Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / March 12, 1884, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOLUME XXXI CHARLOTTK, N. C WEDNFSDAY MARCH 12, 1884. PRICE FIVE CENTS. k 4 A A HANDSOME WHITE -SACH VICTORIA AND MANDRAS LAWNS, CHECKED NAINSOOKS, BAED MUSLIN, P. K's., &c, &c. Abo DUK33 (ilNGHAMS, SEERSUCKERS, CHAMBRATS. SPRING PRINTS, all at prices to suit the tlm.'s. tont forget to look at our Embroideries, Inserting, Machine Torchon Laces, etc. A nanosome line of Parasols. Remember, we keep a full line of Evltt 4 Bro'8 Justly celebrated Shoes, every pair war- Toiiiake room for oar large stock of Spring Goods we have decided to offer the remainder of our Winter Dress Goods, Balmoral Skirts, Underwear, Blankets, etc., AT SLAUGHTERING PRICES. A jnu lot of Neck Ruchlng at a great bargain. Call and see it Very Respectfully, MARGRAVES &1LIEMMR. SMITH BUILDING. sir. wmm. In the North rn Markets, and Blew Goods ARRIVING jAIL.Y. j Just opened a handsome line of Embroideries ami Torchoa Laces F.scurlal, Spanish and Spanish Glmpure Laces, NPVMSII ItETS FOR OVER- Ladles' and Children's Collars, Clerical, Black and White. Sailors' Collars, Plain and Em broidered Edges. PARASOLS Now Is the time to buy before they are picked over. CALL AND MAKE TOUR CHOICE. We Beat tlie City on Domestics. Respectfully, T. L. SEIGLE & CO. WE ARE OFFERING The J.srjjt and Cheapeitt Line of SPRING WRAPS EVER SOLD IN CHARLOTTE. EPASK TO SEE THEM.J JASK TO SEE THEM.J3 ALEXANDER k HARRIS W. Kaufman k Co., CENTRAL HOTEL CORNER, Take pleasure In Informing their customers and the public that the extraordinary increase in their busi ness during the year 1; has compelled them to move Into the large and elegant storeroom under Cen tral Hotel, and beg at the same time to assure their friends that the familiar motto of this popular bouse to offer only the Re west si nd Host Desirable Goods At prices at all times lower than any other house, wlHJbe strictly adhered to. The balance of our Winter Stock of Ready-Made.Clothing Win be soli absolutely regardless oncost. We will offer BARGAINS IN PANTALOONS FROM $1.25 UPWARD. BARGAINS IN BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S SUITS. BARGAINS IN GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS. BARGAINS IN MEN'S AND BOYS' STIFF AND SOFT HATS BARGAINS IN BOOTS AND SHOES. . r. A ?rt enouen other bargains to Ml two or three columns. Strangers visiting the eity will find this an oproitunity to supply their wants in clothing at prices never heard of before, W. KA.UFMAN &CO. CRTTRALDOTEL CORNER. L.F. OSBOUNE, Practical Suttbsot and Ci?i Engineer. Kererence-T.j.Qrr, County Surveyer. feWtf QLD PAPERS by the nun Ur sate at this office Alexander LINE OF GOOD AS- Umbrellas, &c , k Latest Style SILK HATS, SILK, MOHAIR and GINGHAM UMBRELLAS, Cents' hand-made and Machine TS Ladles', Misses' and Children's Shoes of best makes TRICKS, TRAVELING BAGS, Trunk and Slinwl Ulrap JUST RECEIVED. at the same time SHOES, repn k Co. 0 YOU "WISlH TO Bt7IU? ZF SO, CONSULT ARGMITEGTS.! r Accurate Plans, Specification, .nrl DetaOcfl Rowings furnished for Public and trivte Bond ing in any part of the country. JUST RECEIVED A splendid lot of Bill and Letter Head Paper, Job department J THJ3 OFFICE, i S&e.&tiaYlotte 0)bsetruer. PUBLISHED BMLYXCEPT MONDAY : " ' t ' bt CHAS. .R. JONES, Editor and Proprietor. Terms of Subscription. DAILY. Per copy 5 cents One month (by mail) j. 75 Three months (by mail) 2 00 Six months (by inall) 4.00 One year (by mall) 8.00 WEEKLY. One year $2.00 Six months i.oo Invariably in Advance Free of PoKtag;e lo all parts of the United States. "Specimen copies sent free on application. rJBT-bubscribers desiring the address of their paper changed will please state in their communi cation both the old and new address. Kate or AdvertiKlnsr. ..Une Square-One time. $1.00; each additional in sertion, 5j)c; two weeks. $5.00; one month. 8.00. A schedule of rates for longer periods furnished on application. Remit by draft on New York or Charlotte, and by Fostofflee Honey Order or Registered Letter at our risK. If sent otherwise we will not be responsible for miscarriages. OPPOSED TO THE SCHEME! An effort has been on foot some time in the city of Baltimore to con trol the traffic of the Richmond and Danville system of roads, so as to secure the trade to Baltimore, by lendirig the company $2,000,000 in consideration of certain conditions to be entered into by the company. A bill has been introduced and passed the State Senate authorizing the city authorities to lend the credit of the city for this purpose. But the scheme has its opponents, who oppose it vig orously, the sentiments of whom the Sun voices. Calling attention to the clause of the State constitution which prohibits the State from lending its credit to works of internal improve ment, it says: The scheme of lending $2,000,000 by the city of Baltimore to the Richmond and Danville road, "or to such other railroad company or companies" as the mayor and city council may direct, which has passed the Senate of Maryland, belongs to this class of legislation. It were bad enough and obnoxious to all the objections which experience has shown to apply 10 such schemes if this bill provided for a mere loan of $2,000,000 to aid in the construction of a road which as part of a system would tend to bring traffic to and multiply the mercantile facilities of Baltimore with the south ern country. But the bill as proposed contemplates as one of its alterna tives that the city shall purchase a controlling interest in the Richmond and Danville road and the lines of road operated by said company, so as to establish ad maintain a more per fect connection by rail with the Southern States. In other words, the effect of this would be to make a rad ical change in the municipal govern ment of Baltimore. Instead of limit ing the mayor and city council to the business of municipal administration it would be turned into a great rail road corporation organization for the purpose of controlling and operating a system of roads which stretches over two thousand five hundred and seventy seven and a half miles. The capital stock of the Richmond and Danville is $5,000,000; its funded debt $5,814,500. The Richmond and West Point Terminal company is an auxil iary and under the former's control, and was formed to acquire roads to connect with it. Its capital is $15, 000,000. of which the Richmond and Danville own over one half. Through this 1,487 miles of the system are con trolled, embracing the Virginia Mid land and its branches, 412 miles, rep resenting a capital of sis millions, and a debt of eleven millions, including three millions three hundred and thirty thousand of income bonds. By the terms of the bill the city may in vest $2,000,000 either as a loan, which would probably go into the .income bonds referred to, as the valuable consideration for a traffic contract ; or to purchase a controlling interest in the Richmond and Danville com pany, to secure which latter it would be necessary to obtain at least 51 per cent of the Richmond and Danville company's capital stock. By such a purchase would the city of Baltimore be introduced to the new and danger ous role of controlling and managing a scheme of railroads extending through half an empire. Doubtless some benefits would flow to our mer cantile interests were the treasures of this vast domain poured into the lap of Baltimore. But it is certain that the amount would be inconsiderable compared to that which floats in vision around the advocates of the i project. But what of official corrup- j tion, what of perversion of the ends and aims of municipal government, what of debt and disaster, what of the more than possibility that the two millions now asked would be the pretext for calling for five millions more to prevent the loss of the two; and then of further demands to rescue what had already been embarked? Such has been the history of similar enterprises, and such will always be the fate of enterprises which are con trolled by municipal government. If there be one lesson of political econo my more deeply burned by disaster into the minds of men than another, it is that under no circumstances should a State or a municipality assume to govern private busi ness enterprises. Baltimore city has already a load of debt quite equal t her convenient ability to pay. Already are the taxes heavy enough to offer a serious check to property investments, within her limits. There should be overwhelming reason for adding another ounce to the burden. If the scheme be one which will not require payment of the debt to be incurred, and would be remunerative, then why not let the men of enter prise, the commercial and manufac turing capitalists themselves, make the loan? for they would be the first to derive the benefits the alleged ex istence of which are the argument in favor of embarking in the scheme. If those benefits are not to flow, what right is there to tax the whole com munity with the proposed debt? Cer tainly the House of Delegates, ought to work this matter well. They are the immediate representatives of the taxpaying classes. They cannot re lieve themselves from the perpetra tion of the consequent wrong by delegating the power to the mayo and city council, and through them to a popular vote. Everybody knows that such popular: votes are illusory, and that the Legislature has no right to put the mass of society under the necessity of fighting such a battle Nothing short of an absolute personal conviction, after mature investiga tion, would justify a member in vot ing for the scheme upon the ground that the people can protect then oaitrDa it. ia t.hA dutv of the Legisla ture itself to protect them from the dangers which; ny .tnreawnea wuw Edison, the inventor, indulges in the following prediction: As to the changes which will be effected by. electricity within fifty years in the city of New York, I would say that I believe electricity 'will propel the cars of the street and elevated railroads, light the city within and without its buildings, furnish power for all pur poses, - work telephones and burglar alarms, deliver the opera, convey parcels, detect and signal fires, oper ate fire engines and possibly displace animal locomotion for vehicles. Gen Bob Toombs owns some very valuable land in Texas. A littlewhile ago he refused $10 an acre for a tract of 4,000 acres, and he owns much more than this. It was to this land the General referred when he an swered the inquiry of a Northern man in Paris just after the war. The lat ter asked "how that d d rebel man aged to live." "Tell him," replied the General, "that I am eating an acre of dirt a day." He was selling Texas lands at $5 an acre, which was about his daily expenses. . The American Sentry, published in New Ycrk as the organ of the Green back party, commenting upon the late legal tender decision of the Su preme court, asks: "And now what excuse has Congress for not at once issuing greenbacks and paying off all the bonds now payable, and thus for ever ending the payment, of interest on more than two hundred millions of dollars?" A peasant in Holland has discover ed a new cure for gout. He was laid up so crippled that he :ha1 no use of his feet. A bee straggled around and stung him. It cured him. Then he got a friend who was also a victim of gout to try the experiment and get stung, which he did, and was cured. That's a Holland story, and it was Dutch gout and Dutch bees. Ohio farmers, taking current low prices at Chicago and the report of the State Agricultural Board, receive on the crop of 1S83, as compared with the crop of 1882, at least $30,000,000 less on their corn crop and $25,000,000 on their wheat. The actual loss since prices were higher a year ago, is nearer $75,000,000 on their crops, a loss borne bv the owners of about 222,000 farms; , ,. - fc-. The indications are that the late legal tender decision of the U. S. Supreme court will result in a consid erable amount of constitutional amendment talk, four proposed amendments being already intro duced, two in the Senate, two in the House. Hei e is the way the Chattanooga Democrat puts it: "Do free trade Democrats prefer the election of a Republican President on a tariff plat form to the election of a Democratic President on a tariff platform? These are the alternatives and "you pays your moneys and takes your choice." . . - Smi Since the adoption of the high license law in Nebraska many saloons have been closed. In Omaha there is not more than half the number there was, while the decrease in smaller towns is proportionally greater. In the cities the license is $1,000, in the small towns $500. Why Hating Docs Not Pay From the Catholic Herald. It is not worth your while to hate. Your life is not long enough to make it pay to cherish ill-will or hard thoughts toward any one. What if that man has cheated you or that woman played you false? What if this friend has forsaken you in your time of need or that one, having won your utmost confidence, your warm est love, has concluded that he pre fers to consider and treat you as a stranger? Let it all pass. What difference will it make to you in a few years, when you go hence to the "undiscovered country?" All who treat you wrong now will be more sorry for it than you, even in your deepest disappointment and grief, can be. A few more smiles, a few more tears, some pleasure, much pain, a little longer hurrying and worrying in the world, some hasty greetings and abrupt farewells, and life will be over, and the injurer and injured will be laid away and ere long for gotten It is not worth while to hate each other. France's Vineyards. Cor. San Francisco Chronicle. There are planted in France about 6,000,000 acres of vines, yielding on the average in good years about 300 gallons per acre, or altogether a"bout 1,800 000 gallons, worth about 15i cents per gallon, or altogether about $300,000,000, at the vineyards. Of Course it fetches muoh more in the end. The home consumption amounts to about two-thirds of this immense yield and the exportation to the re maining third. The phylloxera has played havoc with these figures of lato years. Not a Thing to be Trifled With. Rochester Post-Express. Those who speak lightly of the wool interests of the country, and of lhe necessity of properly protecting it, forget that the flock-masters num ber more than a milllion, and that every State and Territory in the Union produces wool in greater or lesser amounts, and that altogether there are about forty -five millions of sheep in the country. It is an indus try that must not be destroyed by hasty or ill-advised legislation. Baried in The Back 1 ard. Fort Worth Gazette. J. Tom Wilson, of Terrell, owned a monkey which died. Its body was placed in coffin, funeral notices print ed and preparations made to bury it in the city cemetery. The people protested and hinted shot-guns, and Tom buried his ancestor in the back yard. 1 - - A Baltimore Assignment. : Baltimore, March 11. Marchant have assigned for toe benefit of their ureuibure. ' ioauuities suited. lO DO $,600; nominal assets, $45,000., ; THE GREAT QUESTION. HOW THE SOUTH PROSPER UU. : DER A PROTECTIVE TARIFF. The Inconsistency of Those Who De sire Prosperity and Advocate Free Trade A Comprehensive View ol the Situation. To the Editor of The Obsehves. We have been for the past two or three years reading accounts in our newspapers of the wonderful pro gress the South is making in the es tablishment of manufacturing indus tries. And, as a farmer, we heartily rejoice in the fact of this grow.th, be cause it means agricultural prosperi ty as well, for the reason that agri cultural growth is inseparable from that of the other industries. But what strikes us as singular, or rather inconsistent, in certain leading pa pers of the South, the News & Ob server and Wilmington Star of this State among the number, is that they shall herald this manufacturing pro gress in one column and in another heap abuse upon the protective tariff, under which this growth has been made. Protective tariffs are high Chinese walls, keeping out other nations and keeping in our own pro -ductions, they say, clogging our pros perity, together with a great many more of the same Fort of ill-conceived ideas on the subject. The growth of our country within the past twenty years has been marvelous, beyond any thing in the history of the world ; and the South within the past ten years has partaken of this prosperi ty. How then can it be consistently charged that a protective tariff has interfered and kept back this pros perity ? Go among the men engaged in the manufacturing, mining and mechanical pursuits and you find a large majority of them favorable to protection. Why? Is it just to charge them with being influenced solely by selfishness and greed? They are pro tectionists as a rule, because they realize the importance of diversified industries to the w elfare of the coun try. The difficulty with such papers as the News & Observer and Star, is their failure to grasp the real foun dation facts upon which it is built : that agriculture is the basis of all prosperity; that -there can be no prosperous agriculture without diver sified pursuits, and that the latter have been, and are yet, dependent upon a protective tariff system for their maintenance and further estab lishment. The progress agriculture has made in this country, in the ag gregate, has been due to the multi plication of the other industries. But we are yet, taking the entire country, too agricultural. Taking the South we are too much so, by a large per cent. As we have taken a step in the direction of reducing this excess of farmers in our population" under the protective system, nowiiri' force, why ought we want to adopt a free trade system whose tendencies are in the opposite direction? "The far mer feeds all, but when all are. far mers he can only teed himself, which is a necessary operation, but not a lucrative business." The duty of a country is to build up its internal commerce, and when this is perfected the foreign commerce will come as a natural consequence. Because perfected internal industries means the utilization of our natural capabilities to such extent that the cost of production has been brought to a minimum, and we can then offer to the world our products at a price at which they will be bought. Hence the real prosperity of a country is to be guaged by the amount and variety of its internal commerce, and not by its foreign commerce ; and, in addition by the minimum quantity of the crude products of the soil sent abroad. " An assertion like the following, taken from a recent number of the Star: "The tariff is the cause of over production, and ouer production is the cause of the distress," is a bare assertion with no evidence to sustain it. If there are no causes at work to impair the purchasing power of the people, there cannot oe sufficient over production to bring about any thing like a stagnation in business, such as tbe country is now passing through. For production, without these impairing conditions, will keep abreast with the demand because the increase of production diminishes the price of things, and this in itsrturn increases the consumption, and con sequently the evil will work its own cure. But the trouble under which the country has been laboring has been caused by the impaired purchas ing power of the people. Bad crops for the past three years reduced the purchasing power, in the first place, of 50 per cent of the population -the agricultural. Then, in the second place, this condition of things affected the industrial enterprises, and soon a surplus of manufactured material be gan to accumulate. Then prices be gan falling and the operatives became affected by a reduction of wages and actual loss of work their purchasing power became impaired, and thus again another element entered to further impair the purchasing ability of the agricultural population. And so on until the depression became general, i which still continues, but with a gleam of hope of a change for the better at an early day. And why! Simply because of the favorable out look for the coming good crops. How mighty for good or evil is this indus try agriculture ! How important to the welfare of mankind? A few words more in regard to the civilization and growth of England, lauded by the Star, and the methods by which she has achieved her posi tion as a Bation. We hold the civili sation of England to be built on a foundation of sand to be undermined and swept away in time unless re constructed by her statesmen. To achieve the positions she holds among the nations, she has violated princi ples of justice with her own people and with every other nation which she has over-shadowed in her strength and with which she has had dealings. There is but one true civilization and that is founded upon the precept of: "Do unto others as you would have others do unto you," and is applica ble to nations as well as individuals. "When," says Carlyle, the English Ehilosopher and historian, "a dark uman individual has filled the measure of his wicked block headism, sins and nuisancing? there are gibbets provided, there are laws provided; and you can in an articulate manner, hang him and finish him, to general satisfaction. Nations, too, you may depend on it as certain do require the same pro oess and do infallibly get it withal ; Heaven's justice, with written J laws i without, beine the most indispen sable and the mevitablest thing I m S . . . ! unfa Tsw 1mt Know oi in saw umo"o. v "ui"6 withmnt it: and it is sure to come," TrAianri TnrlisC Jamaica. Esvnt - aad other nations, whose social conditio she has ruined to make a market for her wares, are witnesses of her in justice and wrong doings. Her mil lions of paupers and toiling masses are witnesses of the hollowness of boasted civilization. No civilization can be true which produces a mag nificent aristocracy, few in number, at one end, and millions of toilers, steeped in poverty, at the other. A civilization must not be judged by the few illustrious names adorning the pages of history, but by the so cial, moral, intellectual and industrial condition of the people in the aggre gate. Let us, tl en as a free people, with the power within u of attaining the highest form of civilization the world has ever seen, remember that the goal cannot be reached except by "doing unto others as we would that others do unto us" in our dealings with ourselves as a people, and in our dealings with other nations, and that the free trade policy England and ourr short-sighted citizens would have us adopt, leads in an opposite direction. C. McDonalp. Papal Appointments. Rome, March 10. Cardinal Socconi has been appointed Dean of the Sacred College, to .fill the vacancy caused by the death of CardinalPietro. Itis,thought probable Cardinal, Led-ochowskj-, the banished Arch-Bishop of Posen, will be made Cardinal -Bishop of Frazica. The French Snccesslat. Paris, March 11. - Advices- from Tonauin reDort the French , nnliimn advancing upon Bac Ninh from xiaiuzuong ana nas naa a successtui engagement with the enemy. Ad miral Courbet has tak-pn the Tmri Clad to Qumhon and declared that part oi uie coast DiocKaaea. Wild Kaslern Journalise. Philadelphia Press. Governor Ordwav. of Dakotah. is cavorting around Washington shout ing mac ne can just Knock the. ever lasting packing out of the numerous charges of irreularitv acainst him. But why doesn't he do it ? What to do Them. When rheumatism nicks the lotnts then ask tor Benson's Capclne Porus Plasters. Prompt, sure, rents. IIorBford's Acid Phosphate. For Sick Headache. Dr. N. S. Read. Chicago, sars: "I think it Is a remedy of the highest ralue ln many forms of men ta'land nervous exhaustion, attended by sick head ache, dyspepsia and diminished vitality. Contlnuedj CHA1TER II. wonderful and mysterious curative power is devel oped which Is so varied in its operations that no disease or ill health can possibly exist or resist Its power, ana yet it is Harmless lor tne most trail woman, weakest in valid or smallest child to use. 'Patients "Almost dead or nearly dying-' For years, and given up by physicians of Brlcht's and other kidney diseases, liver complaints, severe coughs called consumption, have been cured. "umcii guile iieiiiiy uniiy: From agony of neuralgia, nervousness, wakeful ness and various diseases ieculiar to women. people drawn out or shape trom excrueiatlne pangs of Rheumatism. inflammatory and chronic, or suflerinsr from scrofula! Erysipelas! Salt rheum, blood pofsoniiu:. dyspepsia. Indiges tion, and ln fact almost all diseases frail Nature is heir to Have been cured by Hod Bitters, proof of which can be found in every neighborhood ln tbe known world. Durham is historic. It was neutral wound durimr tbe armistice between Sherman and Johnson. Soldiers of both armies filled their ponches with the tobacco stored there, and, after tbe surrender, marched home ward. Soon orders came from East, West , North and South, for "more of that elegant tobacco." Then, ten men ran an unknown factory. Now it employs 800 men, uses the pink and pick of the Golden Belt, and the Durham Bull is the trade-mark of this, the best tobacco in the world. Blackwell's Bull Durham 8moking Tobacco has the largest sale of any smoking tobacco in the world. Why f Simply because it is the bet. AH dealers have it Trade-mark of the Bull FAY'S CELEBRATED Water-Proof MANILLA ROOFING Resembles fine leather; tor Roofs, Outside Walls. and inside ln place of piaster, very strong ana durable. Catalogue with testimonials and samples free. Established in 1866. W. H. FAY & CO., Camden, N. J. fyCCT THIS OUT.s3 Ieb28daw4w WANTED MEDIATELY, Young Men to Learn Xelegra phy. No charge unless situations are furnished. For particulars, address with stamp. r JtiNiN A. ana rxcw jraxi rtbrATttirii ou., Main office. 926 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. Pa.. Branch Office 506 Market Street. Wilmington, Del. Throogn wires. ieosaawiw hi Potatoes. 300 BARRELS FINE SEED IRISH POTATOES. inks I LOOK OUT 1 1 f Vr Jt DURHAM j 4trLJ ' . I II he'd eone for a pack- f are of Blackwell's Bull 3f- Wh I Durham Smokmsr To- " ' 1 bacco, as he was told, he i'? It wouldn't have been jj Jyt cornered by tne buil Sor SPRING CAMPAIGN AT- mowsKY This week we shall interest the ladies by offering many beautiful lines of Spring Goods, just received. Notably among them are beautiful lines of "POUJCILINE SILKS," Black Silks, Colored Silks, Cress Goods, Ginghams, Lawns, Sylphide Cloth, VV hite Goods and Embroideries. 1,000 School Hats, spring styles, at 39c, worth 50c. 800 School Hats, spring styles, at 49c, worth 75c 1,000 yards of Silk, Satin, Ottoman andGros Grain Bibbon, in all colors, at half price. 5,000 yards Hamburg Embroideries, the very latest designs, we shall sell at 10c, per yard, worth 25c. 100 dozen Ladies all pure Linen Handker chiefs at 5c, worth 15c THE ABOVE ARE ALL NEW GOODS, JUST RECEIVED. EVERY LADY SHOULD SEE THEM. 1TM0WSM & BARUC1 CHARLOTTR. N. C. L. BERWANbER & EL Thirty Thousand Dollars Worth of CLOTHING AT PRICES THAT MUST TELL. Every purchaser of CLOTHING will be fuuy facts. It will pay each customer to purchase a suit and keep it untS next season, as or redaction la full; Twenty-Five Per Cent- WE HAVE TOO MANY GOODS ON HAND, AND IF LOW PRICES Is anyjinducement, we ask you to aH o us. Vsry EespectfuBy, - L. BEilWMGER & MQlliEfft. I.GADnO CLOTHIERS A TAIsUOItS. N. B. Agents for the Celebrated Pearl Shirt. E. M. ANDREWS H.4S A LARGE Whitn e'y Bahy Carriages, 5WDICII.IS ADMITTED BV ALSO THE LARGEST STOCK OF TT7 TTT im W TT VI TOE STATE AT LBff PMCES. - 8enl mt ata 4r ftaK a i. 4. a TfTr TORSITUXKDBALER k mm rewarded by saBiag b bb. No mfeaepresentatlan but STOCK OF AITTOBE THE BEST.! TT TTT TIT? fTTl v - t 1
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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March 12, 1884, edition 1
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