She Charlotte bBertrtr. HA. IU JONES, Editor &t PTprto EOTXBXD AT TBI FtOTOltl6 AtCHABLOTTB, H. a. AS 8B0OHD-CLAM MATTM.1 IWEDNESDAY, NOV. 2. 1881. Attorney General MacVeagh don't take any stock in Mahone. A second cotton factory is talked about in Charleston with good pros pects of success. A bill providing for a national bank rupt law will be reported by the Sen ate judiciary committee in Decern ber. Several Sherman men in the Orleans Custom House have .bounced and Stalwarts put in places. New been their If the Stalwarts propose breaking the Solid South they will have to use a bet t.r instrtimant than Billv Mahone. He is too small a tool to effect much. A fanner visiting Baltimore, put up at a hotel and on retiring for the night blew out the sras. He was found dead in his bed in the morning. The Galveston News says that if Miss Fannie Parnell were a man she would be the leader of Ireland's cause, and would nrobablv be in iail about this time. - It is reported that the demand for Confederate bonds has led to issuing counterfeits, a large number of wliich have been printed by a Northern estab lishment. A number of Western merchants who don't like drummers, have entered into an agreement to buy no more poods from them, and have notified ' merchants to that effect. Judge Davis is trying to get a Senate restaurant keeper who will conduct the establishment fairly that is, charge no more for his wares to poor employes than to rich Senators, The New York Herald figures it out that the next New York Assembly, lower house, will be 59 Democrats, 51 Republicans. Senate will be Republi can. The great freight blockade at St. Louis has led to the serious consideration of building another bridge across the river at that point. A meeting was held a few days ago to discuss it. There is a school in New York for training nurses. Last Thursday fifteen young women graduated from it. They command a salary of twenty-five dol lars a week or more. There is a party of fifteen New Eng land manufacturers who represent $45,000,000 and run 1,500,000 spindles, now visiting the Atlanta exposition, and propose to remain in the South about three weeks. The trunk lines from New York to Chicago will put on fast trains to make the distance in 24 to 26 hours. They will carry dining cars and only stop at a few points on the way, thus saving several hours. Ben Hill has had a considerable slice of his tongue cut away, but much to the amazement of Billy Mahone, in his speeches he forgets all about it and glides along with his old-time elo quence. The Louisville Courier-Journal re minds the Northern paperswhich have been denouncing the recent dog fight in that city, that most of the spectators were from Northern cities, the dogs English, while the pit was furnished by Louisville. The great Kimberley diamond mine in South Africa has been recently bought by an English company who are holding its products for higher prices, in consequence of which figures have raised about twenty per cent We can stand a corner in diamonds. I m i m Prof. David Duncan, a distinguished scholar of South Carolina, for the past twenty-five years connected with Wof ford college, died at his home in Spar tanburg last Monday, in his 80th year. He was a native of Ireland, and a gradu ate of Glasgow University. Mahone don't seem to be engineering his independent business with much Buccess. He failed on Riddleberger, and failed on Stratham, on both of which he had fixed his pins with a feel ing of certainty. He seems to be doing work for the Republicans, but they ain't quite able to pay him in full. m a. . Hon. David Davis is one of the most frugal of mankind. He started early and has kept up the habit. When a young man he put every hundred dol lars he saved in a quarter-section of Western land. In this way, growing up with the country, he has become a millionaire. Blaine made a ten strike on his Ger man guests. Baron Von Steuben thus vents his admiration : "Mr. Blaine is the loveliest, most dignified, and at the same time the most cordial man I have met in this country. It Is no wonder to me that this nation honors him as one of its greatest men, and I have not the slightest doubt that his popularity will increase as time progresses." Paris Figaro devotes one page of its supplement of the 15th instant to York- town. Ona paragraph says: "Since the days of Yorktown upon what shores and in what country hve we not given of our blood and eold ? "We have aided Greece, Turkey and Italy. Tbe United States, of all Mima, is the only one whose a rati tnfl a h survived a hun dred years." Takinecareof the family is one of the first duties of a Republican official at Washington. Mr. Blaine has made a soft and lucrative berth for .his son Judire Harlan has nnt a recently gradu ated son in a siitto office, i He had pre- another: son, fudges Swayne and Miller, both rich men, have pensioned their (sons on the Government. This is supposed to be tire building up ?of the new. aristocracy. - nONOPOUES lit OENERAI" - - We propose this morning to have a Short sermon on the subject of monopo lies in general and the Richmond & Danville monopoly in particular, andj we desire to introduce the subject by quoting a portion of an interview held with Mr. John H. Inman, a leading capitalist in New York, and recently published in the Atlanta Constitution. That paper introduces Mr. Inman to its readers as follows i Mr. Inman is the head of the firm of Inman, Swan & Co., and is one of the leading financiertkof this country. Al though a young man, there are only two or three men in New York who command more capital than he. Count ing his wealth well up into the millions, ne has tne inorougn connaence ul talists all through the country, and his sacrar.ifcv and success strengthen him year after tear. He has lately invested haavilv in Southern property, and is now prospecting with a view of making other investments. In the course of the interview the re porter asked: "What are the greatest agents of development in the South?" "L should sav the railroads. It is com merce that builds up and developes any country. In olden times those portions of the coasts on which there were the best bays and harbors became sites of great cities simply because they were points at which the products of the in terior were collected and sent to mar ket. The railroads are to the interior just what the harbors are to the coast, and will just as certainly develop the sections through which they run. They will bring into cultivation vast tracts of land, heretofore too reiaote from market to pay for the cultivation of staple crops. They will develop mining properties that were heretofore inacces sible : thev will make available vast forests of common hard wood that here tofore would not pay for the felling. and they will build villages, towns and cities to handle the trade and forward the products of the heretofore undevel oped regionsithat they penetrate." Better than all these, new roads will bring in their wake new settlers from all over the world. It is necessary for their prosperity that they should estab lish colonies of farmers and mechanics along their lines, and already many of them have agents in Europe to induce emigrants to seek homes in the South. I find that in many portions of the South there are thirty colonies of Swiss, Germans, Englishmen and Alsatians established on the lines of the new roads, and this Is but an earnest of what will follow. The consolidation of the various short lines into great com binations with ample capital will has ten the development, and these corpor ations should be lookedupon with kind ness rather than suspicion by the peo ple. It is imperative with them to build up the country through which they vun, rather than impede its growth, and the humblest citizen who lives along their lines is not more dependent upon the progress and prosperity of the country than they are" It seems to us that Mr. Inman has struck the key-note of the situation. The history of railroad enterprises in this country proves that in the consoli dation and co-operation of railroad lines, transportation of both freight and passengers has been reduced to a mini mum cost. As an instance of this fact it is said that railroad freights are cheaper to-day than they have been in ten years. Art. I, Sec. 31, of the State constitu tion declares that "perpetuities- and monopolies are contiary to the genius of a free State, and ought not be allow ed," which it is clear to us means that monopolies of whatever kind, if they exist at all, must be restricted to their legal rights, and always respect the rights of the people. Webster defines monopoly to be 'the sole power of dealing in any species of goods, or of dealing with a country or market, obtained either by engrossing the articles in market by purchase or license from the government; sole per mission and power to deal; exclusive command or possession." According to this definition, if it be said that the Richmond and Danville Company have a monopoly in this section of the coun- ry there are monopolies much more common than is generally supposed. Wherever there is but one railroad that railroad has a monopoly, and itis only where there is more than one line that competition can exist at all. Can anybody say that the railroad that passes through Concord has not had a monopoly of all the railroad transpor tation for both freight and passengers since the road was first completed to hat point, and yet the people of Con cord, or Indeed of Cabarrus county, cherish the privileges and advantages that the monopoly always extends them. The monopoly fixes the rates of transportation for both freight ' and passenger to and from Concord, just as it pleases, and yet the people are better off than before they fell into the clutches of the monopoly aforesaid. So far as railroads are concerned, the same state of affairs exist wherever there is but one railroad, and yet the people of Davidson College, of Mooresville, or of Rock Hill owe what they are worth to day to the advantages given them by a monopoly. And this brings us to the point that 'monoplies" of this character are not "dangerous" until they lose sight of the interests of the people. Railroads are conducted for the purpose of making money for their stockholders, and the business has been conducted in this country .'so long that it has been re duced to system. They can make money only when the people to whom they look for patronage are prosperous, and these very people cannot be prosperous when they are overtaxed, whether by a monopoly, or by any other instrumen tality. Railroad managers are there fore interested in building up the peo ple's interests along their lines, from a business point of view, if they are ac tuated by no higher motive. Hence the Richmond & Danville "irnndinp monoply'! are to-day Engaged in intro ducing foreign immigrants along their lines, whom they hope will shortly be come producers of wealth and patrons of their road. Hence also the same cor poration are to-day making, it is said, a splendid exhibit of the minerals to be found along their lines at the Atlanta exposition. We may, therefore, confidently assert that it is only when the privileges of monopolies are abused that they be come inimical to the welfare of the people, and as we believe in the honesty of the masses of, our people,' we as con fidently believe that they ' -will always be restrained by a just and f ai? public sentiment when they overstep the do main of their legitimate privileges. THE MASSACHUSETTS lOrTTO. Since the Massachusetts Ninth Regi ment have returned home from their trip to Yorktown, where they behaved so disgracefully, they have tried to make it appear that they were very much misrepresented and very badly used. We publish in The Observer of to-day statements from well-informed gentlemen who were in Richmond when the regiment passed through that city, who fully confirm all that is charged about their shameful conduct while there. Of course no one will hold the people of Massachusetts responsible for the blackguard proceed ings of that drunken, rowdy crew, how ever badly respectable people may feel about it. It is their misfortune, more than their fault, that they sent men to represent them who were indifferent alike to their own reputation and to that of the State which they hailed from. But it seems from the best in formation gathered that they got drunk and began their boisterous career be fore they left New York and grew more reckless and disorderly all the way along until brought to their senses in the lock-up at Richmond. The people of Massachusetts are not to be judged and will not be judged by any such set of bummers as these. They were simply a set of uniformed row dies who found themselves beyond re straint and gave loose reins to license, and represented nobody but themselves, and tor whose conduct nobody but themselves ought to be held responsi ble. It is a proof of the forbearance ofJ the people of Richmond that there was no punishment inflicted upon them for their dastardly conduct. mmm t m ai The result of the German elections has been a total defeat of 'Prince Bis- marck and his bureaucratic policy. The only question before the country was the endorsement of the party which had defeated all of Bismarck's schemes in the last Reichstag. The people have now emphatically declared that they do not approve of the would be dictator's policy. This was particu larly the case in Berlin, where not one of the Conservatives or supporters of Bismarck received enough votes to en ter on the second ballot. Herr Henrici and Court chaplain, Herr Stoecier, who were the leaders of the anti-Jewish crusade, were badly beaten. Count William Bismarck, who ran in Muhl hausen, was defeated by 5,000 votes, and this is considered important, be cause he had made a campaign cry of "Down with the Progressists !" As one of the German newspapers puts it, "The result of the elections is a victory of constitutional principles over dictator ship." Poor Boys TClio Iiavo Become Presi dents. The second President of the United States, John Adams, was the son of a farmer of moderate means, who was compelled to work constantly for the support of his family. When at the age of twenty the son graduated at Harvard College, his education was his only cap ital for his start in active life. Andrew Jackson was born in a log hut in extreme poverty. He grew up in the woods or North Carolina, living in the home of a relative, where his mother worked to support herself and her three children. James K. Polk, the eleventh Presi dent, spent his early days on a farm in the wilderness of North Carolina. His father placed him in a store, with the intention that he should enter mercan tile life ; but his dislike for the business was so great that, at the age of eight een, he was sent to the Murfreesbor ough Academy to fit him for college. Millard Jb nimore was the son of a New York farmer, and his home was a humble one. When he was fourteen, years old he was sent away from home to learn the business of a clotheir. But five years later he entered a law office, and at the agflof twenty-three was ad mitteu to tne Dar. James Buchanan was born in a smal town of the Alleghany mountains. His father was poor, and his own axe built his home in the wilderness. When james was eigne years old ne was placed at school, and six years later en tered Dickinson College, where he graduated with the highest honors. It is well known that Abraham Lin coin was tne son oi parents who were the poorest of the poor. Till he was more than twenty-one his home was a log cabin. His attendance at schoo was limited to a few months. From early life he was compelled to depend on nimseii not only ror his living, bu also for his success in his business and his profession. At the age of ten Andrew Johnson was apprenticed to a tailor. Previously his mother had supported him by her own laDor. ue was never aoie, it is said, to attend school. His education he gained by his own efforts at night, alter womng an aay at his trade, and bv the help of his wife. The early home of General Grant, also, on the banks of the Ohio, more than if ty years ago, was without many of the comforts or civilized lire. Til. he was seventeen, when he was sent to West Point, he lived the life of acorn mon boy in a common home. James A. Garfield, like so many of his predecessors, was born in a log hut. When he was a year and a half old his father, died. The family was poor. When he had hardly entered his teens he was doing a man's work in a har vest field. He learned the carpenter's trade. He worked on the Ohio canal. He was determined, however, to have an education, and leaving his plane and his scythe, he worked his way through the preparatory school, and, with some help from friends, was able to graduate at William College. The lives of many of the Presidents prove that no boy is so poor but that he may hope.to attain the highest honors which the American people can give. The Weather, Washington, November 1. -Indications: Middle States, northeast to southeast winds, rising followed by falling barometer, occasional light rain and partly cloudy weather, stationary or a slight fall in temperature. South Atlantic States, winds shifting to the northeast or southeast, rising followed by falling barometer, fair weather and slight changes in tempera ture. Gulf States, increasing cloudiness and areas of rain, east to south winds and falling barometer, followed by colder northerly winds and rising ba rometer in the western portion. Tennessee and Ohio valley, colder, partly cloudy weather and light rains, east to south winds, shifting to north and west during Wednesday with rising barometer. A word to the wise. If yon are troubled with a cough or eold, procure a bottle of Dr. Bull's eoogh syrup at once. Its use mar save you from severe sickness. Tour druggist keeps It Prlee 25c. John MeQinneas says; Dr. Benson, I win pray d they eared me of Sciatica, iKeuraigja and' to 52 1 WM and In the hospital, andsem crvuus weanners. NEWS. Goldsboro Messengef : The best gran- ite in 9 vi w W OVULriJLl glOUlLCa AO 1VUUU quarry of the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad. Tt taken a hirh TVilish Unci looks like th vriprahprl mar hi of Tennessee. We have heard that it is very fine, and that the supply is almost inexhaustible. We are haviner real Indian summer. The cotton fields have taken a second growth and look white with blossoms. Mfallra that. Innlrsil A n.-, A mntt anr now look green, with bolls nearly two- imrus matured, ir tnis weatner snouia continue 3 or 4 weeks longer, without frost, the farmers in this section will De a Die to gather a second crop. Wilmington Star: The eagerness with whiclf Confederate bonds are sought after here, as well as elsewhere, is a matter of surprise to the uninitia ted, one of whom we are which. On some of the scuppernong vines in this city there are grapes of the second crop nearly grown. A son of Mr. Winner, the jeweler, was fishing oif the head of Myrtle Grove Sound, a few days ago, when his hook got hitched into something, which proved, when brought to the surface, to be a batch of humaHhair, evidently from the head of a woman, and one who was probably drowned from some vessel off the coast. The Wilmington canines are numer ous, and -they can outbark any other dogs yet discovered. They will not sleep themselves, and they will not allow others to sleep. Kill em without benentor the town pound, we write in the interest of the afflicted. .Let barking dogs be muzzled. The Confederate Bond Boom Proba bilities of Correspondence Between this Government and Great Britain Washington, Nov. l. Large pur chases of Confederate bonds are now being made by leading brokers to fill orders of English customers. The price paid to-day, on an average, is about $2 for each 81,000 of bonds. Most of the securities bought here come from Vir ginia, North Carolina and Maryland, and it is a noticeable ract tnat holders are quite as ready to sell as brokers are to buy. There is little doubt that this nurchasincr movement erows out of the deposits made by officers of the Confed erate states during the late war or $8,000,600 in the Bank of England, and possibly that this sum, which still lies there unclaimed, may be divided pro rata among the holders of Confederate securities. It is not improbable that the question of the disposition of this money may become a subject of diplomatic correspondence between the governments of this country and ureat Britain. mmm i m i a Firing on Negroes in Mississippi. Vicksburg, Miss., Nov. 1. A Herald special states that several colored men on their way to a fusion meeting were fired on from ambush. Perry Thomp son was killed and two others danger ously wounded. All were inoffensive citizens, and it is believed the assassins intended to shoot a prominent colored politician and candidate on the fusion ticket, but they had already passed. i,i DaaiU in a Drunken Brawl, and a Broken Neck, Atlanta, Ga. November 1. A Mr. Pippin and Josh Gilbert, of Thomas county, quarrelled while drunk. Gil bert pulled Pippin out of his buggy and cut his throat. Pippin died in five minutes. James Wiggins, of Dekalb county. recently fell from his wagon and broke his neck. Failure to Surround the Arabs, London, Nov. 1. The Tunis corre spondent of the Times says the failure to surround the Arabs by an advance to Kiirwan has necessitated some im portant changes in the plan of the winter campaign in Tunis which may entail more important results. We have tried Pr. Bull's coueta syrup In our family, and can assert that It is the best remedy for a cough or cold ever Introduced. Pi Ice 25c AS THOUSANDS DO TESTIFY, So does Thomas Roberts, Wholesale Grocer, Phil adelphia, who says: "Burnett's Cocoalne allays all VrritaUon oi the scalp, and most effectually remove dandruff and prevent the hair from falling out" BURNETT'S FLAVORING EXTRACTS. The superiority of these extracts In their perfect purl- lty and great strength. They are warranted free from the poisonous oils and acids which enter the composition of many factitious fruit Savors. New Bloomfleld, Miss., Jan. 2, 1880. I wish to say to you that I have been suffering lor tne last nve years witn a severe itching ail over. I have heard of Hop Bitters and have tried It. I have used up four bottles, and It has done me more good than aU the doctors and medicines that they could use on or with me. I am old and poor but feel to bless you for such a relief by your medicine ana irom torment oi tne doctors. nave had fifteen doctors at me. one gave me seven ounces of solution of arsenic; another took four quarts of blood from me. All they could tell was that It was skin sickness. Now, after these four bottles of your medicine, my skin is well, clean ana smootn as ever. uinbt jutochk. ANSWER THIS. Is there a person living who ever saw a case of ague, biliousness, nervousness, or neuralgia, or aiy disease of the itomsch, liver, or kidneys that Hop Bitters win not curer BRAIN and NERVE. Wells' Health Ben ewer, greatest remedy on earth for Impotence, leanness. Sexual debility, &c $1, at druggists. Depot J. H. McAden, Charlotte. -Wok MU. CITY PROPERTY FOR SALE. A DESIRABLE residence, three blocks from the public square in Charlotte, will be sold cheap and on reasonable terms to the right kind of a purchaser. The dwelling is on a lull lot, has nine comfortable rooms, brick kitchen, fine well of wa ter, etc. The house Is admirably adapted for the residence of a lawyer, doctor or preacher, having an aamrraoie UDrary or smay room, Duut ior the purpose. Jfor rartiisr particulars, price, terms, etc.. appiy at xnitj vxxivjs. july20,dtf City Lot for Sale Cheap. THE Lot on the corner of Ninth street and the North Carolina Railroad, fronting 140 feet on Ninth street and 196 feet on the North Carolina Railroad, win either be sold as a whole or divided into two Iota of 70 by 198 feet. Suitable either for building or factory purposes. Apply to Jun25.tf 3. S. PHILLIPS Sale of Real Mate. BT virtue of authority, conferred In a certain mortgage deed executed on the 81st day of January, 1880, by Thomas J. Sprinkle and Lou isa J. Sprinkle, his wife, of the county of Meck lenburg, North Carolina to the North Carolina State Life Insurance Company, of Raleigh, N. C, and recorded In the Register's Office of Mecklenburg county, In book 23, page 228. 1 will offer for sale af the court bouse, in the City of Charlotte, to the highest bidder, on Saturday, the 29th day of Oc tober, at 12 o'clock M., Lots 1792 and 1795, in the, plan of the City of Charlotte, situated between C and B streets, and adjoining lands of S. J. Whltehurst, H. F. Elliott and Mrs. H. W. Tatum. For terms of sale apply to THOS. H. HADGHTON, Agt N. C. State Life Ins. Co., Charlotte. Charlotte, September 27, 1881. sep27.dlw, wtd STATE TURKEYS, GEESE, CHICKENS, CRANBERRIES, CHESTNUTS, LOOSE TICKLES by the dozen or 100, AND FINE NORTHERN APPLES, AT S. M. HOWELL'S. octt2 t f Ladies, Gentlemen, Misses, Boys OUR STOCK OF BOOTS AND SHOES FOR THE FALL AND WINTER TRADE. E guarantee that every pair of SHOES we sell shall be found Just as represented, and shall allow no house to give yon better goods than we do for the money. Our stock has been carefully selected with a view to the wants of all classes of customers, and comprises a full line of beautiful and seasonable goods, of the very best quality and all grades, from the finest French Kid Button Boot to the Heaviest Brogan. If you wish to get your boots and shoes to suit you and at the lowest possible prices, you cannot do better than at our store. Give us a calL sepl.S "It feels like a ball of fire rolling up and down the chest," is a common expression among suffer ers from indigestion. Then use TARRANT'S SELTZER APERIENT get the system into a healthy condition, so that the digestive organs can do their legitimate work, and you won't be troubled after eating. Dyspep sia Is the fruitful mother of many sad diseases re sulting from the torpid condition of the stomach, and this aperient carries off easily and pleasantly the cause, and thus cures the disease. Sold by all druggists. Jun5 d&weodtimo DR. C. W. BENSON, of Baltimore, Md., Inventor and proprietor of the celebrated Celery and Chamomile Pills. These pills are prepared expressly to cure Sick Headache, Nervous Head ache, Neuralgia, Nervousness, Paralysis, Sleep lessness and Dyspepsia, and will cure any case, no matter how obstinate, If properly used. They are not a cureall, but only for those special disease?. They contain no opium, morphine or quinine, and are not a purgative, but regulate the bowels and cure constipation by curing or removing the cause of it. They have a charming effect upon the skin, and a lovely quieting effect upon the nervous sys tem, simply by feeding its ten thousand hungry, yes, in some cases, starving absorbents. They make or create nerve matter and give power, force and buoyancy to the nerves, and In that way in crease mental power, endurance and brilliancy of mind. Nobody that has a nerfous system should neglect to take them two or three months in each year, as a nerve food, if for no other purpose. Sold by all druggists. Price 50 cents a box. De- DOt. 106 North Eutaw street Baltimore. Md. By mail, two boxes for $1 or six boxes for $2.50, to any address. DR. C. W. BENSON'S SKIN CURE Is Warranted to Cure ECZEMA, TETTERS, HUMORS, INFLAMMATION, MILK CRUST, ALL ROUOH SCALY ERUPTIONS, DISEASE8 OF HAIR AND SCALP, SCROFULA ULCER8, PIMPLES and TENDER ITCHINCSonaUpartaof the body. It maiea the skin white, mat and smooth; removes tan and freckles, and is the BEST toilet dressing in THE WORLD. Elegantly put up, two bottles in one package, consisting of both internal and external treatment. All first class druggists have it. IYice $ 1 . por paekags. MRS. LYD1A E. PINXHAM, OF LYNN, MASS., LYDIA E. PINKHAM'8 VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Is a Positive Cure for all those Painful Complaints and Weaknesses e common toonr best female population It will core entirely the worst form of Female Com plaint, all ovarian troubles, Inflammation and TJlcera Oon, Falling and Displacements, and the consequent Spinal Weakness, and is particularly adapted to the Change of life. It will dissolve and expel tumors from the uteruln an early stage of development. The tendency to can oerous humors there is checked yery speedily by its use. It remoree falntness, flatulency, destroys all crarlng; for stimulants, and relieves weakness of the stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indi gestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by its use. It will at all times and under all circumstances act In harmony with the laws that govern the female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex this Compound is unsurpassed. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'8 VEGETABLE COM POUND is prepared at S33 and S35 Western Avenue, Lynn,ltass. Price $1. Six bottles for S6. Bent by mail In the form of pills, also in the form of lozenges, on receipt of price, il per box for either. Krs. Plnkham freely answers all letters of inquiry. Send for pamph let. Address as above. Mention thtt Paper. Wo family should be without LYDIA E. PIHXHAIPS LIVER PILLS. They cure constipation, biliousness( and torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box. j- Sold by oil Dmegists. v ep3 PUBLIC AUCTION. THE sale of Jewelry, drc, at Butler's store, will be continued Monday evening, Oct 31st, at ISO o'clock, and every evenlDg at the same time and place until all the goods are disposed of. JrU XI. AXJS2LAJND&H, oct80 tf Sheriff. Perry &Co.'s Pens Bala t' ivisonjrBJakeman; Taylor NEW YORK. 3&a?20-42tawiclrr; CANNOT FAIL TO BE SUITED IX A. E. HARVEY - I -GENERAL "Wholesale 1217 CARY Because of the cheap rates of transportation, and the location of Richmond, she offers spe cial lnducemeats to Wholesale Buyers in North W. T, BLACKWELL & GO. Durham, N. C. Manufacturers of the Original and Only Genuine - XaiOE MARK. TOBACC Mar 22 ly 8 CORNi! CORN1! CORN! FLOUR ! BAGGING AND TIES Wtsare agents for THE WATT PLOW Will sell it LOWEB.thaa. you can buy an other good plow. Full assortment always on hand. Call and tee us before purchasing. MAYER & ROSS. aug26 FOB CONFEDERATE BONDS ! WANTED 810,000,000 Coupon Bonds Until orders exhausted will pay $2.50 per $ 1 ,000 for from $1,000 to $1,000,000 of these bonds with all the coupons attached maturing In 1865 (except the one due Jan. 1, 1865), and since at tached. The present demand for these otherwise valueless securities is so apparently causeless and likely to terminate at any moment, that the great est speed snouia do usea in iorwaraing me Donas. Send by registered mail at once, and I will remit by return mall check on N. T. Bank at the above rate. Those who prefer can ship by express C. O. D., with leave to examine. If by any chance bonds arrive after order is exhausted, I will return by next mail. Send to address below. RAPHAEL J. MOSES, Jr., Attorney at Law, octSO dlw wit 61 Wall street, New York. THE ATTENTION Of the Trade generally, and also the consumer, Is called to our special brands of saleable and staple Smoking Tobaccos Sitting Bull, Durham Long Cuts and Rival Durham to which we are now adding a full line of the latest styles of the most staple grades of Plug and Twist Tobaccos. We can, in a few weeks, offer lducements in Chewing Tobaccos that no other manufacturers can equal. Our salesmen will make regular trips to Charlotte, and the trade of all good merchants Is respectful ly solicited. & H. POGUK, may7 Durham, N.C FOR SALE. I WILL offer for sale at public auction in front of the court house in the city of Charlotte, on Monday, Nov. 7th, 1881, that desirable building lot fronting 113 feet on Church street, and run ning back 172 feet on Stonewall street Terms t Four months note with approved secur ity, bearing 6 per cent interest from day of sale. Title reserved till paid for. W. B. Ml EES, novltds President A., T. O. R. B. Co. STOLEN- REWARD, A DARK bay horse, 7 years old. with a few white saddle marks, was stolen from my Btables, 8 mllaa wAat Af rnnmnl. bit finrtngv ninkt t jh Ml w wuwawy ll WUUUiy 1 1 1 Will give $25 reward for the recovery of the horse, and $25 more for the arrest of the thief, with infor Ml and Children RANKIN & BRO., Central Hotel Block. Trade Street. BURGESS WL wotearieaa4Ketasriiirsi ALL KINDS Or FURNITURE BEDDING, &C. A TOLL LOT Of Cheap Bedsteads, AKB LOUXQXS, Parlor & Chamber Suits. OOTTDO Off AU EIMM W KATO. m. i wm nun i AiiR.M.a cS BLAIR, Grocers STREET, RICHMOND, VA. Carolina. We claim to stand at the top. Our claim for merit is based tip on tlie fact that a chemical analysis proves that the tobacco grown in our section is better adapted tomakeaGOOD .PURE, satisfactory emokc than ANY llLK tobacco grown in the world; and being situated in the HEART of this fine tobacco section, WE have the PICK of tlie offerings. The public ap preciate this; hence our sales EXCEED the products of ALL the leading manufactories com bmed. s&r'Jyone qmuuie urucxs ii bears the trade-mark of the Bull. UXiscjellatijeous. 'win Springs AT $3.00 PEB 8ET. AN IMMENSE STOCK OF mm n ALSO Window Shades, My Carriages, CHROMOS and CORNICES. A full line of E. M. ANDREWS, WHOLESALE ft RETAIL FURNITURE DBALEB AT WHITE FBONT. oct23 CHINA PALACE OF J. Brookfield & Co. New Goods Arriving Daily. The finest collection of Triple k Quadruple Silver Plated Ware. TBIPLE PLATE TABLE KNIVES $4-60 per dot TRIPLE PLATE on WHUE METAL CASTORS, 5 CUT GLASS BOTTLES, $4 EACH QUADRUPLE PLATS X PICKLE CASTORS, $2.50 EACH. W Fine Poroelalne Tea Setts, 44 pieces, $5. Fine Poroelalne Dinner Setts, 100 pieces, 919. GOBLETS 75 ccn's and $1 per Dczen. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Coffins ani Mete LARGE LINE OF FANCY GOODS JUST TO HAND. oct30 novi oi- n. V. CALDWELL.

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