ailfiJuvi ATRUET0N1C SURE APPETISER njftKr TtlTTMRS re hiffhlv ingTcerWT4.eflBcicnt tonic;, especially nsiTntenaiitteTit Fevers, Want of Appetite, Loss of EtrkofEncrgy, etc. It enriches the blood strengthens Htrengtn, ck ' , A np Tt acts like a charm on the Bdchina. Heat in We Stomatti, Uearwurn, .w, T -. ration iiiat r . druggists, write lor uic I y K5pg CHEMICAL CO., Baltimore, Md. - datBW. Avawrtjoaoraino. uiu !,CTKTtr. :ir,, Tpni tain: f rom which I re- . J .mMam aail C IIKinff AD11& AlliiilUUU) A , i rriTJT. TIh i . t. .-a -r.nil.rfnl renlta. The old .TT.h.tfi; i huva niad three bottlei of bor that 1 arer oia in iuv nun umv r,T 'EJTTki. n7.rTiluniMi of thoo-ht aoM MU f T" rri rZ,:i r 7ui:t. MThm 'trtt Tmnt i timSUL mfMron. Imru vtan Bmrkt and JPHm phatmmi mmoeimta teitH tHm Vataol mA.rmatUm. It mi 1 every purpose where WIIPACTIIEI ITTHE Drti H ARTER MEDICINE Junel7 od,d4rwly (&XBCZXUS. A LABGE LOT OF- HOUR. HAMS. -BOUGHT SINCE THE DECLINE - TO BE SOLD LOW Mayer & Ross. apr5 R. M. Miller & Sods, COR. COLLEGE & FOURTH STS., WE SELL AND F. F. V FLOURS. Jul WE HAVE NOW IN STORE FOR THE Spring and Summer Trade The Largest, Finest and MOST ! COMPLETE STOCK OF FINE MILLINERY, WHITE GOODS, TRIMMINGS. NOTIONS And all kinds of FANCY DRY GOODS For Ladles and Children We have ever had the pleasure of showing -OUB. STOCK 0F- GLOVES. HOSIERY, FANS, PARASOLS. TRIMMINGS. NECKWEAR, AN I) COSSETS la not surpassed in the city. We have HATS OR BONNETS TO FIT THE HEAD AND POCKET OF EVERY , LADY, MISS AND CHILD. ttat Pattern Hats and Bonnets will be open . .MONDAY. APRIL 41 4.n examination of our stock will convince any - i lady that stand send In styles and i .'I rr - ces in oar line. ' MRS. F. QUERV Vill'be found In tbe store to watt on her friends v wa tiavrf aflMred the services of Mr. ; M I.-wh would e pi wse to f ,f?28nd apl2 m mm Fresh Mm Mo Syrups WHOLESALE GROCERS Piedmont Patent SPRING til. recommended for all diseases requir The only Iron Prepa- tic. tri tili or crive lieaaacne. 'tv;, - xt R f useful an5 a u v n- mended y t medi- Itysvepaia, Cfnmral Mtebility. Wymote MHa easee, Want of Vital itu. Aervowa Prostra tion, ana cencefrom&everg,Scci UVKOU uuw wow v. I , , energy returned and I fouoq orco the Tonio. Blnoe xuing it Ih; rvh done twice the la- With the trenqnll nerve nuu vitvu uvu.wav iuo . . . never before enjoyed. II tne xomc oh no uouo w -iV5iiH if1 .T. P Wathok. Putor OhrUtlan Charon, xtot.v, CO., MD. 213 NORTH MAIN $T8T, ST. LOUIS. . FEEBLE AND SICKLY PERSONS Recover their vitality by pursuing a course of Hos tetter's Stomach Bliters. the most popular lnvlgo rant and alterative medicine In use. General de bility, fever and ague, dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism, and other maladies are completely removed by 1L Ask those who have used It what It has done for them. For sale by all Druggists and'Dealera generally. July Only Vegetable Compound that acts directly upon the Liver, and cures Liver Complaints, Jaun dice, Biliousness, Malaria, Cos tiveness, Headache. It assists di gestion, strengthens the system, regulates the bowels, purifies the blood. A Book sent free. Dr. Sanford, 162 Broadway, N. Y. ' FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ' Jan?18 deod, eow ly. ' DOES WONDERFUL ! CURES! Because it acts on the LTYEB, BOWELS and KIMEYS at the same time. Because it cleanses theflyTrtem of thapoleosi ona humors that develop in Kidney and TJrt sary Diseases, BUIoosdmm, Jaiuidloe, Oonstt. patlon, Piles, or la Bhenmatism, Nenialgla, Nervous Disorders and Femala Cosiplaluta. , ... 8BB ttfEAI PEOPLES SA3f i rafirpn B.-fltork- of 2mt&.m CHtrr. Kansas. Hays, Kidney-Wort eurSd him after regiilar PhJ aaBs had bean trying for faar years. lier boy was given Bp to die by four prominent jghysMid taatheyaa at terwardycttgedy It M. B. kod-wta, an editor In Charddrr, Ohio, says he was not expected to live, being bloated beyond beliefjbut Kidney-Wort cured him. Anna L. Jarrett of South Salem, N. T., says that seven years suffering from kidney troubles and other complications was ended by the use of Kidney-Wort. m j s " John B.Lawrence of Jackson, Tenn., Buffered for years from liver and kidney troubles and after takiner "barrels of other meiUdnea." Kidney -Wort made him well. f TLT. oti n 1 f . . TIT 4- n I TTJ. suffered eight years with kidney difficulty and was unable to work. Kidney-Wort mado him wen as ever." H PERMANENTLY CURES KinMPV nice Acre LIVER COMPLAINTS, Constipation and Piles. t"It Is put tip In Dry Vegetable Perm In tin cans, one package of which makes six quarts vi meoicine. Also in liquid f orm, Ter eentrated, for those that cannot reodi pare it. Con pre- tS" It acts with equal efficiency in either form. GET IT AT TIIE DRUGGISTS. PRICE, t-t.00 WELLS, EICHABDSON& Co., Prop's, (WCl send the dry post-paid.) BURLIHQTON, XJ. 32 March 27 d&wly "gxoftsslomxl. Z. B. Vance. W. H. Eailest. VANCE & BAILEY, Attorneys and OounBellors CHARLOTTE. N. C. Practice In Supreme Court of the United States, supreme court of North Carolina, Federal Courts, and coiinUes of Mecklen- burg, Cabarrus, Union, Gas ton, Rowan and Da vidson. ;. j Square. ma529 tf ROr ib. GEitHAM, IN Uie'stite and United states Courts. Collec tions, Home . and Foreign,, solicited. Ab steacts of xiaea. Surveys, &4, Iurntehd for com pensation, ' f?SE!3tcn" Trade" Tryon streeU' Charlotte, S, r fjan. . llipF BOME- M SALE AT HENDERSON VILLE, N. C. MRS. TAYLOfi'S BOARDING HOUSE, corr.er Main and Depot streets. Hendersonvllle, N.C., u offered for sale 4o a bona Ode purchaser on very favorable .terms. . .-j--. The house is pleasantjy sltnatad. and has-.nlne-teen rooms; and on the lot are all necessary out houses. iL - , . ... . desired, tt will be sold lurntelieff from the Wtehep .to the jianolnthe Possession given Immedlateiv' aaatum. JUB4 Rl i Mrs. B. Y. TAYLOR, kQi HendersonvUle, N. C. o s (JflSTiTTlBV WHY? I H y Stye t)tott bgeroir. ' " sTATE'wiaws. r: Salisbury Watchman: Nearly all the darfc horses, who are seeking the Congressioilal honors ? thi dtttner, have come out wrwa. ?ifi5'cF-- -r' as intf-prohib4tionjsts if if jm$y be yery wise, anidf again itmf . North State: Revenue collections in the Fourth District for the week ending last Saturday night, amounted to $11,077.80. We are pleased to no tice the improved conaiuou ui va.pi. R. G. Lindsay, who has returned home from the mountain region of Virginia. Monroe Enquirer: Since our last issue, portions of the county have been favored with good rains. fttill, the out look for cotton and corn crops is not at all promising, as the plant in both cases i3 very small generally, rieniy oi rain from now on, will perhaps insure a tol erably fair crop. Asheville Citizen: A severe wind and hail storm visited Jackson county one dav last week. A waterspout of considerable dimensions did some dam ace about three miles from Webster. Mrs. M. M. Jones died at her resi dence in the !New Found Township, this countv. on the 13th inst.. in the 45ih year of her age, Anson Times,' One thousand tons of commercial fertilizers were deliv ered from the Wadesboro depot of the Carolina Central during the past ,wm ter. -Miss Cornie; Benton, daughter of CaDt. J. H. Benton, of Folkton. had the misfortune to fall out of a buggy one day last week and fracture a bone of one of her arms. Our farmers rronornllv rpihnrfc cotton small, though lnoiHno- wall, notwithstanding the dry weather. Early corn is nearly ruined. and that planted late win not mane more than than a half crop, except in low grounds. Salem Press : Dr. John Pepper died at his home in Danbury, Stokes county, on the 6th inst., aged 86 years, ur. Pepper was a well known and highly resnp.cted citizen. On the 5th of eb ruary last he was stricken down with paralysis, and lingered in a helpless state to the end on Wednesday the 6th. inst. We regret to learn that the errist mill of Messrs. Jones, on the Yad kin river, near Conrad P. 0-, Yadkin countv. was burnt on Saturday night last. The tire was discovered stoo late to stoD the flames. The parties esti mate the loss at $1.000. Mrs. Duncan died at her home near Madison, last Fridav. acred 98 vears. She was the oldest person in Rockingham county. Raleigh News-Observer: Mrs. M. A. Arrington, who lives eleven miles from Warrenton. had her house burned on Monday night. She lost about half her furniture. No insurance: loss about $2,000. The fire i3 supposed to have been the work of an incendiary. The African clerk is now a feature of the postomce and court house. They say this is the effect of the African office' seekers' convention, held here last spring. Perhaps not many people in the city have observed the unusually laree sassasf ras tree which stands near the southern gate of the capitol square, and fewer still know that a nunorea vears ago there was a notable deer stand at this tree. This is as tradition has it, and the oldest inhabitant vouch es for its truth. Lenoir Topic : An archery club is proposed tor Lenoir. We have re ceived from Mr. Stallings, of Watauga, a stalk of rye, nine feet in height. A very severe hailstorm prevailed in the eastern paTt of the county last Sunday. The roar accompanying the storm, was heard in Lenoir, and suggested fears of a cyclone. The many friends in this section of Mrs. Mattie Ward, wife of Cant. E. W. AVard, U. S. A., and daugh ter of the late Gov. Tod R. Caldwell, will be grieved to know that she died suddenly of heart disease, at her resi dence in Lincolnton. July 7. We learn that an organized band of rob bers has been operating in Alexander. Robberies hate been of frequent occur rence, and petsons living in the bouth em and "Western section of the ceunty. (-feared to leave their houses unguarded even in daytime. . A citizen-living near the Alexander line, miorms us that a negro was arrested last week and car ried to Taylorsville, for suspected com plicity in some of these numerous rob beries. He confessed that he belonged to a band of thirty, but could not be prevailed upon to make any. revela tions. Chinese Pirates. All the Year Round. The towns contain a due amount o tame cheats, but the bold hectoring highwayman, the truculent sea-robber, must be sought elsewhere. All along the iiiue and x enow rivers are found retail buccaneers, who hawk at a trifling quarry and fatten on slender profits These poor rogues do not aspire to a ship of their own; they come paddling out of muddy creeks in the smallest of sampans, ill-armed, ill-clad, but plenti iuiiy smeared witn nsn-on. n man fully confronted, they fly, if grappled by the crews of the fourth-class junks, which they select as prizes, they slip like so many eels, through the hands that grasp them, and their swimming makes amends for their lax courage. Seldom do any - very sinister results follow one of Jthese attacks. If the fresh-water pirates prove victorious they are mild conquerors, and only too eager to be on shore again with their booty of rice and corn, stray garments. odd tragments oi chain, hits or copper ana crass nastily ripped irom the poop and cabins, and, perhaps, the glorious trophy or a tew rattling strings of cash The dollars and silver bars are general ly too well hidden- to be detected by such hurried searchers; food, rather than fortune, is the object of the foray and, except in rare cases of remarka ble temptation, no ; life is attempted and no torture resorted to. With these amphibious petty-larceny rogues the magistrates deal mildly, according to n a 3: i-i a jti. : . ine uau-iuuiia , ui vuiueso justice Three hundred strokes Of the bamboo may be endured by the human frame. Four sleepless weeks in the "cangue," or bamboo pillory, may fail to madden a stolid, unimaginative coolie. A few minor tortures need only be added to these two first-named inflictions, and the culprit is thought to have been most tenderly dealt with. Pilferers in a fair or the streets of a town are con sidered as still more venial offenders. A vigorous bastinado and a week of the pillory is thd;law's award in such trivial cases. ?etty assaults are ast leniently disposed of, but fire-raising is a sin of deeper dye; and the malicious piercing of a neighbor's dike, to let in a devastating flood, is punished witbf extreme rigor. JIurder and treasona ble practices, wholesale piracy and brigandage all ry aloud for death, more or less sjo and painful, and par ricide evokes thftstemest chastisement of the Chineser iasifc once did of the Roman lawi-r ' ;.-n BUBUE1T& 0000AIKB, Burnett's (W08ia7lllkeqp &e br to a strong and healthy condition bysumulatlng the note of the hair and restoring the natural action upon' which its growth depends. Twenty rears agoa single DoUle saved lady's hair in a desperate ease where every other treatment had failed; and since inai eariy success thousands of cases of paidneag, ganflrjarioga of hair, and lrritaUohof the sc43, have r : Wed to this remedy, fjmtM Burnett's Flavoring Extracts consists in their perfect purity and great strength. ; AICEIfE I IV THE TOMBS. Fallen Angels slng; tbe Praises of the Strange and sad scenes happen in the New York Tombs sometimes. Yester day while a reporter was standing in the corridor the sound of female voices floated in from a room at the other end of the passage, and the burden of the sung was: "There will be no more sorrow there, There will be no more sorrow there; In heaven above, where all is love, There will be no more sorrow there!" The effect was sad indeed. The hymn was sung with that peculiar arawi which is so suggestive of breaking rather than rejoicing hearts. "Who are thevr asKea ine reporter, after listening attentively to the sing ing for a few moments. "Prisoners. "The voices are those of young girls ?" "Well, yes; the girls are, compara tively speaking, young in years, but they are old offenders that is, many of them." "Are they having a prayer meeting?" "They are. A lady comes from Brook lyn every Thursday and goes into the shanty' among the prisoners, who al ways receive her respectfully and listen to what she has to say. She prays with them, exhorts them to a better life, and sings with them. She generally suc ceeds in getting them to unite with her in singing. I always find that a service of song is .more efficacious with women or girls in prison than either exhorta tion or prayer. The hearts of the un fortunates are more readily reached by music, and 1 tell you, sir, that when some of them hear the hymns they sang in Sunday school when they were children they must be very hardened indeed if they are not touched and sor rowful." And this was true beyond a doubt. A peep through the chinks of the door revealed the bloated drunkards, the outcasts of society, the confidenpe wo- men, tne picKpocKeta, anq. snopuiters slttipg around a little pale woman in black, whose face was characterized by an expression of devotion that was al most saint like. She had come among the wretched of her own sex to tell them that there .was more joy in hea ven over the repentance of one sinner than there was over ninety and nine just ones. They, who but a short while ago were ready to laugh boisterously at a ribald jest or to blaspheme, ha4 been sobered &nd steadied by one gentle little woman, who came in the name of the Master to remind them of their moth ers, their Sunday schools, and their dead and buried innocence, It was a sad picture, and one that made a man feel the truth of the statement that the way of the transgressor is hard, and that it were better for a girl to die in childhood than to perish thus slowly, terribly and surely in her womanhood, But the scene also filled the spectator wth hope ; for it proved that It is never too late to mcno, and even in this char nel house of decomposed character there were signs of resurrection and redemption. With heads bowed in prayer the strange congregation knelt, sat, and stood. Emotions conflicting and struggling in their souls were mir rowed on their expressive faces, and as these were suDdued and softened by thought and tears the voice of the wid owed missionary broke forth exultingly in the words of the hymn, "I am so glad that Jesus loves me." The fallen an. gels joined in the refrain. Prohibition In Carrolton, Ga. The following paragraphs are extract ed from a letter from the Rev. J. W. Lee, of the North Georgia Conference, to Atticus G. Haygood, D. D President of Emory College : "After many years of strong opposi tion and abuse the temperance men succeeded in carrying prohibition, and now see the result : " The trade of the town has more than doubled. Before the liquor traffic was abolished the trade of the place was about $200,000 a year ; now it is $500,- 000 a year. There are thirty stores in town, and I do not know a single mer chant among them who would not vote against the liquor traffic on purely busi ness grounds. Mr. John W. Stewart, who has made a fortune here, says, as a business man, that he would not have liquor back for any consideration. Some of our leading merchants were opposed to prohibition at first because they fear ed that it would injure their trade, They are unanimously in favor of it now. The $30,000 that was spent here for whiskey prior to 1875 is now spent in building nouses, improving stock, draining lands and paying taxes. The farmers are nearly all out of debt Many of the men who were spending all their money for whiskey have quit drinking 3 T 1 m .. . ana are muxing a support xor tneir families. " The argument that men would drink anyhow holds good with but very few remaps there are in every town some few men who have drank so long that they are slaves to the habit. Such men would send off and get whiskey and drink anyhow. But we have learned that, with nearly all the people, whis key is like watermelons, the supply creating the demand. Do away with the supply and there will be no demand, as a general thing. "In a moral point of view, the results of this movement in our own town have been perfectly remarkable. The Solicitor of this J udicial Circuit says that there is less crime in this county than in any other in this circuit. Most of the people have joined the church Profanity l almost unknown. On the train that comes daily into Carrolton not an officer or train nana on it ever swears an oath. " The soberness and quiet which pre vail here, even on election days and court weeks, strike visitors as being wonderful. At a barbecue here last year, though there were together about four thousand people. Col. Thos. Harde man, who spoke on the occasion, said that he never saw a drunken man. He regarded it as something almost new under the sun.' The county has been electing, for the part twelve years, Dr. D. B. Juhan. Ordinary, who will not grant license to sell liquor anywhere in tne county, for love, or threats, or mon ey. He has done a grand work for the county. " The prohibition movement in this county is a grand success. Threef ourths of the white people in Carrolton are opposed to the sale of whiskey, and nearly the same proportion in the county.'" ' ' A Singular Death. Augusta Mtws. On last Thurswiav. while Mr. Thos, H. Farnum, a traveling salesman, was visiting Dublin, he was stung on the lower lip by some kind of an insect or spider. He gate Jtut little attention to the sting at flrst,!but soon his lip began tojiwell and became punctured with holes. The swelling extended to the face and every feature soon became swollen, until no semblance of his natural self remained. Mr. Farnum finally died of erpsipelas, despite of the uest meaicai treatment. Deciue of Mm. Impotence of mind, limb or vital function, ner vous weakness, sexual debility, Ac, cured by yells' Health Benewer. t $1 at Oruugtsts. Depot, r. u. sacAucn, vnarwiijs. - SutoAiiKM c Ural: Ttia' wtfti teal nlaa . .1 - . - Ore that ladd pit tmrirmnw tn thA groat wlrtDfta af your "Neuralgine" as a specific for neuralgia ad aw ueatiacue. . boot a remeay. is Messing, ana ou Bunerers snoaia Keep u on nana. - iao catnearu street, u&iumore. - t ?.iBft Die la the House. ? h ' Ask druggists for "Bough on Bats," It clears I .tr ." Dea' DU?S roacnes, vermin, rues, The Cause of IU There is less drunkenness in this4 State, to-day than has been for the last ten years. It is gradually on the de crease, and prosperity is every wnere apparent. Examiner. ' ' This certainly is true as regards tne county of Rowan, and we are glad to note that the whole stale is snowing the good results of the prohibition work. We are inclined to think that the action of the county commissioners in this, and a number of other counties in the State, has brought about this good result by their manly course in not granting license until the people should decide on the matter. If the slight restraint put on liquor has al ready made so perceptible a change for the better, what will be the result when the people all over the State shall repu diate and abate liquor from all its bor ders! It will be a glorious rest! It will be peace and prosperity in many a troubled home. Watchman. efc THE GREAT iura POU RHEUMATISM. 1-.. P- ' J' L rwcjrurytu, eviuiiuu, t-umoagu, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quins, Sore Throat, 6Ve ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a tafe, sure, simple and cheap External Bemedy. A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of SO Cents, and every one suffering with pain cait have cheap and positive proof of its claims. Directions in Eleven Languages. BOLD BY ALL DRUGGI8T8 AND DEALEE8 IN MEDICINE. A.VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, Md.., U. 8. A, deo80d&w ly AN OPEN AMONG THE LADIES The brilliant, fascinating tints of Complexion for which ladies strive are chiefly arti ficial, and all who will take the trouble may secure them. These roseate, bewitching hues follow the use of Hagan's Mag nolia Balm a delicate harm less and always reliable article. JSold by all druggists. The Magnolia Balm conceals every blemish, removes Sal lowness. Tan, Redness, Erup tions, all evidences of excite ment and every imperfection. W Its effects are immediate and go natural that no human being canjletect its. application, Jan. 22 Summer Complaints At this season, various diseases of the bowela are prevalent, and many lives are lost through lack of knowledge of a safe and sure remedy. Perky Davis' Pain Killer is a sure cure for Diarrhoea, Dys entery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Summer Complaint, etc., and is perfectly safe. Read the following; Batobbidge, N. V., March S3, 1881. FEBBT DAVIS' Pain KxlleB never failt to afford inttant relief lo? cramp and. pain in the stomach, Joseph BrmpiTT. . . NlOHOLVTLLE, K. Y.. Fel. 8,1881. The very oett medicine I know of for dysentery, cholera morbus, and cramps in the stomach. Havs Used it for years, and It is ture cure every time. Jrjtrus W. Deb, MoruooiTA, Iowa, March 12, 188L I have used your Pain Kttxto in severe cases of cramp, colicaad cholera morbus ,and It gave almost instant relief. - Ix E. Caldwell. Carnebvtlle, Ga., Feb. 28, 1881. For twenty years I have used your Pain ktt.t. , In my family. Have used it many times for bowel , complaints, and it alwayt cures. Would not feel safe without a bottle in the house. -J. B. Ivm , Saoo, Me., Jan. 22, 188L Have used Peert Davis' Pain ktt.t.hh for twelve years. It is tafe, sure, and reliable. No mother should allow it to be out of the family, i ft. t Nates. Oneida, N. V., Feb. 19, 1881. We befran using i$ over tbirtyyears ago, and it always fnves immediate relief. Would hardly dare, togotobed without a bottjfl in thislwuse. r iV.O. Spebb. Cowwatboho, S. CTeb. 22, 1831 Nearly every family in this section keeps abotUa in the house. Da. E. M.OBXOH. TT, 8. CONBTTLATE, Cbepbu), Rhxnish Pbtjssia, Feb. 8, 1881. I have known Pebbt Davis' Pain Killer almost from the day it was introduced, and after years of observation and use I regard Its presence in my household as an inditpentable necessity. X S. Potter, u. 8. ConsuL , , Bubton-on-Tbent. Eng. I had been several days suffering severely from diarrhoea, accompanied with intense pain, when I tried your Pajn Kn.T.tiB, and found almost instant tehef. H.J. Noons. 31 Montaotje St., London, En a. purlnf? a residence of twenty-three years In India, 1 have given it in many cases of diarrhoea, dysen- ' tery, and cholera, and never knew it to fail to giva relief. . u,), R, Clashes. , No family can safely be without this invaluable remedy. It3 price brings it within the reach of all. For sale by all druggists at 25c., 50c and $1.00 per bottle. PERRY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, Providence, R. L July 22 dw Jul aug. THE OXONIAN, A JOURNAL OF LITERATURE & EDUCATION X published monthly at Oxford, N. C., atOn. Dollar a year in advance. v ' The Oxonian alms at increasing the interest for Literature and Education, and gives original ar teon subjects of vital Importance asvvell as artUclflma ef the newest and most valuable puWlca- Offers deelied advantages to advertisers. Hhrh average eimilaaoii. Advertisenients te shown prominently, are free from errors, and laVtasS fully displayed, ita advertising rates an? not to excess of its value to an adverser Advrtw ments intended for publication to aty lS Bhonia be to V ofiJy the Af thlon .TiftainS(n?.0, Ninth street 'andthe Into twn lAr a -in k buliriinVVw". omwwe eanev ir otac7ParP9e Apply to ' Mn25f .IU . J. a PHILLIPS, EDY dress) AJiO( OBGANS. .1I stops, 5 Set Gold en Tongue reeds, only 885. Ad- BiATTT. Washington, N. J. Julyl2 dJtw4w FREE tiena to T MOORE'S . BTjSMTESS XJNIVEKSITY "or "l Sited Circular. A !! actaal Business Julyl2 4w ' BO LB. MEDAL AWARDED the A athor. A new and great lied icalWork,warranted the best and heaptMt, indispensable to every ' man,entitled "the Science of life or,Self-PreMrvation bound in fall ciltOO PD-oon tains beantifni toe! ennvinga, 126 prescrip- uuna, price omy sen DJ mail: UlustntedBamnla. Acnntii- aend nowAddram Peahodv Mm). V MI1UJ TU VV L I I' cai insiataieor w. n. a. fAUe iXiUVr 1 111 V)LLI . KSK, Ho. 4 Bulnnch sL Bottom Julyl2 dAw4w Cutieara, the Great Skin Cure. ITCHING AND SCALY DISEASES, HUMORS OF THB SCALP AND SKIN PERMA NENTLY CUBED. Cutlcura remedies are for sale by all druggists. Price of Cutlcura, a medicinal Jelly, small boxes, 50c; large boxes, 81- Cutlcura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, $1 per bottle. Cutlcura Medi cinal ToUet Soap, 25c Cutlcura Medicinal Shav ing Soap, 15c; in bars for barbers and large con sumers, 50c. Principal depot, WEEKd & POTTER, Boston, Mass. All mailed free on receipt of price. Julyl2,4w HAVE YOU EVER KNOWN Any person to be seriously ill without a weak sto mach or inactive liver or kidneys? And when these.organs are in good condition do you not find their possessor enjoying good health? PARKEtt'd GINGER TONIC always regulates these important organs, and never falls to maka the blood rich and pure, and to strengthen every part of the sys tem. It has cured hundreds of despairing Inval ids. Ask your neighbor about it rjulyl2,4w IVIL, MECHANICAL AND MINING ENGI N BERING, at the REN&SELAEK POLY TECHNIC IN8T1TD7E, Troy, NY. The oldest engineering school In America. Next terra begins September 15th. The register for 1880-81 con tains a list of the graduates tor the past 54 years, with their positions; also, course of study, require ments, expenses, etc. Address Junl4-0w DAVID M. GREENE, Director. This great specific cures that most loathsome disease WHETHER IN ITS PRIMARY, SECONDARY OR TERTIARY STAGE. Removes all traces of Mercury from the system. Cures scrofula, old sores, rheumatism, eczema, catarrh, or any blood disease. CURES WHEN HOT SPRINGS FAIL! Malvern, Ark., May 2, 1881. We have cases in our town who lived at Hot Springs and were finally cured with S. S. S. McCammon & Mubbt. Memphis, Tennessee. May 12, 1881. We have sold 1,296 bottles of S. 8. S. In a year. It has given universal satisfaction, Fair minded physicians now recommend It as a positive specif ic. S. Mansfield & Co, Louisville, Kentucky, May 13, 1881. S. S. S. has elven better satisfaction than anr medicine 1 have ever sold. J. A. Flexner. Denver, Col., May 2, 1881. Every purchaser speaks In the hlehest terms of S. S. S. L. Meisseter. Richmond, Va., May 11, 1881. You can refer anybody to us in regard to the merits of S. S. S. Polk Miller 4 Co. Have never known S. S. S. to fall to cure a case ot Syphilis, when properly taken. H. L. Dennard, Eli Warren, Perry, Ga. The above signers are gentlemen of high stand ing. A. H. Colquitt, Gov. of Ga. If you wish, we will take your case, TO BE PAH) FOR WHEN CURED. Write for particulars. $1,000 REWARD will be paid to any chemist who will find, on analysis of 100 bottles of S. S. 9., one particle of Mercury, Iodide Potassium, or any mineral substance. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Proprietors, Atlanta, Ga. Sold by druggists everywhere. For further information write for the little book. Sold by T. C. Smith, L. R.-Wrlston & Co. and Wilson & Burwell. Jun2odly Next session begins August 25, 1881. Combines the advantages of the old curriculum, with special and extended Instruction according to the university system. Connected with It are schools of Law, of Medi cine and of Pharmacy. Special facilities given for practical studies, such as Analytical and Agricultural Chemistry, Land Surveying, Drawing, Book-keeping, Business Law, Phonography, etc Expenses, including tuition and room rent, 81 85 to $230 per annum. Address, for catalogue and particulars, KEMP P. BATTLE. LL. D., Julyl4,dfcw2w President. SCANTLTJTS Seamless Evaporator AND "SOUTHERN" CANE WILL. FIRST CLASS SORGHO MACHDiERT AT VERT LOW PRICES. Send for Descriptive Price Lilt. THOS. SCANTUN & SON, EVANSVILLB, IND. Mention thit Paper. Julyl 7,d&wlmo iDgton and Lee University, GEN. G.W. C. LEE. Pres't. THOROUGH Instruction in Languages, Litera ture and Science, and in the professional schools of Drawing and Engineering. Healthful location in the Valley of Virginia. Expenses for 9 months need not exceed $225. Session opens September 15, 1881. For catalogue address, , , J- L. CAMPBELL, Jb.. Clerk. July9,eodlmo Lexington, ya. DENTAL NOTICE. THE State Board of Dental Examiners will meet m. 4,8iieYl1,1?' N P- Mnday and. Tuesday, July 25 and 26. All persons desiring to enter the prac tice ot dentistry, who are not graduates, are noti fied to appear before said board for examination. , V. E. TURNER, Jon. 22. vtT BOaM ""SSSggffi"- BARGAIN rpo a bona fide pumhaser, f offer for sale a SPLENDID FARM, rihir. b.ii-XTi 7 " "" -aviiiuuc, xennessee and COvaUorfof Theland 18 wel adapted to the cotton;, corn, and other Amna nf fhto r. i... . about 200 acres, 20 of which are bottom land and - - " " iicomj vicoivu lauu; ou acres primeval forest. On the plantation Is a gold mine, which has rACaTl a- a - bbb . . yivuvamj wuraea. xne vein gives promise Of valun if nTnimwii On the premises Is a comfortable dwelling and uwemu; wi uuuses. vtvhiu orcnaiti ana never falling well of water. Terms very reasonable. A D PARKS July 20,d3tw3t Alexandrlana, N.' Roanoke College, 8 ALE nr. V A. TwratY-NTNTH SESSION begins September -- vmoMBu, ociouuiic, jtiecuve anarrepa atorv eonrsAa. ITmntth nnf narmnn . , . .. wuu w.UJOU OLfV&CU 111 .flaawoom. Library 16,000 volumes. Iustruciion tnorougjh, nnseotartan. Churches of flvs denoml nations.' Climate unsnrpassed. College surroiind- ttrZZeZZZ nom an sections. Jul,6.deod.wlmoSEABT01rrACDLTY- M lim hi in " in if University of North Carolina I REAL ESTATE. tgftatcftfcs sttua gewelt. GO TO John T. Butler's AND LOOK AT HIS LARGE STOCK OF Mies s Jewelry ALL OF WHICH HE SELLS LOW FOR CASH. All Goods "Warranted as Rep resented, both in Weight ' and Quality. WATCH GLASSES 10 CENTS EACH. deel S Conteci Tnne Table Norli Carolina R. E; -TRAINS GOING NORTH. Date.Mayl5'81 No. 47 No. 49 No. 4.b Dally Dally Dally Lv. Charlotte, 4.05 am 6.15 am 4.15 vm " A-L. Depot " " Junc't 4 1 1 am 6. .0 am 4 30 vyr " Salisbury. 5.56 am 7.50 am .07 Arr.Greensboro 8.03 am 9.30 am 7.57 via L v.Greensboro 8.25 am 9.50 am 8.18 Arr.Ralelgh 1.40 pm for Rlch- Lv. " 1.45 pm .... m'ndonly Ait. Goldsboro 4.00 pm Lv. Greensboro for Richmond 8.25 PM Lv. Danville 10.21 am 11.31 am " N. Danville 10 27 am 11.33 am " Barksdale 10 58 am 12.01 pm " Drak'sBr'ch 12.37 pm 1.20 pm Jetersville 2.24 pm 2.55 pm Arr. Tomahawk 3.20 pm 3.51pm Ait. Belle Isle 4.05 pm 4.28 pm Lv. " " 4.10 pm 4.35 PM Arr.Manchester 4.13 pm 4.38 pm Arr. Richmond 4.18 pm 443 am 7.28 hm trains going south. Date, May 15 '80 No. 42 No. 48 No. 50 Dally. Dally. Dally Lv. Richmond 10.45 pm 12.00 m " Burkevllle 2.25 am 2.43 pm Arr. N. Danville 7.00 am 6.05 pm Lv. " " 7.25 am 6.18 pm Danville 7.27 am Arr. Greensboro 9.26 am 8.17 pm Lv. " 9.31 am 8.87 pm " Salisbury 11.16 am 10.33 pm Arr. A L. Junction 12.45 pm 12.15 am " Charlotte 1.00 pm 12.20 am Lv. Richmond 2.55 pm " Jetersville 4.41 pm " Drak's Br'ch fi.07 pm " Barksdale 7.25 fm " Danville 7.51 pm " BenaJa 8.55 pm " Greensboro 9.27 pm " Salisbury 11.05 pm Arr. A-L. Junction 12.26 am Lv. " " Arr. Charlotte 12.30 am SALEM BRANCH. NO. 48 Daily, except Sunday. Leave Greensboro 9.40 pm Arrive Salem 11.40 pm NO. 47 Daily, except Sunday. Leave Salem 7.30 am Arrives Greensboro 9.00 am NO. 42 Daily, except Sunday. Leave Greensboro 10.00 Aits Arrives Salem 11.30 am NO. 43 Dally. Leave Salem , 5.80 pm Arrive ureensnoro 7.8O pm LlmltAri mails TJrm A Q nnH RO nlll nniv mnim ' i v " w . . jittj uiano short stoppages at points named on the schedule. Passengers taking train 49 from Charlotte will rat AhnaM at thu R n T R Hannt Thi makes close connection at Greensboro for Raleigh, Goldsboro Newbeme and all points on Wilming ton A Weldon Railroad. Passenger trains No. 47 and 48 make all local stops between Charlotte and Richmond, and be- iiwccu ureeusuwru, oaieign ana oiasDoro, No. 47 making connection with W. N. C. R. at Salisbury for Ashevillfl rSnndnvu fivortr OnH olart tfnl nectingat Greensboro with Salem Branch (Sun day excepted). rassenger trains jnos. 42 and 48 make all local stops between Charlotte and Richmond, except Ouerv's. Harrlshtiiv Hnina am TjitnK,,, t ;,. wood and Jamestown, rno. 4d connects with Salem Branch at Greens boro. A. POPE Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agent, myl8 Richmond, Va. FLY FANS & TRAPS, BATH TUBS, SPRINKLERS, ICE CREAM FREEZERS. OIL STOVES For summer use, Just Jn. TnEFJN:,I,fK.)F Cook-Stoves and Sewing Machines IN THE CITY. Orders and correspondence solicited at the Hard ware Store and Sewing Machine House of RICHARD MOORE Trade Street, Charlotte, N. C. Col. C. W. Bbadshaw, bo long and favoraoi known in connection with the Sewing Machine business of this city and vicinity, is now with nie and would be pleased to see his friends Q.;id patrons afid serve them as heretofore. may24 Druggist by Examina Go to W. P. MARTIN, igent, and Successor, to F. Scan & Co. FOB Fresh Drugs and Pure Medicines None bat the Very Best Drngs do I keep in my stock. Also, Toilet and Fancy Articles, Perfumeries, Combs, Brushes, Tooth Brushes, Ac, 4. gabden; seeds of all the best varieties, and warranted - - to be-good. Phy8lclanflr Pfripttcms ate given spec- Boptag'to raoalva'k.shara of public patronage, I am, respectfully, tfum- . W.P.MABYLN.lgt. (1 SEASONABLE GOODS -AND THE Double Quick Cook Stove r-