1'. VOL. XX VIII. CHARLOTTE, N. QM THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 21, 1882. NO. 4,199. LA DIES', MISSE'S AND CHILDRENS' Gossamer duller and CLOAKS, JUST KFCEIVKD. A LOT OF TBE ABOVB GOODS TO ARM VI IN FEW lVx. A septn DEALERS IN Boots, Shoes, Hats, Trunks, AND VALISES. The First Shipment -OF OUB- FALL t WINTER STOCK HA9 A :BI?RD. PEGU AM & CO. IF YOU WANT A NICK PAIR OF MieUlkes and Children's Shoes,. Of any kind you can get them at gEGRAM CP'S, I F YOU WANT A Valise or Satchel, With all the latest Improvements, go to PEGRAM & CP'S. IF YOD WISH THS LITIS t STYLE IN SILK or CASSIMBBE HATS You can Had it at PEGRAM & CO!8t -OUR STOCK,OE BOYS, GENTS' AND YOCTBS' BOOTS AND SHOES a 18 been selected aith or nut mm and soon yen ' can find 4-h t. s i : nATivrim tou want m : -J jjtiiH-H Sicily 1 p RA Mn & VC0'S. ,i CIRCULARS exao der Harris 'mil Oil.'. hi YOU AP.E RESPECTFULLY INVITED T J ATTEND THE OF OUB FallStock, Which will be ready for your laspee Ion on Friday,- 22nd Day of September, and It will compare with any fctcck of IN 1 HE SOOTH. Embracing all the novelties of the season, as It Is well known thai Oil B HOUSE keeps up with all new stylf s as they appear in tbe market. You will Und In this stocfc Bilks and Satins in all shades and prices. Also a large line ot Plushes and Vel vets. Dress Goods In everj thing new. running in price from locto$5perya d. We will sell you a good colored Cashmere Dress at from $1.50 to 82 a pattern. Black Hnd Mourning Goods a special ty. A full line of Dress Flanneis In all colors and pries from 2rc to $1.25 per yard. We have a full line of Goods for making Cloaks and Jackets, alfco Kur Trimmings A large stock of Domestics and Sheetlncs. uadles'. Gents' and Children s Underwear, Hosiery and Gloves In everything that Is new. In fact anything that can be found In a first class I ry Goods Store, from a five c-nt Calico to a fifteen dollar Lace Collar. Call and see us as early as possible and we will take pleasure in showing our stock. Very respectfully. septl7 T. L. SEIGLS & CO. BXedtcal. A cold or sore throat may not seem to Amount to much, and If promptly attended to can easily be cured ; but neglect la often followed by consumption or diphtheria. No medicine has ever been discovered which acts so quietly and surely In such cases aa PERRY DAVIS' PAIN KILLvKR. The prompt use of this invaluable remedy has saved thousands of lives. PERRY DAVIS PAIN KILLER Is not an experiment. It has been before the public for forty years, and is most valued where It Is best known. A tevi extracts from voluntary testimonials read ifeColiows: Pact Ktlleu has been my household remedy for colds for the past twenty -seven years, and nave never known it to fail in effecting a cure. L. S. Cbockeb, Williamaville, N. Y. For thirty years I have used Pais Kiixeb, and found it a never-f ailing remedy for colds and sore tnroat Barton Seaman. Have received immediate relief from colds and sore throat, and consider your Pain Killer an invaluable remedy. Geo. B. Evebett, Dickinson, a,lvfJnBi recovered from a very severe cold, f,,veThtS fPr 801116 Ume- r could get no SLP11111 tried your Pain Killer, which relieved me immediately. I win never jujain be Wwhont - Fonci, Lowndes, Ga. vJ?ve.uw' Path Killeb in my family for forty f?-have never known it to faiL-RANsoat Lewis, Waynesboro, Ga. I began using: Pain Killer In my family twenty nve years ag-o and have used it ever since, and have found no medicine to take its place. B. W. Diib. Druggist, Oneida, N. Y. For whoopinsr-couKh and croup it is the best Preparation made. We would not be without it A. P. Routs, Liberty Mills, Va. For twenty-five years I have need Patk Killeb for colds ana chapped lips, and consider it the beet medicine ever off ered. GEO.HooFEB,WiImiiigrtoii, N. C. I was suffering severely with bronchitis, and my throat was so inflamed I could scarcely bw allow any food. I was advised to try your Fain Killeb, and after taking: a few doses was completely cured. T. Wilkinson. Dr. Waltow writes from Coshocton : Your Pah Krr.T.wp cures dirjhifreriA and sore throat, so alarm- 'ingly prevalent here, and has not been known to lau in a angle instance. This fact vou should maae Known to tne woria. Mrs. Ellen B. Mason writes: My son was taken violently aiek with diphtheria, high fever, and cold chills. So many children have died here, I was !fraid to eall a physician: aid fried' your Pain 'Killeb. He 'was taken- on Sunday, and on Wednesday his throat ml cleat: It was a won derful cure, and I wish it eovud foe known to the poor jnothers who aae losing s. many ahildren. For Chills and Fever PACf KltLEIl has no equal. It oures whenevBrythlng else falls. Delays are often dangerous. A bottle of Pain Killeb 4n the house Is a safeguard that no family should be without. All druggists sell it at Sc Oc., and $1.00 per bottle., PERRY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, Providence, R. I. aept dw sept 4 oct ral HUM H. C. ECCLES, PROPRIETOR. CHABLOTTB, N. C. THIS Hotel was completed in 1872, and new additions made In 1875, "THE CENTRAL" Is situated on Independent Square, occupying hall a block on Trade street, in the business cen tre ol the City, in close proximity to Banks. Kx press and Telegraph offices, and commanding a mountain view of more than fifty miles. The intentioQ of the Proprietor la, not only to g resent to the traveling public one of the finest otel Buildings in the South, but one of the most complete and best conducted Hotels In all Its dif ferent depaitments. Having recently been decorated and fresoed throughout, it Is not on'y one of the most beauti ful, but the LEADING AND PAL ICE HOTEL - of tbe South. te home of Commercial Tourists, pleasure seekers and resident guests. H C. ECCLESv. Proprietor, wfil be pleasedioj we'come hlsirtends and the traveling public, and respectfully solicits a share of patronage from nil who would enjfy and appreciate a home combin ing elegance, besnty and comfort In all Its ap pointments and surroundings. BATHS-S2.00 and $2 50, per day, accrltng to location. . . - . u ' WHEELER &WILS0N'a NEW NO. 8. Llghteet Banning and Beat Sewing Machine to the - World. Trf it before baying any other. I v Rnd for Twrnw nnd Prtm-Uat. LJd 1 VTIioef er ,ffit von imuiaf Coi ut,lcilxliilta.lJ.-CL.; 'Hfl'G 1 iitk-t .AOI- IiX -I" 3k Th -Kfltt1 rrimftl' foWon' hr &KPTtMBEB Gram Owng The ta Tor Catalogue. augiliro f? NOON DISPATCHES. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRES&. Fever, Flood, Diphtheria. Galyjton, Sept. 19. A News Mata moras special savs: To-day up to 9 a m there were 4 deaths, 3 of fever. The epidemic shows no decrease or if any very small. The river is again rising. Reports from Brownsville are that the upper part of the city is inundated and funerals are attended in boats. During the 24 hours ending at 1 am, there were 19 new cases and 4 deaths; 11 cases of fever in hospital and 1 of diptheria. Quite av number of persons are sick with diphtheria and one new case in the garrisonCol Lyster's son. The mails and freight are to be taken on steamer from Brazos to New Orleans. Louis Flager Nominated. Washington, Sept. 20 A despatch from Bayou Sayra, La., announces that the regular Republican convention, sixth Louisian district, at Red River landing, nominated by acclamation Louis Frager, of West Feliciana, form erly of the United States Consul at Bo logne, now one of the most extensive cotton planters in Lousiana. Returning to Work at Old Rates. Young stown, Ohio, Sept. 20. The District Amalgamated Association con vention yesterday voted by an over whelming majority to return to work at old rates. Christiancy gets a Divorce. Washington, Sept 20. Judge Hag ner to-day granted ex-Senator Chris tiancy a divorce from his wife on the ground of desertion. Cotton Brokers Fail. New York, Sept. 20. Burger & Cushman, cotton brokers, announced their failure yesterday with liabilities between fifty and sixty thousand dol lars. Shot by His Own Soldiers. London, Sept 20. The Times in its second edition has a despatch from Cairo announcing that Abdalla Pasha, commander of Darnietta, had been shot by his own soldiers. Connecticut Republicans Nominate Bulkley. New Haven, Sept 20. The Republi can convention nominated Gen Wm II Bulkley for Governor by acclamation. The Planets in September. Venus is evening star, and reigns with queenly and acknowledged power over tne morning and evening stars, as well as the mighty multitude of glisten ing suns that stud the celestial track. No student of the skies will fail to grant her the ascendancy, or fail to note her increasing size and brilliancy. Her diameter now measures nearly twenty seconds, and at the end of tbe month it will measure twenty-six seconds. It must be remembered that the mure her diameter increases, and the more nearly she approaches the earth, the less of her enlightened disc is turned toward us. If, when she passes between us and the sun, her bright side were turned toward us instead of her dark aide, she would be a glorious planet, such as never was seen by mortal eye. On the 27th she will reach the end of the invisible chain that binds her to the sun. Not a second farther can she swerve. The sun's resistless attraction turns her course and directs her retro grade steps westward, until, in our view, she has retrod the whole east ward course, and reaches her inferior conjunction and transit. Millions of observers are watchiDg her receding steps with eager interest, for the goal she is bound for ushers in the great astronomical event of the year, if not of the century. Venus at her elonga tion is 46 deg. 3b min. east of tbe sun. As 15 deg. represents one hour of time, it will be plain that she can never be visible much more than three hours after sunset; as the same lawsj)revail in reversed order when sne is the morn ing star, for the same reason she can never be seen more than three hours; before sunrise. The increased velocity, of the planet's motion will soon be ap parent, While she has been nearly seven months in passing from superior, conjunction to eastern elongation, she will be less than three months in re turning from eastern elongation to in ferior conjunction. This most brilliant portion of her course will form a plane tary study for the student of the stars as easily followed as it is-ihteresting,' and illustrative of. the laws that govern the movements of the Ibferior planets. During this month Venus and Mei cury will reach, their eastern elonga tions; Mercury wilj Hbe in close con junction with'Spica; and "make a near approach to Mars j Jupiter will be in quadrature; Venus' and the crescent moon will.Shine together in the 'western sky, and the ull harvest moon will be the crowning; eattire of the nights of the early antamn. JJvery.night the as pect wilt-vary.; ifever in the lifetime of the observer , will the same picture be repeated, and within the bounds of our own system there is abundant work for the exercise of the noblest powers. But the sun and his family or world, of such vital importance to the human race, is only one little cloud speck in the vast concourseof the 18,000,000 suns that make up the Milky Way. This, in its turn, is even more, insignificant in comparison with the myriad suns that people space, and the massas of nebul ous haze so far away that light is t hou sands of years in , passing over the dis tance: There'll no end, 'rro-bourfdary lwewiaiblfttaour dim conception of this gtjind' material universe If -we may be allowed' tocompa the infinite ly; great with the Infinitely little, there is' no end to the pleasure and profit to be derived from the study of the many sided science of , astronomy. An Act!: of Domestic Self-Sacrifice. The-announcement of the death of Mr. Thomas Martoft" Tilz HardiDge; Berkeley recalls -aa act of -domes tcj aelf-Saerificts which lew would be found! to perforin. The story -of tbeEariibf; Herkeleyand Miss Cole is well kflOTVb.; TheJEarl ftndenfetecHyiaarried her pub-! licly itt:l?9By. a series of forgeries and perjuries! According to the decision of tbe Housed ILords, be endeavored to prove that he hacf-TriaTried herpri vatelv at the beirinning of their iiiti- ';rfiacy. before their 'eldest son was born. "TAindgmenl Tit he'Hoiise of: Lords' ititiHuVtofk vibe, earldom. uj ri Barfceterc tmt: be; refused- co:take tile; l seat or tise the title, and o cast a glir ; legitimacy. In Scotland and every fln-i ropean country bat England the Rom an , i . . . r i i . f.i J law wnicn. -recoguizeu legitimation ; py; subsequent marriage prevails and the dilemma ut petore mr, uerKeiey coma McLure for Coroner. i To the gdltor of The Observer: . , ' s a ' uaW frteafl of I Mr. J. L MeLhre present, hid name to the voters of Mecklenburg cauntj, for the1 ,offlc dt Coroner m Ue comuielectWJ Mr. Me LnrerU a resident ol Xiriariottev-cqnseqaeutl mal4w near the. centre ot the comiti and more aooesable for the duties devolving npoBb tae ofBo tiuui m . tesidtns in - am extreme . Dart. iOf thi county.' He i in every way qualified foV the potli tion, ana u a prompt ana energenp Dusroeta nai aeptlO. , X. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound has given th lady a world-wide reputation lor.dolDgigeod.0 la like a llrlng spring to the, vital consutution. H er Blood 'Forifler wm 'domore' to cleanse the channels of the circulation and.;parUlhe the,.bodT thwi aU the;6anltarj devices of Ulfl NEWS NOTES. A woman has been killed by a process-server in Ireland. The Dean of Windsor, domestic chap lain to the Queen, is dead. The receipts of peaches at Baltimore this season will aggregate 1,500,000 box es. Business is blockading some of the transportation lines running out of Baltimore. The Indian Government has issued a loan of .512,500,000 to meet the expenses of the troops it sent to Egypt. Engineer Melville's wife was sent to the' State Insane Asylum, at Norris town, Pa., Monday. Over 600 bales of new cotton arrived at Norfolk, Va., Monday, by the Sea board and Roanoke road. The finance committee of the Phila delphia councils has agreed upon 81.85 on the $100 as the tax rate for the next year. The passengers and crew of E. C. Height's yacht Princess, previously re ported wrecked off Fox Island, Maine, got ashore safe. Rev. Dr. John S. Mitchell, who was for over half a century a prominent clergyman of the Methodist Episcopal Church, died at Newburgh, N. Y., Mon day, aged 83. Up to Monday 5,670 carloads of peaches had been shipped the present season over the Delaware Division of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Balt imore road. A comet was plainly seen with the naked eye from Georgetown and Cen tral City, Colorado, Monday about 11 a. m. It was about live degrees from the sun, ancLm a direction a trifle south of west. It is said that President Arthur has accepted an invitation to spend the first four days of October in Boston. On Oc tober 2 he will go to Marsh field and participate in the centennial celebra tion of Daniel Webster's birth. Secretary Lincoln, who is staying at Atlantic City, N. J., came over to Phil adelphia Monday, met his private sec retary, who had arrived from Washing ton, at the Continental Hotel, signed some official papers, and then returned to the seashore. According to the official returns, the whole vote cast at the recent election for Governor in Arkansas was 147,169, of which Berry (Democrat) received 87,775; Slack (Rep.) 49,352; Garland (Greenbacker) 1,142. The report that yellow fever had in vaded tho Bermuda Islands is denied. A dispatch from Hamilton says that the islands were never more healthy than at present, and that there has been no visitation of the yellow fever since 1864. Mr. Edwin Booth's recent engage in London is said to have been soroe of a failure from a monetary point of view. lie is quoted as announcing his irrevocable resolve never to play in England again. Chaos to Come Again. Montgomery Advertiser. special dispatches from Washington City confirm all our worst fears as to the manner of campaign to be wagea in the South by the National Republi can party. The outrage mill is to be set to grinding. Ku-kluxlies are to be told over again. The negroes are to be aroused by a steady appeal to their pas sions and race prejudicef. Coirajton is to be the hand maid of power and the South again taught that the party in power will accord her neither sym pathy nor justice. The campaign is not of our choosing. Would to God the race issue were buried as deep as Republican honesty. But when the Republican leaders are already pro claiming that Grant stands ready to march, with his bayonets upon the whites of the South, and telling the negroes to be ready for blood shed at the polls, to call upon every white man and every honest colored man to rally to the Democratic standard, is but do ing our simple duty. Discovery of Oyster Beds. Pall Mill Gazette. The joy caused in gastronomic and epicurean circles by Mr. Olsen's paper on -The North Sea Fisheries" and the great oyster discoveries there will be shared by the whole oyster-eating world. Two hundred miles of oyster beds, thirty to seventy miles wide, of splendid oysters within easy distance ot the British coast, is a discovery to which all those of Stanley and Living ston sink into insignificance. One cu rious feature about it is that the oysters lie at a depth of. twenty-one fathoms, thus disposing summarily of the preva lent idea that oysters can only be raised successfully' in shallow water. Ti e man who invents a new dish, according to some, the man who plants a tree, ac cording to the Mohammedans, deservts well of mankind; but what is the re ward of a mau who discovers miles acres of oysters? And yet all this is tinged with the melancholy doubt whether oysters will be cheaper in con sequence. Infanticide in India. Bombay Iudian Spectator. Such is the force of an evil custom, that even the Legislature cannot put down the public offense to which the custom gives rise. The Kunbis of Gu jarata claos of gentlemen-farmers have so much to spend on the marriage of their daughters, that in spite of the strictest police Vigilance, female infan ticide is not even now quite unknown in some parts. It is clear that the sev erest penal law cannot put down this unnatural crime. The government saw this years ago; they wisely found out the cause of the crime, and tried to re move it. They induced the leading Kunbi families to enter into a sort of agreement with the caste not to spend more than was strictly necessary on the occasion of their daughters' marriage, The result has been most salutary. Bat lately the officials have observed a ten dency on the Kunbi's part to revert to his old extravagant habits. $300,000,000 Wasted. The "Man about Town" of the At lanta Constitution estimates that the Southern people have lost $30,000,000 a year for ten years past in cotton and stock speculations. It would have built, be says, and equipped, five times the present railroad mileage of Georgia and Alabama. We have wasted, he says, $300,000,000 of money by betting with outsiders on a hand that the out siders stocked against us. Care' for Sore Eyes. One ounce of water, one-half tea- spoonful of epsom . salts,, and a half dozen dj-opsof laudanum, mixed wellj It is claimed that the use of this prepa-; ration .will .remove all , inflammation; from the eye, and will also prevent one from catchipg the sore eyes if used inj time. Bathe the eyes in the solution several times during the day, aid bathe1 ffieni ft eU; pa gojUgTy jbedj at nighty I For Register ol Deeds. To the KdUor of the Obsarrer. , i I hereby taBoonee ttyaelft al cBnudate for the office tf Register of Deeds forMeet fenbdrrcoun-f tr. in the cause of the AaU-ProhlblUon Liberal sire?5 - - - -,?- mm 1600 per year can be eaauy made at noma working for B. e. Bldeont & Co 10 Barclay street HewYoifc. Send for their catalogue and full -paij Honiara, ,v ..,...!(;': nu-n 'f.n-ytM, r-a. 1 oem It tJ ' ' . CONFEDERATE BONDS. Another Boom in Past Due Coupons and Old Securities. Augusta (Ga.) Constitutionalist The demand for Confederate binds has been revived in this city, and one or two firms are buying them up at good prices. The fluctuation in these "securities" is past finding out. One time they have gone up to $7.50, $10 and $15 a thousand ; at any other it is difficult to dispose of them at any price. The old sensation about the gold depos it in England to the credit of the Con federate Government, has been about exploded ; but it is supposed that some new idea, equally visionary, has taken its place; or it may be that the General Government of the United States is now buying them up to destroy them, an put an end to future sensation and speculation. A Millionaire's Palace Car. Mr. Wm. H. Vanderbilt's new palace car for his private use made its first ap pearance at Saratoga last week. Its designer claims that in elegance and comfort this car excels even the car owned by Baron de Rothschild, of Vi enna, and in which be recently visited Beyreuth. The Vanderbilt car includes a sleeping room furnished with a bed stead instead of a berth, a small parlor, an office and a smoking room. It is in tended whenever guests accompany Mr. Vanderbilt to be connected by a bellows cover with another car which Mr. Vanderbilt has hitherto used. The Corn Crop in the West. Chicago, Sept. 18. Special dispatch es report that the corn crop in every direction has been wonderfully im proved by the past two weeks of fine weather. The crop will be a full three quarters average. In Iowa it is thought the yield will be the largest and best ever known in that State. The corn has hardened and is fast getting away from danger by frost. The hot weath er which still holds in Nebraska and parts of Kansas has done no harm, the crop being so forward as not to be af fected. POLITICAL. APPOINTMENTS. Senator Vance will address bis fellow-citizens at the following times and places, viz: Graham, Monday, Sept. 21. The chairman of the executive com mittee in Davidson will please fix the precise place for the speaking on the 13th, and cause it to be well posted. Senator Ransom will address his fellow-citizens at the following times and places : Flint Hill, Friday, Sept. 15. Jefferson, Saturday, Sept. 16. Boone, Monday, Sept. 18. Wilkesboro, Wednesday, September 20th. Yadkinville, Thursday, September 2lst. Mocksville, Friday, Sept. 22. Salisbury, Saturday, Sept. 23. Friends at each of the above named places are requested to provide a con veyance to the next place, in order that the appointments may be filled. Route of Dr. Norment and Col. John ston. Dr. Norment and Col. Wm. Johnston have mapped out a route for the cam paign and will address the people on Liberalism, at the following places and dates: Monroe, Thursday, September 21st. Beaver Dam, Friday, 22d. Polkton, Anson county, Saturday 23d Wadesboro, Anson county, Mohdav, 25th. Albemarle, Stanly county, Tuesday, 26th. " Big Lick, Stanly county. Wednesday. 27th. Furr's Store, Cabarrus county, Thurs day, 28th. Mount Pleasant, Cabarrus county, Friday, 29th. Concord, Cabarrus county, Saturday, 30th. DARBYS PROPHYLACTIC FLUID. A Household Article for Universal Family Use. For Scarlet and Typhoid Fevers, Diphtheria, 8aU Vation, Ulcerated Sore Throat, Small Pox, Measles, and Eradicates HALABXA. aU Comtagtoos Diseases. Persons waiting on the Sick should use it freely. Scarlet Fever has never been known te spread where the Fluid was used. Yellow Fever has been cured with it after black vomit' had taken place. The worst cases of Diphtheria yield to it. Feveredand SlckPer- SMALL-POX and . PITTING of Small Pox PREVENTED A member of my fam ily was taken with Small-pox. I used the Fluid;; the patient was not delirious, was not pitted, and was about the house again in three weeks, and no others had it. J. W. Park inson, Philadelphia. sons refreshed and Bed Sores prevent ed by bathing with Darbys Fluid. Impure Air made harmless and jfjrined. For Sore Throat it is a sure cure. Contagion ' destroyed. For Frosted Feet, Chilblains, Piles, Chaflngs, etc Rheumatism cured. Soft White Complex ions secured by its use. Ship Fever prevented. To purify the Breath, Cleanse the Teeth, it can't be surpassed. Catarrh relieved and cured. Erysipelas cured. Burns relieved instantly. Scars prevented. Iysentery cured. Wounds healed rapidly. Scurvy cured. An Antidote for Animal or Vegetable Poisons, Stings, etc. I used the Fluid during our present affliction with Scarlet Fever with de cided advantage. It is indispensable to the sick room. Wm. F. Sand ford, Eyrie, Ala. Diphtheria Prevented. The physicians here use Darbys Fluid very successfully in the treat ment of Diphtheria. A. Stoixbnwerck, Greensboro, Ala. Tetter dried up. Cholera prevented. Ulcers purified and healed. In cases of Death it should be used about the corpse it will prevent any unpleas ant smell. The eminent Phy sician, J. MARION SIMS, M. D., New York, says: "I am convinced Prof. Darbys Prophylactic Fluid is a valuable disinfectant." Scarlet Ferer Cured. . Vanderbilt. University, Nashville, Tenn. ' 1 ' I testify to the most excellent qualities of Prof. Darbys Prophylactic Fluid. As a disinfectant and detergent it is both theoretically and practically superior to any preparation with which I am ac quainted. N. T. Lufton, Prof. Chemistry. Darbys Fluid is Recommended by Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia ; Rev. Chas. F. Deems, D.D., Church of the Strangers, N. Y.; Jos. LbConte, Columbia, Prof.,University,S.C. Rev. A. J. Battle, Prof., Mercer University; Rev. Geo. F. Pierce, Bishop M. E. Church, INDISPENSABLE; TO EVERY HOME. Perfectly harmless-Used internally or externally for Man or Beast. The Fluid has been thoroughly tested, and we have abundant evidence that it has done everything here claimed. For fuller information get of your Druggist a pamphlet or send to the proprietors, J. H. ZKTLTN & CO., Manufacturing Chemists, PHILADELPHIA. MOZART SALOON, joa FI3CHES3IE, Proprietor. HE lA AT AL.E. HOURS Day or night Tryon street, below Central Hotel aeptS . . " - " ii-r'f,l'1 - -j - ' i rij-LU' J" -J L.1JlJVLnj.n.- p DANIEL O'DONNEL, : - ; ' !. ... .; .. ' i ,;r PRACTICAL Plnmte-anu-Steam Fitter At.t fwl . -'biiirr. Vt:-.n -i'sft t:,-tt!S jftsw'J i :, ;Offlo8 nader the Cenh Hotel. ., m u-'.j'l ;rp ;-cHABL0TTf, -BT All orders promptlf attended tov .-fi Juu24- . sv ;I Wbw UMli WE ARE NOW READY TO SHOW One of (lie Handsomest Stocks of Goods ever Shown ia' Charlotte. Look at Our French Drer Pattern front $20.00 SSS.OO. Onr M Comprises EYSRYTHIN& NEW In FANCY DRESS GOODS anl TRIM1NG?. Silks, Satins, Moires, Ottomans, SURAHS AND BROCADES in endless variety. Cashmeres, Henriettas, Empress, Sboodahs, Silks, VELVET, V I.VHINUN. FJnin and Ilrocade PLITSHE, FLANNELS SXJI I'lNUS, KPL,L.r I !, Ac, Ac. A HAND30MK LIMB OK DOLMANS, CLOAKS, ULSTERS AND JACKETS' Look at Them. TBONKS and VALldE 3, a large stock ot CS 3Lb OTO H3L 31 IBS" tS-, AT VBBY LOW PRICKS We have anything jou want In BOOTS, 8H0KS, HATS and CAPS. PKABL SHIRTS, EVITTa' and TUbNBB'o SHOES. The best 4-4 BLEACHING ever offered at 10c per rard; ask to ee It Give us a call, as we will be glad to snow you everything we have, and It we don't sell you, it will not be because o-jr prices are not low eeough. SMITH IBTTILIDIlSra-, HARGRAVESTft WDILID1LI. 1882 ASD 1883. MLL AM m. -:o: WE ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR Stock of Fall and link Clothing Daily, And when complete, we will announce It and have a day set apart for a Grand Opening. Remember, a Finer Stock Cannot be Shown by any House in the State, ESPECIALLY OF THOSE GOODS Which areMannfactnred in onr Home; fine Gent' Farnlnhtnr Coodt, the Very Latest Style of HaU, dec Look Oat for School Suits for Boys. A Large Stock of CBILDBEN'S SUITS. Call and examine. Very Bespectf ally, L. IBerwanger & Bro., LEADING FASHIONABLE CLOTHIERS AND TAILORS. 0 0 1. u. 0 O a as O 00 cS I be 66 a s 2sfl S 0 0 CO 0 G - 5: t- C u V 1 W U .77 a a 08 1 B I U , a n a " O 2 5 o D g JS o T o 0 f 5 n a as a CO s a D a o C3 CO CO C3 a a O O B, i m r- r1 a n " 7 O" at. 9 u 2 ca 0 as o M co m as s u o CO O o a I NOW The LARGEST arid EVER BROUGHT FUILN ; : WHICH T INTEND TO SELL AT BOITO All txr& in vited "to; cl nd see my goods and sauwxt ,n- -uii. iearnrthe?price8.;f!,.,. i . VhQ!e3fifp .an; Retail Furniture Dealer, 1882. AND 1883. :o: 95 O H P O O e js O L3 ; W H o s ft a or? CO CO w S3 HAVE Prettiest Stock of TO THIS MARKET, GO h Pi GO II

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