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DAILY OBSERVES. , JOHNSTONE JOKES, T ' .:" ' . Editor and Proprletbi. Tueeday, July 1. 1873.. NEWS OP THE DAY. Emperor William has entirely recovered his health. Ex-Queen Isabella of Spain, is at the Vi enna Exposition. The crisis in the affairs of Jbe Spanish Government continues- There were twenty ? cholera deaths in Nashville Saturdays Another fire at Port-au-Prince haj de stroyed the greater part of the commercial quarter.. I m .. X ''. -It is stated that Jesse Grant, the Presi dent's father,, is dangerously ill in Coving ton, and may die at any moment. i It is thought that the temperance men of Massachusetts will support Beast But 'lcc for Governor- s I The Colonial Department is preparing a new bill for the abolition of slavery in Cuba without injury to. the interests of the own ers.. . ""; In-New York, while going to a fire, the tender to a fire-engine upset, injuring six men one fatally. - At leasl iOO feet " of trestle have been washed away , from the Spartanburg and Union Railroad by the' recent freshet. The recent conference of Liberal Repub licans in New York City, re-affirmed the principles of the Cincinnati (Greeley) plat form. - - v r r The Cubans are greatly elated by the de tails of the recent engagemeuts in Cuba, and express increased confidence' in the ultimate liberation of . the island from Spanish rule ; The successor of Horace F. Clark as res ident of the Union Pacific railroad will be made the defendent in the Government suits against the Credit-iiobilier. "General Quesada is reported to have re ceived the $50,000 promised from the Unit ed States of Colombia for the cause of '"free Cuba." The Springfield Republican affirms vA. James G. Blaine, of Maine, wants and means to be the next President of the U. S.. and that his only New England rival is Genera rBuflerT Maj. Win. T- Sntherlin was quite pain fully, (but not heriously) cut with a knife, by Mr. James Whittier, at Danville, Va., on Thursday. The two got into a dispute about some law case and the lawyer ended he dispute by giving the M ajor a very considerable gash; Senator Carpenter vigorously defends the congressional back -pay grab. Wednesday evening he addressed a large audience at Janesville, Wis., in behalf of the justice and legality of the act increasi ng the sal- aries of the members, and cited precedents to show that the measure was all right and proper, and that the press and people in their clamor against it are all wrong. THE FIRST DECLARATION. In all ages envy and jealousy have been parts of the characters of na tions, empjtes and state?. Each is willing to detract from the glory rof the Other, when, thereby; hervrn glory cari be advanced. This is, however wrong, natural. In the npward flight we are all prone to put our neighbors under our feet, if .we can, by so doing, gain the object'we have in view. Theemy whieh States have of each other is proverbial, and this proposition will not be disputed Let North Carolina say she sent more and better troops into the late war than Georgia, and Georgia's blood boils forthwith, and she sets a,bout to disprove the assertion. This cap will fit not only North Carolina and Georgia, but any other States. Looked at from this standpoint, it is hot very remarkable that some of Virginias sons should have claimed for her the glory of having promulgated the first Declaration of American ' Independence. - We a say this would not be strange, but it is Something out of the usual course of events for a . Xorth Carolinian to attempt to deprive his native State of the honor, of an act which has been conceded to her from the time the Mecklenburg Declaration of ill dependence was first promulgated. If "it is an ill bird that befouls its wn nest," more detestable must be the citizen who . at tempts to rob Mecklenburg county of the prestige which the Mecklen burg Declaration gave her, and hot .only her but all North Carolina! The grounds taken are so very un tenable that we should have been surprised to have known a Virgin ian take them, but when a -North Caroliniari takes upon himself-, the ignoble work of showing that the glory of a eertain act is due 'sbWe State other than his own, we are al most uncredulous. ! On the subject of the two Declara tions the Wilmington STor has sc-me' w?1l???!idel- mk. The Star ' . says: iJ - I A lively little discussion is r Dro- greasing hetween tome of the State and some Totahe .Virginia papers ftbout the ' iriority of t Declaration's in the two commonwealths, our Virgiiiia-brithj:erilingktiiigthftfethe Augusta resolutions ' of February, 1775, "were a virtual declaration of sovereignty, and- upv ai4e ansisting with evident justice that these' ffere not axderlJif-e$ ce; It is clear that the first declaration of American independence ever made was that put forth in the im mortal Mecklenburg resolutions of May 20th, 1775, which asserted North Carolina's sovereign rights as a free and independent people. The sub- -cr f'' sequent' remodelling of these resolu. tldrts on the 31st of Ikfay was hot a new declaration, but simply an elabopiion of he hrst , I ij jpnjhk j he ifetersfcuirg Appeal closes an article in this ; lan guage, to the sentiment of which every heart in' our old State gives generous response: . . ' The question should not be con sidered as one of rivalry or of prece dence ; which ever State has the first glory, it is the common heri tage of the South ; and Virginia should be proud of the trophies of North Carolina, as that splendid State is also generously fcroud of the historic honors of her sister Com m on wealth' of the Old Dominion." "IRRESPONSIBLG ANONYMOUS SCALLAWAd." The. article below is from that able paper, the Petersburg Appeal, which seems to have a just appreciation of the irresponsible anonymous scalla- wag, who furnished that old beast, Brownlow, with the false statements about Gen. Hill : r ? f - f ''Old Brownlow has written anoth er letter in reply to Gen. D. H. HiP. In this he1 weakens ' very decidedly, nis production neing in many pa ticulars both sillv and childish. Th only points he attempts to make upon the General are set forth in a letter he publishes, which was evi uentiy written to mm oy some lr responsible anonymous scallawag Yv e are waiting to see if the Lynch burg "Republican" will pu Wish and endorse, this sweet-scented epistle though we are almost satisfied tha it will not commend itseltvto ad mi ration even in the f'avorableeyes o that journal. If the "Republican' wtTjm tnkc-mtr jrvd-r-rcrr nt irrnilu at once repudiate Brown k)W. .The peo ple as, a mass can stand a good deal but their stomachs are not strong enougn to resist nausea at the fa vorablc presentation of this old traitor buzzard." The Walworth Case. The following is the last letter ad dressed by Mansfield Tracy Walworth to his wile. It was intercepted by Frank II. Walworth, the son who is now being tried. It is believed that this letter which was preceded bv many of the same kind, induced voung Waltforth to com ivi it the crime for which lie is now on trial : "May 30th 7 o'clock in the morn, ing. Prepare vourself for the inevitable I am getting over my wasting fever and shall be out of my room in a few ctays. l am going to call upon my children; my heart is starving for their caresses. Make the interview, when I come, just as easy and pleas- II T -- --- ant as possioie. . jl cannot stay irom them much longer. I will see them peaceably if I can or with a tragedy ifl must. Their little faces haunt me, as they are mine. Popish cruel ty must bend to the demand of a father's heart, or the Walworth name goes out in blood. Keep Frank Walworth out of the way. -You have taught him to hate me, and his presence or obstruction in any way will only excite fatal ex asperation. I want to see my little giyls and come away peaceably. Be ware that you do not in any way arouse the frenzy which you have known to exist siuce you left me. ml - - mere is a reasonable way to deal with me. I shall have mv ritrhts under the decree, with no further le gal delay or expense; I have con . 1 . , . . ueueu promptly everv right to you unuer iiio uere.e, ana now. i am go ing to see tny -children; and yott shall not bring them up to hate tbeir lov ing father. Eliza Bucks has written to mo that you will do it, if you .can, from your associations with 'them, andjthen I shall shoot yAU JrKl niyr self on those door steps,- for T -have nothing lurther to live for. Do right, Ellen Hardin, and, you, will find me prompt to do right. 1 am a broken hearted desperado. Save this letter for lawyers and courts if you please. God is - my lawyer how. Not that remorseless, brutal God that you and .Lli&i Backus and u. A. Walworth worship, but the God that planted love for my little girls in my heart, and that says to the bereft tiger 'Kill.' Oh, you, wretch, that have kept me two years from the little hands and hearts that love me. Your only ex cuse was my poverty and misfor tunes. ' V r ' "' " ' V - "Should my children refuse to speak to me iii the streets,, of Saratoga,1' I shall.say.to myself that she is teach ing them all to hate a broken-hearted fathers -All is lost, and a tragedy must come when I know from the conduct of the little girls that "you have taught them to hate me, IThat moment two pistol shots will ring above the.; house, one slaying you' the other myself. -1 know that you have no personal fear, no more than I have, but wc both m ust die. When that disco v ery reaches. my brain, that you have estranged my young . children from" rne,-Ihall ihave your life. If my little girls ddfnot love rne,;then my life is, valueless, and I shall die with a feeling of luxury?and rest,' but you will iiave to attend fJne to tbetspirit land. The God of justice demands it. -iBut if you do .rignt under that decretal! may be well."- - " But now my heart ; is agonized for, my , little children. If you .have common, sense, you will kno.w to abrreciate4he dangetwt it-wi " Mansfield' Tracy Walworth." ' From thevRichmond Dispatch. The Duello in New York. The moat vehement oftimdesN&bre heaped upon Virginia and the South by New York journals upon the "oc CiRioji of thelate .ducL iu this, city. Our whole community was held res- :L1. f J.U i. i i i i rnnrinffcil Wn Wi Wr .th. iiiiiiNiii. h iir i i hk n ip mit. nmntv no. ern morality. And now we have a duel in New York. We print the particulars elsewhere. - And what a story it is, this duel of members of the "high society'' of New Yo-ik ! The parties re said to be gehtlemen of "high,social posi tion." What was the grievance of the challenging party ? The papers, all say that he had suffered dishonor by the seduction of his wife by the man he challenged ! We have been famil iar with public events in the South forlo! these many years, and w'e never knew a duel to be fought on this ground. Southern men don't light duels for such a cause. The Northern imitators of the chivalry in thjs cause are but poor copyists, and degrade the duel in their vulgar im itation. Southern gentlemen have killed seducers, but if they did not do this they never went to theiield to seek redress for an injury from them. We have no defence for the duel. It is oneway td resent wrongs. It is only bettor tlran some others resort ed to in those bloody and lawless conflicts which will continue as long as men are expected to resent insults. How long that will be no one can tell. But our New York friends have the duel, and they have what is worse. While they are denouncing us of the South let them defend themselves not only for what they satire us, but for that which is peculiarly bad in their own society, where money, not worth, is the claim for social res peetability, and where the gamblers and swindlers in gold, and stock rings, are the leaders of the social circle. The New York Commerchd speaking'of the duel says: "It is well enough to talk about Paris, and to thank the kind stars that we are not like the Parisians, and that i-r;oti life and educa tion breed a race of quite another sort than is granted in the Stirling atmosphere of the 'g-ti sejo nr.' "'But alas! the evidences thicken that our young men born for , the purple are quite eqal to all that the most ex acting immorality demands, and that they and their companions arc able at the same time to maintain the semblance of a decent regard ft-r the proprieties of life and are quoted as authorities in things fashionable, are foremost on the lists of our "lirst circles," without whom a ball or a dinner party would bea dreary Waste. Qne gentleman of high stauding, lbng suspected-of foul play at cards" is detected and exposed, and made to suffer social and club ostracism. Another who is supposed to holdthe keys of a leading club, membership in which has generally ' been regard ed as a nersonal distinction. chaP lenges a man for seducing his wifeHh who is notorious as asocial offender The seducer accepts the challenge. Thev meet and exchange shots. We can hardly realize that such a miser able poltroon could fire a pistol 11 it . much less noiu a nigh position in th first society club of New York What-a commentary on the "best society PThis is the etiquette of so called upper tendom. A man o "honor' is satisfied to have his home desolated, his family connections dis graced, to stand up and be shot down like a dog, provided he can draw a pair of hair-triggers on the seducer of his wife. And the offender is re ceived in the "best society" as a he ro, and new honors ana new con i !i r. - rv i quests await mm. oureiy mere is something very rotten in Denmark when such things can be and when so many hidden offences come to the surface together. The merefact of exposure has lost its terrors. I So cieiy. pretenas to aonor, nut moon pities and embraces, and a newgar- iana is aaaea to trie coronal of so cial renown, 'lhere is no court of honor to pass upon these cases 'but society owes it to itseii to put a ban Luub tauuui ue removeu, ana one whose sting will be foreverfelt. unon tne unoiusning violators oi social ot ligations." Mr. James W. Tucker, a New Yorker with a high, full forehead- was summoned as a juror, in the Walworth case, and. in the exami nation as to his qualifications, s ated that he had never heard of the trne-ft dy, had never even heard of the . o name of W alworth, and scarcely ever read the newsDaDers. Undfr the modem ruling as to the ancient right ot trial by jury Mr. Tucker was considered enough of an ignora- mus to sit in magment unon vounc A . m L ' I . vvaiwortn. under tne present mrv system nothing is considered com- patiDle with freedom from bias but the most perfect asmine stupidity. A wretched story is coiner the rounds or the squalor and misery of tne ieraaies oi Vienna. Jt is said nearly all the hard labor pei formed in the city" is done by the women. E ven the rough Work of mixing mortar and earning the hod to the uiicKiaer ueyoives principally upon women. 'Ihey have no home, hnt sleep about the buildings on the shavings and make their meals in the baker shops on the coariest 'are.- They earn about t went v-Attrh cents per day wages; A fearful talc of demoralization of course i ihe sequel of all this.. In -the hospital proviueu aor inese pooriemaies only about one-sixteenth of the births b of legitiraatevchildrenlc Atjd yet we are writing of the t great Christian em pire of Austria: ; JIJELEGRAPHIOv : t FROM THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION. .; i- BY THE B pi ' & SOUTHERN AND ATLANTIC LINEj BY TELEGRAPH TO THE OBSERVER. THE TIGRESS. She Sails on the Polaris Expedi tion on the 8th. New York, June 30. The Steamer Tigress arrived off" the battery late Saturday night. She sailed from St. Johns, N. F., June 17th, making an unusually poor voyage, owing to westerly winds and the fact of coal becoming exhausted. At noon yes terday she anchored in the navy yard harbor. A number of necessa ry alterations will be made on her, and Capt. Grier expects to have her ready to sail by July 8th. Captain Tyson will accompany the , expedi tion. The Tigress has not yet been transferred to the Unifed States, but it is expected the bargain will be concluded when the agent of her owners will have received $G0,000, the amount contracted for. Her owners profess to be desirous of re purchasing the steamer, should she be successful in the coming voy age. WALWORTH. The Trial Yesterday Testimony of Witnesses. New York, June 30. In the Wal worth trial this afternoon, Mrs. Wal worth testirield to the erratic acts of her husband. He had on several oc casions without- provocation or previ ous intention, seized her roughly and used harsh and violent language. About the time of his father's death he was frequently violent, damning his father and jother relatives in vio lent terms, and breaking various articles of furniture. Lemuel Hardin testified to pris oner's amiable disposition. Frank Walworth had studied law in his office for a short time. Gen. Martin B. Hardin brother of the former witness testified to an at tack made upon him by deceased in February, 18G6. He visited the city where witness was temporarily stopping. Witness was then just recovering from the effects of a wound and disease contracted in the war; deceased came in his room and threatened him with a pistol, but was taken away by the police. This was about the time the widow applied for a divorce. Hinds and Barbarow, two fellow students of prisoner at college, testified to his good character and singular con duct of late. Murder of a New York Farmer. Brooklyn-, June 30. Considerable excitement has been occasioned in South Oyster Bay, in Queens coun ty, by the murder of Samuel Jones, a wealthy farmer on Friday night hist. Jones lives alone in his farm house, and irom appearances the ouse was entered by several men who first murdered the farmer, and then threw the body in a well and covered it with stones. The mur derers then pillaged the house, but found little of value. No elue yet obtained to the murderer. Improvement in the "Times." New York, June 30. The Times this morning appears in a new and handsome type, and presented a greatly improved appearance. .In an article this morning the Times says this is but one of several recent improvements in its establishment, and that in addition to new type there have been purchased new presses, new machinery, and a new office outfit, at an outlay of $150,- uuu. Great Billiard Tournament. JNew York, June -30. The tiers in the billiard tournament of Cvril Dion, Maurice Daly and Albert Gar- mer, lor the hrst prize, will be plac ed off to day at Civing Hall. Gar uier wm piay laiy, ana in ine eve ning Cyril Dion will play the winner ot tne afternoon game, and so de cide who is to be the champion .Fools of large amounts are being sold on the event. Dion haviner sngniiy ine oest 01 the game. The Terrible Result of Carelessness. jju9i.UA, juu ii. terrioie ac- ciuent occurred at the east end of the Houssaic tunnel at midnight Sunday. Four men were killed and two severely injured. When about 4.000 feet from east part of the tun nel a daean of "powder einlodpH xiua ia iuv ursw eiDision since tne mtroauction of the powder, and is . - . - attributed to the discontinuance of the customary precaution in hand ling it. . The Beecher-Bowen-Tilton Case Brooklyn, June 30. The investi gating committee of Plymouth Church, appointed t(3r the purpose of examining the fcharees preferred against Rev. Henry Ward Beecber by Henry C. Bo w en and Jhfthd Til ton will at ohce begin. It is not thought the. charges, wiil be bus-" liined. - ' The Burial of Powers. Florence, Italy. June 30 HiranV Powers,- the; well known- sculntor; ,was buried here Saturday with im- New-York, June 30. The weather this' morning is intensely close and warnvand bid8,fair;to equal yester day, when the. average temperature was 79 degrees. -- . 1 ' MARKETS. New Yokk, June SO. Money ea sy at 3 to 4. Exchange dull at 109 for sixty days,; HQ JfoVsight. Gold weaker, declined to 115to i, but-rallied-and closednt 115. r " Governments closed firm. Cur rency 61b, I14 to J. State Bonds quiet; -Va'SjG's, new 50; 7's consols, 54y6's deferred, 101; Ga. 6's, 75 to 76; Ga.7X new, 90. N. C. fund act, 1866, 16; N. C. special tax .12; S. C. 6's, Jan. and July,15HS. C. 6's, April and Oct., 20. , Flour closed ' lower for all grades and fairly active at conses- sion. Southern flour closed lower and irregular; Baltimore, Alexan dria and Georgetown, mixed to good super, o.0o to $5.40; do . extra and family $6.25 to 11.00; Del. $6.30 to $7.60. Baltimore, Howard street, $7.50 to $8.00 ; Hagerstown and vi cinity extra, $7.40 to $8.20. .Wheat closed easier; corn unchanged, but less active; provision market moderately active, prices generally firm. Cotton steady but very quiet ; low mid. zu, mid. zi. cottox; Galveston Cotton flat ; good ordinary 15 ; sales 50; receipts 143; StOCK ZU,UU4:. New Orleans Demand moder , iiiiuuimg iof; saies I'luu; re ceipts 925 ; stock 34,785. Mobile Quiet: middling 183 ; sales 300 ; receipts 225 ; stock 14,346. Savannah Firm; low middling 17, middling 18; sales 87: receipts 134; stock 13747. Charleston Quiet, firm for good grades, others dull; middling 18? ; sales 200; receipts 130; stock 18,746. Baltimore -Firm; middling 20$; sales 326; receipts 368; stock 4,140.- Norfolk Quiet ; low middling 1S ; sales 150; receipts 186 ; stock 5,277. Wilmington Quiet ; middling 19; sales 20 ; receipts 17 : stock 1,586. Memphis Quiet and firm; low middling 17 to 18; receipts 241; stock 10,221. Augusta Demand good; mid dling 181; sales 535; receipt 45; stock 5,638. A v;tshi-igton dispatch to the xew jloi k I'osi savs : 'xnero 3 reason to believe that four of the i '.if .i i- - . . mm uo.en names now oelore tl.e President in connection with the' Chief Justiceship, and from which selection will be made, are Be i ja nin Tt l 1 It.'.Ml! r -i . n. turns, wiuiani m. i!.varts. ex- Attorney-General E. R. Hcarju.cl Attorney-General Williams. Well informed persons believe that the choice will fall upon Mr. Curtis, who Tfill, it is known, accept the appoint ment; ii tendered. New Advertisement TO THE FARMERS. e think the plan adopted for selling uouon in our market was done without due consultation with you, and we are in favor of doing justice to our friends in eve rv insuvnee; ana in mture win aband n the present iJan and resort to the fonmri t" r old fashioned wav. Call at out Store and We will handle your Cotton without the p IBs. W. II. H. HOUSTON & CO. July I, 1873 4w. WANTED. wanted an s or 10 Horse power engine to run a Co ton (Jin and a m.in mnsiKlo nf erecting a house and Engine for the pur pose. WM. JUHIiSTON. Jqly 1 3t. IlOO SALE. I WILL sell at the city pound on T1j day July 3rd, ii lot of nice hoes. urs- R. KRWIX, City Marshal. july 1 3t CHAR., COL., & AUG. R. R. CO., Gen'l Freight akb Ticket Dkp't., Columbia, S. C, June. 25, 1873. ROUND TRIP TICKETS llfILL beold on Friday morning, July TT 4th, between Augusta, Columbia, l.narlutte, and all regular stations on the line 01 the. roan, and from all regular sta tions to stations above named, at ONE FARE. Purchase your tickets from agents. Con ductors will charge regular rates. . E.R.DORSEY, july 1 4t General Ticket Agent, RETURN YOUR DOGS. T? VERY citizen whose doe has been re. -Li turned for taxation will please call at I my omce ana get a collar with , the proper ISA SLUIUU UII 11. After the 4th' of July next, every dog appearing in the streets without a tax col lar on will be taken up and confined 24 nours, during which time the owner pan redeem it by paying a tax of $2. After that time eery dog so confined will be destroy cel. By order of the Mavor, - J. R. ER WIN, Marshal, july 1 4t , ' ; NOTICE. ALL persons iuthe county of Mecklen burg required bv law to HuIca nnar. terly returns of their nurcliasea an? mi oS.r,h.n- i .tl" : " 1 , V tuu- reiuxue me nrst nve rinv in t.,i i T wiib Those fkiling to return may expect to be fcpunea as aeimquenta. ''. i p&ste of Deeds, MecklenburgCo: July l-2t . - . .. . .VYM.JUAXWF.T.T, -T- i Atlantic, Tennessee & Ohio Ealf SecKETARY AND TUMASOOtklXlt 1 a k . P. MORRISON. W1 J? W" oyirn July Ut. Ali IT . the bmkhngsbT beea thoroQgM? the grounds hatrtmTllr SJT fel ererythinf that could he done bV . Jf? force m the short space of time the rv. pany has owned tje property, has bSi Sone to make -Piedmont'V comforUbK every respect and we can safely prom hnuted aunber of visitor tbfascaWn and g at as low rat'4 S ean be afforded. The value of the water, and the bfann UonrT to require any Hotel end general management th seasop will be in charge of MR; 8 B Tav The Bar and Billiard Rooms harine w rented to a gentleman who knows his bm? ness, will be conducted in first-class 31 style. - w7 A splendid double track Ten lin has been built, and special care to t comfort of Lady Patrons. e Comfortable Ouches, with splendid teams will run Tn-Weckly from Kernei ville. leavmEKerncrsvillTiii.. -rL days and Saturdays. Leavimr tiklm. Korth Western ctailroad is XjS to Winston, then between Winston L tut mA ' Springs, over a splendid level road until """'u wiuc mice roues m ine Sprines After July 15th, ail mail matter for viit i 'ri suoul(i oe directed to y?;,"3 var,s wage Agent, TEEMS, Rwrd .'per day $L50. per week $15.00 Clnldren and servants half price For bills of $100, 10 per cent ff For $200 and over, 15 per cent otr. For further particulars apply to S. B. TAYLOR, Manager, Danbury, X.'c. W. E. Williamsok, ) C. M. Flikn, Owners. Robt. G. Pace. I June 28-2 w CHARLOTTE, N.'o7 June 26th, I873. ALL persons who have Cotton 011 Land will find it to their interest to call at our office, Black'sr Pnilding,; and we will do tire very best that can be done for them Will advance any reasonable amount uii Cotton left in our hand. No pass required1 in Cotton transactions with us. J. S. WILLIAMSON & CO june 27 lOt ,. FR E WC K'S NEW HOTEti Cor. Cortlandt fc New Church sts. NEW YOKE. On the European Plan, RICHARD P. TRENCH, Son of the late Col. RICHARD FRENCH, of French's Hotel, lias taken this lioul', newly, fitted up and entirelv renovatwl thL a me. VrntraUy located in ' the 11 VSJXEiyH PART of the Citif. Ladies' & Gkxtlemfn's Dixi.nu Rooms attacked. june 25 3m TO THE COHTBIBUTOBS TT0 the A A R A L entertainment on 29th JL of May 1 The Committee of Arrange ments End they have a surplus of about One Hmidrat-and eighty dollar after wr ing alj expense!. And I am direct ni by aid committee. to call a meeting of the contributors, on Tuesday. Jnlv ljt, at 5 o'clock, p. m., at the City Hall." A fall at tendance is requested as'the Committee de sire to kiv)w wluit disposition they shitll make of the money thev have on hands. j. L. BROWN. Ch. Com. Arrangements. june 25 lw DAVID R. DUXCAN. JOHN B. f:LETEl.in Duncan & Cleveland, tTTattEFS AT I. AW, SPARTANBT7BO, S. C. Practice both in State and U. june 1 1m SJ- Courts. A T miDDY'S voir can get aCrTW Sett that I ic it.. f . A is not subiect to the criticisms of "YE LOCAL." Prices from $5.00 to $10.00. Call at i!e Book Store. f nine 19 t. m PROTECT YOURSELF THROM the MOSQUITOES. .We have jurt X received a large assortment of Mosqui to Canopies, Frames, Fixtures, Ac, for tiedstearis and Criling, Bars and Bobinette, for making Jfetts. Call and see them. 13REM, BROWN & CO: inne 20 dtaw2w 1 ST. MARY'S SCHOOL, RALEIGH, n: a Founded 1842. Right4fcev. THO.,ATKtKsoyt D. D., Visitor, Rev. AtDEBT Smedes, D. D., Ilect.r, Rev. Bennett Smepk, A. M., Ass't. The Sixty-third Term of this School will beginr July 29tb. i? or a circular apply to the Rector, june It lm B ING II A IVI SCHOOL. Mebaneville, N. C. MAJ. ROBERT BIKGHAM, Sap t, I MAJ- w. b. lynch. capt. t. h. noewood. Fall Session opens 25th J uly. JFSSr For Ciiculars address, f Maj. ROBERT BINGHAM, Sup'.t. June 13 lm -TXOUR. KAA SACKS North Carolina TWh 0JJ Fres-h Ground, iust received at STEN HOUSE, MACATJLA Y & CO 8 June JSf FLOUR! FLOUR!! tb i i.j ' .t ,v,l and Pl, ftom h most fhslidioos to the e.- to please. ' Some 08 hV sacks to sell as low as $3.75. Then beautiful white Ftn?' made out of White Amber Wheat. TDj put up In small auantitiesinsacksof 2Cl5 5Qets, $1,00. $2.00. and $2.50 each. And doivt forget our very excellent w gars.,:r;v . " JnnA OX 1 r . JJv A CEIJTRAL HOTEi, iU-r.-9f, rormerly ZXaaslon Boum, HC.ECCtES,Propr, : charlotte; m c. pre8sive ceremonies. :r ii. 7 H 6ecr,roi Tieai, junc81y s , 4 i ' .
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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July 1, 1873, edition 1
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