r V. 4 4 taj it-?!': r 1 t ... . ?. ,- VOLUME XXX. HARIyrTEr. y 1883, PRICEIFIE OEM jS. - ",,r - . N-(ri - - -srrjrrxx fl 4 f L.-ArA.y Ar A ' ' 77 flv , , -. - r..T"k 1 III HI JUST RECEIVED Another lot of Misses' and Children's Bibbed Hose, and Ladies' Fleeced lined Balbrigan Hose. A nice line of Gent's Worsted and Cashmere Half -Hose. We wish to call your special attention to our Black Cashmeres and Black Silks, as the handsomest goods that have ever been shown in this market. A large line of Colored Cashmeres from 12ic to 81.50 per yard, and Colored 8ilks from 60c to SI 50 per yard. Colored f nd Black Satins from 60c to $2.00. Silk Ottomans, all colors and blacks. Our stock of Velvets. Velveteens, Plushes and Velvet Ribbons, is very com plete and at low prices. If you wish a Velvet suit come and see us. A nice line of Dress Flannels from 75c to $1.50, embracing all the staple and new shades. White Nun's Veilings, White Alpacas, &c., 6 Button Kids, very cheap. A large line of Kids in Mousquetaire, Foster-Lace and Button, in all the new shades and prices. Jersey Jackets, from $2.00 up, embracing some nice ones pleated in black. A large line of Ladies' Wraps, embracing Jackets from $2.00 up. Ulsters, Pale tot', Pellices, Circulars, Russian Circulars, etc., etc., at prices to sell. Look at them. - A heavy stock of Blankets, Ladies1, Gent's and Children's Underwear. A specialty in Ladies' Scarlet Vests. Just received some new Damasks, Doylies and Towels, very cheap. A large stock of Ready-made Clothing and Gent's Gurnishing Goods. The Hercules Shirt, the best unlaundried Shirt for $1.00. Our "Adjustable Hip" Corset is having a big run, and is very popular. Look at it. The best 4-4 Bleached Domestic at 10 cents. When in need of Ladies or Children's Shoes don't forget, to look at our goods from the celebrated factory of Eyitt & Brj. A nice line of Turner's hand-sewed Gent's shoes, every pair warranted. Call to see us. our prices are' right, our goods are stylish, and we will be ever so glad to show what we have, order what we haven't. Special attention to orders, Truly, P. H lOO IMiMses' and Children'Gossamen at &1.O0. NEW. ARRIVAL OF GOODS! This week we will offer a large stock of VELVETS and iPLUSHES at much less than their value. " j Also a large stock of DRESS FLAN NELS. , - Our stock of CASHMERES have been replenished in all' grades, from llc to $1.50 per yard. , Mk to.ee our new PATENT SHIRT, something very -desirable. , t : " ' ' - - ... . This week we 'will offefio thetrad one or xae , oest huu bluujlb To be f eund in the State. a wg nve ua oiift mjtp. vgg For Ladies, Gentlemen ahd CSiildreii. Many other goods in ' stock and arriv ' , ing daily Come aiuf" look atouretoek and get prices. . l.i' T. L Seiglt & (o. OUR h and Winter STOCK OF Trunks and Valises. Is'aow complete, and was MaQafaetiired to Oar Order for RETAIL TRADE. WR have th best and. most stylish makes of Ladies.' Misses' and children's. Shoes and Slippers, all kind and prices ' Gonts';'Boysrand Tooths' Boots and Shoes, to dt and salt all bia ses of the trade. M Silk Bafs a Specialty. Hen's, Boys' and Tooths' Hats, all k'nds. Trunks arid VallsesV all priees. Shawl and Track Straps, Blackings, ' Blacking Brashes and bhoe Dressings. ; COME AND SEE US. PEGRAn&CO., First NSUleaas Bank Batldlns; SAMB PLACE. ;, Men's fBffat8 AT LOW PRICES loots, Shoes, HATS, d Our Stock Ui). WE DESIRE TO THANK Our Patrons For past favors, and trawt that they and many new ones will avail tnemse ves 1 1 the Advantages We Offer Them in Our Large and well selected Stock of BOOTS AND SHOES, Whlca Is now full and complete n all lines from tli finest to the heaviest We offer yon ctaolc KOOds of the very best ma es, guarantee satlaf ac Hon, and wUl tee to It that y .a net always The Worth of Your Mouey. - We oordlally Invite all to call, examine and sup ply themselves with all that may be needed In our line. a. 'fi. RANKIN & BRO ' see: Our Fall and Winter Stock of Gents', Ladies', Misses' and FINE SHOES Which is now complete in every line from the heaviest quality of Planters' and Laborers' Shoes and all kinds of School Shoes, np to one of the finest se lections of Philadelphia ana newara Custom Made Shoes that has ever been offered in this market . We have many novelties to show you in our line as well as a 1 arge stock of Common Sense Shoes. Come and see us when you want a pair of Shoes of any kind, and we shall endeavor to make it pay jou to duj from us. " ' CRAY & BRO. FiiOSl THE SOUTH. A Perfect Combination frith two Siltent Advantage Why It Concerns Yon. "Ttioro'ia tin tniatalrA about it." re marked Dr. M. F. Flowers, of Gallantin, Missouri, BillNUJM O JA-uhni rua OTJS PLASTERS are one of the neatest nnmhinatinni Avar nrodnofid. Thev have two kinds of advantages overall others, which we may can tne miner anu ma jor. First, they are tslean and .pleasant to use, never soiling the hands anbr the5 linen of the wearer. Second, they act quickley and powerfully. I have tried the Capcine Plaster on my .elf for pneu monia, and on my patients for various aiseases, sucn as ixeuraizia, juubcuuu Bheumatism, Lumbago, Kidney trouble, atrt nml in nil nuea relief has followed in from three to forty-eighth hours." 7 1 Tir. TlnvAr memlv voices the written or oral opinion of thousands in his pro- OUS PLASTERS are the rterfect extern nal application; The genumiB hare the; .word CAPyuNJS cut mi tne icepw Price 25 cents. U ; ' HIV I f DISSOLUTION OF COPARTPRSHIP, 1 Who firm of Sifford & FreeUnd, lately - aping Dusiness ax tne vomer or unuicu ind Trade Street, was dissolved by mu tual consent on the 1st day of Hovem ber, 1888, Mr. J, G., Freeland; having bought the entire vstock tof i goods on liandj and assumed ail debts due. by the late firm All debts due us are payable tohlmi 43 r " J 1 1rJ 1 i t fjs.n rj .O..FREELAND. f I can be 4ound liereafter: in. my new- l- -, :&y BOOTS 5 SHOES. stpre opposite the Charlotte Hotetwherd I shall be glad to see my old friends aid customers. G. JREnANO. I I8gIf5U SV?BT MOBNIJvG "ic.r wTy, CBAS. R. JOKES, Ed. and Proprietor. TtH.VN or M'ttRLKlPl l N DAILY. Pet copy .. .... ... . -.. ftecan One oiootb (by malt) ..... 75 Three months (1m malt) .. 2(io lx months. r 4 00 One year . ... , 8.00 . WBKSLT. One year.i.. ....$2 00 "l 811 months v.. .. l 00 : ' lnvMMjtrJA4rHeefrtv9! f tM Htl Parte of the C .- , " KfPpeetaen copies sen tjee on aipUo 4ton.."r sSf Hubscrlbera .deairtng- the if Jtes 6f their pacer efaoger wilt pjease Btauf lu their ootama meaflonhgta,tiKi old and Dew ad iress One Square ee Umn. f 1 00; each additional Insertion. 60c; two ei-fcs. S5 0f: une month, C800 4 8'hdnle of rain for loug-r periods fur -lshed teappilctlon. Bmlt by draft on New- Tm or Chartoite, and by Postoffl'te "Money Order or Registered ioer at oufli. f sttntberwiawvfiUBotberBspon . slUe for iclscrrlHgHS addres" " viiA3 H, JONJE3. Charlotte N. C DESERTED PRAISE. ; The Democratic press of Virginia pays high compliment to Hon. John S. Barbour chairman of the Demo cratic Executive Committee, under whose skilled leadership the Demo cracy of that State won its magnifi cent victory last Tuesday. Mr. Bar bour knew and appreciated the value of organization and work, and one of the first things he did after entering upon the position assigned to him. was to effect an organization and put able workers in the field. The result was & campaign that has not been equaled in Virginia since the war, a vote that surprised even sanguine Democrats, and a victory of such proportions as to amount to annihilation of the op position. There was intense disgust, of course, at Mahoneism in that State, there was deep desire to get red of him. Many who acted with him when he was playing the roe of a Demo cratic Keadjuster turned from him in loathing when they saw him treach erously cross over into the Republi can lines and attempt to carry them with him ; many straightout Repub licans refused to surrender to his mercenary leadership; but all this would have accomplished but little in his defeat without the organiza tion that brings the ballots to the polls. For want of this Mahone suc ceeded and worked his way into the po sition which he so shamefully abused, with this he was routed from the position which he had won, even when backed by the moral and ma terial aid of President Arthur's ad ministration, and having unlimited control of all the Federal patronage in Virginia, which he used beldly, unscrupulously and in utter defiance of public sentiment. He, too, was a skilled organizer, a tireless worker, verseo in all the tricks and appliances of politicians, and hence the greater credit due to John S. Barbour, who met him on his own ground, and not only vanquished but crushed him into pulp. j . There is a. moral in this for" the" North Carolina Democracy, and we call attention to it, not that we ap prehend any political reverses in this State, -but to show the value of organ izatton, and the consequences that frequently follow a lack of it. There i always was a strong Democratic re serve vote in Virginia as there is in North Carolina, which reserve can only be brought out by thorough or ganization, active campaigning and determined wrrk. On a full vote the Republicans and their associates, by whatever name they may be called, never stood a ghost of a show, and whatever success they have ever met with is attributable not to their own strength but to the fact that the full strength of the Democracy wainOt brought out. In politics, as inward organization system and leadership are necessary with which the major ity is always certain of victory, with-; out. which the majority is often beaten. ' . The following, excellent advice is given by the New York Globe to. its followers of the negro race : ' 'Let each man of us resolve to save more money. Without money a man cuxs a very poor figure in. the world. He is to a certain extent a cipher a sort of dronj in the social hive. Our children should be taught the value of time, value of intelligence, and tke value of money 1 Now is the time' o begin." This -is better advice than that of Fred Douglass when ne toia the necrdes'of Marylandrto ''make it too hot1' for those of their race who refused to vote the Republican ticket. ' Augusta Chronicle: The removal of 0eorge D. Robinso from congress portions. The Republicans, to beat Builer, have shorn themselves of their ablest congressman, ana uie onlv ene fit to be as conummateflead- er of his party in the House of Repre sentatives. rnu "Rrtorm Advertiser savs: ' The i,-,w.n rViihit nf North Caro mmguixivGuv couvv - . lina or a considerable portion of it, wiUproDauly oe reiauicu vouu for ithe exhibition of 1884, and it is not W all improbable that it may be leftfcrejfor.a. ':jem9ti,?? tnei resu"T-co v-5 " Stalie." . ! . 1 Notwithstanding the persistent ef lorts of the Mahone gang to deceive the negroes pf Virginia good many; pf them VoSafttie Democratic ticket ou election - j a ? Tle question as. to who struck Billy Vatterson has never been answered, Wt it has been discovered who struck Bill4 Mahona ; - f wo farmers'in Alabamaare mak-r t, totiiTKi'Toses.iand have orders for 4m - The prdcess ef depbpnlataon ; sifcill continues in Ireland. The deaths and emigrations outnumber the births.. The decrease for the year 1882,acbord Ing to the report of the Registrar General, was 54,88.' ' -' , . s The Baltimore American, epubli can, seems to understand the true in wardness of: Billy Mahone 1 when it says i. "MahOne's rbacahtyis-bf sjuch a shameles r sort' that nobody ever expresses -urprise at anythmg' he does. ' 1 hNewlTork' bdf;' Wderinen Wednesdato I passed: -resolution adopting the standard time through out the United States recommended by the different railroad conventions. j; The bodyof James A. Colligan a -pjmineht young man of Troy, New York, was found Wednesday in the entrance to a basement. There were , marks of violence, and f oub play is suspected. . . . : ' j Governor Butler, of MassachusettSI, and his council Wednesday nomina ted Geo. L. Ruffin, a fccolored; lawyer of Boston, for judge of the Charles town District Court. "Nathan Szkolny was arrested on the steamer Marathon at Boston Wednesday, charged with extensive forgeries at Bromberg, Prussia. Szkol ny was for many years in the bank-? ing business, and it is alleged forged acceptances to drafts amounting to nearly $50,000. The London Sportsman states that Mr. Theodore Walton, known "as 'the "American Plunger," won l0,00tf on the Jocky Club cup race at the Ho lghton meeting, in which Ladislas defeated Corrie Roy, the favorite. The diminished ' consumption of iron and steel in the United States is indicated by the fact that for the nine months of the present year the total imports have been but 540,029 tons against 950,605 tons in the cor responding period of last year. Signor Tobia Berfini has brought suit in New York for $50,000 damages against Col. James H. Mapleson for alleged breach ot contract. He avers that he was engaged for the present session as primo tenore , assoluto at $3,000 per month, and alleges that Mapleson refused to keep his con tract. At a meeting of the Irish National League Wednesday Michael Davit denounced the proposed system of expatriation, and urged the league to organize vigilance committees to frustrate it, and to send delegates to the United States and Canada, if necessary. A motion to that effect was adopted. J. I. Case, of Wisconsin,, owner of Jay-Eye-See, has purchased of R. S. Veech. of Kentucky, his wonderful two-year- old filly Femme Sole, re garded as being the finest filly at her age ever raised in Kentucky. The filly has never taken part in a race, though she trotted in public at the Lexington fair in 1.11 and a fraction. It is understood that $10,000 is the figure paid for Femme cole. Garfield Post, Grand Army of the Republic, Covington, Ky., have adopted resolutions declaring- that Lieut.-Gen. P..H. Sheridan should be promoted to the rank? of General, and that Major,'-General 'Hancock should be made Lieutehant-Gen-eral. The resolutions will be sent to the G. A. R. headquarters of the Department of Kentucky and to all the department headquarters in the United States, and finally to Con gress. A correspondent of the Romney Intelligencer tells of a singular cattle disease that broke out on the farm of Morgan Smith, in Pendleton county, W. va. Two children that had died of diphtheria were exhumed and hur ried in the corner of a pasture field occupied by milch . cows. They fre quented that part of the field, and were known to rub their heads in the fresh earth. Soon afterward they became strangely affected, and three or four of them died. The disease went no further. Mark Twain Fred Dote glass. The following letter, written on the 12th of January, 1881, by Mr! S. .L.r i Clemens, "Mark Twain," to the late President Garfield, has recently been made public: .-.,' ' "Several times since , your election people wanting office haye'psked me to! use my influence" with yen -in J their behalf. To word it in that way-; was such a pleasant compliment to me that I never complied. I could' not, without exposing the fact that I hadn't any influence with you, and that was a thing which I had no mind to do. I seems to me that it is better to have a good man's- flattering esti mate of my influence and keep it than to fool it away in trying to get him an office. But when my brother, on my wife's side Mr. Charles, J. Langdon, late of the Chicago conven tion desires me to speak a word for Mr. Frerl Douglass, I am not asked to usel 'mt influenceyconsequeutly lam not risking anything. So lam writing, this aa a simple citizen. I am not drawing on my fund of influence afc all. A simple citizen may express a desire with all propriety in a matter of recommendation, to office, and so I beg permission to hope that, you will retain Mri Douglass m the present of fice of marshal of the District of Co lumbia, if such a course will not clash with your own preferences or with the expediences and interests of your administration..! offer, this petition: with'peciiliar pleasure and strong xle?, siret c because Ped honor the 'mahV high and blemishless character, and so admire his brave, long crusade for the liberties and elevation of his race. He is a personal friend of mine, but that is. nothing to , the point, for his history-would move me to say these things without that, and I feel them, too. ' -'v V '--' ' .?MkPmae between? 4isfaaeana ehltll ften rief ejid fatalPft better ;o; .be. provided .with : cheap and simple remedies for such common dis orders as coughs, colds, &c. , than to run the risk of contracting a fatal disease through neglect Dr. Wm.. Hall's Bal aam is asnre and safe feraedy-for all if aiaeaBes.iot the lungs and cheat tt taken In season it is certain to cure, and may save you from that terrible dis ease, consumption. It has been known and used f or r many - years in- America, had it is no- exaggeration to say that it is the, best remedy in the world for conghs, &c Ask for Dr. Wm. Hall,s Balsam for the Lungs, r and take no i)the , Sod y ill drnggists ' t; Clears put tratai rniA. 5rhAr.ha 'Qa jLnto bedbugs 5 'Bkunks,' chipmtuiks. ';"jf65bM TELEGEAMS. "' , - Tke SttaaUoa im Jlolin. Lima, vuXJalvb3ton, Nov: 9. News comes from the south to the ef fect that after; the revolt of the Mon teneros m,Areqnipa, Col. Raggado opposed the mutineers, killing many 4f them; including the mayor of the city. Gen: Caueraro was killed by his own troops. y: The whole Chilian expeditionary force is in Arequipa. The Bolivian army is concentrating near;Orogro. Montenero is now in Bolivia. The Bolivian Envoy, Senor Guigarro, wili leave immediately for Toenta to treat for peace with Senor Lfllie, the Chilian envoy. A Case ol Yellow Fever lea.es. at New Or- : New Orleans, Nov. 9. A six year bid Italian girl died Tuesday at the charity hospital, three hours after her admittance of yellow fever. Dr. Jones; president of the board of health, was notified, and Wednesday an autopsy was made in the presence of Drsrones; Chafllers andf others, and the Case declared to be yellow fever. The girl was a 'daughter of an Italian emigrant who with others came here after having landed at Vera Cruz, where they did not obtain employment;. The Removal of Prussian Bishops. London, Nov. 9. A dispatch to the Times from Rome, says the Pope has informed Dr Van Schloizer, Prus sian minister to the Vatican, that the question of the removal of Cardinal "Ledochowski and Archbishop Melch ers from the. Archbishoprics of Bosen and Cologne', respectively, was a mat ter which could not be solved until the question of liberty of education of the clergy in Prussia is settled. He Wool Have Shot Some of Them. 1 Madrii, Nov. 9. A pamphlet is-' sued by the secretary or the Repubh- can military association asserts that; ituez Zianua aeciaea mac 11 me -Republican insurrectidn of August last had been successful he .would have shot Senor Moret, ,k now 'Minister of the Interior, and seyeral, generals. Released from Custody. Berlin, Nov. M. Antoine,. depu ty for Alsace-Lorraine, ; recently ar rested on a charge of. high treason, was released because papers furnish no ground for charges. Want of Thrift Among Ar Kan sans. Helena Correspondence . An enthusiastic citizen of Arkan sas, burning with anxiety to induce people to come in and assist in devel oping the lands, says, triumphantly that ne does not know a region in the world where a man can gain the means of subsistence with so little labor Just there, I am convinced, he touched one of the true causes of the tardiness of progress in Arkansas. Another great cause has been the sur prising lack of ambition and enter prise among the people who settled in the State before the war. It is amazing the number of these who have abso lutely resisted, with all their might, any distinct indications of progress. In Southern and Southeastern 'Ar kansas there are hundreds of farm houses in which there never has been a ceoking stove, the entire work of cooking being done in pots and kettles of the most primitive pattern, in the wide fire places of chimneys built .of mud and sticks. Just this morning a civil engineer assured me that he had surveyed 170 miles of railroad in the State and had stopped for fifteen days continuously at the houses scattered thinly along the way Without seeing sugar, milk or butter. "More than this " said 'he, .'.."these beggars abso lutely resisted the granting of the right of ., way because, they saidy the railroads scared the game out of the country." . . '.Startling Probabilities. ; ( , Ghicag inter Ocean ' .... ; It is estimated that the United States will contain 150,000,000 people fifty years hence. The natural in crease of population,, as judged by the tables of the pasV in conjunction with the swelling tide of immigration from Europe, will accomplish this marvel of national growth.. . When future historians record the fact that the American colomies, with .3,000, 000 neonle developed into a reDublic of .150,000,000 in a century and a half, it swill read like a tale of the ' 'Arabian Nights.?. Rome, at its zenith had no such population, nor one so nomo jgenous in language, , spirit, intelli-: eence and aspiration. This will be -the mightiest republic of all history; figures alone tail to convey an. aae: quate idea of its probable vastness' and power. Its population will be equal to that of the German Empire, France, Spain, Belgium Switzerland, Italy and Austria combined. It will be a match in war for the - whole of Europe or fcr any other quarter of the globe. In the achievements ol peace it promises to exceed any na-; uon extaniOTtjaaiever iroeTOweaiw and splendor.; . '' . ; . ' - ,. : . "r r ' . ! Rather Gloomy. J tforeaihteeprobableuit the next Presidential-election, it win be well for amature " statisticiana etc f bear in mindLthat a solid . South r an fortv-eight other votes - will, constK tute A majority 5f the whole number, of 40i'elect6rial votes to be cast. As matters stand atj?resent .this makes a Wfdjsursing outlook for the Republican, party.. ; - " L' 1 ? Lsdl,'beaaa'7 your complexion wlth:4Mehn,s BulOharSoap. , k .. :.,rj 7.: .Hill's Bate and Whlske Dye, SOe. ,;' I , r HOUSED -jWednesday rtiltiandf. rairsday it ana lotn. -SPECIAL; EIGAPEMFNT OP- Grand RepruVrtioaf Great Spec tacular Meio-Drama, the , Direct imthe.tJraliaperaHbua New York, anda tttn'Of Over lOOlfighe at "Wallack's Theatre, wew lorjc. jr 17Ifeweiae;CnvpIete! Transported by Special Trainf t J f J. A wealth of 'Splendid Music and real istic Scenery. - ql, r ' n I - The Doable "Stage t and jRerplvmg Scene, fc"-"" r-:;? ..rpfir PrkWSO, cents and $1.00, on sale at usual places.? ' : - nov8 OPERA ' . : 1 2Ni 2 Nil ,f.r .mr.r: .if;.-.-'.'. :. it . i ;tj7"i juoU afcvr II HIS FOR TOE PEOPLE. Terrible Crash in Prices! A ffiankrapt Stock of Clothing. RETAIL PKIGES NOWHERE! The People's Opportunity to Buy ! ! Clotbins at Prices Never, Before Heard of. Our Mr. Bariich having purchased direct from the as signees of the largest Clothing manufacturers in America, who are now bankrupt, over cases of Men's, Youths' and Boys' Clothing, all made for this season's trade, we will give our customers the benefit and commence on Saturday morn ing, the 10th instant, THE GREATEST Sao of R-iii Ever Inaugurated in the Carolinas. Men's Overcoats from $1.75 upward Men's Overcoats at $5.00, worth $10.00. Men's All Wool Beaver Overcoats at $10.00 each. Meii'fl Suits from $3,00 upward. Men's All Wool Suits from $7;50 upward. 500 Pairs Men's Pants from $1.00 a prir upward. First Come First Served, mm CHARLOTTE. N. C. W. KAUFMAN & CO. DOttDlj Extraordinary Succjpss of Our Great Mark Down Sale. : The verdict pf Clothing.buyers ia that Wey are leading ail .competition in the matter of low prices, quality! ol goods rann" workmanship considered v while our . redaction of 25 to 50 per cent.' on oar 'ehtife stock1 merit the attention of intend-. ing buyers. We single out. for special mention the following LOT 959. lOOMliK GSSIMERE PANT - Reaace'd foin $jl.00 to $2.7S. LOT 873. 100 AIR;:.'.Q Better Quality, Ilednced From. 5.0O to $&.0. ' ' LOT 659. M PAItt Quality, Reduced . : ,t ' ; We are determined tp sell pur entire remove from the store we now occupy &;IcD6well uhJer the Central. Hotel. in making selections. ', ' .'".. : Qotis' Jl)STSlfEft; 1 00; BARRELS nr.' PATENT ROLLER- FLOUR, THEFINEST EVER ". OFFERED ; IN THIS MARKET, 800 .BJJSHELS i BOLf EC MEAL, 50u BUSHEE Wfi ITE ,C0RK. gam sevtCdtf !i -A BitMM 7-norar power wtesm JSiaaiMi BoUar, erHtl of running a nfty mm eixtoa gin, or kbj other llgbt mvbin-ry. bargat Vmttx or time, to tou peieoawr , - . . - 3. can. b. joirsi nBim PANTS SU PERIOR: From $6. OO to '$9.S0. "" , y- ' ' tocl before January- lst 1884?; as we will', intd the house formerly occupied by 6rem Brink this list with you, it may assist you :1' '' ., - : j . i , 'i W.TTATriWATn Kimv Wtnilr kwwicnA GUmA) CROCKERY, QtASSWAUli HOtTSEFURNIS PING G,QOt)&, All the Latest Stfles. W cU parUcular a'ttotloa to 1 ; r' ' - . ! -:vr . 'n' ' M0S8ROSE . and OLD Decorated '-T?RA SETS, 44 pieces, ? 50. V ' DECvRATED;o' CHAMBER 'i fcsETS, 'ifrom S4.00 4ip. r: 1 ' .s DECORATED .DINNER SETS.Jrom '$20 00 Up. r!; , . ' u WHITE CHINA DINNER rj SETS, STEAKBROILERS, cenU. iCHtLDRENS . CARRIAGES, ; from-'- .fqso'tip. . ' ' ' , j . f '-' - - "; v : AFnUaTOCKOy ' 'eft I . -.: :'u-,t -i'y'y " :- BgOgKi. JMD ; IflNCT OOt. i t Si . ' I. --: ,. r: r ,jo-.-;:"r ' ' ,,verepecawr.,.;f ' ---i -c: - v. . ' ' j tH ::i:I.UDOIJf HARtSiriJtD. fitlfP AtW3Flf,Wir pMsmber of rour. kfflictea wUh Malteawt SemrMnbnilMia or other- . .v. 'A' " Jj't t-i'.: I'1'. "H OjI" jHUe, Balt&benm or -calT Head, utm, woupoai rjfi no amamt aowvtrmv, m whw ton vunaipR. or ... - , rom. wtt&tmev v pnKhreed;ieiMl tad eai- f 2&emt bouie of Tt Kir OIL, an4,tv guaraDtM a VI CW VOJ- U EUIBB afBltHV M-LTCX niUOUITI w ntlonuna,-orr anrtbtng tbai rooresaeo, tbo( TOrt. Ooftortwapplwongrt:aHaliW- . Man to boat 0)4 Wicern arresn how um rrogrexs of vm w Tor salo br all drojrtfsti and oonntrr torjb U o e M& rar Askfor the "Turf OO 8pelUiic-Bok aatf ' x Eeader," wltb oerttflCTtoa of erra - ' 1 I i h i J -.4 l. f: 3 '.'Ii I I :At '.ii-- they can mi .'-.-. Vrf'.