DEW SURE , APPETISER jrmv BITTERS are highly recommended for all diseases requir ineTcerSin and efficient tonic; especially Indigestion, Iys pIpsSVlBtermittent Fevers, Want of Appetite, Loss of &SenfftH,lJttck Of Energy, etc. It enriches the blood strengthens iSSiSLfr new life the.nerres. It acts like a charm , on the diee8ureoreans, removing aU dyspeptic symptoms, such as Tasting the tood, Bw JfiEstJacK, Hepburn, etc. The only Iron Prepa ratioS lat wiU not blacken the teeth or give Headache. Sold by alldrgistL Write for the A B C Book, 32 pp. of useful am jKOvV&CHEMICAI, CO., Baltimore, Md. flnnun: I waaerta fro- fcen?T daww, to JlS'SSJlSdSffiSSa At this time I beia thi a of your IhON Tonic, from whiefcl r5 iS22TSiSSSSSIiiSS55rfal ratoMSgy wtarnadlindl found that my neural force jtw JTram Tanfa m en I trim Bmrlt, mn MAimtTltEltTTHEDRl HARTER MEDICINE junel7 eod.d&wly &VOCZTCIZS. R. M. Miller & Sods, OOR. COLLEGE & FOURTH STS., -WE SELL . AND F. FLOURS. D1 GRAND RECREATION TOUR -BY- Sea, Rail, Lake, River and Sound ! A Most Eomantic Trip of Ten Days TO Old Point Comfort, Fortress Monroe, Boston, Port land, White Mountains, Lake Sebago, up the Bongo the crooked est of rivers, and Long Lake, Newport, Rhode Island, and LoDg Island Sound. LEAVING BALTIMORE THURSDAY, AUG. 4, At 4 p.m., by the steamer "WM. CRANE," of the Boston Steamship Line. Price of Ticket Only $55 ! Which covers all necessary travelling expenses, such as hotel accommodations, meals and state room on ocean steamers, transfers by coach of persons and baggage In fact all needed expenses from Baltimore back to Baltimore. tWT Tickets good for 60 days to return from Boston. Bound trip tickets from Charlotte to Old Point Comfort can be bought for 818.65. For tickets and special Information apply to . , S. J. PESKY, Jul12 Charlotte, N. C. WE HAVE NOW IN 8TORE FOR THE Spring and Summer Trade The Largest, Finest and MOST COMPLETE : --STOCK OF- FlNE MILLINERY. WHITE GOODS, TRIMMINGS. NOTIONS And all kinds of FANCY DRY GOODS For Ladles and Children We have ever had the pleasure of showing OUR STOCK OF PARASOLS, TRIMMINGS. 1 NECKWEAR, AND CORSETS If not surpassed In the city. We have HATS OR BONNETS TO ITT THE HEAD AND POCKET OF EVERY LADI, MASS AHU UH1LU. Our Pattern Hats and Bonnets will be open DNDAY, APRIL 4th. convince any ,es ana win he foonWW the i W Wit on her Wends " and customer. i WHOLESALE GROCERS Piedmont Patent V A TRUE TONIC . nr.- .mmmaS M t9 1 Ilea' profeasioyt, fori I Debility, VnuuMtf It ion. and Onole-I .n " ZZZZtfiSZi I bV CO., HO. 218 N0TH MAIN STREET, ST. j.puis STOMACH JTEli FEEBLE AND SICKLY PERSONS Recover their vitality by pursuing a course of Hos tetter's Stomach Biiters. the most popular invigo rant and alterative medicine in use. General de bility, fever and ague, dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism, and other maladies are completely removed by it. Ask those who have used it what it has done for them. For sale by all Druggists and'Dealers generally. Julyl Only Vegetable Compound that acts directly upon trie Liver, and cures Liver Complaints, Jaun dice, Biliousness, Malaria, Cos tiveness, Headache. Itassists di gestion, strengthens the system, regulatesthe bowels, purifies the blood. A Book sent free. Dr. Sanford, 162 Broadway, N. Y. FOR SALS BY ALL DHUGOISTS. Janjl8 deod, eow-ly. DOES tiriTTT n H WHY? WONDERFUL CURES I Bocanse it acts on tho LITER, BOWELS aud KIDNEYS nt the snme time. j BecaoBO it cleanaea the system of thepoiaon- r4 ona humors that develope in Kidney and Uri nary Diseases, Biliousness, Jaundice, CancU. pattern, Piles, or in Bheumatisni, Heurmlgla, 2f ervoaa Disordeis and Female Cgmplainta. BEB WHAT PEOPLE SAT i 'r'l C J . Eturene B. Storfe. of Jnnntlnn rHfrr Eamaai jHrjJohil ArnalljfTVaslilngtoljOliI, eayi wiagiTeauptgiua rty roar promiiwnn PjnyMcutna and that he was af terwardu eared by Kidney-Wort. .. . VM.M.B. Goodwin, an editor In Chaidon, Ohio, aaya he was not expected to live, being bloated beyond bellefbrrt JBctaey-Wort curedhlm, - Anna L. Jarrett of South Salem, N. Y., Boyi that seven years suffering from kidney troubles and other co triplications was ended by the use of Kidney-Wort. . , John B. TjflLWrenoe of J&rfcaon. Tpnn.. tmlTtmA LJ for years from liver and kidney troubles and arter lamng Darreis ox otuer medicines," Kidney-Wort made him well. H suffered eight years with kidney difficulty an3 was unable to work. Kidney-Wort made him " weu as ever." 11 il PERMANENTLY CURES V KinNFY niQFACCC majvavM w mm - w W f LIVER COMPLAINTS, Constipation and Piles. f 5T It fa nut nn In Bft VAntnhl. li'nrai fn tin cans, one package of which makes six quarts of medicine. Also in Llouid Farm, verv Con- cent rated, for those that cannot readily pre pare it LIT It acts with equal efficiency in either form. GET IT AT THE DRUGGISTS. PRICE, $1.00 WELLS, RICHARDSON & Co., Prop's, (WIS send the dry post-paid.) BtltLUIGTOS, VT,. VI I I I' l JmL March 27 d&wly Z. B. Vanck. W. H. Bailey. VANCE & BAILEY, Attorneys and Counsellors CHARLOTTE, N. C. Practice in Supreme Court of the United States, Supreme Court of Nortn Carolina, Federal Courts, and counties of Mecklen burg, Cabarrus, Union, Gas ton, Rowan and Da4 vldson. t- Office, two s doors- east of Independence Square. may29 tf RQ. p. GRAHAM, A-Tipii3SrZBir LAW, IN the State and United States Courts. Collee-tlons,Sonie-and' Foreign, solicited. Ab stracUof TltleaviSvr,ef34cc., furnished for com pensation." - t - Officbv-lSbrhe?llade 4 "Tryon streets Charlotte. N. C,. rjan.6. -MMM , 4 ' FOR SALE A'THl?NDESTlLxkk(L MRS. TAYL0R8)ABi)INeH0U3E. corner Main and Depot streete. Hendersonvllle. N.C.i Jtl9"1 ga!fl to ahoaatde surchaser on vtr tavorable terms t , ; " , ,j . , , ' tr.he,9?lenU'sat an his nln&i huses?; e" th9 Ui ate j.U liecessar, 'jJmSS1?''-!' 'J sow fornTshed; trom tfea '.0ifeBSW ven immediately-. Address: , w . uj sum umnTTj j"..-fi Hendeffipvllte,ill.ib. fAffffj 7 f'f; i r -.me. - WEDNESDAY. JULY 27, 1881. tTANDEBISO needl.es. ' ' ; f U I I ' Some Very Remarkable Cases The London Lancet observes that the vagaries of needles which have been introduced in the body, and hae es caped immediate removal ha?a in aU aees! attracted the attention of collec tors" of the marvelous I irt medicine. Hildands related an instance of a wo man who swaltowed several pins and passed them six years afterward ; but a more remarkable instance of prolonged detention was recorded by Stephenson, oft)etroit that of a lady, aged 75, who passed by the urethra, after some months' symptoms of vesical irritation, a pin which she had swallowed while picking her teeth with it in the year l835--forty-two years previously. Oc casional pain in the throat was the im mediate symptom, but in 1845 she was seized with severe gastric pain, which passed away, and she had no symptoms until hematuria in 1876. This curious tolerance of such foreign bodies exhib ited by the tissues is often observed in lunatic asj'lums. M. Silvy recorded some years ago the case of a woman who had a penchaDt for pins and nee dles so strong that she made them, in effect, part of her daily diet, and after her death 1,400 or 1,500 were removed from various parts of the body. Another case almost as striking has been recorded by Gillette that of a girl in whom, from time to time, nee ales were found beneath the skin.which thev perforated, and were removed by the fingers or forceps. Concerning; the- way in wmcu iney got iiilo iier svsieiu, no information could be extracted from her. She was carefully watched, and in the course of eighteen months no less than 320 needles were extracted, all being of the same size. Most were black and oxidized, but gome had re tained their polish. The majority were unbroken. They passed out of various Darts of the body above the diaphragm at regular intervals, but in a ort of se ries and always in the same direction. The largest number which escaped in a single day was sixty-one. A curious phenomenon preceded the escape of each needle. For some hours the pain was severe, and there was considerable fever, ghe then felt a sharp pain, like lightning, in the tissues, and on JoQking at the place at which this pain hap been felt the head of the needle was generally found projecting. The nee dies invariably came cut head fore most. No bleeding was occasioned, and not the least trace of inflammation fol lowed. The doctor in attendance ex tracted 81S. They were sometimes held firmly, and seemed to be contained in a sort of indurated canaj. it was con jectured that they had been swallowed with suicidal intentions; but, ontne other hand, the way in which the nee dies escaped in series, suggested that they had been introduced through the skin. That little weight is to be attached to the place at which the needles es cape, as proof of their mode of intro duction, is evident from a case recorded by Villars of a girl who swallowed a large number of pins and needles, and, two years afterwards, during a period of nine months, 200 passed out of the hand, arm, axilla, side of thorax, abdo men and thigh, all on the left side. The pins, curiously, escaped more readily and with less pain than the needles, Years ago a case was recorded by Dr. Ot to, or Copenhagen, in which 49o needles passed through the skin of a hysterical girl, who had probably swallowed them during a hysterical paroxysm ; but these all emerged in the regions below the level of the diaphragm, and were col lected in croups, which gave rise to in flammatory swellings of some size. One of these contained 100 needles. Quite recently Dr. Bigger described before the Society of Surgery of Dublin a case in which more than 800 needles were remoyed from the body of a woman who died in consequence of their pres ence. It is very remarkable in how few cases the needles were the cause of death, and how slight an interference with function their presence and move ment cause. Texas Railroads. St. Louis Republican. During the year 1880 the number of miles of railway constructed in the State of Texas was 662.80. At the close of the year there were in operation within the borders of the State 3,300.96 miles, of which 2,112 miles were of the standard gauge, and 528K of the narrow or three-foot gauge. The area of the Lone Star State is o vast, and the population is increasing so rapidly, that railway projections are so numer ous it is difficult to keep pace with the many movements being made in rail road building in Texas. As yet, though, Texas ranks as the tenth State in the Union in respect to railroad mileage. The probabilities are that before the present year draws to a close she will take her place about seventh in the rank. Already this year the number of miles of new road built far exceeds what was accomplished in the whole twelve months of last year. Fifteen of the Texas roads are extending their tracks, besides the work that is being done the lines projected during the year 1881. The desire for narrow gauge roads seems to be on the increase in Texas. The greatest of these systems is the Texas and St. Louis, which will depend on the ether narrow-gauge connections to be formed in the next few years. Until its line is extended the Texas and St. Louis is apt to be fought bitterly by the standard gauge roads ; more fierce ly by the Gould system, because the narrow-gauge will run parallel to the Iron Mountain through the State of Arkansas. The Fort Worth and Rio Grande narrow-gauge will be completed to a point on the line of the Texas and St. Louis son)e time next year, and that will tend to still further complicate matters. From present indications the Gould combination are doing their utmost to shut out the Texas and St Louis. The new branches recently ordered to be built by the Iron Mountain in Missouri and Arkansas are evidently with that purpose in view, and the purchase of the iSast Line and Red River road is another wise move on the part of Mr. Gould. He has .ordered the gauge changed to the standard, and will ex tend it to points to which it is now the intention of the. Texas and St. Louis to extend its line."- ; The indications are that before many years Texas will afford so much busi ness that there will be room for all the railroads, both standard and narrow gauge. Unpalatable Food. Chicago Times. A native Fiji teacher stationed at Na Drau, on being supplied lately with food by his converts, was horrified to observe that a portion of it was human flesh. He at once exclaimed against the food and refused to tat it. Those who brought it to him admitted it was human flesh, and said they had killed and coocked thefgovetnment officer. If he persisted in refusing to eat they would kill tndTJtornirrriilso. In ter ror of his life he ate a little, but took the first opportunity! of scapinir from his terrible entertainers 4ndmade4iii3 way to thtf coaitwhere2ie ke potted the crime and subsequent abomination that had been perpetrated. The report is given on authority which leaves little doubt as to Its authenticity. files aM Moa.uitea. n IKsTlwR nF.tiAlarfMf an Data" Ktn bn . i. A Pen-and-ink Sketch of Thomas Jefferson. The American Sentinel, a weekly pa per published at Albion, , Edwards county, Illinois, has commenced the publication of the history of the "En glish Settlement" at Edwards county in 1817-18. This history is by the late George Flower, who, in conjunction with Morris Birbeck, founded the colo ny, x lower ana liirbecK were marked men in their day. The latter particu larly has left his impress upon the State for the active and efficient part he took in resisting the nefarious at tempt to fasten slavery upon the State in 1823-24. He was an accomplished scholar and thinker, and the State has scarcely to this day had an abler writer. The paper of Mr. Flower, so far as pub lished by the Sentinel, is very interest ing, and a most valuable contribution to the early history of the State. Mr. Flower was an English gentle man of education, intelligence and wealth, and had a Targe acquaintance with distinguished men both in Europe and the United States. In the fall of 1816 he made an extraordinary trip on horseback through Tennessee, Ken tucky and Virginia, and in the winter of 181617 he became the guest of Mr. Jefferson at Monticello. The follow ing is the description of Mr. Jefferson and Monticello given by Mr. Flower. We do not recollect having seen any thing connected with Mr. Jefferso'n more interesting than the sketch of Mr. Flower: "We entered the State of Virginia at Arlington. I found Mr. Jefferson at his Poplar Forest estate, in the western part of Virginia. His house was built after the fashion of a chateau. Octa gon rooms, floors of polished oak, lofty ceilings and large mirrors betoken his French taste, acquired by his long resi dence in France. Mr. Jefferson's figure was rather majestic. Tall over six feet thin and rather high shouldered, manners simple, kind and courteous. His dress in form and color was quaint and old-fashioned, plain and neata dark pepper and salt ooat, cut in the old Quaker fashion, with a single row of large metal buttons, knee breeches, gray worsted stockings, shoes fastened by large metal buckles such was the appearance of Jefferson when I first made his acquaintance in 1816. His two granddaughters the Misses Ran dolphwell educated and accomplish ed young ladies, were staying with him at the time. After staying a brief time at poplar Forest, I went tP the house of Gapt. John Colesj in Albemarle county. Mr. Isaac and Mr. Walter Coles, his brothers, lived with him. Mr. Edward Coles, the youngest brothr er, was then in England f orming an ac quaintance with Mr Birbeck. The sister, Miss Coles, had just been mar ried. Her husband, Mr. Stephenson, then a young jawyer, afterwards Minis ter to England, was then on a bridal visit. The greater part of the winter I passed at Monticello, the permanent residence of Mr. Jefferson, in Charlotte county. The chief charm of the visit was in the evening conversations with Mr. Jefferson, who gave me the inside history of events, before only known to me as to the world generally, in the published record, or outside history, which is all that the public is generally allowed to see. I was much attracted by the features of the country, and by the climate of Western Virginia. But the brand of slavery was upon the land. Dilapidated fences, decaying home steads, wornout land everywhere met the eye, giving an uninviting aspect to a country perhaps more favored by na ture than any other portion of the Union. In the spring I was at Wash ington, and present at the inauguration of James Monroe as President of the United States. "At the house of Mr. Madison I saw for the first time Mr. Edward Coles, who had just returned from England. "This Mr. Edward Coles was subse quently Governor of the State of Illi nois, and to his energy and ability the State is indebted for the defeat of the scheme to make Illinois a slave State. A biographical memoir of the great services of Gov. Coles is now in pre- Earation by the Hon. E. B. Wash urne" The Hip-Pocket Question. Louisville Courler-JournaL The right of the citizen to bear, arms is not aright conferred upon the citi zen to make himself a dangerous char acter and a menace to his fellow citi zens. When the citizen abuses the right granted, the right must be modi fied so as to remoye the danger. The sale of deadly weapons must be re stricted. At present gunmakers and pistol sellers sell these weapons to any body without asking any questions. That indiscriminate sale can be stop ped. It must be stopped. Boys, for instance, have no business at all with revolrers. They are, however, allowed to buy them freely. They early get in to the habit of carrying such weapons. They very frequently at an early age shoot somebody. Under an electroplat ing of civilizapori we are degenerating into savagery. ' General weapon-carrying is a declaration that the country is not governed by law. That is the nat ural inference, and honest citizens should seek to remove the foul imputa tion. S I I i It Don't Pay. Between $44,000 and $45,000 is the amount of Revenue which is derived from the liquor traffic annually in North Carolina, which traffic destroys each year not less than five hundred of its citizens. In other words, the State of North Carolina sella into an eternal slavery five hundred of its citizens an nually, for the pitiful sum of $45,000, it being only $90 a piece. Truly, this is putting the souls and bodies of men at a very low figure. Mother, would you take millions of dol lars for your boy ? "No!" you answer. Yet, the State, for the sake of raising ninety dollars as revenue, will deliber ately take that boy from you and de stroy him, soul and body, leaving you to struggle through life with a broken heart, and you can't help yourself. And whfen you appeal to those who traffic for metcy you are harshly told by such men as Jim Boyd: "we can't afford to give up a great business just to save a few drunken sots." . Oh, how cruel the policy of a State that sells for revenue human souls at the pitiful sum of ninety dollars. Colorado as a Geld Producer Colorado now stands at the head as a silver and gold producing State. Ne vada carried the flag for years, but in 1880 she had to yield it up to Colorado. The list runs as follows : Gold and sil ver production for 1880 : Colorado $23, 000,000, California $19,000,000, Nevada $15,000,000, Utah $6,000,000, Dakota $4, 000.000, Arizona $3,500,000, Montana $3,500,000, Idaho $2,000,000, Oregon $1, 000,000, New Mexico $600,000. Total $77,600,000. Colorado increased her production of the precious metals from $17,000,000 in 1879 to $23,000,00 in 1880, and those who have the best means of judging of the production for 1881 put the amount down at $35,000,000. BUENETT'S C000AINE. , X LADY'S HAIR SAVED BY ITS USX. Burnett's Coooalne will keep the hair Id a strong and healthy condition by stimulating the roots of the hair and' restoring the natural action upon which its growth depends, twenty years ago a single bottle tave& a lady's hair in a desperate ease; where every other treatment bad failed; and since that early success thousands of cases of baldness, dandruff, loss of hair,' and Irritation of the scalp, have yielded to this remedy. TejuperlQrltyof BmnetJ'aTlf voring Extracts' gonslsts V their perfect parity and great strength,! It Does Not Pay Anti-prohibitionists tell us that we must have prohibition, because of tl e vast revenue paid the State by the liquor dealers. For the year 1880 the total tax was $1,741,401.58, and of this vast sum the liquor license and per cent, tax was only $42,233.36. The honest laborer pays $97.50 every time the liquor reve nue furnishes $2.50. This $42,233.36 costs in the crime it produces over four hundred thousand dollars. Think of this, you who would vote in this important election. The liquor traffic does not pay the revenue that its friends affect to feel that it does, but it blights homes, ruins prospects and causes mourning in the land. Usw xXtrjetrtisemjetxts. FOR RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell' ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, foafh, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a safe, sure, simple aud cheap External Rerasdy. A trial entails but the comparatively trifling' outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering wifh pain can have cheap and positive proof of its claims. Directions in Eleven Languages. BOLD BY ALL DEUGOISTS AND DEALEE3 IS JIEDI0INE. A. VOOELER & CO,. Baltimore, Md., XT. S. dec80d& 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. Sold by all druggists. The Magnolia Balm conceals every blemish, removes Sal lowness, Tan, Redness, Erup tions, all evidences of excited ment and every imperfection.) h Its effects are immediate anq so natural that no human being caajletect its application, Jan. 22 Summer pans i OEttlREtEBl. Complaints At this season, various diseases of the bowels are prevalent, and many lives are lost through lack of knowledge of a safe and sure remedy. Peeey Davis Padi Killer is a sure cure for Diarrhoea, Dys entery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Summer Complaint, etc., and is perfectly safe. Bead the following : BArNBRiDGE. N. Y., March 82, 1881. . FEB TIT Davis' Pain Killer never fail to afford tnttant relief for cramp and pain in the stomach. Joseph Bubditt. , NlCHOLVrLLE, N. Y., Feb. 3, 188L The eery best medicine I know of for dysentery, cholera morbus, and cramps in the stomach. Have used it for years, and it is ure cure every tima Julius W. Dee. Moingoita. Iowa, March 12, 188L I have used your Pain Killer in severe cases of cramp, colicand cholera morbua.and it gave almost instant relief. L. E. Caldwell. , Oabnesvtlle, Ga., Feb. 28, 1881. For twenty years I have used your Pain Ktlleb In my family. Have used it many times for bowel complaints, and it always cures, would not feel saf a without a bottle in the house. J. B. Ivm SaoO, Me., Jan. 22, 188L Have used Pekbt Davis' Pais Killer for twelve years. It is safe, sure, and reliable. Jjo mother should allow it to be out of the family. H. I. Naves. Oitecda, N. Y., Feb. 19, 1881. We began Mini? it over tmrtyyears ago, and it always frives immediate relief. Would hardly dare) to go to oed without a bottle in the house. O. Spxbr7 CONWAVBOHO, S. 0., Fe'b. 22, 188L Nearly every family in this section keeps a bottla In the house. Da. E. Morton. TJ. 8. Cottsttlate, Cbeveld, Rhenish Prussia, Feb. 8, 1881. I have known Pxbbv Davis1 Pain ktt.t.tr almost from the day it was introduced, and after years of observation and use I regard its presence in my household as an indispensable necessity. I. S. Potter, U. 8. Consul. Bubton-on-Tbsnt, Eno. 1 had been several days suffering severely from diarrhoea, accompanied with intense pain, when I tried your Pain Ktt.t.eb, and found almost instant relief. w H. J. Nookk. 21 Montague St., London, En. During a residence of twenty-three years in India, I have given it in many cases of diarrhoea, dysen tery, and cholera, and never knew it to fail to giva relief. -n-n B. Olasidge. . No family can safely be without this invaluable remedy. Its price brings it within the reach of all. For sale by all druggists at 25c, 50c and $1.00 per bottle. PEKEY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, Providence, R. L July 22 d&w jul aug. THE OXONIAN, A JOURNAL OF LITERATURE & EDUCATION published monthly at Oxford, N. C, at On, Dollar a year In advance. The Oxonian alms at Increasing the Interest for Literature and Education, and gives original ar ticles on subjects of vital Importance as well as criticisms of the newest and most valuable publica tions. Offers deeded advantages to advertisers. High average circulation. Advertisements are shown prominently, are free from errors, and are taste fully displayed. Its advertising rates are not In excess of its value to an advertiser. Advertise ments, Intended for publicantion in any issue should be In the office by the 20th of the month marie tf J. C. HORNER, Oxford, N. C. City Lot.jor Sale Cheap. Ninth street and 106 feet on the North CaroiinS Railroad, will either be sohrta a wholeVdWdSd toto two lots of 70 by 196 feet Suitable elSerfor bttOdlpgor toctory purposes. Applyto tai&W 3. S. PHILLIPS. FOR RENT. lBtaec22tt JNO. L. MORXHSAD ; ORGANS, 17 stops, 5 Set Golden-Tongue reeds, only S85. Ad dress DANIEL F. BEATTY. Washington, N. J. Julyl2-dAw4w 4 - FREE Send to BUSINESS WM1VKRSITY For Illustrated Circular A Ut actual Business SebooL Established twenty years. Julyl2 4w I OLD MEDAL AWARDED the Author. Anew and great Med ical Work, warranted the beat and he pest, indispensable to every ra&n,entitled "the Science of Life or,oeii-rTeaervauon ;' bound in finest French muslin, embossed. t full ritnAnn.fVtninelui.nfIfnl steel engravings, 125 prescrip I taona, price only $1.23 sent by rr-.-r rtwr uillll WT1T T. S 1 T : 1 i . v rVJ-r. . - LHUrT 1 11 1 tillhl KER, No. 4 Bulfinch It. Boston. uly!2 dftw4w Cuticura, the Great Skin Cure. ITCHING AND SCALY DISEASES, HUMORS OF THE SCALP AND SKIN PERMA NENTLY CURED. Cuticura remedies are for sale by all druggists. Price of Cuticura, a medicinal jelly, small boxes, 50c; large boxes, SI, Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, SI per bottle. Cuticura Medi cinal Toilet Soap, 25c. Cuticura Medicinal Shav ing Soap, 15c; In bars for barbers and large con sumers, 60c. Principal depot. WEEKS & POTTER, Boston, Mans. 3FA11 mailed free on receipt of price. juljl2,4w HAVE YOU EVER KNOWN Any person to be seriously 111 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? PAHKEK'd GINGEK TONIC always regulates these important organs, and never falls to makd the blood rich ami 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 CIVIL. MECHANICAL AND MINING ENGI NEERING, at the REN9SELAEK POLY TECHNIC INSTITUTE, Troy, N. Y. The oldest engineering school in America. Next term begins September 15th. The register for 1880-81 con tains a list of the graduates for the past 54 years, with their positions; also, course of study, require ments, expenses, etc. Address junl4-6w 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! Malvem, Ark., May 2, 1881. Z We have cases In our town who lived at Hot Springs and were finally cured with S. S. S. McCammon & Mukbt. Memphis, Tennessee, May 12, 1881. We have sold 1,296 bottles of S. S. S. in a year. It has given universal satisfaction, Fair minded physicians now recommend it as a positive specif ic. 8. MANSFIELD fc Co. Louisville, Kentucky, May 13, 1881. S. S. S. has given better satisfaction than any medicine I have ever sold. J. A. Flexneb. Denver, Col., May 2, 1881. Every purchaser speaks in the highest terms of S. S. S. L. Meisseteh. Richmond, Va,, May 11, 1881. You can refer anybody to us in regard to the merits of S. S. 3. Polk Milleb & Co. Have never known S. S. S. to fall to cure a case ot Syphilis, when properly taken. H. Ls Dennabd, Eli Wabren, Perry, Ga. The above signers are gentlemen of high stand ing. A. EL, Colquitt, Gov. of Ga. If you wish, we will take your case, TO BE PAID FOR WHEN CURED. Write for partipiilars. $1,000 REWARD will be paid to any chemist who will find, on analysis of 100 bottles of S. 8. 9., one particle ot Mercury, Iodide Potassium, or any mineral substance. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., n , . . . Proprietors, Atlanta, Ga. Sold by druggists everywhere. For further Information write for the little book. Sold by T. C. Smith, L. R. Wriston & Co. and Wilson & Burwell. jun25dly If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have fre quent headaches, mouth tastes badly, poor appe tite, and tongue coated, you are suffering from tor pid liver, or "bllllousness," and nothing will cure you so speedily and permanently as to take Sln mons Liver Regulator or Medicine. The cheapest, purest and best Family Med icine in the world I An effectual specific for all diseases ef the Liver, stomach and Spleen. Regulate the Liver and prevent Chills and Fever, Ma larious Fevers, Bowel Complaints, Restless ness, Jaundice, Nausea BAD BBEATEL Nothing is so unpleasant, nothing so common, as bad breath, and in nearly every case it comes from the stomach, and can be so easily corrected If you will take Simmons Liver Regular. Do not neglect so sure a remedy for this repulsive disor der. It will also improve your appetite, complex ion and general health. PILES! How many suffer torture day after day, making life a burden and robbing existence of all pleas ure, owing to the secret suffering from piles. Yet relief is ready to the hand of almost every one who will use systematically the remedy that has perma nently cured thousands. Simmons Liver Regula tor Is no drastic, violent purge ; but a gentle assis tant to nature. CONSTIPATION Should not be regarded as a trifling ail mentin fact nature demands the utmost regularity of the bowels, and any deviation from this demand paves the way often to serious danger. It is quite as necessary to remove Impure accummulatlons from the bowels as it Is to eat or sleep, and no health can be expected where a costive habit of body prevails. SICK HEADACHE. This distressing affliction occurs most frequent ly. The disturbance of the stomach, arising from the imperfectly digested contents, causes a severe pain in the head, accompanied with disagreeable nausea, and this constitutes what is popularly known as sick headache. CAUTION. Buy no powders or prepared SIM MONS LiVER REGULATOR unless in our en graved wrapper with trade mark, stamp and sig nature unbroken. None other Is genuine. Manufactured only by J. H. ZEILIN CO. , Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by all druggists. L1unl8,eod,d&wly J. L. HARDIN,, MERCHANDISE BROKER AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, Collese St., Chalotte, N. C, Orders for Grain, Hay, Meal, Flour, Lard, Bacon, -Tobacco, Sugar, Coffee, Molasses, fcc,respectl fully solicited. The cheapest marketsand mruL bis houses represented. JHU J3t HONEST 7 Twfst Chewing Tobacco Beware of Imitations. None genlne unless ac compledwith our "Honest 7" copyrighted Uabel whJ.ch wfflbe found on head of every box. - rnxLUIOU um' 07 KttOWTT ft BBO.. feb20-2w r Winston, i, N. G FREIGHT NOTICE. Office SupEBurrENDENTi A., T.& 0. R B- V Chablotte, July 18, 1881. f ONand after this date all freights on this road will be received and delivered at what has been heretofore designated as the Alr-Llne Depot, at the foot of West Trade street. . Passengers will also in future get on and off the cars at the fame point J. J. GORMLEY, Julyl9.dtf 'Superintendent Roanoke Coif ege, S A LE RI, VAf . , TWENTY-NINTH SESSION begins September 7th. Classical, Scientific, Elective bjiu Prepar atory cMiraes. .Ireneh and German spokea in f's-room. Library 16,000 volnmea iJSrucUor, thorough, mi8etartan. chorehes of fiwdraonm natlomu: Climate unsurpassed. -ColieuoJSj. ed by mountains. , Expenses for lQmonthi iw S160 to220 (mclndini collet 'MSSWSa Mghts and washing.)- stodents fronr alTor Catalogue free. ' Address, t i iu& JoW,deoLwimo8ETTOrTI.: i GO TO iilm T. Butler's AND LOOK AT HIS LARGE STOCK OF Novelties ALL OF WHICH HE SELLb LOW FOR CASH. All Goods Warranted as Rfy resented, both in Weight and Quality. WATCH GLASSES 10 CENTS EACH. deel R Railroads. Condensed Time Taule-NorMaMiiaO TB1INS SO IKS NORTH. Date.Mayl5'81 No. 47 Daily No. 49 Dally No. 43, Dally Lv. Charlotte, " A-L. Depot " " Junc't " Salisbury. Arr.Greensboro Lv.Greensboro Arr. Raleigh Lv. " Arr. Goldsboro Lv. Greensboro for Richmond Lv. Danville " N. Danville " Barksdale " Drak'sBfch " Jetersville Arr. Tomahawk Arr. Belle Isle Lv. " Arr.Manchester Arr. Richmond ewe 6.15 am 4.15 pm 6. -20 AM "4 30 psi 7. RO am .6.07 pm a 80 am 7.57 PM 9.50 am 8.18 PM for Rloh- m'nd only hVsi'AM 11.33 am 12.01 pm 1.20 pm 2 65 pm 8 51 pm 4.28 pm 4.35 pm 4.38 PM 4.43 AM 7 28 am 4 11 AM 5.56 am 8.03 am 8.25 am 1.40 PM 1.45 PM 4.00 pm 8.25 pm 10.21 AM 10 27 am 10 58 am 12 87 pm 2 24 pm 3.20 pm 4.05 pm 4.10 pm 4.13 pm 4.18 PM 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 2.48 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 8.37 pm " Salisbury 11.16 am 10.33 pm Arr. A L. Junction 12.45 pm 12.15 am ' Charlotte 1 1.00 P 12.20 am Lv. Richmond . 2.65 pm " Jetersville 4.41 pm " Drak's Br'ch 6.07 pm " Barksdale 7.25 pm ' Danville 7.61 pm " Benaja g.55 pm " Greensboro 9.27 pm " Salisbury ! 11.05 pm Arr. A-L. Junction 12.26 am Arr. Charlotte ."!!!!"! 12.80 am SALEM BRANCH. NO. 48 Dally, except Sunday. Leave Greensboro. 9.40 pm Arrive Salem 11.40 pm NO. 47 Dally, except Sunday. Leave Salem. . , 7.80 am Arrives Greensboro 9.00 am NO. 42 Dally, except Sunday, Leave Greensboro 10 00 am Arrives Salem ........ ... . .'.11.80 am NO. 43 Dally. Leave Salem 5 30 pm Arrive Greensboro ". 7 Limited malls Nos. 49 and 50 will only make snort stoppages at points named on the schedule. Passengers taking train 49 from Charlotte will get aboard at the B, 4 D.B, a depot This train makes close connection at Greensboro for Raleigh. Goldsboro Newberne and all points on Wilming ton ft Weldon Railroad. " Passenger trains No. 47 and 48 make an local stops between Charlotte and Richmond, and be tween firftpnflhim nalaloh onH .uk.. m11? connection with W. N. C. R. at Salisbury 7Tm- Xiiv uuojjjuwpuju;, una biso con necting at Greensboro with Salem Branch (Sun day excepted). v Passenger trams Nos. 42 and 48 make all local stops between Charlotte and Richmond, except Query's, Harrisburg, Cnlna Grove, Holtsburg. Lin wood and Jamestown. No. 43 connects with Salem Branch at Greens boro. A. POPE .t o an Ticket Agent WHS Blchmond,Va. FLY FANS & TRAPS, BATH TUBS, SPRINKLERS, ICE CREAM FREEZERS. OIL STOVES -AND THE For summer use, just In. THE FINEST LINK OF Cool-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. . C0!-c- W. Bradshaw. so long and favorably known In connection with the Sewing Machine business of this city and vicinity, is now with me and would be pleased to see his friends and patrons and serve them as heretofore. may24 Drapt ly Examination. Go to W. P. MARVIN, Agent, and Successor to V. Scan ft Co. Fresh Drags MPure Medicines None pot the , Jeti ttst Drags do I keep to my stock. , Also Toilet and Fancy Articles. Perfumeries, Combs, Brushes, Tooth Brashes, fta, ft. of all the bestTarietlesjutd- warranted Physicians prescriptions are given spee- :r-f - lal mfrnfiim.' ' o 6 rl SEASONABLE GOODS Double Quick Cool Stove, Hoping to rWe' a' shaTe 'bf publlo X FT fc I u It I