Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Sept. 1, 1881, edition 1 / Page 1
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Stye (I Ijaxtottt bOTtr. avBMOxxmox jutm; paCts one year, (jnstyorfd) t hwwi.... tS 00 io.. ............ .......... 4 oo KomMi , a oo ojfrf - irjjuxr mdoios ; - ry, ( wimfy) w wfcwww.... .... 00 Oirt m ootwtv, poaftxrid. ..m..m.m 2 10 jf....... ;.....:....:....... too ?PTfff1 m OBSZSTZS JOB BSFASBSSSS " Eubee&ttwtoaKSily lorpllad vk7 mM want, aod wuh am late t&U tt Tn a at Job PrtBSm eas VOL. XXYI. CHARLOTTE, N. C. THURSDAY; SEPTEMBER 1, 1981. , : PBoaxupcsSiiccctixfl, jm , s V t 1 11 I f Ml 111'. : . V ." - -T t-i a ' ' . v -IT- Alexander & Harris's. aug21 00t an ft gJxozs 881 Sprin 2 Stock 1 881 We are dally receiving oar SPRING STOCK ! A DcTery Uivallna? Dr. Jnner' One of the most important papers wajimjcrh' UOKSIT8 ubt an established repu - tatkin tbrouKbout tne world for DuraMity, Comfort and Healtbfulness We offer these goods to the trade -with confidence, knowing from experience that mej possess erery advantage claimed lor tnem. HAVE JUST BXCXIVED O? THS A LARGE LOT CORALIIIE, ABDOMINAL jon NURSING CORSETS. ALSO- Warner's 50c Corset ! The best for the money ever sold In this market We will be nleased to have the trade insoect these goods. Satisfaction guaranteed In every case or money reiunaea aag38 ILSeigle&Co. Medical. which will be more .complete than ever before , and comprises the Best Brands Latest Sty Its. LADIES'; MISSES', CHILDTUSrfS,' . GENTS', B01S'. AND YOUTHS' FINE BOOTS! SHOES A SPECIALTY. Lower grades all goods tn our line . all prices. FULL STOCK in variety and M J It I fF SI II II s III STETSON HATS, and a pretty line Straw Hats, Trunks, Valises & Satchels, ALL SIZES AND BBICES. Call and see as. teb'20 PEGRAM & CO. PERRVDAW pain mum IB A PTTBBLT VEGETABLE BEMBDT For TSTSJJ3AL and F.XTKRNAL Use. A siire arid speedy cure for Sore Throat Ckjnglis, Golds, Diphtheria, Cllls,Diarrhea,Dyseritery .Cramps, Cholera, Summer Complaint, Sick Headache,yeiiralgia, Rhen m at i toi , Braises, Cots, Sprains, etc Perfectly tafe to aaeinternally or ezternaEy,a.n& certain to afford relief. No family can afford to be without it Sold by all druggista at &Oc and ! a bottle. PERRY DAVI8 A SON, ProprtetorAV Provlaene(Jtb Ye&f 23 d&w al aag. . TBiiXBSoixs kovtb. DateJUylS '81 No. 47 DaOy I No. 40 Dally No. 48 Dally Lv. Charlotte, . - A-L.. Depot " " Juntft Salisbury, Arr.Greensboro Lv.Greensboro Arr.Balelgb Lv. - M - Arr. Goldsboro Lv. Greensboro for Richmond Lv.DanvQle " Ni Danvine " Barksdale " Drak'sBr'eh " JetersvUle Arr. Tomahawk Arr. Belle Isle Lv. " ArrJfanchester Arr. Richmond 4.05 AX 411 All &56 AM 8.03 All 8.25 AM 1.40rM 1.45 ru 4.00 m 8.25 pm 10.21 AM ltt27 AMI 10 58 12.87 PM 2.24 FM &20 pm 4.05 FM 4.10 PM 4.18 PM 6.15 AM 6.20 AM 7.50 am 0.80 9.50 4.16 PM 4,80 PM .07 P M l 7.57 PM 8.18 PM itor BJck- m-oQonu It. 81 11.88 AH 124)1 PM 1.20 PM 2.55 pm! 8.6 1 PM 4.28 PM 44)5 TM 4.88 PMl 4.18 PMj 4L43 AM , rijiff 7.28 AM THE OflLY JSflEDICinC 111 ETTHEB LIQUID 0$ D8Tjt)g That Acts at the same time n TZ2 LIYXJl, TE2 BOWXLS, 1 ABB T33 KIDBSTS. t fe WHY ARE WE SICK? JB4CnM w aOow Iheu great organt to I beom doooed or torpid, and poi$mau htmortar ihtnfort forced into tM Mood I M that thoOdU txpuud MflOTay vwoienr read at the meeting of the International Medical Congress, held in London, was that of M. f asteur, the distinguished biologist, on certain discoveries of his which will enable "physieiana tD con-? vert vaccination from being an isolated and empiric precaution into a wide sys- tern of 'treatment, applicable' to many kinds pf fever of both man and animals. His investigations have resulted not alone in preventives for four distinct violent diseases, bat in a knowledge of a method of preparing a vaccine for preventing fevers and many if not all contagious diseases. M. Pasteur, in his address as reported by the-JLiondon; Times, gives in detail bis discoveries with respect to two diseases chicken cholera and splenic fever. It will suffice to trace his method of preparing a vac cine to prevent the first. He takes a chicken about to die of the cholera and draws from its veins a small quantity of blood. .Under the microscope this blood is seen to be full of small living creatures, which, for want of a better name, we shall call microbes the name employed by M. Pasteur. A drop of this blood is placed in a close glass ves sel containing clear strained, recently boiled broth, made from chicken or other flesh. Great precaution is taken to exclude the organic germs floating in the air ; in fact the glass neck of the vessel is closed with a plug of cotton, or is drawn out in a lamp flame and hermetically sealed. The glass vessel, or flask, is kept at a temperature of atxmt 55 degrees Fahrenheit. Its con tents at first become turbid from the growth of. the microbes nourished by the broth, but at the end of a couple of days the thickness of the broth disap pears because the microbes have ceased to develop and have fallen to the bot tom of the flask, and things will remain in this condition for months without either liquid or sediment undergoing any visible change, provided the atmos pheric germs are kept excluded. After an interval of a month the flask is shaken to mingle its contents, and a drop from it is placed in a second flask, containing fresh broth! A crop of mi crobes is produced as before, followed by the same clearing of the liquid and falling of sediment. The interval of a month's waiting is repeated, and a drop from this second flask is employed to produce microbes in a third, and so on until there has been, say, a dozen crops of microbes raised. At the end of the process it will be found that the "cul tured microbes," to employ M. Pasteur's language, are innocent, and, when in troduced into the veins of a healthy chicken, fail to produce cholera, as their uncultured ancestors ; did, yet, at the same, time, they prevent the chicken from catching the cholera. In a word, the cultured microbe can be used to vaccinate, and thus protect the farmer's chickens from one of the worst diseases to which fowl flesh is heir. The ra tionale of the process is that the vigor of the microbes is exhausted by any considerable period of suspended ani mation, a month or less, ana when the process is often repeated the enfeebled microbe loses the virulence of his pro genitors. The microbe which causes splenic fever in sheep, &c, differs from that producing cholera in its mode of growth, but may be "cultured" to.a state of innocency by a process similar to the one just narrated, the strict exclu sion or rresn air Deing. m una case in dispensable. It is the want of oxygen which seems to occasion the enfeeble ment of the microbe during its recur ring periods of suspended life. This method of obtaining the vaccine of splenic fever was no sooner made known than it was extensively employ ed. France loses $5,000,000 worth of sheep annually from splenic fever. To test his method M. Pasteur had fifty sheep given him for experiment by the government. He vaccinated twenty five of them with his culture microbes. A fortnight afterward the whole fifty were inoculated with the ordinary un cultured, splenic microbe. The twenty five vaccinated sheep resisted the infec tion, the other twenty-five died of Bplenic fever within fifty hours. Since that time M. Pasteur has vaccinated 20,000 sheep and large numbers of cattle and horses and with good results. Oath's Interview with Stenographer iriurphy of the United Statee Sen ate. "Which of all the men you have seen in the Senate in more than thirty years, Mr. Murphy, did you regard as the sreatestf - "That IS too nara wj answer, mcio is one thing I can say. As a debater in the Senate I think I have never seen the equal or superior of William Pitt Fessenden. ome one ua vaiteu mfu the rrince Rupert of debate, and there ITEMS Of INTEREST. -: - - ' " " 'Asiatic cholera sweeps away daily from one to three1 hundred natives at Bangkok, Siam. . ; W. S. Chapman, Jesse Grant's father-in-law, is charged with figuring in a questionable mining transaction: in London. ' The assessed valuation of property in Tennessee, exclusive of railroads, is $300,000,000 railroad property about $26,000,000. Ex-Gov. Hammond used to say that Andrew Johnson was a communist on instinct, and hated every man who wore a clean shirt. At Clnton, 111, Mrs. James was killed and her husband fatally injured by the explosion of a can of gasoline stored in the cellar into which they had entered with a lighted lamp. King Kalakaua says of Paris, "The beauty of your palaces 'jars with the plainness of their inhabitants." This, from his good looking dusky majesty is a little rough on Paris! A French journal the other day pub lished a table showing that the average wages in fifty-one distinct trades were only 6Q cents a day or $3.63, a week. Decorative sculptors, a class of highly skilled and intelligent workmen, re ceive only 92 cents a day. In an effort to enforce in St. Louis a law against carrying concealed weap ons fines as large as $100 for a pistol, and $200 for a slung-shot are being im posed. This movement is made be cause out of twenty-five!, homicides in now the St. Louis jail all but three be came criminals through the habit of going armed. Patti and her sister Carlotta are said to be enemies. The story goes that while the latter was lying at the point of death in a hospital of the sisters of St Joseph, Adelina was all the time in the neighborhood, and sent not a word of inquiry about her sister. It is said when asked to attend the administra tion of the sacrament she refused. As a part of the new Yankee inva sion of the South we notice that a Bos ton syndicate has a southwestern sys tem of railways comDrising 12,000 miles of track and $480,000,000 capital. It is a rival line to Jav Gould's. By next WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED SOME IN BEAUTIFUL PATTEBNS, TEBT CHEAlP. ,' OTJB DOMESTIC STOCK ffl LEEC HED 3c O O D IS COMPLETE. PLENTY Of THAT VEST POPULAR BLEACHED DOMESTIC AX 10c We are offering bargains in several lines of goods. Another stock of Trunks and Valises. Come and see us. sepl HARGRAVES & WILHELM. TAILORS ! ! ! imi mmm rn, mm lis sr us ra- in est WILL SUCH INDUCEMENTS BE GIVEN EN CLOTHING ! CLOTHING ! AS ABE NOW OFFERED BY 9 FOR CASH ONLY ! OUR $15.00 AND $16.50 SUITS FOR $126 12.50 " 14.00 " " 10.00 OUR $9.00 AND $10.00 SUITS FOR $7.60 " 8.00 " 9.00 " " - 6.00 summer New Orleans will have direct communication, by rail, with the Pa cific, and, in ten years, will be a rising competitor of New York. Justice Hunt, of the United States Supreme Court, is said to show no sign of improvement. He remains in about the same condition he was in several months ago, and will never be able to resume his seat upon the bench again. Not having been on the bench long enough to entitle him to be retired it is not exDected bv his associates that he will resign until Congress passes a spec ial act to meet his case. The Duilding of the jiew Mexican railroad lines has raised the price of la bor from eighteen to seventy-five cents a day, and enabled the laborers to wear full suits of clothes, with hats, shoes and socks. Agriculture is already feel ing the stimulus of rapidly-opening lines of communication. During the nast vear 4.000.000 of additional coffee trees have been set out in the planta tions, and the - United States furnish a market for all the surplus produc tion. Weather In Past Years. A weather-wise writer in the New York Sun records that, in 1819, the summer, though moderate in Europe, was disastrous in its effects on man and beast in Asia Minor. When the much desired rain fell it was transformed, on touching the ground, into an immense vapor bath, which, say the chroniclers of the period, caused the death of num bers of people by suffocation, whole caravans being stifled in some districts. The anmmer of 1822 was also a remark able one, the harvest being so early that new flour was sold in the French mar kets on the 28th of June. Ten years later, in 1832, the sultriness of the weather furthered the spread of the nholera pDidemic which broke out in France in the beginning of March,' and carried off in Paris alone 18,400 persons. The summer of 1842 was a dry and ex ceedingly hot one, like the present Outrage Near Savannah. The Savannah News of yesterday says : "The station master at No. 9, on the. Savannah,. Florida and Western Railway, who had but recently moved to the neighborhood, left his dwelling Ahmif. a mile from the station yesterday mnrnincr. and started 6'Ut on the road with his men. Shortlv after his depart- enterea xne THE BIGGEST BARGAINS EVSB GIVEN IN V "IT 1 ! m 11 s5 and TnHtM mmm WUU 1-UUlllO VIVllUlUg, CALL EARLY AND SECURE BARGAINS. FALL STOCK OUR. .r FOR THE- ILIHS &ILIE TTIEAIDJE Is Now Ready for Inspection. Oar, Mr, Barach is now North purchasing the Retail Stock, which will be com plete by September 15th. Tiuiira Gonre sooth. Date,Majrl5'80 Lv. Richmond " Bnrkevllle Arr. N. Danville Lv. " a i Danville Arr, Greensboro Lv. .-.,:., " B&Usborv - Arr. A L. Junction " Charlotte f. w Lv. Richmond.; " JetersvUle " Drak's Br'ch , " Barksdale -, " Danville ( " Beoaja " Greensboro " Salisbury . Arr. A-L. Junction Lv. " Arr. Charlotte - ; No. 42 Dallr. ia46 tm 2.25 AM 7.00 7.25 AM 7.27 0.2S 9.81 11.18 12.45 pm NO. 48 Dally. 12.00 2.4S nu 6.05 PM 6.18 FM ai7rM &87 pm .033 pm. 2.15 AM 12.20 No. 50 Daflyi 25 PMl 4.41 PM , 6.07 PM 7.25 PM 7.51 pm PM 0.27 P 11.05 PM 12.26 AM i'isd'AM i '. Mlt mgm&VL: 1 . VI LL UUUUI.I V VM)J i KIDNEY DISE ASES. VfJt, V nlJlVER COf4PLAIMTS DUBEAJSXa, VEMAJLK WK1KKESSES, AXJ BXKVOU8 DISOBVKBS iWi ty cmuina jrH action ttf Oum organs and ratoring their power to throw off ditto. A i " Why amffer-BUtow palms aid ahesf - -Why termeated with Pile. Conrtlpatloat ' Why frlghteaed over disordered Kldaejsl WhT smdare Berrons orsleK tnaMim nispat BP to Dvy TegrtaMe farai w mUtmtrZ ythich Mkea H quart rf amBrh, i:laataltmUTt)tm-rvrt C a a. Lj :'wjt aoia itS .aaaal afflclaaer la attharftia h4 rtiovjcm iErjaaar4 Titi, rwiTBiCHABDoxcePMrv r urn three burlv nezroes oa a fliAftrrifiss and evenness and abili- house and brutally assaulted his young tv in his auick and rapid speeches and wife. Permission was asked to use the UDgS 1U I LIB CUUVlUli COUIl ill luo . that was organized. Later information reached the city to the effect that one of the brutes had been captured and Ronfnssed his share in the crime. Froni the state of feeling in the neighbor hood, it is altogether likely that speedy vengeance. has been meted out. by the enraged community." interchanges that make him to me o$e of the great cnaracters 01 me x,ugiwu language in legislation." "I do not think," said Mr. Murphy, "that I have ' m J ivl I unfurl I ever seen a man or more miwiwiuai force exerted at the moment thanJu dah P. Benjamin, of Iiouisiana. He : was rather a small man, of . swarthy countenance and Jewish features. .The grasp of his mind was almost msuu itiver- I have my doubts-whether the South took away from tne senate inuro of a man than he was, althougli Jeffer son Davis was a man or ability ana a certain high-toned intensity which, as long as he stayed in the Union, made . X1111I all ui auiuuuvivui governed much oy nis personal ieeungs, dwever, and I may say the same of I Senator Yulee, ot-Floridai who was a Hebrew, and a most outer, vmqiccive marl. Clement C. Clay, of Alabama, was a man of equal ability, duioj equal acrimoniousne88. One of the greatest men I remember in the Senate; from the Sooth was Badger, of North Caro lina. He belonged to the style of heavy- j a . . t TT-a Alii wm Am F Our stock is COMPLETE in every department. We invite attention to bur new styles ot Clothing Gents Furnishing Goods, Ladies Cloaksv Shawls, Etc., of which we have made a specialty. - Also, and you will llnd prices to suit the timfes. a large variety of Carpets and Blankets. Call. ELIAS & COHEN. BE Me i -' - 1 MGINEERS; IRON FOUNDERS & MACHINISTS, 57 out AUOC BBAKOB. 9.40 r NO. 4-aIly, (except Sunday. UCOTO niWIIMWWH ..--"7 Art lf Leave Salera. .Vw' ! A'rMi ?cr7 fjf Arrive Greensboro. i t . Jiareh 27-UtwlrcJL . rm fW ..franaat apt ' MO: 42DaUr, exeept 8Haday, FlbreQtoh'f Cologne 14m, Machan-l Itaa hanar.:.2s.1..V;.liV.3.Vf iP W . Arrives Salem. - - - iar Leave Salera. ...r.-... ....' " frSn Arrive Greensboro......... ..89 AM 43 Dally. w Mil V rilIMM Mm NVMHWfl - - r T :m ' M PM Limited malls Hoi. 4& and 60 will only make makes elose eonneettctfiU Q rrtrn-Vo7 41 4f J?? ffi TiTmii4l KeSU nafltOwai fliuiuhnm wltfcSalem .SOUUS IpUK Koumiss. Food and fiealih. , ' . , . , . . ' Into one quart of new milk put One gill of buttermilk- and three or four lumps of white sugar. - Mix well arid see that , the sugar dissolves. ;:Put;ia a warm place to stand ten hours,, when it will be thick; Pour from one vessel to another until 'it becomes smoothL and uniform "t in consistency' :Bottis an;d; keep in - a warms place twenty-four hours, it Inay take thirty-six in winter The bottles fcmst be, tightly Tjorked and the corks tied down, j Shake well for five minutes bef ore,opeDing. -It makes iVery . agreeable 4tinfc which is es pecially recommended for persons who do not assimilate their food," ami for young chUdreri Vit Diay be i ; drunk as freely as milk. Instead of tiutitermilk, some use a teaspoonful-of yeast. - Made TVoraa tniiv it i the' standard beverage of "the'TartarsV whoalmost lite upon it in snmmevand :4a also. 4rTAW hvtha RnsalanSk . .. n . . .. . I . t whifth ahnnldT; be imsklmmedlxie -1et- mm m m ar - ri m u m -w. i w . , . , fSbalaTotadwadlyqd FTto ara waatiBf away wua rT AUictr-tou6 ma rrtT-r.Tl.l builds aad Cheer ins; Ilin l'p. Detroit Free Press. An old man. who claimed to be vears old. and to have been turned of doors by his son, drew a sympathetic crowd around him at Cental Market yesterday. , . . T don't know what is to become of me," he isaid, in answer to a question. Can you walk as far as the city hall ?' "I I guess so." " . "Well go right up there and ask for the board of public works. They'll put you on the street cleaning- force and keep you thereuntil you are 150 years 0li don't believe I could 4o anything." -Well, that's just the reason you'll get thejobV Brace up old man twelve shillings frdaffieafl foryou,." v Partr Spirit Notably; Snbaidiug;. , ' .... .. '?T . 1 ; New York Times, Bep. The party' which ' will do that .which nooHs tn he done is the one most likely to command support, regardless of the contests of the past.'. There is nothing in questions 'of administrattoni-i where mercial policy calculated, to fan ..the flames of party spirit to any dangerous f And among the revelations moAo h t.h ore calamity that has.-J J hunff over the nation for two months.! the. miuiiifaetaiwoitheCH " VC1W .tt. - :ca w-- I ' .him. Of riiriimiia anv manafaatnrar ef agricnlinral-aaalnesnet mfdrtth-'aa sotoWStlr TnJ ' Z Tlotfii of SMO m SUOQO'aemai da-red.. ThMe:BCUieiMrji;4.jii ' " ' ' a-j-;1. -dfJ pyp . -l '"l J 1 ' - i 1, ( t nXijyi him uvfr-r " mmmm sw Jr . ; ' "! I, -i . v ' ; .ii - ..;: it : . . . .'.: j -is.: ti- j.i-.l.jiXK). MANTJTACTCBZBS OT 9 V-3 r lrrs 1W COKTBACT FOB 0ONSTBDCT10M ArTD XltlXiF JD hi vliiH 5 ALSO, MAKU- Ulip ul IUQ uvp - -77, 2i rtf ftwsoirit ef , partyj vitiating the feelings and sympathies ptthe peo ple." : '""" ' ' ; ' IRRITATION OF THS SCAI.F. t . . n lIT T U M. - Srro sho their eoofidenee la rhat they uaaft4o eompauBVOiea a a. A and tXoot wjoeu 'Vi irtu ki . y :aug8 .j, r JjOHNG. YQpKGAg latwOriM X AfJUUUAJil' a 7 - aT. mrs m. TLflKCUB I9sW" -' irr T .hAronhemeehMjealdr I Htrj'H I An inOienUfl Tesohy XifE? ftl ttentlemen:Toflverjea t M&vef eri; greatly 'bledwia4andranV with a severe Itching of the scalp , and my hair ramus oou x mea aunon. every khovn remedy, aU prOTtag worthleM. ,,Se- g'ltohefl 'f&fi&b 3ttmett Kalllstoh adr MrttBOd. I procorea sysmup ut-wwm, bu mauar , J. X. Catih. Kansas City. Mi. moved, aqdiiOjl THE ATTENTION, Ot the Trade gemrallyi andtdse the eonsomer, li eailad te ewsial bra aaleabla end staple amoKiPE Teoascos nunng . Cats and ; Btval nrham to; wMeh , wa a now addiac fuU Un-tthe Welles, 0itti" ri.ni. miM At mm. ud Twist Tobaccos, wa ewtna law weeks,ffar Idoce meate InCsMnc mZZmmmk that a nttuu1 mannfactarars emo eaaaL Our ealesmea will make rwnar trips and the trade i tu TJf" BRICE ! BBieK ! f 1 l Tmt imdened resr X that they hava engaged to the brk V8"16? and are now making a superior QaUtychaBd made brick, ' They have In .connection, with tneli yard. a tapvovad Compras Maabtna, by whlct they make; Dressed Brick aaalr to; tba KtchmorK briekvvAar-oiM.desMiig ioboQd twlU,ftnd,tt tc BawatvwimntHBRM How iwnn eonDftnid witk our fHofiart MiWnUIWTtWItJIl WII -HsT. -- mm ". 1 on ?!t'S avv, womir wmww f ,Tjr ,j.a . - - . -wnwMi li-aft ill a TradeTt; 1 dooraoove CoUege. keva. fcwUUeadwiuaemenfcrf W rxtxi tm---: Gen, TlrtAnt 1 . r . . . -A i ttylSr .r. i 4-. A.
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1881, edition 1
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