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1 VOLUME XXXI. CHARLOTTE, N. C., SATURDAY JANUARY 5, 1884. PRICE FIVE CENTS. For Christmas. A HANDSOME LADIES' NECKWEAR INCLUDING Collars, Fchues. OUR TOOK OF JICUET8 ULSTERS, CIRCULARS, RUSSIA CIRCULARS, Ate, Is being reduced very fast, but we have a few left to be sold very cheap. ' TABLE COVERS PIANO COVERS, TIDIES, &c. Don't fail to look at our line of GENT'S SCARFS, GENT'S SCARF PINS, SLEEVE BUTTONS, &c. A beautiful line of SILK KERCHIEFS. Come and examine our stock oefore buying. Closing out our READY-MADE CLOTHING at slaughter-house prices. Truly. H AKtill t VEH & ALEX IXDER. Smith Building, Trade Street, Charlotte. I. C, T. L MA & f o. When in New York last week we tkugnc some very HANDSOME GOODS At greatly reduced prices. Among them is a lot of Ladies' Wraps, That we will sU at about the cost to manufacture them. Am Elegraat Une of CHRISTMAS GOODS At prices thaiwill surprise yoii when you -see the goods and hear the prices.' Cme In on Monday 9IfMic mad See the, Barcalns We Offer. Very respectfully, flf laa paaattBaa tftti iwa iliMiW.bylto w tbooaaWa ct IIIH Ot MM WOTtkiJXl4t c fjithiaTta afiaacr, uiatl willaoiid TWO BOTTLKS FfcKK. toptMr trita ajyALPABLg tBSATOg thJ4MM.t in .offerer. Gin oprmaad P. O, jaSTdaw4' t-Miilum of Veiumea a year. The choicest litera ture of the world. Catalogue free. Lowest prices ever known. Not sold by dealers. Sent for examination before payment on evidence of good faith. JOHN B ALDEN, Publisher, P. O. Box 223 18 Vesey St., N. Y. janldaw4w ' NtHlCK. Wishing to cban re my business, I offer for sale -my Tobacco Machinery, consisting of t Pump 4 Retainers 2 Pot Mill and Retainers. 8 Box Screws. 9 Sets Shnmds and Band 83 t.ump Ma chines b-t in use 2 Seta each 6, 9, 10, and 11 inch shapes and everything nec essary to nm the business, also one 20 horse Erie City Portable Boiler in good repair. (Price $250 00 F O. B.) Will also sell my Plantat on and Dis tillery for a fair price. For further particulars apply to r address dec291m Salisbury. N. C. The REMINGTON HORSE-POWER FIRE ENGINE! Nearly a effec tive aaaateam- er; a boat one. third first eost i)d leas thin one -tenth an- nual etpeom lor repair.. For deecrip. tivedrcnlara with teatmo. ntli,ddw REMINGTON AGRICULTURAL CO. 1LION, New York janldaw4w f POSITIVELY CURES Dyspfpaa, Lircr sbA Hfcej. CouHamU I have used your "life for Ihe Liver and Kidneys' vwi tii xreat ibenefit, and for dvsoeDsia. or any derangement oi the liver or kidneys, I regard it as being- without an equal. J as. J. Osbornb, Att'v at Law, Boilston. Henderson county, N. C. Far superior "to atvv liver pad. B.VQU Tbohas, Glendale, S. C. Your medicines are valuable and splendid remedied' ;I have aold upwards oi nve gross, and can noommena tnem. I would not be wlthbUi tnem- J. 8. M. DAYIMCtft, Proggist, i Charlotte, N. C. "Life for the live and Kidneys" or "Chill Cure" .workfclike frrcharjn and ells msrr fasLai .z iJu lliiVJSSXlK, rWaxIw,iiaiiijar0ntyJ3,C. :'::W&toxm:h9fomUA Sold "FOE f MS U UUUUa -XI I I IP L October 28, dtf. . . i .-y. LINE OF Velvet Capss, &c. -SHOES- Shoes, Shoes. SIIOES--Late Styles. SIIOES--Fit Pe.ftct, SHOES--Best Makvs. 8IIOES-"Lowest Prices. BOOTS AND SHOES, All Grades. Trims, Valhts and Band-Rags. STOCK ALWAYS COMPLETE. A. & BRO. A. U.YLtfS, Practictl Watchmak r ard Dealer in WATCHES, CLOCKS JRWBLRY 8PSC- Fine and Wffloult Wateb B plrt k ' 'PCUIt Uk pf oat otlr done nod wa raiite; i we Ire mown. -5 . HiLBrt. -tK8iWwtf 'ntrl Hotel Au'ldln. Trad' at FOR KENT The farming lands of the Baltimore and North; Carolina Mine, for the year J 884 Apply at the Transfer Office of the Company, No. 61 Exchange Place, Baltimore, with reference, etc. janltw2w 1 AND -FOR RENT. The very desirable tract. here J. C. Smith lately livei, adjoining A. G. Kirkpatnck and others, in Sharon. A good two-horse farm. Enquire of R. BARR1NGER, Agent, dec30dtf Charlotte, N. C. WANTED. For the United States Army, able- j bodied men, bt-tween the ages of 21 and 80 years. Apply to CAPT E M HAYES, Fi:th Cavalry, Trade Street, Charlotte, N. C. janleodsm F K KENT A desirable Dwelling House within three murut-s walk oi Public Square. Six rooms, well of good water and all necessary ruthouses. Apply to dec23dtf . C. N.VANCE. I CUBE FITS! When I ny core Ida not mean merely to atapiUMm rSpSVoS XtLITcWESsTUfeSon, idy. - earn 8nd ones far TrMtiM Bod B?" my infallible remed Orw Kxmaa and Poatooa. ft janldaw4w DOVE'S Trae Tarf Oil. rrvi PHVSICIANS. FARMERS. LI EST 8TA 1 BLKKxKPo.ua AN l lUlLKIMD MKN ND R-aDB r r&aULIW: ir am memoer or rom notinol4 trout parents to the real Infant, are xffltctea with ValUaiant Sores, scrofulous or iber- ls, sun Bbeum or eaio mean, mints. - ouuua, no matter bow severe, or of bow omc tandlim, of tmm wh&uvar causa DrodeHi. send and set afVoeDtboUla f TUKir OIL. and e guarantee a euro or no pay It eurea oerore nwv wnwi beglu to act It la equally applicable to all the Ulexra or "ores, or lun imea aunaeen 01 ui m- metlc nimaJ, or an turns nai moves. on m Tnrf One or two Mini nation a are all that Is nec essaryto neutralize tbe action of .the virus and Deal tne uicer 11 arrests hi once io V rogres m Kryntpe as ano removes we Inoammaium ien k tne iraes or we oiseaar. . For auk- bv all druuatata anal eoontrr stores. er Ask tor tbe "fart oil flpelllng-Bsofc ana Header." wua eertmeates 01 cures PUBCKLL, L4DO OQ , ay If. Htebmond. Va W. J. Black & Sod, WHOLESALE GROCERS . College Street Charlotte, N. C nU stock always In store BIgbmt prices paid - large qnaoutiM or wtieac sou uata, lite liarlottc (Qbszxntx PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT MONDAY" CHAS. R. JONES, Editor and Proprietor. Te s or Snlnacrlptlosi. DAILY. Per copy s cents One month (by mam 75 Three months (by mail) 12.00 bu months 4 00 One year ... goo WEEKLY. One year . ... $200 Six months . 1 00 Iavarlahly tn Advance Free of PoMtasre go all parts of the United Mtats. 9Speclmen copies sent free on application. r Subscribers desirioR the address of their paper changed will please state in their commu nication both the old and new address Raira of AdvriUlnr. One Square One time. SL00 : each additional insertion, 66c; two weeks S6.UO; one month o.w. a schedule of rates for longer periods fur- nisned on application. r-emlt by draft on Mew York or Charlotte, and by Postpfflce Money Order or Registered Letter at our risk. If sent Otherwise we will not be re sponsible for miscarriages THE STATES ON THE TARIFF QUESTION. There is a diversity of opinion on the subject of the tariff among the Democrats of the different States which it would be well to consider in the discussion of that question. While in a small number of States the plat forms adopted declare for free trade, the predominence of sentiment is in favor of a discriminating and reason able protection, not such a to build up monopolies, but, sufficient to pro tect our industries from uneven European competition. Illinois, Michi gan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Oregon and Texas may be classed as free trade, as far as the Democratic party is concerned. But these are all agricultural States, and it will be observed that seven out of the nine are also decidedly Repub lican States, Kentucky and Texas being the only ones that the Demo crats have a majority in. In Mary land,xMaine. Massachusetts, Delaware and New York, while the party platforms demand reform and low taxes, they are non committal on the subject of protection. In eight States the party has de clared in favor of discriminating pro tection. These are Ohio. Pennsyl vania, Indiana, New Jersey, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Virginia and North Carolina. Ohio favors "a tariff for revenue, limited to the necessities of a government economi cally administered, and so adjusted in its application as to prevent une qual burdens, encourage productive interests at home, and afford just compensation to labor, but not to create or foster monopolies." Penn sylvania, while "holding fast to the faith that all power not delegated by the constitution is reserved to the States and .the people," declares "against monopolies and in sympathy with labor, seeking its protection, and in favor of the protection of the industrial interests of Pennsylvania." Indiana demands a revision of the present tariff and favors "such an adjustment of its provisions within the revenue standard as will promote the industries of the country and the interests of labor, without creating monopolies." New Jersey favors "a tariff for revenue, limited to the nec essary expenditure of the govern ment, and so adjusted as to give pro tection and encouragement to home productive industry and labor, with out producing or fostering monopo lies." New Hampshire believes that the present tariff system is unequal and oppressive, and therefore de mands its immediate revision to the end that American industries and labor may be properly protected without creating and fostering mo nopolies." Connecticut favors a re vision of the tariff that shall reduce taxation, and the establishment of a tariff on "the only constitutional basis, the production of a revenue sufficient to meet expenses, giving in cidental protection to industries that promote the general weltare. ana no protection to mere monopolies " Vir gmia favors a tariff for revenue limited to the necessities of the gov ernment, economically administered, and so adjusted in its application as to prevent unequal burdens, encour age productive interests at home, and afford just compensation to labor, but not to create or foster monopolies." North Carolina denounces the present tariff laws as "grossly unequal, un just and vicious," and .avors "such a revision of the tariff as will produce a revenue sufficient for the economi cal support of the govt rnment, with such incidental protection as will give to domestic manufacture a fair competition with those of foreign pro duction." A number of States have not ex pressed any preference one way or thff other, confining themselves in their platforms to State matters and local issues. Knox- ille, Tennessee, is a growing city. At the close of tne war it had a population of but a few thousand, and its business was exclusively re tail. Now its population is 22,000, the increase; the - past year having been at least 4,000. The wholesale business of the city last year will aggregate, about $16,000,000; of this the dry goods trade is credited with $4,500,000 ; hardware with $1,- 000,000 i the boot and shoe with $1,- $00,000; the grocery with $3,000,000; machinery, $2,000,000, &c. Large brickyards and an iron foundry, as well as extensive railroad shops, add t.bA productive features of the place. It will' cost about $33,000,000 to run the, crwArnment of the city of New York the present year and this Is $3,000,000 less than the sum asiceafor by the heads ot tterespecttveaepan r t i ?. t I t-t $ : tit JHAKINti IT PAY. What Two Energetic Settlers Have Done In Warren County. The correspondent of the Boston Herald who is writing up his obser vations in this State, devotes mostyof his second letter to giving the result of an interview with two gentlemen engaged in agriculture in Warren county, one from New Jersey, the other from England, and each; of whom has met with decided success. The first interviewed was Mr. H. P. Bilyeu, who cam from New Jersey five years ago, and settled near Ridgeway, in that county He raises grapes extensively which he ships to New York and Boston, receiving a handsome price for them. Year by year he has added to the extent of his vineyards, until he has now 14, 000 vines, and he and a partner an orchard containing 10,000 peach trees and 1,500 plum trees. The nuxt was Mr. Petard, the larg est wine producer in that vicinity, of whom and whose methods the cor respondent speaks thus : He 'received your correspondent with the politeness becoming a man of sense, and he narrated his experi ence as a pioneer in grape culture and wine making with almost femi nine modesty. He said that he was bred as a farmer in England ; that he aspired to better his condition by coming to the United States, where land was cr eap. With a wife and several small children, he first land ed in Norfolk. Leaving his family there, he prospected in Virginia and all through North Carolina to find an opportunity for the investment of a slender capital. Finally, he struck upon Ridgeway, where there was a small and much neglected nursery. Thishe bought, after noticing that the soil and climate were especially favorable to the growth and produc tiveness of the vine. He then brought on his family, and from that period, which was 14 years ago, he has liter ally "lived in clover" of his own pro duction, while his neighbors have lived in comparative indigence through ignorance of the right method to produce that useful forage plant. Mr. P. relied first upon his sales from the old worn out nursery, to which he had et once directed his attention, for the support of his family, and at the same time he commenced the cultivation of grapevines. In this business he has' been very successful, and every year he is adding thous ands of vines to his acreage and sup porting a growing family in THRIFT AND. COMFORT. He declined to furnish your corres pondent with any statistics, for the reason that it would seem ukeosten tation to speak of his own deeds", (a very singular reason for an English man,) but there is no doubt 01 the fact that he sells from 7)00 to 10,000 gallons of wine a year at $1 per gal lon. To the question: "What do you think of the Sc up perming as a wino grape?" he said. "I am grubbing up all the vines of that variety. It makes a very coodand salable wine, but I cannot keep it long without the ad mixture 01 alcohol, and this 1 wui never do. Every gallon of my wine is absolutely pure. It is the juice of the grape, and there is nothing added. have never aouiierateo a smgie bottle. One gallon sells another, and my customers in Baltimore, Phila delphia and New York buy it at $1 per gallon just as Last as i can mase it. I have only one price," said Mr. P. "If a man wants a gallon, he has it for $1. Ifhe wants a barrel or 100 barrels, it is all the same price, and. if you want a quart bottle, it will be at the same rate." Having learned from Mr. Petard all the principal de tails of his vineyard cultivation and products, it was natural for the writer to question him as a practical farmer, bred to the business i- old England, in regard to the absence of the grass upon the fields of North Carolina, which do not produce sum mer pasturage and winter feed in the shape of hay. His conversation upon this topic was, as Sam Weller remarked, "equal to print," and I Euri-ose to give it as briefly as possi le. in the belief that it will be of great advantage to all persons of small means, vhether immigrants or natives, who desire to better their condition. It must be remembared that the Derson interviewed was an Englishman, bred in the ways of English farm labor. He was NOT A TYPICAL JOHN BULL, however, with a gruff voice, surly air and great breadth of beam ; but a verv auiet sort of p rson, as lean ac Cassius. but without any hungry look. He very cheerfully consented to be interviewed as to the absence of pasture land- and the neglect to raise hav for winter use upon the tarms. To the writer's questions under this head, this North Carolina servitor of Bacchus said that there was no diffi cultv at all in establishing pasture lands and raising hay. "It all de- nends " he said, "upon a proper ro tation. My own lands and my own barn afford you ample evidence of wha I shall say as the result of ex perience upon this kind of soil." In the preparation 01 gooo pasture land upon these old worn-out cotton fields, Mr. Petard said that there was no difficulty at all, and in his state ment he confirmed the writer s own experience and ooservation in other localities. tie says there was no need to buy artificial fertilizers to produce any crops of the region, if a proper sys tem was pursued, or to get the aver age lands into pasturage or hay crops ; or, if preferred, into corn and wheat. le said mere were no ier tilizers better than green clover and cow peas turned under by the plough, -i.i- - .1 . . 1- L 1 and this is the rotation which he had successfully tested: First a crop of cow peas Plow under while green. Then sow winter wheat and also cow peas again upon the stubble ; plow these under in the fall and sow winter oats with clover. Harvest your oats the next season ; plow un der the clover when it is at its best growth, and in the fall sow winter wheat again and with it plenty of grass seed. Harvest your wheat and tne next year vou have vour Derma nent pasture or your hay Jield, just as you may m-efer. With his rota tion, he said that all the lands which look so destitute af herbage could be restored,, and. with a dressing once in four years of lime, they could 4e kept in gcod heart for a lone time; and, if that was not "desirable, they! uuuui u v puuitea wnn touacco to great advantage. It is to be hoped that this record of the wisdom V4t this thrifty Englishman will not'.te lost upon the farmers and planters of. lands upon theirl broad acres, I and evef think of having : a barnfttf of to make milk, winter, sells for 10 cents a quart in all parts of the State, and i- often hard to obtain at any price. At Ridgeway there is an abundance of this excellent vineyard and fruit land for sale at $5 to $10 per acre. Shortly after the war an at tempt was" made by residents of the State to found a city here, but, for want of good management it did not suceeed, and the writer was inform ed that $20,000 will purchase 7000 acres of the very besu land in the township adjacent to the depot, in cluding the well-built brick hotel, which has capacity for 40 or 50 guests. The land is of excellent quality, and much of it is covered with virgin forests of hard wood timber, and quite a large portion is devoted to the cultivation 01 cotton and tobacco. Digest ot Supreme Court Decisions. Raleigh Sews and Observer. Hardin vs. Ray. A judge has no power to render judgment after the expiration of the term of court without the consent of Earties, except in cases where the iw clothes him with jurisdiction at chambers. Kesler vs. Mauney. There is no evidence in this cace that the plaintiff mortgagee agreed to give his attention to the securing and applying the crop conveyed as an additional security for his debt, and the court below erred in not so instructing the jury. 2. A witness, principal debtor in an action by the plaintiff against the es tate of his deceased surety, is not disabled by the Code, section 590, (Code of Civil Procedure, section 343) from testifying for the degndant ad ministrator as to what occurred in a transaction b. tween the plaintiff and the deceased, or as to what the de ceased swore on a former trial. And the plaintiff in histes' imony in reply, is restricted to the transaction to which the evidence of the first wit ness was directed. Kinney vs. Laughnour. In an action by a step father to recover 'lamages for the seduction of his step-daughter, a recovery cannot be had unless the plaintiff had, at the time, the control of her services. Such action arises by the fiction of the law from the relation of master and servant, and not from that of parent and child ; Therefore it was an error in the court to refuse to charge that,if the jury should find she was seduced by the defendant while she was away from the house of the planitiff and not in his service, but in the employ of a third person, the plaintiff cannot recover. McCanless vs. Flinchum. A voluntary deed from an insolvent father to his son is void per se as to creditors; where it is made upon a fair consideration it is not necessarily void, but a reputable presumption of a fraudulent intent arises from the close relationsh p of the parties; Therefore, where there was evidence tending to show that the deed was supported by a valuable considera tion, and the judge charged hejury that if at the time it was executed the bargainer did not 1 etain property 8umcient to pay his debts, then in law the deed is void, and failed to submit the question to the bona fides ot the tranfaction, it teas held to be erroneous. Durant vs. Taylor. 1. In an action brought in a jus tice's court by a landlord to recover the crop to secure rent alleged to be due under a contract of lease, the defendant tenant denied the contract and set up title to the land ; and it appeared there had been an adjust ment ot the conflicting claims to the land, and an agreement entered into that the defendant should remain in pot-session of and cultivate the land upon payment of part of the crop as rent ; Held, that the relation of lessor and lessee existed undrrjthe contract, which is supported by a sufficient con sideration. 2. Held further, that the justice of the peace has jurisdiction as the title of the land is not in controversy the action depending exclusively on the contract. But the defendant is not precluded from settling up title in a proper case, since an estate in land, other than a lease, cannot pass by parol. 'I he Importance of Ihe Mechanic. Boston Commercial Bulletin. Each ensuing day make more prom inent the fact that we have come up on the time when the mechanic is master. We have crowded proff ss ions and ill filled trades A , chance to fill the position of sub assistant clerk in a holesale house is eagerly grasp ed at by a hundred applicants, though the wages received be scarce ly more than a chance to learn the business. Let a master workman try to obtain an apprentice at three times the salary offered the clerk and his applicants will be poor alike in quan tity and quality, A skilled workman in any trade need never want for hire; he is eagerly sought after by a hundred employers; he is independ ent of the condition of the market ; the skill and cunning of his hand and eye are too valuable to lose, and must be paid whether the products are slowly or rapidly consumed. If business ceases, the master hand is eagerly seized by some rival house, which .knows and values ine prouuet of his skill. He who would crush dow n the obstacles to success in our own days must have, as well as the wit to see the crevice, tne strengin to deal the blow. This is an age of the steam engine and it is the engineer, not the conductor, wdois master. Senator Vest'sFiMt and Last Battle. Houston oat Senator Vest's only battle was that fought at Lexington, Mo. The attack ing party were driven back, and in a few minutes Vest rode up to where Gen. Price and staff were standing, dismounted, turned over his horse and weapons to an orderly, and with an impressiveness all his own, declar 3d that "the man who says George Vest has never been in a battle is a d d liar, and the man who says that George Vest will ever be found in another is a d d fool." New Bloomfield, Mis., Jan. 2, '80. I wish tb'say to "you that I have been suffering for the last five years with a severe itching all over. I have heard of Hop Bitters and have tried it. I have used up four bottles, and it has done me more good than all the doctors and medicines that they could use o or with me. I am old and poor but feel to bless you for such a relief by vour med icine and from torment 'Of the doctors. I have had nTteelT'ddetorB at nie. One gave me seven' btth&s of solution of ar senic ; another Wr f 6ur Quarts of blood from me. All theycpuld tell was that it was skin sicknesaV ,N0w, After these four bottres' oT youf . mediefng my skin is well, clean and emooth Meyer. hay, from which which summer and Mr. O'Conoi's Ad Tic-. A writer 'n the Atlanta Constitu tion says: "I have it from good au thority that Oharlpn D'Onnnr advised President Davis to escape from the country after he was taken out of prison on bond, Mr. Davis refvsed to do so. Mr. O'Conor urged the excited state of feeling that might lead to the worst results. Mr. Davis replied that, other consid( rations aside, h could not think of leaving his bondsmen in the lurch. "O," said Mr O'Conor "I am able almost to pay the amount of the bond, and I could not devote my fortune so as to give me a greater happiness than a paying for your liberty." Old Korea on the Bampage, The high winds whistled around the chimney tops and steeple, and blew bricks down into the street, scaring the people who walked below. Snow, sleft and hail drove into the faces ot those who dared expose thems-lves, and made them button their coats tiht around their throats. Of course there were sore throats and colds and coughs and rheumatisms the next day. But what were these to men and women who coud seep into any drag store and buy a bottle of Perry Davis's Pain Killer? The Snow of Mont Blanc is not whiter than teeth that are daily rubbed with SOZODONT, and coral gathered in ocean depths cannot ear pass the hue of the cruras freed from sponginess by the same salutary agent. American ladies visiting foreign lands excite the admiration of beholders and the envy of their transatlantic sisters, with the surprising excellence of their teeth. When asked to what they owe this charm, they murmur the talismanic word SOZODONT! Wintry Blasts WINTRY BLASTS BRING COUGHS COLDS CONSUMPTION BRONCHITIS RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA Perry Davis 's Pain Killer CURES COUGHS COLDS CONSUMPTION BRONCHITIS RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA Frovide against the evil effects of Win try Blasts by procuring Ferry Davis's Tain Killer. EVERY GOOD DRUGGIST KEEPS IT. lotteries CAPITAL PRIZE, 75,000. Tickets only $5. Shares in Proportion. Louisiana State Lottery Co. "We do hereby certify that we super- vise the arrangements for all the Monthly and Semi- Annual Drawings of the Louis iana State Lottery Company, and in per son manage and control the Drawings themselves, and that the same are con ducted with honesty, fairness, and in good faith toward all parties and w authorize the company to use thii certifi cate., with fac similies of our signatures tilt .fro i. v i ii-irdino. Commlionert. Incorporated in 1868 for 25 years by the Legislature for Educational aud Charitable purposes with a capital of Sl.OOO.Of'O to which a reserve fund of over $550,000 has since been added. By an overwhelming popular vote its franchise was made a part or tne pres ent State Constitution adopted Decem ber 2d, A. D.. 1879 The only Lottery ever voted on and en dorsed by the people of any btate. It never scales or postpones. Its Grand Single Number Drawings take place monthly. A splendid opportunity to win a for tune. First Grand Draw.ng, Class A, at New Orleans, I'DEMDtV, Jaannrr 15, 1894. 164th Monthly Drawing. W Ha PI ; AL PRIZE. $75,000. 100.000 Tickets at 85 each Fractions in Fifths in Proportion. LIST OF PRIZES. 1 CAPITALPRIZE of- 875.000 1 do do 25.000 1 do do 10 000 2 PRIZES 86 000 12 000 5 2.000 .. : 10 000 10 " 1,000 10.000 20 " 500 10000 100 " 200 20 000 300 " 100 80 000 500 " 50 20.000 1,000 " 50 25,005 APPROXIMATION PRIZES. 9 Approximate Prizes 8750..$ .750 9 " " 500.- 4.500 9 " " 250.- 2,50 1,967 Prizes, amounting to- $265,500 Application tor rate to clubs should be made only f tbe office oi tne uom pany in New Organs. Forfurther information write clearly, giving full address. Make P. O. Money Orders payable and address Registered Letters to Nw Orleans National Bank, ; New Orleans, La. Postal Notes, and ordinary letters by Mail or Express, (all sums of $5 and upwards bv Express at our expense) to M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, La. Or M. A. Dauphin, 607 Seventh St. . Washington, D. C. mnn n.,. ,rn i tuitmni ENdBG&ODS St ihe fonndfav -jLiiu5'. - y .-IJISBET&BRO'S. AT- BEAs6AU'PEICES m mi a&uk w - fe STOCK OF - Gmeitioneiies and 11-884, The (km FOR OUR CUSTOMERS MLY. WE WILL OFFER ON 100 Pieces 10-4 Sheetings, and Unbleached. 68 Pieces Bleached Price 32 Pieces Unbleached 10-4 at 221c,, For mer Price 32ic. These goods cannot be bought to-day? less than 32 and 35c, therefore, in order that as many a9 possible ot our cus tomers may get the benefit of these unheard of prices we shall only sell 10 yards to each mm CHARLOTTE, N. C. A Merry Xmas LITTLE EAELT PERHAPS, But you know we are ALWAYS AIIE4D OF OTHERS I.H EVERYTHING. It's just so with our HOLIDAY GOODS, SUITS and OVER CO ATS for Men, Boys, Youths and Children, which we are selling at special low prices for this week. Within reach of everybody. Special for Holidays. A Fine line of Handkerchiefs, in Silk, Irish Linen. Hemstitched and Collared Borders, Hosiery, Gloves and Under wear, in endless variety, and don't for get we have the handsomest line of NECKWEAR To bo Found In this Warltet. -CALL AND SEE US. Very respectfully, (Dim Mapnndlay E. M. ANDREWS Will have in stock the Beat Assortment and Greatest Variety of FURNITURE, Oi EVER SEE3T HV AT BOTTOM PRICES FOR CASH. QSo Mo AdDiiw'So THE FIIRITCnE DEALER. U884o Call for 1884 MONDAY MORNING Bleached 10-4 25c Former 35c. customer at any one time. THIS MARKET m it 5 f . i ifiLKf rt -
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 5, 1884, edition 1
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