Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / April 9, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOLUME XXXIII. CHARLOTTE, N. C THURSDAY APRTT, n.-ijws " ' -1 : .- v. - ..JJLI-1 j SPRING -:o: - vif ty dozen Ladles' Hem-stitched, aH-Llnen Handkerchiefs, at 12c., north 25i 86e. handkere hlefs for usle Thread Bose, split feet, 26c. pr pair. Job lot Ginghams and Seersuckers tery cheap. ; ono9 ipmniing (S-codDdls. Are ready for your inspection, and we extend to you a cor llal Invitation to examine them before l m lr?. Our stock f omprlshs everything In the dry goods line from hooks and eves to the finest woolen fai.ri'H Be cure to look at our Dress Goods and Embroideries. Large stock Torchon Laces. Also Nice Line of READY-MADE CLOTBiNGj vr MiMin. and Gents' Straw Hats. ThanWIng you for past favors, and hoping to prices and pome aueuuuu, we are juura, irmy, . SMITH IIIIILDINH. Miss Lavlnla Hunter is over our store, where she cutting aim lining. oo My stock, which is unusually attractive, will be open for the inspection of the public on Wedoesday, ipnl 81 A cordial invitation extend ed to all to be present. A beautiful Easter Card presented to each visitor. i.;lt;8EIile; To inspect the different stocks OPENING. our house. Our stock of COLORED AND BLACK DRESS SILKS .he found equal in price-and quality to any tn the city. We have a tremendous stock of DRESS wops io many varieties of kinds and colors, viz: Albatross, Nan's Veiling. Krench Buntings. Tricots and Jersey goods. These will be found to be very attractive. We believe our stock of BLiCK DRKSS nuous cannot be equaled in this market. We know our stock of White Goods and Embroideries are "e very best In town. Our stock of Ladles', Misses' and Children's Hosiery is large and attractive. Do not think or purchasing a Parasol until you see our stock. Ask for Lawns. Ask for Casslmeres to make the boys suits out of We have tt Ask for Bleached Sheetings and dhlrtlngs; Ask for Seerraek era and tiluarjams for plain Linen Collars and Culls. Ask for anything you want; we have It. ABIIJBR ::& H&REIS Largest Stock of furniture in the State. s CO o mm a. a COFFINg. CASKETS and BUlilAUSUrrsf'; VV.'" ' ' T Orders .by telegraph attended to day or night tlKi TTiYlFUfl I ' tiarlotte CObseitJet The first steel ship . , canckr UtckWiOH -HrHiJlf v I Tkijntult prri- - ,j . f I '1 ( U rrpnts bobmito to J launched last kj gj , - C -V?'- '.TITVTW 1fliittrS:;n. I LI 11 ' 1 l 11 11 II IT 1 m obsoubbd, but, like the TON. only tok a It was a screw steamer of 750 tons. ' !-erfal 8aceM" N-w Ab- StatiMicWiiiiSeinto8lwLri.r i U II lii I ;!fi M 1 1 )1 U.U 1 II 'I I K M I merit a continuance of same by fair dealing, low it - will be glad to see everybody wishing dressmaking, ... We have jost opened the best stock of HATS this Spring we have ever had the pleasure or show ing our customers. We call special attention to our Fealher-Weight Stiff Hab In Black, Brown, Maple and Pearl. Kelt Hiits In all Sh.ipes and Colors. Silk JrLsbts In the latest Spring Black GIVE US A CALL B2F0KE BUYING, of goods, are invited to visit I'lf illll k 0 !' ... I - . .Sea --1 " ' i-ri P3 ft 5 , CD ICS : g cl 8abcrlptloa to the ObMerrer. DAILY EDITION. SlneleeoDT 6 cents. By the week In the city.. 19 1 76 ; uywemonw.... Three months.... Six months ... One year ... WKEKLT EDITION, Three months..:. 3.50 , 6.00 LSlx months ' '" 60 cents. $1.00 J who j car. Io elnbs of five and over $1.50. "' i.70 1 r Ue-rtatlon From These HhIsj Sobscrlptlons always payable In advance, not I vuij iu uauio UUl ill iaub GEN. GRANT'S DELUSION. (ien. , Sueridan . says i $hat Gen' utrani s aeiusion was tnat ne nad a talent for making money and he was" acting un'der this delusion when hi was being so mercilessly duped an robbed by Fred Ward whom he hai taken into his confidence and whom he implicitly trusted. -All men have; their delusions, f their weaknesses,! ana it was ims aeiusion tna( saaaen ed and cast its shadow over General Grant's dosing careerrts not easy to understand why one who was so comfortably and well provided for as Gen. Grant, one who had beea so honored by the people as he had been should after having filled the exalt ed positions which he had filled, and who entered private life-with a for tune ample enough to supply all that he could desire in the way of com forts or luxuries, it is strange, we say, that he should ( become infatuated with the desire to amass wealth, and enter the field of speculation where so often the shrewd and strong of purse Tiave found ruin in in their path. He thus became the dupe of sharpers even before he fell into the hands of that champion : rogue Fred Ward, who made a clear sweep of all that was left, and brought not only finan cial ruin but humiliation to his vie tim. ', Had Gen. Grant at the end of his service as President been content to retire to private life and live in the quiet, elegant 'dignity that the means he possessed would have enabled him to live in, his life would have been a happier one and the clouds that have darkened his latter' days would not have come. In his younger days Gen. Grant never had the faculty of acquiring money, and in bu latter years events have demonstrated that he had not the faculty of keeping it when acquired. .He was a victim, as thousands of others have been, of the mania to be rich, which has been so prevalent in this country since" the war, "and which was one of the results of the war. . These immense fortunes were made by speculation, through ring legislation, , by army contracts, and men who were comparatively, poor became suddenly millionaires. In the rush and whirl of those days the strict morality of other days was lost sight of , the spirit of speculation, in many instances closely allied to robs bery, went abroad, spreadrrttwugh' out the country, and the cnief Ttim of men seemed to . be to get rich, the h onesty of the way being a second Sary .consideration. The consequent demoralization is too well " known. and its effects so wide spread that corruption became the order -of the day, and honesty in official life or in great business transactions .became the exception so that when, noted it became a matter . of? remark. Gen. Grant passed through all this- with out any blemish on his honesty, but he did not escape the results-jof the contagion that spread throughout the land. - f . Ma--iii ti In view of the invitation to Preais dent Cleveland to visit the West land the South, some one takes occasion to remark that there is no impropriety in the President's absenting himself from Washington for two or three months during -the warm season, to visit other portions of the country. The propriety or impropriety depends altogether upon the motive and man ner of such absenting. If. for mere purposes of junketing, and travelling as a dead bead at the expense of cor porations which have axes to .grind, is improper; if to acquire the knowledge of the respective sections of the country that all Presidents should have, and the President travel as independently as one filling his station should, and as Mr. Cleveland does, it is not only eminently proper, but may be highly beneficial not only to the President but to the country. t was not the travelling but the manner of doing it by Presidents for some years past that has called for so much adverse criticism. " . ' They are getting the Sharon -Hill business down fine The old-vfellow has succeededin getting his case into the Federal court, and anorder from the Judge to produce- the marriage contract so that Chicexpertfl mayr test the ink and see whethertbe body of the contmct and the signature of. Sharon 'are in the same ink Miss Hill refused to produce thedocumert, and the Judge sent her to jail for 24 hours. About as good a thing as Sharon could do would be to invest some money in Chicago experts. California farmers are said, to' be anxious tor ; war- net ween England and Russia, as it would give them, a. chance to gut rid of some of the wheat they have c n band. atbetter pricesC- and also-tome of the surplus stock of j A! paper, floor is one of the latest Improvements in. house building lu the WesW 1 Straw' lioards are; pasted togethef.put nhdef hy draulid presses, seasoned ' and placed upon ' edge." When sand-papered.it is as smooth Both houses of the Tennessee Leg-: islature have passed the act repealing the railroad commission act over the Governor's veto. , Ex-Postmaster General Creewell says Gen. Grant wanted a third term in the Presidency, not for the honor, but to reconcile the North . and the South." .. v J. Mrs Garfield denies the story that has been.; put afloat about' her ap proachirie marriage. ' She sava she never thought of it. : ,, A writer in the New Yore Tribune says i Vanderbut has been blessed, in his eons ; that there is not a drpnkard,' rogue, spendthrift or gambler among them. That luck may change. -5 'i . j - I 1,1 ' !- i I Four thousand five hundred patents have been, issued for snow plows to clear; railroad tracks of snow, and yet railroad men have net the machine they! want,' none of those patented filling the requirements. - ".T-t. There is a programme on foot among the Illinois Democrats to take down Mr. Morrison as candidate 'pr U. S. Senator and run Pension Com missioner Black,' 'who, it is thought, on accounfrtrf hispopularity , among the soldierscancommand fiepublis can votes enough to be elected. It is said that Mr, Morrison has consented to this arrangement, and a number of prominent Democrats have gone to - Washington to confer with Gen. Black upon the subject. ' S LAND FH4UDS. An Order of the New CommissiOBer Some of the Which Will 'Check Stealing. ' Geni Sparks, the commissioners f the land office, has issued the follow ing very important orders: "If inal action in mis omce upon ail entries of the public lands, except 1rivate cash entries and such ' script ocations as are not dependent upon ' acts of settlement and cultivation, is suspended in the following localities, viz ; All west of the first guide meri dian, in Kansas; all west of range seventeen west in Nebraska; the whole of Colorado, except lands in the late Ute reservation ; all of New Mexico, Montana, Wyoming and Nevada and that portion of Minneso ta north, of the indemnity limits of the Northern Pacific railroad and. east of the indemnity limits of the Chicago, Minneapolis and Manitoba Railroad. . In addition, final action in this office will be suspended upon all timber entries under the Act of June 3, 1878, which have not already. been examined ; also upon all cases of desert land entries.' f !; ;t ! This order upon its face does not ibow its real importance. It strikes at the entire system of land frauds which have been perpetrate J during the past years of Ring rule in the in terior department. This order delays nnal action upon tne issuing . or patents for all lands enumerated in th circular. Gen. Sparks has found so : many evidena - Of iraud all through the public land system, that ne nas iouna it necessary to issue such an order as the,one given above Itisfebsoluielynecessary for hitri to suspend the issuing of all patents Until he can find out and locate the frauds. He thought at first of clos ing all the land offices in the West: until he could investigate work al ready in hand, bu t in order to do this he would have to upset his entire clerical force and would have caused great annoyance to bona-fide settler. A larere number or tne cattle rancnes uf the West are based upo'n fraudu lent titles. One man can' acquire ottly 160 acres through preemption.. Uisnonest capitalists would empioj several hundred men to locate claims I and then would purchase from them .i The land office regards every one of these entries outside of the original homesteader as -fraudulent. ' Where patents have not-been ill be withheld entirely jsia-sona ises cattlemen have entered up-all te land along running- water, so that they can virtually control fall the land to the left apd right of thei for an indefinite distance. This so; of capture of grCat sections of coun try win ne Droken. ud oecause. n u not possiWe'thatthe wcies along thi lines jbC thww8trtams?aretejiiif bina eiettJef si- J In n$4frycaseo the large-etiwmpanies have de liberately feticeahf tfiw public lands of the ! country and have had them patrolled by armed cowboys, ready to shoot down innocent settlers de sirous of entering upon these stolen lands, r J ..' Gen.! Sparks hopes - to have the President issue $ -proclamation very sobn. which. wilL.De backed bythb Strong arm of the military power, to remove , these capitalists - trom tne lands to which they are not entitled. For- years ,the public lands of the country - have been i stolen through every trick and device of fraud The land commissioner intends' now to investigate caret illy every case that comes before him. No patents will be hereafter issued except to bona fide settlers. Some of the most enor mous cases of fraud are beyond the power of the commissioners. For instance, the syndicate, back of the Bobian and Maxwell Mexican grants in New Mexico promises to oe suc cessful '-in -its capture. Of 1,700.000 acres of land The syndicate's title is based upon two Mexican grants of 11,000 square milf s eacn. x nis woum make in the aggregate about 90.000 acres of land Through a blunder- ing description of the Umiw ol- the grant the syndicate has claimed ter ritory to the amount first named fViri cress '- has ' ratified ' the claim through the influences of the lobby . The Supreme court held that the rati fication of Congress gives title, to the syndicate. - This in what has been known - as the . Elkins : syndicate. which is made up of New York and Western capitalists. Seme of the land is very valuable. It repreents a colossal fortune Ipr litf oripnal sptciulators. " ' v.-: - .. j ?. 1 JcW" fIsht o "Itlieiiwatlwm. , ;i hai been coniplet. tr dlsabteil'from rheuma4 im t i nMd P,.rKBr Tonic for kKlney disease, when io-mr-aatotitehrneii-the rheunwtlsm oom- fileteif dtsapf-eareii.' so-wrMejsaiw. uejiryi ert, of Nd. 464 AUantie lvg. CUieumatlsm arises from the tiltawJtheklor.eys I i separate the one acid from th$ blooa. . I tK. nruuKiTU. 11. -TnBii'iJri(reufferin from errors an a mais ctetlons of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, Jogs of manhood. Ao., I will send a recipe that will Om )a, I UI UiUaoA. XU1B gran, roumuj was discovered by a missionary In South America. Bend self addiwd envelope to B?. JoearH I. "D.fc8WYJS.,-;.; c, .;. VVMderrat Saceesa of the N ewoik'TTnruie.'!''';vu;-ip;-tv'it ') ;'. 'V;5; . -A prominent eye surgeon was re moving the bandage from the eye of a patient at the Post graduate School of Medicine yesterday, when a Trib une reporter entered the room and asked, '--Do you still use cocaine as r "Well, I should say so; in opera tions upon the eye I feel now that I could not get along without it. - In general practice it lias driven ether and chloroform out of the field, " It is only a wonderful discovery, but it is. astonishing how rapidly it has risen into, favor, i Even the most consers vative in my profession,' who look! with disfavor upon anything new,? wiu acfcno wledge that they have at ave at ves- of, least .beard of it" i y 4l .U "What iscocainei", .r ? "It is the alkaloid of .the leaves a, snruD, engmauy ; wud but now largely cultivated, know as the ery- throxylon coca. It grows in- South' f.Americatprincipally in Peru and Bo livia, ana iooks mucn ntce tne ordi nary tealeaf. Dr. A? Neunann, of; Goslar, Germany gave it its - present nauitj ia ioou. rui iiiue was tnemi known of the properties of the drug. In some : experiments it was found that dogs could be killed by it when given in large doses ' Its effect was to paralyze the 'respiratory organs. Experiments have 1 been made from time to time with it since, but it has never.Jbeen; looked upon as of much value as a therapeutic agent. ' That it would produce local anaesthesia was unknown : -until it was accidentally discovered by a young medical stu dent named Koller, at Vienna last September; - Its merits haye since been thoroughly tested and discuss ed all over the civilized world. I think it has been tried in more cases in this country than in any other, and I believe that the palm for bold ex perimentation and demonstration of its ana33thetie properties in many branches of minor surgery should be awarded to America.' There is hardly a field -in which it has not been used with success. ! Too much cannot be said in its praise in surgi cal operations upon the eye, ear, and nose. Almost every conceivable od- eration has been tried in these parts with cocaine, and in many cases the first the patient knew so far as feel ing went that any cutting bad been done was when the wound was bes ing bandaged. It is much easier to itell where it has not been used than jwhere it has been.' It has brought sleep to eyes that would not close, soothed angry wounds so that they were painless, stopped acute hem morrhages and distressing asthmatic Bpasms, has allayed the irritability . 1 1 ' 1 M. 1 L. ot tne mucous lining ot tne mouth, so that laryngoscopic examinations could he made without distress, and food could be given in the last stage of consumption, and has made the boring of the dental engine almost a pleasure and the pulling of teeth painless. Its value is incalculable in gyneecology and genitourinary surs 4 "Is it true, as reported, that inju rious effects have been found to fol low the use of cocaine in some cases?" I i "So far as my experience goes and 1 have treated hundreds oi cases in which it has been freely used I have yet to report the first case of injurious consequences. I have heard of one caseof hysterical paralysis and a; numoer of cases of nervous pros tration following its use. I do not believe that these conditions were the result of the cocaine, but I think they grew out of another circum stance that appears in all the operas tions in which it is used. It is only al local anaesthetic; tho senses re main perfectly active, and the opera tion of the mind normal Although nb pain . is , felt when fhe knife or other instrument enters the patient's flesh; yet the glistening knife and the Blurting blood can be seen, and if the patient has not strong nerves the sight of these things will awaken horror in the mind and rapidly ex haust the vital energy. It is fear more than ; cocaine lhat. produces aA . . ill . , effect, .--.There re also special cases m jrtucb cocaine innot be used to advantage. Take, instance, a person of delicate ner- us organization " troubled with it or some other eye difficulty where an operation is necessary. The eye could be anaesthetized but not the mind, and the patient would become exceedingly troublesome, and twist add squirm from purely mental im- fressions, . and render the surgeon table to inflict an injury that might be- fatal to the eye. In cases of this nature the old an&athetics must be . used.". - s- .-; '- : v : i i'ls cocaine made in this country?" 1 Yes. it is made by a number of firms - When first' used last fall it was put up only by Merck, a German chemist, was very scarce, and worth more tharrits weight in gold." It was made by a secret process. : American chemists, as soon as there was a de mand for it. however,- began to expe riment, and after months of patient trial, and the destruction of a large quantity of ,coca leaves, have at last given us an alkaloid as good, and many thins better, than Merck's im ported preparation. The price, though it; has been reduced somewhat, is still exorbitant, and has not reached a normal basis. The demand has in- creased beyond, the supply. It will take probably . two years to bring cocaine to its proper position as a coirmercial article. The demand for coca leaves has been so great that the market has been cleaned out of all tliosa of good quality, and chemists Will have to wait until the plants grow to get their material. The plants are 1 raised in a comparatively small section of country; but on account of the Drospects of the future, prepara tions are being made to raise them on an extensive scale." i r "How does cocaine compare with ether in price?" I "It is difficult to mttke a compari son. Quantity for quantity, cocaine will; overtop etner enormously, in actual use I think cocaine the cheap-- err L While it may tafce six ounces ot ether, to anaesthetize a person, the same practical result can be attained with a few drops of a solution that contains only 4 per cent.-of cocaine This, difference in quantity makes.the actual ' eost for a given operation about the same, and in time the ad vantage will be largely on the side of the cocaine. The future of cocaine is-1 a' matter of 6uppositien, but I believe that its uses are yet in the intancy ot development, and it willfe a greater ; boon' to suffering .humanity them .we " ttave,any,aea,pt at present. y, - t :tyt. -M!.. iV r JSkiM IHseaven t iired -.! .. ByDr.S'razler" Magte 01riteofcCnreirs If bf magie, ptoiples, blaek heads or grubs, blotches and nimJonson the 4aiMh leaving the skin Clear SDd beautiful. Also cures Itch, salt rheum, sore nip ples, sore UpSf-and old, obstinate Blears. - gold by OJTizsisai.or maiiea on -reoeipv tn irriuc: m wnu. Sold by T. C. Smith A Co. febijdeodJtwly JNewoHTrmnn:!qvu.U!;.v,i,ii . . ., , t H . ff-V I 1 1 I HI llllll II IIIII.T? 8tatiiie Which Kem to Shewn Larger norialitf from This Diaeastt Than Fornerlr. " f!' Hew Torkllealeai BMonL. J , "j There has been considerable discus sion in the past few years regarding the increase in the annual deaths rrom cancer. ,The figures of the ftegistrar Ueneral's report, the writ rags or Dr. Charles Moors and Mr. Liunn, nave, especially drawn atten tion to this Question. 1 The deaths from cancer in England mm waies m ine ten years 186(M9 were 80,049, with an average annual increase of 248. In the next decade 1870 79. the number nf d par. ha dd 111,300, with an annual increase ot ou. me : total increase : itl deaths irom cancer m tne decade of 1850-59 was. 2,000; in the decade 1860 69 it was z,4U0, and in the decade from i7U-7lt was 3,200. - ; '-In 1874 Dr. Farr remark-mi that, in iidigland "cancer, one of the most painrui diseases to which mankind is Buojecc,i,is growing; more 'fatal." The rate of deaths from this disease in mac country from 1873 to lfw ; was equal to 442 in every 1,000.000 of pupuianon. u ,4 ut uuBuuuuiirv LflH VllJtl BEsnaruM Irk A. 1 . . . of this city show that the number of i aeatns trom cancer in 1869 was 804. iu op was 4i and m 1883 was 678. xue wumaie was made ten years ago by our city Board of Health that the rate of deaths from cancer was puf.nttie over four hundred per mill ion mnabitants, . According ' to the last reports it, is about 580 per mill ion. ;t These figures, however, include a large hospital mortality. In Brooklyn the deaths from cancer in 1883 were only 262 in a population of 624,118, which gives about the same rate as tnat of New York ten ago. i . ... years it cannot be denied in the face of statistics like the above, -that the uoabu xate irom cancer is mcreas ing absolutely and relatively in some pans pi tne world. - tfut that there is now a greater susceptibihtv to cancer than formerly has not yet been ! proved. ;. Cancer is a disease of the aegenerative period of life. It occurs oetween tne ages of forty and sixty. I Now. imDroved mod on nf lnrinw I jnnM. 1 i.1 1 . O . W .luuKBBu vuB numoer oi persons who reacn i tnese ages. Investigation wvuiu buuw, per naps, mat tne nums ber of persons reaohine the ae stm- Ceptible to cancer has increased in a greater ratio than have deaths from the disease. The volley from the enemy is the same, but the number prougnt to the front is greater. Defiant Strikers. Joliettk, April 7. No attempt was made this morning to put men to wors: in tne quarries congregated ai e vol vers and ack. They rias and declare they will not resort to arms unless nred upon. The own ers of the quarries have telegraphed io tne vxovernor tnat the sheriff has failed ts do his duty. Troops have not yet been ordered out, but the Adjutant lienerai is expected here to day to look over the field. Many a Lady is beautiful, all but her skin ; and nobody has ever told her how easy it is to put beauty on the skin. Beauty on the skin is Magnolia Balm. ' feb3-d to thu snw Buchn palba," great Kidney and Urinary cure. TORS. JOE PERO.V EDf. Merit Will Xell In the Iiag Rm . t . i TahbobcN. a, Feb;4,1886. Mas. Job Pkrsom: Hadum Ship us at once 6 gross of yoor Bemedy and 2 gross Wash. We are aouir weu wim it in Tarboro. and sales are ranldlv Increasing and It has given satisfaction, safar as pave learnea, in every case., we are uespncuuiiy, ' i - J5.-B. UUlXiKS c uo. ' " what it "had DONE. Tasbobd. Feb. 4. 1RRS. For several years I have had a trouble with my breast, which I fear Is cancer, that being Incident to my family. Kor two years past my general health has been wretched from Its effects. I be came so weaa I was Incapacitated for all work; my appetite was gone, the sight of food was nauseat ing to me. I would would wake up in the morning bu unu i Buareei7 uou energy u ansa ana aress myself, upon the least exertion I bad palpitation of the heart so violently that I was helpless. I was so nervous I could get no good sleep, but would lay awake at night restless, and when I did drop off to sleep would soon awake with a start, and It My constitution was wrecked hope was gone. I concluded, as a last resort, to try Mrs. joe Per numu ue uuurs uemre 1 coma get io steep again. son's Bemea. l commenced nsins it iat Jul have taken 17 bottles, and the effect has been won derful. My general health ts excellent I sleep as well: as I ever did In my Ufa and wake in the morn ing feeling rerresoea ana weu I can not only set i up and eook my own breakfast without fatigue hut have fine appetite to relish It now after I cook It. I can go all dy long and am not tired when night wuiru. UAf c uh nag B MJUCIl 01 paipuauon oi we nean. since soon after I earn. me need the Bemedy. My breast does not pain me at all. or give me any trouble. I do not know woeuier uie uemeay will euro my breast or not. as tne lump Is still there, but If it neverdoes.no words of mine ean express my gratitude for what the Bemedy has done for me. It has done more fen- me than Mrs. Person promised me It would do, when I consulted ber in regard to using it' I will take pleasure in giving any one information In re gard to my ease who may desire-It Iwisheverr afflicted person in the land could know ol its vu luo, x lull gnueuiuj, .. ItABY L. HTVAH. wTttnesses H. B. Bryan. X. B. Hodges. a kowd Ten HercbaaC Having passed several sleepless nights, disturb en uy ine agonies ana cnes oi a suuenng child. and becoming convinced that Mrs. Wlnslow's aooining byrup was lust tne article needed, oro cured a supply for the child. On reaching home and acquainting his wife with what he had done, sbe refused to have it administered to the child, as sbe was strongly In favor of Homoeopathy. That night the child parsed in suffering, and the parents without sleep, tte'uming home the dty following, the father found the baby still worse; ana wnue coniempiaao aioiner Sleepless nigut, the mother stepped from' (be room to attend to some domestic duties, and left the father with the child.- During her absence he administered a por tion of the Soothing Syrup to the baby, and said noming. rnai nignt an nanas slept well, ana the little fellow awoke In the morning bright and hap py. The. mother was delighted with the sudden and wonderful change, and although at first offend ed at the deception practiced upqn her, has con tinued to use the 8yrup,and suffering crying babies and restless nights have disappeared. A single trial oi tfie syrup never yet failed to reneve the baby, and overcome the prejudices of the mother. vitn fir an onuuriHCa. 2ft cents a bottle. to triiurruRK . dkilebs AAV THK PIJH1JIC. WX have commenced the manufacture of Furni ture in this city, and having the very latest and best machinery, Are prepared W no tne very hear ork nossible. and guarantee satisfaction. -Being a home enterprise we solicit the patronage oitnepuouc . ...! j-, ,i - ;v. VgT Repairing promptly and thoroupWy execut-1 d Cane chair seating a specialty; iactoryand ! . febi-U SUJOTT MABSH. JO strong armed with I ,i c r.r, f --w. wuuui utau3ux a ucauu- prepared to resist at- Iul wuvenir will be presented to the ladiM?" . n - are watching the ouar- I ' ' 1 ... - - - .ixr,T):lo r. ' LDFUTZ3tf WITTKOWSKY & BARUCH'S Grand Opening br- il l Vl will take -i ": -it ''3 S ; t ''. i WW Wednesday, AND EVENING, When we shaU display I That has ever been shown in ':f!T s Pil BONNETS 11 M. lhe strikers I l'o which the noonta nr maf ii.J a j. No Cards Will be Issued. M CHARLOTTE, N. C. i ' i itt v ana rvrw-i 1 1. i FOR MEN, BQlEffialto ( mm a r, I V MOV SSVt-tt!0 i? w,222b,'.tne llllT lnV? Ctothfs that ever came into this nwutet. It it not onry large, hot It Is select. It eomprlses evnr style and gradeiof roods that U manufJ3ftiTr thi. ZZJzZ trade, either at home or abroad, and weW -, v. .uium, .11 WWW TM I7TK thlsfity, except at a severe loss.. We know whei lew whereof we do LARGELY and FOB CASH, lttotoTea, WTZS bargains to our cue omen. - i TTrw!! ,. " Our Stock of BnrliurClnthf n wu and ltsvlclnlty, and we will Ichto It to toe rtewhetber to? t&Tl&ZZi and ChildreD';(Blc.biD&k uoys Embracing Original and Fashionable Designs In Boys- and Children's Short Pants Putts, Plaited and Plain; Boys' and Children s Long Pants Suits, in all the latest designs; Boys' and Children's Sack Suit. It will pay every mother and father in this city to goods. Mbdd9s OaDitllnflim The Latest Sorinc Novelties in Xns'lsh Worsteds. etc, m all the Newest Shades. Cot Sack. Cutaway body-fitting. Gents' Furnishing ' ' ' r ? The Largest Stock, the BIchest Designs, the Lowest Prices. Ait unmtiE Sof7t and -1 , For Men, Boys and Children, the Latest Novelties and -i !. '..- 7 W.'H1 AXTWmAJST at CO v "T place okz ill SO Vv' v,vf it K'nAV edi Io 3nj6bn;aaoo April the 8th, i. ;.!V. .1 i';'li. j i:-S '.rani 1 .i the ClVtf- .1 J the Carolines, together :wifW & r e?!i tctaa &id io ajrxii suanl.' 'I t f. jl.'UiUi iV 9ri bfi trrsA&S. ri; oJ Saorabmtc.n u 1 1 lfitjs.'rjo"B-3 o3it .'."j rc severe o$3 JBdJ i-b'v. ' o -T liajOJS bed COuWAvI .Pti) tM.lt RARE FADR ICS c imiei ea0 f2i' mm oo .iaTt Za-::' i we speak In this particular, b4 lt.UIala to the go through pur StoSjn4)cflnt.tw Bricee ofi these -i Tane CuuOmm. Plalda. TMartinala. flnrknniM . and Double Breasted, made U tte best inaoner an A .1 . --rt.' : I' ..... ,, . 1 ' j '..!, ! ..l See them before porefaaelng eswher. 1. . vt 1 -''" 1 - stock or s i if 1 i Stiff 'Hi ats Styles, at astonishing low prleas. ,,.. "t Goods 0
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 9, 1885, edition 1
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