Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Oct. 8, 1882, edition 1 / Page 1
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matin VOL. XXVIII CHARLOTTE, N. 0., SUNDAY OCTOBER 8, 1882. ISO. 4,2 U. ARE MAKING- A 8PECI iLTY OF- ETC., ETC., This Season. WE EAVK A GN IFIGENT STOCK. THIS mm nv Wint CARPETS! :o: :o: 1 OCtS ram d Co., DEALERS IN Boots, Shoes, Hats, Trunks, AND VALISES. The First Shipment -OF ODB- PALIS WINTER STOCK HAS AHBIVKD. PEGRAM & CO. F ol WANT A NICE PAIR OF ladies, fees and Children's Shoes, Of any kind you can get them at PEGRAM & CP'S. IF YOU WANT A Trunk, Valise or Satchel, With all the latest Improvements, go to EGRAM & CO'S.J 1' YOD WISH THK LATEST STYLE IN SILK or CASSMEBE HATS Tou can find It at PEGRAM & CP'S, OUR STOCK OF , GENTS' AND YOUTHS' BOOTS AND SHOES '"selected nh Jgrent care and soon you canflndj QiRam & co's; Carpets, Rugs, Ma exander&Hams. v (Sootis, Iotfting, Sec. To the Ladies ! :o: :o: WE STILL CONTINUE TO BE- For Everyttag in Our Line. Another lot of X3RA.XD la all colors for ' Trimming. A large stock of Ladies' and Mioses Gassamer circulars Just recrlvea In addition to our already large stock or Cloaks, Dolmans, &c, We have received another lot. and can show you the handsomest stock of WRAPd In the South, OursOckof Ladies', Misses, Gents' and Misses UNDERWEAR Islmrmns To'i are cordially Invited to insp' ct our stock. Very respectfully, T. L. SEIGLE & CO. brt8 Ixlefltcal. Diphtheria. A cold or sore throat may not seem to tmount to much, and If promptly attended to can easily be cured ; but neglect is often followed by consumption or diphtheria. No medicine has ever been discovered which acts so quickly and surely In such cases as PERRY DAVIS' PAIN KILLER. The prompt use of this invaluable remedy has 6aved thousands of lives. PERRY DAVIS' PAIX KILLER 13 not an experiment. It has been before the public for forty years, and la most valued where it Is best known. A ferr -ztracts from voluntary testimonials read a- Mows : Pain Killer has been my household remedy for colds for the past twenty-seven years, and have never known it to fail in effecting a cure. L. 8. Crocker, Williamsville, N. Y. For thirty years I have used Pats Killer, and round it a never-failing remedy for colds and sore throat Barton Seaman. Have received immediate relief from colds and lore throat, and consider your Pain Killer an invaluable remedy. Geo. B. Everett, Dickinson, I. "a ve just recovered from a very severe cold, which I have had for some time. I could et no re hef until I tried your Pain Killer, which relieved me Immediately. I will never again be without it C. O. Force, Lowndes, Ga. Have used Pain Killer in my family for forty t?' nave never known it to fail. Ransom Lewis, Waynesboro, Ga, I bejran using Pain Killer in my family twenty, live years ago and have.used it ever since, and have round no medicine to take its place. B. v. Dyeb, Druggist, Oneida, N. Y. ' For whooping-cough and croup it is the. best preparation made. We would not be without it A. P. Routs, Liberty Mills, Va. For twenty-nve years I have need PainKilleb ror colds and chapied lips, and consider it the best medicine ever offered. Geo.Hoopeb, Wilmington, I was suffering severely with bronchitis, and my tnroat was so inflamed I could scarcely swallow any food. I was advised to try your Pain Killer, and after taking a few doses was completely cured. T. Wilkinbon. Dr. Walton writes from Coshocton : Your Pain Killer cures diphtheria and sore throat, so alarm ingly prevalent here, and has not been known to fail in a single instance. This fact you should make known to the world. Mrs. Ellen B. Mason writes: My eon was taken violently sick with diphtheria, high fever, and cold chills. So many children have died here, I waa afraid to eall a physician, and tried your Pain Killer. He was taken on "(JupdajY and on Wednesday tig throat was clear, it TW won derful cure, and I wish it could be; bnowp to the poor mothers who are losing so mitny crtfldren. For Chills and Fever PAIN KILLER has no equal. It cures when everything else falls. Delays are often dangerous. A bottle of Pain Killer 4n the house is a safeguard that no family should be without. All druggists sell It at 3cM 50c, and $1.00 per bottle. PERRY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, Providence, R. I. eptdfcwseptAoct The Central Hotel -"'res? H. C. ECCLES, PROPRIETOR. CHARLOTTE, N. C. THIS Hotel was completed In 1872, and new additions made In 1875, "THE CENTRiL" is situated on Independent Square, occupying half a block on Trade street, in the business cen tre of the City, in c'ose proximity to Banks. Ex press and Telegraph offices, and commanding a mountain view of more than fifty miles. The lntentloo of the Proprietor Is, not only to present to the traveling public one of the finest Hotel Buildings In the 8outh, but one of the most complete and best conducted Hotels In all its dif ferent departments. Having recently been decorated and frescoed throughout, It Is not only one of the most beauti ful, but the LEADING AND PALACE HOTEL of the 8outh. the home of Commercial Tourists, pleasure seekers and resident guests. H a ECCLES, Proprietor, will be pleased to we'eome his friends and the traveling public, and respectfully solicits a share of patronage from all who would enjoy and appreciate a home combin ing elegance, beauty and comfort In all les ap pointments and surroundings. BATES $2.00 and $2 50, per day, according to location. septa WHEELER & WILSON'S NEW NO. 8. Lightest Banning and Best Sewing Machine In the World. Try It before buying any other. AGENTS WANTED, Send for Terms and Price List 3cl Wheeler Sc Wilann iraajmfttctur'g; Co., RICHMOND. VA. D. G. MAXWELL, Agnt, Charlotte, N. C. may 11 Something Entirely New. JUST BECEITED, tne Nobbiest Lamps In the city, for retail cheap, at WINDER'S - Drag Store, corner Trade and College sts. tar" Call and see Them. sept 1 HEADQUARTERS VANCE IN MARYLAND. HE TELLS WHAT HE KNOWS ABOUT FARMING. His Views on the Resources and the Agriculture of the United States, and His Tribute to the Uprightness and Unselfishness of Farmers. Baltimore Sun. About eight thousand people attend ed the Baltimore county fair, at Tim onton. Thursday. The main feature was the delivery of an address by Hon Zeb. B. Vance, of North Carolina, who spoke in front of the grand stand which was crowded. Senator Yance was accompanied by Mr. Saml. Brady president of the society; Messrs. A. S, Abell. Robert Moore, Gen. Bradley T Johnson, S. M. Shoemaker and Colone Daniel Jenifer, comprising the commit tee of reception. The speaker was in troduced by Mr. Brady, and was re ceived with applause. ADDRESS BY SENATOR VANCE. Senator Vance said : "Mr. President and Gentlemen- Tin : a. - a i vvuynis mat agricultural societies generally have lawyers and politicians to address them is something 1 cannot exacuy comprenena. un the supposi tion that they desire to be instructed in cue mysteries or. their art, it would seem as ludicrous as to ask a plowboy to lecture on the relics of the stone age or Jay Hubbell to vindicate civil ser vice reform. On the theory that you gentlemen desire to amuse your- seivea uy an exniouion or our utter is norance of agricultural topics, I could indeed, see some little light, but even men, as in mis case, you run the risk 01 a disappointment, tor I do not in tend to toucn so much as a corner of the end wrucn enshrouds the arena of your prolession. JNo man here shal learn trom me the secret of growing Deets, or even the best time to cut eld ers, l have generally found that the best way to raise anything was in an other man s held, giving him all the work and all the glory, whilst I remain content with the usual proof of the pudding. Laughter. But in the course of my life I have observed some things (.aiways iroiii tne outsioe oi tne fence) or a poiiuco-agricuiturai nature, to which jou are abundantly welcome. Laughter and applause I will give mem to you as orieny as possible. In every conceivable form of suuerstruc ture, whether physical, social or politi cal, mere is noming so important to be considered as the foundation. As no material structure can be either safe or durable unless erected upon a hrm base, so it is equally true tht no form of government and no institution of soci ety can be prosperous and permanent unless rounded upon some granitic principles of everlasting truth. Politi cal parties based upon some falsehood or some element of dishonor are neces sarily full of unsteadiness, and sooner or later perish for want of truth. Ag riculture, as it is the oldest, so it is the most important of all the arts. Not only are all the others built upon it.but hum in existence itself is absolutely dependent thereon. It contains the se cret by' which we extract substance from nature. The brute world simply harvests the spontaneous supplies of the earth ; they toil not, neither do they spin, but man both sows and reaps, forcing mother nature to yield her truits where she has sown none, aud to renew ner powers when overtaxed. Not only so.but by diligence and knowl edge of her processes he increases her production an hundredfold. But for this, long years ago the natural pro ducts of the earth would have become insufficient to the support of the ani mal life upon its surface. Indeed, one of the great questions, if not the great question of our not distant posterity will have to meet and solve, is this same one, to-wit: Will the genius of man be able so to increase and apply the capacities of nature that the ever growing number of the inhabitants of our planet shall be fed, clothed and housed? At present there is still room on the earth, and remedy for surplus population is colonization in new lands. But the arts of civilization have so prolonged the years of a generation, and so promoted the rapid increase of our species that the habitable portions of the world will soon be filled, and colonization will no longer be a reme dy. The chief dependence will then be upon the increased resources of agri culture. Will they keep pace with the thronging multitudes that crowd upon her footsteps ? Will the fertility of the earth by any means within the reach of genius be able to multiply in propor tion to the demands made upon it? "At first blush these questions would seem to be very far-fetcbed in the mind of an American, whose country is pos sessed of so many united millions of thinly-populated or altogether uninhab ited acres. But when we remember that our country is now the general re fuge for all the overflowed countries of the world, whose people are coming in constantly-increasing numbers, we can not avoid the conclusion that soon ours, too, will be an overpeopled land. Un doubtedly our first interest as a people is agriculture. Eighty-three per cent, of our exports is the product of our fields and forests. By common consent we are assigned to the keeping of the granary of the world. Take our situa tion all in all there is no land upon the earth that can compare with us in the production of human food. No coun try subject to our control possesses such immeasurable facilities for its pro duction. This year (1882) we have grown the enormous amount of 1,800, 000,000 bushels Indian corn, 600,000,000 bushels of wheat and 500,000,000 bush els of oats, and at least 100,000,000 bush els of rye, barley and buckwheat, making together 3,000,000,000 bushels of the cereals. This would give for bread two bushels for each inhabitant of the globe. This estimate takes no notice of rice, sugar and the boundless yield of root crops, nor of the product of ani mal culture, which are in great propor tion. In order to realize the vastness of these productions it is only neces sary to say that our wheat crop is more than half of that of the whole of Eu rope in 1880. "Now, remembering the vast uncul tivated area and allowing for the iin rjroved methods of cult'vation for which our country has become distin guished, and the intelligent observer may form some conception of what this land is capable ot providing for the sus tenance and comfort of our race. The bread depots of ihe world, ancient and modern, were and are small and insig nificant in comparison. From the fact that the compilation of statistics was unknown to the ancients we can only judge of their productions by the char acter of their cultivation and the amount of their cultivable lands. It would seem that the boasted produc tion of Egypt was only famous when compared with that of its neighbors in the then existing world ; when con trasted with modern production it is contemptible. Its yield of wheat at the present day is less than eight millions of bushels. Fifteen States of this Union each exceed that amount, in cluding Maryland, whilst Illinois and Indiana each exceed it six times over. It had only 17,000 square miles of ara ble land, yet the Romans looked princi pally to it to help out the deficient Italy. As for Russia, now regarded as the great depot f of wheat in Europe, it is enough to say that the amount she grows is exceeded by France, and we will report this year more than her whole crop. We are therefore entitled to have our country styled the granary of the world. Strange to say, the own ers of this great expanse of fertile lands and the producers of all this wealth on which the world depends are the victims and the prey of all 0th classes of society. The consideration given them and the influence exercised by them are by no means proportioned to their numbers, intelligence of useful ness. It is a remarkable fact that the remuneration of the farmer and the farm laborer is smaller than that of any other grade in human industry. In all lands it is honorable to plow, but everywhere all other men are better paid than the plowman. All men who handle the plowman's products get rich faster than he does in making them. The commission merchant, the carrier, and the distributing factor far outstep him in the race for wealth. Their pal aces are built and obtained from his labor, and the great monopolies fatten upon the sweat of his face. The farm laborer who works in the sun receives on the average 50 cents per day, whilst the man who lifts his grain on ship board or into the warehouse, receives S2 per day. The man who feetJs our bod ies receives about one-half that is paid to him who clothes or adorns them. He who furnishes U3 with the necessa ries of life is infinitely worse paid than he who furnishes us the luxuries. The inequality does not stop here. It has become the custom to shift on- his shoulders all the heavy burdens which he can be made to bear. It is a receiv ed doctrine with a large portion of the world that those who manufacture clothing, implements, &c, are justified in levying taxes most grievous and un just upon those who manufacture food They are made the beasts of burden of society. Instead ot additional honor there is a positive penalty imposed un on the growing of a bushel of wheat or ear of corn. Disguise or sugarcoat it as you may it comes to this that the bread giver is under the ban. People affect to iavor mm, out in truth they use and plunder him. let the value of this class is almost equally great in the maintenance ot our political institu tions as to the feeding of our bodies The very nature of their business tends to make them conservative and inde pendent. Ihey constitute the safest repository of the theories of freedom the securest ot wardens of laws and order. No strikes, no communism, no rioungs or incendiary burnings can arise or continue among the homes of the farmers. Sudden changes in church or btate, and all experiments, new or startling, have small chance with them It is well worth the while of our be.M thinkers to inquire why things are thus with the man of the fields, and why it is ins importance is not more esteemed There is something wrong in the const! tution ot our society. Where is it, and what is it? Is it in our lpislMtinn v In part it undoubtedly is: though, after an, wuii us legislation but tollows pub ..11 .:u. i. - i . . lic opinion, rubiic opinion must there fore be corrected. "To the farmers of America, there fore, I say you can shape this opinion and mold this legislation. You are in avast majority. The free landholders of this country can do anything they cnoose to uo. ine remedy is in your own nanus, i o be led as you are by , 1. ...111... 3 t .1 . J tne snmn nanoiui or other classes re minds me much ot a great and noble horse made to perform with docility the will of a little child. You know not your own power. You should re member that the benefits derived from mat principle ot political economv A. , . 1 1 1 ' - n i " tei meu ine uivision or tapor are con fined exclusively to the art of pioduc- tion. ihe division of knowledge is quite another thing indeed. If you con fine your knowledge to those things pertaining to your art alone you are at the mercy of others. The agriculturist must look beyond his fields if he would hold his own. He must acquaint him self with the methods of trade, with the changing conditions of production in lands, and with the fluctuating in fluences which control the markets of the world. Agriculturists must eman cipate themselves by education, by or ganization, oy combination. They will have this to do if they are to hold their own and reap the fruits of their own abor. Ihe manufacturers promote their interests by close and effective association, the banks combine offen sively and defensively, the railroads pool against their customers and smothercompetition.and the merchants keep the best talent of their profession in organized boards constantly on tha outlook for the interests of trade. In truth, the tendency of the age i3 to the concentration of wealth, power and business control in the hands of a few, and to systematize all departments of affairs under great central heads. The agricultural classes must combine also to meet and defeat this state of things both for their own protection and for the public good. As they now consti- ute the chief conservative element in our politics, so they must act in trade. The only successful way to fihgt the evils of centralization over any one department is to organize in like manner a rival department. When capital becomes sufficiently powerful to successfully conspire aerainst the aws of political economy, the monopo ly can only be destroyed and the bles sings of competition restored by coun ter combinations. The farmers of ev ery county in the United States should have a local board of intelligence, and every State a chamber of agriculture, composed of their ablest and most ac- lve men. There is another matter to which the attention of farmers might well be called. Much of the class legislation of Congress and the States is procured bv that kind ot importunate solicita tion called lobbying. Disreputable as it often is, and disagreeable as it al ways is, it is yet so effective that all those interesting classes who desire some legal advantages over their neigh bors invariably resort to it, and seldom resort in vain. In all my experience as a legislator I believe I have never yet met a man fresh from the fields in the obbies with a bill or project in behalf of his class. It would be a rarity in deed to see in Washington a single del egation of farmers or farm laborers to protest against taxation which robs both of half of their earnings, while you can see twenty such any day from the beneficiaries of that legislation, urging, arguing, importuning, and by a hundred questionable methods promo ting their schemes of plunder. They thus suffer the cause of agriculture to be judged or affected without a hear ing. Labor, too, suffers by the same default. It never comes to plead for itself, and there is always a grim hu mor about the idea of his employer beg ging Congress for permission to pay the laborer higher wages. When men demand nothiug the world presumes they want nothing; when men make no complaint, it is natural to suppose they are satisfied. It is just as natural for legislators to grant the requests of those who are constantly clamoring. Not that I would be understood as say ing farmers never complain. The truth is they complain more than any people on earth. They are forever growling, but they do not growl in the right way or on the right questions. They do not crystalize their grievances into politi cal action, but let them all evaporate in mutterings. "Nevertheless, with all my soul I honor these men of the field ; with all my heart I love them. Of all the sons of men they live nearest to nature, nearest to God, and in most direct de pendence upon His beneficence and wisdom. I cannot help the belief that in consequence of this they are more upright, unselfish and better men than any other class." Pony, weak and slcklr children, need Brown's Iron Bitters. It will strengthen and invigorate them, DARBYS PROPHYLACTIC FLUID. A Household Article for Universal xainuy Lse. For Scarlet and Typhoid Fevers, Diphtheria, SaU vation, Ulcerated Sore Throat, Small Eradicates MALARIA. Pox, Measles, and T ""-S"" inseases. 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 wurst cases of Diphtheria yield to it. ll r i . . . I" ever ed and Sick Per SMALL-POX and PITTING of Small Pox PREVENTED A member of my fam ily was taken with Small-pox. I used the . .u. sons refreshed and Bed Sores prevent ed by bathing with Darbys Fluid. Impure Air made harmless and pVrified. For Sore Throat it is a sure cure. , uic yuueiu was Contagion destroyed ! n?' delirious, was not For Frosted Feet! ' Pittecl. and was about sure cure. Uhtlblains, Piles, Lne nouse again in three weeks, and no others had it I V T.,. 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. Burnsrelievedinstantly. hears prevented. Dysentery 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. (xnson, Philadelphia. The physicians here use Darbys Fluid very successfully in the treat ment of Diphtheria. A. Stollenwerck, Greensboro, Ala. Tetter dried up. Cholera prevented. Ulcers purified and healed. In cases of Death it should be used about the corrtse 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 Fever Cured. !t Tl fl fT-11 T t 1rnimr-Ll lkTn .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. Lupton, Prof. Chemistry. Darbys Fluid is Recommended by Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia StXvf;- DEEMS' D-D-' CHUrCh f the Jos. LeConte, Columbia, Prof.,University,S.C. kev. A. J. Battle, Prof., Mercer University; Rev. Geo. F. Pierce, Bishop M. E. Church LNDISPENSABLE TO EVERY HOME. Perfectly harmless. Used internally or -n. r, "raally fr Man or Beast. Phe 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. ZEILIN & CO., Manufacturing Chemists, PHILADELPHIA. While other Baking Powders are largely adulterated with Alum and other hurtful drugs, has been kept unchanged in all its original purity and strength. The best evidence of its safety and effectiveness is the fact of its having received the highest testimoni als from the most eminent chemists in the United States, who have analyzed it, from its introduction to the present time. No other powders show so good results by the true test the TEST OF THE OVEN. ' IT IS A PURE FRUIT ACID BAKING POVWER -MADE BY- STEELE & PRICE, Chicago, HI., and St. Louis, Mo., Bunfsetnrers of Lupolln Teut Gem, nr. Prlee'a Special FUkTorlof Extracts, and Dr. Price's Unique Ferfuiea. A NEW HOTEL All Modern Improvements. STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS. Scoviile Bros., Prop's. iar- Also Proprietors Kimball House, Atlanta, Ga. ; Duval House, Jacksonville, Fla. ; the Arling ton and Norvell House, Lynchburg, Va. sept6 tr SULPHURATED COLD ORES. WE WILL BUY ANY QUAN TIT Y OF SULPHURET ORES FOR CASH AT FIXED SCHEIULE PRICKS. ASSAYS AVEBAGB SAMPLES. PAICE LIST ON APPLICATION. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. SOUTHERN ORE CO., P, O. Box No. 352, WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA. Sept25 d&w lm ,ma" Diphtheria Prevented. H1K -.i:- TK have on exhibition one of the Handsomest Stocks of e.or slio.vn In this c'ty In o-r Silk JVp-irtment v.iii be found all llw new sh-vl'- .-.n n-ivilles in Plain k- l Bnc l,- fT 'cts. i'u Ottoman', Mervelienux. hhoduias. Surlis. Sa'ins a'ld :rn (iin'.n Hlk.Bro-ai'il -irnl Polka Dot Cash meres and Satlnes. Striped and B.oca. ed Silk Velvets, 1'iuslu .. Velvets and Velveteens In all the new shades. Press F!a:i:a-ls, Suit ngs. K- ; n.t.s, Cloaking. :. Don't fall to sec our French Novelties in Dr Patterns from $20 to $." e , i Also, by fie piece from $.2o to 5J pjr yard. Bomber we stl'.l have on h it.ds about 2.500 yarn of that 24 Inch Casli iiere at 122, and 3,000 yards of the rouble fold 27-lnch Cash nere at liic.that Ins been so popuHr wlili us this jeason. V7e have all the bhades In this line Including black Call early as they are going fast. A beautiful line of Clclllan Djlmms and Clrc ilars. AIsj a lrg. stock of Palatoe3, Ulsters, Cloaks and Jackets, Clothi ;g, Hats, Cap j, Bjots, Shoes, Trunks and Valises. "Pearl Shirts," Gents' and Ladies' handmade Shoos. A call will convlncj you that wa are Headquarters in Our Line. Orders Solicited. smith: builzdito-, HARGRAVES BBRWANGER k BRO.. u. Leading Clothiers and Tailors. New Goods! Correct Styles! Closest Prices! -: o : Oar Patrons: The People. Our Study: Their Interest. Our Maxim: Fair Dealing. OUR REWARD: SUCCESS. WE Manufacture our own Men's Clothing, and therefore can sell at much lower prices than any other house can offer the same Uoods. We are now prepared to offer the largest ana best assort ed stcc of KEADY-MADE C5IIOBi3?IHEJIErCS In this section CUil Furnishing Goods Department comprise the latest out, and we are confident that for beauty and novelty will compare with any In the South. The last but not least, our Hat Depart ment, consists of only the latest out, and finest thst could be tound In the market. We have taken special pride this season to secure such Roods that cannot be found elsewhere. Our prices In each and every department are Invariably bottom figures, and every article sold with our guarantee Thanking the public kindly for past favors, and soliciting a share of your trade In the future, we are Very Respectfully, Ti. Borwangor 3 33ro., octl Leading Ciothlers and Tailors. o CO Or o o rt- O 02 o Xfl e-f-O 02 to CO c-t- m w o o p- 02 p 3 3! I 5 X S c 3 c a 9? o CO m Z o oc B c tt -I CO O 9"? If hi 3 SZ- O o 00 C g o fs mET 51' 3 s 02 CD O hT. i-j 02 O CD - o CD CT n Hri 0 R CO CD to s - s 2E o ST p ST a O r co O C0 wo ij to se' p SsrZI s-5 ft. r . Cd CD &j cDrjq C . CD 02 CD I i-J - y o t-l Cti 2 3 o p a m u I NOW HAVE The LARGEST and Prettiest Stock of FUKNITUKE EVER BROUGHT TO THIS MARKET, WHICH I INTEND TO SELL AT BOTTOM All are invited to call and see my goods and learn the Prices. E. M. ANDREWS, Wholesale and Retail Furniture Dealer & W1L II ELM. : o : 3 tr1 w L 1 J O f H W d m H o 5- a H 0 CO o C-rl rn to to 3 t5 CL , 0 H Q 0 cc s cr.o. 3 O W MOW 3 to Dl- rr. 2t S - H to c o CO toOtOM - 2 o o Z a s to -M H to PRICES. M ! Vii' f S3 I 1 II i ti am MM n (IV ! II
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 8, 1882, edition 1
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