Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / April 8, 1882, edition 1 / Page 2
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CIIA8.R. JONES, Editor and Prop'tor. f SATURDAY; APRILS, 1888? The charters Of fotirhtitidred natlon 'nVuvwiU'Wriirfl bv the first of Ml uniinn ; ," ".. " - March next. .7 -.f ,i authorities of Atlanta puiiea The city down and burned the building in which the case of small-pox appeared. Longfellow had no hankering for of ficial station. lie was four times offer a forfliffn mission and four times de-. clined. Uo to this time this year immigra tion from Europe has been forty per cent.heavi r ihu for the same period last year. The treneral quadrennial conference of the M.E. Church, South, will be held in Nashville, beginning May 8d. This dATmmination now numbers 800,000 communicants. Thursday was the twentieth anm versary of the battle of Shiloh, and was nhaprvpd as decoration day m .Louisi ana. Tflxas. Mississippi, Tennessee and Alabama. The pateut office at Washington takes in a suiplus of $250,000 a year over and above all expenses. The business i3 in creasing so rapidly that the commis- sirtnr asks for twentv-five more as sistants. A young man named Walter Roun- tree, a student in the University, at Athens. G a., was shot on the 4th inst, in a street, encounter with some ne- crrnfts. and died the next day. The 0 , shooters are under arrest. . If President Arthur took as much .interest in the protection of American citizens abroad as he does in the Chinese perhaps the humiliating spectacle would not be presented of American citizens being incarcerated n foreign jails without charge and without tral. Aug usta Chronicle : The 20 per cent dividend declared by the Langley mill is creating a sensation' at the North, where, according to Senator Frye, it is night and day labor to make cotton manufacturing pay more than 6 per cent. Beecher don't believe in sack cloth and ashes, fasting and all that kmtf of thing. Nobody ever accused Beecher of practicing such self-denial. He will have a good time while he is fighting the devil in a free and easy sort of way. As an evidence of the contempt in which Jesse James held the officials of the State of Missouri, he took up his residencein St Joseph, the third city in population in the State, when there was a reward of $50,000 offered for his capture, dead or alive. It was no doubt desirable to get rid of Jesse James, the noted desperado of "Missouri, but when the Governor of that State entered into an understand ing with a cut-throat to assassinate him he did something which does not reflect any credit upon himself nor up on his State. The New York Herald speaks of the bribery of the New Jersey legislators as "New,., Jersey's shame." This, the Boston Globe says, is because the high est price paid was 500, and the highest offered $1,000, while the lowest price paid for a New York Legislator las td year was 62,000. The gahg of robbers which has for some time been infesting Gaston coun ty has been broken up by the arrest of seven of the number through the shrewd management of Chief of Police J. B. King, of Spartanburg, S. C, who came to Gastonia about two weeks ago and played detective. It is not pleasant to be burned, but when one has to be burned perhaps do ing so in effigy is about as satisfactory an arragement as can be made for the individual. This is probably the view President Arthur took of it when he read of their burning him in effigy over on the Pacific slope, for vetoing the Chinese bill. It is in accordance with custom, but not with justice, that United States Senators and Representatives should draw their pay right along when absent from their posts, as if they were regu larly on duty. Some of them only see Washington occasionally, but draw their salaries as if there all the ,time. ! The country does not probably suffer much by their absence, but it is not right for them to demand and draw pay for services while they are otherwise engaged. About the the time the investigation into the Chilian-Peruvian matter began a subpoena was issued for Franois D. Suarez, who was then supposed to be in Washington. .The sergeant-at-arms of the House failed to find him. however, andjan; investigation as to liis where aboats has resulted in establishing the fact that the gentleman left for France immediately after he heard of the pro- prosed congressional investigation. Mr. Suarez was agent for the'Creditlndus trial company, a rival of the Peruvian companyr . . ' ' ''- . .'rPhUadelphta Record : "The Demo- ";,cjrat&itt; Congress who vote against the extension of the charters of the national banks -will be called to rigorous ac- count. Until a substitute for the na tional banking system can be devised which shall give equal security to the noteholder and flexibility to the volume ' most stand b"SJ!iJi ' whrf. Th Ifrrty Tnar ttridef tikes to deprive the country of its advantages will have to encounter the-BOlid dpposi- twnoivjeryneii Wj$ an honesatakV fotbja pU4wy Moving springs oTacuon' J . ...HtaAtAn eertain laws, xn Tron. health Mf Dr. Benson's Celer 1 i 1 , 1 1 . asked the friendly intervention of this uu f t. wmuiereiai job pie so a aog and a cow, and when Ford, who shot Jesse JameByth fa- "ment in behalf whereupon praying for CtongressionacUon they saw that the dog diedalmost im- rirrnnd W'W a bertiiess boy. government in nis Deuui, wnereupon 0n the Mississippi levee bill. Referred, mediately and the cow became iexv mous briganwjpiej uoy. president Afthar asked ar fortnight's : Blackburn, -Kentucky,- offered obSs:SSZ NATIVE BORN-AND CITIZENS. Dr. Lamson, a native born American, but a resident of England, was accused brother-in-laws; ITsirM4ered sen. was inea una friends thought hini innoctuf, innocent andi r i . : I C.t 4 1... oh in hi' acquittal, forK'waSWnlcmTg uPn circumstantiafc evidence one, jiatr in fcbe adjudication , Clft an(i tuat nt 0f a Very reliable charac-1 tnb' quartermaster-Seneral'Sr eomtnis- ter. The friendly offices of this govern ment, under the circumstances, "Were right enough, for it may iQ the means of saving the life of an innocent man, if he be innocent. 13ut for over twelve months certain citizens of the United States have been incarcerated in British prisons, wAhotit charge, arrested simply on suspicion.' They have' repeatedly demanded know the charges against them and be confronted with the witnesses againBt them, if they were guilty of offenseV And all this time the American gov ernment moved not a foot, stirred not a hand, spoke not a word in defense of these imprisoned citizens, and not until the indignation of the people on thjs Siae 0f the Atlantic took the shape .of public meetings to protest against tbe outrage and demand action on the part of the authorities at Washington did they move, even in the way ot a tame respectful request to the British gov ernment to treat the imprisoned Ameri cans gently, and with as much clemen cy as was consistent with the British idea of law and justice.-. We are told that the English authorities, in consideration of the mild manner in which the request was made, consented to turn loose all but three of the incar cerated citizens turned them loose, but never tried them. All that lOigbt have been accomplished months ago, had the government manifested any interest in the snbiect orJ shown any disposition to woteei ber outraged citi zens. But thiee -Sttll remain within prison, walls', against whom tbere is no charge and to whom rio-trial is offered. How long -they are to remain there depends al together ''upon thtf pleasure of the power that has seized them. Ip. the estimation of the administra tion which iow rfm the government at Washington, there ia evidently a dif ference between-- native ; born and adopted citizens. ..ZZZL . -. -v THEJHIJI,T. - j ' The Retiblibani1i& are try ing to patch up some' sort of a Chinese bill as a eompronns6 with the Presiden tial veto, for:, piei.Jrecp the fact that the Republican party "trill be in a terrible Kin tne rwmcwaail that .'t'gethroBgb. in v somtTshape. bill don1 Hence the .'niimefous -'bilis. presented with the hope of getting something that will meet the case and also meet the Presidential sanction. The Democrats who, with few exceptions, .have been friends of the measure from the start, don't . seem to faTpx tbe' efforts at a compromise wfiicliare inspired hot by a desire to help the people of the Pacific section, but to get the Republican party out of the dilemma in which Mr. Ar thur's veto has placed it, and they don't propose to lend themselves to any com promising scheme to that end. They are right. If it be just and proper to exclude the Chinese for sixteen years, as some propose, or ten years, it is right to exclude them for twenty ; the princi ple is the same, and there is no argu ment on principle which can be alleged against twenty years limitation that will not apply with equal force to a less period. It turns upon the construction of the phraes a "reasonable time," and the majority of those who are opposed to the bill would hold and do hold that ten years is unreasonable, in fact that any legislation at all of the kind pro posed is unreasonable and wrong in es sence. The opinions held upod that question take their hue mainly from the self-in terest of people, the eastern man gen erally speaking, who comes but little in contact with the Chinaman, and conse quently suffers but little from his pres ence, believing, or professing to believe, any exclusion wrong in principle, while the people of the sunset side of the Re public who are thrown into hourly cbfa tact with the Chinese believe their .pro miscuous admission into the country as one of the greatest of BTils. If , the pop ular voice ijito Miff imTtblng jtodo with' the 'siapmglfitfthe result jbhen'the voice of those who Urectly "tdier- ested sho.uld hare rdae'Velght.If it don't there will be racket f or tlnrMoh golianou'the Pacific side. These peo ple are fearfully in earnest in that mat ter and if they cannot "find "the legisla tive relief they ask they will seek iin anotner ana a less desirable way. A singular marriage took fclace in the Greenville, S. C. jail Weoliesdaf even ing last. A negro under sentence to be hanged for incendiarism begged permis sion to marry the woman ? he loved, which woman was then serving a two years term in prison for larceny. Thp jail authorities for some time rref ued to grant the request bu , finally yielded and had the dusky damsel brought to the jail where the ceremony was peri formed, apparently to the infinite de light of both They seemed oblivious ot the fact that death was4n a little while to claim the new-made husband, end the penitentiary the' bride of ajr i hottf. They were as happy as June bags tbi thebrief,perlo4they were p ralttel..t, remain; together, !'' Western people, irrespective of poli tics, are taking much interest in the improvement of the Mississippi River, and say if this Congress refuses to grant tion which they are entitled to The last! flood 1 has done much to bring the Id Father of Waters prominently to1 tWe JErpnC aubjee fHgclYernment' atteniion. , . , . , - 1 l!T- When a lecturer has-wcrke tae ladies -fikisl audience so near the vrtseping point tnat Ojerhavel gotten out their handle erchlers, and then suddeol ly changes his tone and speaks of the merits oC Diiulfs cough sjrnp, h3 !s bound to roase a feel' uieaia assea tor, uey.wm see Iqitthat Congressmen shall be elected boi give-their elaiins soiUe of thi tdnMef ai It Devotes V the' Day i to" Discusiine Resolution, tIatettiiUe Certain Reports AbottV tie Qxr-naster't Department, ifdtd tie rks4Pion ot us, of ioniBlana, presented a memorial of the Mayor and several, commercial vaorkliit.mn , r .rtirfr.in - that atnmnmtf- tee oaf ' expenditures ih- Cher l any, anuses exist, or nave i ex- SMY.general's. and third auditor's offices, itoawportthr findings, together sucn recommenuaamiB as lc may aeemtr roper far the "eettlement of such 1 claims. Robeson, of New Jersey, offered (as a substitute a similar resolution; rt with a preamoie recituig that it aai.Deen i member that he had evidence in Ms possession which j showed that eertain clerks of -the government had acted f randulentlv and corraDtlv. : ': '' . Blackburn declined to accept R6tje son's substitute. -j . ?) . ; . Reed, of Maine, read a letter fr6m the third auditor, stating that McFar land (to whom Bjackburn had referred) had ceased his connection with the quartermaster-general's -department 1ri June, lift 4. , r., , . After further debate, Robeson modi fled his preamble so aa to read : ' "Whereas,-it has been publicly de clared by a member of this House, from his place on this floor, that there are reasonable grounds to believe, etc-that-" : This was accepted by Blackburn as an amendment to his resolution, wnicn was thereupon adopted. The private business having been dis-J pensed witn, tne iiouse, at 2 x6, went into committee of . the whole on. the tariff commission bill, Haskell, of Kan sas, being the principal speaker. The committee, at 4:30, rose, and the House took a recess until 7 :30 p. m., the evening session being for the consider ation of pension bills. An Unfounded Report About the American "Suspects." London, April 7. A despatch to the Times from Dublin says: "The report that the Irish-American "suspects" have been liberated on condition that they will quit the country except two or three who refused to. accept the con dition is unfounded. About six of the "suspects" who are naturalized citizens of the United States, have been releas ed within the last three weeks but only on the same grounds as were others who were liberated. Their citizenship is entirely unconnected with their re lease, the executive holding that all Ssrsons resident in Ireland are liable to ritish law and are to be treated as British subjects. Among those of this class who were released was Boy ton, who was liberated on account or ill health. There are only four more "sus pects of the same class now imprison ed. The Case of Ex-Governor Moses in Court. New Yokk, April 7. The case of Franklin J.Moses, Ex-Governor of 1 South Carolina, indicted ibr obtaining money by false pretenses, was on Re corder Smyth's calendar in the General Session's Court yesterday. When the counsel for the accused asked for an ad justment of the case, Assistant District Attorney Fellows said that he would willingly consent. "I don't think, your honor," said CoL Fellows, "that I could try this case im partially, as I myself am one of the vic tims of misplaced confidence in Moses. Under the circumstances I think the case should be transferred to another part of the court," The papers were then sent before Judge Cowing and the case was set for trial on the 14th inst. . A County Treasurer Speculates and EEADtNd, Pa., Shrill The accounts of AflahrM; Dundor, e-coxtTrtytreasnr-er of thi? county, are short about $30, oooi vf which amount .CjPQjs jane" the State for tavern and mercantile. licens es, and $300 is due the county or tax es. When Dundor retired from office, his defalcation amounted to $50,000, but $20,000 wa3 returned to cover a por tion of the default in the county ac counts. The bondsmen of Dundor have been notified and will pay the lossv The cause assigned for defalcation is gener al speculation. 4 i i 1 i A Jlavisher Hung. Charleston, W. Va April 1vA mob of sixty men captured the steamer ! Satlie. Freeze at Kaymond tCity" last ni&hl, went to Winfteld, and tookla ne gro named Jos. Smith out of jail and hanged him to a tree early this morning. , He had committed an outrage -two weeks ago on the wife of a section I hand on the Chesapeake & Ohio Rail- read. 'The shock was so jrreat that the woman was reported dying last night. smitiwkowieagMrms gout - ! : miMiTfni m ii.nif ni j The Toacce Tri4e Petersburg. nual report wtTOtoba inspectors of this city shows the sides oMorea tobac co from difierftnt w'arehotislf rom Oc tober lit, 1831? to rApriMit-18Si, tohave been' 3451pounds, anexoess ef 1,037,706" pounds Over sales of taatyear, This tobaccasold at an aVeraire trioe bf f$M0';pet hundred weight there were inspecwa inline Qinereni ware biu8es during -the pas'' fnbnths 2bigsheada,:and tl4clMgsba$s less were DpenedldniiajBeoxVesw&ing .erabie-excitenient .-.was-ereate here ' ,thi vm&M pfmximtti Ihiiiork- toen in W(faJctotes?wJMc3aMfc pioy unian.inBa sau wcwvecujinpn y tnous TOmjuunlWtiOTilinraTitough en graving oAi knnaMitroAabon )! .-(. Strikers, Male and Fcnaie . authorities Tefaw farther oonference oraered ImBaediate ,. paymeaty and dia miSBal of the strikers i-w? . v The female shod otieralfrfSt kr Bttll out, but a new bill of prices waa 8tttr mittedi last night. 'which is likely tO prove satisfactory;7, ' .wvi-"--'1,;. 51 T WJJSSESrflTOSi: An t tee ot theHottse;,eiec e wtheltoaljiramentwiU b heard w weakiesa.earlvdM) I wwwww, 1 wiu send a reotse send reotM.tbiLt.iik 9WMerM.4BBSt0MrfW rt sd erf' non-union men. 4 ! '",Uio n 1 Ir.,,.v, ..u.,x'-tti.u 1 ecu w report layorauiy u Bsn lrthff 'sitting isembe .lotir thi AlexanOria distriet bf VifMnla? sf St Geneord Son. icnao of poisninir occurred rLOfJ4r.Henri.Biettr8.jkt cofatyibn Wsftn inner indkhrtrii Ht MHn TerysKK. TChey had given a piece of the pie to a dog and a cow, and when bnmokin pnvBfcianattehfi6d eh fat navndrinT wi flm brought em around all riehL tbduish Mr.Bie- dying. It iaavery mysterious case bnd Astfsnf? tne iimil trnspm the doctors arepnzzled to account Tfor Mttij-t&SpmentSe tf jfsWitffrJenkin wmcnv'uyine sway"wa B6B$ to Mr. ieeembr ai danchter. i H vi iiiiMeck- hburgcounjtyfciafluiroosed, though that this is the wmtw aftaRfln. of trer year to eat. pumpkins.. and the,, people .snouwotjoeaj lhdnlgmgin'thatlnxry. Balelgn Newi aadDbaenre&i v ) :. i- i Conversing itte prominent builder yesterday, he Informed as that contrary to his expectations a few months' since tne ouiiaiag ooom wilt' be about equal to that of last vear.-ThismeaaT& a larffft number of new bottses; werk f or many, men, and last; but net least Much more adorn ment of ourityv already so graced byhahdsomebuildiii?sr public and pri vate -ror the bast twayeWslas tnany; nno more nouses naveteen tam tnan in any similar period since the" war. The improvement in the stvle of houses built is of course an item. ; -With greater beauty comes'greatoeVeo taphouses built now make oh an average a far greater addition to the city'B appear ance than did those erected 'ten or twelve years 6gov"AtHhe same time, the suouTbs have been' so bout up with cottages as to enlarge the city in all di rections, and without1 doubt 1 people pf small means, white and' colored alike. art as comfortably hoased here as anyr1 T. UV. V. A Catholic ChnrcH Borned Cincinnxtj, April 1y-rAt. 12:45. tliis morning an alarm was sounded for Are which was discovered in the roof above the altar of St. Xavier's Bpman Catho lic church, on Sycamore street . Every-i thing of a combustible nature about the DuiiQiijg was purnea ana only, the waii3: an.a tower jemam tjuiuumgois .morn,-, ing, and, the j are badly .shattered, $h& church belonged to the fcocietj of Jeeti,- its. . roe, puuaing ana contents cost nearly $150,000. Insurance about sto, 006. How the fire started is a matter of c jnjecture. ' "".V Demand for, Cotton Planters. New Orleans, April 7. The mills here have ceased crushing cotton seed on account of the demand for seed for planting. i Anybody can catch a oold now. The trouble is to let go, like the man who caught the bear. We advise our readers to-keep a bottle of Dr. Ball's cough syrup handy. A Practiner' Tent, Marlon, 3. C, March 15th, 188a H. H. Warner A! Co: Sirs I have been trying some of your Bate Kidney and Liver Cora in my practice, and find it to act like a charm. N. 0. MUHPHY, M. D. "BCCQITAIBA." Quick, complete cure, all annojlng Kidney, Blad der and Unrlnary Diseases. 81. Druggists. De- pot, J. H. McAden, Charlotte, W. C. . UABKETSBY TELE GIB, APH APBIL 7. 1883 PRODDCK. Chicago There being no session of the Board of Trade to day there were only curbstone markets ana there was. very utue trading,, wneat was a trifle lower. Com was somewhat hleher. the ad vance amoontlng to nearly but the aadlng was omy May options ana oetween . Tavs ana 73. jtTot uuons were not ieaii in.. Ciiwihsati Flour, steady and uuchBszed; fam- lly$60a8.10: fancy S0e7.ta Wheat dull; No. 2 red -winter I.82ffi81.33. Corb neavr aoa lower: no. a mixed. 801 rot cash. ' Oats-strong; No. 2 mixed, 52ffi53. Pork-dull and nominal, at 818.00. Lard-dall and Bomlnal at SI 1.1 8. Bulk;, maahjsjronn; shoulden 7; ribs 10. ,Bcon firm; shoulders' 8; ribs 1M dear 1114. Whiskey steady, at Jt.l 7; combina tion sales of finished soods 64000 barrels, on a basis of $1.17. Sugwr easier; hards 8a 1014; new urieans HMtD&n. nogs- quiet: common and light 55.2RaS6.-25; nacktntt and butchers So.400iS7a Becefpts 565; shipments lti. (. - i. CITY COTTON MARXXT. i Oirates or Ths Obssetkk, i OHABtxnrs. Atm . 1882. 1 . The JOarxst yesterday doted dull at the fol lowing quotations: kodMlddllDK..,-. 111 Strtctlr mlddung....... , llUa lllidUr5!tTTr?....'.... ' 111 8uletlowmlddllkg.:i....a.;.. - 11 Low tnlddUngv.... ........ .4.. A. 184 Tlnees QViQlbVa Stonn cotton... .................. 5a8 Bales yesterday 125 bales., t ; 1 . ' j STRAYED, ' 1 1 -rt AMI to m pnemlsts h 0 6th itftl. Whl'a Vtari A.iver MJtoea asuer wuen tae owner can n. TUKRJ5YS, 7HO- til !l: 11 AND SWEET: .EQTAXOES. D1I .it. sx r-tj i. 1 my l-nj; liS !: f j'-illwnj'if .J 'Af. :t;j ; iwinaluf a Af a wall aalAAfad ninnwni ai ri fn li V.Uj;". i' (i'.n 1 f 1 J-i it'UU , OlaUgcades, .family. Phetograph and wwting JPper nd xnseiopee rper wwgai Blokamea,p-Bs,,Tablr, lvet.end dcnlelJ aad Pass Books, Blotting Paper, BriBteF 3MtL rnrrt nnirrt Copy Baohe7nmri"fr Babr SnrRMirlaWnhhai. Par.hnlrVlArgMtOCkjSf gold Peifl aTwais WlWwftpfldiv:4o4, f e .&A r 1 ' : ifif -J'lfi 1 si lorn Rh(iinr vo DlBaoem-Pletdreer'ii fwhlotttof soUUx- XJ.Oi a Jon Jaoo n in .Qurft.ti j rtf"SiVFa&S iJ MtwoJ 5-iIonfi fcfxwtHna 9a5 t'tti f Battetld Pattenw t Wrapptag.1 ra-JHiavPapet I , ftrmrtr'w U UllU . KJUlAl FOKHE lich is now full and complete. We keep the best Ourrteck -Embraces a roll line of Goods of all grades, and ot various styles and prices, being well adapted JfeirtriuraUiaigiyb us a call and satisfy themselves of the truth ot-ovt assertions. V(jJ : 4J .iU. .. : Ji H AVE : : .supply ; BX.ACit nwd CEE?f TEAS, i. , ,.,.iwr ui retail rau. R. fl,: JORDAN & CO TRYON 8TBEET. " VIOLA COLOGNE, Q? and Halt Pinto, refreshing aia last ,:-:,.' i . ' I .. Inc. For salH hv R . H. JORDAN & CO., DBUGGIBTS. - : . .IMPORTED BUJ..; Ui Quarts, Plat) aod Half Pints. ' Collates Ylolat and Florida Water. BAY .H. JORDAN & CO. DR. SCOTT'S , ; ELEiCTJiiC HAIR and JLESH BRUSHES. R. H: JORDAN & CO., DBUGGIST3. " RUSSIAN , , i HTSURELOWEa BKED, for sale R. H JORDAN & CO. V 5,000 CIGARS ! . For the Retail Trade, Jost Received, by R. !! JORDAN & CO. A FINE STOCK YAtT and WarTE WA8H BRUSHES. A n eolors " PAlNT8 ra small cans. R. IT JORDAN & CO., api T&IOX aTftEEt. Execntor's Sale. AS Executor of John McConnel. deceased, I wlU sell st the court house la Charlotte, on the STH DAY OF MAT NEXT, the following real estate; All the interest which deceased iiad In certain lands In Iredell county, descended to him irom ms latner ana Demg an undivided interest. A let In the city of Charlotte, on East Tryon street. known aa the shop lot, being a part of the let up on which deceased resitted lu his lifetime, de scribed as snop lot. forty-Dve feet front and one hundred and ninety feet back. This lot Is subject to lire e.-iaie 01 tne wiaow. TERMS Twenty-five dollars cash, balance on six months credit. W. M. SH1FP, Executor. P. S.- In my absence 3reral R. D. Johnston will Act for me and give any lu tor ran tion desired. , arpg dltw4t Particular Notice. All the drawings Hill hereafter be under the ex clusive supervision and control of GENERALS Q. T. BEAUREGARD and JUBAL A. XARLT. A SPLEHDIP OPPOE i u -. " TO WIN A FOKTUNB FOURTH GRAND DISTRI BUTION, CLASaD, AT NEW ORLEANS, TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1882. ' UZri MONTHLY DBAWISO. Louisiana State Ufcry Ceropany, IncorporSted In 1888 for 25 years by the Legis lature for EducationaL' and Charitable purposes-! with a capital of 81,000.000 to which a reserve fund of $550,000 has since been added. By an overwhelming popular vote Its franchise was made a part of the present State Constitution Hdopted December 2dyA. D. 187W. , Its GRAND SINGLE NUMBER. Drawings will take plaee monthly. : It never eoales or postpones. Look at tfc follows tog distribution; t CAPITAL PRIZE, $80,000 s 100,000 TTctets at.1 Two Dollaw Each. Half Tickets, One Dollar. LIST OF PRIZES : 1 Capital Prise... ............ 1 Cavital Prize 1 Capital Prfte. .. .. ..... 2 PriiM of $2,500. ... , 4 -S30. f 't-!i 10,000 . 5 .. &J0O0 . . 10,000 20 Prizes or , fiOO... f - 100 Prizes of lOa.. 10.000 .-. aoo wares ttf -.' -60. :. APPROBATION PRIZES, 9 Approximation Prises -of $800-....... a Apjroxtmaflon Prima of 3800. . i . . .9V ApproxUnaUpn Prizes of 100 r 10,000 taooo 19.000. J2.700 1 100 :: eoo f 1851 Pr ns, amoantiqg to..,,; Sj irMOC espOnsIbfe corresponding sgehis wanW at all ; points, to whom liberal o'Dpensation'will be paid, for further lnformarloBj write dearly, giving full address. Send, orders py, express or Registered Letter,, or MoneiOruerbr id all, addressed only to io:J o7 . - . ft: M; A1 DATJPHIfV ' L : 'H Orieaas,La. 1 J27lAllfiea,Clik5agp,El&f 1MH.'Ji. DAUPHIN, ' 1 ; 1 '' j: 1 ':" ' ' 607 Seventh street, Wasbmgteci, Di C.. , The New York fBce Is Bemod to Chicago. K B, Orders Addressed to Mew Orients win re ceive prompt attfloUon. , .. . Ltfentloa of the Pi . -. 1.. : 1 : i ?ublfc s called I for eaob Monthly -Dr&wliut m ioM,,atd' cense- t tne- Tickets aU teprtjfes 1. emh dfavlog art Id and rawh and nalc ill: u II I nil. '.it J IVJ 43rd ' in Hit 111 . WtheC'of td8vfeiloix i. , ilTO RtjXi'jAW SStb, 1882. . These drawings occur monthly (Sundays except e4) under provisions of aa Act 0! the Qeueral As sembly Of Kentucky. . 1 . ' eredthfoBowlrdelslon.- ' - IstHTbtit theCominonwealth Dlsefbnt!e&.CoBi- - 'The- Company has now on hand a large reserve tk. ILtinl rnrfn. M.'.kM - , ' fund. Read the llstat ipriaBSfor the1- - Mil Ho APilL DRAWraJi rXiiva.i.?;;L,::i:-itSd,ifjdo 1' P,r..; .iw. iK'.c iJi&.l.-Mii' 10,000 IK. WiPPP Mchif J IOiOOO 60eali.....i.v.,iK .,JD4)O0 tHOOaecHJ 'ill J- . ee 1 woote xieaeu. sz; tuui xicxets, 91; dl renin h " - - 1 1 66 Tickets. 9 100, JZF" JFU DON'T! ftXi'DqSn laSSISTKRXD mad onward, bv EiDtssa. can henf at rw. 1 1 KM ft!iff1 II 1 II It! I Ml II i3 rr? 111 KniM lllWWtei 10,000 w B. K. BOARDMAN, (SotrriowriAl yBoB4' ' , TO OUR STOCK OF SPRING AND SUMMER Goods made, will sell them at the lowest possible WE HAVE STOPPED SELLING AT r-V I JT. m -v m. I m m UUM AO I UlNIOnmULY LOW PRIriFft - - That the Public cannot Percelye the SPRING JUST RECEIVED. apr2 tafcesville, INT C, -LARGEST STOCK-: GENERAL MERCHANDISE ON rilC MOST FAVORABLE IEBMS AND IN COMPETITION WITH AN V JOBBERS IN THE COUNTBY. THEY WILL BE GLAD TO QUOTE PRICES TO THE TRADE. mat!8 1? - . SPRING STOCK IS NOW COMPLETE. Wholes Je 1 Retail Buyers Ioyited to Examine it Before Making their Purchases. HANDSOME Mm. Carpets, Jil loth$ Ipgs. HOUSE J17EHISHIHG GOODS A SPECIALTT, He Largest and Cheapest Stock of Embroideries in the City. EIIA.S fe COHEN. , m&Tt In WwStore e" j- i you will find a chelce and complete stock ot PURE ! FRESH DRUGS, 'CoSden's, Leibfg's Eiqaid Extract .'i s BEEF r aad TONIC 1NVIGOUAIOR. GIQATtS ! TOBACCO, -HfiynrfEt 8LECTK)N ln the CITY, Uddtag tW'fanUiA PARXPA brand of Cigars CketnittM Toilet Articles, an assortment, hnfl eyerytbin't generally kept in a first class Drug Store. Special attention, given to Physicians 'PrescrlptlenA. day and night. gat:s faction guaranteed. am Mt a fiiT.T. Comer Trade de. ..and.. College Street Pin. k mwiawu nun um wkmiu niuit9b VIII MIVO more than enough to doubly pay fur Itself every season. Geleer and Empire .Thrashers and Horse Powers, Thpopf pnjorue &ariow, Acme Har rows, CM. jWll compare. -prices ;ialbitMaj a3.'! 2! fjVfc' .-. j-fr-alH r TRADE, to the wanta rot both tliaeltr iui oii . I8 Wl Bom 100 CK ot trade COST. BUT OFFKB GOODS AT - . . . - . . Difference. A beautiful stock ot GOODS, BURGESS NICHOLS, ALL KIXBe ff BEDDING, &C. Cheap Bedsteads, jjiBLouiran, Parlor & Chamber Colts. commwAU.KSKaaMAn. KO. B WM7 TUN RIIR, caAXLovn, x. c BROTHER : f STOCK OF "gov LUnt. FOE RENT, NICE foot room Oottaga. eonvenientlf arraagen, Apply to C. W. EDDIN8. aprd O At Postofflce. FOR KENT. BY the year, the store room near the court ho . se ; or would let the same by the day, wtek, or month, for auction or similar purposes. Also, by the rear, a four room Cottage nr5; . .', ,n ' B, BARKINGKR. TWO front rooms on second floor over Traders' National Banks. Atee flatf rOWeettae on Ninth street, handsome grove, with kitchen and good garden. Apptytt, ? t 1 apr2 lw A. B. DAVIDSON. Et,Hn -JUST RECEIVED tes; li.'K.t -as! zl,u.?, .'Jj4 J.Ii l.!atlJOirt.J a;t a 1 . Miaasr no 2Ua ti l- . FURNITURE, m anaefflt'aeloW " : Ing oi inajgnauon. aprl : ins-1 'u WW
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 8, 1882, edition 1
2
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