Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Oct. 9, 1880, edition 1 / Page 1
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. 'm , wvt J - THX 0B8XSTZS JOB DPABTKEXP c Has been thorousily sflpplld with everjr need j want, and with the latest styles of Type, and erery IVB8CKJTTJON RATSS i Sir .jv-t) ;vf qt 4 00 manner of Job PrinUng eah now. be done .wB T7irw ow 3 00 . 7R fflsmten and eneapnesa. - we ....,.Vf. fv. lah at short aoaee, kk, 4.r WKBKLY SDITTOW : 1. i ' ' "O1 1 "'i Vs" Weekly, ( n.?. eotmtvi n KftwM. ...... oUAJTaB, BILL-HEADS, - r ..f2 00 ..2 10 .. 1 00 LETTER-HEADS, CARDS,' , - TAGS, RECEIPTS, FOSTERS, ' -PROGRAMMES, HANDBILLS, P AMPHLETS, CIRCULARS, CSSCSS, AC. CHARLOTTE, N. C; SATURDAY QOTC)BER 9, lm VOL. XXIV. NO. 3,616. till. mmn-'Vy, ...... -..(. ...... .. W5erf tteductUmifor Ctiibt. Counters atad shfllvei are now loaded with beautl- " fat and desirable foods of all kinds. ': ? i i - I ' '. i Btock of Dresa Goods ,and., Iress Trluamlngs Is superb. rQ U R Stock of Hosiery and Gloves lis simply enormous. OUR KtecW of Prints, SblrUocs and Pillow Casing is luree and as cheap as ca be found anywhere. h the best s eke' CARPET DEPARTMENT fet WMtern Korth Nu&Haa. . S By Tuesday r Wednesday hex! we . will Bar largest stoek of Beady-made Clothing srer oflrd by us. ALEXANDER & HARRLS. septlt Ve are Now Receiving Our Fall Stock. Gent's Hand-Made, Machine & Cable-Sewed BOOTS AND SHOES, ALL GRADES AND PRICES. L ALL PEICES AND STYLES. A Pretty Line of jMs, Valfees and SaHefef LATEST STYLES OF CELEBRATED STETSON HATS. ALSO Lower Grades- in Fur, Saxony Wool, &c. U IY E JJS A TRIAL, " ' r- RespeWuliT, Pegram & o. aug28 1 i IS NOW COMPLETE In every detail, and we can show as pretty a stocjr as has ever been- offered, in - DRESS GOODS. All the novelties In Trimmings, Ribbons, Laces, Scarfs, Yelling, 4c. Just received a handsome stock of Beaded Capes and Shet and Shawls. Our stock of Cloaks and Dolmans cant be beat for style and prices.- Underwear, Clothing, Hats, Ca ps. Boots and Shoes In end less variety and at low prices. BtmnvAnt vlalllnv fhA lace will find all Hf" ve lues tnat possibly call found in a pry fc .. i. n,IS!hI JLop,nK J2U m examine our stock before SSSSfJ52!L,.,6eUn ""a we can .make It to J sur interest to do so, we remain, Vouhi troll. "t? . HABiiRAVKS AWILHELM, ' Smith Building, Trade BtnseL Gray's SpedQc Medicine. rADl MARKThe Great Kag-TPlADtllAint ma nesiMyiAn anf ailing - cure for Seminal Weakness. Sper matorrhea; Im- si ihboteli r( aaUsi of "'OH TAIIII niojrf,lJmveru liHasitade, Faitttn t anSS?8 idAe'5Dd Bm other Diseases B RhiiSJL0"01 Consumpuon, andaPifr. -wemo- mhq m all dnureUts a CI Ml .orS5. orwlU be.ent ..... . 10 laoan1CJl, BloiC Detro lich. w xii8Motte,wholesalsi and MtMl . h mil 1880 lj l 1880 x f l . , petti grj ocras, WXoXMnQf Sec. OUR ST -is- NOW COMPLETE; And we ask an Inspection of GOOD J and PRICES " before purchasing. Having gained the confidence of the trade by Fair Dealing and Low We feel we can and know we will make It to your Interest to buy our goods. The ladles will always find the latest novelties In dress, trimmings all know we keep abreast with the styles In this line. We can show a very handsome assortment of Taney Dress Goods, with buttons and trimmings to match. 8tlks, Satlas, Cashmeres, Momies and' Henriet tas. We make a speciality of Mourning Goods. We sell a geod Kid Glove for 75 cento. In Hosiery we offer special inducements. Every department Is complete and has been selected with care. All can be pleased by glVlnjos a calL Very Respectfully, T. L Seigle k Co. : P. 8. Our Cloak department has been enlarged and made more attractive than ever. sept26 f&tscellauccrtts. PERRY AVIS' iLLER 18 A PURELY VEGETABLE BEMEDT ,For IBTERy AL ind EXTERNAL Use. D AIM Iflf I CD u faiUd when used rAlti UlLLtn aceerdW to print dirm-. tout incloain? each bottle, and is perfeetlg aft m in th most inwcperimeaA hand: . . - PAIN KIUERS VUUluy iHarrhosii. Ursentery. cramps, known tor tMcn-SIckncss. 81rk.Ifeadnb, ain hi the Back or Bide, edy arvi mtrmanmt mmU rtOtTia. auosseii I its, MMdM 8eipe' Burns etc lra firth mOMad and trutti LLClI friemftrf the Mechn.nl.-. Pianter saJioiM and in fct a i.J exiectfizlb mil afford tr withowt- i hoBe. its price i Aranriatt at ftd .aad 1 (Httt ' PIRRY DAVIS SOM,rovMenoe, R.I. Vf'ropriotorW ' If you feel dolt, drowsy. a. ent headadhoutJ ia?e j, aqq wgaeooaied,yot m km ahftarlnfir from n. and nothinir will CUKi so-soeed llf i permanently as to takeBhx mons'sLiver The Cheapest Pur' CV1JU , DOT X iUIlllJ Medlclneln the World! AntOTeauaiaipecinc rflir'dl(i4etotttie tet, SffimaciTan4 pjeea.'!"'" " M-:rT' Sesulate tbe -Liver and nrevent Chills and Jevei, Jalartous Ven vers, iiowei uom- Wflf8rHtewesaneav' aundioe and ausea. BAD BREATHI i . Nothhurisso nnDleasanL nothloiz so common as bad breath, and in nearly every case It comes from the stomach, and can be easily corrected if yeowtll take Simmons' Liver Regulator. Do not neglect so sure a remedy for this repulsive disor der, it will also improve your Appetite, Complex Ion and General Health. , . . w mani suiter, iohubb qay air aay, mammc harden apt! Topotng exitnoe or ai pteasore, ; toHhe siiciet aufleplng from PUes, Yet re- r to mmi ia im nana oi mutoat mij one wu will use systematloally the remedy that has per manently cured thousands- Simmons' Liver Regu lator Is no drastl violent purge, but a gentle as sistant to nature. -;''CONSTIPATlONt:lY:': : ., ' SHOULD not be regarded as a trifling - ailment; In fact, nature demand the utmost regularity of the bowels, and " deviation from :thls demand paves the " way often to serhnis danger.lt 1? onltfl ,wliewaBttve ThUdtatteeng afflictkinnceors. lv. The disturbance of me s,tpmaift, arising irom the to perfectly dtoestad oontents, causes a severe nalQijf the Thead; acQmpanied''vwltli' disagreeable naasea, and th-oonstltutea what is popularly Known as tHCKMeaaacnv. ... . CiimoK. As there nre a number of Imitations, offered to the public, wd .wdtfld cautvm th oom-f munlty to buy no Simmon1 Liver Regulator or Meciofne unless our engraved wrapper, with 'Red Zf trade taftrk, stamp and signature unbroken. None o&ey li genolne. . ; , ,L4Jf-. 1H.EXLINACO 4- V ; PHILADELPHIA, PA. K tAii'it rt:"4 t AU PpeglBU.- nrrTTT-i:T7.-...T.i . , , . ,J I f, .rtF fi'.F-r'ir T,T.,-i-i jti. ? A wek)y Piaeeratte rawiipaper.ta avnefch togkw.r.wodntoftheprssnfOOfoth sesW t present editors fad proprkowrj or- f tnt V could attend to It Very acaQraodathig V -a wUt toglve ' tXeTby penir - n vote' JOnCS, Of Tii CSAKIjOTTB OrJ,z4VrJ. fen-T An. tnm unwoaiA ahrHlIci t-'tV--rtarS R. I w r mm li ii If ti, ' jj. -jil ill iju i o fj- - J-fcfca&-!" ' mj m m l m U-m m . , b a -m m m m-m ,.--9 t0-tnw:ftiftor ra carw 'rro iw sr is weUestai.aa; a a v-n, 'nens prossec ; nd has a,b uw, as l V. F-..", --.7 . . -i.. FtJ,l. More Honey! From Maine to Minnesota i A wall that tells of toward throes. De Golyers party everywhere ' Demands, in accents of despair, !; More money! More money! More, and more, and more I Hundreds of thousands we mast pour Upon the Indiana fires, . And even Garfield's State requires More money! In every State the voters rise, And make a raid on our supplies. .Vermont soaked up our cash In vain, And we have sunk, in losing Maine, More money! In vain onr leaders stretch their hands; And call on their praetorian bands; On every side men fall away. And all Is tost, unless we pay Mere money! In this our grand campaign of cash Nothing can keep us from a smash, From going as Maine went, - bent, But that auractive argument, More money! The people scorn our candidate. And mean to vote for Hancock straight Who knows where this revolt will stop, Unless we get, to buy them up, More money! Shell outl ye men in every town Who want to keep the people down. Notes against votes I is now our cry, And we must have, in vast supply, . Mere money! CBtRtaattror Tea. Maid of Athens, ere we part, Give, oh, glre me back my heart; : . Listen, to my pleading tongue. ; Ulve,, oh, give me back each lung, . And to ease nry system's quiver, Give,' oh, give me back my liver; Then, to cure its feelings sad, I'll buy for It a liver pad. MarcUTvon Independent. A pretty girl may talk slang, but she never says to her beau, "None of your lip!" New York News. Toledo claims a citizen who pours hot water down his wife's back because she wont Join his church, but it's no town to live In compared wtth Detroit Detroit Free Press. Find a man who has made his creditors settle for ten cents on the dollar and you find a man who says he can't trust the country in the hands of the Democrats. One of the first requisitions received from a newly-appointed railway station agent was : "Send me a gallon of red oil for the danger lanterns." P. T. Bamum has written a book for boys. We presume It contains account of how the bad, the very bad boy tried to crawl under the canvas and got right under the elephant which stepped upon him and squeezed his eyes out. The good boy was given by his lather fifty cents to go to the great shew, and fifty more to buy peanuts with. The real loafer finds the days so short tbatbe must stay up half of the night to get through with the nothing he has to do. Mrs. Fogarty has been experimenting again. This time It was at pressing leaves. She heard everybody talking about it; so she tried it. She says she pressed and pressed, but didn't get more than half a thimbleful of Juice, "and that didn't taste like nothin' nuther." The American Indian readily acknowledges the civilizing influences of the stovepipe hat, and he puts it on the head of his squaw. "I suppose I am a great bore, papa,'-' said a fond daughter, after she bad teased her father half an hour for a fall bonnet "You may not be a great bore exactly," said her parent, "but you certainly artes'an well." His little joke made papa feel so good that he came down with the necessary check right away. FROM WASHINGTON. The Grand Contribution to Political Literature A Serious Bepnblican BlunderThe Outlook in Ohio and Virginia, &c HANCOCK AND GRANT. Washington, October 8. Leading Republicans are beginning to see that the bitter assault upon Gen. Hancock by Gen. Gran t,iu his setni-authorized inter Tie w, published yesterday, is a serious political blunder, and one which will be certain to react upon the Republi cans and do them in dry. A prominent official, in talking about the matter to day, Baid that many Republicans were deeply pained that Gen. Grant had per mitted himself o be drawn into the political campaign and to engage in the work of assaulting the Democratic can didateone who had earned the grati tude of the nation by doing his duty on the battle field. In his opinion, the re cent talk of Gen. Grant would lower him in the estimation Of thousands of persons who take little or no interest iii the political warfare' how going on. It was unfortunate for Gen. Grant th,at be did not reserve his usu.al yeoence, and leaye tft Qera the wotfc of trying tq arouse t(ie Republican party up to its legitimate work. It is understood thathe friends of Gen. HancocK are having the records, examined, with a view of replying to the agaaalt made by CtenGrftnt wpQ the former's motiveg in. s,tanaing by the constitution and the laws while in command in Louisiana; It is not improbable that light may M turned upon some of Gen. Grant's acts at the time he was trying to influence Gen: Hancock from doing his duty, and an inside chapter of secret history na puonc xor ine nrst viw The reports receivedto-daY from Ohio have been very gratifying to the Dem ocrats. Hon. Richard T. Merrick, who has been doing campaign work in that State for a number of days past reached here to-day, and UfQnght inteHgence that the Qlno eaocracy are aroused, to the highest pitch oi enthusiagm an4 very . confident of carrying the State. Senator Thwrraan and Mrv.Merrlck rode from Colttmhus to Cincinnati together, and the former expressed, the utmost confidence in the result. The Demo cratic meetings are simply the outpour- mc of the masses, who leei tne deepest concern in wrestling from the Radical party the control of both the btate and national administration, and are going to the polls on next Tuesday, deter nin- ea to Dung aoout tne pojisumaMon ox sobft fMnr:" While in Ohio, Mr. Mer-; ncK ioqk wcasiou iu iuHire tue truth of some of the 'reports which reached biro about Republicans having renounced their party ana aeoiarea ror Hancock, and found that, there were1 hundreds of such cases known person- ally to his informants. He believes that the j)enidcrats are going to win a mag nificent victory, unless they are cheated at the polls by gigantic frauds, oft the. part of the SfpWW; YPIGINIA. The ReDubliCiin .congressional com mittee are not particularly pieaged with' the character of the news which reaches heta roffl iYirsinia; - Th confidence heretofore expressea umi me jvepuo licans would gain at Jeast- thiee Con gressmen is last uisapiKttujug, iiu tsutua memoers or me commiu.ee wm ue en tirely satisfied if two districts can be earned, v The committee no longer puts forth the claim that the State can be carried for Garfield and virtually aban dons the contest for tfre State. K :-",kur.00AlM(i - i-"-;. su5&WSWSSu end JunTpe lfTuare sfeertng from anjranrcment of the Kidneyaw Bladder, Gravel, Fain Ol Weakness in toe Back -Qf fOffk V a bottle one or two will re- hiZinitk ha hMta before thls'oublfc foif near ly ten years, and Its sale la constantly , increasing liand thaT with very .lltUe advertlslng-vFhlch proves it to be ad article of merlC We have testi monials from some of the losing nnysiclana. of Georgia, Smith Carolina and Florida, and other StatesTln reliability as a Diuretic and riemedv for the disease f or which U rfnM-; ' .51 ! 'wMVhT w Halt Bitters' Mpomuarr. r,vnnM as a Food Heroine, taey aeyent Ah tikA blood, harden the mux': 3,1 quiet tie nerves, perfect Csssaon.?. A CUBIOV8 8TOBT. -v f-.Lt 1 ; ;-!':.' : What Will Not the Human Bod y Em :-v1'- "larel ' ' ' ;.; ' In the winter of -,1850-60 there occurred at the Niagara counter, KVX, Oyer and Terminer a criminal. trial 50. unusual and astonishing in the, facta it develop ed that, were it to occur to-day, its de tails would be telegraphed over the con tinent. But in those anti-war times, when newspapers and i readers- had rather limited notions of the meaning of the word news, proceedings of this trial were hardly known, (outside of the county. The writer of tibia account attended as a curious spectator daring the three or four days of - the trial, and it occurred to him then, as it often has since, that some of the medical publica tions should have preserved the details of this evidence, for the benefit of the profession. Being well acquainted with all the actors in this singular judicial drama at the time, and haying long known the strange creature whose death furnished the occasion, can vouch for the following narrative: One Dr. Creswell had for some years previous to the time of the trial been a notorious character in the country. He was re puted to belong to a Wealthy and aristo cratic family in England, and in his few sober moments, to be an excellent phys ician ; but John Barleycorn had long got the better of him, and his queer antics in various parts of the country were the subject of common talk. He was espec ially given to sallying out on, the street with a whip, and terrifying women and children with his threats by voice and gesture, on account of which be was frequently arrested. This was the person who was indicted and tried for manslaughter of one Phil Hawkins; the offense charged, , stripped of legal verbiage, ; being that- Dr. Cress well, while intoxicated, had caused the death of Hawkins by administering to him arsenic During the several days of his trial the court room was crowded, and the trial was the sensation of the country for weeks. Of the counsel the prosecuting attorney was A. W. Brazee, since Unitecl States Judge in Colorado, and the defense was represented by John L. Talcott, now justice of the su preme court, fourth department, New York; George D. Lamont, afterward justice of the Supreme Court, eighth judicial district. New York, and Ed ward I. Chase, a brother of the late tjhief justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. The evidence show ed that Hawkins, the deceased, was a man of about 65 years of age, a wander ing character, known in many parts of the country, and not over intelligent. In early life he had been a Peninsular soldier under Willington. He had been known in Niagara county for a num ber of years, and chiefly for his aston ishing powers of abnormal eating and drinking, without apparent bodily harm. It was . testified by reputable witnesses, who were not attempted to be impeached, that on the coldest of winter nights he would sleep out doors without covering or protection ; that he had a doubled set of teeth in each jaw all around, and that on frequent occasions he would, on a wager, eat up, masticate and swallow an ordinary 7 by 9 pane of glass in the presence of a dozen spectator ; that , in the same way he was known on numer ous ocasions to bite a large piece out of a heavy plate glass tumbler, masticate and swallow it without difficulty, and one witness testified that he had seen him drink off and swallow a wash-basin full of spirits of turpentine, also : on a wager. So much testimony was given on theso subjects that it was perfectly apparent that this human phenomenon could and did do these things frequent ly, without derangement to his usual good health. The defence that the medicine was a proper one tobe admin istered was attempted, but so plain was the proof that Cresswell was, at the time of administering it, in a condition of blind, furious intoxication, that this defense alone could not have availed for a momenta The defense rested their cae almost entirely on the novel proposition that a man whose body could, for a long series of years, bear the unnatural burdens.that Hawking had accustomed his to could not be killed by a dose of arsenic, and " this defense, on the evidence, was argued at great length to the jury. The result of the trial was a disagreement ; but the effect of this testimony, and the number of the jury who were in favor of acquittal was such that the case was never tried again, and after a few months the de fendant was discharged ftn a ntfte pro sequL It should he added that Hawkins was, when prescribed for by Cresswell, suffering from slight affection, which could not fairly be attributed to these abnormal habits. It should also be stated that the presiding Justice at the trial was the Hon. Noah Davis, then of the eighth in&ew district, Irishman tn Buenos Ay re. An intelligent gentleman who has re aided in Buenos Ayres for fourteen years, in speaking of the. foreign popu lation of that country, an extensive and multifarious One, including Italians, French, Portuguese and Germans, says "that the "aristocratic class of the for eign population, because the richest and most influential, are the Irish. Take them as a class and they are the richest men in the country They control ev erything. They are nearly all sheep farm.ert They never interfere in pol itics, he said, take no part in it at all, and so are free .from inconvenience in the frequent re vol utions w hich harass and destroy that rich and promising country. Some of the richest of the Irish estancieros, the. narrator remark ed, could not tell you the name of the President They want to make money, hoping to go home and ehioy R. This, however," said the g$$eman. Hhey seldom d& J newme;rich:ibl(f fellow 'whd did, however, and bought a very large estate in t tne old country He went to improving ttjwm evicung ten ants; and one night, his, windows were smashed .in bv a charge of buckshot He sold 6nt and came back to Buenos Ayres again. . K i r . f n : : . - A Fact In Antronowy, Burlington Hawkeye. Young Mr. Latehour was sitting on the porch the other night watching a. seventeen year-old girl trying to, kefctt awake long enough to see the warning star rise. They talked, astronomy, . I wish I was to aid smiling at hilown ppeiio fancy.' I would rather you1 were a cometnesaid dreamily. His ' heart beat 'toroifftuously.AM why ?" beBskedfetjderly, at4 the same time taking hefahd in his ownA"and !why r she related," imperiously; "Oh she said witte brooding earnestness that fell unpen his soul like s barefoot 'on n cold on, tlbth, "beeause therAk jm would only come around, once every 'fifteen hunrlred years He did not say; urt vt.Mnsr until he was half Wav to the front gate, wheti he turned 'around and shookhis fterttthffhottsenand'mutter ed between histeeth that ,-it- would-be ft thunder sight longer than that before tiAtfuirnfi aronnd aain.-'But bv'that time the poor girl was in; bed fmusxaind asleep, vuia -y a it lay of U T IT H B WlEwETTFISI 9B3IXOS X23" -A-SKIlSTGr "3TOTJK- ATTEUTIOU TO OUR NEW AND ORIGINAL FASHIONS FOR FALL, Permit us to assure you that our aim in manufacturing a STOCK OF CLOTHING is to produce Fashionable Garments with good Workmanship. oes la catering for the Trade, is PRIMA FACIAE evidence that our endeavors have met with the requirements of our customers. We Shall Open for Your Inspection this Season by Far The Handsomest Line of Men's Boy's, Youth's and Children's Suits, Overcoats, Vandykes, Ulsters and Ulsteretts THAT HAS EVEB BEEN EXHIBITED, READY-MADE, IN THIS MABKET. "WBINVITB EVEBTBODY Tb CAliL OIsT THE OF OTJIS OBITIlSrO- Very respectfully, L. BERWANGER & BRO. NT WE HAVE ON HAND A FINE LINE-OF SAMPLES FOB MEftCHANT TAILORING. GARMENTS MADE TO ORDER AT TT5RTSHORT . X,""NOTICE. FIT GUARANTEED OR NO SALE. " " IS CHALLENGING COMPARISON AS TO QUALITY, WORKMANSHIP, MATERIAL AND PRICE. Gffl s m WITft THIS B3SUB OF THE OBSERVER . ' We have the Pleiasure of Announcing the Arrival of Our FALL PURCHASE oua efforts : and in now soliciting your patrbnag, we do so fully confident that our business will V Tniittmlltr iMi.tiftfa6torv. Xrustinsr that you will put these assurances to test by giv ing us a call, Vr fiaToring us with your orders, we are respectfhlly yours. aug29 We take pleasure ttf announce, to tlie , public tnat And will be 'rady for inspection shdrtly ; also, OiBl; WHICH WE WILL JOHN L. HARDIN, MERCHANDISE BROKKB'aad GENERAL COM MISSION MERCHANT, Charlotte, JH. C, - rgrt-r Chester, & C. Orders, Samples, -Consignments and Correspondence SoHctted. . All shlsments handled to teat advaatags ana -f v pramytietarusaiade. ' V, BT" Amble storaga root Shelton buUdlng, JL mTHE;LmIES; A ITER to-day, Miss Lou 8tuart's address wffl be "A at Wianlngkor Ladles desiring hair orna ments wU pleas addxeHi toa Uierevencloetng stamp for re plr. r - : ir, ;jt sept lT-ii, TtTAWTEV-Bj fftnttemaa who has had eon- ill- bmm tmA. fornn ImmIa!! audi avHointiMt counties. a Siion na,tv9 U Cf-i-k. 3. Can. g!ve best .... : .ii'-'.-i - - ' 'Sa- Mi (ppeoiog for Unspectioo or Youtk M n j isnmg uooqs 01 a for trie oominff season's trade, to surpass all prer- of Spring CLOSE QUT REGARDLESS OF COST. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE FASTEST SEELLING BOOK OF THE AGE, Foundations of Success, jBUSmE$S ANEb SOCIAL FORMS .t" v-' . ; - -.1 fnutA. IamI forms, how to transact business, valuable tables, social ettiqoette, Parlte- facTttis acomplete 60IDK TO SUCCESS fox aU ttaSseavH A,faUlynecea. AddreIewetotalar CTOBrOBifiO!ia CO., AOanta, Ga. T OktrAmlm: i-iio -ft ci ; n , 1 0 U MG:HEJL1 iSJg,ffi : Udorfc's Cess j UniTcrsity. 9 Atlanta, 6a, tsrflOO eorer total expenses fof three montna. sena ior luusirateuviivumr. aug20-wl2w - - J.' T 4 EIPlIElIBIElii. Oursne- E MM lis, at DRY GOODS. ELIAS & COHEN. we are receiving uau; uui have placed on r - and Suaner Clothing, CO. rj-HE WASHINGTOW Biirru, Published at the National Capital every Sunday Giving a full resume of the preceding week, news or all national topics auu jcucnn uuwivuwi sides being the only REPRESENTATIVE SOUTHERN FAPSS There supporting the National Dejmocraqo jrany. Kdited by GEORGE a WEDDERBUBN, Of Vtrgln- la, formerly pnmisner i uh nuuuyuu to.; -' TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : " V.; Single copies, one year, postage paM." 4 1 2 00 Five copies, to one addresapoetap pp'l! , 2 2 ' Ten copies, lo one address, posts - 3 r 'd, 12 59 Twenty coptes, to one aaaress, pv a yu, . w w . (With a copy free to the person secor-sx the clubs. Tor further information address Z-A J GAZETTE PUBLISHING COHPANT, ,,f - Box 322, Washington, D, X, or the Lditor r - -Dee. 23. - " 'r ' -y-.-. WANTEDS BY a young man, well recommended, riatwe. of Iredell county, a situation as salesman Inv some business house in Charlotte. Adss 4 I 41' 1 It r i ii : H. lit. I i 4 i ii- t 1 1 ' p. I- (r ii t .ty3-"dartf. i i, . .
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Oct. 9, 1880, edition 1
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