r tK-.v. JPT ' LXTTX3-EX1S3, C1BS0, " " 0aqrw)4v,pqrtppdl.. f 10 TAfiS, BTXPTSi'FOSTZSa, WjfMUAi...V. .......... X '-- . -" j 00 VOL. XXIV. charlotte; nkcktuespat October 19, isso; - NO. 3,624, w- 3 XX) f - i4 i-1 i im ,h r rr Lir i'M h K- V L. 1- V T h 1 It? url-l K 1 1 II I 11 rtl r I - " ' FttZtt?? MB MrtCffaments f-STofcS:4 ei Binges PLAIN TEIMMIHG SItWAT irt fejea tbatibwuitlfiil jltwi of NPM'a CLOTH. teiUDtt tor Moumins porpoaes. which we propoM to cIom out CHEAP. OF DRESS GPS DM MIR SOT P3 WlBtKlUQ, Set. mil IS NOW COMPLETE, And Mk sn Inspection ot GOODS and PRICES before purchasing. Hiring gained tbe 4 eonfldence of the trade by M ! Dealing aod Low Prices, V J i. - . i.'-. -.. - . jlijU Hiin -Iff u au taat can be desired In that line. 18 LARGE. WILL A8SOBTE& AND CHBAP. We hare the best stocked t Carp pcppr,tmen IN WJE8TJERN NORTH CAROLINA. 'ALEXANDER & HARRIS. pcti4-dW Hi-! j We feel we can and know we will make it to yoar interest to boy oar gooda. will always And the latest noreltles In DRESS TRIMMINGS? All know that we keep abreast . , , with the Styles In this line. We can show: - - -a wry handsome sggortmont of Fancy Dress Goods -Wtth Buttons and Trlmnlng to raatcn. BILKS, SATINS, CASHMERES, MOMIES,-and ' . . HKNRflfit'TAS. We make, a specialty of MOURNING GOOftS. We tell a good KID GLOVE for 75 cents. " In HOSDERT we offer special Inducements. Stoit department Is complete, -andhas been se lected with care. All can be pleased by glrlng us a call. T. L. SEI9LE CO. P. 8. Our Cloak Department has been enlarged We are Now Receiving Our Fall Stock. t Gent's T(and-Made, Machine & Cable-Sewed BOOTS AND SHOES, ALL GRADES AND PRICES. Lafe'Jp 6 Childrens ALL PRICES AND STYLES. A Pretty Line of 'Mnks; Valises and Satchels, u LATEST STYLES Of CELEBRATED STETSON HATS. ALSO ' hm fiidts in For, Saioay Wool, fa) rinQim) US A TRIAL Respectfully, . .. -'-n .J.l A II U mmrm. H1a D AIM VII I CD & f llf"lf UWZ1 1 I AY. U .II T- rH HI IUJLotUW AA . mial.UVaJ ., WJf ,1L Vf I !, mowBing- aca ixA.te, ana. i g't43g00jiS JS ECEJViED A LARGE and more attractive than ever. etl5 ii - Ill y! (1LLER 19 A PURELY VEGETABLE REMEDY Tor INTERNAL and EXTERNAL U6i iUd when need CTDJlB-rfr t J Cjrlis, i and all Botel Complaint; known for Ken-Mickncaiu . lllnflli nwm nam or nicie. Cholera, and at lchHnliiott htmiaatlaini i D A I M 1 1 1 1 CD v'oiNy the BEST brinn wwrfy aadtMrmoamf rlif In au oees rf .1 ARD:;TiS i A t. A '. I'M HANDSOMEST fe. & Rosettes TH4Y:CA BX0NJQtf;THESITY; ALSO; i - - -r ' " nei?fflTjfMtlire( mi. 1m fventhlnar iou wish Our Stock of f - ;t-;. 3 ft 1 0 J 7. ' - VI tlA lll-rijv,, i,n; -j.;- H 'l ift uargraves & mineia. , rcrai fRADI MAIXfkt rtl KK T1AOI MAI iua Kemeiy.AD i5 . MtrariM aatul II -v .1 3aiaTtiTi-f .follow, ,s LuenotofseTfJ' abuaat u kMi r A.MMa.ITMii. I rf-.r "ML l'LiMlUM1.'Minnanii baeiC liiufetabt VU- l"ft. Premature Old Age, and many oQwr Dtsease tjjruil partlewlan are 1a oar pamphlet, wfaMi u,W 4jlh 1 tf t maU 9,avry ,pni Tf f -. jkji ! ,m lul C31Tl.ti- . 111.. . i -"i. J ilHBth,iHi4suri5ewrwlMW I aySferere Barns, etc o weft-tnea ana rrw c a AlwavK at harv .-14 l7vor&ternUy .Ti ll noM tp ba withouf '.Vs. It within the reach of all, and it will aunuali j ' k 3nanT tunealts costdoctora' bfik.- Rarf H nW Oaaa4 1 Mil.. ciaMea wanunc riq "NofiTSFli I -- ' ! VI PLNDID BTOCE: OF li Gootk ,11 !.'( .' YlVJii i . IT fW.W be ; on her, shefye lnj fhlevdays.,; i j i ..: 2fJL -i , , i y ,' - S ' HANDSOMEST ; ,;'- ' f J . it 4 i J w 1 .ft : 8he has ever offered to the Charlotte publki ; 1 :-J. i . AGENTS WANTED F015 HI FASTEST 8EELLING BCOgT-i .fe.li-liit-'"ls Dropplac a Seed. The land was still; the skies were gray with weep " tagr Into the soft brown earth the seed she cast; Ob! soon, she cried, will come the time for reap ing, The golden time when clouds and tears are -.- past!- j : - There came a whisper through the autumn haze, "Yes, thou shalt find It after many days." Hour after hour she marks the fitful gleaming Of sunlight stealing through the cloud) rift; Hour after hour she lingers, Idly dreamlDg, To see the rain fall, and the dead leaves drift ; - Oh ! for some small green sign of life, she prays, Have I not watched and waited "many days? At early morning, chilled and sad, she hearken . To stormy winds that through jth poplars 1lojf, Far ever hill and plain the heaven darkens, - Her field is covered with a shroud of snow : Ah, Lord! she sighs, are these thy loving ways?-' : He answers "Spake I not of ntany days?" . . The snow drop blooms; the purple violet glistens On banks of moss that take the sparkling show. ' . ok; : xi!.,. Half cheered, half-doubting yet, she strays and listens To finches singing to the shy young flowers; A little longer still his love delays The promised blessing "attar many days." 1. On, happy world! she cries, the sun 19 shining! -: Above the soli I see the springing green; 1 I could not trust his word without repining, ' . I could not wait In peace for things unseen : Forgive me, Lord, my soul Is full of praise; My doubting heart prolonged thy "many days." - : UauBxsock Cast Crry l ndlana Inpianapolis, ( October 16.-r-From 20,000 to 30,000 illegal Republican votes' were cast in Indiana Tuesday. The bolt shows it and the census proves it. fTheM Democratic estimates . upon. the State giving from 6,ooo to 8,000 majority were correct. The estimates were based up on pontics ot the Dona nde residents or the State. Ten thousand ignorant, poor, miserable, stinking negroes, from the South, were brought into Indiana; to vote away the rights of the people. These deluded black paupers come to Indiana and wrest the State govern ment out of the hands of honest men,; who nave honestly and economically administered the public affairs, and place it in the hands of a corrupt polit ical party. Think of it, citizens of In diana. The Republican- party sends Sbuth and brings to your State igno rant negroes enough to over-ride your choice of rulers, mat is to say, ten thousand of these ex-slaves now con trol the destinies of the great State of Indiana, its wealth, culture, refinement and brains and its two million of in habitants. This is one of the glorious results of the late war. Bill Coates, the boss leader of the Radical repeaters, brought into this State to defeat the people, as great a scoundrel and villain as ever went un hung, remarked in the rotunda of the Grand Hotel last night: "The people wonder at the large vote polled Tues day. Lord ! but I could tell tem how it was done if I wanted to." And then he gave a coarse horse-laugh and walked off with his arm in that of a local Republican politician. Thia is the kind of a man brought here to do the dirty work for the Republicans. He is the kind of cattle that help make up the Republican majority. I do not give up Indiana to Garfield. I give up nothing before an election. I knew that the fight was hot, close and desperate, that the odds against us were too fearful even to contemplate; but I thought we would pull through. I did not dream that the Republicans would commit such "glaring frauds and successfully vote such an army of men, white and black. I estimated that the Republicans would increase their ma jority in their great Republican dis trict, the sixth, from 500 to 1,000 votes. I did not think they would import and stuff the ballot-box to an extent to swell, as they haye, their majority to over 10,000, a Republican gain of 2.00Q. I did think, and had a right to, that the Indianapolis Democrats would carry out the pledges they made to the dele gates in the State convention if thtej; would nominate Mr. Landers, and re( duce the Republican majority in this city, if they could not carry it. The n dianapolis Democrats- received mdre aid: mid encouragement In the cam paign just elosed than any half dozjen counties in the State, : and still the re turns show a largely, increased Repub lican majority. This, too. when: tfie Democratic candidate for Vice-President and the Democratic candidate for Governor resided in tbe city. There is one poor little grain o comfort in tb5s, however. It everlastingly for time and eterpity cooks the ring of Indianapolis politicians. The boys up bera'are all right, but the leaders are execrable. - '..;,' A tnlque Railroad Celebration. C. P. 8.Tn Balelgh News and Observer. Apropos of thinking what mieht. oT could, pi; , would, should, .be ; djme the lauHfs oi onf town resotyea iasv,.ifeeK' to celebrate the completion of the grad ing of the University Railroad by giving the. convict laborers a good dinner, fjol. Holt' readily gaye the required,perflQls 8in. and last Friday, beheld what mignt, reauy.pe caiiea a notaqie tnaiiRs givingjfeast, set forth in the.fielbe yond James Crahz's farm, near thesnbt designed for the railroad station Jkousei A long platform table had been puij op .. .. "L.lvJ - : . . :THE CH ASH IJf B0STPIV. i : Tlie f laics' Pepofctt BsSk C mi -A Hecklea Adrertares. Boston, Oct, 15.-Tbat miracle of shrewd woman' inhumanity to gulll ble woman; the "Ladies' Deposit, has closed Its doors, no more to open them. It was a sort of goose which for a time laid golden eggs, but which has demon strated its inability to keep up the prc duction... This was the eoncern which paid eight per cent interest a month, part of it in advance. Itshistory reads like a tale of the delusions of two cen turies5 ago when the Mississippi scheme and the Sonth Sea mania swept away the estf nihgs of the simple., Mrs. Howe, the chief priestess of the tempre on whose alter the unwise1 ladies offered up their sayirigs, had a record which'fitted her much better for the inisane asylum of the penetentfary than'for the head ot a banking establishment. Yet when she opened the doors of her bank to re ceive raoneylfrom her own sex andtftke care' of It as(a favor to them, ' innocent souls mildly trotted along ' with their learnings and: savinjgs and .committed them to her keeping.1 Ih iahswef to their questions as xp now aire coma anom 10 pay such arate1 of interest1 as 'she did, she stuff ed her dupes with a lot of stuff about some Quakers who had' once lived somewhere or othef and who were fath ered nnto ttieirjfathers; first having left fin. "their wflfe a fabulous sum of solid cash for the pnrpos6 bf being beneivo- ieht. to' 1fotr':' lonfe ; ; women of ,his- rty; ' jyoboay 'fever j found out for a certainty; who these Quakers were or where theV Kved. vor if they wej:e i anybody andlived anywhere, why they died. Such peotile should have been immortal and might bave'lfcenpermH ted to keep up a perpetual Friend's Meetingon earti Inquiry at Nantucket, at Alexandria ana at every other place where Mrs. Howe said these Quakers had belonged failed to produce any tacts to show that such people had yer lived at those places. But Mrs. Howe kept her "bank going. It is; now about three years since she took her first de posit in a humble and : unostentatious way. Since that time she has scooped in about a million dollars, a consider able portion of which she has paid bat in interest and returned deposits. The balance-sheet of her "banking" is not" yet submitted to the public and proba bly will not be; But as many of th patrons of the bank left their interest on deposit,jand as comparatively few ol them wanted to draw out money which was piling itself up to their credit at the rate of eight per cent, a month, Mrs. Howe must have pocketed a prodigious fortune for such a short term of effort. The Ladies' Deposit had not the ordi nary appurtenances of a banking house. At first it was only an unpretentious room with a desk in it and a moderate ly sour-looking woman at the desk. Mrs. Howe iherself saw the company when they came in, and in the most bland and persuasive manner insisted that she did not want their money, but would consent to take it as an act of be nevolence, pure and simple. That is to say the benevolence. was a pure swiudfe and the depositors were simple. No ad vertising was needed. E very woman who deposited $200 and received back at once $48 for "three months interest in ad vance was advertisement enough. Such a woman might be relied on to tell ail her friends. Mrs. Howe avoided print ing circulars or statements or prospect uses or reports or anything which could give her victims a legal hold on ber in the way of promises. She gave notes for amounts deposited, payable as a general thing In one year from date. With the avails of her "banking" she bought herself a $50,000 house and fur nished it in gorgeous style. Now there has been a run on the bank, as chroni cled the other day. The persuasive magnetism of Mrs. Howe averted for some little time the disaster which was inevitable. Even when many anxjous ladies were drawing out their deposits she succeeded in persuading them to deposit again. But the tide became too strong and the bank had tQ go undfer. Mrs. Howe is said to be missing and the money is missiug.too, Manjof the depositors will be entirely ruined, hav ing deposited every cent they had. No? body knows, or .is likely tOjkhow, how much Mrs. Howe gets away wh. It is said oil wMt is thought to be good au thority that she and her alleged husband were regular and liberal patrons of cer tain lettery shops. Should this prove and was fairly loaded with '(substantiaf ana wen cooj&ea meats ana vegeuttyes, cakes, , pies, puddings, apples, treaty bi8cuit,cpgee, &c &c The convicts were marched np by their guard and stationed 'on each side of thfeir- table.' ReyMr Cheshire asked a blessirigdA the men fell to. : l thought it a pleasapt spectacle, rotrps oftwrsrood citizens stood at distance ttndSooked on. Th woodsand fields , rwere glowing' and mellowing: in . autumn beauty. Peace Veiled Prophetess, by which she Was generally: known. The title was all the mora appropriate because Mts. : jTltiigt ifald bwhlhg to some iafflictioh to her fad habitually wore a veiVwbich(lBhe Kevet raised in pcrblic.t Mrs. Fitzgerald Ijeiricrthe eldest sister Of the "Boss" and' having: been ;!McjCustomed. since :;chUd- :hoo4;to'ex?rc was :abl8 'to influence' him. whenTall p.thers faUed. Sh6 held faiences ur; ing a cauipiujiu vv uiun t ny l ucej veu anbeals. A'nu'mher of 'suocesf ul-' rneri ' ; oWe their positions to her, among them city court, Her pttwier wasfuHy recbg nized,1 and f reuentFyV to win W fsNor; she was overloaded with: presefiti. liam.C. Kingly, the ereat ring man. oh ce Jseqt her aostty easy ehttb' W 'rWJogni and good-wlH breathed on' the1; kin tfhile one " day. M gn6nlAyvahillt tQil was bfightoned. The poor outcasts ate heartUy ' aiHi cneerfnllyiind with ! 4iti fiess.and'.ehariiy.!. bestowed -l onj ihemx eeetRneiraamaMe. arM" directed the ! brftti tude1 of those whom hri erVed J Iff her criUrchMhe catholic. ! Accordingly: J an fairs ot wnjcn'SBe' was the patroness Tha4lhMUiat.the :neiWii;-.fttSi)ii-. MJWiyiwwsu; uo wu pi u:ouie,wa them ; they had done, their work' wl done morethan leed tha.bodies of these; criminals. Somejamong them mav date their;hoP arid, resolve, ofi reformation, I from tins nnexpectea ana entireiyun- precedented. act of charity.' , We heard ibatv iha :nmhd prayer meeting; that nightand- prayed heartily 'for the tcplpbffiapeHilhi,'I:r aran Bernnardt u Huate-fer TtAvnuL. fkstr 16-M'lle Sarah Bern- 2 Tne laws ox iraae. jca( iorms, , now w iraosan kpanu;. ; ituco iJyui--ii.2 noutj bualness, valuable tuites. sodal euette, Parlia- J 2tt&L?U tZLnsreldi "4u ill le Marie eiaiieA XajiyBeea8it;,rAddresa.to t TJie-feteamsnin widana, wnic-asi ai f5?.f.L;.v- ,wU.Un: ' posEim-aitaneoi:? y, wses toe coinpa- mi t - njr1 iTlle Jeanne Bernhardt? is jtfli saSf 1 cnS-day.naxt.;;v- : ,i ;' T T . . j. . . . A'.l t f Tl. t l tJlWn1niu.lrf iT ICre'S CnSlZTS3 lJri?CrS;y,! v itdlseases arirTfKHaa Lordered Liver are Xut-i W.n ..:.'..;,: i to . KAi i i 1 mostly : e crse xf l .aCn Aerenttve - r-i-'t-t l"leov total expenses for riaar 1 r-tila he";th tyr" . DfriP-Ti Im-j lliMtVoSS irovHIr .randMaacI.wlt to be the case there will be no use in looking for the,, money As for Mrs. Howe, Boston has no further use for her.; - ' - v; " i a taii i ' Veiled PropbetetMl Dead. New York Special to Qtieago Ttmes. ' ' ' One of the largest funerals of the year in Brooklyn was that attending wie Dunai tonray pi mxs. ji.unx iizgexam wao occupied a uniqueposmon in urookv lvn politics because of the. influence lie- possessed 6 ver her brother, and her arjiLf ltyto decide the fate of political aspi rants earned ior ner, tne utie ot the alacrity arid; gobd: feet was' hot likely to be tf ansieht;!, Ila b believed tbeJadf Chapel Hill hM mm tfotrier late resdencrV,at94' tkcordstteefc.v 'Her body was removed toSt. James' cathedral,1 where a solemn: requiem, mass-was off ef edff or ' the ! re pose of her sbuh -Th.hearse1, was . fol lowed to GalVary eeinetery by a long line ofoarrfages.1 "Mrs. Fitzgerald's hts -bandliastJe'enfcoiintV ttuditor for man 1 year id Kings county through her iijflu vaiyvt 1 .-a r " f t." t, ' " ' ' Oar Katlsaal Kealtfe otiikr ' The past jtesaob' btiaicuiarry I TdW V uua ne'as-ncarde'the'.BealUrof toe Southern"! ft States. anajeapeeiauy. lAscorwe wan catea ? xae. 1 siagwsv jnooeiA uumaiii eiiow zever-naa. I been fought sad vanoulshed, thanks greaQy to the 1- efforts of . tho late- lamented' r. Chopin a -the bead of the world-renowned Charity Hosplbii ot New Orleans, This institution 1ia been mlraculr ously, hs It were, preserved In' the liigbest state of. Jts-ef3eieiici-oy the large revenues it ' annuailrre oertas f sr stwentyaa yearv winmenclnt' 1808; from The Louisiana btate Lottery ComraoK. about Tormaiion ynit ee given trn 'stmncauon. dj xnui made to Hi i DffaiJttn; Koi 81 Braaaway New win-." '" "J"-'- '.'J ' I'l ! I'l-moj j - :t W-t' TtU PTa wy a. feHdiL hervS "and . blood fondi TetnniariT. auiT)ted ' tor and "warmly reeom-' merJJ t rour in? ,-lst aX physleians tot c ?n raldefcil.:yriaer:tl ec4 cisical exaanstioatis- tena. nervousness, a.eepiessiess, eaciar' i ana ... ,m.KJ J' 111 rf ' ' m?-- ..-lul. ;xy o -o" ' .,! .r.-,: "-' " -''" 1 T A A X. ". .Kali, v'muiw'i imm . J.t- Kuri l 'jrV.-i :u. (S Tf'SiA H .U wflr'fi'l tkt.- ' .'' , 1 :) -jv:4i vn , in r)rfiw!?7H fVi my OUR NEW AND ORIGINAL FASHlbNS" FOR lALL, rrj V !: i i:r ifi iiUiiti. .r'tiV.il i ..V " " Permit us to assure you that our aim In maruif arring a 8TCK OF CLOTHINO Is to produce Jashroh'abie Garments with goor Workmanship. OurH i ... i . . . tr i til i mm in i j . v. . , . . . , . . T We Shall Open for Your Inspection this SeaiqiJbYf.Fiar - : r 9.t.T rf'ltl Wint-ii:; The Handsomest Line of Men's Boy's,' YraftY andJChiliren's Suits, Overcoats, Vandykes, Dlste ;pIUls,tertt THAT HlSIVBB BEEN EXHIHITKt), BZADT-MADE, IN THIS M1BKBT. ''"' - " ''' v ' " : -j. . .! ; - : . ... - ; j .. .. I...; wBiNYtTB irv5ia"Sroi)'3r to ciiii oust the ida.it ob otjks 03PS2riijrd ...rf L. BERWANGER, s; BRO. Nf .WK HAVE ON HAND A FINB LINK OP SAMPLES FOB MEttCHANT TAILORING. GARMENTS MAPI TO ORDXB AT VEST 8H0R! X) NOTICE. FIT GUARANTEED OB NO SALE. T, "OJvi CLOAKS, FLANNELS, PRICES.: BLANKETS, PRICES SHAWLS, PRICES r- DRESS GOODS, WHITE GOODS, KNIT GOODS. 7. ": . w irr KID GLOVES, Every Fair v AinrAXS-tecl TO SUIT you; TO SUIT f. " '' i I ' '. -iii 't .' .' TO SUIT YOU i -.ri- -- - EMBROLDERIES;" HANDEERGHIEFS ,1: t. ! io Ij;:jV " TJie Largest and Finest SHLLIiVERX DEPARTMENT IN THE OTY. FIRST -CLASS TRIMMINGS. -A ;. '. Popular Prices for i nr. r sits. i! 'I 1 ill H I. - . "IMS Large SUck ;f itiotd Styles in Rbif Bresselsy Tapestry HireeIy' inpinl 1 : 1): if! iJ...i! : ' I. ..-'!) cots t -aif;?I od; oi ?rnj j r i 11 Sl.9riM p : MI' 'JiMtft f'-W 1 '! VVe have the PlMi A otis efforts and'fn'now solididis JQfliC Ttrftinig, we So'fO tiJril will be- an ttftll v atifaotopy.,i i.Trusting that . yon . will putt these assurances to, teat it jtrgiF- lli'iitf 'iraui; W fdVoTTttSf1tiS' wnHyoor orxleri w ai-e' respectfaliy joari - m &mv.L u1t29 Omi.TSTOCK i. jwtiUi..;. !Pf .fall aw :wintrjmwbS;::: ' ji J'' 'Of fJ. U i . . - - . . ' . 7 . ... . w . ' . w -w a w - - W id larger and more complete than, ever heretofore, and at; pnees se Idom equaled,! VmiAdneYr m 'i i 1 ' i 1 i !..'.! i 1 ., 1 . . " 1 ! r ' ' f 1 f ' ' : ' 1 1 ifi ir 1 11 "" 11 ' ' 1 11111 "g1 " 1 : 1 oittimmaiiXftanTS i&ttifte& AU. sMpmenUnandleltoJ lwst dantagth aid JunoM -amaga Joam.-. aawoi pwimait J:: i a. .rxric is-aax. asb udb etumar maareaa mu Xlrattltoinptoii. -Ladles' tiesirtoiBj hair prna aeffuBI kaalrss-lMrUiert)enidoalBC 7TT tvTX'STZiwPy aW'eman'w'no'Ij's iad'eob- !;Vf e ,m.',exr'. anowbot icorairaad St." 'alar . i i ' ' ' v t3t weekly DermraaHc nqouHtper. In . a neigh town, on account of toe pressure of other b 4s of- pa- fioe A' Ina town, on account of toe Dressure of neat on the neseatc!toMaa4jroM!el lered lor sale, eitner in wnoie or in part, xne er is wen estaonsnea. in a innvinc lown. wim osineas DrosDoetar and baa a bnsinaflB maU that would return a very fair remuneration to one who eouttatteBd to It ' i Vb aosotaodattrir lenna' will be glrear Fefr fty penmrtoa f.Coi, ,Chaars. for sin i 111 soonldAe reterencesrand aoay oue, . u InlvO-ifawrf, Ja , Jones, of Ta CXASurm Ob&xbvxb.' .Xnf applK of' am T KJUJa at t.e kzirssztizir PaLTTKCHic TvsrriTifr TimVi r 1 JTittt orwHnaiii tug scbool n Arrrfc'ijernLbeeins September 16tn. The tesru; r i r IS -a.eor'ains a list of tie eradaat's tr- L.aJ : 'i I t&.j; "wllVtaetr polsoett t-jgv r "ytf-stt.., teQuiremcnts, ex- THE WA31INOT0N GAZrm, v .5 ? ' published at the National Capital event Sunday awnraud resume of theoteceolnr week.newi BEPBXSENTATIYX SOUTHXSN PAPXB' There suputtlug UiB WMluusnJOTBoenitie Party Xdited by UEOHGX C. WrSSUaabbHvltKln la, formerly publisher of tne Etctunood (?a) F1"1e er!2S..ne f". for4- rsIJUfv' ,f!3.(K) FiveeODiestoo&ti jxS?!.ifty?2rS posta-er-I, 20.00 ' 822. Washington. LVd t j L.stT i Dee. 23. B i Tar -WAKTj l r; a ! tlve 0 . t ...ta In j f ! ....... ...'.. f 'I