Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / May 30, 1876, edition 1 / Page 1
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OBSCBIRtOM EATKa. Pally l year, (postpaid) adyance. r.:; $8,00 mos. " - C'.!H'i',H,jii 4400 3 mos. " ..h f i,. Ott t mon. " "' 75 W ci 1 1 y , i i u the county) i n ad ranee, 1 $2 00 out of the county, postpaid, 210 - 0 months, va l j " : I 05 Eir Liberal reducH ous lor clubs, t w- thoroothly supplied with avery naaded want, antfwiUf the laterfslylaaTOTyp, f rery manner of J Vorlr cm now be don with neatneM. cpatca ana ens -pnew. Wa tanfornlri a! short. BULNKS. KLL d' " -V- XCTTEB HE CARDS, fjf TAGS. XXGXTPTS fOSTIES, ;" PAMPHLETS. CHECKS, to., o CHAELOTTE, N. C TUSPAY, MAY 30, 1876 NO. 2 240 r it ;i ' , 1 . , ' 1 A'i ''' - . - . , - - I I 1 - ! J-.- - ' . 'I , : ' k " - , . ' m A ,- N, Attorney and Consellor at Law. : : .1 1 . i i i 'i . i , CHARLOTTE, M,0.'.' i i I OFFICE In Dowd A Sims' New Build, ing, Up Stairs. a-tf. A- LOT OP NNED GOODS I ived at i ! THRESH CANNED GOODS (best brands.) J. J ast received at may 23, ASDKEV8 & JQNESy BOOTS, a: JO MS QkIA BOOTS ! THE BEST' STOCK IN ToHtNi ' AND' TH' ' BEST GOODS FOR THE MONEY. COME ANO SEE US, EXAMINE OUK HEW IRON jraORTiisWlTH BUlLDING.'lTRADESTREKr, CHAKLOTTE, N. C. mar30 ; a l ! ?: n kj s I ' t m-Jm' r" ":r ijTT - WHOLESALE BED'ROOM ANp IARLOh OF COFFINS OF ALL mar TO- fro?- Jl Jt . u , JIG J iU lit si.' (VAk (loor i ot " UXL aF. ivi.n(ppEl0- 9 - --wi16 . .; ; 'i. i 'a- f:: ;.:, ; -.tii '. c i-Ua ii ' j.ii 1 tTipfll 54CK O , 8 II O E S. New &0m i (tomissii House. THE undersigned have associated them- business1., and solicit consienments of Mer- ouniuuvvi Oil &.1UU8. 1 ! BpecialattenUon giren to the sale of all kinds of Country Produce. B N 8MITH, J A McLURE. J A McLURK, Auction ee. ruaylG . 1: FinfrHfcb CIOAB3Iftfotn 21 to 15 cents X-Bit iEetai!.- Also, a good assortment of CHEWING TOBACCO low for cash. T H AUSTIN. STOCK AND LEARN OUR PRICES. & RETAIL, DEALXES IN ALL KINDS OF TJ 33 I T TJ 3R 3S 3 BEDDI1NG, &C. No. 5, West Tradet., ch;arlotte, n.cj, just received A WJJIjTL link OF- CHILDREN!) CARRIAGES. SETTS, AMD A FULL LINE CRADES, ON HAND. Till 1 IVi c U -3 IWCVrSflnTTTnrv i" 1". : : I . ! J iW fVl fffliflV Wlrt ftlffSi flaV MTitl .2H0E HHJJiH .H .fl 5. io b-rv.:uiy:TryiTa i ' i ,1-' .i. ,Ut Il!?:7 .'LlUadH'.. 'iO 3JZAH' ii Ot-'' q Ce.ii Ja .:!oJn;ri:;i7.r --hiA -! ft '3: :fi ...'iui"' Jii sv.;i A ' .il .a u.r . it lib O ) ii .T.iViiif JI 7 Agent .JAH ".0 HHI3I.18HAOQ " 'Of. . H 7 3 fl J J! r. Ct -t TELEGRAPIIIGiNEWS 5 "fjiia " FOBEIOX Tbe Potte Won't grce The Feeling on the London Exchange. , London, kay 29.'Upyd conimerrc- ed taking war risks Friday. , Bkrlin, May 29. The Porte has in directly notified the powers that he will on no account consent to a two months armistice. Servia was ready br action, , ith,'.a ' h undred .' . thousand. infantry, ten ) thousand cavalry , Jind jreelfiidted pieced of ar. r ' ; jLojroo-v, May The Stock Ex change opened strong at sharp re covery for all government stocks, bat auicklv jrelar&ed to a' Mint in Vonie? cases oonaiomftiy D6U?ftnat oi at- urday's closine prices. Business is dull in conseoaence of .makire uo amounts 'preparatory s46'eUleioent;ti:f!PntlJ;-1 wtoea- lled at and becavise of Ihe abfiricfijOf the Jf e iah to em bers, who are observing1! to ljtX1', Tbere : has beea a heav vy fall in rnost stocks since last ac- obanis: h?hef ititementis tb'bawait- ed with some apprehension. Already to-day one firofj of. J?pke jat(hye sna pendedi witB liibimieS 'believed to be rather heavy. CRIME AND CASUALTY. Murder in St Louis And One at the , Hot Sfiriiigsflin. Ed ittfr? Killed by a Train. St Louis, May 29. White Carrol, a steamboat man.YaaJata.Uy sobbed to' day, irrftUI-rfel tii.lltAirElW'illiam- fjn, proprietor of a furnishings ftjpre, unaer ine ot James fl1 f; viiiiam- son used a knife after relieving a blow with a cane. . : : -.; Memphis, May 29. Passengers from Sot Springs, Ark., report excitement there, Saturday, over the shooting of Jno C Hale, a prominent citizen of that place, and son-in-law of Ex-Gov. Brownlow, of this State, on last Satur day, by Wm P "Walsh, the post master and a prominent politician. The dif ficulty grew out of Walsh building a store on ground claimed by Hale. .Re ports are conflicting as to who fired the first shot. Walsh emptied the contents of a double-barrelled shot gun into Hale's side, inflicting a mor tal wound. Walsh was arrested. r CiNCiNAliMay .--3rA Blbla, an editor of!the Enquirerfwas Btrnck by an engine to-day, and killed. He had been 22 years on the Enquirer. He was aged 50. WASHINGTON. Apprehensions' for the Black Hill Miners The Sugar and Rice Men from the South The Tariff Bill on Its Passage. Washington, D. C, May 29. There in jtfBIcL GtfM ffirip.rnrnent prosecu ting the Indian campaign. The troops will drive' the Indians' ori the Black Hill mines, insuring their destruction, and leave thexfrontiejrtowns exposed to raid. The expeditions also leave the telegraphs and railroads unprotect ed. Great apprehension is felt for the safety of the town of Bismarck. The rice merchants interested from South Carolina, and the sugar and rice men from Louisiana are very ably re presented. The delegations are work ing effectually; and there is some hope that.ttyej Hawaiian Treaty will fail in the Senate There does not seem to be much foundation in the report that California had spent $300,000 iriiecur-. ing the treaty's passage through the House,.' 4 : The Comtnittee v on Roles have agreed to allow the Banking and Cur rency Committee to report at alay time'. Tnia will , ' allow th $10j000,0ep!sjiver bill for a like amount of legal tenders to c6me up. The House ' resolution that in its sense Iff se .lf Wationj. affefting the, tariitflBeitpodilat, 4 as pdCupon its passage, seconded, and the main;ques tiou ordered, when Mr. Morrison mov ed a reconsideration of the laslL'Vote are tEattlie vole onthe passage of th resointion wyirio OftAllojWjed, Messrs. Gibson & Potts and Gov, jii ii'iini'i m i '': u.i.il'l .it-tile FLASHES. . ;-:''i' PHiiADixrHiA,.tay .-rWrnHarU nercoir Socety,.is,dead, aged 47. Providence, R. L, .May 29. Freer mahiiVery 'stable, with''8d horses; was brried; to-day . Loss $70,000; f i jT'KwLYoW V'Mayi ztCarqii. , De 'Talmhnird waf bufted-'aedrding to -the bheUe.s!: wheh pef mission is obtained, my, Slid-Nigbtr i H Washikqtoh, May 29. Foxlha Soulb Atlantis-Siaies; fall AHm& foHo1 "Kb rnftTftarprnflter, ly shifting to cooler northeastly, gen ralrjRoktlidy 2 weathn (Jaod : thunder WASHIKflfON. A Cockand Buil Storj About Bribing Speaker KerrTbrftpealur's Deni al in Toto?6;Srt8'fakes Juriar diction inthe alap Caafe-rTlie tariff Goea 0rer'f Ac. ASHikcToN, tf. ciifay 29. Hear- ney, who had charge of the door in the House during terms ' of- the Congress of '65, testifies that he has been continuously;, tdkfiicc since '58 in several positions,. (r which he had the lobby to recommend him for his honestyj that his friend Green came to him after acotytifsTOO ;h; had 'girea Mr Kerr,; He left his, door to tell Mr Kerr, about it, Mr Kerr, invited him to his Toorn. He ealfed; told Mr Kerr he, was. a iRepiLVc.'fiftthd Mr Kerr, told witness ii. woui po. iex;sary to nave me' credeniaJs fcom Nw York ' De-1 mdfcrats.'Stnaf rHt wte'Wdrtfr-any- t nine:' it was worth $500: ' Subsecruent ly w itneas and ?r?en , called on ,!Ke rf, Kerr hbje With the credentials, aqd isubseqUently handed Mr Kerr, At his door in the House o( Representatives, $500, and in two, days the nomination was made and in, due time Green re- cieved his com mission , and was subse quently cashiered. This Story is ad hered to with 'exact . particularity. Green could pnly, raise $460, and wit ness supplied the $40. The cross-examination does not shake these lead ing statements. Witness had no com munication with Mr Kerr before or after this affair: had 'never done or at tempted anything like it before or since. Did not know where he board ed or with whom he associated during his two years in Washington, Beyond the main incidents of the bribery, the witness has no positive recollection. Witness first declined to testify, and the committee seemed disposed to give him time to consider when witness wished the examination to proceed4 Witness asked Mr Kerr if he desired to tell all he knew. Mr. Kerr replied: 'yes." Nominations: Seriah Galran, poBt- m aster at Brownsville, Texas ; Hedge- man Slack, Marshal of West Nirginia. House. The vote to reconsider pre vailed, 119 to 95, when Mr Morrison, arising to speak, the matter went over until next Monday. The House went into Committee of the Whole and adjourned to Wednes day. The Senate went immediately Into secret session which continues. Speaker Kerr said he did not want to retire' without saying a few words, and asked to be sworn. He then testi fied : "I only want to ' remark to-day that as to every material statement made this witness, affecting my personal honor aud official integrity, I deny it. That is all. If I were in sufficient health, I would make a statement of the circumstances which led to this investigation in connection with the anonymotts letter I received ; but I do not feel able to do so to-day. I will further say that conscienciously, I never knew this witness in my life; but I do not say or wish to be under stood as saying, that he did not intro duce Green to1 me. I do not know six doorkeepers about this House now, though they are supposed to be my political friends. I never consciously exchanged onaminute's conversation, between Heaven and earth , with t hat person.' I never knew him and he was never at my Toom hie has stated, and o course I never received any money from him nor anyfrom,aoy one else." The news comes from the capitol tnat the Senate.by a majority of eight, take the jurisdiction in the Belknap impeachment case.; - , , WE W YORK. Unfounded Report Vandefbilt low Good Presbyterian Feeling Look ing to a Reconciliation. ; New : YoRkl'Ma 29.-The repbrttd retirem ent of 'Mr, Orton, , an&tbe. auc eS8ionof A B Cornell, to - the Presi detveyof the WesternUnion.isfotrndf ied j Cortfm bdOre V andefbilt U oAsch fitmily. Are ,nDt permitted to see himr J "i'ln the Presbyterian' Assembly Rev; itePHmeV rnSdfe ihb report? frdniiho Co m m ittee on x Cbr!eapoce. , He said that the Sojh wind blows pleas antly is nj orjjiri, andyhat jtlja, overnj Jure to the Southern Assembly adopU -ed j-by this assembly on Friday, had BenreCeifed by the membets of the form er body,, pi , ihe spirits of gentle-' menandebristans. Appiau8e.J Mr.- Trifiie thek read "the answer of' the Southern KiAseVnbI jr. He ! then ISon tinned his report as 'follows1: , ( Tiieverlmelbis.Asjejub ine been received by the General As sembly m ft Ire iSrtiith such a cor-v dial ex Dtes,sT6rt' 6r gratification, the cpmniee.ecomniend, that , the same resolution u declarative of J the spirit in which this action, is taken, be adopted by this Assembly-: namely y lr-ord6 to show our disposition to remove on our part all real or seeming' hindrance to friendly- feeling, "the As8embly3&3&kUy (declares that while condemning-. Pertain ... acts and , deUvemnees of 4hfJ Souihern Gner 'Assembly.' no acts or deliverancea the Northern General Assembly or of the. historial bodies, of which IhOj press ent Genral Assembly is the ancdessor. impugning in any way the character of the Southern General Assembly." The residing of this resolution was followed by loud applause. Judge Strong moved the adoption of this res olution, which he believed would aid in the restoration of the fraternal rela tions between the two assemblies. AH, he said, could meet on this common platform, without calling back any thing which could not conscientiously be retracted. He hoped that the res olution would be passed by an unani mous standing vote. The Rev. Drs. Fowler and Musgrove spoke in favor of the motion, which was then unani mously adopted in , the manner sug gested by Judge Strong. The result was followed by three rounds of ap plause. On motion of Dr. Prime, the whole Assembly then rose and sang the doxolegy. THE .BLACK HLttSv .14 300 Whites Killed Since January 1st Indians Hostile and troaMesome. VlfcEW York, May , 29'.aV dispatch from Fort Fetterman, says a letter from the Black Hilli reports helping tip bury, seventy-three, and thinks . three hun' dred have been killed since the first ef January, by the Indians. .The. people at Custer City are in constant terror. , Omaha, May 29. Capt. Nickerson Gen. Cooke's aid, telegraphs from Fort Fetterman that all the young warriors from the Red Cloud Agency have gone Northward to join Sitting Bull. The indications are that Cooke will have to contend with the whole force. Cooke's command left Felternian this morn ing;' NEW ADTEBTISEKIEIVTS Festival To-Night ! FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE YOUNO MENS' CHRI8TIA.N ASSOCIA'N- IN NEW INSURANCE BUILDING. Admittance : 25 centa Doors opened at 6 o'clock. Ticket admits geat with lady, or one only. may30 ESTABLISHED 1841. HERRI N G ' S PATENT CHAMPION, BURGLAR AND FIRE PROOF PS BANK VAULTS OPvS. ' ALSO TIME LOCKS. HERRING & CO., 251 & 252 Broadway, New York, . a6-(X) Banbury St., Boston. may23 The II. I. Kimball House, ATLANTA, GA. ON and after the 15th of this month. Rates of this hotel will be $3 per day ; Single meal 75 cents ; $75 per month for couples. Special rates made for families. No charge for baggage to and from Depots. Elevator runs at all times. G. McGINLY, Proprietor, may 17 taw 2w Jmi Sol-Just So !: CAMEO AT 6 CENTS HEIGH-HO! ' Mm Calko at 6 Cents. FOR FIVE DAYS MOBB ONLY. .', A. W. LOYNS. may28 ' " ! - ' " ' ..j,;, i r , .,.,) . 4 ,h f:.l.. il. iL. KID GLOVES i t J ' ' ... ... " : . . . . 73 Cts. PER PAIR, (CHEAP.) ' ' .. ' ': .2,.:.'. A. W. LOYNS. r ,J.:may"'.,t ''. ; 50 BOXES BULK CtUfi flit SIBE5, JUST jDISDAp FOR LOW -BY- .: To! R JVI MlLLElt & SONS' 'way7 .1 PRIME JAVA COFFEE, X. A Cr TJ A f RA CO P F S B, GHOIGB RIO COFFEES,.",;',, SEED TICK CO F F EE, CHOICEST u0jt0lIG?TB A " CHOICEST UOTUHE GUII POUDER TEA, VANILLA CHOCOLATE, Ao . STANDARD A & C SUGAR, A & C YELLOW SUGAR, POWDERED SUGAR, And a complete fresh supply of FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC GROCERIES. ALL OF WHICH WILL BE SOLD AT REASONABLE PRICES. G0OD3 DBLtVfiRBlJ tktK TO may2 nr. Breakfast,.. 25 Cents Dinner, , ,.-50 (dents Sapper, ....25 Cents Table Board, $4.50 per week fi . , ... , apr22 CONFIDENTIAL. 1 Wn.I. SELL MWIS, SHOES S IMS, CHEAPER THAN ANY HOUSE IN THE CITY m CALL AND SEE THEM. W" ADE & IP IB Or Sj , OPPOSITE CENTRAL HOTEL, CHARLOTTE, N. C BET MACKINAW HATS. may2C OF THOSE 3E JUST HKCBIB.' More of the Pretty Calicos for 6i cents Cash, may27 rj.y.i is EW and BEAITIFUL SELECTION cf LADIES TIE, v - LARGE ; AND RARE ' ' ' 7 1: unii 'IS ' lew IldWaDd Ladies' dlat. TSi: ' i10:'.l JflltU 1 lit 3000 PIECES Ttf&smMlM&$W!fa :- .'AuL 150 i -J )u or ii:nr ..! c J 1 . I "::. imib; mayia ANY PART OT TBTf CITY. - i i .' i i -"ii YOU BEST JUST RECEIVED. CHEAP S' . . . " :i.J - 7t n SELECTIONS - OF : ' .' :':k'H Ju tsu ijea a- . ! f u a f ; tuinl-jtil' jfloil .ttiHr's'i -4T ''f't' - :v.'4: - . 9! J r hi.'' i4i.' a j T and i' t' "n;;i!c, c.:4 i.tfi hiy :;4f i. -U"-n f il :'lll) Vf : 4ji;;; ?.) ,:;rn ji-:.. ;u noi ha ll .Bficeiq hiiv o.ti ;:uqu qyls Uaiaio liodi qpsl ii imtniw hatband li ram ..ir.o.i in ?'e4 37 u storms will prevail. ' vi- are to be construed or admitted asul .' 0 S'.t.;". t v is may!7
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 30, 1876, edition 1
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