axrBaouiprion iun : 5. . pmty. cm year. ipovS ' aOmmc. .f . ttS 00 .'4'00 ATM 2 00 Or JfdMA f 5 WMMKLY UDIT1CN j ffoeKv. ( fx tti) m adtMMM W 00 Out of the eomnty, ixxtpaiA, q jg SixMontlUs... ............. ... i qo Uvtj OSacrfis IllS ! We Meiflit We Say. We still have an elegant and we, 1-as sorted line of LADLES', HISSES' and CP.ILDRIN'3 F aMy Hosiery. They Must Be Sold. We will commence sacrificing these goods Immediately. CUR ENTIRE STOC K OF SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS AT GREATLY REDUCED RICES. Call early and secure best bargains. Alexander k Harris. Julyl7 oots and gUsts 88 vnmn U11U Stock 188 0 We are dally receiving our SPRING STOCK 1 Best Brands Latest Styles which will be more complete than ever before and, comprises the LADIES', MISSES', CHILDRENS,' GENTS', BOI8', AND YOUTHS' FINE BOOTS! SHOES A SPCECIALTY. Lower grades all goods In our line In variety and all prices. FULL STOCK STETSON HATS, and a pretty line Straw Hats, Trunks, Valises & Satchels, ALL SIZES AND R RICES. Call and see as. PEGRAM & CO. feb20 ' grij abatis. 0 RECEIVED ! ANOTHER LOT Or kuiil kwns At 6U cents, and 5 CENT CALICOES. ALL WOOL PLAIN BLACK BUNTINGS, at 15c. LACE BUNTINGS, In cream and black, at 15c STRIPED and DOTTED BOBINETS. A large line of Mosquito Canopies, in Pink ani White, ' AND MOSQUITO NESTING, ALL COLORS, at 50c. ANOTHER STOCK OF HOOP SKIRTS, Just In. We are offering some DECIDED DH1VES In MANY XENES? of SOODa Give us a call. July22 1 CAR-LOAD Fine I ijeofia J.?-arriw ou Wednesday and Friday mornings FINE CANVASSED H&MS, CABBAGE, CANTALOUPES AND TOMATOES, At 4 iu-' n it!ii! J 1o VOL. XXV. BARGAINS ! We are offering bargains in our REMNANT STOCK OF White Goo d s. SOME BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS OF LINEN LAWNS To be o very cheap. We offer at a great reduction our stock of Silk & Lisle Thread Gloves Milk Mitts. A FEW ROLLS OF CANE MATTING Very low, to close out stock. July 17 T. L. Seigle & Co. medical. A DELICIOUS DRINK For Use in Families, Motels, Clubs, Parties, Etc. HUB PUNCH. Boston t BE. GRAVES fe SOXSk The "Hub Punch" has lately been introduced. Ml meeta with marked popular favor. It is Warranted, to Contain only the Best of Liquors, United with Choice Fruit Juiees and . Granulated Sugar It is ready on opening, and will be fonnd an agreeable addition to the choice things which undeniably enlarge the pleasures of life and encourage good fellowship and good nature if rightly enjoyed. GOOD AT ALL TIMES Just the Thing to Keep in Wine Cellars. Sideboards not Complete Without Hub Punch. It can to used Clear or with Fresh Milk, Ice, Soda, or Hot Water, Lemonade, or with Fine Ice, to Suit the Taste. Sold by leading Wine Merchants, Grocers, Hotels aaai Druggists everywhere. Trade supplied at manufacturers prices by Wll son A Burwell, Wholesale and Retail Druggists Charlotte, N. C." Jan. 23eod-6m. TUTTFS POLLS INDORSED BY PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN, AND THE AFFLICTED EVERYWHERE. THE GREATEST MEDICAL TRIUMPH OF THE AGE. SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Ijqbs of appetite,lTauflea,bowelg costive, Fain in theHead.with a dull sensation In the back part, Pain under the shoulder blade, fullness after eating, with a aisirT clination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper. Low spirits, Loss of memory, with a feeling of having neg lected ipme duty, weariness, Dizginesa, Fluttering of the Heart, Dote before the eyes, Yellow Blrin, Headache, Restless ness at night, highly colored Urine. IT THESE WASHINGS ABE UNHEEDED, SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED, TUTT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases,one dose effects such a change of feeling sis to astonish the sufferer. They Increase the Appet ite, and cawse the . body to Take on Pleah, thus the system Is nonriahed, and by their TenieAoUpn on tbe Blsjeslve Orjrana. Itaralar S tools are pro flBfodTrtcyzl cents, as Mnrtay Sfc, Bf.Y. TUTT'S HAIR DYE. bit TTiTH iffWmsEin Chahired to a GLOSSY Black by a single application of this Dyb. It ' Imparts a natural color, acts Instantaneously. . Bold by Druggists, or sent by express on teeeipt of fl. - Office, 30 Murray St., New York. ! af Dr. TCTT8 aUKCAL ef YaUafcle Infonnatloa aad h 1 "itMhil RMfelpU wUI b audled FKEK application. Feby. 28deodwl Floreston Cologne 5a Matt Vrsgrsat and 'Lasting ef all Ferfuates. N.w, A FaiMonable. Sold by deal. f b Drag. & Pcrfum. cry. Birnatnra o( Hiscox ' Co. . N. Y ., on arary kettle. All Fanners. Mothers. -Business Men, Median-J kics,&c., who are tired out by work or worry, andj r tc I... mm mlriM. with IhmviMM. RbiMima-1 ail w.tv i .w.". j r i m trion. Neuraleia. or BoweL' Kidney or Liver Com -plaints, you cath belnvigorated attd cured by using; UVJeIMJK, IIT533 CHARLOTTE, N.C, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1881. NO. 3,858. TUB OBSXEYZB JOB tiXPABHtSXSCI Hai been Uioronghly snppltod fhati&a fnt, ana with the latest ttylei of Type, a wen taannef of Itth netfDeM, dttpattft mot t-pset. Wean torn ITTXB-HSaDS, CaBDS, . ' T1Q3, RSCTEPTS, POSTEta PBOGIUltQIirHiOT)BniJB, PAlaTHIjrKremciJ UBJL-nnrrs, m OBSERVATION S SOVTBTEK GIRLS. The baby elephant gflned 700 pounds in a year on an exclusively milk diet; and bad bli trunk to play with. In Peoria It costs $2.50 for each blow a man strikes his wife. A man can thus regulate chas tisement In the family according to his purse. When a man expires In Washington from rasing delirium tremens they say he died a natural death. Boston Post. Yes, but the name of the malady Is always "malaria.'' Young lover asks: ' When Is the best time to travel?" When you see the old man and Ills bull dog coming around the corner, sir, travel for all jou are worth. Boston Pott An exchange says: "Miss Carrie Meals, of fiet tysburg, who has been sojourning in Washington for three months, has returned home." ' Perhaps she will Carrie Meals to her "fattier la the Held du ring the haying season. "Does It ray to Keep a clean record In politics?" asks the Blnghamton Republican. It may pny, but a man has to economise to save twenty-five thousand dollars a year out ot a salary of live thousand. Norristown Herald. Now that Sitting Bull has been caught, why not send him to school? It is said that he is a lair French scholar and well up in several Imil-tn Jnu enages, but that he never would learn English. With the rteht sort of an education he mlani be came a sueC'-ssfiil politiclau. Philadelphia Rec ord. If you want to get the reputation cfknow'nga heap, do as Professor Proctor does. He guesses what happened three or four million years ago, and predicts what is to happen fifteen million -years hence. It is onl -afew years since he com1 menced. and now ha can get credit at any grocery. Detroit Free Press. An invitation has been extended to Hon. Robert T. Lincoln to deliver the address at the State Agricultural Fair in Vermont. Having been Sec retary of War four months, Mr. Lincoln Is doubt less prepared to deliver a very able agricultural address. He would probably dwell particularly upon the adaptability of some of our forts and barracks for fertilizers of the iofl. Boston Post. Southern Frogresa. Savannah News. Ever sine the war there has been one voice in this State and section as to the desirability of Northern capital being invested here on its own responsibility and in good faith. We have 'hardly ever" met a sane or sensible person, since 1865, who did not agree that what Georgia and the South more particu larly desired was the investment of Northern capital here. Much of that came, but the times were not propi tious, during the Reconstruction and panic eras, and there was no end to em barrassment and, disappointment. Since, however, the'State has resumed her proper; privileges politically and is mistress ot her own home interests, there has been a wonderful recovery, and nowhere in this Republic is there a better field for investment than the South. Thus convinced, millions of Northern and European capital , are pouring into the Southern States and developing their mining, manufactur ing and transportation advantages. Augusta knows what the factory boom is, and Atlanta is beginning to experi ence a railway bonanza. The whole State will presently be benefitted; and vast regions will be agriculturally re deemed. . The aid and comfort we all pleaded for have come. Moneyed men and cor porations are engaged in building up the South. Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi welcome these benefactors and make their path an easy one. They know what is for their good and do nothing to discourage capital, which is tne most timid or ail tnings. Georgia should be not at all behind her sister commonwealths in this important mat ter,and she will not be. There are some people who are in everybody's way, like turnstiles, and hinder nobody, al though possessing a slight power of annoyance. These men may attempt to stop the progress of the State, but they have not the Anal power to suc ceed. If they could, by any possibility prosper in their work of obstruction, the next decade would very effectually and humiliatingly dispose of thedaim of Georgia to be considered the "Em pire State of the South." If the unanimous appeal of the. peo ple of Georgia for Northern and Eu ropean aid to rebuild their waste places and recreate their industries meant anything and means anything, we can safely say that the man who stands out in public life against what the over whelming voice of the people demands, might as well dig his political grave and go to roost among some camp of cawing crows and sepulchral ravens. "We do not anticipate any serious trou ble in this matter, but why there should be any trouble at all, in case the popu lar clamor for outside aid was honest, passes our comprehension. It may be another case of grasshoppers making more fuss in a fence corner than their size or numbers warrant. Alt llUat tTaaitl. A titm rthllAstnrer YOU CW IJSM land m superior to Bitten and other Tonics, as U rbuiids up the system, but never jntoicates. S?j vHAIR . B AlrSAM colon . ijttiyi.v :-; - City Lot for Sale C1. S mmi Tt on thfl cornflr of Ninth 'street and the tiina 4 rhmVUsm-.ooWa, and Railroad, will either be sold as a whole or amaw uTtotwioUoMOby roTfSet SmteWeltor SXSSSvS8i TTOWP" bulldtogot taetdrj purposes. Apply to ,V ' -(l , Tito North State Mining Company. London Mining Journal, July 2. Incorporated under the laws of North Carolina, with a capital of $10,000,000 or 2,000,000, have issued a prospectus with a view to place shares which are of $25 or 5 each par value in this cpun try at 1 each. The principal mine ap pears to be the noted Copper Knob mine. This is a copper mine carrying gold and silver, and is a property of 350 acres, covered with heavy timber. The vein is a fissure, and varies from fifteen inches to four feet in width. The mine is opened to a depth of lc.7 feet on, the incline, and has already produced a large quantity of rich and valuable ore. The vein at the present time is four feet wide, and carries an average: of twenty per cent, of copper and forty dollars in gold and silver, per ton. This mine is fully equipped with modern machinery, steam hoisting .engine, air compressor, air-drills, sixty -horse power boilers, twenty-five horse-power engine, and two smelting furnaces ef twenty tons capacity are being constructed. In the ore house there are about 300 tons of first-class ore, and not less than 600 tons standing in the incline and drifts on the foot-wall in the mine. The ore is the vitreous copper ore, bprnite, mal achite, and chrysocolla, all carrying free gold and silver. The properties have been very favorably reported upon. An estimate of gross earnings and receipts shows 700,000 or thirty five per cent, available for dividends, and 32,000 to form a sinking fund for the twenty-year railway bonds issued by the company for the line from States ville to the company's mines. Strange Belief in Conjuring:. Richmond Whig. The Virginia Star of the 23d (owned and edited by colored men) says;, "We knew a white farmer who recently came into the city tar get a SPjQX4 con 1rire,r to examine his injured legito see hbv dfod wnofi'x'ed1ifm.'i WV'tried to persffiade him outfettf-6elief, but he persisted Jtod, YplA f tha proceeds of the saleftOls wdou'tiiyotldou investi gation, 'We-hareeeni; carriages drive up t6:t"hfe;dl6TS of ;ths6;idlored con- j urers'; ana nne-iooiing ana weii-aressea white speopHgo in to Bet'asi ofccult pre sfefrtttion. 4 Merirl (injuring is ex tensive amonff ; deitaiilcla&ss of white sijifaioTjeg DR. TULIO& IRia.'br Wknlneton. D. C. the celebrated edLmmlsaloner of the Ka- tional Board ot HealthTete., says the L.eblg Go's Arnicated fatract of Witch HAzel "is Invaluable.", Cures plies, Baro-rneum, witann, painiui perioas. heap imteifeits-etehltvo Effective Attatver to Ilelcu Camp. , bell front. Use North. New England ,Jpnrrial4t Education. "Helen Campbelr writes to the Bos ton Herald, fram North Carolina, about "Southern girls" in a way that moves us, after a year's examination of theiaine, to say that Helen should buy a new pair of spectacles and look deep er if she expects to get credit for a truthful acctfunt of the young women down South. Wtt have seen several thousand of- thm, school-girls and schbol-mistres'ess'5hot to say young ladies, within tUa past year. That a good many of ihm are exceedingly pretty, and are. aware of it, is certainly no mortal sin." That people get into tbe shade and stay- tiiere, by the middle of a Southern summer, may be imput ed to laziness, but. in our. judgment, is accounted for by the original infirmity of human nature. Tbat there are too many silly young females, too few su perior girls, (jh.ci) Is and too little inter est in bracing up.the mentalities among our Southern sisters, does not prove them so,very exceptional, as we have tbe same trout'lpj even in Boston. We only say that a good deal of . the talk about 5'ineffi"iei!cy," "indifference to good culture" and "sectional preju dices" of Southern girls is little better than nonsense. The South- is full ot young girls who have grown up since the dismal days of '61, of whom the country will think the more in propor tion as it knows them better. There lot has fallen, too often, in hard places, and theirtf)pprtunitie3f or study, soci ety, travel, and the enjoyments of much that is open to their sisters of the North, is very meagre. But we have never seen in the New England, or the Western States, in all of which we have carefully looked over the American young women, a more prom ising set than they. For cheerfulness and courage amid disheartening circum stances ; fidelity to family, home and friends; resolute purpose to improve themselves, and eagerness to enter every avenue of womanly advance ment, they have no superiors any where. We never saw or heard of more touch ing instances of devotion to the best culture than were constantly un der our observation during the past month of our sojourn in these States. The superior young wo men of the South are not seated in sackcloth among the ashes of the past, but up and coming, in the brightest clothes they can get into, full of new American hopes, ready to do their duty as it shall be made plain to them in the days to come. If a few more of our wealthy Northern women of culture would go down there and liberally en dow half a dozen of their best schools for girls, or, better vet, "pool" their money and philanthropy in a Southern Vassar or. Wellesly, where .thousands of these little women could receive the best education of the time for a hun dred dollars a year, the Helen Camp bells could be left to their scribbling with small danger of prejudice to the Northern mind. STATE NEWS. Raleigh News and Observer: Old bonds amounting to $4,700 werereeeiv ed at the Treasury Monday. Three prisoners, two negroes and a white man, all convicted of larceny at the late term of Greene county Inferior Court, were brought up to the pen Mon day. . The Richmond and Danville Railroad Company will make a special exhibit at the cotton exposition at At lanta. A letter from First Lieu tenant Henry Tull, of the Kinston Rifles (K Company, First Regiment,) says the people of Kinston will furnish both food and shelter to the visiting troops of tue State Guard, even it there is as many as 500 who make the trip. The letter closes: "Bring the troops on, and we will do the thing as hand somely as we possibly can. Our good citizens are thoroughly in earnest on this subject." One night last Week a negro family, living in a house on the land of a gentleman a few miles "south of this city, were aroused from' sleep by horses.at the door, and going out found a white man and-woman, with a male infant, evidently but a few hours old and unclothed.- The man and wo man had been making preparations to place the Child on' the doorstep. As soon as the negroes appeared the man began talking, and in a few moments made an. arrangement by which, in pon sideratipn 6f $5, the negroes undertook o take the infant and keep it until called for. .The man said he would call for the baby in a day or two, 'but he has not called, and the negroes still have the child. The parties, driving away f ron the house, came in the di rection of this city. ; 1)11.M ASD DEPRAVITY. A Cultured Woman who Follow In Her Hukband's Eoototop loKninr Phtladeli.hla Times. Mrs. Ellen McShane, of 1528 Cabot street, a woman of education and form er refinement, who took to drinls and, viciousness when her husband desert ed her and her three children, was' ar rested yesterday by an agent of : the. Society to Protect Children from Cruel ty. Complaint had been made that Mrs. McShane was always drunk and neglected her children, who, however, would be in danger of moral ruin if thev remained with her. Mrs. McShane , was fined $10 by Magistrate Riley, but this will probably be remitted and the woman may enter a ref opmatory. The children, two pretty girls and a boy, were placed in a private, farnily. Mrs. McShaDe's husband was at one time a demonstrator of anatomy; but became a slave to drink .and;-Ieft his, . fatriily. Mrs, McShane endeavored to suppoxt herself and children, buy becoming dis- couraged also abondpned herself tq drink, and then took a lower step,.: ; , A Judicial Decision oik Options. . .' Chief Justice Cole, of Wisconsin makes option deals "gambling, pure and simple. In Barnard vs. Bachus it is held by the court that speculative ac tion in, grain, in which there is no in tention to deliver on one hand and re ceive and Jay for on the other, are un lawful, and clearly, come within the statute forbidding gambling ;:and .bet ting. The court concluded, from evi dence presented in the argument of the case that the business method, practiced in the Milwaukee Chamber of Com merce but hazards unon!,i;pp&teetive changes in the markets jHhat sares are not bona fide, and that the understand ing between the-seHeFHnd-buyer is that the latter shall pay or be paid the dif ference between the price when the contract is made and the price when- the grain is figuratively sold. Unless the grain is actually delivered, and the coiirt Will not sustain $iitS;at,law. glow ing out of such transactions. ' . ; ' ' BECaUSJ! it adds to personal beauty bi restor ing color and lustre to faded or gray hair, and is beneficial to the scalp, is why Parker's Pair Bal aam is such a popular dressing. When King otton i Mtens the jFiBlds l xnith IVZusic Souse. (Branch of Ludden & Bates. Prices and terms exactly the same.) T"a 1 t n II . wxi - neoty ot Cotton ! Flenly of Music ! MAKE EVERYBODY HAPPY. KEEP IN DE MIDDLE OB DE RODE And read Kill's ei Cash Prices aii'J km aufflnicr Uifcp: 3 Months' Credit ! Cash n BALANCE Write to me COTTON COM.E3 IN. "i , 'taiaV ' 500 Pianos and- Organs ON HaNO AND CONTRACT KD lTOB TAT MUSI BB CLOSED OUT BKJOEB OCT. JU LOWESrCASlI PRICES: 810. CASH ON AN ORGAN. 25 CASH ON A PIANO, And the balance . 3 Months, Without Interest. This i flr expires October 1st Buy now and buy as cheap as you cn nextlau, wlih cash In your hand. This is neither "Pie" nor 'Tally," uui ,wu wit iiojf turn nominy. i . i ...... i . . i i ior a liiiie reaamp; mauer ana be na-DDv. (h-ripr frnm fV, time, freight and money. Address, H. M'SMTTTT. -Charlotte "NT. n MDTI1S!!! :0:- :0: SPRING AND SUMMER CASSIMKEE SUITS -AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. , BOY8' AND CHILDREN'S SUIT8 AT COST.- CALL AND SEE US. L. BRO (D n Ml OF jpiriiiDg sumdll mmfoiii$i o WE NOW OlTFER THE REMAINDER OF OUR SPRING AND SUMMER GOOES AH IHIsjM THE GREATEST OPPORTUNITY TO BUY GOOD CLOTHING CHEAP IS NOW WITHIN YOUR REACH. THIS IS A POSITIVE KACT ! W-OUR PREPARATIONS FOR,FaLL DEMAND A CLEARANCE OF THE. GOODS NOW OlTERED W8EI ft IBillDCi. mm Ml MlllKlllIS lEHErll A. BECKETT & M e Dp WE L L, : - LWrSEKIlS, 1U0X FOUNDERS & MACHINISTS, ;i.u ' f-MANUPACTUBKBS OF --STEAM' ENGINES AND MACHINERY .CONTRACT FOR CONSTRUCTION AND. ERECTION . OF MINING MACHINERY OF EVEBtY TE TION AND LATEST DESIGNS. )E8CBIP- ALeO; MAN UFACTURE AMD SELLaGRICULTURAL F011TA 'T K JCNH1NJBS, AND MILLS, 4.a ? SAW The manulactursn of the CHALLENGER PORTABLE ENGINE ?J0HN GtQJJNG, Ag't, CoUee Street, tetween Trade.and Fifth.... . ' CHALLENQB.THI WOBXD : J . .. m .... . Te produce a better engine. To 80 par confldjnee In what they claim, they challenge any mannracnirer of agiicuttuVal engines' not fitted wHtt- aaautotoaUc cutoff, to a competitive test at a lorleiror $500 to fil.OOO as may be desired. These engines' wirn 4. U and g-loot -wjoa. . :u lulyfl' Nxtt io&tjbmcx,. s-& ?. courtlaxdt sc. i branch omci, ARWjJION. n.. 8, M. HOWELL'S, 1