i Stye Charlotte Wtm& i t'H'T ' '. -' " ! gwroa nun gun gtttutti i ! r' L h SVhSOklPTIOJS BATES ; I ' k Dafly, one year, (pott-paid) in advance $8 00 ! BtaMmttm. ... 4 00 jnre montm v One Month .; 2 oo 76 j X WEEKLY EDITION : Weekly, In the county) t fldtxmw. a .'. . . . . . S2 00 Out of tle'county, postpaid, ...2 10 SixMonO 1 00 liberal Reduction Jor Chit. 1- AsnwintTca and ALPACAS. just Received another tot of superior CASHMERES AND ALPACAS, Ranging In Price from 25 cento to One Dollar. A Few Pieces of COLORED CASHMERES, all Wool, of superior quality, at sixty cents. worth $1.00. Do not fall to see our LADIES' CLOAKS before buying. It wiiipayyoa ELIAS & COHEN.. xxvnitxxvt. B URGKSS NICHOLS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 1IK ALKTR T1H A LL KINDS OF FURNITURE! FURNITURE I BEDDING, &C. BEDDING, AC. BEJOING, AC. BEDDING, AC. FURNITURE ! FURNITURE t A Full Line of CHEAP BEDSTEADS t CHEAP BEDSTEADS t LOUNGES ! LOUNGES ! LOUNGES 1 .--LOCNGES-t- " LOUNGES f lounges; PARLOR AND CHAMBER SUITS ! PARLOR AND CHAMBER SUITS ! COFFINS of all kinds on band. -A3 COFFINS of all kinds on hand. , No. 5 West Tradx Street. CHARLOTTE, N. C. line supply. 3an3 JARGAINS IN KK1 V URRB Nlf. Jt II TTTTU URRK KKJS Jf U UR RKN N II T TJ UK Kf URRR N K n T U JJBBB K K U UR RN NN II T U. UR KB v UUR Kjf JIH II T UU B EM eiJlij'ilirA'i'j'j" E. G. ROGERS' WAREROOM&, Nkxt to PoeTorrjCK, . My Slock Is very Lar, ; and embraces a Full L.ine of PARLOR. CHAMBER, DINING BOO AND .it a .... OFFICE FURNITURES C"' All Goods Packed Free of Change VOL- XX. AMU, OTHER DRESS D O O D S "yyTK propose to close oat oar entire stock OJji Black and Colored Cashmeres, Fancy Dress Goods, Bepellant and Water Proof Goods at once. Real bargains will be found in the above lines, and you are Invited to call and see our stock. We have also a very large stock of Ladles' and Children's -FANCY HOHIERY,- which must be reduced, and we will offer bargains In that line. Call on us for Kid Gloves, Buttons, Flan nels, Ruffling for the neck, Shawls, Towels, Table Linens, Marseilles Quilts, etc., etc. tS The best Corset in the world for the money. ALEXANDER A HARRIS. P. S. An elegant line of Cloaks Just receiv ed. A. A H. dec8 LADIES ! ADIES ! LADIEC I LADIEO . Call and get one of those handsome Cloaks that I am now closing oat very cheap; also some of those nice silk, lace and hemstitched Handker chiefs; lam also selling very cheap a beautiful Black Spanish Lace Scarf; be sure to ask to ask for those pretty White and Opera Kid Gloves, both for gents and ladles; a large stock of fancy Hosiery to I be closed out very cheap; a new lot of nice black Cashmeres Just received; a large lot of Fancy DRESS GOODS, To be sold very cheap; a new lot of splendid Blan kets, at prices to suit the times, and the most beau tiful black Silk Fringe: Just received; also Worsted Fringe In all colors. J You can Always be supplied with the nicest Dress Buttons that are to be found tin the city; a large lot of Shawls and Balmoral Skirts for the cold weather very cheap'. Remember I always have a large assortment of Corsets, all sizes and prices; Knitting Cotton and Germantewn Wool la all colors. , A Call and get a sntt of clothes off of our Charlottes ville Casslmeres that you cant wear out; also Just received a large lot of the splendid Reglna Um brellas. My stock of Boots, Shoes, Clothing, Hats and Caps always complete and. at prices to suit the times. Respectfully,, ' v T. t. SEIGLE. Opp. Charlotte Hotel, Tryon si, Charlotte, N. C. dec22 'V LADIES' CLOAKS. ADIES' CLOAKS. LADIES' CLOAK C LABIES' CLOAKO. THE GREATEST B A R G A I NO HE GREATEST BARGAI NO OFTHS 8 E A S O AT F THE 8 E A S O 1 . ONI HUNDRED CHOICE LADIBS' CLOAK Q NB HUNDRED CHOICE LADIES' CLOAK ij- TC8T RECEIVED BT EXPRES VST RECEIVED BT EXPRESl s, : Which will be sold without reserve, at sacri- : : ficlhg prices. Don't fail to come and look at : . SWEEPING REDUCTION of FORMER. PBIOBQ' WEEPING REDUCTION of FORMER PRICE O NOW fSOUB CHANCT OW IS YOUR CHANCXY TO BUY A CLOAK FOR A CHRISTMAS GIFT O BUY A CLOAK FOB A CHRISTMAS GIF X AT .' H X Lr ,'P ft I C.TJV T ,H;lLf PBIC XL. 'Wilt ' rr unnnin t. H1U .' ."lima JlVWHaaoaua del4 HARLOTTE, Coatrabaad's Rjmn. E. E. Hale In Sunday Afternoon. . - i "In de morning T's gwlne away No one tar pity me . I : "You can't get lost In de wilderness; Dart a little candle In your heart "Beat back, beat back, de power ob hell, And let God's children take de field. "I left my home to sing and pray; I trust ole Satan will go away. "Walt till I gits on do golden shoes; IH run 'bout Hebben an"ear de news. 7 1 "De gates of Hebben am opened wide, De angels throng en eb'ry side. "Car me fway and let me go ; Don't wan' be left behind; "See Jesus sitting in de chariot wide; Two white horses side by side. "Oh keep your shoes upon your feet, And you shall walk In de golden street "And if I iblow my lungs away-' I'll have 'em again on de Judgment day." OBSERVATIONS. A little" girl of our acquaintance calls her Impecu nious lover "Life," because he is "short" ' Sixty-two per cent, of negro blood, according to the Llbcrlan courts, entitles a man to rank as a ne gro. - In Paris, when any one in the theatre laughs heartily, the rest ef the audience put on great dig nity and cry 6ut: f "No Joke I No Joke! He laughs for payP') Out In Nebraska, when two good men want the same office the caucus decides in favor of the one who has a door-plate on his front door. Detroit Free Pre. i i It Is rumored tfeat Mme. Anderson, the pedes trienne, substitutes a twin sister during the middle watches of the night to take her place on the track while she is getting a long nap. Last summer when the hot wave from the West struck us so violently we felt as If we'd like to go out and shovel tea feet of snow off a neighbor's sidewalk, and not charge him a cent We don t feel that way nowi SorrisUnm Herald. If people would only keep their mouths shut re garding other people's business, what a vast amount of trouble there would be spared in this world but what lots of people would be thus thrown outif employment Elmira Gazette. Charlotte Bronx's piano is advertised for private sale In England.; Its authenticity Is guaranteed, and it Is stUl In geod condition. ; A Boston physician of very large practice says that he has never known it to be so sickly in that city as now. A Chicago paper propounds a conundrum as fol lows: "When a man bets that corn, or wheat, or barley, or pork w&l go up or go down, in what does he morally dtffenfrom the man who bets that the ace will lose oc tb king will win f We give It up. It has been decided to present Mr. Gladstone with a sliver axe & his sUty-nlnth birthday, which will take place on the 29th Inst The axe will be of solid silver, with an ebony handle. A public subscription has Ibeen started in England to pro vide It With his little, ttut keen razor, 3. P. Thomas, proprietor of the ILindell house barber-shops, had accumulated $30j000, but he made a much more successful shave when he married a girl worth half a million more. Now they call him the richest col ored man in St. Louis. THE1 RAW-BONED SAG. He is Laughed at by the Hoie Trader?, but Makes Them Open Their Eyes. From the Des Moines Leader. Horse traders were surprised in this city a couple of days ago because a horse which ' they refused to buy at twenty-five dollars trotted under 2.50 and made a couple hundred dollars for his impecunious-looking owner. Graves and a few others were standing out at the corner of Third street when a rustic appearing chap drove up in a rickety ng, patcned-up harness and banged wagon. Two horses were ; hitched in, and one of them seemed about ready to lay down under a load of "ears and short grass. This horse the fellow tried to selL He was very hard up and want ed to dispose of him th&.worst way In his recommending he did not forget that the old horse had "go" in him. But the lookers-on didn't think that ;plug could go, and some f them were rasfr enough to bet he couldn't go a mile in four minutes. They put up money on it and kept betting on time clear down to 2.50. The owner thin wanted to bet five hun dred dollars his horse could make a mile on our track in 2.25.- The exceed ingly wily horseman in the crowd got scared about this time and refused to invest any moire money, preferring to see how the od nag could go. They all adjourned to the fair grounds where rusticus, hitched to an old sulky, drove around a few itimes to limber up, and then got the word "goF Away he went, like the wind,; in a cloud of, dust by the stand and down the first quarter; past the half mile in 152, and never skipped as he came down the home stretch and Eassed under the wire in 2.50. ; The boys aven't got sO;much monev a.they had, but they found out something. Average Decrease f Children in American Families jg Baltimore Sun. 1 Is ifrue thjat the old Puritan stock of Massachusetts is dying out, and that in a few years the Old Bay State will be given over to eitizens of Irish, English, German and French-Canadian extrac tion? It would seem so. The London Medical .Timis and Gazette ,has been commenting on some statistical papers by Dr. Allen, of Lowell, Massachusetts. The London reviewer comes to the con clusion that trie birth rate of New Eng landeitf corresponds very nearly to that of France, which shows a smaller an nual percentage of births thari any oth er country of fcuroper Dr. Allen shows, from comparative tables, that the aver age number of children to each family in Massachusetts has been diminishing through several successive generations. He ascribes this change in part to the undue development of the intellectual faculties. He shows, moreover, that the number of children in each family among the foreign-born population is double that-of fthe native born. Other State's of New (England show 'a similar, decline in thei number of children to each family. But surprising to some as such statements may be, the difference between Massachusetts or New Eng land and other of the older settled States is only one of degree. In New York city the average of children is only three to a family. In other cities on the At lantic seaboard we doubt if the average is much nignef. Physical condition has much to do wifch this decrease, and the wear and tear K)f active lives in pursuits that allow of po cessation. A Forced Tribute. London Truth. 1 I have worn American cotton for my .shirts more than a year. I ' told my shirtmaker wlaere to get it. He abso lutely .knew nothing about it, 1 It wears better than English, and is more hon estly made better cotton, I believe, Up to last spring I believed that Eng lish piano fortes were the best in exis tence. But hiving to buy a flew one I chanced to her an American instru ment If was so pleased with them that I bought two-a grand and , 4 cottage. They are far fir.er and more: brilliant than the. English maker's of whom I " bought my f orimer grand. The mechan ism is perfect and they show Ithat Eng lish manufacturers have madecomparar tively . no progress during the last twenty-fire years. America cutlery is, I hear, being sold in Sheffield, In f act, we are being cut out every where. N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY, 2, 1879. POLITICAL. There will be a half dozen colored men in the next Texas Legislature. Ex-Governor Bullock, of Georgia, a Republican, says that the nesrroes in that State now vote the Democratic ticket and enjoy equal rights with the whites. There are twenty-nine lawyers, thirty seven mechanics, thirty-six merchants and thirty-three manufacturers in the newly-elected Massachusetts Legisla ture. Poughkeepsie, N. Y wliich gave a large Republican majority at the gene ral election in November, has recently elected a Democratic mayor by a good majority. Congressman-elect Gilbert De La Matyr; the Indiana greenbaeker, has written a long letter to show that there is ample warrant in the Bible for the infliction of the death penalty upon murderers. A call has been issued for a State convention of the National Greenback party of Kentucky in Frankfort; on Thursday, March 20 next, to nominate candidates for the State offices to be filled at the August election. New York has had the Secretary of State uninterruptedly since March 4, 1861 ; has also the vice-presidency at the present time, and has had the Demo cratic nominee for the presidency for the last three terms in succession. Mr. Edward McPherson authorizes an unqualified denial of the report that he authorized the statement that Blaine and Conkling have agreed to "pool their issues" in favor of Grant for 1880. He has said nothing of the kind. The story is a pure fiction. The Washington correspondent of the Louisville Courier-Journal asserts that Mr. Blaine is working very hard to have Gen. Grant put on the army retired list in order that the general may thus get the reputation of being what the cor respondent calls "a laid-aside public man." Governor Zbbulon B. Varce. Knoxville (Tenn.) Times. There is no other name among the many of those who battled for the cause of the South, and who have since firmly defended her rights, which carries with it, at least to the young men of the Southern States, so much enthusiasm as that of the present Governor of North Carolina. Gov. Vance had been a firm and decided Union man, and had opposed secession with all his ability ; many in this section still remember his soul-stirring eloquence in the campaign of 1860; but when his State was declar ed out of the Union, he raised a regi iment and went to the field. A seat in the Confederate Congress or ajudgship, out of danger, might easily have been his, but he chose the other course. From his place at the head of his regiment he was elected Governor of North Caroli na, and in the most difficult position of any Southern Governor, he maintained the honor of the State and at the same time protected her citizens in their rights and liberties. Through his efforts was inaugurated the State ownership in blockade runners, which caused the North Carolina soldiers to be the best clothed in the Southern army. Gov. Vance was elected to the United States Senate in 1870, but was refused admis sion into that body for the alleged rea son of his war record, and after ineffec tual effort he resigned, and Hon. M. W. Ransom was eleeted. In 1872 Governor Vance stumped the State to aid Judge Merrimon in his race for Governor. Judge Merrimon was beaten by a small majority, and came before the Legisla ture for the Senatorship. Gov. Vance by a large majority received the nomi nation of the Democratic party, but thirteen Democrats boiled, and with all the Republicans, elected Judge Merri mon Senator. lie has nearly served out his tex-m there, . with what acceptability to his constituents .we are not aware; but it would be natural justice that in the present race for Senator in North Carolina, that,.,naving enjoyed these honors for six years, he should give place to one who worked so faithfully for him in 1872, and who has ever been ready to rally .to the help of his party. In every canvass from 1868 to the pres ent, Gov. Vance has ever . been ready with act and speech to aid the Conser vative party, and to him mainly is due the fact that North Carolina has a Dem ocratic Governor and was carried by Tilden and Hendricks. It is doubtful if anyone else could have beaten the popular and plausible Settle. The Old North State Is our neighbor and from her we have received some of the noblest men Tennessee has honored, and without presuming to dictate, we would suggest that her Legislature can fiend no nobler Senator to the halls of Congress, no one more ready in debate, quicker in repartee, and whose mind, by careful study in the -prime of life, has been stored with more useful in formation, no one more likely to reflect honor upon his State and section, to maintain their rights and obtain "'relief for their necessities, than Zebulon Baird Vance, who, as statesman, soldier, or politician, has ever been ready to act a 1 i-i . 2. i e i . : . 1 nu ptwK earuesuy in uie cause ui ms State and country. To those .who work in the heat and burden of the day should belong the honors and the rewards. Striped Stockings fSt Louis Globe-Democrat J Judge Gottschalk yesterday sustained the motion to set aside the nonsuit in the case of Waite against Crawford. The suit is for damages to the child of the plaintiff, caused by wearing a pair of striped stockings purchased of the defendant. On the trial there was evi dence tending to show that the stock ings were poisonous by reason of the dye used to give them brilliant -colors, and that the newspapers had published reports of the death of children occa sioned by wearing similar stockings. The plea'that the defendant was ignor ant of the dangerous quality ot the stockings was met by the proof that he took the Globe-Democrat, and ought to have known everything; and the fur ther fact that, when he heard that there ' ; was death in the stockings, he sent all he had to an auction-fiouse, and sola no more of them at his store. It was not shown on the trial that the-defendant was not the manufacturer of the strip ed stockings, and under the instructions of the court the plaintiff took a nonsuit. The judge now says there were facts introduced at ttte trial that should have been submitted to the 'jury, and he therefore sets aside the- nonsuit and grants a new trial. Matinf a Mart ' ' ; Raleigh News. A few days since the fact Was prac tically demonsrated in this city, that a redhot stove will leave its mark upon any one who takes it for an ottoman, In thes case the mark left was "patent ed, 1872," and it is said to be indelible. patent S&edittes. "yEGETDtE, WILL CUBE RHEUMATISM.! Mr. Albert Crooker, the well-known druggist and Apothecary, of Sprlngvale, Me., always advises every one troubled with Rheumatism to try VEGE TINE. BEAD HI3 STATEMENT: Sprlngvale, Me., Oct 12, 1876. Mr. H. R. Stevens: Dear Sir Fifteen years ago last fall I was taken sick with rheumatism, was unable to move until the next April. From that time until three years ago this fall I suffered everything with rheumatism. Sometimes there would be weeks at a time that I could not step one step; these attacks were quite often. I suffered everything that a man could. Over three years ago last spring I commenced tak ing VEGETINE and followed it up until I had tak en seven bottles; have had no rheumatism since that time. I always advise every one that is trou bled with rheumatism to try VEGETINE, and not suffer for years as I have done. This statement is gratuitous as far as Mr. Stevens Is concerned. Yours, ALBERT CROOKER. Firm of A Crooker 4 Co., Druggists & Apothecaries VEGETINE HAS ENTIRELY CURED ME. Boston, Oct, 1876. Mr. H. R. Stevens: Dear Sir My daughter, after having a severe at tack of Whooping, Cough, was left to a feeble state of health. Being advised by a friend she tried the VEGETINE, and after using a few bottles was ful ly restored to health. I have been a great sufferer from Rheumatism. I have taken several bottles of the VEGETINE for this complaint and am happy to say It has entirely cured me. I have recommended the VEGETINE to others with the same good results. It is a great cleanser and purifier of the blood; it is pleasant to take and I can cheerfully recommend It JAMES MORSE, 364 Athens street RHEUMATISM IS A DISEASE OF THE BLOOD. The blood in this d'sease is found to contain an excess of flbrim. VEGETINE act by converting the blood from Its diseased condition to a healthy circulation. VEGETINE regulates the bowels which is very Important In this complaint One bottle of Vegetlne will give relief; but, to effect a permanent cure, it must be taken regularly, and may take several bottles, especially in cases of long standing. Vegetlne Is sold by all Druggists. Try it and your verdict will be the same as that of thousands before you, who say, "I never found so much relief as from the use of vegetlne," which is composed exclusively of barks, roots and herbs. "VEGETINE," says a Boston physician, "has no equal as a Diooa puriner. Hearing of its many nuuuenui cure, mier ower remedies naa lauea, i visited the laboratory and convinced myself of lis genuine merit It is prepared from barks, roots and herbs, each of which is highly effective, and they are compounded in such a manner as to produce astonishing results." VEGETINE NOTHING EQUAL TO IT. South Salem, Mass., Nov. 14, 1H76 Mr. H. R, Stevens : Dear Sir I have been troubled with Scrofula, Cancer and Liver Complaint for three years. Noth ing ever did me any good until I commenced using Vegetlne. I am now getting along first-rate, and still using the Vegetlne. I consider there Is noth ing equal to It for such complaints. Can heartily recommend It to everybody. Yours truly, Mrs. LIZZIE M. PACKARD, No. 16 Lagrange street VEGETINE Prepared by H. R. STEVENS, BOSTON, MASS. Vegetlne Is sold by all Druggist. deco rpHE GENUINE DR. C. MCLANE'S CELEBRATED AMERICAN WORM SPECIFIC - OR VERMIFUGE. -SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. - The countenance is pale and leaden colored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed spot on one or both cheeks; the eyes become dull; the pu pils dilate: an azure semicircle runs along the lower eye-lid; the nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds; a swelling of the upper lip; oc casional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears; an unusual secretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath very foul, particularly in the morning; appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a knawlng sensation t)f the stomach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in the stomach; occa sional nausea and vomiting; violent pains through out the abdomen; bowels Irregular, at times cos tive; stools slimy; not unfrequently tinged with blood ; belly swollen and hard ; urine turbid ; respira tion occasionally difficult and - accompanied by hiccough; cough sometimes dry and convulsive; uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth; temper variable, but generally irritable, dec. Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist DR. C McLANE'S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY in any form; it is an innocent preparation, not capable of doing the slightest Injury to the most tender infant The genuine Dr. McLane's Vermifuge bears the signatures of C. McLane and Fleming Bros. on the wrapper. DR. C. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy "for all the Ills that flesh is heir to," but in affections of the liver, and in all bilious complaints, dyspepsia and sick headache, or diseases of that character, they stand without a rival. AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. As a simple purgative they are unequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. ; Each box has a red wax seal on the lid with the j impression Dr. McLane's Liver Pells. 1 Each wrapper bears the signatures of C McLake ' and Fleming Bros. I Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. McLane's Liver Pells, prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pitts- ! burgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of j the name McLane, spelled differently but same ' pronunciation. dec29 pHOTOGRAPHS. In consequence of the reduction in the price of the original cost of materials, and in order to give my patrons the benefit of the reduction from and after this date Photographs will be taken at my Gallery at REDUCED RATES. sept22 J. H. VAN NESS gjetttistrij. D R. A. W. ALEXANDER, DENTIST- OFFICE OVER 1h R. WRISTON & CO'S Drug Stork. ' With 25 years experience I guarantee entire satisfaction Janll 2 NO. 3,069; P R K UK "W8 KEK H KM T BS8S fOB THE FOB MS P V n DDD ATT .88a H OOL II D D AA T T I"8 HHH OOL IIDDAATT "SS H H O O L HDD AAA T a H H OO LLLL II DDD A A T BSSS: :s. w. GREAT REDUCTION OF ALL FANCY GOODO REAT REDUCTION OF ALL FANCY GOODO SUITABLE FOB HOLIDAY PRESENT O UITABLE FOB HOLIDAY PRESENT k5 FIVE HUNDRED SCARFS, ALL SHADES, FROM 25c to 75c, WORTH 50c and $1.50. BONNETS AND FELT HATS, TO BE CLOSED OUT REGARD- . LESS OF COST. RIBBONS, ORNAMENTS, HANDKERCHIEFS, CUFFS, COLLARS, AND HUNDREDS OF OTHER FANCY ARTICLES A T REDUCED PRICED J T REDUCED PRICE C 100 CLOAKS AT REDUCED PRICE C 00 CLOAKS AT REDUCED PRICeO- AT ' AT SWITTKOWSKY'O WITTKOWSKY' O. decl8 CLOTHING! CL0THIN1I LOTHING! CLOTHInIXI W. KAUFMAN A CO'S. CLOTHING HOUSE! GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICE. Havine determined to reduce our stock, we now offer to the people of Charlotte and this section of North Carolina, the largest cheapest and most beautiful and well selected stock ! OF OOO L OO TTTT H H II mt H OOO OOL OO T H H II N If N O O O L O O T HHH U UK If O OOL OO T H H II N If If G OO OOO LLLL OO h h n k znr ooo WE HAVE EVER OFFERED, Consisting of the usual variety of MEN S, BOY'S, YOUTH'S AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING FOUND IN A FIRST CLASS HOUSE. All we ask In that ntir friend nrwt mt&tnmara I will give us a call, as It will be to your Interest and i .ah aHll onirn Mftum .... .uin, am your purchases. W. KAUFMAN CO., Springs Corner, Charlotte, N. C. dec!2 pttUittjertj. J UST RECEIVED BT EXPRESS, Another laige stock CLOAKS, HATS, CO KTS, BALMORAL SKIRTS, And fine Fancy HOSIERY, at the lowest possible prices, at! : 9 ' - Mrs. yUKtrS jg noH2 , TSJt O&SEMVMM, JOB DEPAJtTMEMT fr tfJot Work eon m$ 6t done vuk neatnetS. dUvatch wd cJwapmtM. Wt m rmrmth, t Short notice, - - - BLANKS, StUr-HXAHS, .. , W LETTER-HEADS, CAEDS, TAS3. RECEIPTS. FOSTEJta, PROGRAMMES, HAJTD-BlLLS . PAMPHLETS, CIRCULARS, CHECKS; SO. t VQ 0O&8f XtttUiUQf Set. IMPORTANT TO PiBIX CS MPORTANT TO PAREN & BOYS AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING AT NEW YORK COST. A BIG STOCK ON HAND OF MEN'S BUSINESS SUITS, FINE DRESS SUIT8, YOUTH'S SUITS OVERCOATS AT CLOSING PRICES. In fact we will sell our eomnlete stock now at such low rates that It is within reach of every person, nespecauuy, L. BERW ANGER ft BBXX, Fine Clothiers and Tailors. N, B. We are selling a fine White Linen Boom Shirt, laundried and ready, for wear, for the low price of $1.00. 3tc22 A AA A A AAA A FEW A A AAA A A OUTH'S and BOT SI oo O O O O O O OO xrtj H oo V V V V v V V V V V V T vv V BBS B KB EKE K KB B BBB B RBB R R RRR R R R R BRR R R RRR OOO 8 0 O o OOO OOO O O o O O OOO OO oo o o Q o o oo O O 8 o o oo A AA A A AAA A A A AA A A AAA A A TTTT T T 9 T t r HM LEFT, WHICH WILL BE SOLD REGARDLE8.1 .OF COST,1 AT J. 'VOTER'S 0 decS TTTTT" -"tORN AND WHEAT EXCHANGE, , poiitofltolddrss.ta Faitlesluvintcraiirtogrb It to their interest teeall on ttevndefslpMd, )toal yr ground either fine or sxse. according foj order.. v .Thankful lonnsr ;pato&age7TT wlBj f "l? -' pt personal attention io au oraera xvw " ROBERT D.GBAHAM. eupBlatoadeBS'-' - i -'ill

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