Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Aug. 19, 1881, edition 1 / Page 1
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SClje Cljorlottt O&bgcroec; ; SVBJKmXFTIOW JUImV'-' Deity, me war, pottyoU) in tOmmet. fr.lttS Or is MonOi...... ....... ; 4 OC km Months 9 Of oiMiritt.....rt;..A.';.-..'...i...i...... 7 wmmklt mnmoK t WmI&v, (to V eotmttf m tcme$.... 3 y Out of Oi county, pottpaid, 3 10 if Liberia Umetianw (Jkv j THS 0B8XRYXB JOB- DXFABTfEBT Eaa rjera ttoroDghry. wppiiec; wia eraa need want, and wlthtb Uteat ttylee olTrpid twf PHDnemt Jobganuug em iwrrtw aooe wiQi wtneea. mmolfih jand firinenniMi We eaa fan HLAOTH, BILIrHEADa, ,. . Jv XAQSt'SBCEIPTS, POSXXSS, FAMPHIXra.aBCCIJLBACHJCIl.4C. VOL. XXVI. CHARLOTTE, N. C, ERID AY, AUGUST-19 1881. NOi 3,876. . ii-ls! We fc fiat We Say. We still hate an elegant and well-assorted line of LADIES', MISSES' and CHILDREN'S Fancy. Hosiery. " They Most Be Sold. . We will commence sacrificing these gocds Immediately. OUB EN TIRE STOCK OF SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. Call early and secure best bargains. Alexander & Harris. Julyl? loots am d 3Uoz& Ski 188 1 We are dally receiving our SPRING STOCK Best Brands LaMSMes which will be more complete tban ever before and comprises the LADIES', MISSES', CHILDRENS,' GENTS', BOIS'. AND YOUTHS' FINE BOOTS 1 SHOES A SPCECIALTY. Lower grades all goods in our line In variety and all prices. FULL STOCK STETSON HATS, and a pretty line Straw Hats, Trunks, Valises & Satchels, ALL SIZES AND RBICE3. Call and see us. i ; PEGRAM & CO. feb20 t r R 17 11JU E. M. ANDREWS, (Successor to E. G. Rogers.) WHOLESALE & RETAIL FURNITURE DEALER . 4 full line of CONSTANTLY ON HAND. ji il'l hut . . . DONT FAIL ..;. .-'St ' f!'i ' 1 TO ?1Y Ml A CALL BEFORE BUTNO Ppbolstertng and repairing done cat the j shop In connection with the note. , it.!; Juli29 n I - mm rtmt ttnk-t mm m viAhnuuiA aiul netiflla UOp, mTintU 6 a, ButishoulA the Pleased- to -. enlighten 4r assist them. Office 28 West Trade street, next door to tieketfflee. t aug3 i Y. X. MoBEJt, Ag J Mosqnito CaDon les From $2 to 810. MOSQUITO NETTING, In white and colors, by the yard and by the pleee. SOME NEW AND STYLISH LAWNS Very cheap, Just In. We offer great bargains In our remnant stock of Silk & Lisle Thread Gloves Milk Mitts. All our summer goods will be sold uniformly at first cost Bargains In store for those who will avail themselves of the opportunity to secure them. aug7 T. L. Seigle & Co. Summer Complaints At this season, various diseases of the bowels are prevalent, and many Uvea art loet through lack of knowledge of a safe and sure remedy. Perky Davis' Path KtTiTiTtb is a sure cure for Diarrhoea, Dys entery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Summer Complaint, etc., and is perfectly safe. Bead the following : i BAnnmnxre,X. Y., March S3, 188L Pebbt Davis" Pain KTTJ.ra r fails to agori ute nUtf for cramp and pain in the stomach. Joseph Bubditt. t . NicHOivrMjs, N. Y.. Feb. 3, 188L The tty hut medicine I know of for dysentery, cholera morbus, and cramps in the stomach. Have used it for years, and it is ur cur every time. Juxrns W. Dn. Motnooka, Ictwa, March li, 188L I have used your Paxn Killib in severe oases of cramp, colicand cholera morbus .and it gave almost Instant relief. L. E. Caldwell. CARirESVILLE, Ga., Feb. 28, 1881. For twenty years I have used your Pain Killeb in my family. Have used it many times for bowel complaints, and it alxeay eurtt. Would not feel saf 9 without a bottle in the house. J. B. Ivik. Saoo, Me., 3m. 22, 188L Have tised Perry d Avte' Pain Killir for twelve years. It is soft, ntr. and reliabU. J9 mother ahovddaUowittobeout of the family. H. L 1TAYM. . Ojtetda, N. Y Febi 19, 181. we beesn -08107 it over thirtyyears ago, and it SlwayB frivea immediate relief, would hardly dare to go to bed without a bottle in the house. W. a Spxbbt. COWWATBOBO, a 0., Feb. 23, 1881. Kearly every family in tola section keepe a botUa in the house. Da. . Mobton. TJ. 8. COWBTTLATK, . Cbetexs, Bhkhibh Fbcssia, Feb. 8, 188L I have known Pebbt Davis' Path ktt t almost from the day it was introduced, and after years of observation and use I regard Its presence In my household as an inditptntabU neceuity. X 8. Potteb, TJ. 8. ConsuL BtrETONJN-TKKKT, ENO. I had been several days suffering severely from olarrhcea, aocompanied with intense pain, when I tried your Pain Kn j.KB, and found ahnoet instant relief. H. J. Noorne. 91 Moirr aottx 8t., Ixndon, Ens. 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 give relief. . B. CLAUoxiK. No family can safety be without this invaluable remedy. Its price brings it within the reach of alL For sale by all druggists at 25ci, 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. PEERY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, Providence, R. L July 22 dAw Jul ang. B IU1S i INDORSED BY PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN, AND THE AFFUCTED EYEBYWHERE. THE GREATEST MEDICAL TRIUMPH OF THE AGE. . YMPrTOWS OF A TORPID LIVER. Igg of appoyte jy ansea, bowels costive. Pain in theHea,Tritha dull sensation in blade, fullness after eating, with a disin clination, to exertion of body or mind. ngi leeted soma dutytweariness, pigsineas. yiutteripg ot4.he Heart, Dots before the ' . , . i i .S 1 m wr i ness acrugn V rugmy coiorea urine. UP THESE WASHINGS ABE TJITHEEDED, SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED. T HIT'S pmJl are especially adapted to such eaitin dose effects such a change of feeling a to astonish the sufferer. Thev ibe Apnetit. and cause the body to Take est Fleab, thus the system is urlal4, and by thsirTonle Aetleaon the IMseeUve Orrana, Hernia duced.- Price 25 cents. SS H r Btools are OTPS HAIR DYE. changed to a u lossy cation of this Dye. It acta Instantaneously. ild by Druggists, or sent by express on rscsipt of 81. Office, 35 Murray SW New York. Vn TUirS MARUAIi ot Talaabls hformttea n k ChU Mmlpto wUl ht mmB4 FKZE oa apUeUom. Feby. 23doodwl 1 ; t 'A "N """"O 0 V xoosiif -szjs x$ pa ua, oS issnixatni jaasa nq 'uiaiuCs eqj dn tpjmq. 'n te 3abx P a Jouedns J pus- It xp j. fv Hr. itamjsaA Xos so oonsdis; tluia.f'ClJlJiU.f:Cav!KlT:l fiutnAipeJlpHS p)Jo2iAU!qreD noa "W4 M ?m pmaw? !a "smI Awa W-?wi"Va-5j:i I rtl iniJ n-j-!'-' mwajwws s jK;iau NOTICE. I t-anmroT wiT.Tmf TMnhmrmitJVa.. irtll dellrer JtL by express to any person, freejrf transporta tion. lDaredienU enoueh of hla Premium Bum writing Ink to make 2Vi gallons, by only ddlng hot water, for gl.25, notto.be Jajot'vm hjfi proved. ,. .-'. B0B1ST HILL, v Ink lIanufacturerf.All Colorf. auglS Biefamond, Ta. OBSERVATIONS, As the maiden dlsroDed for the night, she dropped her striped skirt so softly you could actu ally hear the bed-tick. New York News. . There are 400 men In New York worta S3.000; 000 each, and over 500,000 men. who are not worth a cent : i - ' The man who goes to a picnic and discovers the loss of his $5 bill lust after treating seventeen handsome girls to the delicacies of the' occasion has some slight Idea of how it feels to be run over by a wagon load of hay. - ' - J ; , ; ; : I It is reported that Inna Dickinson entered a store the other day and asked for a pair of stock ings, whereupon the clerk, not bearing plainly, inquired. "Hose, Anna?" and the ministerial looking man at the other counter said "Amen." Yatchtlng Item: Brownjohn very appropriately calls his yacht his floating debt. It Isn't paid for. New Orleans Times. The wife of a Springfield editor has Just pre sented htm with girl triplets. His article on the drought, which he had just begun, must remain a fragment Courier-Journal. "Where Is My Daughter To-Night?" Is the title of a new song. We don't know anything about that particular daughter, but we saw somebody's daughter going down the street the other night, and she was hanging on the arm of a young man who eats cloves. - A. citizen of Evansvllle who caught a thief in his barn fastened the broken door and let his big watch dog in to keep the fellow company. Next morning there was lots of dead watch dog but no thief, and the Svansvllle man feels natter thin he did. free Press. , Blanch (to Ethel, -Just returned from their sum mering): 'Why, how thin you lock!" Ethel: "Of course, my dear; four toilets a day, and the ger man four times a week, are not fattening. Be sides, one doesn't wish to come back to society looking like a dairy maid." ITEMS OF INTEREST. A locomotive drinks 45 gallons of water every mile it travels. Four of the Thousand Islands in the St. Lawrence are owned by the widow of the late Judge Asa Parker. They cost him fifty dollars, and are now val ued at one hundred thousand dollars. Polish women are yery beautiful, perhaps as a race they are the most beautiful women in the world. Bayard Taylor declared that he saw more hand some faces at Warsaw in one hour at the races than he saw in all the rest of Europe in two years. Matthew Vassar, the Poughkeepsie Ehilanthropist, just dead, began his usines career as a brewer. A re nowned college in Poughkeepsie and a thriving town in Michigan bear his name. Ex-Senator Conkling visits Manhat tan Beach almost daily, and thinks nothing of a half-mile swim from the bathing-house .to the new iron-pier be low Brighton. , During the last fifteen years of slave ry, the South raised 46,075,591 bales of cotton. During the first fifteen years of freedom, that is from 1865 to 1880, the number of bales produced was 56, 438,335. The report of the Bureau of Statis tics shows some improvement in the trade of this country with Mexico. For the past year our net imports were $14,524,898, as compared with $12,691, 955 the previous year ; and our exports $6,069,345, as compared with $5,405,420 the previous year. Our Central Amer ican trade was $5,356,002, an increase of 40 per cent over the previous year. The rural population of Connecticut is decreasing, and the manufacturing towns are increasing. Connecticut no longer feeds herself, but depends upon the West, where a good deal of the State's money is located. Small farms are merging into large ones, and, ac cording to a recent writer, the country is falling into the hands of wealthy manufacturers, New York merchants and foreign mill operators. Ben "Wood, some years ago, won, it is said, $125,000 at a single sitting at faro. He borrowed $2,500 from Judge Mc Cann to begin on, and he went away with every pocket stuffed with checks and bills. The cigar seller in the gam bling rooms told a correspondent of the Missouri Republican that Wood that night smoked $70 worth of cigars. He took cigars costing about one dollar each, and lighting one end, began in his nervous way to eat the other, and in about two minutes he would take a fresh one. . . ?, . ' Dr. Hammond Again. The New York Evening Express contains a lengthy interview had with ex-Surgeon-General Wm. A. Hammond yesterday morning. Dr. Hammond said lie nad.anticipated the last relapse of President Garfield as a natural con sequence of his debilitated condition, and that it would lead almost directly to his decrease. Continuing, Br. Ham mond is quoted as saying "The case does, and has tbroughout its various developments, point to. .all . the symptoms of pycemia. The low respi ration, the increased but fluttering pluse, the growing temperature, the in ability of the patient's stomach' to. sus tain food, the gradual wasting away of the body, thV pinched appearance of . the features, and especially of the nose, the comatose state in wbich his waking hours are passed, and the general disintegration of the System, are conclusive indications that the pa tient is fatally . poisoned and . cannot live. The attending physicians have neglected this view of the case entirely. They bava been treating him in. the an ticipation of the development of, peri tonitis, and have, according to this hy pothesis, been reducing him in flesh by a most ascetic diet; where they should have given him more nutritious food to build his system up to the highest standard. This dieting business has.in d uced this collapse,f or it approaches that more than a relapse. I think this re lapse is the final one, although I hope I am mistaken, and that, instead of re cuperating, his condition will continue to be grievous unto death. The long, est time recorded, for a patient to live when suffering from pyemia is three months, and because of the President's weakened condition he will" not last even that long. I think. that the eon elusion of the attending. physicians that the President is -suffering from dyspepture is the most ridiculous one they could arrive at. He is suffering f ifjm dyspepture ho more than I am he is dying from pyaemia, and nothing under heaven can save him. , The fact that the surgeons did not immediately ascertain the President's xact condi tion has done more than anything to kill him. It is neglect, human neglect, that will kill President Garfield. " t , From Pittsbarf fo; LrncUfiufff.. ' J, Mr. P, P, ,Dandridge. engineer in charge, has made a report on , the pro- Ejsed railway IWm Pittsburg, Pa, to ynchburgjva. i The report;is entirely favorable to v the proposed route via Cheat river, Cow, Pasture and j .Lexing ton, Ya where it would strike a brahclt of the Richmond & Alleghany Railroad;, nowOeing built to IVBingtpji4 This route is 84 , mlres'islTorter''thani the White Sulphur route, and 20 miles V&H? : I AACI0VU . IVSbV, J far tbtfTfiostiiatoral.'-practical and dirt recc ana, n ia ciaimeo, wouia Dnng wiq vast undeveloped ore fields of .Virginia in proximity to the coal fields of West' Virginia and Pennsylvania. 1 STATE HtBWSr' - Raleigh New& & Observer: The board of aldermen declined to pass the ordi nance requiring all hog" pens to be re moved from the city. w North Carolina contributes 294 white and 429colored people to -the popula tion of the District of Columbia. :-Miss Lucinda Brtggs,a$ old citizen of the city on . Sunday last broke her arm. A fanner near this -y planted twenty-acres of new ground in corn. To-day not a single stalk isJ4iving. The grape crop in this section is very large and of good quality- The railroad work on the Eden ton extensiosofHhe Elizabeth City and Norfolk "'Kaflrpad is progressing suc cessfully. T About TOO laborers are em ployed on tbe&work.' ' The Oxorii&n and 0rjpli8 Friend have been consolidated and will appear hereafter as a wionthly, 43 pfeges, under the name of the OjcfordSuoational Monthly: Horner & Mills, proprietors. Bishop Lyman, who was'ttrjured by an accident to his buggy, wile driving in Wilkes county last Tuesday, reach ed Raleigh Thursday. The? physicians who called to See him aseenained that there were tid bones broken! but that he was suffering from contused -wound in the shoulder. Milton Chronicle: The Country is in fested with robbers, lazy rascals that sleep all day and prowl around at night. Wilmington Review: There are a number of five dollar gold pieces in cir culation that are counterfeit. Exam ine them carefully before you take them. The counterfeit coin is not more than half as heavy as the genu ine. Robesonian: It becomes our sad du ty to report the untimely death of Mr. C. Nash Collins, son of Mr. John Col lins, which occurred in this town about 12 m. on Saturday, 13th inst. He was about 22 years of age. Durham Plant : We need more cheap dwelling houses in Durham to accom modate our citizens. It is difficult to find a house for rent. Died, at the residence of her father, Mr. J.J. Ferrell, Friday night, Miss Nebraska Ferrell, aged about 20. She had been sick with typhoid fever for several weeks. Mr. Seigle, superintendent of the cig arette department of W. T. Blackwell & Co.'s factory, left last week for New York to employ fifty experienced ciga rette hands. We learn that the hail storm Satur day night did considerable damage to the tobacco in the Northern part of the county. Saturday will be known as the "hot Saturday." The thermometer stood 110 degrees in the shade. Winston Sentinel: The mast crop will be short in this section. More wells have failed this summer than was ever known in the history of the town. Profanity on the streets of Baltimore is punished by a fine. Winston might find in this a very acceptable amend ment to her own ordinances. It is strange but true that the old, va rieties of peaches this year far surpass improved growths in point of yield. They seem to be hardier and the severe weather of last winter had little or no effect upon them. Many mills are stopped in this and neighboring counties owing to the in sufficient supply of water , caused by the drought. Farmers are bringing their grinding to town for miles around in order to be accommodated. Laurinburg Enterprise : Reliable gentlemen have told us that in the north western part of this county there is a white female child, 15 months old, which weighs 173 pounds; and that there lives on the premises of Mr.E. H. Russell, near Spring Hill, in this coun ty, a negro woman 60 years old, who has a number of children as black as negroes generally appear, and who was herself as black as the blackest one un til her children were all grown, but who is now as white as any white man or woman in this county. The change in her complexion from black to White has been gradual. Now whoever can will please rise and explain these mys teries! ' Statesville American: We learn that Mr. John Lowry, of Davie county, who was driving a two-horse wagon to County Line, where he had purchased' a lot, with his little son, last weeK, nap- Send to drop his lines,, and reaching own for them, the team became fright ened and ran, when . Mr. Lowery. fell over, breaking his neck and arm; , The child escaped unhurt Deceased leases a wife and several children. During the thunder-storm '. on Satur day evening last, about a , o'clock, the lightning struck the barns of Messrs. Samuel Wilson and William Johnson in Sharpesburg. . township, and both were destroyed, together with their contents, the stock within alone being saved; Jt the same, time Wm.i Ellis had a fine cow killed. '. . -' During the same storm, at "Bennett's store, near Mt Pisgah, the stepping block m front of the store was struck and torn to pieces, and Messrs. Bennett and Wm. Lackey, who were. 'standing in the door were stunned by the stroke, Mr. Lackey, being thrown to the floor and badly burned upon ; the back,, the skin from which is coming off. The storm is represented as being : unusual ly severe. . . -,... r ' :; : . i ; Lenoir Topic : Wallace Brothers, of Statesville, intend making a fine exhib it ot Western North Carolina medici nal roots and herbs at the Atlanta Ex position. Gen. Collet Leventhorpe has gone to Elk Knob copper mines, in Watauga, to show them to. a representative of some Northern capitalists who wish to invest in mines. Two farmers brought a load of wa termelons and . a big rattle snake to town last Friday. The snake got out of the wagon, wandered about the street for a while; creating no little ex citement butwas re-captured. r. . '- -" ;. ?'- ; i ; Kahoka, Mo., Feb. 9, 188a I purchased five bottles of your Hop BUters of Bishop dt Co. last fall for my daughter, and am well pleased with the bitters.. They did her more eood than all the medicine she has taken for U years' ' ' -Wit T. IfrTJBB. s : The above is from a vwr reliable farmer, whose daughter was in io6r healUt for seven or eight teats and couM . obtain no; relief until she used Bon Bitters. She is now In as good health as any person la the country. . We have large sales, and fiwj aremaklngreniaTlHUjlremw -- ; M-'- :w;h.bishopCO. . f Bklaaj Men. " . i . Wells' JBaalth- Benewer.-. Absolute cure for ner vous debility and weakness of the generative tune-HnnRl--adruEgisia Depot, t. H. McAden. .Charlotte, Kfi , t . , ., , ' fea retvedtDfe ilhfest eddls" at iHcfpalx positions, and is enoorspa n ipreacrjpea or tne mexueal faculty here and abroad as. the standard mhuo. i . -aEi f ttmafrtmi 112 49 lBOJtfiPHIHSB WaTZX AS&-The eat tMiejmd, alterattva reoo tarns twlo,as mucn Iron ana Kty -per cent, more alam-i mum thanany ."aluni : aad'lron- mass'', known. . Just Ihe.lhHigJthewprtogT weakness" general no" "";Hiaw: oa maj an Frioes reaucea oue uau. majll tf BOW SO yiuTueV ISCDIUIEIB We are now selling best brands of LAWNS at 10c Nice lot of those 6c LAWNS on hand. All Wool Banting at 15c. Just arrived, a large lot of UMBRELLAS From the cheapest to the best ALSOfSlXK AND WORSTED UMBRELLAS INI INCLUDINa MOBS 01 THAT FAMOUS GREAT VABXETT. To Arrive Soon Another Foil line of lie Mill CALL I ABLY. augl7 DOMESTICS. HARGRAVES & WILHELM. 11 TIM 1 1 llJULJJUliM I I I mmm 1st, mm rs- & IE j?r S BE GIVEN IN CLOTHING! CLOTHING! WILL BUCH INDUCEMENTS BE GIVEN IN AS ABE NOW OFFERED BY LLo llCeiPWaims!!0 & UBiPdD OVR $15.00 AND $10.50 SUITS FOR.. 12.50 44 1400 " " . FOB, GASH ONLY ! .$12.50 I OUR $9.00 AND $10.00 SUITS FOR. . 10.00 1 " 8.00 " 9.00 " " . . THE BIGGEST BARGAINS EVER GIVEN IN $7.60 6.00 Mm s, Ji and Youths Ooii. CALL EARLY AND SECURE BARGAINS. (Dn 3nn (Dmtt Salle OF l)irniiDg anndll SimimiiDiicBir K3Dcn)cSIS WE NOW OFFKB THE BEMALNDKB OF OUB SPRING AND SUilMBR G00t8 Alt JEsiM TMip Vaflone I THE GREATEST OPPORTUNITY TO BUY GOOD CLOTHING CHEAP IS NOW WITHIN YOUR. REACH. THIS IS A POSITIVE FACT ! tyOUR PREPARATIONS FOR FALL DEMAND A CLEARANCE 07 THE GOODS NOW OFFERED WITT! KOWSKf & BMIDCE New Goods for tie a n Ira I e BjLII AEMOTft MM. - ' t . , ; . . i beckett & Mcdowell, ENGINEERS, IRON FOUNDERS & MACHINISTS, MANTJFACTUBEBS OF CONTBACT FOB CONSTBUCTION AKDEBBOKOF MlTMACHINraY SD' . . FACTUBI AMDSKLL ASBICULTlJBAi Af0 F)BTA8IKNGIN, SAW MILI, AO. ,n what theJ The inannfac tte caAjreBBTO L??&. VffivTteit af ? W ', . eiaim.Uiey enBUnn .ujmanviauuwoiBgricuiMirst ensiuee uw .u .w-..--- . . m .-. ' j i H v, ' s.Tvrfeli of00l $ l,OOoT as inaje4ertred. These engines bum 4, and t-foo JdU W-i l TntTxr a Trnrrvai' a rronf nniirft atrgeL bet Trade and Fiftb, Charlotte, Jt. i - V W-SVAe. W A V 1 AI VT) aavu vvv0 - w - . - r ii ii'i'i'i ni .w.i.1 -.i 'v - aogS ' 1 Til -THE ATTENTION Trade generauy ana aueuie wmwner, a teearspeetal brands or saleable and staple i i.t. Tnii .im nitttmr VMLrrOarlfajB 1MB fnUttVaUst styles th?n?ost fewwesks;n(recidae nB4riiiewte' Oi that no ower. iwnuuouainwi eqwu. tosmenwttl makeegaW trtpa to Charlotte, stdofaU goodiwrchkaUIKtXul- ilea. . : . t avwnaavxi.A Of the eeiled npwgraawac .miu ma -TohafeOi t rr": ITT onrsai anaine ly aouci mart BBIGK ' BRICK ! ! J:t.. .!!:..' X1' t v"-1-' . i J.'.! rrtHB nn6SBrsiaTiewP'olly Inform he pubUe A that tney have engaged In the brtcfc business, Ware now making superior .qubj tand rnade brlcfc'TheThave hi connection with their yardman Improved OompfestIachlneby which; tnerlBBwinreBsca om iuat. wui wcsiagun I brickv Am oae, destruig to build willr flndi It toH VIDOVtMVSOT pnar-44mi . yi eaV M Avnanoue, n. v. irt ri"nr wnj wvivpii their tnterest to give us. a' ill ssili nns . 4 .t:" -' .. - i i i ' ej0VWMVSM zzHONESIW: Tw i stChewifi b a c e o 'Beware of li8il(msJoneBfenin toj"": epmpanlea with- ourHonest 7j eoprhted label which will be found bd bead ofeveff boi ?i Maaufacturedenlr bj'Ua JBQ-'r , febQO 3w " r-r .Winston. N. u. -r,!r1rir A rd GEOBttlAAror to K I ijOxLl L) A formaon I about these iStdeflAWAMOBNIN ailf 910 njWi worn vwwnii Bample copies 5 oen . fla. augl2,2t
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 19, 1881, edition 1
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