A- MSB rn sum APPETISER IRON BITTERS are highly recommended for all diseases requir ing a certain and efficient tonic; especially Indigestion, Dys pepsia, Intermittent Fevers, Want of Appetite, L.oss of Strength, Lack of Energy, etc. It enriches the blood, strengthens the muscles, and gives new life to the nerves. It acts like a charm on the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic symptoms, such as Tasting the Food, Belching, Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn, etc. The only Iron Prepa ration that will not blacken the teeth or give headache. Sold by all druggists. Write for the A B C Book, 32 P- of useful am amusinjr reading- sent free. - BBOW CHEMICAL CO., Baltimore, Md. I wm Sarins trom gaoarat dabUitr to torn. ATaaatloaof amontn aianot irira me VzJZZjm. ..H nklnaahillx. AttblaUma I ,Dj avt liairil- '-'I nArtni rtumlta. The old art pM naaatiy aoatafw i naTa nwmt arvm vwfn vnw xoiuo. ciam uuhk a a w bar that I ever did la the aama time during my illness, and with doable the ease. With tfie tranquil nerve .. vmmg of kody, haa eoma alsa a olaarneaa of thought never before enjoyed. If the Tonic has not done the ak. Tknow nt what, lsdva it thaaredit. J. P. Watbok, Pastor Christian Church. Troy, O. Tlsa Mrn. Tmnlm im r jiraita mf JV atit Traxa. Pmtt phmtam, aaoeeif I vOJa ) raowiakfa HAIirAITIIEI II TIE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., MO. 213 NORTH MAIN STREET, ST. LOUIS' t17 eod.d&wly R. M. Miller & Sons, COS. COLLEGE ft FOURTH 8TR. -WE SELL T out Patent AND- F. FLOURS. Jul Just Received and to Arrive ! 1 CAR LOAD I FLOUR ! AS30BTKD SACKS. CATCH OF 1881 HfOLASSCS 1T1 L0LASSE9 STBTTP8 Including a few bbls, YBUP3 ol Mew Orleans. OTJOAR OUGAB C OTFXE OTFXX "DICE ICE 13AC0N J1 ACON LARD ARD TJAM8 AltS CORN OBN "MEAL 1TX EAL ETC TC AT INSIDE PRICE3. MAYER & ROSS. WE HAVE NOW IN STORE FOB THE Spring and Summer Trade The Largest, Finest and MOST COMPLETE STOCK OF FINE MILLINERT, WHITE GOODS, TRIMMINGS. NOTIONS And'all kinds of For Ladles and Children We nave ever bad the pleasure of showing -OUR STOCK OF QL0VE8. HOSIERY, FANS, PARASOLS. TRIMMINGS. NECKWEAR, - AND CORSETS -I not surpaMed In the city. We have ' Hats or bonnets TO FIT THE HEAD AND POCKET OF EVERT LADT, MISS AND CHILD. ttut Pattern Hats and Bonnets will be open lIOPiY iPRlL 1th. ln exanunatlon of our stock wlU convince any Utly ttteA we Undheadlnstirlesand MRSeMOTERY Jtoa be found in tbe 'itore to watt on her blende mSTJ lJ?? TVl Of Mf. M. B. . J-(would u pleased to eee his friends and SSSTf--! - I f .MJJ8.F QUERY. ' v. , WHOLESALE GROCERS Pen F. V A LARGE LOT OF M n n n i-i u ii n n nn i ui I II AM V rt J II J H . , spring mm. FANCY DRY GOODS A TRUE TONIC JRnrforwerf and re Meal nrofvstiion, fori Ityympvpmia, (General DabilUv, Mfiemole Dim eaaea, Want nf Vital- fity, Kervna -roart-a-fioiL. and Convalea- eenefromVeverm,4be.i Bach an extent that my iqdot was exceedingly but- maca reuei, dvo, on me contrary, wu iuuu ujr besan the naa of yoor Ibon Tonic, from which I re- energy returned and I found that my natural force MALARIA IS AN UNSEEN, Vaporous poison, spreading disease and death In many localities, for which quinine is no genuine antldota, but for the effects of which Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is not only a thorough remedy, but a reliable preventive. To this fact there is an overwhelming array of testimony, extending over a period of thirty years, All disorders of the liver, stomach and bowels are also conquered byfhte bitters. For sale by all Druggists and'Dealers generally. DOES HY? H WONDERFUL ff CURES! El Because it acts on the LITER, BOWELS and KIDNEYS at the game time. Because it cleanses the system of the poison ous humors that deveiope in Kidney and TTri- fw nary Diseases, Biliousness, Jaundice, Const!. pation, Piles, or in Kheumatasm, Neuralgia, JTervoua Disorders and Female Complaints. EES WHAT PEOPLS SAT : Euffr-no B. Stork, of Junction City. Kansas, says, Kidney-Wort cured him after regular Phy sicians had boon trying for four years. Mrs. John Arnall, of Washington, Ohio, says her boy was git-en up to die by four prominent physicians and that lie was afterwards cured by Kidney-Wort. M. M. B. Goodwin, an editor in Chardon, Ohio, says he was not expected to livo, beinjr bloated beyond belicfbut Kidney-Wort cured him. Anna L. Jarrett of South Salem, N. Y., says that seven years guffcrinir from kidney troubles and other complications was ended by the use of Kidney-Wort. John B. Lawrence of Jackson, Term., suffered for years'from liver and kidney troubles and after taking: "barrels of other medicines." Aiuiwjr - un maue mm wen. Michael Coto of Montcpomorv P.nnt-ni- suffered eight years with kidney difficulty was unable to work. Kidney-Wort nuuls well as ever." I PERMANENTLY CURES ? if inucv meeAcce LIVER COMPLAINTS, Constipation and Piles. tIt is put up in Dry Tea;etable Form In tin cans, one package of which makes six quarts of medicine. Also in Liquid Form, verv Con eentrated, for those that cannot readily pre pare it tS It acts vrtth equal efficiency in either form. GET IT AT THE DRUOGIST3. TRICE, $1.00 WELLS, EICIIAKDSOJi & Co., Trop's, fWIU send the dry post-paid.) BtnLIXGTOS, TT. r ii a u Ti ll g Ti n - i March 27 d&wly 30 DAYS TRIAL ALLOWED- ELT. WE WILL SEND, ON 30 DAYS' TRIAL, DR. BYE'S Electro -Voltaic Appliances enffcrlng from Nervous Weaknesses, Gen eral lability, loss of nerve force or vigor, or any disease resulting from Abuses and Oth sr. Causes, or to any one afflicted with Rheuma tism, Neuralgia, Paralysis, Spinal Difficulties, Kidney or Liver Troubles, Lame Bacfi, Rup tures, and other Diseases of tbo Vital Organs. Also women troubled with disease peculiar to their sex. Speedy relief and complete restoratfon to health guaranteed. These are tile only Electric Appliances that bave ever been constructed upon scientific prin eiples. Their thorough efficacy hat been prac tically proven with the most wonderful mecess, and they have the-highest endorsements from medical and Mcien tifie men and from hundreds who have been quickly and radically cured b -their use. ' Send at once for Illustrated Pamphlet, givin; all information free. Address, VOLTAIC PELT C0erhall, Mich. JulySl W. H.BAHJET. VANCE & BAILEY, ' Attorneys and OoonseHors CHARLOTTE, N.C, Practice In Supreme Court of the United States, , Dupieme vxrartoinorcn Carolina, e eaerai Courts, and counties of Mecklen burif. Cabarrus, Union, Gas ton, Rowan and Da- vldson. W" Office, two doora east of IndenendflnnA Square. may29 U RO. D. GRAHAM, IN Ui4 state and United States Courts. ' CoUeo . iJoM, Home and Foreign, eolleUed. Ab traets Ot TlUea. SnrverB.. An., rnmlalud for Mm peneatton. ttoSuEL v'ri" Ooroer Trade- & Tryon itreeti vaariwe, . C. Han. A. - II f B M U 9 If W f 77sT If ff 1 It . k TUESDAY AUGUST 23,1881 ? J jantevlEaiuitDECisibiiw: 5 v it I -Hl HH'! Commissioner Rannf Sayi all Brok- era are Bankers, and that Borrow ed Money is a Deposit and Subject to a United States Tax. Philadelphia Times, 16th. United States Revenue Collector Ash worth yesterday began sending notices to the stock brokers of this city that Commissioner Eaum had decided that all brokers must be rated as bankers and pay taxes as such. The decision also holds that all money borrowed by brokers must be considered deposits and taxed. -Also that the brokers must pay taxes for all of the past years when they were acting under a former decision by Commissioner Delano that they were not subject to these taxes. The same thing was attempted about tein years ago, when Columbus Delano was Commissioner of Internal Reve nue, and a committee of the Stock Ex change went to Washington to try to get the decision revoked. The decision promulgated at that time was that all brokers were bankers, aud also that the money they borrowed should be rated as capital. Mr. Fox, who acted as spokesman for the committee, soon convinced Mr. Delano that if brokers were bankers so was every other man engaged in trade, and he had no diffi culty in convincing the commissioner that borrowed money was not capital not an asset, but a liability. The deci sion was revoked, and since then those brokers who do only a strictly broker age business hae not been making any returns to the Internal Revenue De partment, as the head of that depart ment had decided that they were not required to do so by law. Before the decision was revoked, however, Clark, Dodge & Co., of New York, had paid a tax on borrowed money and they brought suit to recover it, and won their suit, after a long contest, which finally ended in a decision by the Su preme court, it is said, that borrowed money was not capital. The new deci sion attempts to accomplish the same thing by a different method, treating borrowed money as a deposit, subject to the same tax as capital. When the agents of the department came here a few weeks ago to examine the books and accounts of the brokers prepara tory to a new promulgation of the old and once-revoked decision, a committee of brokers visited Washington and made representations to Commissioner Raum similar to those which had con vinced Commissioner Delano of the in justice of the position which the de partment had assumed. The commit-4 tee returned to this city fully expecting favorable action. The brokers, there fore, were not a little surprised and very indignant yesterday when they learned that the Commissioner had de cided that they were bankers and that borrowed money was deposits and that they would be held for taxes during all the past years during which they were acting under a decision from the same department that they were not liable. Their notifications were accompanied by the information that' if they made out their statements covering the past years and paid the taxes claimed to be due therefor the department would not enforce any penalties. It is not yet decided whether the brokers will make a contest in the courts or whether they will bow to a decision which they believe to be con trary to law and common sense. The Republic's Danger. Litchfield Enquirer. The real danger to American insti tutions in this second century of our existence as a people is the same that threatened Rome in the seventh cen tury after the founding of the city unexampled material prosperity. Ko modern country but our own so nearly resembles Rome in this respect. Mas ters of a new continent, with no equal within thousands of miles and no rival anywhere, we, like Rome after the fall of Carthage, are a country with whose power and progress no other country can interfere. With an almost un limited field for growth, with an im mense, inevitable development of wealth, the question for America to day is, who shall gain that wealth, the few or the many? In Rome it was the few who monopolized the spoils of the then known world, and the result was the ruin of the State. Are we sure that we are not hastening to the same result in America? With all our unexampled material prosperity, is the average American citizen of 1680 growing more Intelligent, hones ter, more independent, than the Ameri can citizen of 1830, of 1780? In spite of all our boasted material progress, the eventual welfare of the republic hangs on an affirmative answer to this momentous question. The nation is advancing or retrograding not in pro portion to its increase in wealth, but in proportion to its increase in the manli ness, the independence of the individ ual citizen. Though we build 100,000 miles of railroad if is no crain to us as a people if those miles of railroad are in the hands of a few monopolists, but a loss. If our mines and our manufac tories breed a race of masters owning them; and a race of servants working them, the country is a loser in what is worth, more to a republic than wealth. The republican reader of history, then, grows to fear this avalanche of mater ial prosperity which may, if monopo lized by the few, destroy the liberties of the many. Sudden wealth seems almost as great a danger to the nation as to the individual. It is a manure that, if suffered to lie in heaps, threat ens the public health and breeds noth ing but w"eeds ;. while, thinly spread it enriches the whole land. It should be the chief aim of the American states man to prevent these undue accumula tions to which thoughtless people point as evidence of an era of unexampled national prosperity. Royal Blood in an Almshouse, Mrs. Belinda Connor, who was res cued from tramps at Erie on Sunday, has been Bent to the poorhouse, and is a confirmed drunkard. She is about 40 years of age, and is highly educated. She states that she was born " in Sohort Castle, Corlr. county, Ireland, the seat of the sixth Earl of Egmont. Her father was Col. Tracy Perciyal, of her Majes ty's Fifty-second Regiment. At the age of 15, while at school, she contract ed a love for liquor, and was sent home in disgrace. She states that she had an illegitimate child by James Powel, a son of the member from Sligo, and was disowned by her family. She married a mechanic named Connor, who was Eaid to take her away from the coun ry, and they settled in Erie 17 years ago. She states f urlher that she is de scended from Spencer Tercival, the Prime Minister who was shot in the House of Commons by Bellingham, The Pittsburg Dispatch says that refer ence was made to Burke's British Peer age, and the names, dates and locali ties given by the woman were found to be correct. Bedford Xutm ahd ISO Sprihgs Water and Mass. The great tonic and alterative contains twice as much iron and City per oant, more alum inum than any "alum -and jron mass" known, fast the thing tor the "spring weakness" now go general, sold by all druggists of any standing. Prices reduced one half. mayll tf THE EST TQ HEALTH. Have yon found the key - to perfect health and strength? It is Sidney-Wort, the only remedy that overcomes at enee the' Inaction of the kid neys and bowels. It purines the' blood by cleans-' lng the system of foul humors by giving strength to the liver, kidneys and bowels to perform their regular fciaetton ; - See displayed advt. I rSlIS OF fcTTEREST, There isi a monastery r in -the very heart of the Roman Camoaena. where -malaria never comes, because of the 1 i x L - - " There are 175,000,000 Mohammedans in the' world. ., The missionaries of Islam have surpassed all others in pro pagating their faith In Africa. Col. Dunbar, proprietor of the . fa mous Bethesda Spring at Waukesha, Wis., refused $500,000 for it. He want ed $1,000,000. It was sold the other day for $84,000. ' A barrel of lager contains about thir ty gallons. There are sixteen half pints to the gallon. Retailers, howev er, get about twenty glasses from the gallon. For a barrel of beer which costs $8 the retailer receives about $30. The drinking poition of Memphis are doing some tall kicking over the recent order closing the saloons at midnight. The fellows must be idiots to want to drink all day and night both. As Gov. Hendricks would remark: "Midnight is an inconvenient late hour." The Chicago Times has a new writer. Describing Mr. Conkling as a swimmer the new man says: "The water wrings Maccassar from his famous curl, his dauntless breast swells out like a big life-preserver, and his legs thin as a White House bulletin stab the wound less waves with a desperate thrust." A protest signed by forty-three wo men, legally qualified to practice medi cine in their respective countries, was presented to Sir James Paget against their exclusion from the meetings of the International Medical Congress in London. At the six congresses which have been held in other countries duly qualified medical women were admitted to the meetings. The city of Newark, N. J., one of the manufacturing towns of the North, shows how manufactures build up cities. Out of a population of 130,000 over 41,000 are employed in manufac tures of various kinds. The wages paid outlast year were $14,784,383, and the value of the manufactured products was $66,985,766. The epidemic of tpphoid fever at Eugby Colony promises to create a sensation in the medical world. Ex haustive articles on the subject are be ing prepared for the medical journals, and it will doubtless be thorougly dis cussed. The appearance of typhoid fe ver as an epidemic in a town situated in the woods, nine miles from a rail road, is unique in medical history. An American in London writes to the Chicago News: "1 deliberately de clare that in five weeks and a half in this kingdom I have seen as many wo men under the influence of liquor as I have seen men under like influence within the preceding three years. I have, in scores and scores of instances seen little children, late at night, at the saloon door, crying for mother to go home, as in our own land wives plead for their husbands." Mr. Charles O'Conor, the distinguish ed lawyer, is building a residence at Nantucket, Mass., which, when com pleted, will be the most costly on the island. One portion of it is of brick and as near as possible fireproof, and this is for the reception of his immense and valuable library. It is said that Mr. O'Conor Intends at his death to leave this house to the local Catholic organization for a sanitarium. It is only within a few years that the tomato or, "love apple" as it was for merly called has been generally grown for food. Now it forms a prom inent feature in every private garden and on every truckf arm. The appearanc of a mysterious tomato disease is there fore a matter of general interest, and scarcely a housekeeper in the land will fail to hope that the danger which ap pears to be threatening this crop may te speedily removed. The people of the United States, du ring the fiscal year ending June 30, 1881, consumed 63,526,594 gallons of distilled spirits. Of this only 2 per cent, was imported; 28,030,601 gallons of wine were also consumed, less than one-fifth, of which came from abroad, and 414, 771,690 gallons of malt liquor, 1,000,000 of which only were manufactured in the old country. That's pretty good drinking for an infant Republic. It is related in Gordon's book on "Central Africa" that the Christian King of Abyssina cuts off the noses of those who take snuff and the lips of those who smoke. He also cuts off the feet and hands of those who offend him. He gets drunk every night, and reads the Psalms at dawn. No woman is allowed within 300 yards of his palace. He is of the strictest sect of the Pharisees, and is a good king for the dynamaniacs to practice on. It is said that "Boss" Shepherd, who used to "run" Washington city, has made $3,000,000 in Mexican silver mines and is coming back to Washington with the intention of once more setting up as a political and municipal "boss. With a Republican Congress it is possi ble, and even probable, that he will carry out this programme, but had Congress remained Democratic he wouldiardly have succeeded. A new notion, and probably a sensi ble one, is what the fashionable New York girl calls a bare bath as a first rate cooler. She gets into a room hav ing a skylight, disrobes entirely and sits in the sun's rays until every pore is streaming. Then she rubs herself dry, skurries under temporary cover to her own room, dabbles herself with cologne, fans the skin dry again, and feels as cool as a cucumber. The effect is good for an hour or two at least, and un doubtedly worthy of praise from a san itary point of view. The negro woman who murdered a little girl and boy, near Washington, says : "I was going along the path. It was not God Almighty, but it was the devil who put it in my head to kill them. I could not help killing them. I did not do it with, the ax, nor the washboard, but with apiece of wood big as my arm, and about eighteen in ches long. The children were running about the yard of the house. I struck the one with the long hair first, but I don't know how many times I hit her. I saw the ax in the wood pile after hit ting them with the stick. What I kill ed them for I don't know. The devil got into me, so that I could not help doing it." A Sleeping Pike Caught. Ithaca (N.T.) Journal. On Saturday afternoon a young daughter of the boat-builder, William Jarvis, while playing along the Casca dilla, creek, in the vicinity of her fa ther's establishment, discovered a large fish lying perfectly still and apparently dead in shallow water a few feet dis tant from the bank. The girl quietly withdrew from the stream and in formed "Jack" Thomas, a veteran fisherman, 'what she bad seen, and he returned to the spot with her and as soon as he espied the fish he declared it to be a pike taking anap. Thomas en tered the water cautiously and, by wa , ding quietly ."he succeeded in getting, within reaching distance of the game, when he, with a quiek scooping motion with both hands, lifted r the pike from Ms native element to terra firma, where he speedily dispatched him; - The pike, ppon being - wejgheai proved to pe a rmdeV:. :;; & : LOSIQ 008 COCX BEEi TONIC Has received the ntghest medals at principal ex. positions, and Is endorsed and prescribed by the medical faculty here and abroad as the standard tonic. Beware of worthless imitations. ' THE COTTON ItllLXY CAMPAIGN. Active Operations fn Mississippi arid Tennessee "There has been wonderful activity throughout the South during the past year in the-establishment of new" cot ton manufactories, and a great deal of capiuu uas oeeu mvesteu in sucu emer Drises.' Mississippi is moving extensively in developing her manufacturing inter ests. The nistory of ner Wesson cotton mills has been profitable to her. Start ing with one mill and $300,000 capital only a few years since, her goods took a premium at the Centennial Exhibition. Another mill was built and the stock doubled. Fortune still smiled upon her and prosperity crowned the work. About 30 per cent, was made, and then another mill was built and the stock increased to about 81.000.000. In Mav. 1878, the sound of the steam whistle and the clash of the shuttle announced to the people of Natchez that a cotton factory was in operation there, and the Seople gathered around to see it start, me year proved it to be a paying en terprise, ana at once the foundation stone of the second mill for Natchez was laid, and it is now about completed So successful are some of the principal i-i j. ii : - i i i -. . . . iiiiiia uiat iney are iigmea wun electri city and run a night set of hands. - A New Orleans company is starting a large mill at Canton, Miss. At Wa ter Valley the machinery has arrived tor a small mill, to be enlarged if suc cessful. At Vicksburg, the largest citv in the State, a large cotton factory movement is on toot, jn early $200,000 has been subscribed in the city, and it is expected to raise as much more East, and have the Eastern stockholders take the man agement, equip and operate it. Colum bus, Miss., has a new cotton seed oil mill, and is raising stock for a cotton factory. The Vicksburg mill will use a staple 1 inches long, buying direct from the planters' wagon, will save all incidental expenses, and will secure a year's supply of cotton in getting the crop of a few planters around the city. Many of these mills are specially ex empt from all taxes. One of the largest mills in the South is located at Nashville, Tenn., and a dividend of 14 per cent, was sufficient inducement to build another. The mills at Pulaski, Tenn., have a specialty, and are so overrun with orders that they are anxious to double their capacity. At Jackson, in West Tennessee, the people intend erecting. a cotton factory, and they have already about $50,000 subscribed for that purpose. Dallas, Texas, is inaugurating a $200,000 fac tory, and Sherman wants a $75,000 one. i i A Pupil Forty Years Old. Marlon County (Qa.) Argus. A colored "school marm" in this county has a number of men with fam ilies attending her school, one forty years old. Among the number is the man with wham she is boarding, and one of the first to receive the rOQ of correction was her landlord. Two weeks ago the forty-year-old student was told his next failure to know his lesson would bring upon him "the rod certain." He says she is right, and if while he attends her school he dis obeys her commands or fails to comply with her regulations that she ought to whip, and his duty is to submit to the chastisement without complaint. Pity but that many of his white friends were as consistent and as honestly fair. "AM DELIGHTED WITH IT. I have no con fidence In the colorless. A pure article was great ly needed," says Dr. J. J. Youlin, President Jersey City, N. J., Board of Health and Vital statistics, of the Lleblg Co's Am lea ted Extract of Witch Ha zel. Cures painful periods, leucorrhcea, female weakness, exhausting flows, sore breasts, and quickly relieves pains of any kind. Beware of eounterfelts. Sold in fifty cents and dollar sizes. gets tlwrtisjemjettts. miMBPisi Mil REMEDY. FOR RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, Genera 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 safe, sure, simple and cheap External Remedy. A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of its claims. Directions in Eleven Languages. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AHD DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. VOGEUER & CO., Baltimore, Md., V. S'.JL. dee 80 d w ly ' AIM 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 hnes 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, Kedness, Erup tions, all evidences of excite ment and every imperfection. Its effects are immediate and po natural that no human being caujeteipt 4t9.appBcatiQiia JaoTSa SITUATION WANTED. wants steady sitmatton. Can "make np" a taper, run a press, and is tpmpetent to take harge of me mechanical department of a news- rwoi. -wi u nvia vary cnesp during tne lUflHuW. ,,)uly24,atf Caret Observer, Charlotte, K. a aug9 d&w4w Df A HflC 0 SOLD ON INSTALLMENTS and riAll UO Ot shipped to aU parts of the conn fiD PA HQ I P&IGES LO w and terms of UiluHilv ! payment easy. Send for eata- e. ' HOBACB W ATKKS A CO. anufacturers and Dealers. 826 Broad war.N.Y. augy,4W BOLD MEDAL AWARDED th Anther. A new and great ated- ImI Wa.It .l. 1 l a - 3 1 "...HiwiKivHivwibBaa neapest, indispensable to every or ,Slf-Preservation bound in finest Freneh mufliin. embossed, rail gUMOO pp.oontains beaatifai steel ensraTings, 1SS prMorip- mail; Ulnstrated sample, Scents; MIW It M4 WiMM I aug9 d&w4w KS&, Ho. 4 Bulfinchrt. Boston. aena to MOORE'S BUSINESS UNIVERSITY Atlanta. 6a. For Illustrated Circular. A live actual Business" School. EsUoJUishea twenty years. aug9 4w mm butters cure all diseases of the stomach, bowels, blood, liver, kidney and urinary organs, nervousness, sleeplessness, and especially female complaints. Ask your druggist for Hop Bitters and try them before you sleep. TAKE NO OTHKB. Send for Circular. HOP BITTERS M'F'G CO., aug9 Rochester, N. V., and Toronto, Ont 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? PABKEB'S GINGER TONIC always regulates these important organs, and never fails to make the blood rich and pure, and to strengthen every part of the sys- ujin. 11 nas curea nun areas or despairing inval ids. Ask your neighbor about it augy.4w Benson's Capcine Porous Piaster Vnr T.fima DaAlr Dha.irr.qHam iriiin aw m.. and aches and pains generally, It Is the unrivalled xomAlD i- . AUTOMATIC CABINET PLAT ANY TUNE. ORGANS only $5 Music 4c. per foot. Illustrated catalogues free. THEO. J. HABBACH, aug9,4w 809 Filbert st, Philadelphia. 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. CTJRE3 WHEN HOT SPRINGS FAIL! Malvem, Ark., May 2, 1881. jZWe have cases in our town who lived at Hot Springs and were finally cured with S. S. S. McCamkon & MtTBBT. 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 & Co. Louisville, Kentucky, May 13, 1 881. S. 8. 8. has given better satisfaction than any medicine I have ever sold. J. A. Flkxneb. Denver, CoL, May 2, 1881. Every purchaser speaks in the highest terms of S. S. S. L. Mktssktkr. Richmond, Va., May 11, 1881. You can refer anybody to as In regard to the merits of a S. S. Polk Mn,i,?nt & Co. Have never known S. S. S. to fail to cure a case ot Syphilis, when properly taken. H. L. Dknnaed, Eli Wasbkh, Perry, Ga. The above aimers are eentlemen of hieh stand ing. A. L Colquitt, Gov. of Ga. If you wish, we will take your case, TO BE PALD run whjsin cuked. write lor particulars. SI. 000 REWARD will be Dald to anv chemist who will find, on analysis of 100 bottles of 8. a 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 llttlebook. Sold bv T. C. Smith. L. Ii. Wrlston & Co. and Wilson & Burwell. un2odly J. L. HARDIN, MERCHANDISE BROKER AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, C0LLX6K St., Chalottx, N. C, Orders for Grain, Hay, Meal, Flour, Lard, Bacon, Tobacco. Sugar. Coffee. Molasses. &c.. resDect- fully solicited. The cheapest markets and relia ble houses represented. Jan 23 Administrator's Sale, . IN obedience to an order of the Probate Judge, I will sell at public auction, at SDartanburtr Court House, on the 3rd day of September next, at 1 1 a. m., tne iouowing property: 24U snares commercial Bank ol Columbia. 240 shares Bank of Hamburg. 60 shares Merchants' Bank of Cheraw. 120 shares Bank of Chester. (50 shares Bank of Charlotte. 118 shares Charlotte. Columbia & Aususta Rail road. 90 shares Atlantic Tennessee & Ohio Railroad. 1 share South Carolina Ball road. Also, on the same day. at the residence of Mrs. Springs, near Cedar Springs, at 3 p. m., the fol lowing property: A lot of Household and Kitchen Furniture. Terms of sale, Cash. A B. SPRINGS. Administrator of Rlch'd C. Springs, deo'd. augl6,dl6,23.sepl COUNTRY BACON AND HAMS, LARD, BALTIMORE HAMS, SMOKED SHOULDERS, WATERMELONS, Etc. auglO 0. M. HOWELL. S ESBl n-1 re- p. 2 rf ilkl 1 lp Is B 1 a B3 ... -I II t Very Cheap By tne crate or peek, at augl8 PERRY'S. St. CHARLES HOTEL STATESVLLLE, N. C THIS house has been leased for a term of yerfrs by Mrs. Dr. Beeves, whose intention is to keep a Btrictly first-class house In every respect. Commodious sample rooms on firat and second flOOrS. i - ' - - .-v: -.. ' -The patronage of the public la solicited. -Julilrdtl, r ' v i FREE 3 s6 Peaches reaches fatcfrisa trad gcttrjelyg. GO TO lira s AND LOOK AT HIS LARGE STOCK OF lovelfe s Jewelry ALL OF WHICn 1IE SELLS LOW FOR CASH. All Goods Warranted as Rep resented, both in Weight and Quality. WATCH GLASSES HI CENTS 'EACH. decl5 Mensed Tiifle Table Nortli Carolina R. R TRAINS QOIKO NOBTH. Date,Mayl5'81 No. 47 No. 49 'No. 43, Dally Daily Dally Lv. Charlotte! 4.05 ak 6.15 ax 4.15 fm " A-L. Depot " " Junc"t 4-11 AM 6.20 am 4150 pm " Salisbury, 5.66 am 7.50 am fl.07 pm Arr.Greensboro 8.03 am 0.80 am 7.57 pm Lv. Greensboro 8.25 am 9.50 am 8.18 pm Arr.Ralelgh 1.40 pm for Rich- Lv. " 1.45 pm m'ndonly A it. Goldsboro "4.00 fm 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 12.87 pm 1.20 pm " Jetersvllle 2.24 pm 2.55 pm Art. Tomahawk a20 pm 3.51 pm Are. Belle Isle 4.05 pm 4.28 pm Lv. " " 4.10 pm 4.H5 pm Arr.Manchester 4.13 pm 4.38 pm Arr. Richmond 4.18 pm 4.43 am 7.28 am TRAINS GOma SOUTH. Date,May 15 '80 No. 42 No. 48 No. 50 Dally, j Dally. Dally Lv. Richmond 10.45 pm 12.00 m " BurkevUle 2.25 am 2.43 pm Arr. N. Danville 7-00 am 6.06 pm Lv. " " 7.25 am 6.18 pm Danville 7.27 am Arr. Greensboro 9.26 am 8.17 pm Lv. " 9.31 am a87 pm " Salisbury 11.16 am 10.83 pm Arr. A L. Junction 12.45 pm 12.15 am " Charlotte 1.00 pm 12.20 am Lv. Richmond 2.55 PM " Jetersvllle 4.41 pu " Drak's Br'ch 6.07 pm " Barksdale 7.25 pm anvUe 7.51 pm Benaja g.65 pm " Greensboro 9.27 pm " Salisbury 11.05 pm Arr. A-L. Junction 12.26 am Lv. " " Arr. Charlotte . . . 12.30 am SALKM BRANCH. NO. 48 Dally, except Sunday. Leave Greensboro. 9.40 pm Arrive Salem 11.40 pm NO. 47 Daily, except Sunday. Leave Salem 7.sn m Arrives Greensboro. 9.00 am NO. 42 Daily, except Sunday. Leave Greensboro 10.00 am Arrives Salem 11.80 am NO. 43 Daily. Leave Salem 5.80 ph Arrive Greensboro 7.30 pm Limited mails Nos. 49 and 50 will only make short stoppages at points named on the schedule. Passengers taking train 49 from Charlotte will get aboard at the B. A D. R, R. depot This train makes close connection at Greensboro for Raleigh, Goldsboro Newberne and all points on Wilming ton 4 Weldon Railroad. g Passenger trains No. 47 and 48 make all local stops between Charlotte and Richmond, and be tween Greensboro, Raleigh and Goldsboro, No. 47 ' making connection with W. N. C. R. at Salisbury for Asheville (Sundays excepted), and also con necting at Greensboro with Salem Branch (Sun day excepted). Passenger trains Nos. 42 and 43 make all local stops between Charlotte and Richmond, except Query's, Harrlsburg, Cnina Grove, Holtsburg, Lin wood and Jamestown. No. 43 comwets with Salem Branch at Greens boro. A. POPE, Gen. Pasa. and Ticket Agent, mayl8 Sichmond.Va. FLY FANS & TRAPS, BATH TUBS, SPRINKLERS, ICE CREAM FREEZERS. OIL STOVES AND THE For sximmer use, lust in, THE FINEST LINE OF Cook-Stoves and Sewiog Machines LN THE CITY. Orders and correspondence solicited at the Hard ware Store and Sewing Machine House of RICHARD MOORE, Trade Street, Charlotte, X. C Col. C. w. Bbapshaw. 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 md patrons and serve them as heretofore. may24 Druggist by Examination. i i GO to W. P. MARVIN, igent, and Successor to F. Scarr ft Co. Fresh Drugs and Pare Medicines c H H 1 ii 11 1 r None but the Very Best Drugs do I keep In my stock. Also, Toilet and Fancy Articles, Perfumeries, Combs Brusjies, Tooth flushes, &&, At QABDEN SEEDS of all tne best varieties, and warranted to be good. Physicians' prescription are given speo- - lal attention. Hoping to receive a snare of publio SEASONABLE GOODS Double Quick Cook Stove,