Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / April 17, 1884, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
- 0.ISAII9 7 J .1 t S f . 4f wt mm f j ! 1 i J I "f H i l j H .f-j ' r' !? I 1.3 4 !1 t ; i r 1 VOLUME XXXI. charlotte; n. a, Thursday april it, ; im. - PRICBEiyjCERTS. III 1 rl I FTOFIfc -t. J' tOwV kJT F. WW I r I m .afar- f iri Mrs. Joe Person's REMEDY, A SPECIFIC FOR ALL BLOOD DISEASES. TONIC, AUe.-atiye and Blood x?uiifier. ; s ,f. It will cure Rheumatism, Cancer in its I&rlyBf,IIeart Dis ease, Eryripelaa, Indigestion, ChronilUiIioas Colic, Tet ' ter, Ernptlons,.Skln and Blood DXi&asea. ' . -. . , Infallitlfor.-Ecrohla. .'' IX REUGTES CATABKO. A MODERN EUREKA, Which is a Boon to Ladies Suffering from Diseases Peculiar to Their Sex. 'I C. S ml ili Co. Charlotib, N. C, Jan. 4, 1884-H Mrs. Joe Person: We enclose check to pay for last lot of goods. We ars doing well with your Remedy have sold over Ova hundred bottles In about a year, and as far as heard from entire satisfaction has resulted. We have also sold several dozen of your Wash. You miy expect another order soon from us. Eeepsetfully, T. a SMITH 4 0O, Wholesale Druggists, Charlotte, N.C E-31nce the date of this letter Messrs. T. C. Smith & Co. have bought another gross 144 bottles - of the Reme $, ' . v Wilson Bros. djJPjBiamJt'iClBh. , 188. Mrs. Joe Person:' a- s;.vV " We nam sold large ,ianHty of jonr Bemedy, and so faftJlekeard fnaiir has given ett satf f action, and we believe It to be allr joa claim for It, Bespectrully, WILSOlf BiOS.. Wholesale Dwggfcte arJottp, N. C. TWlisoo Bwham 0UgW JBMf Of this Remedy since the dat OMWf HHef'rt i! ' i jU Af Ivly Cm tclie Thrown Away.i The following was taken ffdm the Marlon (N. C.) Pest of March 19th, B8i and . was Inserted hi Mr. Flnley, and was not an advertisement: For the past eight years I had been not only a great sufferer, but entirely disabled, getting about on crutches with difficulty. A little over a year ago 1 began the use of Mrs. Joe Person's Celebrated Scrofula Remedy. Have ased 26 bottles, and now I can walk without crutches with ease and feel that I am on the road to renewed health. My case was a bad one, and had resisted the best medical treat ment so long that I had little hope of recovery. I therefore take pleasare in giving my testimony to the value ef Mrs. Jee Person's great Scrofula Rem edy. Signed, A. L. FIR LEY. For sale by Jehnston Grant, Druggists, Marlon, N. C. Another Voice from Marlon. Marion, N. C, Oeteher 20th, 1582. Mrs. Joe Pkbson, rrankllnton: Madam Dr. OHMey, Otis ftoee, informed me i day that you uxrt here some time ago and told him yon could care Scrofula, and he advised me to write to yen for some of year circulars. I have sore en my leg and hip. It will euro up and break oat just below where It cures up. I have been treat ed by severe! physicians. Seme say It Is Scrofula, others say It is Lupus and Salt Rheum. It Is Just ekln deep; It never gets deep; Is very painful; dont. rest at night I want you to send me your circular and prices of your medicine, and if 1 think, after reading them, that It will do me any good, I will srder some of the medicine at otioe. I have had the sores for IS months, and have paid oat a great deal ef money to parties that have done me no good Roping to hear from you soon, I remain, Respectfully, . . S.C.DALE. The following, eat from the Mirion tamp Post, speaks for Itself: ' ' .! JS Mr. s. c. Dale, of this place who for years had been suffering from aggravated Scrofula, has In three months use of this medicine entirely recovered. His case was almost hopeless? Jwlng BcwoBly able to get about on crutches. He Is now In active busi ness Six homes effected a eurey " Boykln, Carmer 4 Co., No. II ft 1A T lhrr,'txif " m. a. crown dc Bro.. NO. Jo Baltimore,' Md. bouthbharp street, I , ,. Canby, Gilpin ACo., J " ' PurceU,Ladd4Co. ) Owens, Minor ACo. f Richmond. Va Powers, Taylor A Co. ) . ; T. C. Smith 4 Co.. f . A Wilson Bros. Charlotte, JI. CL J. B. Johnson, Rock Hill, 8. C. ' '"" ' ' Turner A Bruner, Monroe, N. C. ' " j ( Wholesale Druggist for Nl 6M J Dr. j. h..ivicA:ben; CI1AKLOTTE, Ana forSaU fJJff Every Bottle Prepared Under tlie immediate Supervision ot Mrs. Joe Person. mli a lf. V n . h' ; iuu mi. m Tryon Street, GituUte.NV.; fcTSflUlri umiutt,N4;fcijpfltalrfc--! i Wa ate having a Jlg run on our 4-4 10c Bleached Domestic, our 10c. Barred Muslin, our 10c. White IwniB, and our 124 Cambrics. Get some of them before they are all gone. The; are cheap. Our ! it B8S StoAJs complete. JIunU Veiling, blacks an colors, from 1210. to $1.00 per Yard. Gfnfp Trimmings ar)d Velvet Tlnges, the old tune figured dotted Swisses.' such as our grandmothers wore. They are pretty aadKylua. . '..;, tf , , EMBROIDERY, In all colors, for Children's Collars. Beamtlful match patteims In Hamburg, Nulusook and Swiss m .broldeiles. Just reeelved per express aaother tot of those popular v " $ W ELITE ROBOES, BXfk at our lOc. an linen H. a Kerchiefs. The kestHnck Twel for 25c." Jersey Jackets, plain and braided, Macks, blues and pinks. Zephyr Shawls, blacks and colors. Another lot of handsome Dress Ginghams and Zephyrs., From 10c. to $16.(. Look at our stock of Laces. Bvltt's Shoes, for Ladles, Ml jaes and Children, are sail booming; they give satisfaction, and we guarantee them. A nice line of Clothing and Gents' Nobby Straw Hats, Very cheap. Come, we want to show you omr stock., BpeclAl attention to orders through the malL Troly, -OUR- DEPART M EIMT '.i COMPLETE. 'V- Case Matting Cane, Mattings, IN ALL GRADES, Prices Low. We have the Rest Mtock or Lace Cnrfain.9 to he Foand In the Clly. Prices From $1.95 to S30.00 Per Pair. MARSEILLES COUNTERPANES, Marseilles Pillow Shams, Lace Spreads and Shams to match, Table Lmen, Doilies, Waiter Covers, etc.1 '" OUR STOC IS BEST 'APPRECIATED WHEN EXAMINED. tWA full stock of Dr. Warner's Corsets always on hand. T. L. SEIGLE & CO. Trade s Cofflmenoei HooseiarmsbiBg WHICH SHOWS THAT CHEAP GO OD OUR EMBROIDERY AND WHITE OUR SEERSUCKERS WB ARE CLOSING-OUT A LINE OF DRESS GOODS AT- TERT LOW FIGURES, on our Bargain Counter will be found some Splendid Bargains. Ask for Cane Matttngs and Carpets, Rugs, Ac. Ask HOSIERY, very cheap. Ask for Corsets, ours are good ALEXANDERS Our Firs 1884 Sprint 1 Summer Cloie W. Kaufman & Co. -:o: OUR MEN'S DEPARTMENT Is one of the largest, and at all seasons OUR BO Y S' f CILDREITS DEPARTMENT Will not ' fail to interest very one . i GHBLDKEN'S OUR HOSIERY Is thorbuehly fcaded ownwilh, th OUR UNDERWEAR iEraaSS . T ft norfect cem in itself. All the M A I .1 I H , I A friends and tbe public - j L. F.OSBOKE, - ttjht- MCI tJ LettatBead-rBMMr teDRrtmflBr.wtn.iA" L 5 u i v '"w.t t . In fact neveine history of our career havewfad a pQCter supply tC aTthe present seasoti. 'We court an kMi eSellent assortment, ' and trust to merit tho apbrdciatiOn p? our many engagements promptly filled la my or county, .IV" MAPTrttigand pUttthig a specialty. Offlcewluii " j i!rborDe, attorney, at court hoaa-- hi RetoeievV5, JOir, Qounty ureyer. febStf H i , i, n w'i'iWv - I 'Job 5 A f i ,f J - ; I it i ;E$tasdris 4 .ILK-DATS, Umbrellas, Ac, k Latest Style SILK HATS, SILK, MOHAIR and GINGHAM UMBRELLAS, Gents' hand-made and Machine Ladles', Misses' and Children's Shoes of best makes TRUNKS, TRAVELING BAGS, -Trunk and Shawl Straps JUST RECEIVED. Pepoi 4- SWILL TELL! GOODS ARE SELLING FAST, AND GINGHAMS ALSO. and cheap. S. Well stocked with the choicest fabrics. in want of STYLISH BOYS' CLOTHING. and DEPARTMENT various grades and sizes ,;bf English, newest and most styusn xiais m our i - IS. IUV1 A V :3VCAlSii'&3CJO. JO mm ear iDr'riiM. ' s 1, drnggWa, or Ulf F E H Stm DilitT. Mwi; nllilDfi 8deodaw It PAJPES& b toe h MS MB BOOTS ! SHOES, Co, in Earnest with lis, 84 lEMlken. 2Iie CTtarlotU Xrscrxuer. PUB LI SUE D DAlVeX CE PT MONDAY BT , , CHAS. R. JONES, k Editor and Proprietor. i - Terms of Subscription. ' DAILY. Per copy 5 cents. 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 Six months 1.00 Invariably In Advance Free of Powtag: to all parts of the United State. tySpecimen copies sent free en application. Subscribers desiring the address of their paper changed will please state In their comm sul catum both the old and new address. Rate of AdTrrtlnIns1. One Square One time, $1.00; each additional In sertion, 60c; two weeks, $5.00; one month, $8.01. A schedule of rates for longer periods famished on application. Remit or draft on New York or Charlotte, and by Postomce Money Order or Registered Letter at our n&K. it sent otherwise we will not t reerponsime for miscarriages. --i1 ,'. WILL STICK. la addition, to his clerical duties and sundry other miscellaneous em ployments, Rev.-Henry Ward Beocher keeps his' eye on the political field, and takes a lively interest in political matters. He did as much, perhaps, by his sermons in the pulpit, his lec tures and his writings to build up the Republican party, array sec tional animosities and -precipitate the conflict of arms between the North South, as any man North of Mason's and Dixon's line. He is an earnest, bold, vigorous and brilliant man. On the question of tariff he is a free trader, which gave rise to the report that he would sever his connection witii the Republican party and fall in with Mr. Watterson, jTank Hurd and other Democratic free traders. But he is not going that way nor any other way that leads into the Demo cratic party.. In a recent letter to the Chicago Tribune, which asked for his views upon the tariff question, he says: "The Republican party inaugura ted a policy of high tariff. The ne cessities of a period of gigantic war are the only palliation of such a poli cy. But when protection of Aneri can industry was grafted upon the tariff, no excuse could be found for the blunder. It is an insult to Amer ican enterprise to assume that it needs protection. American indus try is no decrepit thing, needing crutches and nurses. Protection uts the government into the ridiculous attitude of undertaking to supervise all the various and intricate affairs of manufacture and commerce. It is the last vestige of that old system of paternal government which seeks to arrange men's religious beliefs, to determine their social relations, to prescribe their meat, drink and ap parel, to do for them what a free peo ple are a thousand tunes better able to do for themselves. The aim and drift of protection is foolish and im pertinent, but the machinery by which it seeks to secure this end is even worse than the cause which it serves. Corrupt custom houses in their nature are academies of injus tice and dishonesty, abhorred of God as they ought to be of men. But right in so much and wrong in so little, shall we abandon the par ty or remain in it to settle a reforma tion ? As long as freedom of discus sion vi allowed, its members should abide within and strive for its refor mation. What a ridiculous and mon strous folly it would be to leave the Republican party because it is yet blinded with protection and go over to the Democratic party, that has co quetted with almost every evil which the war has swept away, and which has not yet shown that it had learned a single lesson from the grand strug gle of the last twenty -five years I" It is to the concluding paragraph here quoted that we wish to refer. The free trade champions have as sured us that if their policy became the battle cry of the Democratic par ty, thousands upon thousands of free trade Republicans would fall into line, and that the Democracy would sweep States that for years have been practically solid Republican. There never was a greater mistake. The rank and file of the Republican party in the North have supported that party during and since the war with its high tariff policy and there has been no indication -of .' a change in popular sentiment to war rant the assertion that they" will da differently now. There may be, and doubtless are, some Republican free traders, but they are insignificant in number, and these will be kept with in the party by just such appeals as Mr. Beecher here indirectly makes, for this letter is written, hot so much to place Mr. Beecher right before his Republican friends, as for the influ. ence it may exert in keeping the Re publicans solid in the . coming can? ; paign. There may be dissatfefacM)4 ' with the Republican party,;iq! ;soter respocts, but the masses will1 be ap-! pealed to and asked why they, should abandon the party which they , hate.' acted with for years, which has done somuch good, so little wrong, and of whose history in the main they are proud, and go over -to the,enemy whom they have been; fighting for years. To these appeals will be ad ded any'amduntof niisrebres"ehtation and falsehood, in the production of which the average Republican cam paign orator and writer is- prolific. The result will- be that the free trade issue among supposed' tree trade Re publicans will "be entirely lost sight of, and they will.be found going with Mr. Beecher for the' old party with all its high tariff shortcomings. Mr. Beecher may like free trade; but be likes the Republican i party better, and so with ninety-nine out of a,lu ders. : ,! .. ,t : . - .t.'iili-'jlt -.K.'. " The police pree of B&gland an4 Wales now consists of; 682.. superin tendents' 1,483 peetorsi" 3,82 ser- ' 1 il'' 1 "'''Art' MAfl ' " '"JL. 11" roams ;ana tuneumiea. iue totidjftr$ri forjiajie geaats and 2J86r constables. ii:; Enormous beds of solid rock salt have been discovered in the State of New York. There are 350 measures which have passed the Senate now awaiting the action of the House. It seems to be conceded that Blaine will have a walk over in the matter of delegates from Pennsylvania to the Chicago convention. M. Pasteur and his collaborators have announced to the French Acad emy of Sciences the fact that by inoc ulation they can render all dogs ab solutely proof against the effects of rabies, in whatever way or quantity the virus may be administered. Some one who professes to know writes that Mr. Blaine is a member in good standing of the Congtgational church of Augusta, Maine, of which he is a regular attendant when at home, that he takes great interest in the church and is a liberal giver. Cocoanut growing is becoming a considerable industry in Northern Florida. A large number of trees have already been planted and seem to be doing well. A man from New Jersey has started a thousand acre grove in Dade county in which he thinks he sees millions. In six years the trees begin to bear, a fully ma tured tree bearing about sixty nuts annually. The Frankfort, Ky., Yeoman spici ly remarks : ' 'Mr." Henry Watterson is not ordinarily a dangerous man. It is only when he is very greatly provoked and highly excited -that he becomes savage. The strangling of such a man as Sam Randall is only an occasional thing with him, and prominent Democrats who differ with his opinions need, not bo fright ened into a belief that such remorse less cruelty is an every day occur rence. ; The Nottingham Land and Iron Company has been organized at Cal era, Ala., with a capital stock of $1, 500,000. The company owns landed property to the amount of $750,000, and has a reserve fund of 400,000. Calera is .at the junction of the North and South and -Selma, Rome and Dalton Railroads and is near the coal and iron mines of Alabama. It is a rapidly growing place, with bright prospects for future impor tance. A BRAZILIAN OTHELLO. Traffic Ending of the Baseless Sus picions of a Corporal of Police. Rio Janeiro, March 13. A Brazil -ian Othello has appeared in the pro vince of Maranham, at the town of Caxias. Mariano Monteiro de Silva was a corporal of police at that place, and was married to Leocadia Fran cisco de Souza, also a member of the mixed white, black and Indian race, which constitutes the great mass or the natives of the north and north eastern provinces, and of the Brazil ian interior in general. He was ' a quiet and well-conducted man, much respected by his officers, and adoring his wife, who seems to have been equally attached to him. But one evening, on going to his parade ser vice, he saw signs of male and female footsteps in the back of his rear gar den and suspicion entered bis bosom, especially as his wife 'had appeared very earnest in reminding him o the hour for going to parade. Brooding over this he returned immsdiately .as soon as afternoon re view was over, and as he entered , by the back of his garden at half-past 6 p. m. he saw in the dusk a man in converse with a woman dressed in a pink robe, such as his wife had worn that day. .Darting forward he thrust his bayonet seven times into the man ; the woman had fled, but he pursued in the direction she had taken and as he re-entered the yard of his house he met his wife hastening toward him. Convinced of her falsehood, he, without a word, stabbed her with' the bayonet eighteen times, and then went and surrendered himself to the police, declaring that he had avenged his dishonor. The wife died in a few hours and the wounded man's case was almost hopeless. Next day a slave girl came to the police and declared that the wife was completely innocent, that it was she herself who had met the slaughtered man and who had fled in fear. The poor Brazilian Othello had sacrificed another Desdemona to unjust suspicion. ' '' The Postoffice Appropriation. Bill. j The postoffice appropriation bill was reported to the Senate from the committee .on Appropriations Mon day afternoon! As amended by the Senate jCOQimittee it provides for a total' appropriation of $49,722,400, which is $5235,880 in excess of the amount appropriated last year, and $3499,500 in excess of the amount oalled for hy, the bill as it left the Sl6ise. The'principal items of in drease over the amounts in the House bill are as follows : For compensa tbn of postmasters, from -$18,500. 000 to $11,750,000; for payment te letter carriers and incidental expenses of the free delivery system, from $3, 600,000 to $4,000,000; for transporta tion of mail on railroad routes, from $11,700,000 to $12,750,000. An appro priation of $185,000 for "necessary and special facilities on trunk lines" is added to the House bill."' Uprising Against Americans. ; Chicago,-Dili' April 16. A special from El Paso, Tex,, to the Daily JJews, says: A despatch comes from l?racazecasv Mexico, 700 miles south of herevtO the effect that there is trouble among the inhabitants and an .uprising against the,, American resi-; dents! They attacked the Mexican Central Railroad, burned bridges and tore up the track for several miles in CMhnahua. '14 The Governor called Out troops tp,.. prevent anyrdemon-. siratioh. 'Travellers from the inte rior for Several days have reported uneasiness ' and fear of rebellion atnohg the inhabitants!" It is impost sipjte .ftbtain prculars.g ., , I 'Alleo'a;3rdi food ;botanioal extract strengthens the brain and poetively ciirM nervous - debility, nervousness,: headache, unnatural losses, and . all weakness of generative system; it never failai rflpkg., jjfor $5. " AvotruggiBts oi by mail from J. H.' Allen,' 815 Ave. ClZliCOgijiiil, A REPUBLICAN PROTEST. An Old Line Republican Raises His Tolce Against tie Scandalous Pro eeedings and the Conduct of the Col ored Oelegntes in the Late Republi can Convention. To the Editor ot Tsx Obsxbver. Through your valuable paper I have decided to ask permission to make a few statements and have something . to . say? concerning the Republicanconvention which assem bled in Charlotte last Saturday. 1st. That the proceedings were dis orderly, no one can deny. 2d. That the convention was not controlled by that discretionary fair ness which should characterize the government of such assemblies, must be admitted. 3d. That the personal interests of two or three individuals should not have been forced into a general con vention, thereby disturbing the har mony of the great and grand politi cal organization now aUigning. for the; overthrow of Bourbonism in North Carolina, ; strikes mo will be the verdict of the one hundred and sixty thousand people in our grand old State, who are more interested in the success of the great party pledged to reform by securing every right to the citizen, than in the interest of a few individuals, -whoever they may be. I take this method of saying that the writer of thiA communication has participated in about every Republi can convention which has met in Mecklenburg for thirteen years, and I must say that I have never witnessed such confusion and disorder - as pre vailed on last Saturday, and say em phatically that the scenes enacted on that occasion are a disgrace to the county, a disgrace to the age. -'-a dis grace to the party fftid a reproach to the colored race. Fifteen years ago, five years after emancipation, friend ly people could endorse sueh pro ceedings, Dut seeing no improvement the disposition to palliate is fast pass ing away. And I will say that the chairman (as temporary had his opportunity through courtesy and his criticisms upon the whites came with very bad grace in the face of the fact that he is filling a Federal ap pointment,' and furthermore chat at least eight or ten other 'eolored peo ple have toeea appointed to Federal positions from Charlotte l win close oy saying taatthe reso lution limiting the State delegation to members of the county conven tion was of the closet corporation type and altogether ' too narrow to spring from a 'Republican onven-i tion. ; ' Respectfully, ' MEOKLEirBtm&i ; April 15, 1884. : The Cholera Germ Identified. As the germs to which certain' dis eases are due have in several instan ces been so modified by careful treatment as to-become innocent, and have even been used, like vaccine virus, as a prophylactic, there is always a warm wefcOme given by scientists to an announcement that a new germ has been" isolated arid subjected to artificial cultivation. The cholera jrnrhnsrbeen .the object oi aprotracwaquest. uermansavans visited Egypt during the-recent out- Dreajc tnere witn a view or searchme for it. Not a few persbns were; .wilt ing to 'assert that cholra.was hot the result of the action Of germs within the human body in fact, that there was no such thing as a cholera germ. The crucial test, of course, was to nnd by. the aid of . the microscope within the bodies of cholera patients aerm which, when placed in the body of a pig. or other animal, would reproduce the cholera. Koch found ! in Egypt a micrceoepe parasite which he declared characteristic of the dis ease, but he was not able by inocu lating with them to produce cholera. Persisting in his inquiry, he went from Egypt to India, the home of the disease. "There, in a water tank,' says the New York Times, "he found the tiny thing which had never be fore been seen outside of a cholera patient or his secretions, It 'was a great step. The argument -from analogy was that the microbe caused the disease, but it was still possible that the parasite was only a symptom and effect of the disease.- -and sot itself the cause. A dispatch fr,bm Calcutta announces the taking of the final step; The animals . which Koch' fed under the supposed cholera germ gave no sign that anything disagreed wiin mem. xuc ur. v mceufa xucn ards, civil surgeon of-Goalundo, has Caused the death of a pig from chol era within tJiree hours, after, the poison was , given." Dr.i . Richards will need to repeat his experiments to convince ine increauious -Btaeuusc, Of the reality of his supposed discov ery. To make it practically lisef til he must, like Pasteurdevise a mode of "culture" by which, the cholera germ will be deprived of its virulent qualifies, so as to be used as a pre ventive against tho disease it now produces.. .- ','-' .; ' - . w-4- .:' V A Fair Mer-, ... ...,.. The VoltaicBelt CdJ Marshall, Mjch., offer to send Dr. Dyo'e Voltaic- Belt and Appliances on trial for thirty days, to men, young or old, afflicted' with ner vous debility, lost vitality,- and kindred troubles. VuT'X'titi .v-. See advertisement in mis paporv ' When yj com id ttittiX Cf It, ttl not Odd that literiry people prefer k pipe to a dg&t. It i htndler to imioke 1rhen they Cre wrtUng, aitd ever 0 filtlch dtaaaar.' And then' givM them' the trok eeeenoe tad flavor' of the tobmocd. , The tnbet fasUdldni imoken tmoog all natiOna and all rltimen of men agree that the tobacco gfrown on the Golden Tobacco Belt of Horth Carolina ia the most delic. ions and ' refined In the world. Iilirhter tiian Turldah, more fraaxant than HaTana, freer from nitrates and nioo&oe than oxy other, it ia' joet viui the oonnoiseear prai and the habltnai smoker demanda. The ery choicest tobacco grown on this Belt is bought by Black, well's Durham Tobacco Co., and appears in their celebrated Boll Dirrham Smqkiiig Tobacco. It is Known toe world over, Oet the genuine. withBnll trademark, then yon will be sure of haying: abao lately pare tobaooa . ; i ; ..WANTED- BchOOU in need, of good teachers, . ana eekfM THS CaiiXRAL D UCATIOKiL BUaiU U, Ma k t JiTinSeeretary,, aplwlm "V ftlili! MA .1 ! f--.ul ' - - ' " " - v ii .J A , ' . - , u . . . --oo;ij! nttrmoenj oaanm4. jiiw ; .( mmm i in Will offer this wegk STRAW New shapes in Fine Milan .and:1,' Chip , At exceedingly low priced. Novelties not to bo found also offer a guperb Reh In Novel Colbrings and C6mbnations, at prices that admit ot no competition. Uur i While Goods!: Depirtment Is filled with the choicest Persian and Hindoo Lawnsyiil Jain an4 colored. effects, Satin StripLd and (Dheckwd SwigsjiiNain sbokfif, ptaln and checked' Persih yrenph' Victoria : tawjfis,; WniBatiste! CambrfcftWt streiieltlbw' prices. iNoveities, and attractions added dtxiyaU CHARLOTTE. N. C. 66 Spring Stobk Re I . - ...... ., , J,;,., I . . . . .. Almost everybody in the Clothing pade ' is sjust ricrw5 teJHhg what' "ele gant," "suporb," "unrivalled" stock, of I Spring Clothing they are offering, until dictionaries are exhausted in the search for stresglesoriptive adjec If the expression was , not undignified, we" "would" "be UmpleSf to remark that ""talk is inexpensive;". . ; ,! : :, ; j.wiy4Tio:v,-i . i Trade is influenced less by what, is eajd than by wha.is d9nenn,i we care Omly to stateithat we are ready for spring business leayjujav Uie;critioal buy, ers who wear the. class of .goods that we handle dndrn&nuacjure, to deter mine how well we have sustained our .reptitation' foifpfbdvfdihg the ;i1 : ' te Mi s and Boys CliiBt Sold in this market. We invite the ptiblifi call andvOmine eur stock. Very respectfully, v'.j 1-.' :hi) ..... . . . . t The leading aoart ttus BQasoniia xno;c THE FURNI :a ,lii JV'jl I ;iYi sill 1j nohileti bco 1 CI" 4fv iiw-j eiJ tt 'Half- N. y0:At luli fti t' of Mi.w i! i,afjWjM .? hit-; '.--T-K" st!.' womflii g?an : .., . .o. 'jjiiui'ovtili: j ..oil r.:i so iAOii.iii.5i . . i in CO: t ) -'rQ-.g:: 3 rrt 5 i VAJ , li H (KiStf another impbiation, of vii.. . 'i j:U r. It . . : . .' ... . . -a -uJ f .jro-i .. U!:i. !'.! '' t'i'.-' if i TK!r,:r: o ..". ,.. i Among thepe gooda,ar ,many 1 TfBl wr : elsewhere, assortment W r.;l :. : We will of it , .j i i :ii:ni--'i3 -luo-. ,1 y J .noiiuUKsun eiu lo uoilq' Amtann t ' a. i . . I - i.jo ouiv, (patent genoing.; diuoa odT .31 IhqA ,2;ioY 'rnY KEi 1 l:t-niuui m" -nq sri I 3o io4idJ yn ui riJ onflnejrjjal! oi pew Jod eia f lo laabrfiGJannlj law ffla m w Dress Goods, .'- ; ' ' : -r .T,. lU'K Y. V V"-' ady MX mate oi wn w Iw asfcAjpyxui Tttotvl'fjd migo'Ci11 toiS'Mfcn CAb FooSXJ W idc0 nQmi A O u i J sal M. p edJiofaai&4m laie4il .Jt'iia Jjm9 ViUniU f U 111 CItJ dtOTV O) WAblO 6JW -TiW nrft VTfV.tnTT vwtftn odl vd L a "ikKi lo 92BOd liina toraaos sbsat i) i j :1 -: "if : 11 ii io 3 .fl Jiol5' . Aii
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 17, 1884, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75