Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Jan. 21, 1883, edition 1 / Page 1
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- . ,. 1 "-- 'J t M WW n i n i i in -rfv -"yoiTxXlX.- CHARLOTTE, N. C. SUNDAY JANUARY 21. 1883. NO. 4,298 - " i i i i . i- ALL PERSONS ir NW N WD " R BBB TTTT EEB DDD I NNNDDE BBTBDD nNNN T D.EK BBB T EB D D I N N N D D B BB T D D i N NH DDD ERR BBB T BBB DDD TO Pegram &Co., Bv'Me or AcwodI, W-I-L-L P-L-E-A-S-E aodSettle. Fan ths- MONEY BECAUSE WE Need and Want It. ?& Co. Jaall A COMMON-SENSE BEMEDY. SALICYLICA. No more. HhewuiKtWni, Coal or Neuralgia. IMMEDIATE BELIEF WARRANTED. PERMANENT CUBS GUARANTEED. Fire years established and never known to fall la a single case, acute or chronic. Refer to all j omlnent phslclans and dru&lxls for the stand ing of saolcjdica. 8BCRBT: The only dlssolver of the Poisonous Utlc Acid which exists in the Blood or Rheumatic and Qoutj Patients. 8ALICILICA Is known a common sense remedy, b cium It strides directly at the cause of Rheumatism, Gout and Heuralg'a, whi e so many svcailed specifics and supposed panaceas only treat locally the effects. It has been conceded by emlnert scientists that outward applications sucn as nibbing with oils, olntmnts, ltn ments, and soothing lotions will iiot ertid cate these dlsensee which are the resu t of the poisoning of the blood with Uric Acid BaLICYUc a woiks with marvelous effect on th g acid and so removes the disorder. It Is now exclusively used by all eelebnted physicians of A n erica and Europe. Highest Medical Academy of Pi-rls reports 95 per cent cures In three days. UETIEnBf'R that 8 ALP T LIC A Is a certain cure for Rheu ma tism, eout and Neuralgia. The most intense pains are subdued almost Instantly. 1 Give It atrial. Relief guarantee d or money re funded. Thousands of testimonials sent on application. ft I,, BOX. ,6 BOXES for $5. Eent free by mall on receipt of money. .ASK TOUR DR GGI3T FOR IT. But do net be deluded into taking Imitations or substitutes, or .someihii g recommended as "Just "Wfr'Inslst on the genuine with the name of wabHBURNE A CO., on each box, which is guar anteed chemically purn under our signature, an Indlspenrtbie requisite to Insure auceuss In the' treatment. Take no other, orsnd to w WA8HBUBNE k CO., Proprlftors. .287 Broadway, cor Reade St., New York. noyjg flaw ir LOG ROLLING. .-..,-. . while Wrewtllos; wiik agft'aWlen Tree . liDMkurmsn Mecclvw C.u- ulle on a hontmg excursion in the gr-at coal and woc ti gtQn near Carbondale, Pa., the wrtier met William troll, a lumberman. Accustomed to life and labor In the forest from early manhood, he wis a true Xulght of the Axe. Many a tree bad falUnhtfore his rli glng stokes, andfldelsof faf ts had ne away to market the sawed products is a racier, and if Ocar Wilde la right In sajtrgtbat all movements In unhindered labor we graceful, our filend William, stripped for his orlt, and attacking a tree a Richard I. assault' d heavy doors of Trent de Bceai's Castle, mutt h e presented an admirable plcii-e. "Oneday. bowtver.-butlet him tell the story nlraself , as he told It to me : ' I was out la the woods, you know, . trying to tart a log down a hl.L Thinking I could get a tetter a purchase on It from the lower aide, I Jfckled it there with my log rolling hook and wew my weight on thejever. She tarted, she "W. but at lock would have It, before I could get Wtottho waJV A9 mm rlgnt OTer m9 H jf J4 !'t eeo er a lot of J small bs and brash "D8 ln the road, which Ufte4 bar up,, she'd a rned me fl at As tt waa J got op without a n bone, but with ome plghtj ba4 brutoea. then you werajUl right," said hU auditor. not by a blamed sight, atranger. I took cold, Wh- K,MB0U PtlBTKltaand wed other l1 latoh I ahonld nereThaTi Aiade an wcnip a,, Bot tB CaeIl6 took hokl aulok, "lood.aa new.: Pufjhere'a- one ithta?K "ateonIahall BeTer wraaae th lZ. 101 XU1 I tare tha advantage of the .T uea WtoX w' told TOU beOtfe it hadnt W J bra,lM Td been tnashed to, you Wtv 1 rheamatlstaW ib10mmD'i Wtword CAPCLHEU v i ,r 01 Senuine. ' Prtaj 251 f ; cmrwiUfirewTorki WE ABE JDST THROOGH TAKING STOCK, - AND fiATB MARKED DOWN 8XVSBAL Ln S8 OP SEASONABLE GOODS, And for the next 80 days we will ( ffer Splendid Bargains io Dress Goods, TRIMMINGS, &C, OT If you want a BARGAIN ln a LADIES' WBAP. we have a few that will be closed out at remaiknb'y low figures. Give us a call and we will convince you that we are i fferlng tiOOD BARGAINS. Respectfully, T. I, Seigle & Co. Jam7 "aw OiTHK- WORTH OK WATCBES, SILVER and PLATED WARE TO BE SOLD - WITBOCr REGARD TO COST, -AT- J. T. Butler s Jewelry Store. dec 16 TUTTS ETPCTORAHT Is compos. d of Herbal and Mucilaginous prod ucts, whicli permeate the substance of the Iitwgg, expectorates the acrid matter that collects ia the Bronchial Tubes, an& forms a soothing coating, which relieves the ir ritation that causes the cough. It cleanses the lungs of all Impurities, strengthens them when enfeebled by disease, mvigor n tea the circulation of the blood, and braces the nervous system. Slight colds often end in consumption. It is dangerous to neglect them. Apply the remedy promptly A test of twenty years warrants the assertion that no remedy has ever been found that la a a prompt in its effects as TUTT'S EXPECTORANT. A single dose raises the phlegm, subdui Inflammation, aad its use speedily cures the mo t obstinate cough. A pleasant cordial, chil dren take it readily. For Croup it is invaluable Rnrt should be in every family. In 25c. atfg f Bof flea. TUTTS sf Hast Ha ACT DIRECTLY ON TKELiVEt Cures Chills and Fever, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Bilious Colic, Constipa tion, Rheumatism, Files, Palpitation or the Ileart, Dizziness, Torpid JLiver, and Female Irregularities. If you do not ".ftt l very well," a single pill stimulates the stomach, restores the appetite, imparts vigor to the system. A fJOTED DIVINE. SAYS! DiuTott: Dear Sirt For ten years I have been a martyr to Dyspepsia, Constipation and Viles. Lost springy our pills were recommended to me ; I used them (but 'with little faith). I am now a well man, have good appetite, digestion perfect, regular stools, piUs gone, and I liaro f ained forty pounds solid flesh. They arc ttoi th heir freight in gold. ' 1 REV. R.Xi. BrMPSOir, LcuisTille, Ky. g Office. 35 Murray St., Wew Tork. I I TTJTT'S MANCiL of I seful Receipts I'" II EE on application. ROCKBRIDGE, VA., ALUM WATER, jOR more than half a century bas grown steadl J? ly ln reoute as a medicinal agent In a wide range of Chror.lc diseases. Multitudes of women can testify to Its unsurpassed efficacy ln the re lef and cure of those ailments peculiar to their sex. D8PEPdIA In its varied and most distressing forma Is cured. CHRONIC, BRONCHITIS, SCROFULA, -CHRONIC DIARRHOEA AMD DYSENTERY. yield most rapidly, and permanent cures result Bottled In lta - natural statey direct from . th Springs, which are beautifully located ln Bock bridge county, Va.,and are open for the reception of fullore. from June 1st to October 1st, each year; capacity, 1,000 guests. . - For sale, wholesale nd retail, by Dr. J H. Mc ADEN and Dr. T. C. SMITH, Charlotte. N C. JSmarl2 t DDBBIHS' S1ARCH POLISH, An important dis covery, by whicl every family 'mat .M. --- - - -' 9 X 'give their. Iineu ' .i ' -rthat beautiful fin- I i -V. tsu peculiar to nne laundry work i Ask your Grofcerv J.: & &OBBXNS, Phlladeiphia, Pai ' roU siLE nt j. a; spencei & go and FIELDS BROS,, Charlotte; Ti ' 15,000 ocks, J ewelry, Ml. n a . . f SOUIHERN COTTON MaNUFAC TUBE. What President Hanson Has to Say About the Prospeets and Accomplish ments of Southern Work. Atlanta Constitution. We had a pleasant call on yesterday from Mr J F Hanson, manager of the Bibb manufacturing company, and of the Macon Telegraph and Messenger. Mr Hanson has just been elected pres ident of the "(Southern Cotton Manu facturer's Association" a deserved compliment from a convention in which he was a pioneer, to one of the most intelligent and successful of our Southern manufacturers. Few men are so well equipped for a discussion of industrial or economic questions as Mr Hanson, and no man has given more earnest or painstaking study to the subjects on which he speaks. A strong thinker, a man of positive con victions, a direct and straightforward talker.be seldom says anything with out having something to say, a charac teristic as commendable as it is rare. We cannot do better for our readers than to reproduce the substance of what he said on points of public inter est. Touching the circular issued by the executive committee of which Mr Han son Is the head, we expressed surprise at the assertion contained therein that cotton spinning in the South was on a decline. Mr. Hanson said: "That proposition is based on facts. Oar mills in Macon , make as good a showing as any and yet my books show that we cleared $22,000 less last year than the year before, although we had $150,000 more invested in machinery than in 1881. We cleared $72,000 on our capital of $425,000 in 1881 and only $50,000 in 1882. Something of this may be due to the fact that cotton was un usually high and yarns unusually low that year, but more was due to other causes causes that will operate every year and deepen in effect until they are remedied." A DISORGANIZED BATCH OF MILLS. "What are these causes ?"' "In the first place, we have built too many mills in the South in the last few years. Inspired by the flittering esti mates of what Southern mills were do ing and could do told that we had an advantage of about two cents a pound over New England juills and led to be lieve that cotton machinery, set up anywhere and run by anybody in al most any sort of way, would pay big profit, we have had a number of milis built without calculation and operated without judgment. Many mills were put up in a loose and unworkmaulike manner, and then given to a farmer or merchant or professional man to man age. The result has been damaging to the mills themselves, and to Southern mills in general." "The South has an advantage over the North in manufacturing?" "Yes ; bnt nothing like what has been claimed. The advantage we have is just the difference in the price of cotton in Macon and in Boston, which is about one cent. We get labor cheaper than the New Englanders can, but they get better labor. So that oh the labor ques tion one advantage balances the other. This leaves us as our only margin the difference in the price of cotton. A gainst this margin the New England spinners bring the very best busiuess training fifty years of experience the m st ac curate system of business perfect or ganizationa thorough understanding of the cotton market in which they buy and of the goods market in which they sell, and of the general laws of trade and finance buildings and machinery that stand as the perfection of three generations, Dunaing ana operating ie mill against another. You can easil see how competing milia III South built withoul exlJbllenee or" model, epuipped by whatever machinery an agent offers at the lo wt st prices, run by men who have been trained as farmers or lawers or merchants, buving cottoi without judgment and selling good1 without knowing anything of the mar kets, and each jnill working in igno ance of what other mills are domg, an setting usown price on yarns or cloth how easily, I say mills can eat up tha vantage margin of one cent per pound and the New England margin of profit and come out witli a loss beside. The truth is, many of our mills have run at a loss, when they might have made money." THE REMEDY THAT IS PROPOSED. "What remedy do you propose?" "In the first place, that we get down to bottom facta. We have been run ning too long on the inspiration of fan ciful profits and advantages. John Stuart Mills eays that political economy is deductions from assumptions rather than tacis. Maoy of the cotton spin ning mills in the South have been run on the same basis. They have been able to continue because of the general good times. They could not stand a panic or the depression that follows a panic. It ia important, therefore, that we should take our bearings, in times of prosperity, at;d prepare for whatever may be ahead of us. "In the second place there is strength in organizations always. I am satisfied that if the mills of the South had shut down six weeks lust summer or run on half time, for three months, we could have commanded a half cent per pound mwre on our product. Yet each mill went ahead on its own hook, pouring its products into the markets already glutted, simply because there was rn organization and no possibility of con certed action. You remember how the English spinners rallied to each other last year against the cotton speculators. They could have shut down every mill in England if they had desired." As it is, they frequently buy two years supply of cotton in one season and carry it ovei. A buyer may lose a cent a pound by buying cotton unwisely. In the third place, the cotton spin ners of the South lose very heavily by incompetent or dishonest sales-agent. In the call for our convention we urged each raemtjer to bring his account siles for the year. I found that I had re ceived, as the figures showed, a cent a pound more for my yarns than three fourths of the members bad received, and more than almost any member. I am sure that with sufficient capital I could open an office in New York and take the product of the mills of the Southand realize a cent a pound more than they get, if I controlled the pro duct of all the mills. Let me show you how it works... .A company organizes to build a mill, and puts a good old farmer at the head of it. The moment he buys his machinery, the fact is an nounced in the textile papers. At once agents who want to control the sale of the products of the ipill begin writing t him. They send a sample of yarn that they say they can get a certain price for. ; The new manager closes with one of them and sends on his goods. The agent sends word that his yarn is not up to sample, and that yarn just as good as his is offered for a cent less. The mill man tells him to sell at a cent less. He then writes he can't sell without a half cent discount, and the mill-man submits;. He neverstudies the market and knows nothing of it. Frequently the agent is honest in all this. Havig no good custtmers of his own he is forced to catch; another agent's customers; by cutting prices,. This forces the men who are selling these other customers to cut, and so it goes. I claim no superior ability and I have no superior advantages, and yet my account-sales showed that I got an average of a cent a pound more for yarns than three-fourths of the' mill men present yesterday. - -f ; J : -In the next place, by getting together and comparing notes each of us learned something. There were many : mill men in attenaance wno say they can save a half cent on each pound of yarn thny make by practical information on mill management received yesterday, and many more who will average a half-cent to a cent more for every pound of yarn they sell. Each man helr.s the other organization helpffus all." THE FUTURE OF SOUTHERN COTTON SPINNING. You hope for better results in the future?" "Yes. As I said we have a fa.;r aa. vantage in the South of a cent a pound. If we preserve this advantage by or ganization, by accuracy of calculation in building and management, by selling carefully and bj working together we can build up a great and prosperous industry that can run and make money when New England mills will have to shut down or run at a los3. But if we run on in a haphazard way, at the mercy of the markets, we will continue to lose ground as we are now doing. A mill inefficiently managed in a section, is just as damaging to good mills as one irresponsible and reckless merchant is to a business community, or a shyster is to a town bar. While cotton spin ning is a good business when properly managed, it is a very exact business, and the easiest in he world to lose on. I hope for a great deal from our organ ization, but of course everything de pends on the earnestness with which our Southern spinners take hold of it The meh,Whrmitke cotton goods are just as much interested as the spinners are. I need not go into details on this point, but it is time to call a halt in the general cotton manufacturing business in the South, and ascertain precisely where we stand, what we are doing and where we are making mistakes and how they can be corrected. Even those mills that are prosperous may become more prosperous by consultation and co-operation. The New England spin ners have shown us what necessity there is for organization. THE NEED OF EDUCATED LABOR. "Do you not feel the need of educa ted labor?" "Very much. There is not a man in my mills getting three dollrrs a day or more, that is native to the South. All that sort of skilled labor we have to im port from New England. Naturalh, we do not get the best, as New Eng land milla keep the best men there. Out ot all the men in Georgia who get three dollais a day, or upwaids, 1 do not think one in ten is a southerner. We neid a school in the South to train our boys to these things. Why, New England with her hu id reds of mills, and operatives that for generations have been in mills, rinds it necessary to support schools ot technology in order to keep up the supply of tducated la bor." "We need such schools here." "Yes, and we netd to revolutionize the social sentiment on this point. We want to make laboi honorable in every sense of the word. Why, if I advertise to-morrow for a clerk or agent at $50 a month I will have a hundred applica tions in a day. If I offer $3,000 or $5,000 a year for a superintendent of a mill room 1 would have none, except from New England. Now this is not thf fault of the bovs. The young felloes who are anxious to work for $50 a month in a store would be glad to work for $300 a month in a mill, but their fathers, through a false pride or thoughtlessness, have not fitted them for such work. They have felt that it was beneath the dignity of a gentle man's son to go into a factory and take off hiscoat and go to work as an ap pfentice. Consequently the boys grow up and spend anxious-days looking for $50 a month places, while $300 a month places are looking for them." "The lack of youa'men educated in mechanics and having served appren ticeships, is a great drawback to manu jfacturing growth ?" - t w "Certainly, and until we manufac ture more generally we cannot prosper as a btate. Do you know that with all its wealth of soil and opportunity, the only thing that the South sends out to sell for money is a bale of cotton ? The only real source of wealth anywhere is what comes of idleness turned into work. There are to day, in my opinion, 300,000 people in Georgia idle, who could earn fifty ceuts a day if they were at work. This would be $1,000,000 a week created, that is now lost. This million dollars would be spent at home and would build up a home market for the fruits, vegetables, etc., that our far mers now have to sacrifice to freights in search of consumers. With labor made honorable in public estimation, as it is in reality with a school of tech nology turning out young fellows fdu cated to build factories and run them proud of their profession and with nothing else to look to, we should have scores of sruatl industries springing up our mills properly managed our idle population furnished with lucrative woik and general activity and pios pnrity. We all lfcttire our farmers as to what to plant and bow. They do their duty. Now let us do outs by fur nishing him a busy and teeming citi zenry that will buy his produce, near where he raises it, and save him the fieights that would otherwise ear up the results of his labor. We can only 1o this by manufactories. We ran on ly get these by proceeding carefully, by building on facts rather t han assuraij tions, by organization and co operation, by turning the tastpsof our young mep to mechanical pursuits and training them for i and by a tariff that will protect our industries. But excuse me, I believe we don't agree on the tariff and suppose we drop it and take a little walk ?." Mr. J P. Wa'kup. Monri e, N. C.,savF: ' Brown's Iron Bitters cured me of palpltatlou of the hrart, liver complaint and iysprnsla." Ilorfcford'a Acid Phoopliate, For Wakef nine. Dp Wm. P. Clothier, Buffalo, N. Y. Fays: 'I prescribed It for a Catholic priest, who was a hard sudai4. for wKkefulnfss, extreme nervous' ess, eta, and he re tons It has been of great benefit to him." Tnatdbal Fruit Flavors. - SPECIAL EXTRACTS. . Prepared from the choicest Fruits, with out coloring, poisonous oils, acids or artific iaf Essences. Always uniform in strength, without any ; adulterations or impuritie ' Have gained their reputation from theii perfect purky, superior strength and quaU ftp Admitted by all who hare used them as the most delicate, grateful and natural I flavor for. cakes, puddings, creams, etc. r . i., I v MAHTJPAOTUEED BT - STEELE & PRICE, ? ! Chicago, HL and St. Itotds, Mo. . Kates of tapallB TMit ', Br. Aries's Crwa Bsklaf Fawder, u Dr Prlm'i Ealq rartuM. WE MAKE NO SECOND GRADE GOODS HOOH DISPATCHES. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Organizing for Civil War in France. London, Jan. 20. A Paris dispatch says it is perfectly true that Barou De Cbarette aided by M Baudry D'Arsou, member of the chamber of deputies for Laveude, and others, have organized from Fmistore to Tours 32 legions of 1,000 m-n each and ha3 begun to arm them. Six hundred horses, which were purchased as a nucleus for the insur gent cavalry, are stationed at different coataux. The recruits wear a small cross as a rallying sign. It is stated that the conspirators have 15,000,000 francs in bank in London. This is no canard but the result of government enquiry. The police report as certain that Baron DeCharrette harn Paris 1,500 pontifical souvres fully armed. Snow Storms and Cold in the West. Washington, January 20. Heavy snow storms aud intense cold are re ported throughout Minnesota and Iowa. Trains are delayed aird in some cases abandoned. A Georgia Failure. Atlanta, January 20 Huntington & Wright, general store, at Cedartown, assigned yesterday. Liabilities $12,000. Moving the Capit .1. Raleigh News find Observer. Mr. Scott, of New Hanover, Thurs day, introduced the following resolu tion in regard to moving the State cap itol from Raleigh to Wilmington, but the chair ruled that it would require a constitutional amendment. Whereas, The State capitol has been located at the city of Raleigh for the past century, and the side walks are still impassable, and are getting annu ally in a worse condition, and the streets are paved with a lake of mud and water.which renders them an eli gible location for the American bull frog, Therefore be it Resolved. That the capitol of the State of North Carolina be removed from the city of Raleigh to the city of Wilming ton, wheie'tbe side walks are in excel lent condition, the streets respectably paved, where mud is not tolerated, ai d wnere tne oaimy air rrom the o;u At lantic shall restore to perfect h alth the weary and drooping members from the west, who have been daily plodding their weary way to and from Hie Sra'e capitol through oceans of mud. Resolved. That the congratulations of the General Assembly be tendertd to the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of the city of Raleigh, and to the citizens in general, on the fanilitips thpv nne. seas for starting a brick yard on Fay- etteville street; everything being in proper condition and the chay well mixed. Extract of Bepnrt 'ram the Celebrated Physician Erasmus Wilson, of London, England: "MTreral severe cass of Incipient onsumptton have come under my observation; nil have been cured by the time! us of "Co den's Liquid Beef Tonic " (B member the nnme, Colden's ti-ke no other) or Druggists - -- Mothers! Mothers!! Mothers!!! Are you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with the excruciating pain of cutting teeth ? If so. go at once and get a bottle of MBS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING SYBUP. It will relieve the poor little sufferer Immediately depend upon It : there Is no mistake about It There Is not a mother on earth who has ever used it, who will not tell you at once that it will regulate the t-owels, and give rest to the mother, and relief and health to the child, operat ing like magic. It Is perfectly safe to use ln all cases, and pleasant to the taste, and Is the pre scription of one or the oldest and best female physicians and nurses ln the United States. Sold everywhere. 25 cents a bottle. For Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Sick Headache, Chronic Diar rhoea, Jaundice, Imparity of the Blood, Fever and Ague, Malaria, and aU Diseases caused by De rangement of Liver, Bowels and Kidneys. 8YMPTOMS OF A DISEASED LITER. Bad Breath; Pain in the Side, sometimes the pain is felt under the Shoulder-blade, mistaken for Rheumatism ; general loss of appetite ; Bowels generally costive, sometimes alternating with lax; the head is troubled with pain, is dull and heavy, with considerable loss of memory, accompanied with a painful sensation ofleaving undone something which ought to have been done; a slight, dry cough and Bushed face is sometimes an attendant, often mistaken for consumption; the patient complains of weariness and debility; nervous, easily startled; feet cold or burning, sometimes a prickly sensation of the skin exists; spirits are low and despondent, and, although satisfied that exercise would be bene ficial, yet one can hardly summon up fortitude to try it in fact, distrusts every remedy. Several of the above symptoms attend the disease, but cases have occurred when but few of them existed, yet examination after death has shown the Liver to have been extensi""W deranged. It should be used by aU persons, old and yoang, whenever any of the above symptoms npear. Persons Traveling or Living: in Un healthy Localities, by taking a dose occasion ally to keep the Liver in healthy action, will avoid all Malaria, Bilious attacks, Dizziness, Nau sea, Drowsiness, Depression of Spirits, etc. It will invigorate like a glass of wine, but is no in toxicating beverage. If You have eaten anything hard ot digestion, or feel heavy after meals, or sleep less at night, take a dose and you will be relieved. Time and Doctors' Bills will be saved by always keeping the Regulator in the House! For, whatever the ailment may be, a thoroughly safe purgative, alterative and tonie can never be out of place. The remedy is harmless and does not interfere with business or pleasure. IT IS PCBELT VEGETABLE, And has alllhe power and efficacy of Calomell or Quinine, without any of the injurious after effects. A Governor's Testimony. Sjmmons Liver Regulator has been in use in my family for some time, and I am satisfied it is a valuable addition to the medical science. J. Gill Shorter, Governor of Ala. Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of Ga., says : Have derived some benefit from the use of Simmons Liver Regulator, and wish to give it a further trial. "The only Thing that never fails to Relieve." I have used many remedies for Dys pepsia, Liver Affection and Debility, but never have found anything to benefit me to the extent Simmons Liver Regulator has. I sent from Min nesota to Georgia for it, and would send further for such a medicine, and would advise all who are sim ilarly affected to give it a trial as it seems the only thing that never fails to relieve. P. M. Jakkst, Minneapolis, Minn. Dr. T. W. Mason says: From actual ex perience in the use of Simmons Liver Regulator in ray practice I have been and am satisfied to use and prescribe it as a purgative medicine. fi""Take only the Genuine, which always has on the Wrapper the red Z Trade-Mark and Signature of J. H. ZEILIN & CO. IvR SALE BY ALl, DRUGGISTS. WINTRY BLASTS BRING COUCHS COLDS CONSUMPTION BRONCHITIS RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA Perry Davis's Pain Killer CURES COUCHS COLDS CONSUMPTION BRONCHITIS RHEUMATISM 1 NEURALGIA . Provide against the evil effects bf.W!n ! try JlastsljyiJrocuring Perky I' . Davis's Pah Killer. EVER Y, GOOD DRUGGIST KEEPS IT. tafflijj&aijiy Wintry Blasts NOW IS YOUR TIMET JUT BXCX1TXD, Ladies', fonts' aod Children s Robbers, ladies' Gossamers and Gents' Rubber Coats. We are no closing out our stock of Winter Goods, at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, AND YOD WANT A - - NOW 13 YOUa DRESS 4c. , is oelng closed out very cuoap. If you want a B line come lu and we will con lnoe you that we have XiimS 3mU WE 1MI HEM ALL DO: If COME DOWN IN PRICES.'ESI A SPECIAL UEDUlTIOiVFOR TUE HOLIDAYS. TEE Laigest. Flnest.and Best Made up CIjOTH from, of any htlail bucfc in tte ctair. htrLUUuon tiawi das ' lOTblMi only, hi irOl VL&H lt'W 1 RKb d)Hll ue uudeiyoiu Dy buy i kunirg r un-, tnLer ihiKt Ji ei.se, such hs llLe fct Ahi , t UK j-.i d Llr-Eft l blMf HhMfrKJMib .civ llir-bii Agents tor the P3ARL SHIttT. Ve lavLe declO to gs CO 0b CO o CD IN H o Ox O O ! 83 WW DO KM OO 22! am I H H W w I C W O I o m C2 F3 CO o CD -a Ox OO w CQ CD CD C2 CD o ZTJ CD O tf o -t f h3 t3 trf o c. d 53 3 o d O P3 O W 0 CP H Li O W H o o w o O c m o AN pill J . lift, jo , oL kmm-' iiill THE FURNITURE DEALER, Is Frequently Asked How it is He SeHs 3 O Answer : He Bays in Large Qdintities B.M;-ANDREWS,tyribIesaleandneiWliD A. LABGX STOCK Ot TIME TO 611 IT. GOODS UMJ itN ln aaflulng tlli Is loot In Tthe Ln Oood. It for you. n woa" fr "rt SWrt8 Qlve we will show flan raves & Smith Building, East Trade Street HT&C3r Bid ice hot UstoHe g utn icquiitd ty us fcr selling flrot- t; If h It U10lrUa ihst .ti no or sit mi i tt H ill 1 blOCh. (V uiIm vms hr iheHulIDAYanreiru HM Kl hi lllrrf, na all In the Hi t MRiOAlb U 1 i LLC Hj PKUVh. to Fubllc. Respectfully, Leading Clothiers and Tailors GO o WW. BS OO 5Z5Z! CiCl w G3 Si era -I I- s r . 4 ., it .flu; i .SSNf . anl Am (talent bSell at Sail! Profits I .;;..:'.: SS: Cj SS moo WW 1 m otj 33 13 pi O II fm - ) CD - W - -i
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 21, 1883, edition 1
1
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