VOLUME XXXIII. CHARLOTTE, N. C THURSDAY MARCH 5, 1885. PRICE FIVE CENTS If Our jemnant of WW 5. At About Half Price. 5 K). 15 and 18 cents per yard, worth 10, 25, 30 and 50 cts. Notwithstanding the cold weather, we are selling lots ot White Goods, and our embroideries and Torchons are selling vi rv fast. They are cheap, look at them and judge for your self - ; - v " : ' ..' '1 ': Bras, oops Just received, all colors in Arracene, Filling and Embroid ery Silk: We are agents for Bn utericl's Patterns, And have jat received the March Catalogues. Look on our Job Counter for bargains. Have iust put some new thingH n it. Bargains in remnants of Lace Curtains from 2 to 8 yards. K.131TI1 BCILDim 111 (J A ICE ASS'RTMKKT OP M; aod Little RGIDV MADE CLOTHING ! Boys -ARE SELLING- KIDG-LOVES havea fine line of KMBKOIlRI ES, carried from last season, which will be sold very cheap.. They hive the best $1.00 SHIRT In the market. Try them. Ask to see their BLACK you may be surprised at the price. Ask for the celebrated Razor Scissors, the best in the market. OUR CARPETS Will be closed out cheap don't forget this, they are really very cheap. ALEXANDER & HARRIS IA1IJSS OF 0SM We Are Selljrig Now offer their WINTER' "CLOTHING AT -stock and don't" intend to carrv make tfrices to sart vervbodv. buyat our ho-ise a oauitibr $4.50. $5.00, : $10.00. These suits we sold (before the Holidays, b'ut we maan to' selt, -and therefore put the knife into prices. Finer grades of Suits which we sold at $15, $18, $20 and- $25, - we now ' sell at' $12, $12 50; $15 and $18. A large line of Boys and ,vVhich we will close out for les3 than cot of production. Hen's Underwear at greatly reduced pricef ji We? only maintain these prices for a short time, as; we are bound to make room for our' Spring Stock, which will shortly arrive. Nobody should miss this opportunity Calfat once. - w; k Ail fman & c8iim-&!m: Jul v. 1885. 1885. THIS SPRING Consisting of the Latest Styles Silk, Stiff and Soft ilafe Which we have Just opened, and are satisfied we can please all, Our Spring Stockfof Ladles', Misses', Gentsi. Youths' and Children's BOOTS AND SHOES Is now complete, comprising the most correct styles. A full line ot best Babe and TRUEVKS. VALUES. TRAVELING' BAGS, And Shawl Straps Just received. Last but not least, a fine line ot Umbrellas. Silk. Mohair, and Alpaca. Large and Beautiful line of Gents' Oter Gaiters. Give us a call. Peffpam & Co. entire stockjof SUf! rWA m&t&fm&&&M ;at Specia Attraction (Hothing n.iiitrin i iin t nrtn I dyi We meaftkjtesell out oii atw Averand tO.dO.tnJS .AJMUbHcarr notions ot . ' nut i i;-l,UH'HieWB-Ciiuuw,i, vjv least 40$ per cent ""fSfciand does no more, than bring this THIS IN A UtiU tt VTIOM . The "event j for which Democrats fcve been hoping and struggling for these many years culminated yess terday in the inauguration of a Dem ocratic President when Grover Cleve land took the oath of office, and be came the President of these United States. No inauguration, perhaps, nas ever been looked to with more popular interest, or attended by greater number of witnesses, and certainly within the past quarter of J a TTT a century none nas arawn to w asns ington as many representative peo ple, of all classes and conditions from all sections of the country; Hereto fore sinco Mr. Lincoln entered Wash ington secretly , in 1861, preceding his inauguration, every President has been from the Republican party, and a sectional President, the represented tive of a party which looked upon the South as an alien, and legislated as if she was an enemy, and not one of the sisterhood of States. When Mr. Lincoln entered Wash ington after his secret ride from Harrisburg on account of rumored plots of assassination, Southern -men were arming for the conflict which was to come, the sound of the drum and the fife was heard, war talk was the talk throughout the North, and everything was in a state of unhappy uncertainty. In this state of affairs Mr. Lincoln, the first Republican President, with anxious forebodings of the awful responsibilities he was to assume, took the oath of office, which was so shortly followed by the clang of war, and four yearsof f rater nal strife, and blood and eath and des truction, terminating in his assassi nation, followed by years of prescrip tion and partisan legislation against the States which he, if he had lived, would have done all he could to bring back on an equal footing into the Union from which they had made the futile, but bold and heroic effort to withdraw. Time had modified the feelings and passions that grew out of the wer and the issues that led to it, and year by year thepeople of the sections have been coming closer and closer together, but it was not till the elec tion of Grover. Cleveland that the cool, sober sense of the people could , - . m . , 1 ' T . oe saia to nave iriumpueu. m iacb. and sectionalism to have been buried. Grover Cleveland is' the President of no one section. No North, no South, no East, no West can lay special special claim to him and demand preference because he belongs to them. He is the President of a Unit ed country, of the people drawn to gether under one flag and with one destiny, and as such be took the oath . of office yesterday. Hia inaugural address which he de livered on that occasion, and which appears in full in The Observes this morning, shows that the people have not been mistaken in the man they honored in calling to the chief magis tracy. It is a candid, a splendid and a patriotic document, wnicn will meet with a hearty response from the people of this country irrespec tive of party. Actuated by broad Democratic principles, he speaas not from mere partisan standpoint, but as a Democrat, as the fathers under stood that word, in its broader and more liberal sense, and it is possible that the mere ' partisan who looks upon office for the advantages it may present, gain or political promotion, may be disappointed, but the busi ness interests of the country, the great mass of people whose chief de sire is good, honest and safe govern ment, will accept it as a harbinger of a new era and of better and happier days. There is one portion of this inaugural which we are particularly struck with, and that is where it re fers to extravagance in -administration begetting extravagance among the people, and where it aommend.s that simplicity in keeping with our Republican institutions and the mis- sion'of the American -people. With in the past quarter of a century there has been a wide departure from this and even Presidents of the United States so far forgot their positions as ape the titled, families abroad by having coats of arms emblazoned ou their ferriages, aQd in ; numerous other, ways Imitating the fashions Abroad, which in turq were imitated rjby! shoddy aristocrats, ; who during the war and since, , accumulated for tunes and tried to draw a dividing line between themselves and the com mon crowd by putting on style and 'assuming dignity which made them ;ndiculous if nop disgusting. , 1 k66? up style money was necessary, and where many were trying to imitate the example set by those above them Hplunder began. . ftoincack'to oWfalttdned: .Be-1 bid fashioned honesty and give- new. ;lease. terthe about his administration will be a blessiug. . , : lirciors of the' Insane Asyiun. '. l- yesterday the senate confirmed the following appointments made - by Gov. Scales: . - Directors of the Western asylum, jr term.expiriBg 1st March, 1891: F T. Fuller, of Wake; Jos. J. Davis, of Franklin; F. -.C. Robins, of David son ; for term expiring 1st March, 1887 r J. G. Hall, of Catawba; Jas. R. Harper, of Caldwell. Directors of th;e Raleigh asylum, lotife term; Richard H.1 Smith, .Wm i 8. Battle Wm, S. .Harris; short term R. H. Dfllarda-''-,.-..;-,.- , For the Goldsboro asylum, long tarni'Dr: J. W. ViekJ E. B Borden, nU'digmtyi we return-to J pir.iatW Moore, -- " ' i': THE C4.BINRT. Sketches f tbe Mea who Will be Mr. Cleveland's Coancilors. - The following are the names of the gentlemen who are to form President Cleveland's cabinet, with brief sketches of their lives: Bayard, Secretary of State. Manning, secretary oi tne xreass ury. ) Lamar, Secretary of the Interior. Garland, Attorney General. Endicott, Secretary of War. Vilas, j Postmaster General.' Whitney, Secretary of the Navy. THOMAS F. BAYARD. Mr. Bayard was born at Wilming ton. Del., Oct. 29, 1829. He was chiefly educated at Flushing School, and his early training was for a mer cantile life. After having had some experience in business in New York he returned to Delaware and studied law with his father, Hon. James A. Bayard,: who was then in the Senate. He was admitted to the bar in 1851, and inJJ853 he was appointed United States District Attorney for Dela ware, but resigned in 1854 and went to live in Philadelphia, where he re mained till 1856, when he returned to Wilmington, where he remained through the civil war, practicing his profession. In the winter of 1868-9 he was elected to the Senate to sues ceed his father, and was re-elected in 1875 and 1881. In 1876 he was a member of the Electoral Commission. Mr. Bayard is the fourth of his family who have served in the Senate. His grandfather, James Ash ton Bayard, was elected to the Senate from Dela ware in 1804 and served till 1813, when President Madison appointed him one of the commissioners to negotiate the treaty of Ghent. His uncle, Richard H. Bayard, was elect ed to the Senate from Delaware in 1836 and again in 1841. His father, James A., served in the Senate from 18S1 to 1869. , DANIEL MANNING. Mr. Manning was born in Albany, N. Y., August 16, 1831. His parentage was of Irish, English and Dutch ex traction; He was a poor boy, and his early opportunities for schooling were very limited. At eleven years of ago he went to work as an office boy at the establish mtnt of the Al bany Atlas, which was afterwards merged intothe Albany Argus, with which paper he has ever since, in one capacity or another, been connected. In 1873 he assumed sole charge of the Argus, and was elected President of the company, which position he yet holds, though he has done little or no writing : for some time. He was a member of tbe Democratic State convention of 1874 that nominated Samuel J. Tilden for Governor, and was a delegate to the St. Louis con vention of 1876 that nominated Mr, Tilden for President. He has been a member, of the Democratic State committee since 1876. Was its secret tary in 1679 and 1880, and was elected chairman in 1881, which place he new fills. He was warmly interested in the nomination of Mr. Cleveland for President in Chicago last July, and it is generally conceded that he showed great skill in the convention as the head of the New York delega tion. Mr. Manning has been active and successful outside of journalism and politics. He has long been a director of the Albany and Susque hanna Railway Company, and is president of the National Commercial Bank, of Albany, of which he was first director and then vice president. He is also park commissioner of Al bany, and is a director of the Albany Electric Light Company, LUCIUS Q. 0. LAWAB. Mr. Lamar was born at Oxford, Putnam County, Ga., Sept. 17, 1825, and received his early schooling in his native town. He graduated at Emory College, Georgia, in 1845. He studied law at Macon, Ga., and was admitted to the bar in 1847. He moved to Oxford, Miss., in 1849, and was elected Adjunct Prptessor of Mathematics in the Mississippi State University, Dr. T. A. Bledsoe, editor of the Southern Review, being the senior professor. He resigned in J8&0 and went to Covington, Ga., where he devoted himself to the practice i of law. In 1853 he was elected to the Georgia Legislature and in the following year returned to Mississippi, where he settled on a plantation in Lafayette County. He was elected to the Thirty-fifth and Thirty -sixth Congress and resigned in 1880. lie entereed tne uonieoerate army in 11861 as Lieutenant -Colonel of the IMmeteentn Mississippi volun teers, and was soon promoted to .the Colonelcy. In 1863 he was sent to Russia by the Confederate Govern ment on an important diplomatic mission.! He returned to Mississippi at the close of the war and in 1866 was elepted ; Froesor of Political Economy and Social Scienoe in tbe University of tbat State. A, yew later he Was transferred to tbe Pro f essorship of La w. He was elected tq the Forty-third Congress and re elected to the Forty-fourth. In the wjnter of 1879 7 he was elected to the Senate, where he has since served. AUGUSTUS H. GARLAND. , Mr. Garland was born in Tipton Couaty.iTenn.. June 11, -1832. The following year his parents moved to Arkansas, where he has represented in the Bepate sjppe 1876. He wag educated in St. Mary's "College and St. Joseph's College in Kentucky. He studied law and was admitted to the practice; at Washington, Ark., the place where hia parents bad origi nally settled in 1853. He removed to Little Rock, where his home now is, in 1858J He was a delegate to the State convention that passed the or dinance of secession in 1861 and was also a member, -of the provisional Confederate j Congress, . that ; subset quently met the same year at ! Mqnt eomervl Ala-,L He served- in both -the! bHoiisa and"the Senate of the Cohfed He wss1 elect- qeu tuts war ahvocu. ed'rahi Ark&nsaKlo- "tne "United ;Un ted States' Senate March 4, 1867,1 but. was riot admitted to his seat. He" jnade the test-oath case as to lawyers in the Supreme Court of the United States and gained it He practiced law at Little Kocfe witn success tui 1874. when he was looted Governor of Arkansas without opposition, and at the expiration of his term was elected to the United States Senate, again .having no opposition and 6U0- ceeded Powell Clayton. He has taken high rank aa a lawyer from the dav: he entered the Senate, and has for some time been a member of the Judiciary Committee, . He is of medium height . and speaks .with clearness, delibera in and fore, His wife died soon after he was elected to tbe Senate and .he has since i-emained a widower. ... .WII. C. ENDIOOTT. - William Crowninshield Endicott, Mr:1 Cleveland's Secretary of War. was bora in Salem, in 1827 and js the son of William Putnam Endicott and Mary, daughter of Hon. Jacob Crow ninshield, who was a Representative to Congress. He attended the Salem schools, and was graduated from Harvard College in the class of 1847. He married his cousin, a daughter of ueorge Peabody, and has two child' ren,a son and a daughter. Judge En dicott studied at Harvard Law School, aud read law in the office of the late Nathaniel J Lord. He was ad mitted to the Bar about 1850 and a few years later formed a partnership witn tne late J. W Perry and contin ued with him until his appointment by Gov. Washburn to a seat on the Supreme Bench jn 1873. This posi tion ne neid until ltmz, wnen ne re signed on account of his health. In 1882 he made an extended tour of the continent. He was a member of the Salem Common Council in 1852, 1853 and 1857, when he was elected Presi dent of that board. He was city so licitor irom 1S58 to 1863. He is a member of the Historical Society and of the Board of Overseers of Harvard College. The coming Secretary of War is a direct descendant from Gov. John Endicott. Politically. Mr. En dicott is of Whig antecedents, his affiliation with the Democratic party dating from the Bell-Everett cam paign of I860, but he has never been an active politician. Last fall, it may be recalled, he was the candidate of his party for Governor in the State, but did not himself appear in the canvass, and received a comparative--ly small vote. As a lawyer and a judge Mr. Endicott holds high rank, and personally he is a gentleman of the highest character. The object of the appointment is manifestly to gratify the independent allies of the Democracy, and may be accepted as indication of Mr. Cleveland's purpose to make them, if possible permanent supporters of himself and his party. The rank and file of the regular De mocracy appear to acquiesce in that idea as a shrewd and politic thing to do, though there are unquestionably, a dozen leading New England Demo crats the selection of any one of whom for the Cabinet they would have hailed with a warmer and more sin cere satis faction. WILLIAM F. VILAS. Mr. Vilas was born at Chelsea, Orange County, Vt., July 9, 1840. When he was eleven years old he went to Wisconsin, where, a few months after, he was entered a pupil of Jfehe preparatory department of the University of that State. In 1853 he matriculated in the Freshman classes of that institution, and was graduat ed there in 1858. After taking his academical degree he studied law in Albany, N. Y.,' and was graduated from the law school of that city in 1869. After his admission to the Sus preme Court of New York he remov ed to Wisconsin, where, on his birth day, July 9, 1880, he made his first argument before the Supreme Court of that State. In the samo year, 1860, he .became a partner witn Chas T. Wakeley. a lawyer of good standing. Upon the outbreak of the war Mr. Vilas entered the army as captain in the Twenty third Wisconsin Volun teers, and rose to be Major and Lieutenant-Colonel. He resigned his commission and resumed the practice of the law Jan. 1. 1864. In 1872 Gen. G. E. Bryant joined him in partner ship, and in 1877 his brother, E. P. Vilas, also became a partner in the firm. The Supreme Court of Wis consin appointed Col. Vilas one or tne revisors or tne stat utes of the State in 1875. and the revision of 1878, adopted by the State, was partly made by him. In 1879, Mr. Vilas relused the use of his name as a candidate for the Govern- ship of Wisconson. He has persist ently declined office, but went to Chicago as a delegate to the conven tion of 1884, which honored him with its permanent chairmanship. WILLIAM P. WHITNEY. Mr. Whitney was born in Conway, Mass., in 1839. His father, Gen. James S. Whitney, who had been colelctor of the Port of Boston, a del egate to the Charleston convention of I860, and prominent among the great Democrats of that State, was regarded as one of the leaders o the party. After being graduated from Willis ton Seminary at Easthampton, Wil liam C. Whitney entered Yale Col lege in 1859. With William G. Sum ner, the well known writer and teacher uponpolitical economy, who was his classmate, Mr. Whitney divided the first prize for English essays. He was chosen to deliver the oration of his class of graduation. Entering the Harvard Law School, he was graduated in 1865, and con tinued his studies in New York with Abraham R. Lawrence, now one of j the Judges of the Supreme Court. On his admission to the bar he began the practice Of his profession, which ! he has since followed. j in 1871 Mr. Whitney took a fore most part la the organization of the Young Men's Democratic Club, which still continues aa a vigorous and powerful political factor. He was prominent among those in the club ; who maintained and perfected the system of inspection at the polls in tbe memorable election ot that year. when the citizens asserted their rights and fought against 'the notorious Tweed and Republican Democratic ring. He contributed' largely to the honest vote. The attention of Mr. Tilden was attracted by his sagacity and courage exhibited in that contest Mr. Whitney's prominence in the politics of New York has been unin terrupted since that time. The friend ship of Mr. Tilden given him then has never been withdrawn or weaken ed.1. -: -- . ' . ' I When Mr. Whitney became the official adviser of the mayor he was placed as a barrier between the public treasury and the" establishment ot .Claims aggregating miniuua.uuujiai o Growing out of the rin&f rauds.There .were already over "3,800 suits pendhlg jjoa titaijOQOOOOHnd new iones were beginning eyery aay - oy tne . score. He held this office until iDecember, 1882,! having twice been reappointed, when he resigned the position, in which he was entitled to continue for two vears more. During his term of seven years he not only saved large gums or money, but instituted a sys tem for the protection of the city's legal rights which are of permanent benont. . - '';- ; - . - ' It is estimated that his saving to the citv while be was its counsel di rectlv amounted to $2,000,000, and indirectly to much1 more. l:-:A' m m m - A Di-eehed Woman Is the lady who uses cosmetics, face lotions, white lead, bismuth. podOTS- arsenl &c, la the belief Of enrtoh'ng and beautifying the complexion. It la but temporary and ultimately destroys the sKln hutnnt Mia TAurar.nf natIm ' to . restore. Stop itl Stop It now and use oly I. Harter Iron Tonio, which uaparu ine vigor ana loveuuenn ui juunu Ta dmm faithful. triffOMUJi WlTfi With & CleaT, nandsome complexion, these can an be acquired or ming Dr. Barter's iron ionio : - Mr. Brewster's Office FarBllDie. 1 Washington special to Boston Herald. Among the items in the Deficiency bill is one. which provides- for the payment for theelegant adornments of tbe room occupied by the Attor ney General. Mr. Brewster has tris ed for two years to secure an . appro priation for the Duroose. but haa hmn unsuccessful. He asked Mr. Randall's committee to make good the deficien cy this year, but it was not disposed to allow the claim. One day last week Mr. Brewster visited the com mittee room iu person, and set forth his claims, but the committee did-not give him any encouragement. "Ve ry well, gentlemen." said Mr. Brew Star. "I Wfll TOT fnr t.Ya Aimifnm myself, i But! shall occupy the office only a few days longer, and when I go I will take the articles I pay for with me. If it is your desire that my successor should find a bare floor, an uncomfortable office and nn flivver auyoB nut BQUStv law nonlra I nm perfectly wUlingto have it that way." Then hn Infr. vVit.hin ton m;nian . . wuu .v.u i mroo after the door nlrwuwl t.h rio.a;H amount had been added to the bill. The Immoral Condition of Boston. The Hon. Amos. A. T lAtrrAnra wui a witness a tew days ago before a committee of the MaiuuhiiBAffK Tav. islatura charged with an inquiry into the condition of affairs in Boston. t9 said he was connected with' .some twentv-seven P.harit.ahlA arranizo. tions, nearly all of which were made j i i ueutJBBarv . mrouffn inr.mnArnn There is at present no enforcement of the law. Further Mr T said: "The present situation is horri- 11 4. A . . . -w uie bu contemplate, we are as bad as Sodom and Gomorrah, and deserve their fate. The traffic, in t.ha amila rvf our youth is almost beyond concep tion. There are 365 charitable insti tutiors in Boston, on for each dayjin the year, and there would be work for many more. These are made necessary by systematic violations Of the law acainst intamnrAncn and licentiousness. A Thin Babr. New York Advertiser. Victor Hueo's mother, in describe ing him as a baby, said: "He was so small and thin that he looked more like a table knife than a human be mg." And now in his 83d birthdav Victor Hugo is strong and hearty, with a clear brain, a good appetite and a vigorous digestion. Many a Lady is beautiful, all but her skin ; and nobody has ever told her how easy it is to put beauty on the skin. Beauty on the skin is Magnolia Balm. feb3-d tu thu buaw MRS. JOE PERSON'S EDIT. REM' IWeritHvtll Tell In the Long Run Tabbobo, N. C, Feb. 4, 1886. Mrs. Job Person: Madam Shin us at once 5 gross of your Remedy and 2 gross Wash. We are doing well with it in Tarboro, and sales are rapidly increasing and it has given satisfaction, so far as we have learned, in every case. We are iiesptaiui.'y, E. B. HODGES & CO. WHAT IT "hAD DONE. Tarboro, Feb. 4, 1885, For several Tears I have had a tmuhta with mi breast, which I fear is cancer, that beinsr incident to my family. For two years past my general neaiin nas oeen wretcnea rrom its enects. I be came so wean was Incapacitated for all work; my appetite was gone, the sight of food was nauseat ing to me. I would would wake up in the morning so tired I scarcely had energy to aria and dress myself, upon the least exertion I had Dalnltation of the heart so violently that I was helpless. I was so nervous I could get no good sleep, but would lay awake at night restless, and when I did drop off to sleep would soon awake with a start, and It would be hours before I could get to sleep My constitution was wrecked hope S6ue. t concluded, as ajast resort, to try Mrs. Joe Per son'sitemed, I oprnmeaobd using it last July, have taken 17 bottles, and the eSect has been won derful, My general health is excellent. I sleep as well as I ever did in my life and wake In the morn ing feeling refreshed and well I can not only get up and cook my own breakfast without fatigue but have fine appetite to relish it now after ' cook it. I can go all day long and am not tired when night coms. I have uot had a touch of palpitation of the heart, since Boon after I com menced the Remedy. My breast does not pain me at all. or give me anjt- trouble. I do not know whether the Bemedy will cure my breast or not, as tbe lump is still there, but if it neverdoes.no words of mine can express my gratitude for what the Remedy has done for me. It has don more for me than Mrs. Person promised me it would do, when I consulted her in regard to using it. I will take pleasure In giving any one Information in re gard to my case who may desire It I wish every afflicted person in the land could know of its vir tue, I am gratefully, mini ii. uiJOAn. Wittnesse3-rH. B. Bryan, K. B. Hodges. :o:-:o: W. &-J. Sloane ABE OFFERING THEIR ENTIBS STOCK AT MOST ATTRACTIVE PRICES. NOTTINGHAM LACK CURTAINS, from $1 85 upward SWISS AND FRENCH LACE CURTAINS. . from $5.00 upward MADRAS LACE CURTAINS, from $4.00- upward 'xlitJUMAJN bUKTAiNS, . irom $o.M) upward TAPESTRY COVERINGS. f-om 1.60 UDwatd CRETONNE COVERINGS, from .90 upward Materials Furnished ros Window Shams." Samples sent by mail whenever desired. All correspondence will receive prompt attention. BRO ADWAY & lOih STREET, New Tork Citr. feb25-lm t . 1 .;-. m 'ui ba." r 1 T i FLRrriK WEAVERS I "' AAD TME'PirBElCV: 0: TT7 E have oommenoad the manufacture' of Fumt V ture In this city, and- having the very latest and best raaenmery. are prepared to 00 ine very best work Dfessible. and guarantee satisfaction. Being a home enterprise we solicit the patronage of the Dublic tap- Repairing promptly and thoroughly execut ed cane enair seating a specialty, factory auu oftioe on 8th street and u. c. Railroad. feb28-tf -r ELLIOTT ft MARSH. Second Band EBg v n7!? have the following Engines which we will VV sell vary low. Call and see us: One 6 -horse Taylor, tw years in use, In perfect order;-one tk-norse lajiur, uiree years ui dm, iu pensuv uruer nn 4 tn (S horse Frick A Co's. two Tears in use and in perfect order, and is a standard engine. Any ef these engines will run a 60 -saw Gin. -. Full stock new Engines always on band, jnarl-d s&w w4w ; - - - BOEM ft MCDOWELL. ; IO OTE LADIES. Mrs I B. Hirrlneton Is now In New York city. whers she Is looking after all the latest designs In Embroidery and Art Needle work. . On he return she will be prepared to give Instructions to all who mar desire them. She will furnish material at New York prices. -Orders promptly Attended to. Upholstery Goo Js JUST IOO DOZEN fl re Every customer will appreciate the fact upoiif examination, that they are worth 65 centa per pair. We will sell them at 40 cents per '; single pair, or Three Pairs for $1.00. 1 This is an exceptional bargain, and- Very lady should call at once and supply herself with three pairs of these 8-Bntton Lengtb Lisle Thread We still continuejour special drives in Ham burgs and Corsets. WITTKOWSKY k MM THE fur;nituke dealer. Largest Stock CMROJVEOS, OIL PAINTfNGS, WINDOW SHADES, FEATHER DUSTERS, AND BABY: CARRIAGES. fegT Send tor r W.H.FAYt9.CASD; 4 UBOR-SAVING OFFICE DEVICES JariooseSmts of long Minn. sdaiUni;f Olrtotari fBK B. , ' ciAoijTiicHi.ioHTFiKL;j sich9.9t, V lisaabetnim am wkkrate taprmS IkaiM 14 ter tmt BUI VHM Immmt Shuns 1Hw.toMwU, u vzts naanuiinH m22deod w3m XX ; PJJ A&T.J i WS- mr m m it m s"th MUdlU. ONE OP TflEiMEDICLNESTBAT HAS' f ttRSnStOSffl??S i '"''- n -V.'; 'j ht:-?-'''-' weekonBontH.' lteltallkuWOiJl - Ilts. Jce PfCecedj: liuM8 .t. - If.'rvA-nt). iXsft.y icafil -jV ilKd- s:i REGEIwI i mi 1 if iu rem in the State. ' Prices. .JQ) m MMMMMriU 'ec!7dwetiM tohnitsrtua'.t',:' r ' I ! MRS: JOE PERSONS Remedy . - i. 1: :, ft l-tld frf.fv: I prifi , c'ur I Blftd Dlseotcii l. v HARRINGTON'S r US wmsm fc, - 10 '1, 1 iv; if I, I