pacte m& Soft Srttrttti0 ()e Charlotte bscroer. PXTRSaitTPTJON KATX8 : oativ. V- VVfo wfwweo.-.. . . -fS 00 ... 4 00 hr-4 Mont. a 00 me Month 7 WMMKLT MDItlOB I Weekly, (in ttu county) vt adtxmtx S2 00 Out eft !. SQttpd...... a 10 six jlonti I 00 lite Sedtiettonijor OMt IS. VONHTH tUS iWUHMMt iia in iiniiiimiiniw wsqt, ana wrar tne tote amg Jo Pnnang ran jeiLtoi Tihrni flimii 11111 iffifiiTifaMg--Tnr : IJrTTaMEAM, CARDS, . raO0BAiqTi3,HAroEnxB. VOL. XXV. CHARLOTTE, N. C, THURSDAY MAY 26, 1881. NO. 3,807. T A HUMAN PENItVLUM. vM-'-m Staca. ita&toi jmene?". We have Just recetTed anelegaat second stock of goods which Is READY FOR INSPECTION. The handsomest line of Ladies' Neckwear In the city. CANE MATTING at all prices. DUESS GOODS AT A SACRIFICE. EMBROIDERIES cheaper than ever. We have the BEST STOCK OF WHITE GOODS ; In the State. Call and get a cheap Marseilles Quilt We are offering everything at bottom prices. Call and see us. Alexander S Harris. ma) 15 oat& a ft ghats 1881 Spring Stock 1881 We are dally receiving our SPRING STOCK which will be more complete than ever before and comprises the LADIES', MISSES', CHILDRENS, GENTS', B01S', AND YODTHS' FINE BOOTS1 SHOES A SPCECIALTY. Lower grades all goods In our line all prices. in variety and FULL STOCK STETSON HATS, and a pretty line Straw Hats, Trunks, Valises & Satchels, ALL SIZES AND BRICES. Call and see us. PEGRAM & CO. feb20 HTTTT TC 1 fYTTTT ,TS I f We have the handsomest line of Marseilles Quilts ever ofterred in thin market, at ex tremely low figures, The most complete stock of CRETONNES CRETONNES CRETONNES CRETONNE 3 CRETONNES Ever shown In this market. An elegant line of LADIES', GENTS' A CHILDREN'S HOSIERY HOSIERY HOSIERY HOSIER 1 H08TERY HOSIERY Ask to see otr T ACE TUCK IN n ACE TUCKIN PUKEIN UFFINVT M8BS P58BS T INEN D'lNDY? INEN D'IND Hi MASALIA MAS ALIA JACONETS JACONETS MUSLINS MU3LINS Ywi can get any shade of SILK MITTS, at any price you wish. A beautiful line of Taito and Lisle Thread Gloves. A HANDSOME STOCK 07 Busle Lace. Butte Trlnce, Pasmentry, Neckwear, Towels. Damask. Open Flannels, Hamburg Edgings, Laoes, Dress Goods, Silks ana Satins of all colors, Trunks, Valines, Clothing, Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes. The nobbiest line of Straw Hats In town, Giveus a calL . . HARGRAVES I WILHELH. AL0TLTTXRAT0RE4 ibb ateas at increasing reaaina; thai Interest for ocation. aad tlves onglnai ar- mt vital Imn. rbtnM' as well aS crUtelama af & nasMat and nuMt valuable Dabllca- M,noiia i:inztAr,tfr hatirvlKir--?' f uamoMUed adTtznceesai adrertuers. sign ODauanmt- aiTRraaemaH are anown ;euw n from error, ana are tane mpntftma$0tiaBfpAe not in oc in rtlae- iarar imit aim -aAfaTT-adMrnaer. aai Nffi ii If Best Brands Latest Styles 1 11 We have just opened the cheapest lot of Mitts to be lound In the city. Will sell you a real nice pair of FOR 25c. Real Lisle Thread AND- SILK GLOVES, IN COLOR3 AND BLACK. Call and get a pair of Harris's Patent Hook-l?ast enmg Kid Uioves tne best and most conveni ent giove in tne marKet. BARGAINS IN DRESS GOODS. Will sell you an All-Wool Filling Bunting for 10c. T. L. SEIGLE & CO. may 17 HUftical. A DELICIOUS DRINK For Use in Families. Hotels. Cltibs, Parties, Etc. HUB POIH. Boston t C. H. GRAVES fe BOX. Tha "TTnh Punch" hft lately be.n introduced, Md meats with marked popular favor. It is Warranted to Contain only thi Best of Liquors, United with Choice Fruit Juiees and Granulated Sugar. It is ready on opening, and will be found an agreeabl. addition to the choice thingewhicn undeniably enlarn the pleasures of life and encourage food fellowship and fooa nature if rightly enjoyed. GOOD AT ALL TIMES Just the Thins to Keep In Wins Cellars. Sideboards not Complete Without Hob Punch. It can be used Clear or with Fresh Milk, Ice, Soda, or Hot Water, Lemonade, or with Fine Ice, to Suit the Taste. Sold by teadincWine Merchants, Grocers, Hotels aa4 Druggists everywhere. Trade supplied at manufacturers prices by Wil son & Burwell. Wholesale and Retail Druggists Charlotte, N. C." i Jan. 28-eod-6m. PHYJI Nf , CURBYMEH, AHU qiCTEO EVEmyHiBE. TH.Mll THE ITEST MEDICAL PHFTHEA6E. TOHPID LIVER. iho back otjrt, Tain under the gtwrniaer- blade. XUUnMS after B tog, with dial IT THBI W ASITUIOI ABI UKHZEDED, SERIOUS DISCXSES Witt SOON BE DEVELOPED, TU'lT'S TTLLB r Pfiy aapia to acn cases, one aou . nwmi r..ii m.m tj sivtonlsli tn. nff.rar, Th.yfaCT.sus.Ui.ApptIt,-ndcPth. body to Tk wwmm Monrftalicsl. and by their thus the system ta Actum on in. dacad. Frtc as canU. ta Marray 1T. M'S HAIR DYE. r whibkkm changed to aGtoarr buck 07 a single application of this DTK. It mparts a natural color, acts Instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or Mat by zpraas on raccipt 01 p. QfHce, 30 Murray St., New York. Feb 23 deodtwly. flUGD SISSON & SOKS, Importers, Dealers and Manufacturers MARBLE STATUARY, x 9 MONUMENTS, FURNITURE SLABS, Tile, Mantels, Altars, Tombs, 140 West Baltimore IStreet, AND CORNER NORTH AND MONUMENT 8T8 Drawings i Minlf:k , MITTS Mm ii nline.tion to oxertion ox Doaj or mma. Irritability of temper. Lo wrptnta. joib ef memory, with a foe Wo nwmgfc WteA mom duty, wennw.qaattBM; nutfring of thi Heart. Heti Mtare thi yee. gollow flkin, Haa,ohe. keatieeT- ntuM xucafi. Olgjuy opurea urine. Samson's strength was In his own hair. The strength of the Hon. Sitting Bull and his tribe seems to lie In somebody else's hair. Walt Whitman fell In love with the fine-looking gray-haired women of Boston. Probably he was not made aware that most of them were still young, but their hair turned white irom reading his poems. The season has arrived when house keepers make a change of carpets, and the man who walks about his rooms much at night with bare feet should steer so that he may not get on the wrong tack. Cincinnati Gazette. "Puck" says this Is the season when "a boy may be seen drifting lazily among the llllies in a flat bottomed boat, with a gtrl In a big hat and freck les." The season has not yet sufficiently ad vanced here co admit of that costume for out-door occasions. Fashion Journal. A South End girl thanked a man who gave her his seat In a street car, and he married her, and proved to be worth $400,000. (We circulate this fie In the hope of Inducing the girls to be a little more courteous. r Boston Post "I've got itt I've got a conundrum for you!" he yelled, as he dashed madly Into the room. ' Spit It outl Spit it out!" cried a dozen voices. "Well, then, can one man keep a coal office?" "Of course he can -that's no conundrum." "No, he can't, a coal office mu3t be kept bl-tu-men!" The Whitehall Times knew a man In Its neigh borhood who went out with a set purpose of drowning himself, and as It was raining he carried an umbrella to keep his clothes dry. The London Athenaeum says that a classifica tion of books according to their bindings is In har mony with the spirit of our time a tine which has been successful in classifying men and wo men on the same principle. Some one who professes to be "up" on geneal ogies and relationships has dl covered that Prince Rudolph married his own aunt when he took the Princess Stephanie to wife. This seems to aston ish Europeans, but It Is as nothing compared to the experience of the American who on his fourth marriage succeeded in becoming his own grand father. New York Herald. NEWS OF INTEREST. Mr. Wm. E. Chandler, according to reports in administration circles, is to be provided with a good fat office as soon as one can be found that will suit him. "Unprecedented" is again the only word that describes the tide of immi gration, nearly nine thousand arrivals having been recorded at Castle Garden in the past two days. New York Her ald. Curly Bill, the notorious Texas cow boy, who killed Marshal White, of Tombstone, Arizona, recently, and cap tured a church with his gang and made the clergyman dance before the congre- eation. was mortaiiv snot at uaiesvine, Arizona, last week, by Jim Wallace, one of his comrades. Wallace was re leased on the ground of self-defense. There are 65,111 men in the standing army of Great Britain, and 70 per cent of the first-class army reserve 16,651 strong is to be employed for the de fense of England and Wales and for reinforcing the garrisons of Scotland and Ireland ; but deducing 44 per cent reported unht tor service, tne number is reduced to 48,787 available men. The anti-Jewish movement in Rus sia are still giving the governments no little trouble. It has issued a procla mation intended to give tne Israelites protection, but there is not enough re spect tor tne autocracy to give mucn weight to a proclamation. AtLompoc,SantaBarbaracoouty Cal. Saturaav nignt. tne only liquor saloon in town was blown to atoms by a large bomb. There was no one in the build ing at the time. Lompoc is a temper ance colony, and this is the second sa loon destroyed there by gunpowder. The special correspondent of the London Times thinks that the number of persons killed by the Chio earth quake does not greatly, if at all, exceed 4.000, ana that this is possiDiy too large, In the southern hair ot the island scarcely a house remains in a habitable condition, so that a population or near ly 50,000 persons is camping out in the open air. Throughout the northern portion of the island the repeated shocks wrenched the houses and fright ened the inmates without doing them any serious bodily harm, except in a very tew instances. Railroad Talk. Carolina Spartan. President McCaughrin of the Colum bia and Greenville Road was in Spar tanburg last week looking after the S. & U. Road. He states that the lease was made to the C. & G. Road tor it self, and not for the Clyde combination Cars will be run from uoiumoia to Hendersonville without change. The C. & G. is now virtually owner of the Spartanburg and Asheville road, hav insr purchased $308,000 or oonos, wane other parties own about 3200,000. This road will De completed to Asnevine oe tween October and January. Then connection favorable to the State will be made with the Cole combination just formed. This road as well as the C. & (i. Road will be wonted in tne in terest ot the State, and the prospects of the com hi nation are encouraging. The annual meeting of the .t rench Broad Vallev Road was held last week This is alittle road projected f romBelton on the G. & C. Road to Easley on the Air-Line, and thence to Pickens, bix and a half miles have been graded in Pickens countv at a cost of $803 per mile, and about four miles in Anderson countv at a cost 01 30u per miie. ai though this is a small affair, the people interested have high aspirations. They propose to scale the Blue Ridge, and then descend the French Broad to Asheville. The C.,. C. & A. Road held a meeting of Directors last week. President lias kell advised putting down steel rails as fast asahe net earnings ot the company would permit. The freight and pass enger earnings are on ie increase, Hunter, Climber and Itattletmalto Catcher. Morganton Blade., Mr. Clem Fair, the celebrated hunter, climber and rattlesnake catcher of the South Mountains, was in town a few days since. He is over eighty years old, but is still stout, hale and hearty and can kill a squirrel out of the tallest tree with a rine and without spectacles, He climbed the flag-pole at the celebra ted Henrv Clay mass meeting in Mor canton in 1844 and drank a health to Clay from the top of the pole, a dis tance of eighty feet from the ground He accomplished the same feat at the Seymour and Blair barbecue in Mor ganton in 1869, and the old man was ex pectins to climb the Hancock and En glish flag-pole last year, but was disap pointed, as there was none erected. Mr Fair never was sick in his life and can do a good day's wort; now Saslly answered. If & strong man, who has fre quently suffered pain, grows impatient and rebel ileus, bow much more impatient should' lie the baby, who does not know what suffering means. Fer the peJns of coUc, .teething, etc. , Dr; Bull's Baby Syrup is the spTerelgq re ped; Price 25a, It was thlaj "Trust lh God andkeep roar bowel open." For this purpose many an old doctor has advised 'the habitually i eestlve to UkeKldney Wert fer a other -ieiedy' so: efleetnallyove anmaathia condition, and that without the dis tress and griping which other medicines cause, it Thrilling- Exhibition of Nerve by House Painter In Cincinnati. Cincinnati Commercial. Bernard Koehler and Fritz liisgen, two house painters, yesterday began painting the large house at Betts street and Central avenue. Three o'clock in the afternoon found them close up un der the eaves of the house and sixty- five feet from the ground. They had just finished tne surrace within reach and had started to lower the scattjld a few feet. When the required distance had been reached Hisgen called to his partner to hang on to the rope until he (Hisgen) tied his own, when he would come over and perform a like service for him. Hisgen had just completed his own knot when Koehler cried out: "Come oyer quick, I can't hold it." His gen, as quickly as possible, started across the aenai image, out na not gone two steps when he saw the man et go his hold ana relt the ladder give way beneath his feet. As he began the fall, in the energy of desperation he, with both hnnus, grasped the almost smooth top of the fourth-story window cornice and there hung in the air, a distance of sixty feet from the pave ment. He then gave an exniDition 01 nerve that terrified every one who saw it. Placing the toe of one boot against the window frame he gave his body a slight pendulum motion away from the house. A second push gave him a bet ter impetus and as he swung on the re turn toward the window he released his hold and went crashing through the glass safely to the floor of the fourth-story room, from whence he im mediately looked out through the aper ture he had made to see what had be come of his companion. Koehler had not been quite so fortunate. As he went shooting through the air he caught the hanging rope with both hands and lessened hi3 speed all the way down at the expense of all the cuticle of his palms, which was burned off by the friction. He landed in a sit ting posture on the sidewalk and was taken to the hospital with a pair of very sore hips. It Is Rotten and Ought to Die. The New York Herald, which so ar dently cnampioneu uonjmng s side in the Garfield contest, is now devoting some editorial attention to the Repub lican party, to which it pays its respects in the following style, which we clip from an editorial in the issue of the 23d inst. : The public, we say, looks on with amusement or careless unconcern ; for the public is tired of the Republican oartv. The old superstition that some thing quite too awfully dreadful would happen to the country it the Republican party should cease to misgovern it has no longer nearly as much terror as it used to have. Dorsey dinners, Brady star routes, Indiana two-dollar bills and Hubbell letters have done a good deal in the last few months to disillu sion honest men who really believed that their party was the sole repository or honesty and all the other virtues The Republican tricksters and jobbers have cried wolf while they were feath ering their own nests, but the respecta ble part or the country begins to see through them. There is a rapidly grow ing conviction that the Republican party is no more necessary to the coun try than was McClellan after Antietam, and that the sooner it goes to pieces and makes room for another and better party the better it will be for the real interests of the country. People begin to ask themselves every where what has this great Republican party done and what is it doing for the country ? They see it j ust now engaged in a desperate fight over the public plunder and neglecting every public in terest in this disgraceful scramble, And as they look on with contempt at this exhibition, which has about as much dignity as a first class dog fight, they recall the fact that under Hayes it did little else than carefully conceal the stealing which it fostered, and that with loud and interminable professions of virtue in the last dozen years it has only produced scandal after scandal until the whole history of the party in this period is made up of Belknap, Robeson, Pacifio Mail, star route, whis key traud, carpet-bag, salary grab and a multitude of other jobberies of the basest and most vulgar kind, mixed in with the most abject subjection to rail road and other corporation influences And in all that time no one can recal without an effort a solitary public ser vice the party has rendered. It might as well inscribe on its banners "mil lions for plunder, not one cent for the public interests." It has resisted every reform : it has prevented the repeal of every bit of the obsolete and obstructive war legisia tion ; it has maintained every bad law on the statute book; it has shown in every imaginable way its total incapa city to deal with public questions, and whenever publio opinion has pressed it to do at least some trifling good it has adroitly got up some new excitement about the South, or some new, petty and uncalled for quarrel with the uem ocrats, with the sole view to engage the attention of the people and draw their minds away from public interests and real questions. The Republican party has in the gen eral opinion fulfilled its mission. Why should it not go to pieces ? Why should any one of its honest voters mourn over its disappearance t it may not be dead at this moment, but it is rotten. It is the creature of railroad and other cor poration and monopoly influences. Its most intimate relations are no longer with, the people, but with the railroad and telegraph kings, the Jay Goulds, Stanfords, Huntingtons and others of that kind, who own and control its managers and chiefs. To say that such a party, which deliberately chooses Dor sey as one of its publio manipulators and unblushingly gives him public din ners ; which has protected and honored Robeson, which openly courts the friendship of public plunderers, which during four years sheltered Brady in his star route jobberies, and took part of his gains for it3 campaign fund after the exposures made of him in Con gress; to say that such a party, which scarcely conceals its relations with a dozen lobbies, and many of whose pub lic men live by jobs to say that this party, quarrelling now over the spoils, ought to live is absurd. It has lost even the respect for public opinion which leads jobbers usually to divide their spoils in private, A Woman Kidnapped for Debt. . "Several days ago three armed Mex icans crossed the river at Sheldon's ranche, 35 miles below Eeagle Pass, during the absence of Sheldon, and kid napped a young woman in his employ, forcibly dragging her across the river Into Mexico". The reason given for the outrage is that the woman's husband is indebted to the Mexicans, and the wo man was peon to the latter in conse quence other husband , unpaid debt Thej)arties reside in a little pillage on the Rio Grande, ' Mexico,1 'opposite the ranch.The citizens are highly indignant at the invasion and kidnapping, on An established fact: That the such worcUas fail. No sub-agent about this house. any offers made by small dealers or agents, Never close a Piano or Organ trade until to i have heard from the MctSmith Music House. No man llvlnit can buy lower than we. and in selllnc a fair chance Is all we ask. Every piano and organ guaranteed for 6 years. BUYING FRO M THE NORTH must be stopped. Why do you send North? Can you buy cheaper ? How do you know ? Have yon tried us ? There's the rub! We compete with the world, and New Jer sey in particular. The man does not live who cm undersell us. Wo keep the best instruments We give Stools, Covers and Books. We warrant them lor 6 years. We sell them on easy terms. We send them on 15 days' trial. We do everything that a reasonable man can ask. PIANOS: Ckickering, Arion, Guilet&Oo., Math ushek, & Southern Gem. OEGANS. Mason & Hamlin, ITew Imperial, Pel oubet & Oo.& Ster ling. New schedule, new prices, note our variety of styles. mam LEADING CLOTHIERS Are the best in the State for At the lowest prices. A good The Best Call and see us early and may8 TTDoe MDDDfittD)ir (DoDirseteg Made expressly for us. We have just received 500 of them, at the extremely low price of 50 CENTS. A SURPRISE FOR QUALITY AND PRICE. These silks are worth $1.00 per yard, and will be sold for the extremely low price of 65c Pei? Yard. We have another lot of 50c silks, just received. may 2 2 SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS. JUST RECEIVED A LARGE VARIETY OF Ladies' Dress Goods and Trimmings, Lawns, Silk Handkerchiefs, Embroideries, Corsets and Hosiery, all the latest Styles and very Cheap. ALSO, A HANDSOHS STOCK OF Ready-Made Clothing and Gents' Furnishing Goods. Give us a call before buying. mar27 beckett & Mcdowell, ENGINEERS, IRON FOUNDERS & MACHINISTS, Steam Engines a n d Mi ning Machinery CONTRACT FOE CONSTRUCTION AND ERECTION OF MINING MACHINERY OF EVERY DESCRIPTION AND LATEST DESIGNS. Also, Manafacture and Sell Agricultural aad Portable Engines, Saw Mills, &e. COLLEGE STREET, BETWEEN TRADE AND FIFTH. New York Office, 5 & 7, MoSMITH MUSIC HOUSE came here to stay. No Only the Best Makers Represented. new instruments. Send for H. McSMTTTL Charlotte. N. C. ii :0: :0: OUR S12.50 AND $15.00 BUSINESS SUITS the money. We defy competition. Come and see for yourself. We have the largest Stock of STRA.W I I J Stock of Manilla and Mackinaw Hats at reduced prices. Shirt in tie 1 Jarket for S1.00. convince yourself that the above Very Respectfully, JUST RECEIVED, 1,000 YARDS. -MANUFACTURERS OF Ooltetlauht St. Branch Works: Arlington, N. J. We will duplicate 10 per cent. m.. i,,i . catalogues and Drice lists and T S facts are true. TAILORS ! L. BERWANGER & BRO., CLOTHIERS AND TAILORS WITTKOWSKY & BARUCH. ELIAS & COHEN. Office, Chahlottb, G. II! I Ii it 55 a ! ii 1 I f i Si ST! i ft 1 -A wwbw muaoQueby tne y?i.oik ore n apr2S WlW'i 4. C. UUKNJUt, . 5tsUBntbaded fWi-waileanUotvtm ftny, BALTIMORE, Md