VOL. XXVIII. CHARLOTTE, N. C, TUESDAY AUGUST 29, 1882. NO. 4,181 DEALERS IN ifoots, Shoes, Hats, Trunks, TRAVELING BAGS, UMBRELLAS, C. PEGRAM & CO., HAYS A PEETTT LINK OF GENTS AND LADIES' SLIPPERS. 1PPERS. co7, PEGRAM & HATS THE BEST STOCK OF Gents' Hand-Sewed Shoes, IN THE STATE. PEGRAM & CO., BATE ALL KINDS OF Children's Shoes and Slippers. PEGRAM & CO., Keep a well selected stock of TRUNKS and YALICES rpF ALLPEICES 1 KINDS. :P E G R A Mi & C O., Have just received a fine ?tock f "Wool, Felt and Straw Hals Of THE LATEST 8TYLFS IPEliKA M & C O., CAN jBUIDT THEIR Farmer Friends ' Wfth any kinds BOWS and SHOES TH Y WISH. KKEl'S AI L KINDS OP Shoe Dressing, French Blacking. PEGRAM & CO., Can supply you with the BEST BRANDS and LATEST 8TYLE8 OK Ladies, Misses and Children's Shoes. TO CANOPIES -AND AT is m Natttftag9 II 1 O TT mm SLHarr S8 500fls, Ictltitifl, Sit. IFirst Arrival -OF- 'jyT'E have just received a beautKul line of FOULARDS and SATEENS. Also a case of CALICOES In new designs. Something new and nice In RUCHLNU3, &c, Ac. T. L. SEIGLE Is dow In the Easttm- Cities, purchasing our T1 A T.T. STOCK, which will commence arriving In a few days. When our stock Is received we will show you the HANDSOMEST LINE OF GOODS EVER DIS PLAYED In the SOUTH. Respectfully,. T. L. Seigle & To. augl9 XVUtUcaL Summer Complaints ' At this season, various diseases of the be-wels are prevalent and tyany lives are lost through Jack of knowledge of a stefe and sure raraey. PeiSry Davis' Vmbx Killer is a rerire for Diarrhoea, IJjjb entery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Summer Complaint, etL, wjd is perfectly safe. Read the following: Batkbbidge, N. Y., ifarth 23. 188L PERBT Davis' Paih EiLLEB never fails to afford Mtant relief for cramp and pain In the stomach. Joseph Burdittj. Nichoivilije, N. Y., Feb. 3, 1881. The very best medicine I know of for dysentery, cholera morbus, and cramps in the stomach. Have Bfled it for years, and It la ur cure every time. Julius W. Dm. Motwqona, Io-wa, March 12, 1881. I have used your Pain Killer in severe cases of cramp, colic.and cholera morbus ,and it gave almost Instant relief. L. E. Caldwell. . CARjresvrLtE, GA.,Feb. 28, 1881. i or twenty years I have used your Pain Killib In my family. Have used it many times for bowel complaints, and it always cures. Would not feel safe without a bottle in the house. J. B. I vie. Saco, Me., Jan. 23, 188L Have used Pebbt Davis' Pain Killer for twelve years. It Is safe, ture, and reliable. No mother should allow it to be out of the family. H. I. Natts. Oneida, N. Y., Feb. 19, 1881. We be (fan uaintr It over thirty years ao, and it always gives immediate relief, would hardly dare to go to bed without m Cottle ixrtne honse; W. O. &PERRY COWWATBOKO, 8. C.Feb. 22, 1881. Nearly every family in this section keeps a bottle In the house. Da. E. Mobton. TJ. S. Cowstlatb, Ceefkld, Rhenish Pbosbia. Feb. 8. 1881. I have known Pehky Davis' Pain Kii.i.f.r almost from the day it was introduced, and after years of observation and use I Tegard its presence in my household aa aa indispensable necessity. 1. 8. Potter, U. 8. Consul. Bubton-on-Tbent. Eno. I had been several days suffering severely from diarrhoea, accompanied with intense pain, when I tried your Pain Killer, and found almost instant relief. H. J. Noone. 21 Montague St.-, London, Eng. 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. . Ii. Clabldge. No family can safely be without this invaluable remedy. Its price brings it within the reach of all. For sale by all druggists at 25c, 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. PEKKY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, Providence, R. I. sent d w sept A oct. ROCKBRIDGE, VA., ALUM WATER, Lj'OH more than half a century has grown steadl Jj ly in repute as a medicinal agent In a wide range of Chronic diseases. Multitudes of women can testify to Its uniurpassed efficacy In the re.lef and cure of those ailments peeuliar to their sex. DYSPEPSIA In Us varied and most distressing forms Is cored. CHRONIC, BRONCHITIS, SCROFULA, -CHRONIC DIARRHOEA AND DYSENTERY. yield most rapidly, and permanent cures result. Bottled In its natural state, direct from the Springs, which are- Beautifully, located in Bock bridge county, Ya., and are open for the reception of visitors from June 1st to October 1st, each year; capacity, 1 ,000 guests. For sale, wholesale and retail, by Dr J. H. Mc ADEN and Dr. T. C. SMITH, Charlotte, N. C. mar 12 ly WHEELER & WILSON'S - NEW NO. 8. Lightest Running and Best Sewing Machine In the World. Try It before buying any other. AGENTS WANTED, t Send for Terms and Price List. Winder v WIIaton laannfactar'g Co RICHMOND. VA. may 11 Cleayeland Mineral Springs, OPENED MAY 15th, 1882. THESE Springs are two miles from Shelby, 54 miles West of Charlotte, and within 1 mile of the Carolina Central Railway running from Char lotte to Shelby. Hacks will be at the Springs' Station on arrival of every train. COLD AND WARM BATHS. - White and Red Sulphur and Chalybeate Water a, Bowling Alley la good order. A good string bajid secured for the season. Livery accommoda tions attached to the hotel. - tar For further particulars address S.Me&POSTON, may 1 6 tf Proprietor. " VIRGINIA Female Institute, STAUNTON, VA. Mrs. Gen. J. E. B. 8TTJABT Principal. npHE next session WILL OPEN flEPTKMBEIt : 1 14th. with a full corps of teacberfcv Training thorough and terms moderate. Catalogue sent upon application to the Principal. Jull8 eod 6w FALL GODS 5 1 LETTERS FROM A TRAMP. NO 6. Gambnenus A "Bloated Bondholder The Walls of Jericho Gabriel's Horn Arilngton King Solomon Surface Hill Gold Mine Holman's Liver Pad Decorative Art Empe- docles Si Harris 300 Pounds of Gold. ARLINGTON, Aug. 15, 1882. To the Editor of The Obseiver. There are various much more, com fortable means of locomotion, in travel line down the stream of time, than ri ding double on the ragged edge of a bare-bacK mule in hot weather, and it took several days of rest to recover our usual equanimity. The person who sighed "for a lodge in some vast wilderness, some boundless contiguity of shade," could be easily accommodated hereabouts without rushing into poetry, or making such a fuss about his melancholy feelings, though for our own part just at this moment, we would rather be in Char lotte, at the beer saloon of Charles Roe diger, moralizing over a foaming schooner fresh from the famed gelid vaults of our inena Oram or m us. "Whose land is this?" we inquired of ' a barefooted negro whom we saw sit ting ona ftoce ana picRing his teeth with a jacknife." " 'Squire Hinson's,"he replied and we passed on. "Whose land is this?" we enquired of a colored matron who was sunning the variegated bed-clothing of a cabin hard by, which resembled the hut in the pic ture of the Arkansas Traveller. "'Squire Hinson's, to be sho'," she replied. Continuing our journey for several miles still further on we . asked the same question of a white man digging a well, to which we recived the stereo typed reply for this part of the country, " 'Squire Hinson's, sir." It needs oonsiderable skill to pilot the way to Arlington where 'Squire Ilin son resides, as the roads are so sinuous, deviating and conflicting. The sign posts en mute are like angel's visits, and when found the directions are general ly obliterated, and frequently nothing is visible thereon, save a weather-beaten work of art representing a hand with all the fingers gone, excepting a broken thumb pointing, significantly upwards, as if directing attention to regions beyond the skies. While in a deep study over one of these peculiar triumphs of genius, and feeling somewhat like "Patience on a monument smiling at Grief," there came along at a moderately slow pace, a solitary ox harnessed to the shafts of a wagon which contained a colored man and two women, with several bandies of oats in the sheaf, all going to the camp meeting" at Morning Glade church. They informed me that all the land in sight belonged to Squire Hin son, so that the very atmosphere- we breathed seemed to belong to this pa triarch, and in the secret chambers of our heart we couldn't help wishing they had him in the south of Ireland. , We were told that Arlington was' "four miles off," to "take de fust road to your left, den you come to Mr. Floes, but you don't go there, but you take de fust. road to Mr. Tom Ellington's, den you sees Mr, Steve Connell's. and you go down de hill, past 'Squire Hinson's meadow patch, wbar he cuts de hay, den you go up de hill to de sweet gum, and turn round and dere you is." "And where waa I, Aunty, when 1 turn "round," said I. "Why lawd-a mussy ! you is at de sweet gum tree thought eberybody knowed whar de sweet gum tree is." Pleading our ignorance of the locali ty so lucidly described, where the bea con tree stood as a guide boaid for the benefit of mankind, with oat confessing our inability to distinguish a guar from a poplar we inquired "how far was it from the sweet gum tree to the object ive point of our destination." "Oh!" said she, "if you is a preacher, (and you looks like a real good one) you is only losing time a talking predestin ation, for we is all Arican Methodists, and ef you comes to de church to-morrow night, you will see us all walking around the walls of Jericho, two and two abreast, like a span of mules, and Brudder Sam Alexander a-toting of Gabriel's horn." Assuring her that amidst a variety of employments, in a somewhat chequered career, he had never been called upon to preach, and that we would endeavor to be present at the procession "around the walls of Jericho," she said "ef you is a looking for work, de white folks is all a gone to meeting, and dey took dere mules and hosses along for safety, ana aey iocisea ae Kitenens ana ae ! smoke houses, and dev barred all de doors, Bird left de dogs at home, so Lawd a mussy : if you is a tramp you'd better git up and git." With this fling at our ancient and honorable profession, the mild-eyed ox with his precious freight departed at a lively gait for the walls of Jericho, leaving ns in a mood as pensive as Ca lypso mourning the departure of Ulysses. Field upon field of waving sunlit corn, field after field of cotton with white, crimson and lilac blooms, as far as the eye could reach upland, lowland and meadow land, we passed all belonging to Squire Hinson, whose name was mentioned so frequently during the day and always with respect and es teem, until in the classic parlance of Dennis Kearney we could write his apotheosis in the category of "bloated landholders." At length we reach Arlington, which is prettily situated on an elevation, whose base is ..washed by a babbling brook which' answers the purpose of the river Jordan' 6f old.'ln filrnishing pure water for the impressivet religious . ceremony of Baptism, which takes place here once a year, it is scarcely necessary to state that Arlington be longs to Squire Hinson, as do the grist mills, flour mills, cotton gins, saw mills and brick: yards it contains, and the very church on the summit of the hill, with sufficient land around it for a camping ground and grave yard, is the handsome gift of the Lord of the Manor to the large , and rapidly increasing Baptist congregation of which he is a devout member. We were struck with the perfect con dition of the improved machinery in all of the mills, and the superior quality of the flour manufactured, with the various ingenious labor saving contri vances and the neatness and business like manner with which everything was conducted, showing the eagle eye and commanding spirit of a master mind. We prophesy a future for Ar lington, when her enterprising proprie tor has time to lay out the embryo city when she has stores, hotels, a jail and a calaboose, gas works and a town pump when sne has railroads leading to Harrisburg and Matthews Station, and the steam whistle of her first loco motive keeps time to the music of her town clock. We hope to see all these expectations realized in the lifetime of the founder of Arlington, as Alexander the Great saw the city ii& founded on the shores of Mareotis, Tise"as from the stroke of an enchanter'Sj Wand" before the stir ring scenes of liis earthly labors cease and he rests at peace in the bosom of his Father and hia God. We found Squire Hinson, who greatly resembles Ktag Soloitiori (except in the number of his; wives) at his country seat a mile f rom'Ariington, surrounded by his househol4gods, oii the verandah of a hkndsome, commodious, two story brick house, where, as it was about the time when sereolites and meteors were expected to be rushing through the sky hesaidto ns: Look? how the floor of Heaven Is thick Inlaid, with patines of bright gold. There's not the smallest orb which thou behold'st But In bis moUon, like an angel sings, Still quiring to the young eye'd cheraoim. To which, endeavoring to keep pace with the poetical tenor of his remarks, we replied : The thick black cloud Is cleft, and sUU The moon is at Its side, Luxe waters shot from some high crag, The lightning falls with never a zag, A river steep and wide, "Turning the accomplishments of many years into an hour glass," we talked on various subjects long and earnestly, until it seemed as if the very witching time of midnight was near, when "church yardsijawn and Hell it self breathes forth contagion to the world," "when weariness can snore upon the flint, when restive sloth finds the down pillow hard;" and then to bed, to sleep, perchance to dream of walking in procession round the walls of Jericho, and seeing Gabriel in the person of Sam Alexander, with a linen duster and a stove pipe tooting the "good time com in cr"-ax a horn. XThe suri was" streaming through the" window curtains 01 our Dearoom when we arose refreshed the following morn, and after a stroH amidst beds of pan sies, violets, ' asphodel and hyacinths before the "tocsin of the soul," the bfeakfast bell, euni mcrjjed; us to the din mg-ropm, we-were ready for a visit to the-Surfaee Hill gold mining prop erty, some four miles distant. . Before reaching this famous property we saw many white Jto? cbi0red people ot both sexes KvIy .eredvin washing for gold. Their implements were of the rudest kind, and insisted of rock 'ers made of hollow-: iogsV about four feet long, which thy filled with dirt and turning on watir allowed it to flow through the ' saaddy contents. Affier thedissolving Jnud was cajSri&fc 'off the remain irigredtoent showed fin sfind coarse particles Of the prectous metal, and5 freTiaentljt nuggets ol vari ous sizes, from one to fifteen penny weights in. value. 4 Ttwtts easy to discern from the ex pressions on the countenances of the gold seekers, who were the fortunate or unfortunate ones as we passed them by, but the- best evidence of success laid shining-in the largemouthed bottle on the stump (once a pickle bottle), but now promoted to be the treasury de partment of a mining syndicate of one barelegged colored man and two col ored children in their shirt-tails. The country was beautiful, and was rendered . still more pictur esque by a multitudinous variety of artistic impro.vements on Nature in the way of decorative art. Gay car toons of Holman's-liver pad, and St Jacob in the attitude of St. George, on a jackass dispensing miraculous cures to a recumbent alligator, handsome full length portraits of Mrs. "Winslow with her soothing syrup, Mrs. Lydia E. Pink ham with her vegetable compound, from the drug itores oft Dr. Joseph Da vidson, at Charlotte, aderned the fences and most prominent trees, and Barrett's circus advertisements helped to make a Panorama such as in all our travels. we had never seen before. But at length we Teach cavernous abysses in the earth at the Surface Hill Gold Mine, down which Empedocles were he.alive might leap, and leave be hind no further record than the mystic abyss of iEtna's crater has so far yield ed, regarding that heathen lunatic, who wishing to be considered a God, is hand ed down to posterity as the most fa mous ass of ancient or,, modern times, to be rivalled only by Cyas. J. Guiteau ana nis relative wtiof'aiorlhe talking for Balaam. More than fifty years ago this mine was already famous. It has never been half worked or developed except in the rudest sort of way. It has been, and still seems. to be the rendezvous for all persons who are "hard up," who wish to scratch round to pick up a few dollars without labor. After a heavy rain ne groes and white persons ramble over and around it in every direction, through" the fields and woods to look for nuggets which the rain exposes. Sometimes they pay toll to the owners of the property, a custom very much "more honored in the breach than in the observance." Specimens have been found frequently of the value of seventy-five dollars, and the original owner has been known to have taken from a pocket in one morning no less a sum than seventy-five thousand penny weights. 'Some years before the war a negro named Dick Harris, (whose brother. Si Harris, a venerable old grey-headed African of seventy-five summers we have seen and talked to), used to live at the present old Blair mansion. As a slave, the legend goes, he bought his time and paid his master a pint of gold per day. Becoming too insoletrt and in dependent he was taken to Charlotte and sold to a planter who took him to South Carolina, where during the war he died. Sometime before his death he wrote to his brother Si to look in a cer tain place on the surface Hill gold min ing tract and there he would find his scales for weighing gold, his pan and mortar, and other tools. They were all found in the place described, but a cer tain rock weighing, it is said, some thr e hundred pounds, which was very rich in free gold, which his brother bad helped him to put in a wheel barrow, but which he buried without a single witness to assist him, they have never been able to find, although he gave directions where to look for it. So many years have elapsed since the rock was buried, at a time when the cultivated fields were a thickly wooded wilderness, that all directions about "three-pronged trees," and other fea tures, are vllnless. But the spirit of enquiry As still rife in the neighborhood of the famous mine, and many a per sonals still hunting for that three hun dred pounds of gold. We have often met old Si Harris, like the bridegroom of Ginevra, "an old man wandering as in quest of something" with pick and pan, roaming the fields with bowed head exploring Ihe water courses and ravines, digging holes in the hill sides to no purpose. The famous lump, like the fountain of Ponce de Leon like the lost tribes of Israel refuses to be found, and in its hiding place may rest "Till Time, like him of Gaza in his wrath. Plucking the pillars that support the world, In nature's ample ruins lies entombed, And midnight, universal midnight reigns." A Tramp. BXDIORD ALUM AND IKON SPKlHeS WATIR AND Mass. The great tonic and alterative contains Iwice as much iron and fifty per cent more alum tnum than any "alum and iron mass" known. Just the thine for the "spring weakness" now so general. Sold by all druggists of any standing. Prices reduced one half. Tnayll tf "How are you my old friend !" asked a bright looklne man. "Oh! 1 feel miserable. I'm bilious and cant eat. and my back is so lame 1 can't work." "Why in the world don't you take Kidney- Wort? that's what l take when I'm out of sorts. and it always keeps me in perfect tune. Kidnej Wort is the sure cure for biliousness and consti pation. Don't fail to try-it Long Branch News. The Durltv and elegant perfume of Parker's Hair Balsam explain the popularity of this relia ble restorative Habitual costlveness Is the bane of nearly every American woman. .From It usually arises those disorders that so surely uduermlne their health and strength. Every woman owes it to herself and to ber family to use that celebrated medicine, Kidney-Wort. It Is the sure remedy for constipa tion, and for all disorders of the kidneys and liver. Try It, in liquid or dry form. Equally efficient in either. Boston Sunday Budget. A Delicious Appetizer, That ensures digestion and enjoyment of food; a tonic that brings strength to the weak and rest to the nervous; a harmless diarrhoea core that don't constipate lust what every family needs -Parker's tilnger Tonic. Sparkling Eyes, Rosy cheeks and clear complexion only accompa ny good health, Parker's Ginger Tonic better than anything, makes pure, rich blood and brings health, Joyous spirits, strength and beauty. La dies try it. Bazaar. STATE NEWS. Newton Enterprise: Many iit-wmem-bers have lately been added to the lodge of Knights of Honor at this place. Two negroes hud a cutting scrape at their camp meeting at Mott's grove last week. We never saw better looking cotton and corn than now line the entire road from Lincolnton to Newton. Upland and lowland alike will yield to their full extent. Rtleigh News and Observer: Officer Miles Goodwin has no less than four children at his house which have been abandoued by their parents. The board of trustees of the State University in" meeting at Raleigh Fri day elected Prof. Joshua WJGore, C. E , of Virginia, as professor of natural philosophy and engineering in place of Prof. Grandy, resigned. It Is the common observation that the standard natural health and norma! acivlty, among American-women, ts being lowered by the Influence of false Ideas and habits of life, engendered by fashionable Ignorance and luxurious living. It Is a happy "clrcnrostance that Mrs. Lydia E. Pu.k ham has come to the front to instruct and cure the sufferers of her sex Composed of the best known tonics, Iron and clnehona, with well known arom&tics, is Brown' Iron Bitters. It cures Indigestion, and all kindred troubles. WOMAN. A Heinedy-fdT Her Only. Cheaper than pijslclaW bills, and to be used by women exclusively. It is prepared for them only, and is especially adapted to cases where the worabidlsedeed, and will cure.-all irregulari ties of UtexaeBses," or "monthly courses, .wtieth er acute, or chronic, by restoring the discharge. This great boom is Dr. J. Bradfleld's Femnle Begulator, and known and reibgnfeed as a" Wo man's; Best Friend. " - Prepared by r Dr. J, Brad- flAlrf Atlanta la . Hrfol afva "? C. k. ,-!-- "iiuhiw, v Aiwv. Hint. oixof , uv ioi !xe.8L5j. . For sale by all druggists. , , Hew &&vzvti$tmiuts. From the Bprlngneld Republican. A GENEROUS ACT Thai Will be Appreciated by all M ho Care for Their Complexion and Skin It Is not generally known that the nervous sys tem has a wonderful influence over the skin, but this is a fact known to medical men who have given much of their time to the study of diseases of the skin. No one can have a clear and fair complexion unmixed wl.h blotches or pimples who is jrery nervous. Whatever tends to a healthful condition of the nervous system always beautifies the complexion and removes roughness and dryness of the skin. Some skin diseases are not attended by visible signs on the surface, but an Intolerable Itching that renders life miserable. We copy the following deserving and Interesting compliment from the Tribune, which says: "Dr. C. W. Benson's New. Remedy, 'Skin Ctjbk,' Is re ceived by the public with gieat confidence, and It is regarded as a very generous act on the Doctor's part to make known and prepare for general use his valuable and favorite prescription for the treatment of skin diseases, alter having devoted almost his entire life to the study and treatment of nervous and skin diseases, In which he took great delight. He was for a number of years Physician in charge of the Maryland Infirmary on Dermatology and anj thing from his hands Is at once accepted as authority and valuable. The remedy is fully the article to attack the disease, both Internally, through the blood, and externally through the absorbents, and is the only reliable and rational mode of treatment. These prepara tions are only put up for general use utter -ha via g been used by the Doctor in Lis private practice for years, with the greatest success, and they fully merit the confidence of all classes of sufferers from skin diseases." This Is for sale by all drug gists Two bottles, Internal and external treat ment, in one package. Don't be persuaded to take any other. It costs one dollar. OH! J1V HEAD ! WHY WILL YOU SUFFER? Sick headache, nervous headache, neuralgia, nervousness, paralysis, dyspepsia, sleeplessness, and brain diseases, positively cured by 1 r. Ben son's Celery and Chamomile Pills. They contain no opium, quinine, or other harmful drug. Sold by dqigglsts. Price, 50 cents a box, two boxes for S 1 , s'x box es for 82.50, by mail, postage free. Dr. C. W. Benson, Baltimore, Md. C N. Crlttenton, New York, is Wholesale Agent for Dr. C. W. Benson's Remedies. augl LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE OOMPOUrTD. Is a Positive Cure For all those Painful Complaints and Weaknesses so common to 6ur best female population. A Msdicine for Woman. Invented by a Woman. Prepared by a Woman, The GrwtMt XdleI DUeoTMj Sine ths Dswn or History. tTTt revives the drooping spirits, Invigorates and harmonizes the organic functions, gires elasticity and Irmness to the step, restores the natural lustre to the aye, and plants on the pale choek of woman the fresh roses of life's spring and early summer time. "Physicians Use It and Prescribe It Freely.- It removes faintqess, flatulency, destroys, all craving for stimulant, and relieves weakness of the stomach. That feeling of hearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by its use. For the core of Kidney Cnplaints of either sex this Compound is njisurpassed. LYMA K. BIJfKftAM'S $LOD PURIFIER 3tuae of of Humors from the Blood, and give tone man woman or child. . strength to the system, of ustA na' ring it. Both the Compound nd Blood Purifier are prepared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of lither, $L Six bottles for $5. Bent by mail in the form ot pills, or of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per box for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers all letters of inquiry. Enclose Set. stamp. Send for pamphlet. Ko family should be without LYDIA E. FDTKHAM'8 LTVSU PILLS. They cure constipation, biliousness, and torpidity of the liver. 5 cents per box. 43-Sold by all Druggist.- 0) HARRIS U.vtUY G0.,8Iill. t ; OinuUU ad SU. Prop', of ! PROF. HARRIS' PASTILLE REMEDY ouag Krn and otheri who suffer Iroui Ninons and Physical Debil ity. Premature Exhaustion and their utiAj gloomy consequences, 'are anicklv ifV njlfoallv .nml , The Rentn-iy is rj, up in ltoxea. Mo. 1 (luting a month), S3 - Ko.2 (enou,-:, . , . uenre, unless fen severe cases,) f ) Ho. t Carting Uirn. in, 7. Sent by mail in plain wrappers. IHreHiint. lur L.iay areompany eaeh Bol Pamphlet desert. htnf tlua disease and mode of cure sent sealed on application. FOR RENT. THE Store House now. occupied by X. M. An drews as a furniture store. Apply to Gen. & BARRINGXR, ang22 lw - or Jt M. Andrews. WANTED BIT SEPTEMBER 4(li. FITS or six Music Scholars. Rates reasonable and satisfaction guaranteed. Apply to Mrs. N. DUL9, Corner C and 6th streets, or T. L. Seigle & Co. aug20 2w TURNIP SEED. w E have Just received full stock ef all varie ties. R. H. JORDAN Jk C.n imp Tryon street, BURNETT'S COCOAINI, Creole Hair Restorer, Ayers' and Hall's Hair Vigor, and Parker's Hair Balsam, K. H. JORDAN ft CO.. Jul8 Druggists. KFtew LFaDIl (Bcowatk JUSr HE :EiVED 4. PBIHTS and SATIWES o'-!ittst.tJrle-s- A very large assortment of HOOP PKI8T-1 ot every d-scription. ranging In prioe rromoctojl.ii. We will have quite a variety of thosa 4Vic XjA.'WIjTS. Call and examine OUR BARGAIN COUNTER, As we have an e-dless variety of LADIES' MITTS. GLOVES and HOSIRttY. all of which wo are offri mg at prime cos . Another large htpment of that popular 10c BLEACHED DOMESTIC. SMITH BUILDING. augl8 (DDsnnngf A ffOSIHOTE -:o: nn mm clotbiik WE HAVE REDUCED Oar own Manufactured Suits, former price $22.50, now $18.00, Our $18.00 and $16.50 Suits, at the uniform price of $14.00. A handsome line of $15.00 and $12.50 Suits at uniform price of $10.00. Our Entire Stock of Men's Summer Underwear at Cost A Handsome Line of Boys and Children's Suits at and Below Cost. HP" These Goods must be sold In oruer to secure Room for FALL G00D3. The prices given are strictly CASH. Call early anl secu-e Bargains. Respectfully, IL. Ber wanger & Bro., LEADING f ASHIONABLG CLOTHIEBS AND TAILORS, MUSIC HOUSE, CHARLOTTE, IM. C. E.nv.ixros: or IjTJjdtdxhst dts bates. 02 era CC3 1 jr Thousands ot Musical Families throughout North and South Carolina are intending to purch so PIANOS and ORGANS In the Fall, when cotton comes in. WHY WAIT? Buy at once, and enliven the long, hot SUMMER MONTHS with Music and make the "HARVFST HOME" still more Joyful. Mid-Summer Special Offer : Under our Mid-Summer Sale, we offer to sell during the months of JUNE, JULY, AUGUST and SEP TEMBKR, 1882, PIANOS and ORGANS, of eveiy make, style and price, at our very lowest cash rates On PIANOS $25 Cash, Balance November 1st, 1882. On ORGANS $10 Cashj Balance November 1st, 1882. without vsnmss ob ant advance nr price. IF BALANCE CAN'T BE PAID IN THE FALL, Longer time will be given, with a reasonable Increase of price. All Instruments of every grade and price Included in this sale. Tell your musical friends of It. Write us for Catalogues, Price Lists and Circulars. Tbis sale, close October 1st 1882 Early purchase secures cash prices and easy terms. felx.(il) years guarantee:' btool and Instructor with every Organ. Freight paid both ways if no sale. Test them to yoor own "horrat. Address 2fcXoJSxs?Lltlx JAyXxxsilo House. PROF. WM. BAKER is my authorized Tuner and Repairer. All work guaranteed. Send orders to thla-house. H. McSMITH. AT FOR IM DAYS IN ORDER TO REDUCE MY STOCK B1FORE MOVING INTO THE LARGE STORE LATELY OCCUPIED BY H. MORRIS St BROS , NEXT DOOR TO WIWKOWSKt A BABUCHV Don't Forget For Ten Days Only HiNDSOMR LINE OF ant! Saafle OF CASH SALE. :o:- 02 0 00 ' Furniture Store,

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