MUM VOLUME XXXI. CHARLOTTE, N. C FRIDAY FEBRUARY 15, 1884. tt iTrt7T?-n M NT.Q ' WE STILL HAVE SOME REMNANTS -IN- Wolteds, Cashmeres, Colored Silks, &c, TO CLOSE OUT AT AND BELOW COST. Also a few Pairs of BlatlketS, At a Great Bargain. Our HAMBURG EDGINGS and tNSERTINGS are selling very last Call and see them. RICK RACK BRAID In an numbers. LADIES' and MISSES' SHOES from th celebrated manufactory of Evttt 4 Bro., every pair warranted to give satisfaction or money refunded. Try a pair. Call and Get a Suit of Clothing Cheaper than jou ever bought It anywhere. A nice line of GENT S HATS. The Perfect Fitting HERCULES SHIRT, PRICE $1.00. A !tice Line f Trunk, Valise, Etc. GIVE US A CALI Very Respectfully, SMITH BOLDIQ. White Goons! ! J 1ST OPENED ! ! ! Big stock of Checked Nansooks At 12c, 15c, 20c, 22,:. 25c and up. India Lawns, PLAIN AND BARRED. IIV MULLS. LI3iE LAWKS, VICTORIA LAVTKS, I R1SH POINT AND CAMBRIC EMBROIDERIES, Piques, Cheeked and Striped, GOO FOR BOYS' WEAR. Ordjra tor samples or goods promptly attended to T. L. SEIGLE & CO. SHU ES- Shoes, Shoes. SIIOES--Latet Styles. SIIOES-Fit Perftct, SIIOES--Best Makes. SIIOESLowest Prices. BOOTS AND SHOES, All Grades. Trunks, Yaks and BaBd-Rap. STOCK ALWAYS COMPLETE. A. E. RANK IN & BRO. FOR SALE. Cotton Seed Meal for feeding or fertilising, in quantities to rait purchasers. The best feed for cattle ever sold, being worth twice as much as corn meal. novrJdtf CHARLOTTE OIL CO. We Wl Monday, Jan. ALEXANDER& HARRIS. W. Kaufman k Co., CENTRAL. HOTEL, CORNER gfre gfaarlottje ftgeregr. PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT MONDAY BT CHAS. R. JONES, Editor and Proprietor. STATE POLITICS HOW BOTH SIDES TALK. AT WASH-I!fTON. Terms of Subscription. DAILY. PereopT Scents. One month (by mall) 75 Three months (by mall) $2.00 Six months (by mall) 4 00 One year (by mall) . 8.00 WEEKLY. One year $2.00 all months loo Invariably In Advance Free of Portage o all parts of the Halted States. E-Spedmen copies sent free on application. nr5UD8crlbers desiring the address of their paper changed will please state in their communi cation both the old and new address. Rates of Advertising. One Square One time. $1.00'; each additional In sertion, 60c; two weeks, $5.00; one month, $8.00. A schedule of rates for longer periods furnished Remit l)v draft on Vaw Ya rw TOiarinttA ni v.. Postofflce Money Order or Registered Letter at our rist. If sent otherwise we will not be responsible for miscarriages. LET IT ABOLISH ITSELF. We hare presented from time to time, as they have been received, the replies of cotton manufacturers to our inquiry as to their views on the tariff question. "We publish to-day the reply of Messrs. Phifer & Allien, of the Ivy Shoals Factory, which, though brief, contains much food for reflection. They believe that this is one of the questions that will in time settle itself in accordance with the laws of supply and demand and . can see no practical benefit to be derived from the agitation of the question now. On such goods as the South makes there is practically no protection, and consequently she has no interest in the subject. She competes successfully in the market now simply because she has some advantages which her competi tors have not, while on the other hand she labors under some disad vantages from the cost of machinery, transportation, &c. They think, however, that the South is able to hold her own, and the question will be who can make the goods the cheapest and supply the demand at the lowest figure. There are now manufactures enough in operation North and South to more than supply the home demand the result of which is and must be low prices, as low on the class of goods made in the South as England or any other country could make them for, and that consequently there is no need of protection on these goods. In time, of course, the South will branch out as her capital and experi ence increases, and enter upon the making of a greater and finer variety of goods, but by that time she will be probably able to take care of herself and successfully compete in these as she does in the lower grades now. One thing is certain, that whatever the opinions on the tarsff question may be, the South has made marvel ous progress within the past few years in her industries, and it is a question whether it is not the wiser policy to let well enough alone, rath er than take the risk of blocking pro gress in the effort to hastily correct evils complained of. It is a good maxim to let well enough alone, and in the language of these gentlemen "let the tariff abolish itself." OUR ANNUA L CLEARING-OUT SALE. "TTTfS HAVE JUST FIXTSHED TAKING STOCK AND ARE DESIROUS OF REDUCING rT BEFORE ?- oar Spring purchases, and in order to do so will offer goods greatly below their real value. Among the d jairable goods offered will be the very handsomest lot of Hamburg and Irish Point Embroidery To be foun 1 in this city. Real bargains will be shown in these goods. Our stock of DRESS GOODS will be sold chiap, and a beautiful line of Ladles' and Misses' HOSIERY. Also Flannel Underwear for La dles, Chil Iran and Gents, and they will be sold cheap. Our frlenrts are invited to examine these goods, believing they will be benefitted by so doing. Take pleasure In informing their customers and the public that the extraordinary crease In their busl- popular house ness durln the vear 1883: has compelled them to move into tne large ana eiegaiu wbi wui uu ycu . . a - - ... . , . 1 1 !,.... 1 . . , V. . . . H. n f.jm nar mnTM fT TniS g at tne same ume w assure mcu mcuus iuav ww .m. ...... ..... tra.1 Hotel, and beg 10 oner only tne THE If. C. EXPOSITION. A letter from Mr. H. E . Fries, of Salem, secretary of the North Caro lina Industrial Exposition Associa tion, informs us that substantial prog ress is being made in the exposition work. Although the canvass in Salem and Winston has not been completed, over $1,200 in subscriptions to the stock has been taken, in addition to which, at a meeting of the Forsyth county magistrates, they, by a large majority, instructed the commission ers to appropriate $499 to defray the expenses of a display of the products of that .county. Mr. Fries will spend Friday and Saturday in Charlotte, when he will present the subject to our citizens, and if desirable will meet the friends of the cause in the hall of the Cham ber of Commerce, the use of which has been tendered him by the presi dent. This is a matter in which Char lotte and Mecklenburg county should take a lively interest, and we trust that our citizens will cordially co operate with Mr. Fries, that the ex position may be a brilliant success, and that Mecklenburg may be credit ably represented there. The GovernorshipThe Federal Offi cers GooliHg ofl ob Some oi the Co alitionists. Corresepondence of I7W Observer. Washington, Feb. 12. The lalk here about the Gubernatorial nomi nation centers chiefly upon Scales, Gilmer, Coke and Bennett. There is not bo much said as to Lieutenant Governor. J. Edwin Moore, Coke, JuHen S. Carr and Charles M. Sted man have friends. One gentleman to-day declared for Scales and Coke. Jo Davis is more discussed for Treas urer than anybody else, and perhaps Kenan for Attorney General. I have heard no name suggested here for Secretary of State except Col. Saun ders. The Republicans are not doing much talking where Democrats, and especially correspondents of Demo cratic newspapers, can lay hold on the loose threads. Their plan is to nominate a combination ticket, main ly Republican, but with enough "Lib eralism" in it to enable a few men in certain countries to play ostrich. Leach is rather more with Democrats when here than Republicans, which indicates that possibly he is not a "biger man than ole Grant" any longer. The coalition is still looked for to save the g. o. p. The war on Keogh may not pan out for the Re publicans as well as certain hopeful politicians expect. Indeed, it looks very much as if they were killing the fine goose that laid the golden egg with much regularity, or at least that was to lay it at some'future time in the "dim unknown." Keogh is not despairing, but "w orking might and main to re-instate himself. His alliance with Wheeler is not helping him. Certain Democrats think that the confirmation of the pair is the best thing tor the Democratic party. Others are opposed in toto to carry ing the load that these men have im posed on themselves. Prominent Re publicans denounce ' Wheeler with great bitterness, while few Democrats have a good word for him. Against both Keogh and Wheeler, and possibly Boyd, there is a strong combination composed of Dr. Mott, who is now in charge of the forces in the field, Douglas, D. H. Starbuck and Lindsey Patterson. Mott looks to the next campaign. Douglas is ostensibly working for some one else, but really for his own restoration. Judge Starbuck is a candidate to suc ceed Wheeler in th3 collectorship. Patterson is trying to oust Boyd from the district attorneyship. The name of Gen. Clingman is connected with some of the plans for the approach ing canvass, though hardly with seri ousness. He is at work on his pamph let, "Nepotism," and expects to blow up about all of the more prominent politicians of the Democratic party, if one may attach importance to ru mors. Eastern Republicans talk about Russell for Governor. There is some discussion of Fowle's chances as a coalitian candidate. Some of the Re publicans do not take kindly to either, Fowle or Johnston. With these men Price is the favorite. They denounce Leach as a "played out braggart" and employ other' terms no less taste ful and complimentary. Of the twelve noes yesterday on the adoption of the flood appropria tion there were from North Carolina Messrs. Bennett, Cox and York. Judge Bennett said to-day that he voted distinctly upon the ground that he did not consider the Federal Government an eleemosynary insti tution, and that he was sure that such appropriations were unconstitu tional, as no provision was made in the Constitution for spending the public money in this manner. This is about Gen. Cox's, Randolph Tuck er's and Mr. Eaton's position. The latter did not, however, vote against the appropriation. The bill list was .again shorter yes terday, but North Carolina was not behind her previous record. Among the pension bills was one in favor of Col. C. A. Cilley, introduced by Gen. Vance. Gen. Scales introduced a bill at the request of Adjutant Gen. Johnstone Jones to give the State her cart of the distribution of arms to the States under the old law of 1808, which was repealed to prevent the Southern States from sharing in the benefits. Gen. Cox brought in a bill to secure a more faithful delivery of mails on etar routes, that is, the stage and saddle-bag lines. Also one to enable the auditing of the claim for rent for the Russell Barracks, near Raleigh. O'Hara introduced a bill providing for a public building at Newbern. A number of relief and pension bills were introduced by Gen. Vance and O'Hara. A tall, fine-looking man, of perhaps 32 or 35 years, was introduced to me to-day by ex-Senator Fowler, of Ten nessee, as Mr. Nutt, of Mississippi. He is a grandson of the Prof. Ker who was the first instructor in our university, and is evidently proud of his ancestry who he thinks were originally Gauls. Johnstone Jones, Adjutant Gen eral of the State is here. H. colored men, so far as the witness knew, had pistols. One man was shot dead and several weunded. In consequence of the riot the colored people agreed among themselves not to vote at the election three days afterwards, fearing violence. In re ply to Senator Vance the witness said his affidavit made before the committee of fortv at Danville, was incorrect, in so far as it averred that 4" the colored men had used firearms. The witness had signed the affidavit, but did not write it. It had been read over to him, . but it seemed something had been added there after. The colored men had been assured by leading white men of Danville, after the riot, that they would not be disturbed at the polls, but still they feared to vote. The witness was not afraid to vote, but di 1 not because of the understanding that the colored people would not vote. No orders were received not to vote. ABOUT THE STATE. TO THE A SUCCESSFUL FARMER. Iu- What a Rowaa Farmer Did with dastrr and Intelligent Caltare on oae Poor Farm. Editor Observer. I have recently visited J. Mc. Har rison, of Rowan county, an old friend of mine in my schoolboy days. About the time we were grown up we were separated, and had not met again for about twenty years. At the close Of the war Mr. Harrison had a farm, not a large one, and I am told ex tremely poor. On my arrival at his home I found a splendid residence, well furnished; three large barns well filled with grass and clover hay about these barns more fat fine brood mares than I have seen since our raid in Maryland during the war. Also in the barn yard a herd of as fine Jersey cattle as are in the State, numbering some sixty head thor oughbreds and grades. In his pas tures a flock of the finest Cots wold sheep imaginable. Also pure bred Berkshire and Jersey red hogs, a number of which can always be bought from Mr. Harrison at reason able prices. I have told you of the residence, the barns and the fine stock, and now I will tell you from whence they came. From the same small farm and from the pluck and energy of my friend. He now has a very fine tract of land or farm of 800 acres or more finely set in clover and orchard grass. I found on this farm the latest im proved agricultural implements, not only for cultivating the soil but for harvesting the crop. And last, but the best of all, I found this magnifi cent and well furnished house of my friend presided over by Mrs. Harri son, his good wife, one of the most estimable and practicable ladies it lias ever been my good fortune to meet. To her good management and supervision the success of my friend is largely due. My object in asking the publica tion of the foregoing is not to give my friend a "puff," for I have known some to get many who were not worth the paper on which the "puffs" were written. But I think when a man has gained success by his indus try, perseverance and good manage ment, like my friend has, then hon orable mention and publicity is al together right and due him, as well as the benefits that others may receive from his good example and success, which should greatly encourage the desponding. Respectfullv, J. M. Davis. LET IT ABOLISH ITSELF. Newest and Most Desirable Goods A' prices at all times lower than any other house, will be strictly adhered to. The balance of our Wiekr Stcck of Ready-Made Clothin win be sold absolutely regardless of cost We will offer at the same time BARGAINS IN PANTALOONS FROM $1.25 UPWARD. BARGAINS IN BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S SUITS. BARGAINS IN GENT 'S FURNISHING GOODS. nnrm. BARGAINS IN MEN'S AND BOYS' STIFF AND SOFT HATS BARGAINS IN BOOTS AND SHOES. And enough other bargains to Ml two or three columns. Strangers visiting the city will And this an opportunity to supply their want in clothing at prices never heard of before, W. KAUFMAN &CO. CETTRALHOTEL CORHER. L. F. OSBORNE, Practol snneior anil Cm ELiieer. Afl engagement! promptly filled in city or county. Mapping and platting a specialty. Office With E.K P. Osborne, tttorne,.. .Imrt honsa. iiereit-T.j.On,CounljSnwer. UtMt LD Papers by the hundred lor ale mt - w THia omci W. J. Black & Sod, 1 WHOLESALE GROCERS, 1.. - r . - . ., . Coueee Street. Charintt w r. ' '-'I ;r-, : .. - ' TTA J"-MI M'ulwan' n:-J iL. 3 pnm piaiur large quantities c Wfcaar anil Oata. inllftt Slow Liring on the Eastern Shore Greensboro M'd. Times. A Talbot farmer and his good wife lo3t their reckoning last Sunday, and the farmer drove to Easton with a load of marketing while his help meet stayed at home and finished up the family ironing. Finding the stores and market house closed, he inquired the cause, and being told it was Sunday, he exclaimed: "Good CTacious! and my wife at home iron ing!" When the church bells began to ring he made a bee-line for home to report to Mrs. Osman and stop the ironing. A Boat That Unas Udder Water. Bartfrrd. fverdnff fast . . , , , Professor j&tehel, of Bridgeport, whose airship has naade him famous, has invented & submarine boat. He has a working model in operation i u n lar tankof -waterat .his labora tory and office rooms ; in the Bridge imrt Savintrs Bank Building. The Jr.,vp1 fa twenty inches long, and speeds about under water at a depth of three incnes w 1.0m-- . ay-- dme to the adjustment of the spring which operates its elevating lowering attachment. Tf n be Dolsoned, woe be to those whoflrttdf thrIUs worto poison fountain UfB, i nr flnrti seK. aaa mr P"?""- v w .w, - . ..... M tBiutfiziuicB. uusuaunr AlsarMpaimSTreei the Mood, the .'JSmSK PPe. etrengUiand THE DANVILLE RIOT. and health. Tir.'iT t kn.Uiri.u. ciMiian Half Benewer impart a ShSSsto the hair, and to liighl A Colored Policeman Gives Hi Testi mony Before the Investigatine Com mittee. Washington, Feb. 14. The inves tigation of the Danville election riot was begun this morning. Congress men Cabell and John S. Wise, of Vir ginia, were present. Walter S. Withers, colored, who at the time of the riot was a policeman in Danville, first witness. He de scribed nis experience on the 3d of November. A white man and a col ored man were fighting and a crowd assembled. The witness arrived after the combatants had been separated, but crowds remained. The whites were ranged in line along the curb and the colored men were in the street. The white men had pistols in their hancU. The witness advised the colored men to leave, fearing they would get hurt. He heard white men say they, the colored men, could get enough if they wanted it, and if they didn't leave some of them would get hurt. The witness was unsuccessful in his efforts. Some of the colored men objected to leaving, saying thst the, whites were trying to ovemae xnem. He stepped to one side'and upon the side walk iust be- foreemgDtgansThe first , fir ing wag atheiri thetcjiJlored peo- pu3jgair2.3jnmi the whites aimed at hei'wherever they could see them. ; Thwitnss did not Uma&'&txnbdttoea& to do so. xne locai omciais were Kead jus tersv A military company was call ed out about an hour after the riot. Some of j the white rioters were on guard that evening; None of the Views ot a M ana taeta ring Firm who Think it Unwise to Tamper with the Tariff Mow, Bat Believe it Sboald be Left to Abolish Itself. Editor Charlotte Observer: LrscJOLjrroN, N. C, Feb. 13, 1S84. Replying to your circular January 3d. would state with reference to questions : 1. That the South is not protected on yarns because she makes the coarser kinds. These goods being more easily made and requiring less capital in their manufacture, the production exceeds the consumption at home and prices are so low that no country in the world could export them to this country. 2. The abolition of tariff on goods selling for 20 cents and hinder would not affect our business or the business of Southern mills generally. In answer to your last question, would say, that of course we can make goods as low as any part of the world, but do not see that we possess any great advantage over the rest of mankind. Living near the cotton fields is something, but not every thing in the manufacture of yarns, Our machinery and factory findings cost heavy freights Ifroml Northern cities. What we gain in having the raw material at our doors, we lose in shipping our manufactured goods to Northern markets. In conclusion, we think it unneces sary to trouble ourselves about the tariff. In the course of time it will cease to protect any manufacturer of any commodity and then it will be taken oft It is only,'. a question of time when there will be an overpro duction of everything for our con- snmntion here. We shall then be compelled to sell to other countries, and in this event we must make ev-firvt.hine-as cheaolv astEngland or any other country. It would be dis astrous to manufacturers and laborers to disturb the relations thatexist at nresent bv a total abolition of the tariff. Let it abolish iteelf . Phifer & Allison. From the tone of the State press, Judge Gilmer appears to be the most popular man for the next Democratic candidate foi the Governor. A keen witted, facetious member of the last North Carolina Legisla ture, told that honorable body, in a Miscussion on the tariff, that they had better drop the subjeet, for,' said he jocularly, "most of you wouldn't know the tariff if you were to meet him in the road." The News & Observer states that Governor Jarvis has appointed James G. Martin, of Asheville, assistant Adjutant General, with the rank of major, in the North Carolina State Guard. F. R. Curtis and T. B. Young have been appointed aides, with the rank of captain and lieuten ant respectively. Baltimore Sun : Mr. J. H. Hender son, of North Carolina, a student at the College of Physicians and Sur geons, died yesterday at his boarding house on North Charles street, of in flammatory rheumatism. Mr. Hen derson came to Baltimore last Sep tember to attend lectures at the col lege. His body was forwarded to his home last night. In respect to his memory the usual lectures were postponed yesterday. Wilmington Star : Applications for the position of Superintendent of the Oxford Orphan Asylum should be addressed to Maj. Robert Bingham, Biagharn's School, Grand Master of Masons and chairman ex officio of the board of directors of the Asylum ; or, if preferred, to the resident director in this city. Mr. H. H. Munson: or to either members of the board, viz : Thos. S. Kenan, Raleigh; Julien S. Carr, Durham; A. H. A. Williams, Oxford, or H. T. Bahnson, Winston. The steamer North State has been purchased from Messrs. Worth & Worth by some parties in Georgia to run on the Altamaha and tribu tary rivers. She will be commanded by Capt. R. P. Paddison, who owns an interest in her. Fayetteville Observer : Mr. J. C. McCaskill, an enterprising merchant and capi talis; of our next door neigh bor on the South, the thriving town of Shoe Heel, has purchased the Hawley field opposite the Clarendon Mill, and house and lot adjoining on the North, with a view to establish ing a cotton factory there. Near the village of Rockfish, now quickly reached by the Bennettsville exten sion of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railroad, is a ridge of sand extending nearly two miles in one di rection by half a mile in the other, and fifty or sixty feet deep, which has been pronounced by experts to be as fine sand for the manufacture of glass as exists in this country. Some glass makers in Sherman'.-s Army on their march through this country in 1865, discovered the mine. With our present industrial boom, opportunity occurs tor a repetition ot the laminar history of the establishment of the Durham business, which resulted from the occupation of that place by Sherman's troops pending the Greens boro surrender. Farmer and Mechanic: Reports from various sections of the State in dicate that the counties are slowly declaring in support of the project,, officially. Attorney General Kenan gives the opinion that the county authorities may make an appropria tion, not directly to the Exposition, but for the purpose of raismg a coun ty exhibit to be sent to the Exposi tion. The accident to the new Episcopal church in Henderson re cently, was duplicated at Jonesboro on Friday evening, by the giving way of a scaffold at the new Metho dist church there. our or more men were precipitated a distance of W'-f - rxns?n !! (1 .;,h m wrs, Hotel mm 1 v l AMD HEADS OF FA1T1TMES Throughou the Stato -o WlTTEmOWSatY & -Will OHVr on Klonday- Ail Immense Purchase of Table -CONSISTING OF Irish, Scotch and German Linens, (BLEACHED AND UNBLIACHTOJr A Magnified Lioe of Turkey Red Damasks (FROM 38 CENTS PER YARD UPWARD.) Towels. FROM 50 CENTS PER DOZEN UPWARD. Towes 50 PIECES 10-4 SHEETINGS AT 22 25 Cents TIIIS IS AX OPPORTUNITY THAT DON'T OCCUR OFll IN A LIFETIME. We also Invite attention to the most Complete Stock of Zephyr, Shetland and OermantowB Wools Ever Snowa la tateSec lion, at Lowest Prices. , j mm & Bill CHARLOTTE. N. C. 25 or 30 feet, and lav until help came. Charles Riddle, John Brown, Jos. Johnston and Jos. Wicker were hurt ; the last named not seriously. The Hamlet & Cheraw connection, which is now being surveyed, is called the Palmetto road. It is not an exten sion of the R. & Augusta Air Line, but is understood to have arrange ments with that road ; so that Col. Moncure Robinson's car can pass di rectly south from Fredericksburg to Ridgeway ; thence over his son's track to Hamlet ; via Cheraw & North Fstern to Charleston. This will likely be a favorite route for Florida travel, as a great many of the wealthy tourists prefer t come via Mt. Ver non, Kichmond, Kaleigh, etc. ine Palmetto will eventually push on from Cheraw to Camden and Colum bia. Tf von area freouenter or resident of a miasmatic rtutriz-t hiirrirewiR vrair KTstem against the scourge of all new countries ague, bilious and intermittent fevers by the use oi nop Bitters. A Fair Oner. The Voltaic Belt Co., of Marshall, Mich., offer to send Dr Dye's Celebrated Voltaic Belt and Electric Appliances on trial, for thirty days, to men, old and young, afflicted with nervous debility, nervous vitality, and many otner diseases. See advertisement m this paper. Violent. nnrrofiive sublimate is the usual form nf murcurv eiven for blood and skin diseases, and it is one of the most active anri -uirtl Ant noisons. A case is on record of the death of a child from the effects of corrosive sublimate sprinkled on an excoriated surface. Taken fa small doses for alangth of time, it gradually .rftia in, i.hA tiftanea and bones pro ducing mercurial rheumatism and other diseases equally as painful. Persons Vwn noisoned An this way, or who suffer from any blobd complaint or skin humor, should by all means take a nnnr of Swift's Specific, which is the vA0tttoble oreiaration which will oiiminato thin noison from the system. snri fnr a corjv of Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases, free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. L. Berwanger Oro. CLOTHING DOWN. BARGAINS FOR CASH ONLY. A lot of odd and end Suits worth $10.00 and $12.00 for $7.50. Our regular stock of Suitings all marked down. Our $18.00 Suits, $16.00 $22.60 Suits, $18.00 $27.50 and $90.00 suits, . $22.60 Boys' and Children's Suits A T AND BELO W COS T. Winter Overcoats At $7.50, $9.00, $12.00, $15.00, $20.00 and $25X0, all . worth 25 per cent more. A handsome line of light weight Spring Overcoats on hand; in fact, $30,000 worth of Clothing at 75c. on the dollar. Call early and get bargains. Respectfully, . . - - . . i L. Berwang er& Bro. Leading Clothiers and Tailors. N. B. Agents for the celebrated Pearl Shirts. r... ;:T "it.. ; or. j E. IVL. ANDREWS U c3 i i in II AS A LARGE AMD SELKCTlTOCK OF , )-:' ;- ;r: - rrTnoil n fil F". ' IJUFACT Tie k'isl in Iwrdo odT r i ..; 4oii ;:T '.vfJilii .",!Lij;'io:ii i If -J if '-iiX M- nJ !! i irii m iViJ Horrors of the Inquisition. m. Hr..TifeiHnn" nf aiden time inflicted horrible torments on its victims, such as stretching hem in all kinds oi unreasouauwj ouayo uu i . v, Tttit th torments were not muct worse than those which are experiencsd by people wnmmt mttTTOT TnDn niUIEUUIl . mw-m ....... JU1 MS o Morean of Syracuse, was a martyr to muscular VhSm but Perry Davis's Paia .Killer made him well. Mention this to your mend who a tor- tared with rheumatism. T.tmnisBrnN. Mich.. Feb. 2. 1880. I have sold Hop Bitters tor four years and there to that immwa them for bilious attacks. kidney complaints and maaj p dlbeasestrnddeBt to this malarial annate. n. i.juumuujvju As far as heard from the "TANSILL'S PUNCH" CIGARS Are ahead by a large majority." IT IS AMUSING to notice the smile oi satisiac tion that creep ever the face of the old smoker - . -. HTnndll. PnnpR as no puns away v uiro in. - ittnm America's finest 5 cent cigars. - . ,: THE MOST PROMINENT MEDIC AI MKN OF the land smoke and recommend "Tansill's Punch" Cigars, because ot their entire freedom from injurious drugs. ' . . - . - arioue, n. i AT LOWZPBICES. Cmead be Ctlc or Wri(i'Bie aa Get Price lEo ML si -HUM 61 r !.hi iron j f io T-ra n nHtt - ' ... ..i, .M . TTTO. FIJItlllTfTBE DEAJLEB. J J MUM tit aalr to Kb youthful color.

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