Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Jan. 14, 1886, edition 1 / Page 2
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l:z J.,;ivloitc wb v CccrM so itie bertcr. DAILY EDITION. f lecopy I . the week In tL" I the month. lixee months.. ...r months........ . 6 cent. :.. 2u ... 75 ..,$2 00 ... 4.00 ... 8.C0- "?"V" ' ' . - L-3 year..., - WLE&LY EDITION. T'yree months . -- a months.. .. f .. C3 year :.- In clubs ol five i.a over i -U. ' . 60 cents. . U5 ' ; Ho iVeYiatlost From Tla ne SSwlefr ' . .. ....n r. sin nftf osly In name but in fact. . " ,i . JSfXEHIflAS FOIi SE5ATOB; - Our dispatcher this - morning ind: cate that JOhn Sherman Was yester day elected to tbW United States Sen- oto n rPni-PCHnt'thfl State Of .ObiO for sii years; The dispatch says i took 74:v.otes to tltct, and that Mr S&irman got 84. or:ten morethaua Senators '- from Hamilton county. who were awarded their sea' s by. the coufts.were unseated, and not allows ed to participate in the election. The U Yt&kr-. anvthin hut defeat and the ebisode at Columbus, vAatp.rdAv nnlv fseetn to remind us how Gen. Da Trobriand, in New Or leans, with Federal bayonets behind him, seated and unseated members ot the .Legislature or Louisiana. -.av wm . Thank God, the scenes of -la wis -snes3 - .rAi rAfviiiRtriifrted. liesislatures are not in the South,- but in far off Ohio "We can stand it it tae people out mere can. . ' TI1E BLASTOG, BLIGHTIKG 1 . BLIZZARD. Its Ef f ects isr Texas Thousantls of Cattle ; Suff erinjr ana DyiOR in the Snow. "Waco. Tex.. Jan. 13' Tho; storm which swept over Texas last Thurs r. day ard has continued with but little abatement up to .' the present date, is without a parallel in the history of Texas iii itk'eitfenti'severttyihd.du ration." Intelligence from the cattle regions of the State are of the gloom iest and most depressing character. The loss in cattle will be great ana ; cannot be approximately estimated until the full extent of tha damage inflicted by the intense cold upon the stock interests is fully known. From , the Southwest and -West news is re v ceimi '. that the cattle are driven against fences and are rapidly dying from the cola, ice loss win be un , usually heavy. . ' , From1 Baiesvilje in the Northwjest nes comes that great Prari fires have occurred in that section u the country, and that the cattle are dying by the hundreds from the cold carcases ,8irewiug me prairies, tuiu that the loss will be enormous.nd pro : vision having been made for the care of cattle m these bleak districts which are devoid of. everything ex cept grass. .-M". The lass of cattle ; in the. Pah Jlandle will be very great; 1 although no reliable reports have - been receive ; ed from' that remote district, all; the water pools and streams throughout heavy cattle; growing districts of the State are frozen over hard and ad- ding to the gravity ot,t.the situation a heavy snow storm set ;in Sunday ' night and Texas from the Sabine to the Rio Grande and from Red River bu me uaiL la wveieu w a va rying from two inches to one ; foot of snow. The indications this morping . point to another fall equally as heavy as that of last night. . -; This will completely cover the grass on- the Ranges, and as ho pro visions have been made the deatn rate among the stock from cold will reach frightful proportions" and en ter the oi millions. U v".' . - , A TOWS UUDEB ICE., Alarmingr Situation 4 at jFnlton, '" " Wew' Tork. -"' . Syracuse, Jan. 13. The ice ; jam in the 03 wego i river at Fulton be comes firmer and larger every hour as immense quantities of ice are conn : stantly coming down the river." ' The water has risen more than two feet since last night and is rising several inches per hour. The damage already done cannot be estimated. Fully saventysfive families have been drivs en from their homes, and others are constantly moving out. These famw lies are poor arid as fast' as they are rescued are turned over to the poor authorities; All team that are available are being used inTemoving flour and other goods fromtlje mills and manufactories The grain i in the mills is wet. If the water should recede the mills and factories will he filled with ice, and as many of them naa large contracts on hand the dam age will be very great. .Hundreds of people are out of employment. Prnf Boynton, of this city, was telegraph- eu xor tnis morning ; to consult : with V the authorities about removing the gorge. : He visited the place and says that it cannot be done, and fears that the worst is to come. The gorge is now two miles long and increasing Distributing Fuel o Imll-ent ,.' Families. , CHARLE3TOK, S. C, Jan. 13, The News and Courier relief bureau to day distributed 519 loads of fuel to the indigent families of :: Charleston, making a total of 679 families who have been supplied with one week's fuel since Tuesday ' last. . The: wood was mainly contributed by the rail road authorities and distributed through the News and Courier buV reau. Very liberal contributions, both in fuel arid' money a ve been made, and much suffering conses quent upon the cold spell - relieved and prevented. . . coxcr:E;G:ira cEon:;nr to The Senators Azain XaclJle ie Silvern- Question Tue. Daliota Bill Goes Orer--rorth Carolina to be Furnished With OGcial Copies of . tue Odcial: tetter BobZis of tlic"l3xecutlve ..De'parf inent, &c9 &c. ' ' Washintton, D. C, Jan. 13.- Senate. Senator H iwley presided over the Senate today, in the absence of Senator Sherman. , . 1 - . ,i , In sralls- offered the following resos lution; which at his request ;was laid over for. tne present: rtfisnhwd. That in the onimon of I the Senate the compulsory coinage of the silver dollar, airectea bvtne law m . m 1 of February 28, 1878;' should not be f suspended till the aggregate reached the sum of $500,000,000. Eustis gave 'notice that Monday nPTf, nt 2 o'nlock- he would call uo Rpfik's silver resolution with the view of making some remarks on it. , ; Voorhees stated tnat to better suit thfi" fionvenience of other Senators, he would not call up." his resolutions expressive of the sense of : the Senate on the death' of late Vice President Hendricks until Tuesday ,26; instead next Wednesday, as originally pro- posed. : Hirtpratirm of bil Is on : the - calendar, t Several bills for private relief having heen deposed of. .the bill to admit Dakota was reached; tlarrison said ifewnnld he impossible to consider L that bill under the five minute rule, and at his. suggestion vit; went over. H stated that he. would call it up 8 earlv next week as practicable. A ioint resolution was passed directing crpies ot omcial letter . books ot the l Executive Department of the State of;l North Carolina. to be furnished to said State by the Secretary. )f War. At 2 o clock i Coke called up Beck's s;lver resolution and addressed the Senate' oh it The questioh of the I suspension ot silver coinage. Coke 3aid, was one of . such, transcendent importance that the arguments of the president and secretary of the treasf ury on the subject, should the cohsid ered on their . intrinsic merits and should not be influenced by the fact that they were arguments coming from high officers of the government suspension, iOKe regarueu as tania mount to the complete stoppage of our silver coinage. Silver he said. naa ' not aepreciateo, out goia naa risen in value. He showed by statis, tics, that, taking ninety "leading ar ; ticks of merchandise, there had been an average fall of 26 per cent, since 1870, while there had been a fall of only 23 per cent, in silver bullion. It was therefore an abuse of terms to say that silver had depreciated. Silver constituted onehalf of the quantity of all the coin in the world. and the stoppage oF its coinage would l deprive the world of one-half of its coin supply, and would "double the purchasing power of the other half, xnis wouia oe an enormous contrac tion ,The fight against silver was a fight against the people by banks and bondholders. It, was a fight against labor. Had Ahdrew Jackson "been: in the White House at any time since 1878, the silver question : would have been settled. He would have execute ed the laws of the United States, and would have taken4 by the throat the conspiracy against those laws. The silver standard. had no terrors for Coke; Germany liad ? been a silver country before it , had got so much gold from France.: I France - was one of the v most thrifty nations in the world and had six hundred millions, 1 and some said nine hundred million dollars of silver coin circulation in harmony with gold, and side by side with - it. Yet French silver coins were of the fineness compared with gold of only 154 to one. while our silver dollar was of the fineness' of 16 to one. Give us, said Coke, the same executive yigor and fidelity exercised oy tne omcers oi tne jj rencn govern-. ment in behalf of silver, and we will show that we can carry very much more silver, tnan we now have. The SSnSo? fSiZSS Kf ig0ld n SSSSJSjS place- rirr. r3rJ'iiVCiJfT Lu? uZ?Zr rAl L17 should insist that our government fn.vt .u u j. it.. , - . u muict t buuuiu eitjuuwj tue laws. - A bill was introduced by Onlmiit-.f-. -to appropriate one hundrfid . thmi. sand dollars to continue the imnrove ment of the Chatahoochie river below Columbus, Georgia. . A resolution offered by Edmunds was agreed to . authorizing the'; Seres tary; of the Senate to pay : bills ins currea by senators in attending the funeral of the late Vice President Hendricks. : - .; 7?rAt 3:45 p. m;; on motion rof Mr. TT j. -.1.1. . V . i a nuar, ; me senate went into execu tive session. At 5 p. m, the doors were reopened and the Senate ad journed. , The Senate m executive session td- diy confirmed the followihg nomina. tions: to be united states Minister to apam, Jabez L. M. Curry. Richmond; To be Minister Resident and Consul General ; to - Venezuela, s Charles L. Scott. . ' .-; i To be Minister Resident and Consul General to Persia; Frederick H. Winston, Illinois. To be United States Consul General at St. ; Petersburg; Pierce' M. B. Receiver of Public Deeds at Monts goraeryVAla., William C. Jordan, United. States Marshal for the northern district of Georgia, Jno. W. Neles. :. . " - Register of Land Office at Jackson, Miss., Jame3 D. Stewart. ; -; To be United' States ; Ministers Russia, Geo. V. N. r Lothrop, Mich. : Italy, John B. Stallo,' Ohio; China, Chas. Denby, Ind. First Auditor of the Treasury;: Jas. Q. Chenowith,' Texas, y- To be Ministers R ?sident and Cons Thompson, N. Y. ; Bolivia, W. A. I?ay, La. ... -. . . . To bQ Secretary of Xgation, Jci. L. ilorgan, S. C, to Mexico. To be Minister Resident and Consul General to Roumania, Scvia , and, Greece, .Walker Fearn, of Ia. . Charge D1 Affaires to Paraguay and Uraguay," . S ' Several hundred promotions i and- appointments in the army and navy, postmasters ara ptner miner oiiicia's in .the civil eerVice of the govern ment.- -. j ; House. O'Neil, of Pennsylvania, presented a' petition from the Ameri can Clav Tobacco Pip8 Association, asking that the duty on clay pipes be cnangea rrom a voiorem io specinc Referred. xThe,momentthat Curtin. of Penn syivania, wno naa oeen conierring - ' 1 .1 " - with friends at his seavat the end ot the main aisle, succeeded in being recognized by tne speaker, ne arose and said: 'is was- your, pleasure. sir. to do me the noDor to pU.?j mf -first on the list of the commitioe o. Banking ft Currency. I did intend to state to tnis nouse my reasons tor declining that honor, but on tne ad- vice of many friends and of the sen timent of. the publie journals, of the country, I have concluded to offer no reasons of my own, as to declining the position it was your pleasure" to give me. 4 did not heed the advice this rest)2Ct was made up from tne beginning. . For reasons of my own which seem to be understood by my mends ana colleagues on tnis noor, x do now ask'this house to excuse me from the important duty as chairman of the committee to which you. have assigned me:" The Speaker: If there be noobleo- tionthe gentleman from Pennsyiva nia will be excused rrom the duty as chairman of the committee ori. Bank ins and Currency.. ; Bland,;of Missouri,' moved that the House do not excuse the gentleman from Pennsylvania, but this motion recived no support, and Curtin was excused. This devolves tie chairmansbip.on Sfillerpf Texa' , - Jjf j-',. Reagan, o! Texas, rising toa dues- tipn of personal privilege, said he found in the Record today 'that (previous to his making' his speech yesterday, Morrison, of Illinois, had protested against debate on the silver question oeingopeneu au tuaii riiuie, and had remarked , that - nothing justified this departure from the rules or the iiouse. w nen ne : Reagan; with . the consent of .. the - House, occupied This place in defence of the rights of the people, he did not think that 'he merited the rebuts of the gentleman from Illinois. Morrison denied that he hat any intention to reouke the gentleman. He had meant to say that, he -could see no reason why debate.- should besrin yesterday. Kaagansaia that he had retcrrea to this matter because he did not .wish by his silence to seem to acquiesce in the rebuke Aja behalf of the committee on Presidential laws. Caldwell. of Tenn., I called up for action the Hoar Piesi- dential succession bill. but on the state : rrient bv Cooner. of Ohio, that the minority renort had not been printed: the discussion of the subject was postponed until tomorrow. Then, on motion or Morrison, ot Illinois, . at one o'clock the IHoue adjournod. . . , . s Lyncli Lav in Nebraska. Omaha, Neb., Jan. 13; Sheriff Zegman. of Colfax county, was killed yesterday in the jail at Schuyler by a prisoner named Lapour, who struck him over the head with a heavy club fracturing his skull. Lapour , then attempted to escape, but was recaps tured. He had formerly beehi in an insane asylum, but was discharged 1 because he was found to be sane. ; At a late hour last night a Jlarge J5rowd of men took Lapour from the jiil and I nangea mm to a neignooring tree. .. Sherman for Senator. Columbus, Ohio, Jan The Senate and use in, joint session noon today elected John" Sherman to the tlhited States Senate.-; It required 74 votes to elect. Mr. Sherman receive ed!84 votes and Thurman 62 Safe Bobbery, i . ,r , L ATLANTA'. GA Jan., 13; At two o'clock this morning burglars blew open the safe of L. Cohen , & Co, wholesale liquor - dealers, ; and got i away with $2,000. . ; It Takes but a I it tie Trouble, to Get Rtchs " The brleht winter Bkv at New Orleans. La., on Dec. 15. 1885. saw a strictly honest distribution of the 187th Grand Monthly and Extraordinary Draw- lne. condndted as usual entirely oy wen is uv t Beauregard of La, and Jubal A. Early of Ta. Over half a million dollars were scattered everywhere. Ticket HQ. 69,255 drew the First Capital Prize $150, 100 sold in tenths at $1 each one to Leon Marthe, 19 St. Charles st, New Orleans, La.;, one to J. C. Webster and Heck Barryr Carrolt n : Ky . paid through Citizens' National Bank of Louisville, Ky. ; one tu Mesdames Marearet A.Naele and Mary: W SRSSSS&iT.SS&i ijewis oi s saloon. Black's Station. Yolo Co. , CaL, paid through Bank of Woodland, CaL; one to Chas. Fardee, care Carhait & Bra, 49 Park Place; another to Max Polatschek, 17 John street, both of New York City, etc. No. 14,928 drew tne Second Capital Prize of $50,000, and paid to the First National Bank of Portland, MeH in one check -on account 5 of Wm. M. Mc Arthur of Lemlngton, York Co. , Me. Ticket No. 51.794 drew Third Capital Prize $20,000, sold In Tenths at $1.00 eacn one to T. C. Hand, No. 419 W. 7th St., St. Paul, Minn.; one to A. M Gendron, Boston, Mass.; one to Geo. FIchenor of Tucson j Arizona: one to A.. T. Beck of Lancaster, Ohio, patd to Lancaster Bank there; one to T. C. Daugh erty of Ellzavllle, Ky., Paid through Exchange Bank of Flemingsburg, Ky.one paid to Anglo Calif omiau Bank (Limited) of San Frar Cisco, CaL Nos. 62.S78 and 85.966 drew each $10,000 sold In tenths also so they go everywhere. Kor any infor mation of tha 183th Grand Monthly Drawing to take place Tuesday, Feb 9th, I8s6, apply to M- A. Dauphin, New Orleans, La. "It takes but a little courage to get rich. ,- . . Scott's Eranlsion of Pare Cod -rj.rer Oil,v with Hypophosphites. Very Palatable and EfScaclous Wasting Diseases. Dr. C T. Beomseb, Bochester, N. Y.. . s&ys: "After having used Scott's Emal3lon with de cided benefit upon myself, I -have tikenr great p'easure in recommending It since la the vai lous conditio s of wasting in which it Is indicated." '4 Ct Gather Early Soldiers in Seliool. Architecturally th3 university cf Leipsic is by no means imposing. Scm3 of the buildings are very old, having be longed originally to the Pauline con vent -Old, 'quaint frescoes, centuries old, still appear upon the walls of the Ion?:, vaulted passage through which one enters the - street into the large court around which the buildings are situated. From thi3 court entrance is gained tq the many lecture rooms iwith which the university is provided. :; One standing in this court and talcing a sur vey of the surrounding buildings will be quite apt to have his attention taken by a row of windows at the south end of the court and , far up from the pave-, ment. - These windows, are "'furnished with strong iron grates.-' There is the student's, prison. ' The man who ma triculates -in - a German university is amenable' .chieay to ' the" university. Hence . the university must have -the means of enforcing its laws. vi ' ,The scene that , this large court pre-J gents during thu intervals between the lectures is often an. interesting one. Hundreds of young men (some of them hot so i young throng the stairways and pour out upon the rough stone, pave-' ment." One is munching a biscuit. He has been up late perhaps, the , previous night and did ' not have time to get7 hia . . . . . r' "1. a; : . oreaKtast. , Anoiner is ngutiug a cigar. All ' have small black portfolios under their arms; They gather in" groups. Here is a grpup with caps of bright red. There is another with white caps, .and yonder another with blue. ' -They - arc the "corps . students," who stick with the strongest 'fellowship to each othei and have .hothmg to do with "members of other corps, except now and : then an exchange of sword cuts. But "th corps students are in the minority" and thev onlv serve here m the court aaa a dash of color to'the dark 'mass.; wade up of others more soberly attired.- J . Here and there a soldier with' bis gay uniform helps to brighten the picture. For, under the paternal - government vof Kaiser Wilhelai', though every man must do his share of military servioe,,it is wisely arranged that he may-often serve in the araiv-and attend lectures in 'the university at' the".. same time., .These solqier, witn,tueir sworas at taeir siue, and portifolios under their arms; give'a hint at the" true character ,of German life that is worth? considering? clt is a curious sight also to gee, a soldier entei the room of a . lecturer upon theology, hang up his cap and ; sword, against the wall; and sit braced up. in ; his stilf uni form making notes of a lecture upon Genesis; notes that present1 to. the eye an overwhelming mass of German s and Pebrew. y 1 r , , A letter devoted to the Leipsic uni versity would be worse than incomplete if nothing were said about the hours devoted to the lectures. ; The lecture rooms are by no means j picturesque. They are furnished with .plain benches and desks," the board running' along the back of one seat serving as a .desk for the seat next behind it. There is every thing necessary for work, nothing for ornament everything that is necessary except fresh air. One advantage about the lecture hour is that ; it is forty-five minutes long." Fifteen minutes are al lowed for the students to get into their places and for the professors . ,to get from-one room to another. Before the fifteen minutes are oyer every .one' is in his place; or, lat least, is expected, to be there! The' lato comer, who disturbs the quiet by entering the room a minute after the lecture has begun, is greeted with a shuffling of tb,e feet and hisses. . -A glance around Tthe room at any of these lectures -will reveal the fact that among the 100 or 200 present other lands are represented besides Germany. There are a few Englishmen, more Americans, here and : there a Russian or a Swede, and a few J apanese. . Kot long ago , one of these . yellow-skinned orientals,vrwho had taken' notes of the lecture rin German, was seen reading and translating his notes into English lor the benefit of. an American who had been so unfortunate as net to under stand the lecture. And yet the Japanese are barbarians! ; . - , And now the portfolios are opened, the note-books ' spread out upon the desks, the little ink-stands. taken out of the pockets and everything is in readi ness.; At the proper ' second the pro fessor . walks into the rodm takes his place upon- the platform and, without waiting to get his breath, says. . "Meine hejrren," and the lecture is begun. He speaks for a short time perhaps rapidly, thbn takes his notes and begins to read sentence. afterrf sentence slowly for.his audience to copy iu their notes. He forgets" himself and' Teads faster: than the students cah"wwte. Instantly his voice is drowned . by a loud shu ilinsf of the feet, ' mingled with hisses." The students - mean ,no ' discourtesy. It is onlyj the customary way )f intimating that., he; has, gone too fast, and they would be very grateful if he would, re peat, lie, therefore, carefully repeats the last sentence and goes oh agajn un-, til more shu iling brings, him to another, halt. - The . m'inuteness.s;withv which the lecturer 'treats every detail of his sub ject is somewhat marvelous. A simgle point, often one of no visible import ance may.; occupy, an. entire lectute., But when the professor is done" nothing remains to- be said updn the siibjeci leipsic Cor.- Troy Times.- - r .. . ,tUe' Muiuaiv As a Panacea. Sir Thomas Browne, in his Interesting ''Fragments on Mummiesrtells us? that Francis I always carried mummy with him as a panacea against all disorders. Some used it for epilepsy, some for gout, some used it . as- a styptic .He further adds: 'The common opinion of the virtues. of the mummy .bred, great consumption thereof; and princas and . great men contended for this"1 strange panacea. ' ' Exchange. .1 ; ; . . The Population" f Paris." - . " ; The population of Paris ' is decidedly decreasing. Last autumn there'- were nearly 115,000 fewer inhabitants of the French capital than four years ago, and this diminution 4 bears heavily "on . the cab and ; omnibus r companies. Ap parently the . chief absentees fare the foreign residents and the poorer work ing class, who can" get food and houso room cheaper outside the city. London Standard. - 1 . ,. All the Japanese commanders -of ves sels of the Nippon Yusen Kaisha are studying the English languase. . Crc-r COUGHS, CEOUP AND CONSUMPTION t, . . .TJ3E '. i,'. .-Mi t!HE'E0SES MULLEI W v The sweet gum, as gathered from a tree of tha same name, growing along the small streams in the Southern States,' contains u stimulating expecto rant principle that loosens the phlegm producing the early morning cough, and stlmu'ates the -card to throw off the false membrane tIn croup land whooping cough.- vWhen combined with tha heal ; incr TniwnndnrMia nrlrirtlnlA - In ttie ' mnllleli 'nlant of the old fields, presents la Tatlo'b's ISpiKOKEK KEMEDT Oe swkbt" wtjm . ahu : JO.ujLX.KQt ;,sne finest known remedy for Coughs, Croup,' Whoop-' ing-cough and Consumption; and so palatable,. any nhHH la rtlaaaT tn tnlrA It Anlr vnnr flmffoiat. fnr It.; UUUU W AWV - - - OCT" . Price 25a and Sl If he does not keep it see will nnv fnr nnA time onlv. eiDress charges ' onlaree size bottle to any part ef the U S. oa receipt of $i.oo; - - - WALTEK A. TAlLUH, Atlanta, ua, ; .V j list' iaV - ' : , BARBEL PICKLES, S&RATEI PINE APPLE, 4 CANNED CORN and the - . Very finest .Cream .Clicese. ' " T-ALSO- FRESH BREAD AND .CAKES ' ' Every morning. - S. M . HOWELii. i THE STAR. : - IVe-vrspaper supporting the i ': principles ofaDemocrat- ic Admlnlssration. WILLIAM 0ORSHEIMER, i. Editor and Proprietor. , " -' Daily, 'Sunday and Weakly - Editions TIIK WriiliLV STAK, AS Ix teenIsi pfeJJ IV -wpa p r r I u-d er-ry Wdetda,y 1 , The ablest, brlghest and most interesting week ly published. t. r The latest news down to the hour of going to press. ' , ,."'." . ' Original stories by distinguished American and foreign writers ol fiction. - , THumor, Poetry, Market. Financial, Agrleultural and Household Departments, all under . the direc tion of. trained,, joarn illststhe' ablest .''Kth'3l respective departments. ' Its sixteen pages will be found, crowded' with good things from begin ning to end. ; r-'5-- - .:'f- ,, ... f: a ; The Daily btar, -. The Daily Stab contains all the news of i he day in an attratlve form. Its special correspou dence by cable from London, Paris, Berlin v Vien na and Dublin Is a commendable feature: ; . " At Washington Llbanyi and other news .cen ters, the ablest correspondents, specially retained byTHK Star, furnishel the latest news by special wire to New York. -Itsllterary features are tmsurpassed; ' The1 Financial and Market Reviews are unusally full and complete. - - . i : TKBMS OF THB DAILY StARTO SUBSCRIBERS FBEK uf Fos rAGB In the Dnited States and Canada. outside the limits of Jsevt Yoik City: . Every day la the year (including Sunday) $7.00 Dai'y, without Sunday, one year,-- ; soo Every day, lx mon hs, . . j , s.W Dally, without 8unday, six months : ' ? . 3 00 .Terms of the Weekly Stab' to Subscribers. Perjear - 'v - - -- $125 Clubs of Teu . , r -',..,, . . V I lo.co Clubs of fifteen (and one extra to organizer) 15.00 Adrft, ' ' THE T4R 26 and 28 North William St. New York. Decl7dtf TOBACCO' SEED. . We will give to any reliable farmer In Mecklen burg county, as much . - . TOBACCO SEED ; A1 he des'res, and full directions how to grow and cure tobacco. We expect to open a. o- . ' -Tobacco raro!ionse In the centre of the elty. and thereby enable farm ers to sell their tobacco for cash. Now Is the time to put In your sted . CARSON BROS. FOTJETH STREET. Hou S8S RantGd, Hpuseisreatad and rents collected, In the city tfvertlsed tree of charge. . . CHAiiLOTTE BliAL E3TATT! AGTITCY. R- E. COCH2AIC:, llan?er, -2c u Tri7e Etreet Vioat Central EoteL . '.' " of V - : ;,'S ; Vr'TlTT"1? on fileto PMadelpWa I I l . t - 4' ,tlie Newspaper Adver- . tifilnpr Agency of Messrs. . Um Jm AYC.i U our authorized amenta; C HARLOT! SEAL ESTATE ; m& E: COCHRANE, IIanagei! 1 of every description and In ny DartJf or South Carolina, - and wul nmt tehd to payment of taxes, eflectini0 .; yruyeriy put mio OUT hands WDI be 5',f AdTertlsed Free or Cost ' For a stipulation previously agreed upon. i FOR, SALE. 1 One dwell Ins in each room, v In good neighborhood. lot 50x198, convenient to business, prr?? Q One dwelling on South Tryon street, adininiZ I Oresidence of Dr. Bratton, 8 rooms. rtSS?? pantry, weU of water, well located for aboT house. Price, $3,000, ;-.. . 1 D0arllai 5?n? dwelling on corner of Graham and it) streets, 5 rooms, Jtttchen, weU of water, lot il feet on Graham street, 162 feet on loft 2LS very desirable property. Price, $1,0. . Q One dwelling oh Poplar street, 10'roomRrJ 039x198 feet, brickHtchen; outhouse, sffl'.K PrisSoa 80(1 on terms to suit pmAg. OQ pweillng In Mechanlcsvule, 1 story S-tJ ZO ; houBe, 101.99x190, fronting bn C iteS 1738, square 215, adjoining property of W a ftffi andothers.&Prl?cash850. w-a.81il OO ' Two lote, Nos. 297 and. 808, square 46 frorit! OZ tag 99 feet onB street ' WrtmnlnVtfflv .to C street On the premisea is atworyfrwTJ dwelling, seven rooms, and small storehouse. - 1 Ok ..Tan yard at. towesvllle, N af 22 fiJ Ui .? TatS.. 1 T.Ofl1 . 2 llm 1 shnn hnnu icon er?. .hcuse, bark mill house, stable, dwelling: 10 am. and connected : with tan .vard. tm 1 mi - U1 lease for 5 or 10 uears on reasonable t. f; A' yery idesirable farm, containing lu acresi aoout inreee mues west of CharlottA I on the Carolina Central railroad, known as ffi ' Junius Hayes farm, adjoining-, the lands of ft I Paul Barringer and others. Seven-room dwelto' t remises. WeU watered and. In a good nelehhm hood. ., Price per acjre 580. .; . . .. 3Q Lot fronting on; Morehead st 99x866 feeti J V 'small two-room house well, lot, well set wlti frulttreesol Price $850 c j - t -t. , A.V ve-room dwelling with kitchen and stable, r lot 99x198 on West Tiade street, DeauGfn grove and well of good water; Price $2,200. 9 1 One story frame dwelling and lot on" Ston . wall street Price $500. , i. ; h . w A One lot and a half ' lot, unimproved, on to Trtl comer of B and 11th streets. Pric van j r 0n8 story ftame store house 20x60 feet lot xj 24xlUO feet, fronting on rallroaa, and om unimproved let In rear of above lOOxliS feet, bote "I i Two story frame dwelling .four rooms, bam t l Rtflhlft. smnlfft Tinnan.- trood well inm, fn trees, aDoui w are oi lana, in TSaniora. iloore ca - , - - - rv.., uviuuuui J f Ytft: one acres of land. 2S aakmi rmAr mm I ' vatlon. t alance timber.' mobttv rim. snm. oak. Two tenement houses on nlace. IvStia lit! the (The ahove three tracts will t e sold together o: epiiraiiy, nnn u purcnaer aesires can secure fusalof a stock ot goods at price agreed vroa tween himself and the owner. ) KO 150 .Acres In tavldsou ; count , N C.,v 3i iT11a from TTinprtim nnH fi ...i..o n. . . - a ...uva 1 1 uui .,1 n wood.1- Six room dwelling, good water: fovff ejred O'J room kitchen, weU and Barden. belug pd em aajonmig 4 q, rttuups r.siaexice. m $2,650. ' t i FIftv acre? nf land In and adjoining Hunt Ot ersvllle, N; C un the place there Is a com fortable tour-room dwelling house good barn. c7fc kltcheb and well. "Very desirable property i 'Mm $35.00 per acre, - . , . FOR RENT. 4 Dwelling house on South Tryon street, adjoin ing the resldenre of Dr. S. E. Biatton. V n cod- venaentiy located ior a hoarding house ; Apply to - Charlotte Real Estate Agency sept2dtf B. E. COCHRANE, Manage FOR SALE. I will sell cheap, and on accommodating terms, a good second hand, No. 2, planing and matching machine, made by Goodell & Waters, Philadelphia. sold only because i naa to Duy a larger machine. f APPiytO - JUblAU ASBURI, novl9dtf . CharJottejN.a riAnOLtlVA CENTRAL BAIL Kj .way. Office of SuPEBnmarDKirr, - WruuNe-ros, N. C, Jan. 6, 1856. f CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. ' AN AND AFTER SEPT 27, 1885, THE FOLLOW- vs ing acneauie wui oe operated en this tm ' PASSENGER, MAIL AND EXPRESS TBAIKS, DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY, i ' - ' i ) Leave Wilmington at.. .'. . . . .-..T. fl.OO p. m. No, 1. ' Leave Raleigh at .i .............. .7 85 f. . - i . ) Arrive at Charlotte at.... 7.30 a i -) Leave Charlotte aL. .8.15 p. . No. 2. Arrive at Raleigh at.; a a...... -...9.00 A. i- ) Arrive at Wilmington at...i ...8.25 a e : , LOCAL FREIGHTPassenger Car Attached, Leave Charlotte at......I. 7.40 A, Arrive Laurinburg at 6.45P. Leave Laurlnburs at.' J. '.: . : : 6.15 A . Arrive Charlotte at . ........ .... : . 4.40 p. Leave Wilmington at 6.45 a Arrive at Lanriuburs at. . : : . . i . : 5.00 P. X. Leave La.irlnbnrg at. :v.li.i 6 80a Arrive at Wiimit gtotf jit, , s. . .-. 6 4p. T.Oflal Frertflrh;' lvt..rAfn, rharTnt.tA and Lsnrln bre Trl weeklv lRHvlnar: ChMrtott on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays : Leave Laurinburg on Tuesdays, Thur?cays and:Saturdajs. . t v Pasenzer trains atop at regular stations onlj and Points-designated in the Company's ran 'l'aoie. , , , ,t.-' SHELBY DlVrSIOI -PASSTSNr?T51l. MAIL, EX PRES3 AND FREIGHT. 4 . .' f Dalit ftrnt Knnriaf.) . Leave Charlotte at.. . , .. ...... ..... 8.15 a Arrive at Shelby at... .... .12.15 p. Leave Shelby at; : ... 1.40 P. J Arrive at Charlotte at.. . .... . 1. .. 6.40 f. Trains Nos. 1 and 2 make close connection i Hamlet with R; & A. Trains to and from Balelgk Through Sleeping Cars between Wilmington ana Charlotte and Raleigh and Charlotte. Take Train fo. 1 for Statesvllle. statiwi on Western N. C. R. B., Ashevllle and points est - Also, for Spartanburg. Greenvt'le. Athens, ; lanta and all points Southwest. ' - . . , . L. C. JONES ' - SuoerintePdsnt. S F.! W. CLARK, General Passenger Agent . WM0AL ! W. H, Warrior & Brother. - r - - "v JEWELERY, WATCHE3, Ac, A Having iremoveC to our new stand, opposite tt Central Hotel, we will be pleased to have ourfrieD call, where they will find a good line of v ' WATCHES, CLOCKS JEWELRY, IDIAM0TSt , : EILYER and SILVER-PLATED WARE, &c Special attention given to difficult ' watch .'im pairing . W: H. FARRIOR & BKO. ' Successors to Hales 4 Famor. city of Charlotte, collect rents, attendto'rw house on B street, 7 room. rail of ennri wntoi- w
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 14, 1886, edition 1
2
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