Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Feb. 19, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOLUME XXXIILV RiiiiiiDi i Big stock Ladies', Misses', and Children's 1 ' Rubber Overslioes, Arctic and Self-Adjustable .Wool-Lined Ladies' and Cents' Rubbers, , . - r Mies mill Wmi Gossamers. REMNANTS OF LACE CURTAINS from 2 to 8 yards on our bargain counter and at bargain prices. V tjents' and Boys' Habber Coats, ! FLANNELS. ETC. j Ladies', Gents' and Children's Underwear, very cheap. . SMITH IJIT11L.II. A Mce Assortment of JERSEY JACKETS For Misses And ladles. Ask to see the JERSEY I Lam Offering at IF. $1.56. Twy raBiwrtJCullj, T. L. SEIGLE. Mew JEm :ot- !We are now offering some attractive bargains in Bleached anjl Unbleached TABLE LINENS. Don't fail to come and examine them. We can also give you a very handsome line r " PLAID NAINSOOKS, t - . , .... . .. ' ...i. TUCKINGS, EDGING, FINE EMBROIDERIES and a variety of WHITE GOODS, at prices that ar cal culated to startle you. If you want a REAL BARGAIN hi a few RUSSIAN CIKCUL AKS er EBW MAR KS r CLOAKS you must coma right now for there Is Just a few remaining or If that don't suit you we will sell you an elegant SPRING WRAP and make you think that wouders will never cease. A JERSEY JACKET Too that you will like. Don t forget that this is Headquarters for Ladles', Masses and Children's Hosiery. BepeUants In all colors and Dress Goods low down. If you are going to travel we can sell you a good Trunk or Vails., or if exposed to the weather we have got good Umbrellas and Rubber Gossamers. Bear in mind, Just a few of the genuine Foster Kids at a sacrifice left. - REGARDLESS OF COST We Are Selling Clothing "W. TC A TTTrT-MAiN" & CO ; Now offer their entire stock of . -; WINTER CLOTHING AT That it will astonish everybody. stocJc and don't intend, to carry -mu., Ll 1VV.O tV OU1V S I V J J $10.00. These suits we sold Deiore the Holidays, but we mean to r. sen, ana mereiute put tViA Vri'fo I'ntAnrinoa TFinor n-rarlpa nf,fSllit.n which We Sold at $15, $18, $20 and $25, (we $10 and $lb. A large line Which we will close ont for ' Men's Underwear at greatly maintain these prices for a to make room tor our Spring arrive. Nobody should- miss lifts Boys and W. KAUFMAN & CO., . cmniL IXOTEJL, COSINES. 1884. - ' 1884. THIS FALL ' Consisting of the Latest Styles Silk, Stiff acd Soft Hats Wblch we have just opened, and are satisfied we can please all, ' Our Fall -Stock of Ladles',' Misses Gents', Youths' and Children's .. BOOTS AND SHOES Is now complete, comprising the best makes and most correct styles. . Afullllneof TRUNKS. TRAVELING BAGS, And Shawl Straps Just received. ; Last but not least, a fine line or Umbrellas. Silk. Mohair, and Alpaca. Large and Beautiful line of Gents4 Over Gaiters. Give us a call. ' 1'era i k X - O O tl O O - SUCH LOW PRICES We mean to sell out pur any over anu io uu una. wm imitedv means can - - 1 . 1 SO nOi 00 $7.00. at least 33 J per cent higher now sell at $12, $12 50. ot ; r less than cost ot production reduced prices. We : will only short time, &i we are: bound Stock , wmcn wui b aorujr this opportunity. at once '' LEADING OLOTillEES. Attpaction Clii She Ixarlotte bsctrucr. THE STRUGGLE FOR BREAD. The present winter has been one of the hardest that the laboring classes of this country - have , ever encoun tered. More working men : and wo men have been out of employment, there has been greater and - more widespread distress than ever before known, and in all the laree cities of the Norths and some of ti e smaller ones, people neyer before known to seek public aid have been compelled to seek assistance from public benevs olent associations to enable them to live and supply their families with the necessaries of life. " The New York World fro at careful inquiry and in vestigaiiJns made by its reporters sent f it through the wards of the city places the number of unemploy e 1 men and women in that city, at at least 75,000, whose wages when em ployed amounted to $1,000,000 a week now earning nothing where with to buy the food they must have, or the clothes they need, or rents for the roofs that cover them. There is not a northern city which has not t verjlarge number of unemployed people who depend for 'subsistence on their daily labor, in the aggregate amounting doubtless, to a half a mil- ion. Driven by necessity, those of these unemployed workers who can, leave the cities, following the lines of railroad, generally in the direction of a warmer sun, taking their chances at finding work and something to eat on the way, begging food as they wander and stealing where begging fails. This is the array of ' tramps whose presence is ' seen . in every Southern city and ,town near the ines of railroad which they - follow. t is composed of all kinds of men, some skilled workmen, some of more than ordinary intelligence, the great er number without any particular trade acquirements, men, who-when employed work at anything they can da. , r They are not all bad men, but they have been so much decried in the public press, and have . been so much subjected to hostile legislation tHat they look - upon themselves in the light of criminateand apparently seek to avoid notice as much as pos sible. .Considering the fact-that there are so many . workless hands in the Northern cities is it .a matter of sur prise that there should be tramps? And is it not a matter of greater sur- prise that some method has not been suggested by the wise men who gov ern those cities, the great tramp in- cubators, and by the men who tihape pnblic opinion, in emergencies of general depression to give occupation to their laborers? No city has a right to turn its pauper population loose upon the people of adjoining or more remote States, and no city has a right to see its laborers starve, because they can't get work, if they are wil ling to work. It would not tax the genius, though it might tax the pock et of New York, to find sufficient oo. cupation to purchase the necessaries of hfe to such of its unemployed population as are unable to do so, during the trying days of winter. And so could every other city" that had a will to do it -Legislators sit in their seats in the capitol buildings, and city councilmen kill time dis cussing trivial measures while thou sands of their honest fellow' citizens ook in vain for work and live from day to day upon what chance ! or charity may bring. The true policy of statesmanship is to make the peo ple as prosperous and happy as pos sible, to keep th9 multitude employ ed. When this is the case there are but few tramps, and the anarchist and dynamiter are unknown charac ters. ' - , . A shocking story of seduction and its consequences "comes from Tennes see, near Knoxville, The betrayed girl, after giving birth to a babe, dies of a broken heart; the babe lollowing to the grave in a few days the girl's mother fatally prostrated by the shock; the father becomes a raving maniac, and the young man a refugee from the vengeance that threatened him - - Herr Most, the German anarchist, is making himself somewhat conspic uous in working,. tip agitation and discontent among the laboring classes of the Northern cities. If such cattle as Most could be charged with dyna mite, and -the dynamite be made to perform its" proper office, it would be a good thing for everybody - but Most. ... It is stated that the noted sports man, Harry Hill, of New York,' ap plied for a liquor license the .other day, and presented a petition on which were the ' signatures of 60,000 citizens. Harry keeps , a drinking shop and dance house,', the chitf at traction of which is the disreputable girls who frequent it. ' Pat Donan. who for a brief period edited the Raleigh Sentinel, and sub sequently located in Dakota, and at a later nwrifMi desei tea tne uemo- cratic party and joined the Bepiibli cans- is now going to make a trip from Chicago to New Orleans in. a birch bark canoe. As Pat is a sort of a wind machine he can make the trip without much difficulty.' ", ;: ; . f A German paper states that eggs may be kept perfectly fresh for.; a year by rubbing them with vaseline which has been melted with three tenths per cent, of salicylic acid. The application should be made twice at an interval of a month. President Arthufiias not lived .in vain. Thomas Ochiltree) of Texas, has written a card"endorsing his administration. CHARLOTTE, N. G,, THURSDAY FEBRUARY The liquor license in : Tennessee the past year amounted, to 1153,335. Working the roads in Georgia by convict labor is one of the topics of discussion now in that State. . - j - , Having failed, to - kill - O'Dohbvan Bossa, Mrs. Dudley is now going to tackle her own life, 'that is write her autobiography. This is the ticket that some of the New York . Republicans aire putting up for the next race": For Governor, Ulysses S. Grant; Lieutenant Gov- ernor.-Chester A. Arthur. Mr.iW. A. Coe, of Guilford county, has a horse .29 years old, still hale and hearty, although he moves some what more deliberately tnm he did twenty-five years ago. - ' "" . -. The proposition to submit the ques tion of prohibition to . the. voters of West! Virginia failed,' lacking three votes i of having enough to carry it through. . A colony of about 100 Japanese have established themselves in Eng land. I They represent various trades, their, ;object being to familiarize- the English public with their arts and industries. " . Mr.Ir Beecher's orthodoxy takes a pretty wide range. . He - thinks that heathens, infidels, &c. , stand a pretty good chance of climbing the golden stairs if they behave themselves here belowl f- W. E. Ardrer. ' To the Editor of The Observer, . r I am glad to see that at least one member of the General Assembly has 8ucceeaea in making: certain, oeonle snort." ' His road law is just what we need. Let him nOw turn his at tention to the dog law and the vagrant act, and he will set another class to snorting " And that is mst what we need here in North Carolina We have had too much "snoozing,"; now give -Jus a little "snorting,"; . Capt. Ardrey seems to be the man to do it, if we can only keep him from going to Congress, the grave of , all State prided Landowner. Charlotte, Feb. 18, 1884. ' : Wtaatis a Alabdil New York Herald. . " '." Mahdi, or mahadi. as D'Herbelot spells it, is an ancient title in the Moslem world which at first signified simple director of the faithful. But in the; course of Moslem's history, and especially Moslem's history in! Africa, it came to have another signification, relating to an accepted prophecy of Mohammed. It necessarily refers to the African part of Arabic historv. By this secondary significance of the word the mahadi is a certain ancient leader come again. - His appearance is the "second advent" of a - nroDhet who lived in the old davs and who in all the. meantime has been with the immortals. Mohammed, the twelfth Imam, and the twelfth in de scent from Ali, is the ' real original. He is the mahadi who comes again every now and then. He was. hidden from the world at an early aee and communed only . with his desciDles through" his lifetime, and finaUv did not die, but 'went up," with Che fixed intention of returning to revive the glories ot Moslem. As in the i Chris tian theory, and even in the history of several monarchies, this legend of a prince who is to return has afford ed a favorite pretext for- no end of impostors, so it did in Islam. r The most famous of these in past ages was Abulcassem Mohammed Ben Ad dallah the founder of Fatimite dynas ty in Alrica. - Mohammedhad prophe sied that in three hundred years the sun would rise in the west, and as Ab ulcassem's glory was in 296 of the He1 gira, if was held that the prophecy ref ered to him, and since J then , the idea of the , mahacu . has ' commonly had relation to,a revival of the glories Of Isham in that .western . world of Moslemism, the provinces of y Africa held by . the ' Arabs. Perhaps we should not plume ourselves "top much over a race of men who are yet con trolled jby a . vivid - convictson that their leader was born a thousand years, ago. We believe in leaders whose claims to allegiance are equal ly ridiculous. lUmi88ed by His Bishop. During the late presidential cam paign a fair was held at Indianapolis, Ind., under the auspices of St. Pat rick s Catholic Church, and a ' cane was voted to Mr. Blaine as the most popular presidential candidate. The Rev. Hugh O'Neill conveyed the cane to Mr. Blaine, though warned by the vicar general of the diocese, in the absence of Bishop Chatard, not to dp so. ; Un Sunday last, according to an Indianapolis dispatch. Bishop Chat ard ordered the peremptory removal of the priest. , It is added that the or- def for removal elicited a strong pro test from the congregation of St Pat rick's -'Russia Oraers KroppGaas. London, February 17. some ex citement was . created ; here to day. -especially in the commercial and financial circles, by the receipt of dispatches from Iserlin announcing that the Russian.; Government tbad ordered two thousand Krupp guns for the purpose of " strengthening its position in Central Asia. - The guns are to be of the largest : pattern and are evidently intended" for the ser vices in fortresses of superior build Simultaneously with the above report name a-disnatoh from St. Petersburg. stating that Sebastopol is to be made a free port. ' 1 A Frivolous Woman. Cincinnati Enquirer. '. ? A ! contemporary ' remarks that Queen Victoria does not appear to be perturbed over the disaster which has overtaken "my armies in the Sou dan;?' but is in great spirits, as she is preparing the - programme for her youngest daughter's wedding vThat is what might be expected. Victoria mereh makes a formal declaration of sympathy for the fallen soldiers, and relapses into her sphere, : which is a com i arative narrow one. : A great crisis like the present-one in Africa brings out in bold reliel the useless ness of the royal family of great Brit tain. . ' Ameika's Pride ! V True American men and women by reason of their strong constitution, beautiful forms, rlen complexions and churacterlstlc energy, are envied by all nations. It Is the general use of Dr. Harter's iron j oniOf wnicn oruigs aooui inese resuii. feb4awlm - GEANT- AO) THE SOUTH. . ANALYSIS OF THE VOTE ON THE RETIREMENT BILL. . Ur. Randall and the Nary Tbft lm proved Prospect tor Closing Business on the 3rd, ' " ' Correspondence of The Observer. . . . ' -. CAROLINA ENTREES. Washtngton. Feb. 16. Mr. James H. Horner of; Oxford," the eminant teacher, was here Saturday. For several days there have been no prominent arrivals from "the West." ' . ' Rev.-3. Taylor Martin preached at the Second Presbyterian church, in this city on last Friday evening. Gen., Cox took some part in the discussion of the legislative judicial and executive appropriation bill Sat urday night. - :. r y -- Mr. A. u. Singleton, of bumter, fire man at the capitol, died at his resi dence here on Saturday, and his' re mains were removed today to South Carolina. .:.: v, ' :. '- - There is a group of South Carolina Representatives who can be depended upon in nearly every instance to vote against the committee on appropria tionsand tor liberal public expend itures.- The ' gentlemen -frequent y speak as well , as vote on that side. Messrs. Tillman and Ai&en are two -of these Representatives, and they occupy conspicuous seats. - ; , r : There has not been much danger of an extra session, although to the casual glance if may- have appeared probably at one time last ,, week. rogress with the ! bills has been made, and this evening the leaders feel assured that all necessary busi ness will have been finished when the end of the legislative day ; of March 3 Bhall arrive. Otherwise the day would not have been given up to the regular rder-suspensions but the session of Saturday would have been continued through at least the great er part ot the aiternoon; lhe motion from the military af fairs committee to suspend the rules and pass the Senate bill retiring Gen. (irant provoked a sharp debate today; There was considerable excitement in the house, in fact, more than we have had this session. The .Republicans charged the committee with taking J up a bill which they knew from ex perience : the Presidents would veto. But the Democrats retorted that if he did they could join in passing it over the veto. As the vote is probably hot fully analyzed in the press dispatch es, l prepare tne following from care fully corrected tally lists kept during roll call. The vote" was 158 yeas and 103 nays not t wothirds. The motion was therefore lost. Sixty -eight Dem ocrats voted in . the affirmative and four Republicans in the , negative. Excluding Missouri and counting Maryland andKentucky ,the Southern vote on the proposition was ayes, 25; noes, 58. All of the North Carolina Representatives were present, and all except O'Hara are recorded in oppo sition. . Of the South Carolina mem bers Messrs. Bratton, Dargan, Dibble, Tillman and Smalls, (col.,) voted aye, and Messrs. 'Aiken and Hemphill, no. The affirmative vote of the Southern States is thus distributed between the two parties: Eighteen Democrats, 7 Republicans. The negative vote is divided ; Fifty seven Democrats ; 1 Republican (York.) ? The affirmative Southern vote is f ull, , with : Republi cans marked R., is as follow:; Brat ton, 8. C. ; Breckenndge, " Ark. j Candler, Ga.; W. W. Culberson, R., Ky ; Dargan, S C; Dibble, S C; Ellis, La,; -Garrison, Va: GoflV R., W. Va; Hancock, Tex Hoblitzell, Md ; Hunt, La: King, La: Lewis, La; Libbj. R.; Va; McComas. R., Md; Nicholls, Ga; O'Hara, R N C ; Pettibone, R , Tenn ; Smalls, R., S C; Snyder; W Va; TaU bott, Md; -Thompson, Ky ; Tillman, Cf Willis, Ky. The negative South ern vote stands: Aiken, S C; Ballen- tine. Tenn; Barbour, Va; Barksdale, Miss; Bennett, W O; Biackburni Kyj Bianchard, La; Blount, Ga; Buchan an, Ga;Cabill, Va: Caldwell, Tenn? Clayv Ky; Clement, Ga; Covington, Md ; W K Cox; JN U; Urisp, lia; Da vidson, Fla; Dibrell, Tenn: Dowd, N C; Dunn, Ark; Forney; Ala; Gibson, W Va; Green, N C; Halsell, Ky; Hammond, Ga ; Hemphill, S U ; Hers berK Ala; G VV-Hewitt, Ala; J Jl Jones. Tex;". J K Jones, Ark; J T Jones,-Ala; Lanham, Tex; McMillin, Tenn ; J T Miller, lex ; muis,vicx ; Money, Miss; Mulgrove,iMiss;'Oates, Ala f O'Ferrall,-' Va ; Pierce, Tenn ; Peel, Ark ; Tryon, Ala i Reagan, Tex ; Reid, N C; Reese, Ga; J H Rogers, Ark; Singleton, Miss; T-G Skinner, N C; Charles Stewart, Tex; J- M Taylor, Tenn: Tucker. Va:HG Turner, Ga; Oscar Turner, Ky ; Vance, si U: tl Warner. Tenn ; Wellborn. Tex ; Wn liams, Ala; G D Wise, Va ; Woolf ord, Ky; lort, K., JN u. The - defeated ' bill was warmly championed bv Randall, who said that if it did not pass today some oth er bill of the sort oueht to be passed It is the measure first passed by th Senate, and was drafted by Mr. ; Jd munds. - Afterward the senate pass ed a second bill more consonant with the ideas of the President. The first bill got on ' the . House calendar and the object of the Democrats who sup ported it was to torce tne Jf resident take water or veto a oiu to pension Gen. Grant. The Southern Demo crats and some others more wisely concluded to beat the thing outright as they see no necessity under the cir cumstances for and much improprie ty in restoring a general to the army who so many years ago resigned to accept higher honors. " The treatment received by Fitz JohnPorter was thrust in thelteetbloflthe obstreperous Republicans today." It is not likely Mr. Randall's advice will be taken and another bill passed by "this very respectable and leaderless uongress. The. rejected bill simply recommends Gen." Grant to the President, but even that appears like an infringement of his constitutional narnc so appoint. With these scruples, right or wrong, of the Republican executive the Dem ocrats feel that they have nothing to do- - . - The more Mr. Randall's proposition respecting the new navy is discussed the better it is liked. The first res ports were imperfect. He means that the commission- shall have pow er to build the navy on the plan sub mitted to it. and not simply tne pow er to examine plans and submit them to Congress, . The proiect is ridiculed bv the "naval .wing here, but that means that they . fear that Othello's occupation will be gone when the commission act. The commission of civilians ere to co-operate with the President and the secretary of .the navy. The naval affairs r committee of the House have not yet considered Mr Randall's plan,' but it is thought there will bo no considerable opposi' t.inn if anv at all. ' " - : - ' ' The silver coinage petition .which went to Mr. Cleveland today shows the amount of interest the, proposed restriction excites in Congress. It 19, 1885. I requests the President not to submit I any views in his inaugural favorable f to a stonnam or tha coiniiM or silver. One hundred names are signed. H. JUcUONALD'S CHANCES. What Senator Vorhees savs A boat his i Interview with Cleveland Car. Baltimore Sun. ; . , - - - - WiSHTNaTON. - Feb. 16. Senator Voorheea, speaking of his recent visit to Albany; says he called upon "Mr. Cleveland, as every one -knows, to further urge the appointment of Mr. McDonald to a cabinet position, f ; The visit was very pleasant and certainly very satisf aetory. - Mr. - Cleveland listened very attentively and appear ed deeply interested in all that was said in favor of, Mr.. McDonald. He did not intimate by word or action what his future course in this con nection may be" Senator Voorheea says he did not expect Mr. Uleveland to act otherwise, and he would have considered it rather extraordinary had he openly' committed himself either one way or the other.- The Senator declined to state what con clusion he may: have derived from the visit. : The : petition in favor of ex Senator - McDonald presented to Mr. Cleveland by Senator Voorhees was drawn up by Senator Beck, and carried by him to the different Sena tors for their signatures. " , No Senator whose name has been mentioned in connection with the cabinet was ask ed to sign , the paper, but Senator Lamar, who heard of its . existence, asked ior it and put his name to it. The t friends of Mr. McDonald are quite confident today that his chan ces for a cabinet position are excel lent, and they certainly are if- per sistent ana constant pressure is to have any effect. The most - souerht ' after person about the Capitol, today were senators uorman and Bayard, but as neither had returned from the flying trip to Albany, curiosity had to remain unsatisfied, although if seen its doubtful' whether: anything of importance could : have been exs tracted from either jot them. There is an impression, however, that some definite and reliable intelligence con cerning the cabinet will be made pub- iu m a very Bnort tune. Sloan's History. ; To the Editor ot The Observer. ' " : , From the many kind friends of my history from all over our State. I have received letters since the adverse action f a majority of the State Sen ators, asking why such action was taken, l reply that 1 cannot, m print, properly answer; the question, and do myself or the' question full justice. ; The gentleman who so vio lently opposed the resolution possibly can give a reason. . I .trust, -though, in more polite language to his constit uency than to the State Senate, one of whom whom went so far as to at tack the personal character 1 of - the author. The special section I of the act, not to give to the youths of , "-'our State a proper and correct history of the deeds of their fathers, and would haye counteracted the spurious and untruthful school books sent from the North and tised 1 in our . public. and some of our'private schools, all tending to SHOvert, in a secret under stratum, the original teachings of the constitution of our fathers, and im press their young and susceptible minds with the idea and belief : their fathers and relatives vho fought our battles, were Mebels. ; For no where are we called people of States." nor is our Confederation designated as a Confederacy. : The people of North Carolina owe a solemn and imperative duty to their heroic dead, and more so do they owe it to tne children of their giants, who bore victory m every battle fought on Virginia soil, on their bright mus kets, which time, indifference and forgetfulness are permitted to engulf in oblivion. " ' i - ": . I asked no appropriation from the Legislature, as its opponents choose to term it," but 1 aid , ask the State. through its law makers, to .subscribe to a work Of love, and untiring labor, to place my native State in her prop er and deserved position. Although my absence from the state to write up both truths and facts, subjected me, as I was told, to disfranchise--wo vote. Consequently, I had no claim on North Carolina. Yet I have voted for 1 the ''straight-out" f Democratic ticket, both State and National, up to this time, defraying my own .expen - 8es to so do. l leave the matter here, with my comrades and my people. -Very respectfully, : John A Sloan . - i Death of Enoch G. Ghlo. . Norfolk, Va., Feb. 18. Enoch G. Ghio, general superintendent of the Seaboard and Roanoke Railroad Company, died this morning after a short illness. Men Think" they know all about Mustang Lin iment. Few do. Not to' knew is not to have. ' - . feb3-d tu thu suaw As a raindrop foretells a storm, so does a pim ple upon tbe human body Indicate health--iesl.ro j iBg virus In the blood, which can be neutralized ana exnenea omy Dy ir. narters iron ionic. ; -- febldAwlm . - MRS. JOE PERSON'S REMEDY Restores - Vital . Energy Lost by Indigestion, Overwork. Worry, Mental btrain, or outer causes. It. Is Watare'a Great " System Ren ovato r ." - - AND BLOOD PUBIFEEB, SOI.O DT ALli DniTOGISTS. m We continue our ; Si' - ' For a few 1 of fresh embroideries; from 5c to Every Yard Worth Three Times as Much. We have secured this Bankrupt Importer -AND- W know thai the Tjadies will such Goods could be sold at such prices. : This is an entire ly different lot from that we sold for the past two weeks, be ing a much finer grade. Come and see them at once; it will pay you to supply your needs in that line for the'next three years. At the same time we U Ble at 1 7ic per yarc1, the equal of ached 20 pieces,FKUIT OF THE LOOM, 104 'SHEETING, at 27c, the usual price 35c ; 100 pieces: checked NAINSOOK at c per yard, and many other new and attractive goods All Far Below WITTKQWSRY k BARUCH, CHARLOTTE. N. C. THE FURNITUKE DEALER. Largest Stock CHROMOS, OIL PAINTINGS, : I WINDOW SHADES, , ($5 Send fob E.-:M. ANDREWS. Land for sale. I offer for sale that valuable tract of land lying lust beyond the eastern limits of the city of Cbar lotte, and known as "The Grove." This tract com prises one hundred -and thirty-two and one-half acres of land, of which about twenty-five acres are creek and branch bottoms. Upon this tract, is a large and commodious dwelling bouse, and the necessary rat-buildings. 'I also offer for sale another farm (adjoining the above) of nfty-iwo and one-half acres, upon which are a small frame and several log houses. I will sell this property as a whole or I will divide It to suit purchasers. This property can be bought at a reasonable price and on easy terms, and any one wishing to purchase would do well to apply at nee to . S. J. TOBREKCK. decSftuesaoaUsunAwtf .- . - BINGHAM SCHOOL, : Established In 1793, : Schools for Boys, in AGE, In NUMBERS, In AREA of PATBONAGB, and in equipment for PHYSICAI CCLTUEK. - - ' - TBe only School for Boys In tbe Sooth with GAS, . s GYMNASIUM and a steam-heated Bath House. febidwtf - ' : - Bingham School S. O., N. C. j HARRINGTON'S . European House, - OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. Unequalled accommodation. Board by the day, week or month. Heals at all hours. Call on : . ' ' ; ' i 3. b. HARRINGTON, feb&dlt Near Court House, Charlotte, N. C. PRICE FIVE CENTS wi ii! , ' - " I " - days longer. new clean 40c per yard, immense-lot from a ba astonished to kVinw whn will place on sale 200 pieces of which ha never bpftn oApn '. Their Value. in tHe State. Cotton FEATHER DUSTERS; K" AND BABY CARRIAGES. Prices.' -JPF3I1 ' ; : SWEET GUM&HOIIEDI vna aviiaiB wui n -mm id Mdi wsMlaa MoellMt -toovc, kMting an4 Oeab-pn 4Hg ariaeipte. Th fiwetk Qua or th south era vazat . POMMM tiBUlltfBK e- peotoratiaV which Ioomm th phtegn d uu tbo tmm Mmbrtw that fornt l& th threat and hronohiml tube. K Thw two tiiBDla TMte- "T 2 V " 4lM 1la4 altr Hw or r BWCSBC wtB Bn Mallelav th flnwt kaowa . M Vf mil dm gin at M M. IH NKH. Kiddle Book tar It. at aana aat'i " WAITER A. TATI.OS, Atlaatav, Ga. deel7dwedsaUunw6m MRS. JOE PERSON'S Remedy "Ill fore mil' Blood pisetuea ONE OF TEE MEDICINES TBAT HAS i-. .--' ' r-- - Stood ewy test made upon It lithe v- " " - . . .
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1885, edition 1
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