Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Jan. 12, 1884, edition 1 / Page 1
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" - ' a ' . , .... p j j.- ' "'t-- "'.'' " " " - " - . - - . - . VOLUME XXXI. price rayEOEiffs. CHARLOTTE, N. C SATURDAY JANUARY 12, 1884. RUBBERS, k .adie8,J 'Gents' and Children's Arctics. Plain and adjustable Gums. Rubber Coats. Cossamers, Overcoats, At slaughtering prices, A job lot of Children's Underwear. A nice line of Ladies' and Gents' Underwear very cheap. Blankets and Quilts. Bargain's in remnants of Dress Goods now on our Bargain C ounter. Will call your attention to some opecial things on our Bargain Counter in a few days. Come to see up. You can now get lots of goods for a umall amount numbers in of the "ready GENTS' HAND-SEWED SHOES, Very cheap. Come and see us. Truly, HARGBUVES& ALEXANDER. Smith Itnildlngr, Trade Street, Charlotte, IV. C, T. L Seiirle & Co. When in New York last week we bugnc some very HANDSOME GOODS At greatly reduced prices. Among them ia a lot of Wraps, That we will sell at about the cost to manufacture them. An Elesraat Cine of CHRISTMAS GOODS At prices that will stirtnriae'TOO when you see the goods and hear the prices. Come In and See" the Very respectfully, X. C REIOLE A CO- ils' badies Lies,! FLANNELS, Ladies' Cloaks, Gents'1 Pant Goods, Blankets, &c. These goods are needed this weather and we are sroinsr to rail them. Please call and settle all old notes and accounts. We need the money. DO YOU WISH TO BUILD? If BO, CONSULT ARCHITECTS' Accurate Plana, Bpecificationf, and Detailed Drawings furaiabed lor Public and Private Build ing in any, part of the country. , - aOPTBERS 1TOBK A KBCXaXTT.-WI CONSUMPTION. 1 hT a TxwHire rtmady f or Vb abor dia ; br iU on thooaanda of eaaea ol the wont kind and of kn Undine ban eorad. Indood, o rtronit ia bit fmithioiu efflcac?, that I wfll aead TWO BOTTI-ES If RKK, toft otttor with m VAL.DABLJC TRKATI8E on this diHua, to T raff erar. G iva azpreM and P. O. addTMa. Da. T. A. 8LOCUM.181ParlBMiew Vorfc janldaw4w I P. II RE KIT SI I U waiB. a-l-a-w i thm a a tinla sod them ban tbera retnra ar auitlBiua aeaaa .PL. rSpflT OA tfALLINOICKNES8 f 1 -in-. 1 lftwM ntmAm MiadlMMtt MCKNSS8 Iif4auT atodT. rMTD mt remedy to em the wort cm. Swum other hTefiltU. rion for ot now rewririn a cSiT lend t ones Sra, re.ti and i?W Bottta of !?hrflnthl nmed.- n Bxnraaa and PoatoOoa. U mu warn wmnmn eail SVew" York. AddrcaaDB.ILO. janldaw4w !. i , , , POSITJin&Y ,?rjfc! Dys wa, liter M UBfiy Complaints. I have-used your '.'Iifeor; thfrMver and Kfcs" with great benefit, and for dyspepsia, or any derangement of the liver or kidneys, I regard it as being without art equal. J: JXS. Jr (tefOBHK, Att'r at Law, BdilflWSnderson county, N. C. Far superibr'to any liver pad. r Hugh Thomas, Glendale, S. C. Your neduJin: are; 'valuable and splendid remedies 2 laAve Bold, upwards of five gross, and cut recommend them. I would not be without them.. J. S. M. Dathwoh, Druggist, Charlotte, N. C, "life foy the -TjiwTM. Pf . TfOuU Cure" works vcharm and Bells very fast. "A." tt"PCTpi . . Wax law, Lancaster oountyTS. C Ia large 25c. and Zi-QQ bottlea. Sold by druggists and dealers generally. Prepared by.. - -; ' v.. . ' DB. 1IIE.XOIV, Olendale, C. 1 igctobetatf:- 'r' ,s " : ,v: v'- Kubbers in buckle and half cash." We have a few off Shoes, Shoes. SIIOES-Latett Styles. SHOK8--Fit Perfect, SHOES-Best Makes. SHOKSLowest Prices. BOOTS AND SHOES, All Grades. Trunks, Vates and Hand-Bap. STOCK ALWAYS COMPLETE. A. R KAMiliV & BBO. A HALES, -A ik-r and Dealer in ' rifCTSa(StOCK JSWKLBT, 6PKC- prompuy done and wa-ranted i twelTe monihs. A. Hi LB 9, eptSOdawtf CentnU Hotel Building, Trade at LOT O F" and Children's WANTED. For the United States Army, able- bodied men, between the ages of 21 and 85 years. Apply to Fifth Cavalry, Trade Street, Charlotte, N. C. janleod3m 4 P FREEI RELIABLE SELF-CURE. C ...... - - tnnnt nnisfl iDO IMMnMnnil UWIf XZ. nawteduVlopyM. DroggimcaanlUh Addrsn DR. WARD CO.. UsItHa novl8deodaw DOVE'S True Turf Oil rpo PHTSICIANS, TABMKBS, LIEBY 8TA X BLE KBBPEBd ANO BA1L&0AD MEN AND HKADB -F if AMILIK3: If oar member of your houMhold, from parents to the bo a rest inranc, are afflicted with Hallanant Sores, scrofulous or other wise. Salt Bbeum or Scald Head, Burns. Wounds, no matter how severe, or of bow ionic standing, sr. from whatever cause produced, send and get, a ' 26-eent bouie of TURr OIL. ai d e guarantee ar euro or no pay. it cures before ewer remedies, berin to act It la eouallr aDlleable to all the Ulcers orHores, or InBamed curfaees of all do mestlc animals, or anitbinc that moves on toe Turf. One or two aoDllcations are all that is necJ easaryto neutralize the action of the virus and beat the Ulcer It arrests at onee tne rrogrens 01 Sryalpeiaa and removes the inflammation left In . me iraca 01 me aisease. Vor aah. hrall rtrmririsra and- euuHtrt atorea. tas- Ask for the "Turf oil SriilrIg-Bok and neautsr, wno ceruueawm ui cum PTJBCKLL. HDD CO . $9 If. Hlchraond. Va. f, Sod, a..aiaa-!l'.B 't - .: -. : . WuOIillSALn uHUCJttlS'a .... College StTet,,CnaxItte, K. C. ,' :r,, 1 - r -.T 'tvj s '. Full stock alwavs in store. -tcHishest prices paid for large .quaatitiesr of Yheat and Qats. julylSdtf I PUBUSHKD DAILY KCEPTOND AT CHAS. R. JONES, j Editor and Proprietor. Terms or Subscription. ' DAILY. Per copy.. 5 centa One month (by mail) 75 1 Three months (by mail) 2.oo olx months ' 4 00 One year " g oo WEEKLY. One year 00 Six months 1.00 Invariably in Advance Free of Postage to all parts or tfae United States. 49peclmeti copies sent free on application. sRntjscribere desiring the address of their paper changed will please state in their comma, nication both the old and new address. Rates of Advertising:. i?n2i5quaIe0ne tIme- L0j each additional $8!oo 5 two weeks- 5.oo ; one month. .sShedu,e ,?f rates tor longer periods fur nished on application. hJ,rfn,Jt a5H Yot orChaTtottevaBd by Postoffice Money-Order rw-Registered tetter at our risk. If ent otherwise we will not be re-" sponsible for miscarriages. WEATHER. We have had considerable weather in North Carolina lately, a sort of weather not very common to this par ticular section. As a cold snap it was a success, and it does not seem to have confined itself to any particular section, but just reached out and took in the whole North American portion of the continent. Old Boreas started out two cold waves, one from the Northwest and the other from the Southwest, which formed a junction somewhere down on the gulf. The Northwester sent the mercury tum bling down from twenty -five to forty below zero at different points ia the Northern and Western States, while the South wester rolled in towards the gulf coast and sent the inhabitants as far South as San Antonio, Texas, to shivering and wondering what Old Boreas was about. It was a solid, first class cold spell. It is not often that we see anything like it in this favored clime, where extremes pf cold or heat are very rare. And yet, while it was very cold, it was summer weather compared to that experienced in the far West, where the mercury fell from twenty-five to thirty, and in places to even as low as forty -five and forty-eight degrees below zero, while here it was sixteen above, and the ice on the ponds reached a thick ness of only a few inches. While in the West animals shipped on trains which became snow bound froze to death, it is somewhat remarkable, though theie was necessarily much suffering among the poor, that so few deaths have been reported. The great West, about which we hear so much, ani which is painted in such attractive colors, may, have its advantages, but they ought to be great to offset the sudden extreme changes of weather to which it is subjected, and th6 usually long win ters not unfrequentlv running into April, when the forests have begun to put out their leaves and the fields are green in this latitude. It is long, cold winters ; short, hot summers, and hard work the whole year round for the laboring man or farmer who suc ceeds out there. It requires not one half the labor to live well and com fortably in North Carolina, where nature is kinder and gives man a bet ter chance. A correspondent of the Baltimore American writes from Staunton, Va., about an old fellow who lived in the mountains of West Virginia, who owned and still owns slaves, and hadn't heard any thing about a war between the North and South until he came to Staunton, a short while ago, to sell a slave, when he was very much surprised to learn that there had been a warT and very much dis gusted to learn that the slaves had been emancipated. He didn't attach much importance to the information, however, for failing to nnd a pur chaser as he expected, he took his darkey-back home with him. This lie has not toe merit of originality. It was started, jus! aiterothe war m Florida: and told about an old Sem inole Indian, then travelled Around to Arkansas, and how turns up from West Virginia. 'Jdl of which shows that it keeps travelling, though it moves slowly. . It is reported that Senator Sherman, of Ohio, has declined, the presidency pi lae jxoriinernf rmc -railroad. De cause his retiring . from the Senate ; -af it'-.' -' . ,. . v 1 would give, his seat to a Democrat as his successor, sni thus put the bal ance of power in the hands of Billy Mahone.. It nust Mve been a trying case on Ifj, Sherhiaa .to decline a position pavincr a salary of f&o.ooo a year, with perquisites. There JtaKdifrerencei of opinion among Denidrats on the question of toe couT$f silver, some Jhplding that w ought to continue, oinemcnat if flight to stKjt, there leingmot9silvei(; Does ..the: holdmgTcia opinion one way 1 ; toe 1 - 9 s ,ds; question make the noiaer 01 tnat opinion more or lesB-a Democrat? r -England 1 getting ready - TO sena 4welya i thousand -rxtemiantai lEgypt. England -i!B9ImM; .Egypt, JMit refipmfPiUi .Wttratmg a distorbanee wito sbiaa bf toe -tibte& hwers wH& are fnbff immtetestea '.in toe proprietorship, ot tnac country. " . . . . V - . WoodpnlFMiuer, jjnngiroygjBuc- cessor; iaEtte 1 United Stated Senate, instate fWl& W W a W w WW WJQfifc mi-H MmerJ8 a modes. He nnlv sits bebMd, the curtain tl A " - d.iSL Villa 'triA'tlmiluia 1 P"wnB W"TO l ilavlIA I . Vnhoi. -Pooria v the new Prime Mm- tafirt nt v3tir f :i'iik05tfit: XhedlVe. MKffSS simpiy. .HOLAn. juufsrro rr to-dav practically Britiab-'province. PRAYlIfU FOR PAPA. How God Answered a Little Uul "Most as Quick as the Telephone." A few nights ago a well-known cit izen of Detroit, Mich., who had been walking for some, time in the down ward path, came out of his home and started down town for a night" of carousal with some old companions he had promised to meet. His young wife had besought him with implor-r ing eyes to spend the evening with her, and had reminded him of the time when evenings passed in; her, company were all too short. His little daughter had clung about his knees and coaxed in her pretty, .will ful way for "papa" to tell her sortie bedtime stories, but habit was 8trong: er than love for wife and child, and he eluded their tender questioning;by the special sophistries that the father, of evil advances at such times from his credit fund, and went his way. But when he was a block fom home l-ha found that in changing his coat he nad forgotten to remove his wallet, and he could not go out on a drinking bout without money, even though he knew that his family needed it, that his wife was economizing each day more and more in order to make .up. his deficits, and he hurried back and crept softly past the windows of the little house in order that he might steal in and obtain it, without run ning the gauntlet cf either questions or caresses. But something stayed his feet ; there was a fire in the grate within for the night was chill and it lit up the little parlor and brought out in startling effect the pictures on the wall. But these were as nothing tOj the pictures on the hearth. There, in the soft glow of the firelight, knelt his little child at her mother's feet, its small hands clasped in prayer, its fair head bowed ; and its rosy ilips uttered, each word with childish dis tinction: "Now I lay roe down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep; K If I should die before I. wake, .' 5 1 pray the Iord my soul to take." i .; Sweet petition ! The, man himself who stood there with i bearded lips shut tightly together, had said that prayer once at his mother's knee. Where was that mother now ? The sun set gates had long ago been unbarred to let her nass throueh. But the child JiatLnotioished; he heard her "God bless mamma,., papa and my own self" then there was a pause, and she lifted her troubled blue eyes to her mother's face. , ; . - - "God bless papa," prompted the mother softly." ' "God bless papa," lisped the little one. - ' "And please send him home sober." He could not hear the mother as she said this, but the child followed in a clear, inspired- tone: 1 ' "God bless papa -rand please send him-'-home sober" Amen." Mother and child sprang to their feet in alarm when the door pened so suddenly, but they were .not afaaid when they saw who it vras return ing so soon; but that night , when little Mamie rvas being tucked up in bed after such a romp , witn papa, she said, in the sleepiest and most contented of voices : . - "Mama. God answers most as quick as the telephone, doesn't He?" Lass's ia India. A great part of India is. still uncul tivated, "virgin soil. Mr. Matt son's estimate is that in the four principal wheat-producing provinces the JrunjaD, rsortti western ana Central Oudh, and Bombay, there is a total area of nearly three hun dred and seventy thousand square miles; and he divides this as follows: Sutian mila. Area now cultivated 145,549 Area culturable 87,B2 Area not culturable 136686 He estimates, therefore, that there are nearly eignty-eigni tnousana square miles or fifty -six millions of acres of wheat land that may still be brought under cultivation ; and this would reDres3nt an annual product, at twelve bushels per acre (.the aver age of the country,) of six hundred ana seventy-two miuions 01 uusneis. Mr. Mattson s conclusions are mat India can produce wheat at as lo w cost as the most favored localities in the United States ; that she can now snare (this was a conclusion based on the crop harvested in the spring of 1882.) about iortv munon Dusneis annually for the European market, and can increase the supply to- an almost unlimited extent;" that Indi an wheat has already become and will continue to be a very important farr,nr in the cram markets or Hai rone: and that while America will not be greatly hurt by the compe tition. if she keeps her cost of produc tion and transportation down to the lowest mark, she cannot expect to eret hierh Drices for her grain here after, and that if by the failure cf her crops or the artificial creation of high prices she should lose the mark- . . -.- m 1 .1 1 1 1 J et the India tanners wouia iay uom of it and be very hard to dislodge. The Art of Advertising;. Son Francisco Call. The newspaper has become the legitimate inheritor of the patronage 01 advertisers, it oners advantages that no other vehicle possesses, and it costs less than most others. It can not be assumed that the advertising pages of a paper are so earef ully read as the news portions, but it has grad ually educated the reader to look for what he or sne wants in tne aaver-. tising columns, and those who read the paper quietly at nome are iar more inclined to go over their wants and look where to supply them, than the man in toe street who is probab ly thinkinc more of selling his own gpodftthan of buying his neighbor's. Then toe scope of this method of ad- vertising is almost endless, it taees in Dusmess earns ur iwu-nue uunuco, or it may cover an entire page, there is a chance for literary dispi Many large business houses keen gentleman of education and skill ia literary matters, to superintend this; department of their business, ana : w is wonderful how much he can find: to say on what would seem ,1;o. be a hackneyed subject. Indeed, the art of advertising is to be always fresh and new, yet clear and concibe, to be humorous when humor will tell," but to oe plain and direct. The nearer an advertisement harmoni es with :the general drift of the hanar the more likely it is to he read and mak an impression. i . Answer ThK Is there a perso living ybo eyerAawreports that Bhe left the Celtic on the aoaaeof agueVbUiousness, nervousness.- or neuraiKia, or any disease 01 tbe stomach, liver, . or kidneys that Hop; Diners wm uos cure, I Emory's Little atuartic PlIU sufficiently powerful for tha moat rooust, yet tne saiest for ctuldren and I weakccnstionj.--iVcent8. tie TOTAL DEPRAVITY As Developed in the Case of Elphonso , Kelt. Washington OrWe. ' -' . A depraved, and vicious looking colored boy named Elphonso Kell, about fifteen years of age, was in the dock ajb Judge Snell's court this morning for committing a series of atrocious deeds. Prosecuting-Attorney Moore suggested that he bo examined as to the condition of his mind, as he believes that no person in his. right mind cpuld be guilty of W. T'r3eniamin. a respectable colored; man, who lives in the county. aooyet:AJniontown,. was caned, as - a witness against the boy. He stated that the boy was his nephew. "His first: criminal act," Baid Benjamin, was to bAild a fire, in Baltimore, just before he came to this city, and call his : aunt to see it, and throw a handful of cartridges into the fire to blow her up. After he ca Tie here he began to steal, and then he set the woods afire. On the 19th of last month he set fire to witness' barn and ran away, and came back toe next day with a lot of arsenic, and said that he was not going to burn them out, but Mould poison them. A vessel of milk that was drunk by the family was afterwards found to have arsenic in it, as it made them sick. This was about Christmas. A few days afterward he went to witness' wife's room and took a razor,' as he afterward confessed, and attempted to cut her throat, but his hand be came paralyzed and he dropped the razor on the floor. He then poisoned the water with arsenic, and not hav ing enough of this kind of poison, he put in a handful of blue headed matches to make up the deficiency. Tlie dumb animals on the place were found to be sick, and he confessed to killing a pig with arsenic and ad ministering it to the other animals. The court called up the boy and asked him if he had confessed to all of these acts,and he admitted that he that he had. Zell was committed to jail to be examined by a physician as to his sanity. Missing Air.' Delmonico. New York. Jan. 7. Detective Van Buskirk, employed by the Pennsyl vania Railroad Company, reported to Superintendent Walling that the' noon train from Philadelphia to day brought a passenger whose descrip tion corresponded with that of miss ing Chas. Delmonico. He took the Cortlandt street ferry boat and was lost in the crowd. A general alarm was sent out to all the precincts, warning the police of his arrival in town and directing a careful search to be made for him. Relatives of Mr. Delmonico have offered a reward of $500 for any in formation which will lead to finding him. It is stated by more than one of Mr. Delmonico's personal friends that the mean cause of his flight was the feet that hejhad discovered an intention on the part of his relatives to put him in an asylum as soon as possible. The idea being repugnant to him, tor he had frequent lucid in tervals, it is said he had made up his mind to escape at the first opportu nity. A gentleman sustaining close relations with Mr. Delmonico denies positively any such intentions on the part of his relatives. They say he was perfectly sane the greater part of the time, though at intervals during the last six months his mind occa sionally wandered, and at the time of his disappearance a man was un der employ to watch his movements. The family of Mr. Delmonico dis credit the story that he was; in this city to-day. At a late hour to-night they had received no tidings from him. Cotton Cultivation in the North. While the South is complaining of too much cotton and the press is ad vising a reduction in its acreage, the great Southern staple is invading new territory. The cotton country has extended . greatlV since the war and States like Virginia and Missouri which , knew nothing whatever of cotton twenty years ago, have lately produced large quantities of it. The plant seems to be traveling North and West and we now hear of : it tinder cultivation in California and Kansas. In the Sacramento Valley f the Pa cific coast, whose climate is very simi lar to that of the Southern States, it thrives and yields well: The Kansas eApenuieiiv is ay cii uiuib roucut, ouu dates from the large exodus of ne groes into the State. According to the Kansas City Times the experiment has been, a success. Cotton eins have been established at various points in the State and have plenty of material to work on. As for tne yieia per acre it is very satisiac tory ; and it is now considered as demonstrated that cotton cultivation can be carried on profitably in Kan sas; and it is predicted that it will soon become an important industry there. Special Attorneys' Fees. . In response to the resolution of Senator Van Wyck, the Secretary of the Treasury Thursday furnished the Senate with copies of the vouchers on account of the expenses incurred by the Department of Justice since March 4tn, 1001, wnn names oe spe cial attorneys and detectives em ployed. In the star-route cases Mr. Geo. Uliss is credited on novemrjer o, 1881, with $2, 500 for professional ser vices, and Decembers, 1881, $6,000. Under the head of disbursements, Mr. George Bliss, for services in the star-route, cases from September 9 to December 24, 1881, is credited witn $388.83. Under date of March 35, 4882. he is paid 5,zw ior servioea since toe settlement of forme? , ac count and"prior to, dte. He ia also credited wfth 1418.78 for expense ac count, From January 6 to March 14, 188S he received $5.700 ; April 5, 1883, in Urn .' XT 10 ta 9(1 Mr in. A, Cook is credited witn rdous 9.000 for services as special attor- rneyiMr. W. W. .Ker with $31,877- and a. X. merncic 91, w. Another Report front the Celtle London, Jan. H. Theigteamer Ar gossy, from ?ew "orfc for this port, as arrived, off Lizard and reports having met the steamer Oeltio and taken off- several passengers whom she transferred to a tug bound ; for Falmouth. The four pasgengers who left the Ar gassy in the tug have; beeit 0 landed at r"aimoatn. rne Argossy 5th inst., lZDUimies iroia ijizaro. Some say "CtohBumptJon:, can't be cured. " AyWft KmWFWm proved PTt6fty yeartvexperienc- ours the disease when .not i: araavrad. vanced beyond Ihff eacK,pf medical aid Even thenltt use affords very great relief, ana ubbiltvb iuicbuwd nvsn Vanderbilt's Prodigal Son. HrvMyn EaqU. It was reported a few weeks ago that William K. Vanderbilt had suf fered serious losses from speculating in wall street. The report was contra dicted on the authority of his father, who exhibited a natural anxiety to conceal from the public the extent ot t' Willie's" indiscretion. The fact is no longer denied, however, that his losses were not only severe, but that they involved the bulk Of his avail able fortune. When toe true state of the case became known to Wil liam Hr V andef bilt he had an angry totervtew with his son, which termi nated in an offer io - make the" latter ah annual allowance of $TO,fi00y pro vided he would pledge himself nBver again to dabble in stock. William gave the. pledge, but insisted that toe sum specified pas insufficient for his support, and, after considerable : dis cussion, it was increased -to $100,000. It is also known that Mr. Vanderbilt has altered his will so that, instead of having the absolute control of his share of the property, William will only enjoy a life estate, his children to inherit the principal after; his death. These measures nave been ta ken with toe entire concurrence of the other members of toe family, who believe that the prodigal son has been treated fully as well as he deserves. A Rescued Crew. Washington, Jan. 10. The Signal Corps Station at Hatteras, N. C, re- Sorts the three masted vessel Emma !. Ramell, Sloan master, before re ported ashore on the ninth inst., was from King's Ferry, Fla., bound to Philadelphia, loaded with pine lum ber. The vessel went ashore at 5 :30 p. m. on the 8th inst., during, a vio lent southeast gale near Gull Shoal, the life saving station. Nine passen- fers were on boaid. All were saved y the boats of the Gull Shoal life saving station. The vessel is still on the beach. What a Queer Climate This Is. First it snowed And then it bio wed, AnrMhen began to rain; And then it blowed, And then it snowed, And then it rained again. With cold in head I'm almost dead, But yet I won't complain; Pain Killer saves From wintry graves And makes us well again. Nobody ought to be without Perry Davis's Pain killer. Benson's Capcine Porns Plaster Cher 5000 Druggists and Physicians have signed a paper statins: that Ben son's Capcine Porus Plasters are supe rior to all others. Price 25 cents. Wintry Blasts WINTRY BLASTS BRING COUGHS COLDS CONSUMPTION BRONCHITIS RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA Perry Davis's Pain Killer CURES v COUGHS COLDS CONSUMPTION BRONCHITIS RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA Provide against the evil effects of Win try Blasts by procuring PERRY Davis's Pain Killer. EVERY GOOD DRUGGIST KEEPS IT. TUTFPS BLLS TORPID BOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER and MALARIA. From these sources arise three-fourths of the diseases of -the iraman race. These symptoms indicate lheirexwtenoei Ioaa ol Appetite, Jtowels eoatlve. Stoic JBead ac&.e,Tallneas alter eatlnar. averaion to tlnttoa of body or- mind, ISractation of food,. Irrltatailitjr oT temper, Low jjirlta, A. feeling of having- neglected jome doty, Olzxlucss, fluttering at the Heart, Dota berore the eyea, hichly Col ored Urine, COMSTIPATIOW, and de mand the use of a remedy that acts directly on the Uver. As a Liver medicine TDTT'S PI LiUS have no equal. Their action on the Kill neys and Skin is also prompt; removing all impurities through 'these three " aoav enffera of the avatm.n DroducinB apne- tite, sound digestion, regular stools, a clear skin and a vigorous body. TUTTS 111.1 cause no nausea , or griping nor Interfere witn daily wors ana are a perfect ANTIDOTE. TO MALARIA. HE FEZXS LIKE A NEW MAK, "I have bad Dyspepsia, with Constipa tion, two years, and nave tiled ten different kinds of pills, and TTJTT'S are the first that have done me any good. They have cleaned me out nicety. Mt appetite is snle-KjM, food digests readi'r, and I now i it a yirai passages, ill lute a new v - w . D-. Ep w Akds, falmyra, o. SoUlew. hera.arie. Office, 44 Mnrray8t.,N.Y. TUTTS HAIR DYE. 7 Grat Haib ob Whiskers changed In stantly to aGtossv Black by a aiMla ap plication of this DTE. Sold by Pruggiat. or sent oy express on reoe Pi SVI, Office, 44 Murray gtz afc New Toot. TUTTS MANUAl OF ttlim RECEIPTS FBEf. STOCK OF - Groceries, Coiifeetioneries FANCY GOODS3 Can he foundfat L R. NISBET & BRO'S. AT REASONABLE PRICES KE KOfcENE OIL, LUBRICATING OILS.' CHESS-CARLEY CO., H ARllOtm N, C. Prices GREAT eLQfilKfi'SAK Haye decided to close thmt : p'pifff have ever enjoyed in their Clothing Department' by: mkiug knl Clearing-Oat Sale Of the balance of Clothing now on haiiIi?wluei were ever before offered the people of thisrttifitcr; On Thursday morning, 10th inst., at will commence the greatest sale of Ready-Made Clothing ever in augurated in the Carolinas. fat HMDS SATIN L.IND Fully equal to Custom Work, at $25; fotB.840. Gentlemens' Satin Lined Overcoats, fully equal to Custom Work, at $18; former price 30. ' ( Gentlemen' Styllsb Overcoats at " " 44 " " " " GENTLEMENS' Elegantly Finished. Fully Equal mer Price GENTS' ELEGANT STYLISH SUITS Now is the ereat opportunity to heard of. mm CHARLOTTE. N..0. 1 Merry Xmas. But you know we are ALWAYS ADBAD OF OTHEBS ETEKTTHL1Q. It's just so with our HOLIDAY GOODS, 8UrrS and OTEKCOAT0 J,fbr Men, Boys, Youths and Chfldrearwhica we are selling at special loJoe lor 1 this week. Within reach of everybody. Special for Holidays. A Fine line of HajidkerjcWsf ioSUk, Irish Linen, Hemstitchsd and Cotlared Borders, Hosiery,- Gloves ' 4nd! Unoer wear, in endless variety,' kad dont for-' get we have the handsomest line of NECKWEAR To be Fennd in tills Market. sWC ALL AND SEE US. Very respectfully, L Berwaouer: Bro. dDnn E. 1VL Will have in steck the Best Assortment and Greatest Variety of FURNITURE, Oil Paintings. Clriios Mire AT RHITOM PRTHRS FOR vrhAftW? V-4 SBBBBBBSkk. : SBBB .. . I. -'.Tl ii-"C"SsWPi Below to ! .5U3 i $1S.0; : !. t.ftSN ; S.OH 4. SO; Former Pr4eetat9a - .J.s 18 " sal . " nT.A .,.... t-::z to Custom Work, n $40.00. at $20.00, " 18.00; 15.00; " 13.50; " 12.60; " 10.00; " 7.50; " 5.00; 4.50; Former pries'5$8.80 SS.OOaD30.00 234 90.00 15.00 1 13.50 tQM S.OOaulO.00 supply your wants at prioes never, before --. r - 1- i'Lt-Tt T,I m a 1 i
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 12, 1884, edition 1
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