Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Oct. 28, 1885, edition 1 / Page 2
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gUz Charlotte m&zvvcv. PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT KONDAT 81 CHAS. B. JONES, , ' Editor and Proprietor. TTKBXD AT THK POSTOTFICK M CH1BIXCTTB, N. 3., as Skookd Class Mattkb. CnOESE WOMES. v'V lrl Babies Arc Killed Br t ... - .' " . A few .weeks .ago I heard Miss ? Adele Fielde give a parlor , lecture ? about Chinese women. Miss Fielde Rantist missionary in XJOO wccu - r,v.o fnr manv vears. and has as- , VUIUM v ml ml J 1 mated orominently m l. developing tv,a fnr influencing the women of that country. I wish I could con xr on oHpnnatfi imnression of her i tv. and of the mental clear ness which she showed in the address rv.,vvVi t heard. Her manner was ;, pleasing,-and there were firm, sweet tnnoa ' in hfr voice' which rendered l ; tha sentences which she onniro fnr ns m the Swatow dialect. Miss Fielde gave some horrible a(S AAimtfl rf t.hfi nractice of infanticide in-China. At SwatowJtorty women, ' . each over fifty years of age, separ ately confessed, ; without apparent . sense of guilt, that they had among tham ViUpd Rfiventveient aauenters. In "Pagoda Shadows" she says : . "The murder of other than newly born infants is rare, but I know of an instance in which the mother of a girl three months old died, and the father, finding the care and -support of the child difficult, took it to the beach and left it till the tide washed it away to the sea. That such a thing might be dono in any land is credi ble. But that' 1U1 the neighbors and relatives should know and acqui esce in such an act; that the man who did it should not lose caste there for. and that the drowning of a three H10DiaS01U gul duuuiu oavw, V more comment than the drowning of C a kitten, in a village of three thousand j people, is marvellous f to ariyone who Soesotnowf how-' lightly thU lives f k of Chinese girls? ar esteemed f t a WrtrQTi ti am ftd " Treasure, who told her story to Miss Fielde, said she kept her eldest daughter; but f4al the other daughters were" put into a hod and thrown alive into the river, one each year ' I did not feel sorry when the little girls were carried away, and did not cry I was vered because they were not boys. I did not want them, -and I hoped to . a. i : have sons the sooner uiaiu not Keep them. I had not then heard of God, and I did not think that what I did was wrong. In view of such facts as these, Mis Fielde began her remarks the m other evening' by saying that the . first Question which confronts a Chi- ' nese woman when she enters this world is the Question whether she ' 'will be allowed ? to live. Extreme oovertv is one cause for the, prevals ence of eirl infanticide. Another cause Miss Fielde finds in the super stition that it is only through the lils ial worship of male descendants that t,he spirits either of men or women ,,. can receive comfort in any existence Vibeyond the grave. This belief makes narents much more desirous to have ; v .-sons than daughters, and, by a sort ' hoL reflex action on the mind, seems to destroy the sense of obligation to ward the female cnila, wnen ior any reason the birth of a child, is a burs . den. . -'v';v:' r::'HK::----c-y ' In the conversation .which Miss Fielde reports there are also one or : two traces that these ignorant people are' influenced by a fear that if they allow daughters to live fewer sons will be born. It is the fc last terrible form taken by the world-old, world- twide idea. that to procure the "welfare of men the , welfare of - women may be justly sacrified. ,The same ghastly motion which excuses in men the sin by which adult women are destroyed f . in prostitution here masquerades grimly in this awful offering up of newly-born daughters in the hope of winning unborn sons. a mrX Vuilnn o-Q fr her nwn narents '. only for a few years. She is merely a sojourner in her father's home. r After marriage she is absolutely sub inatft to her mother-in-law, and DAILY CHARLOTTE ;, OBSERVER : WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1885. SHAPE MADE TO OBDE. M Curves of Xoreliness Soft Wool of! tbc Lamb, X- Iue' to itne Australian : t While -watching a belle' in Vspec tacular piece the other, night, writes a New York Sun reporter, I turned to a well ' known" costumer, who sat next to me; and asked him if he did not think the prima ballerina ad aj Imaii tif ill Htrttra - " . ' 1 . "I ought to," was the reply. wWhv?" asked the reDorter. 'Because she bought much : of if trom me." v - . 'Much of . what?" ! "Of her figure : and I could say the same of nearly u every ' man rand wo man on the stage principals, ballet, an supers. I ' There was no chance for further- conversation that evening, but the reporter bore the; conversation 11 mind, and, calling on tne costumer the next day, asked for some points on the art of making up tne numan form that is, for information as td how much of the human form ia the gift of nature and how much is the gift of , man. : J . , . f The reporter had known that many attributes of stage beauty were arti ficial, but after this conversation he arrived at the conclusion that no man ory woman need f hesitate to go, on the stage hecause deficient in face or figure.- A trifling expenditure of money will place such a man or wo man on a par with Apollo or Venus, v ''How are these for legs ?" asked the costumer, spreading out a pair of tights, v :.:f "Beautiful r exclaimed the reports er, tor tne tigats were pot ot tne ors dinary kind, but so woven that their lines seemed f to follow the contours of shapely legs. These tights came in "five sjzes. They are made qf stocking -material Mlike ordinary. tights, but one can tell On feeling them that the parts which cover the calves' of the legs are thickly padded. The padding is of Australian lambs' wool, which is so elastic that when the tights are'on the padding streCches itseir over tne caives v ana enlarges them. No others portion of these tights was padded. -Thi reporter ' was" informed that tbeyiwere vintendedto remedy only deficiencies iij the calves and ,wwere much worn by, actresses when their costumes neces sitated the wearing of dresses which reached only to the knee, and by ac tors m costumes w men . snowea me calves, such as kickerbockersj or old French costumes; j Tights for" the ballet come in the same variety of sizes, ; but are more elaborately padded, so as to meet tlje requirements of the case. Ballet dancers usually wear what are called shape dresses that is, short dresses which barely cover the hips. Con' 8equently more deficiencies are like ly no do nouceaoie wan in tne case first mentioned. To remedy these, so called calf : and thigh pads are made, the Australian lambs wool being woven into the stocking mate rial at the points mentioned: For actresses who appear in male cos tume, calf, thigh and waist, tights are provided. In these the hips are made shapely and at ; the same time so fashioned that the waist looks small. Then there is an arm pad to go with short-sleeved dresses. This is also made of stocking material, padded with Australian lambs' wool ' at the proper points. It fits tightly, and when a "skin" is worn over it the wearer appears ; to have a lovely; DlumD arm. Indeed, it should be stated that in all cases the padded tights form only the foundation1. 'Skins" have to be worn over them aU. : : -: . A slim actor need not be afraid to play a heroic character, for he can be made stalwart one half as big again, if necessary. For him there are pad ded shirts which gave him a splendid chest, and also arm and shoulder pads. There are special arm pads for Roman characters, and shoulder pade are often used to make the shoulders even, for frequently one shoulder will be lower than the other. He Can Take a Rest. Philadelphia Record. When John Sherman returned to Congress from a former campaign in which he vigorously swung the bloody shirt, he remarked, to OFFICIAL CHARGES TQ COME. r t the Heads to Go Off After Elections in November.; i - Washington. Correspoadent Philadelphia Times, LiiEvents departmental of the' last week causes a chill of insecurity , to course up and down the 'spinal coK unm of the Republican officials who have recently been counting upon the safety of obscurity. ; v Comparatively few removals have as. yet been made within the sacred" circle of the classi fied civil service.- Last week a hum hber tof such removals was made, the axe 'falling; on -the necks-of those who are representative of a consid erable body of clerks. They were clerks who were active managers of the State Republican Association and jwjio spent a good deal of time , ana money in the ' service of the grand old party. There are hundreds more of them in office who have " been ig nored- thus ?far because. Derhaos. of the pressure of weightier .matters. .The. retention of Assistant Secretary Coon and other prominent Republi cans, the scrupulous ; enforcement of the civil service law and the general moderation of the administration lulled. these clerks into fancied secu rity, :': But Mr. Coon, Mr. Graves and other officials of their standing are men - whose official knowledge and at tainments are of a high order and far superior to the average employee, whose duties f are simply clerical. There were a good many more im portant things to attend, to . than hunting down clerks who might" come under the head of offensive partisans. It is now getting to be understood that the: 'civil 7 service reform of this administration will be pushed t to its legitimate conclusion. The politi cians in the classified service, as well as, out of it, must go; t pn-partisah merit will be recognked, not only m appointments, but in ''those who hold over from the old spoils System; This will (stride down a gpodly ;numoer; of men who have been advanced to hierh grades for political services, butfwho. curiously enough, have counted' on the protectibn 61 th& civil service) law; which is violated in' both letter 1 and spirit every "'day of their retens tibn;?hAs soon as, the November elec tions; are over the work of decapitav tion will begin and continue gradual ly,' until every ward politician shall nave Deen weeaea oud ana nis piace filled by persons certified by the Civil Service Commission. The adminis tration has determined that the class ified service shall be as absolutely non-partisan as it can be made. fclurder of the Innocents. Jchn Howell, -of Starrcsca. Pa!j who on Friday murdered i four of his children and then hot; and fatally ness on v Saturday ) and confessed to the coroner the killing 'of his chil dren. Howell was ahindustrious man, Jbut sickness during , the past year has affected- his mind consider -ably v He says t that on Friday his wife and daughter drove to the vil lage store, and as soon as ; they were out of sight ho set about his murder ' ous work -He induced 'his four chils dren whose ages ranged . f ronx three to twelve years, to take arsenic, and when they had fallen in a stupor, he successively placed a pistol , close to the forehead of each and drove a bulv let into the brain." Howell then seaU ed'himself with the' cocked revolver in his hand ; to await the coming of his wife and daughter intending to add them to his list of victims. After waiting three hours and they not re turning he shot . himself twice and fell unconscious beside the murdered children, where be was found by his wife and daughter On their return shortly after. No one holds the wretched man responsible, as his in sanity is conceded. N open Via rflniopbon - rrv ormft entirely a member of the family mto Democratic senators with a sigh of relief that he could now aliord to be independent for a few years. In this wVitoh Rhf has married. If she be comes a widow it is her mother-in-law who' decides whether she shall 'marry, again. "In this country," nA to Miss Fielde. "it is of no ----- way he sought to make a half apol ogy for the truculency of his stump speeches, as if he had reluctantly neck tA PflTfl for eirls. They can oniy niaA .A' tSrviM-ilai nrain1ira) . On Vila he Kept till iney are umocu ui vuv. about, and ..then they must belong wholly to some one else." - In Ohma our old proverb is reversed : " "A son's a sonttKbe gets Mai a wile, a dSSwtert a daugUter aU the days ot her life.' Miss Fielde does not suggest , that iQ nf the relation of women familv may have oeen ' f t.H'rsiise3 leading parents to . fi ht av infants have no claim on them, but it seems probable that onm w HavA been the case, filter re election to the Senate after that last bloody shirt campaign be will doubtles's greatly moderate his tone. But he was hot constrained by a vi cious popular sentiment in Ohio this year to stir up the sectional issues of the dead past. The issue was the li quor -question, on which Governor Jtloadly expressed himself; with too much frankness for a politician. On the bloody shirt cry J ohn Sherman would have been overwhelmingly defeated. As it is he has made an becoming acquainted with these tacts exceedingiy uarrow escape through 1 II LlltJ 1J.V TO tiv ujkj . c. . '- . ViAfirts of Chinese women, it is quite touching to perceive in the narratives ipfl(ra Shadows." how : readily the maternal love flows out to the . a oMffhtara who ' are allowed to live . and lead their brief existence of rrtniflAnhood in the "homes of their , parents. The newsborn infant is sac thout a nana because in the 4 " l-r mind of the mother deep -. 4-n f nni nion and desire have been ..nAifi( for centuries: '"'-but if the child does live, the heart even of the z -nnther 'turns to it and clings. y i ' i m ::'::'-: ; i Feel so Well". ; t 'Wt. tft tuank jou for teUlng me ot Dr ' Pierce's Favorto PreEcriptlon,"' writes a lady to her tnencl "For a long time I was unfit to attend . m tinnapriold. I kept about, but I . orouehlymlserab'y- I Had tenlWe ;t acr8, end beailiown sensatrona acroES me - and was quits weak and discouraged.: I Bent and m nr me otthe medicine auet ivws, jvm g3t M HI m. 1 1 aroly kno myself. t w, anu - . oct27tuesfrl&w. the carelessness of the uemocrats in making nominations for the legislas ture m Franklin county. Jtiis rero-; cious sectional campaign in Ohio was a criminal blunder that was retrieved only by the turn that was given to the liquor question. HI edica 1 Men of Iisti vction Havfthftftn amonff the foremost to felve honor where honor was aue in tne case 01 uostetter'a Stomach Bitters. Abjuring old fashioned profes sional prejudice, they have tranxir Dome evidence w lis worm aa a uirouo w iwivujuj6 uapcpoia., fever and aeue. bilious remmiueni, rheumatism. constipation, liver complaint. , debility and renal disorders. With all intelligent people this favor- nWft nrnfftSRional veraictnas naa its aue weteht. especially as it was in direct corinnnation of that of the people and the press. Far more effectual has it Droved than bombastic assertion, too often resorted to by the proprietors of remedies of doubtful value. -Tnepiam unvarnisned truth nhnntt.hftTMttersismore than sufficient to eon vince a skeptic. As a family medicine of compre hensive utility, prompt ana tnorough In action and pure in composition, stanas aeservedly first. It is claimed that tie free use of sugar with coffee will obviate the injurious ef fect on .the organs of; digestion which Coffee sometime? produces. : How to Catch Cold. Sit in a street car next to an window; r - v o Leave off your heavy underclothing on a mild October day. Take a hot drink- before . going out into the cold or damp air. ' Let the boys romp at school dur ing recess time without their hats. ' Sit in the passage or near an entry after dancing for half an hour. Put on a pair of thin shoes in the evening when you go to call. Fail to- change your shoea and stockings after coming in on a , very rainy day. , Have ;f our hair cut and shampoon ed just as a change takes place in the weather. - Wear one of the new ladies' cuta way coats without a flannel vest un derneath. Send the children out in autumn for exercise in shorty thin stockings and stumpy skirts. ! 1 ' Leave off your rough overcoat when you go driving, and wear your nice thin one to look well. VTake a hot bath in the evening and Sit up in your room to finish the last page of an Exciting novel. Throw or your neavy coai wnen you reach the office in a hurry and put on your mm KnocKaoout. Go down to breastast without a wran on a chillv mornrne before the fires have got fully started. Put the window of your ueepmg room up before you go to bed, espe cially if the .window is near your head. . - Run a square to catch a street car and take off your hat for a few mo ments to cool off when you catch it. Go out into the lobby during a theatrical performance and prome nade around without your overcoat. Do vour back hair ud high when you have been accustomed to wear it low and e:o out on a windy day. Take a lone bicycle ride ana stand for awhile showing off the beauties of your machine. - Come in from a rapid gallop on horseback and stand talking in the ODen air to a friend for five or ten minutes. firv to an evenine: oartv in a dress suit without putting on heavy under wear to compensate for the lightness of the cloth. -.; Wfiar a thin vest of fancy nattcrn that protudes a little below the coat and allows a part of the body that should always be warm to get chilled A Blizzard from the Prairies. St. Joseph Gazette. All the Mugwumps in America are going into ecstasies over the result of the Ohio election. Why not? iou can no more make a Democrat out of one of them than you i can reverse the law of gravity. The Mugwumps as a class are a dreary lot of old tax- dodgers and monotonous moonsnin- ers of reform. v if the Democracy were to kill . a fatted calf for them every day in the week they would hate the Democracy all the more be cause they have no digestion, iney were born the year old Horace Gree ley -was murdered, and from their shrunken shanks, their timid : coun sels, their total lack of snap and vin egar, it ia easy to be seen that the cant and the drivel of those days are chiefly responsible for these.dwarfs and deformities. ' - A Cow with a Tfooiren Lej. i I Some time ago a valuable cow, the property of Mr. Botteril Hudson, of MaltOH, broke her leg, and Mr. Hudson, being desirous of saying .the cow for the sake of a find . well-bred 'calf then run ning with her, desired Mr. Snarry to amputate the limb. This was done, and the veterinary then tried the ingenious plan just Carried to a successful issue. A rudely constructed wooden leg was made under Mr. Snarry's ' direction, and the. cow did. so well on the artificial limb, the stump of the leg . healing so natural ly,v too j that; when all swellutg had sub sided, - the yeterinary had a more artistio and rpermanentmberj'rconscted, and the cow. jenay now pe seen stumping about, iho meadoWs as1 contented, ana apparently f'almost sir active, as ' when Supplied' - with1 the full' complement of legf intended for her( hynature. -; frpf . .Williams, of din burgh, says be knows o( but one case anything like 4 parallel td -this, and - that J occurred in Wales. There are several similar cases on record. v t. .STOP THAT, COUGH By using t)r. Frazler's Throat and Lung Balsam the only cure for coughs; colds hoafseness and sore throat, and ail -diseases of the Throat and Lungs. Do not neglect a cough. ft may prove tataL Scores and hundreds of people owe their lives to Dr. Frazler's Throat and Lung Balsam. and no family will, ever be without it after once oslng It, and discovering Its marvelous power. It Is put up In large family bottles, and sold for the small price of. 50 . cents a. bottle. Sold, by T. C Smitnco.' - : " - iet22deodAwly A- MeriliThink they know, all about Mustang Lin , foment. Few do. Not to know is 'not to have. I am an old man. For years I suffered with ulcers on my right leg as the resalt of typhoid fever. Amputation was sugaested as the only means of preserving life.; The doctors could do notning lor me, and thought I must die, For 3 years I never had a shoe on. Swift's Specific has maue a permarient cure ana added ten years to my lile. Wm. E. Heed, Hall Co., Ga. I have taken Swift's Specific for blood poison, contracted at a . medical college at a dissection. while I was a medical student. I am grateful to say that it gave .me a speedy and thorough cure after my parents had spent hundreds of dollars for treatment. ' . . Augustus Wkbdel, M. Dl, Newark, N. J. My wife from early girlhood has been suffering isvm meumaiism. one nas tried many remedies, and I must frankly sav has derived mora benefit from Swift's Specific than from all the othersafter lung ana iaitnrui trial. ; Rev. James L. Pierce, Oxford, Ga. Swift's Specific is entirely vegetable. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed fn. ; The Swift Specific Co., Drawer S, Atlanta.Ga., or xos w. Tiaa St., . x. - OPERA HOlict Commencing Tuesday, Oct. 27t A Message from the Land of the th. mission of the JapatiSSSiLH TOE BIJOU OjPEUA Cft Headed by the charmg ADELAIDE RANDALL, Will produce Gilbert & Sum ;i vio, iu two acts, entlUed THE 91 IK ABO; or, The Town of Tiu NEW AND SPABKLING MnRTPv . REAL ANTIQUE JAPANFsw TUMS-LlrtlRTT. )'S 5o. T SS- BY THE TJSHK E Wednesday ev'ng, Oct. 28, Thursday " " 29, Friday " 80, Reserved Seats '; - - ChlmesofS Reserved HoteL- Seats can be secured at Charlotte City Water Works Co. The adjourned annual meettne of th . era win be he'd at the offices of ihA Pnoiu Saturday, NoveaM James gamble President, 1886, at 12 o'clock, noon. oct27dlt BE Dansliters, Wires and mothers , We emphatically guarantee Dr. Marchlsl's Cath- Ollcon, a Female Remedy, to cure female diseases, such as ovarian troubles, inflammation and ulcera tion, falling and displace aient or bearing down feeling, irregularities, barrenness, change of life, leucorrnoea, Desiaea many weaknesses springing from the above, like headache, bloaMng, spinal weakness, sleeplessness, nervous debility, palpita tion oi tne neart, c. jfor saieoy aruggists. Tice $1,00 and fl.&o per bottle, send to Dr. J. B. , Alar chi8l, Utlca, N. Y.. for pamphlet, free. Fer sale by L. 9 . Wrlston, druggist, Charlotte, jn.u luiyiveooiv LOOK AT TBIS! , .. 1 :o: U'. THIS IS FOB OHAELOTTE PEOPLE; EHEUMATISM AND TONIC. I Kate used Mrs. Joe Person's Reme dy, and it is the finest medicine I ever used for Rheumatism. For more than twenty years I have been afflicted with muscular Rheumatism,- and had tried every known remedy, but without avail! f I was of teri bo bad off and suf fered fso much f that I could' kot lie down,' but had to be propped up ia bed I had been sub ject to these severe at tacks for twenty years. I tried Mrs. Person's Remedy last spring, and am perfectly cured. It is the best medicine m tne world, l think. No words of mine can express the benefit I have de rived from its use. I suffered from pal pitation of the heart upon the least ex ertion. Of that I am perfectly relieved, prices ' axy uooiiu ia uuw uouwi, tuiu lb IB au owing to Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy I am strong and well, and can take ex tended exercise without fatigue. I ad vise all who need a Tonic, or are suffer ing with Rheumatism or Eczema, to take it. I was induced to try it by it havhtg cured my little grandson of MRS. B. M. HOWELL. ' mm l ) OF THE PUBLIC Is respectfully 5 called to on t-v i . specialties in ropiFiupnft drill mm For which we ures and make I take meas- Guaranteeing a fit at following exceedingly the low Extra Heavy Brown Drill 35c ' Cotton Flannel 50c " J5C JOHN BROOKFIEL1), A?U Skin itlseases Cured By Dr. Frazler's Magic Ointment Cores as If by" Magic. Dimples, DiacK neaas or eruos, Diotcnes and ernptlons on the face, leaving the skin clear and oeautuui. Also cures itcn, salt rnemn, sore nip-1 oles. sore lips, and old, obstinate ulcers. Sold by j druggists, or mailed on receipt or price, do jents 8oldby T. C. Smith A Co - feb!Mdeodwly Ihry ! :-: Mill inprv I I X-o-X- PILES!! PULES!! JPILESI! 1 sure cure for Blind, Bleeding, Itehlng and Ul cerated Plies has been discovered by or. wubbibs, (an Indian Remedy), called or. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment. A Blngle box has cured the worst j chronic cases of 25 or 30, years standing. No one i suffer five minutes after applying this wonderful soothing medicine. Lotions and.. Instruments do more harm th.in good. Williams' Pile Ointment absorbs the toiAors, allays the Intense Itching, (Darticuiariy at night alter getting warm m Ded.) acts as a pr ultice, clwn instant relief, and Is pre pared on' or Piles, itching of private parts, and for nothl else. Price 60 cents. T. C. Smith d Co.,agen f,21deortwlf We have now in stock a full line of heavy andl farj .Groceries wen as CANNED FRUITS, MEATS and VEGETABLES, Visitors to the fair Pickles of every Yariet , Positive Cure for Piles. To the people of this county we would say wt have been given the agency of Or. Marchlsl's Italian Pile Ointment emphatically guaranteed to cure or money refunded Internal, external, bltnd, bleed-1 Ing or Itching piles. Price 50c. a box. No cure, no pay. ....'.;. For sale by L. E. Wrlston, druggist, Charlotte N.C. 1ulyl7eodly. "TITAN TED Agents In every section of the coun- try t sell Eon. S. S . COX S great book, "Thrf e Decades of Federal Legislation. ' Illustrated with Steel Plates. Outfits now ready. Aeents are mak ing $10 to $30 a day. Write to the publishers for terms. - .. , J M.8T0DDABT&C0. ,533 15th St.,WashIngton,D.C Will do well to call and examine Mrs. BENSON & ' BEEVES' etock of trimmed I ATM and BOINETS, BEFORE BUYING ELSEWHERE. Central Hotel building, entrance through Gray & Co s store. MACCARONI and VERMICELLI. ; .. HOLLAND HERRING, and C0DFISE Ferris' Pig Hams and B. Facoi. MABBOW. LIMA. KIDNEY. PT!A BEANS .nil ENGLISH SPLIT PE AS, CHOOOLlTJt. w , COA. BBAMA, PBUNES, PBUNETTES, FIGS, LONDON LATEB and SEED LESS BAISINS, CRANBERRIES, - BANANAS, ORANGES, LEM ONS and MALAGA BICE. GRITS. HOMINY. OAT MEAL. BiB Wl GKAllAM JfLOUB. Finest Patent F m Mm COFFRG, SUGAR. STBtP. MOLASSES Reeves Edom, Pineapple and Cream Cheese. A BIG OFFER. To introduce them we will give away 1000 self- oneratlns Washine Machines. If you want one send us your name. P. O. and express of fice t once. THE NATIONAL CO., 21 Dey Street, New York. ;, ' NOTICE- BARNETT k ALEXANDER'S. twenty-eleht years Treated by most of the noted epeeialists of the day with no benefit. Cured him self In three months, and since then hundreds of others by the same process. a plain, simple and successful borne treatment. Address x. s. jfAUJi: 128 East 26th St-t New York City. I will offer for sale my property; one and a half miles from thar'otte where the Bozzle's Ferry i and Beattle's Fard roads fork. In front of Bid rile University, one acre lot, good dwelling house, store TYT? A XT' XT I? lte CAUSES and CUBE, m' Da anaotner, outnouses, well of good li Kf A r JN llO O by one who was deaf watI' a, orchard coming on. Also, I will sell stand for selling goons is as gopd as any rntslde of njauoiie. a nas ice advantage ot both roads, be sio.es tnacuesvme. uan pe nought cheap, and on easy irms. ror tartber particulars, terms. &c Inquh-e of F. J. BKbMaN, ocWtiaw Athlsbtore. FOR THE FAIR GROUNDS. TheC. C &k. will run trains on Wednesday I and Thursday. October 28th and 29th. from the i-ooi or secona street, near a a u. freight depot. i r irsi iram win leave at iu o ciock a. m.. and run every half hour till 5:30 during the day. Fare I uoxma iTip vx cents. straight 15 cents. OCtUVOT , - W. A. MOODY. Igt. WANTED. SOO Barrels North. Carolina Corn Whisky. ; We we will pay $i.sa cash for 500 Barrels of N. Carolina Corn Whiskey and tax pay same when desired. - Free delivery. Telepho; call '81. me NOW I. A CARD. To all who are suffering from errors and India eretlons of youth, nervous weakness, early decay loss olmanhood, &c.v I will send a recipe that will care you FREE OF CHARGE. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary In South America. Send self addressed envelope to Rxv. Josxfh T, kman. stauono. ftew xork. n , octlbdeodAAlj. - , ' i . : - WAHTEO! RELIAI1LK D RUMIflERS To take the general agency or the best German import In this eountry. It Is well established. Be ceived highest award at New Orleans Exhibition. Pays well. References exchanged. Address.. ADOLrH GOllRLNW UO., SH)2 William St., N. Y. The largest stock of and most complet? nun i.ii V Parker's Tonic; If you are wasting away from age, dissipation or any disease or weakness and require a stimulant take Parker s Tonic at once: it will lnvleorate and build you up from the first dose but will never intoxicate. It has saved hundred of lives, It may save yours. Hiscux & cu., New York. PWSPaPFR ftOVFRTISIHG. Ct23d5t&wlt . DABCHY & CO,, 27 Park Place and 24-26 Murray St., New York. Mak lowest rates on a-1 newspapers In the U. S and Canada. EstaMished 1867. . . . , '. To those whose purpese may be accomplished by a short advertisement, or by a transient advertis ment, and to whom prompt insertion Is Important, nc ictvuuuciiu uui v POPUUR LOCAL LISTS: L12U Dauy and weekly newspapers, divided Into sections. ,.-: . . , All home print papers no co-operatives Included The papers have a monthly, circulation of over ELEVCtl TRILLION COFIcS! u ai new vait.iugue juaii . uui. JraTues C0H wjinpiaiiug a nne or advertising, large or small: 1 KEY & CO. Many a Lady is beautiful, all tut her skin ; and nobody has ever told her how easy it is to put beauty on the skin. Beauty on the : skin is Magnolia To be found in the State. Also full lines of WOOL YARNS, ZEPHYE, HOSIERY, GLOVES, COBS " COLLARS, LACES, - NECKWEAR, HANDKERCHIEFS, Jerseys, Notions and Fancy all kinds for Ladies, Mis, rii.ru , .a it c v. nPW very lowest Cash Prices. . ; Respectfully, ' C M; oukkY- I re si w
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1885, edition 1
2
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