Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Sept. 25, 1879, edition 1 / Page 1
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She ttt)arlotfc tybstxvtt. t i' i s .' o i - aVBSORZPTioir saxms : , , , WBIKLY EDITION: wmJUy, (M tA ootmy) u advance. ........... (2 00 Out qftm county, pottpoud,.. ..... 2 10 Six Montitt. j. fMMf fi M.. J 00' 17" Liberal Reduction for Olubt. Mt ml Ml iirtc m t4 THE OBSERVER JOB DEPARTMENT Has been thoroughly supplied with every needed want, and with the latest styles of Type, and every manner of Job PrtntJiur can now be done with neatness, dispatch and cheapness. We can torn ish at short notice, . . BLANKS, BILL-HEADS, LETTER HEADS-CARDS, TAOS. RECEIPTS, POSTERS, PROGRAMMES. HANDBILLS, PAMPHLETS. CIRCULARS, CHECKS, AC. CHARLOTTE, N. ;.' jpi ; THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1879. VOL. XX. NO. 3,301. TO THE PUBLIC. OUR STOCK OFJJTjPLE AND FANCY Is now open, ana ready tor Inspection. We claim THE fflNDSOnfip-rORE And the moot complete ste&eTlW flwods to "be found In the 8tata. THE LATEST :. , BUT,- -. NOT THE LEAST. Magnificent Carpet Boon; Representing 820,000 In Carpets aim anything ever before seen in the eltf. xtja nil hva nnr atnr.k raadT 'for mrhlhittnh bv r Monday, September 15th, which Is the largest and -handsomest we nave ever uuereu. uur mock ui DRESS GOODS, laik and Colored Silk, Blaek and Colored Sat ,B0Sr Black and Colored Alpacas, Tamise, -? Henrietta Cloths. Dran Ce Almas. J and Fancy Dress Goods In ' anytblng ever before seen in me eity. it is a well known ?M.mWjUia ladles that we lead the-J we haws ft large stock of Repellanta, in plaid alxed colors: Cloaks, shawls. Blankets I laid and market lo - DRESS GOODS, ., NOTIONS,. . nir a larger and handsomer stock than anr $ branch eomprises alarge toe of fclad Carrylne a larger and handsomer stock than house In Charlotte. Don't fall to ask for Ribbon. Call on us for -. CASSIMERES AND JEAllsl ' Ask for flannels. Ask for Towels, Table Linen, Napkins, etc. Be sure and ask for Ladies', Gents' and Children's Under Vesta. ifitack :w;wtfltr JwuslTtioAotAiUaiiaa I ijaces. Our Hosiery. Department Is well worth seeing, being the largest In the city. Our stock of Ready-Made Clothing ts equal to any In the market we have the best Shirt sold In the State for the money 75 cents. In short, we have everything you want, and at prices as low as can be found anywhere. Everybody Is Invited to eall on as. We will show them polite attention and nice goods. Very respectfully, , , ALEXANDER HARRIS. Sept 14 1879.' - Democrat and Home copy. BORCESS NICHOLS. Si WCttAJpAIL ) mtUB ni ALL : KINDS Of ack Silk, ttalaiM hnttatlon and Valenclenne ki;adiMUk and Lace Scarfs. Silk, and ?rr '- Linen Handkerchiefs, SHklllusloni ' Tissue and He rage veiling, 1 " Dress Batons, Hamburg Bnd Swiss Embroidery, a,-handsome stock . ' Ladies', Gents' and Chll i dreu's TTOSIERT ' IN trHTTE AND FANCY COLORS. Corsets In all grades. Ladles', Gents' and Chil dren's Underwear. A laige stock of Kid Gloves, from 1 to 6 Buttons. I Yl1 8ning 0x9 celebrated KEEP'S SHIRTS, Cuffs, Collars and Umbrellas. Be sure and look at our stock of Gents' and Youths' Stiff and soft Hats. Gents' and Youths' Caps. Ready-Made Clothing in Diagonal. Basket ciotn. Fancy uasimere ana Cheviot Suits in dress and business styles. A large- line of Caroets. Rues and Oil' Clothsi we ask special ' attention to our Une of Ladfes'i Hata and Millinery Goods. We are willing to compare ds and prices wiin any one. uur siock oi ts and 8hoes is complete. Give us a calL Special attention given to orders. Respectfully, T. L. SKIGLB ft CO., Opp. Charlotte Hotel, Tryon St., Charlotte, N. C. 3ept 14. ' I Gool Night. THE IDEAL. AND REAL. EDITOR. HEADQUARTE FOR BEDDING, &C. A FULL LINE OF CHEAP BEDSTEADS AND Bottled Liger Beer, ALE AND PORTER. Is corner Trade and Boundary Avenue. Delivered to any part of the dty. free of charge for 51.00 per dozen. F. C MUNZLEBj All orders left at John Yogel's tailor shop will re ceive prompt attention. mar4 lmiei mm HAPPY JOE FISCHESSER. 80LE AGENT FOR THE ATLANTA BREWERY Good night; I have to say good night To such a host of peerless things! Good night unto that fragile hand All Queenly with lta weight of rings ; " Good night to fond, uplifted eyes, Goed night unto the perfect mouth, And all the sweetness nestled there - The snowy hand detains me, then Til have to say good night again! .. But there will come a time, my love, When, if I read our stars aright, 1 shall not linger by 4hW porch With my adieus. - TULthen, good night! . You wish the time were now? And L You do not blush to wish-It so? You would have-blushed yourself to death To own so much a year co What, both these snowy hands ? Ah, then I'll have to say good night again. OBSERVATIONS. How to make a 4catftsh leave her alone in a roou-wUb an-aqqadum. Aran treat asking a fellow about once in six monftstD-take something," . awr!mt-ent the old," aa the washerwoman said wbehUeded4amr $tupthe sods. - A mm -Out West, who tBamardry copperas put In a bed of antewotrid "tarase them to leave, put some in his mother-in-law's bed, to see If she would go. He says she was there at last accounts. The scientific expedition around the world, may, Lrjerhapev-aaleteU.JU-when it returns, why a man always takes on nis doocs nrsi wnen unaress- Ing) while a woman begins at her hair-pins. "Silence In the court!" thundered a Kentucky lodge, the other morning. "Half a dozen men have been convicted already without the court's having been able to hear a word of the testimony." It was at the battle of Edee Hill that Sir Jacob Ashley made his remarkable prayer: "Oh, Lord! Thou knowest how bus I must be this day; If I forget Thee, do not Thou forget me. MaactMn, boys." A railroad train moved out of Denver with a bride on board, but the careless husband was left in the station. He was wild with excitement when be understood that she bad been whisked off on her honeymoon Journey alone, and at length a compassionate official put him en a special loco motive, with orders to the engineer to overtake the bride at an hazards. Said the lawyer: "Why do rou apply for a di vorce?" "Well." he answered, with emphatic candor, "you see t'other nleht I came home from a business trio rather late and unexpected like. and going too abruptly Into my wife's presence, I discovered more than a confiding husband ought to know." The counsellor opened his tool chest and prepared to file a bill. ( Some of those side-splitting witticisms in Con- Sess, which provoke "laugnier." ana "contjnuea ughter," and "renewed laughter," would create a funeral elooin if printed In the humorous column of a daily newspaper. If a Congressman were to get up and read a few pages from a coun terfeit detector, the effort, rio doubt, would be pro fusely punctuated by "laughter' irora tne mem bers. Hardly any better retort is on record than one made to Professor Bonamy Price, of Oxford Uni versity, on his late visit to this country. He was not remarkable for his geniality, and at a dinner party at which popular ideas of heaven happened to be under discussion, he turned to Dr. H. W. Bellows and said. "We would like to have your opinion of heaven. Dr. Bellows, as that oi one wno stands outside the Dale oi civilized religions." Dr. BeHows replied: "My idea of heaven is that of a ereat dinner oartv. where we can have every thing we want without money and without Price." All but one joined in the laugn. liOtifi'GESi " Let those who never drank Beer before, Go to Joe Flschesser's and drink the more.' PARLOR & CHAMBER SUITS. COFFINS of all kinds on hand. -Mi J W. UU r, . . No. 5 West Tradk Stkxxt. . ; T ,i ; ;. . . CHARLOTTE, N. C. Ladles and Gentlemen's Burial Robes tine, stipplj..' Juiy2 ' ' '.-.v: u NDERTAKIN6V' edto'flll all orders is Sill The undersigned Is now prepared for every class of Undertaking, j Havtn&og faar full assortment of FRESH FROM THE ATLANTA BREWERY, ON ICE ALL THE WAY. I have an arrangement with the Atlanta Brewery. bv which I am able to keen on draught, and for sale by the keC - :s . . . PURE ICE COLD LAGER BEER Brought to my door In an ice-cold refrigerator direct from the Brewery. Persons In Charlotte, or at a distance, can bay beer from ne at bottom rdck price aad warrant- - . Urn ' Z . - A ed to be as pure and iresn as u just maae. My facilities this summer for the delivery of Beer are better than ever, and as the sole agent In Charlotte of the Atlanta Brewery, I respectfully solicit the patronage of the public. winM nd the best Liauors on draught or for sale by the quantity all the time. ju27 ' feTATB NEW;" . ! ! The sheriff of New Hanover gives a bond of $90,000. Some new tobacco has been sold at fair prices at Durham. Laurinburg has already shipped 1,226 bales of cotton this season. ; Chas. Emerson & Co. are about get ting up a directory of lialeigh. Miss Sue J. Jessimine Dickson con tributes stoiies to the Robesonian. Giles Cornatzer, colored, was sent to the Denitentiarv for two years, from Davie, for' stealing a mess of wheat dough. The public schools in certain parts of Robeson county have been suspended to allow the young idea to learn now to pick cotton. Mr. A RT. Brvan. tne Kaieieii ex press asrent. has returned from Europe, brinsriner safelv back home the Tucker and Williams boys, who accompanied him. Kaleich News. Tuesday: It was re ported on the streets yesterday that J udere Russell. Greenback congressman . . Tir'l i .1 : l,ni1 irom xne yt limiimtuii uiaiiiui, uau made arrangements to have Dennis Kearnev in North Carolina during the campaign next year. Going to work u uie so-caueu uieeuuauii. uauui aitj. Wilmincrton Review : We are sorry to . learn that the peanut crop in this sec tion will nnr. vifild this fall a full crop. The promises of the spring and early summer were verv crood. but the drouth has cut short the crop, xne y ieia , win probably reach 100,000 bushels, but will hardly exceed it, whereas good seasons would have given 125,000 or lao.uoo bushels. Last vears crop was about 100,000 bushels. Some Very Frequent, Curious and Ab surd Notions Put to Right. Baltimore Gazette. The majority of people imagine that it is the simplest tlung in the world to edit a newspaper. A man may have grave doubts about his talent for pub lic speaking; may freely admit that he cannot turn a tune or recognize one when turned by anybody else; may confess that he is no poet, not much of a scholar, and nothing of an artist; but there is no creature so poor-spirited as to avow his incapacity to edit a news paper. On the contrary, this is a work to which.- every man seems to have a manifest calL-JSo matter what his ac tual business in life may be preacher, lawyer, physician, butcher, baker or canaie-sut;it-iuaii.ci ue uaa a secret lan cy that if he only had a chance he could make a newspaper a little bit spicier and livelier than anything in the shape of a public journal that has ever come Hi hijj way. ' xiiia jo wiiu isj. buc uivob amusing and universal weaknesses of modern times. The number of people who are infected by it is known only to publishere, just as the extent to which opium eating is practiced is realized only by druggists and physicians, 'ihe drawers and waste-baskets of every leading newspaper office in the country overflow with evidences of the ambition and harmless vanity of the vast public who scribble by stealth ana patiently toil over reams of composition which nobody can be induced to print. it must be admitted that mere is something enticing and-enviable in ed itorial lire, as it appears to the outsiue world. The delight of getting into print for the first time is one of the keenest enjoyments. What, therefore, both men and women reason to them selves, must be the pleasure of that happy man who daily feeds the public with ins wisdom, ana whose smallest scribbling finds its way into type with out criticism or delay t liut this reas oning is altogether unsound. The ed itor aoes not iook at things exactly in the same roseate light. The bright col ors seen by other eyes have become to his a little clouded. The freshness, the exquisite charm of seeing his reflections in print, has long since vanished. He writes sometimes painfully and under pressure, often harassed by a thousand petty vexations, and not unffequently with aching head and weary hand. His work is, of all work, the most wearing, the most akin to treadmill drudgery, and the most exhausting both to body and brain. The call lor copy is inexor able and cannot be refused. He must write. He must also endure the most contemptible and continual criticisms must bear patiently "to be esteemed dull when he cannot be witty, and to be appiauaea tor wit wnen ne Knows mat he has been dull." Every blockhead who bnvs his paper feels that he has purchased a right to dictate the manner in which it shall be conducted, to crit icise sharply everything that appears in it. and to "elevate its tone" with his own carping lucubrations, fairly writ ten out and enclosed m a note tor im mediate publication, signed "A Subscri ber," "An Old Patron," or "An Earnest Wellwisher. If you were to ask this modest friend to cut you a coat, or measure you for a pair of boots, he would indignantly reply that that was not his trade, that he knew nothing about it and would not attempt it. But the diffidence which shrink;: from the shears and coyly draws back from the awl and lap-stone, boldly grasps the pen and undertakes to illuminate and instruct the world. Breeches and shoes require art, experience, reflection, in their niaking political essays flow spontaneously from the most addled pate, or can be pumped out of it by sheer hand labor, without the vulgar appliances of study, thought and knowl edge, buchislifel LAST CALL ! WE ARE OING TO MOVE ! And we Intend to clear out every vestige In remnants from this season's business. We will occupy a new Store, and In compliment propose opening an elegant New Stock; hence, from this day a tremendous sacrifice on our remaining odds and ends. All of our Straw Hats, without reserve, ranging at $1.50, S1.75, $2, $2.50 and $3, closing at $1. Oar Nainsook Underveits, at 75c. and SI, at 50c. Our Summer Jeans Drawers at 75c and $1, at 50c. STARTLING PRICES To Close the Season's Business Prior to Removal ! .... . 1- - - Our Spring Cass. Suits will all be placed upon two counters and closed uniformly at J 10 and $12 -former prices ranging up to $20. Our entire stock of Cass. Pants will be reduced to two classifications, viz: $3.50 and $2. Such bargains have never been offered, and we invite early attention to secure the best selections. Respectfully, E. D. LATTA k BRO. -OF- FILL Al WINTER CLOTHING o What! BJever ? Bio, BJever A larger stock, never a grander variety, never better styles, never finer workmanship displayed, and last but not least, never was Clothing offered at closer figures than we offer it this season, as this will be our banner season. So if low prices be any inducement for this kind of Clothing, we invite all both near and far to come and call on THE MAMMOTH CLOTHING ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SOUTH. We call special attention to our OWN MANUFACTURED CLOTHING. Every garment on our counter new in style and design of goods : every lining and button for each suit to match with the outside. Our MR. L. BERW ANGER, a Practical Tailor by trade, has been in Noithern markets for three weeks to select all our goods, and we are confident of satisfying the wants ot tne people in every regard. , . Special attention is called to our 3-button n rock isuit ana our 4-button sack suit, i oums , iioys ana Uhiiaren s gar ments in full variety. , " HATS AND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS la full lines. Call and examine our stock. Respectfully, Fine Clothiers and 'Tailors. N. B. Goods sent per Express, to be examined before payment of bill. DON'T FORGET (BEAK THAT THE IF A ILL rPE IIM OF COFFINS, CASKXT INIX BURIAL CASX4. Both Wbod And Metallc rtuttfs as low as Airr beairar.futEJSlied 18 desired. O TOP AT THE ' BO TD E K i HQtlBE Salisbury. N. C C. & Baowv, Proprietor, Late of the National Hotel, Raleigh. Rrown. Jr.. Chief Clerk; W. O. Shelburn As ImcKO i LUdrlpao Be notice. ! A ' I 's t i . i paired aVMter $2.00 HO U O U 1me 2n. WKh W. 1L WILHELM. lWrs) trade BW. 3 1 $ MARSHALL E IT 8 SAVANNAH. GA. $2.00 'U 8 U 8 H gpronlflll QHARLOTTE, COLUMBIAN AUGUSTA R. A Reduced rate $2.00 and $2.50, according to loca tion of Room. M. L. HARNETT, Oerk,Ute of , Planters' Hotel. Feb 1ft tt hi i OFFICE GEITL PASSlcvmn) lleita MK,.f8Wn nimodatothe pub kmrwn JK SP m aftet this datev sell durlnV thi .m?U8i. 51 tb nearest statten thwta. theu?t5 ltS J?a court' n on salesoayot iilf?.".1? whlehttaf wattMi U situated; These nly. On RYE, GRAHAM AND WHEAT BREAD AJPBATTO'Sm A Builary Stolrjr fromTexas. A Texas newspaper gives-the follow injr news paraerapa -rrom jonnsoii countv. in that State : A lady was vis ited by two of her laay trienas, wno spent the day with her. She told them of lately having come in possession of a large" sum of money, and that the ab sence" of her husband annoyed her, be" cause she was afraid of being robbed. That night a stranger stopped at her house, and during the night, " being awakened by a noise in tne iaay s room.i hft looked throueh the window and saw two negroes, choking her ip. her bed. He fired on tnem ana Kiiieu uuwi, wiu just thpn t.m nersons fled from near the house. On investigation it. wasJtdftDCLl that the negroes were the lady s guests disguisedVind! it On !iup(ised that the two who fled were their husbands." Anotlter OeorgiH-KeHiffiiaiion. Atlanta Dispatch, 28rdU w. - ' Yesterday Dr. Jies resigned his po sition as coihmissioner oi agriculture. It; is not known' whether or not the ftrivflmnrr hasi acceBted it ' Dr; Janes in his resiflrhation gives as a reas6n for it that on account of some bitter hostility, to him personally, his rurtner wtenuon in aasm wmiM Midanorer the .abollsn- meat ofi tbebuseatt,, and that he hopes to avert, hi the interest of the agricul tural body pf the State. r ; i ii i - i i . '' The PropecU In' Ohio ' The Hohi' John G. Thompson; of Ohio. sergeantatrarms 'of ,the HOuse, cha?r-. mau-of the Democratic Cential Commit tee of Ohio, member of thd National ExewtltB Coinrtuttee; and iiget rt Democratic politics generally iniorms thfi Washington Post that at this junc ture General E wing's election is consid ered probable )tha two-thirds of last vfeara greenback vote will go to the De- Liilwl by Postal Card. Albany Law Journal. A novel question has recently been decided in the Irish High Court of Jus tice. The defendant was a trader, and the plaintiff, one of his customers, owed the defendant a sum of money, for the payment of which the defendant ap plied to him. The plaintiff, being un well, directed his wile to write to the defendant, sending him at? the same time money in part payment of the sum due.. The defendant, in reply to mis letter, wrote in reference to the bal ance, on a postal card, (which was trans mitted to the plaintiff through the post- oflice,) the libelous matter complained of: "Sir: Your plea of illness for not pay ing this trifle is mere moonshine. We will place the matter in our solicitor's hands if we have not stamps by return, if it costs us ten times the amount. T. Jones & Sons. The inuendo put upon this communi cation by the plaintiff was that it meant that the plaintiff falsely pretended that he was prevented by sickness irom pay ing the defendants demand, and that the alleged sickness was a mere inven tion and sham : and that the plaintiff was an untruthful person, and unable to discharge his debts, by reason of which the plaintiff had been injured in his character, credit and reputation, and in his profession." The court saia: I am willing to assume that the averments in the statement of defence show that the defendant had an inter est in writing to the plaintiff the words complained of, but the publication that is to be justified is not a publication to the plaintiff but to other persons. I think that we ought to take judicial no tice of the nature of a postal card ; and, therefore, I see no reason for holding that a communication written on a post Card is privileged. It would be a most serious thing to lay down that a person may extend the sphere of circulation of defamatory matter because he wants to ' save a half-penny in postage." By our own eaerai statutes it is a nrisaetneanor for any one to mail a pos tal card containing any indecent or scurrilous epithets, and the punishment , denounced is a fine from $100 to $5,000, or imprisonment from one year to ten years, or both. WITTKOWSKY & JBLliXJ TAKES PLACE ON TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, 23D, 24TH AND 25TH THIS WEEK. CH EVERYBODY ANB THE LADIES ESPECIALLY ARE INVITED. THE GRANDEST STOCK OF GENERAL MERCHANDISE Will then be exhibited. A real treat is in store for you, and a call will be appreciated by Wittkowsky & Baruch. IO 'rTri iJdl siderable disaffection" lit the Republican iT ticket Trt i "?f-r " l . . a PiiiasaatiieiaeBtU Editorial lire w no wouiuix nw ,vi.tw- - - i i . w" for Avi! A1!?) Charlotte and Columbia, ThPSiS ro&rks round trip. - t TJJi 52?S,f?5.Uon ekete wUl NOT BE EX TvlfPSrSS0' CIBCUMTACES, NO iiui MM XMAMaMMUikiiUM. ''J JAli'w'i', 2i" ,:: m lk. CARDWELL.' i'l':"1 ai 4)fcK'JUi ti w.jmi-., 4. 1000wwu?XSDe Pound Sponge. Fruit, Jelly, and all kinds of Fancy Calta ul PRATHSR'S. Wh oo Trade Bbmet. Orders for ornameBtal Cakes promptly attended' to. m i rnuf mi x j ua nmnm. CIAELOf f IE, SEP! EBIKE, WE DESIRE TO CALL SPECIAL ATTENTION TO OUR LARGE AND VARIED ASSORTMENT OF 10 THING Gents' Furnishing Coods, Hats, Caps, &c, &c, SOUTH CAROLINA ITEMS. ; MOOT APPROTED VORJf ' V, '' vt t-iir'c x -tot I'-ifT -f Wust Printed and Eor Saw at the i OBSERVER 01TICE inTMnan desMnc to Durah&M a well Improved City Lot, Bouse with mine rawayaM modem conrti veuienoes, One weu oi water, onckkiicnen, wmun Ive minutes walk of the pubUc square, eanbeae- eommodated by applying as In hla lAtler. August 29th, 1879. I fma nf Rntkei edar. BetheL Conn., J u t ETT4mti4toial9 Broadwar, Newftork tv: ! Bear 8ir-I take tUr ppppttunlr of talprmlnr, yeu4atlhe ageaU of. Adams' Sxprass umpan delivered to me last Saturday morning a Package, nfto onbondredSollar Mils, 4he' exact lamOTnt aTWVk BhliA mm tiotr l.t v)4 Q(iF. dnifW -AlKi 1 2ta. aod which I Pbtainedvby taoioeiag. ona dollar tH you by mau.i Tnamung you, a remaini; ni ir.uii, iept28lw r n South Carolina Railroad stock goes begging at $5 per share of $100. . The number of deaths in Charleston last week-was 26 6 white and 20 col ored. . . . Mr. R. W. Shand, of Union, has been appointed, .reporter of the Supreme, Court A board of trade has been formed in Columbia with Mr. T. A. MeCreery as president. Mr. Thos. Cox, of the firmofGower, Cox & Markley, died at Ms residence in Greenville Tuesday. Mr. Jesse W. Starr, who has the con tract for building the Charleston city water works, has made an assignment It is claimed, however, that the work will nevertheless go on. til hi 1 GBTdHMW JA0KS0SJ3. BEST 8 WSEt NAfl JOBAOCOJi I I 1 Selected with great care. Our shelves and counters will be found replete with all the N6velties of ,the latestost , . : . .. . .. t. ..!.. , . i AND ALL THE LATEST STYLES ARE FULLY REPRESENTED. In our Store will be found Goods that, notwithstanding the advance in the raw material, we' are ftfcle to oiferai the nvic, nrA in anma inafonnoa inwor than ftvor hp.fnrA. Thfi rfinntatinn of our house for keemnff Goods oi well-known makes, (so that the customers may be assured of getting full value for their money) will be fully maintained, also- W8 oharr TTTTC POPITT. A U flLOTHLNG HOUSE OF CHARLOTTE. j . n: : lu .!- W. KAUFMAN & CO. Corner of Trade and Tryon Streets. P. a We are selling off oar entii e stock of Boots and Shoes at and below cost W.-KAUFMAHrCCb'.f Corner of Trade and Tryon Streets. I' II i '1UU I'lll W.LACO. P. SCHIFF. J.SCHLEF. TIIOSVGKtER. GROCERS . Jt.i- ,A -.,11 ., i; i ij;.- 1 . ...... .. I : . . : . HAVING OPENED. A FIRST CLASS 8TPCX0F hi:-': FANCY, HEAm AIStD FAMILY GRGGERIESi Offer special inducements to wholesale buyers. . CAIIFJE4 &'GniEUj Trade Stfeet, hatlOtte,'tr.',1 ' 't suvf ail ,VJ;'i 'w in i im. frs.' s .ilT J - i; 1 i"!!.!. T Having become interested itt the firm of Schiff & GrierJ rospectfully and coifdially Joyite, my old friends, and icua-ji; ? tomera to call and see me when they want goods in my line. . ... September 23df 1878. - - : -yc-Minnn nun-- toi !i-r:;i i w U M !!!,. "ii Mf .I l"V
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 25, 1879, edition 1
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