and the rf.,Vj- wjiririrprts ot tp.lesrach. tele- fraaments of reefs signs and otter cb- u".a aTW oWtHf Utrht wir are jeers are floating through the air, mak- 0rv-n Tae gre ai"arm system in Ai- mg walking nazaraous ana anvmg ai- bany remained out of commission to most imoo?sible. Reports from the a,- Thp t damaw to nubiic country tell of fences and much timber utiiitie3 corporations in ' Aicany being Dlown down, besiaes carnage to and -vicinity is . estimated at a mil farm and outhouses. -i lior dollars TTrm Six Feet cf Snow. HEAVY WITHDRAWALS Geneva, N. Y., March 2. This sec OF RAW oUGAR, tion ia iu the grip o an UIlUsuaiiy Atlanta 26 38 26 .00 Augusta 30 42 28 .00 Birmingham .. 28 42 26 .00 Cha-iotte 30 40 28 .00 Columbia .... 32 30 .00 Fort Smith .. 38 38 .00 Galveston.. ..53 CO 56 .00 Houston .... 56 . 54 .00 Louisville 26 32 24 .00 Macon 30 30 .00 Memphis .... 34 42 34 .00 Meridian 32 30 .00 New Orleans - 42 5S 42 .00 Palestine 4S 70 4 .00 Raleigh 32 38 2S .00 Savannah .... 34 44 32 00 Taylor 56 54 .00 'ihomasville .. 34 32 .00 Bv Associated Press. New York. March 3. Heavy with drawals from bunded warehouses ot raw sugar weie made here yesterday beau of the 5 per cent cut in du ties provided for iu the tariff act o . fr"om the effects of Sunday night's bliz 191 effective Marcn 1, zard The Reajing railway sent out Custom house cmciais renorteu tui fta t tran 1D k.-w York sine Sun- heavy snow storm. Snow m the busi ness section here is six feet deep. The temperature is ten above zero. Philadelohia Is Recovering. Philadelphia. Pa. March 3. Phila delphia rapidly was recovering today 45. Atlanta Crude Oil. Atlanta, Ga., March 3. Crude oil Legislative Committee Denounces Modern Dances By Associted Press. Boston, Mass., March 3. Modern dances were denounced by a legisla tive committee today at a hearing on a bill introduced by Representative L. R Sullivan, prohibiting specifically the tango, lame duck, Argentine, chicken fiip, bunny hug and grizzly fclide. t-wpntv-t.wo warehouse entries lor d iiverv" n-ere made while the duties cay at 7 a. m. today. The Pennsylvania railroad which resumed partial service rrnld en the wit tiara- di .-iast nismt, announced its passenger $290,000. . . ' traffic over the New York division Several refineries in this city and rould be aimost aormal by noon. One Yonkert have resumed tua time ater of its tracks Ptill buried under a a lon-r period of part operation or l5.foot 8now (lr;ft at Bristol, Va., their plant? i Trains to the West and South are pro. reeding with little delay. Freight traf- Cciumbia Shivered. ric in all directions remains practically Columbia, S. C, March 0. comm- at a standstill: bian? yesterday morning shivered in the coldest -eather for March 2nd in the 27 vears' history of the local weath er bureau and the coldest March day in 13 years. At S o'clock the mercury had fallen to 21 degrees. The cold wave was accompanied by high winds, vary' ing in velocity from 15 to 30 miles an hour. The previous low record for this date "was 27 degrees, recorded in 1890. Only four times before has a tempera ture of 21 degrees been equalled dur ing March. It Was Cold at Asheviile. Asheviile, N. C, March 3 The mer cury in Asheviile yesterday morning at o clock went aown 10 eigut grees above zero, the lowest tempera ture registered here in March since the local weather bureau was established in 1902. The lowest March temperature heretofore secorded was 14 degrees above. A 40-mile gale did considerable dam. age. Many telegraph and telephone wires went down. Railday traffic was interfered with, especially the mail service. Schools were closed on ac count of the extreme cold weather. New York Provisions, New York, March 3. Butter firm, unchanged. Cheese firm, unchanged. Eggs unsettled, fresh gathered, sec onds C0al-2. Horse Sense Put a new harness on an old plug and see him pick up his ears. If a horse has sense enough to feel proud in -a new harness, what excuse has a man for wearing a poor suit. Let Hummel Be Your Taiior. 15 S. Tryon. !. C. C. SUSPENDS INCREASE FREIGHT RATES ON TOMATOES Washington, March 3. A proposed tariff of the Atlantic Coast Line Rail road increasing freight charges on tomatoes in carloads from Florida points to East St. Louis, 111., and St. Paul, Minn., and destinations taking the same rates, today was suspended I by the interstate commerce commis sion until July 3. When Better Automobiles Are Built Will Build Them c"e;r:cDDDirr370N. CHARLOTTE N. C
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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March 3, 1914, edition 1
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