Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / July 4, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOLUME XXXLV CHARLOTTE: N. C., SATURDAY JULY. 4, 1885. ; PRICE FIVE cents: - V , - i'.l ill u knd laOW: PROCESS IT, hi !" I COME ON! Some New Goods Just In Uearlng one of the new ATTIGE CORSETS. Noladr should be without ae In warm weatber. ive them -a trial an4 be convinced of their merit. Beiceiiitotr that lam sacrmciug mj Block oi INE PARASOLS wry low prices. Ask to ee the Dress Good .ami .lipomas BARGAIN COUNTER? I pew arrivals cff Cheese Cloth te the different lenine shades. New Oriental Laoes, White Can-l-Belts, fcc,&e. k limited quantity of the 12Vsc Linen Lawns Bo F FN CONTINUES AT- 7r The wt-PK w win maef ve a I tge stock of r tw ,n ""a 'I 'rge stock or hf t?r. v i em, wmte vth f,'l?od8 b"'ni2 sold t a treme-dous loss to ua. RUBBER BELTIISG, PACKIBT HOSE, Scc. 413 WSS. w ie':-:lir:Ci (BiD(iD.(iDs Cifortal FOB- SUMMER WEAR. Tbe largest and best selected .-stock of LOW SHOES FOR GENTLEMEN That&as ever been shown in this market, consiit ng of STRAP SHOES, BUTTON OXFORDS, CONGRESS OXFORDS, LACED OXFORD S Made a Opera, London and French last, in plain and Box Toes. We earrj a large assortment f Widths, from largest to smallest. All wfit be shown at popular prfoes. , GIVE US A CALL. Miller's French Blacking is llie ; Best. Soldonlf by - era I Co, Uj Shoes MMllElt IAMB SpodLs?;; Store. r?00rrl,a"e mov-tapidly. Every day thi stok !s erwin? smaller and th desirable poods ae le Wa mi u WUI "He a iutTne'" reqnciun in orner to ciose uo i"e Dimness a eftnj yua Uf b-t. v e in. White Gods and Cambrics to be found amwhe e - . . mi. 1 1J, nn a 1 .1 . In 4-a ffthlo i u '"K sola 1 a twnle UOUS lOSS lO U3. V e WOUiU u giau w sec cycij uvu.iu iut fuisween realbarsiilnswin iinfTt.Krt hff -. - - S. CHARLES STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. fcFACv nil n rih?ri1 i inTiirn nri TiMn I UiilV LtM I II ill i DlLMNu, pos;,yooLEiff.na saw jiull SUPPLIES, &c. Agents : lastonBelting,CQ . . Rubber Beltingv a a . I r- i . JJ.jKr tarle's Uard Clothing, &c sV U 5Hjc Charlotte (Dbsevuer. Truth, likx the suit, sometimks submits to BK OHCUHKD, s BUT, LIXJS. THE SDN, ONLY FOE A TDSX." . ' Subscription .to the Obt-errer. ' DAILY EDITION. Single copy.... 5 cents. By iae Ween In . Ule wiy 20 , . ; Bvthemonfb. 75 Three months ................... ........ $2. 00 Six months.. .00 One year 8.00 - WEEKLY EDITION. Threemonths ' 50 cents. Six months. ....... ..$1.00 One year 4 1.75 JUi ciuub ot five ana ovtsc $1.50. Ho leviation From These Ritlrs Subscriptions alwaVs payable In advance, not only in name but in fact. ..v-: . 1 SMALL IWDUSTIIIES. An effort is bring made to enoour age the establishment of tobacco fac tories in Raleigh, and as an induce1 ment to the investment of capital thf '"Mty authorities are urgd to exempt property and capital so employed from taxation for a given number of years. Some of the leadit g citizens of Raleigh ar moving in the matter, and seem to be very much in earnest about it. , . , ; : , : , What, the South wants is diversi fied industries in her towns and cifies. ard diversified fanning . Until this comes there can be no real at.d per m " nent prosperity in this section. Diversified industries in our towns would keep at home millions of doK lars which are annually sent to Northern States for the purchase of articles which could be as well made at homeland the raw material of much -of which comes from the South There is but one thing lacking and ch it is concert of action Capital, of course, is necessary, but there art few Southern towns where the neces sary amount of capital could not be found to establish one or more man ufaeturing enterprises, if undertaken in the rMht way. In other ? manufacturing sectious tbe j3int s o rk plan prevails, and five, ten, or a hundred or more people may have their money invested in manufactures of various kinds, and thus these sections have cume to the f ntAii4 taken --tbe-leacLlf -they -had depended on vindividual capital and individual enterprise, today they would practically be in tbe back ground. One industry leads to an other, and that to another and so on until the town that began in an un pretentious way becomes a manufac turing centre and capital from -outs side voluntarily comes to it. The result is not only the giving of employment to the people of these towns, but irawing to the'm men and women seeking labor. These must have houses to live in, they must be fed and clothed, and capital finds profitable investment in the building of houses, and the merchant is bene fited in his increased sales of goods1. Every industrious, self supporting man or woman added to the populas tion of a to wn adds somethirag to the wealth of that own, and contributes" more or less to the prosperity di rectly or indirectly of every one identified with it. It is to the inter est of the real estate owner, the mer chant, and the capitalist,' to encour age manufacturing enterprises," Wen if they derived but a small return on the capital actually invested in them for the benefits derived in other ways would pay handsome dividends on such investments. We want to , see the day when everything the South needs will be made at home, and when her young men and young women who hav to earn their bread by the labor of their hands will find abundant and profitable occrpation without going elsewhere to seek it. s They, say5 when the Now York del egations were be.sieging Mr. Cleve land about the Federal appointments in that State, he swore a great big oath j Well, if he did, it must be re membered that these are very warm days in Washington, and that;, run ning thegaUritlet of rivlNewTotk. f ctions is nof calculated to increase Presidential piety. . , , , . The languishing; condition of . the business indusies of the -New Eng land States is illustrated by the fact that the. semi-annual dividend, on bonds and stocks, payable in Boston, aggregate $10,014,753, while the divi dends f rom jnahuf acturirig enterpris-' es f'oot up only .3,pp9fiJet semi annual dividend for, years. r-. ar ca email than his First-Auditor Cheno- ritlfor Congessrnali Warnefi V 4 - eWiYork ;Vprld's Bartholdi pedestal fund amounted Thursday to $89,647.67, contributed by 99,789 peo pie. SecretarV Mdhnihg! fih ttieKei - .... '.ui v-'.'i? y j; . . ,. ?e, showea tnac ne. was a. ; pigge: ... THE FOl BTn. This is lhe grand day. when ; the American eagle is turned .loose and and screams his loudest scream, and the small boy turrs himself loose, and fires his pop cracker with patri otic ardor, while hig older brother, who has passed the period of pop cracker, etc., manifests his ' love for freedom by liquid remembrance of the men who pledged their lives and sacred honor and backed the pledge with musket and ball during the rev oiutionary scrimmage Whilst hav ing passed the pop cracker age, and not. relishing the eagle screaming oritorical performances over much, nor altogether in love with the liquid way of attesting devotion to the memory of the fathers, we like this day and like see it hearti'y atvd unan uiiously celebrated it wakes up old memories, calls the 'attention of the young to tbe grand characters of the past, stirs up the patriotic mbt-rp, brings the different members ' of , the American household nearer togr-ther. and makes them feej more 'like one people with one grand ancestry, ot.e gran 1 country, and j one grand dps tiny. In this spirit h t the day be celebrated, where v- rr it is celebrated, and that ought to . be evi ry where where two or more' Americans are asse nbied. , ' - The Supreme Court of California has decided that ex Senator Sharon ha a right to appefd from the decis ion of the lower court iu t he Sharou- Hill c i8e, and has ordered a tay of aliujouy pending hearihg'of the ajs peal. ' ''"-'i w- ' --- . The nomination of 'a State ticket by the Prohibitionists of Ohio adds somewhat to the roughness of the sailing before candidate Foreaker. Ix is much, easier for the man who is on top to stay on top than for the fellow who is down at the bottom to get up. . . . Gold and Silver. Washing on Critic '4."' "The treasury .gold fund rose steadi ly during the month of Jun, aK though the predictions Of the finan; cial prdss had been to the cotitrary. The monthly loss of gold which had become so serious a matter was re versed and the fund rose from $114, Ot 0,000 to nearly $120,000 000. The result got 8 far to quiet the fears of those who had predicted : disastrous results of the continued silver coinage during the ! present summer, and gives the new treasury officials conti dence in the soundness of 1 the policy which they have adopted. The central idea of this policy is that the outstanding silver currency is so widely scattered through remote regions and the outstanding goldso largely concentrated at the financial and business .centres, that if the treasury department carefully avoids the unnecessary issue of silver cer tificates , and succeeds gradually in getting out its large fund of fraction al silver, the government receipts will necessarily be very , largely , inv gold, and its equivalents and the gold fund fund will be steadily, increased. . Th3 change in the character of the customs payments is already .very apparent,, the results gratifying and the conclusion ? logical that as ; the, silver in the treasury ; approaches $70,000,000 the proportion of gold in the government collections must steadily increase. :" . " ' Tlie Decline of Frencli Cooking. Paris Correspondence London World. . I do not know a single restaurant in modern Pans where you may go unannounced and be absolutely sure of having a delicate and, faultless dinner.;ftThis statement . may jseem to oe sweeping, que am spedKiug from exoeriencei 1 and- e vett in - the three most famous and most expend sive establishments Of Paris I have souvenirs of unartistic cooking,' coal- fire roasting and economical sauces French cooking nowadays, V bothi in restaurants and in private' houses, with very rare exceptions isrvlacking in imagination ; the carte is limite i ; you get the same dinner every where and you feel; that 'yoiiare- in the hands of a cook who has studies a couple of years; i mastered , a doze a recipes and then ; taken a place of cher. Formerly in the classical days of French cooking, a ckef would study fifteen or, .twenty 5 yeara before he would venture to preside over the saucepans of a grand seigneur, or of a rehowhed restaurants... A SajDl Social Kumor. . ProvWence Journal Rep, '- ' :r. : ..' : -' Tt'is rumored thai the objection, to t kr. Keiley at'.Yienna comes ;f rom the. gitimatefWnupt vicwrtflEminaAUL; jrernaps ine. AmnaBuor wi iua t-uay his ownf ipiresence at the Austrian VJOurjt is sumcient eviqenc agauu his father, without ihe testimony Tof Keiley. ,irg,T i" illeu. h jlnrsi 8i Dr. Pra2lert Magtc . Olritment : wires - as u vj magic, pimples. Black heads or grnns, woicnea auu bnmtions on the face, leaving the Bkin clear and eeautitul. Also curea Itch, salt rheum, sore nip ples, sore Hps, and old, obstinate ulcers. Sold py pold by T. v. SmUA Co v 1 '' I' III 1 I IIm"I vs i-Jj Will offer another lot of Fresh Bargains for this week, so . ..... ........... .'.-.,." . - Don't Waste Your Time, Don'l Wasle Your Patience, DON'T WASTE In going elsewh re, but come direct to head quarters, where pur low prices cause pre tended competition to hang its weary head at tlie sight of our startling bargains, ;Wheat:iot Oha.fF. Rkbts Not Fiction! Our siaiinch old friends, as well as thou sands of new ones, can tell you where Tlbe DBfiK" IB AKK TO BE FOUND. - . Greater Reductions than ever this week Oen ui n eFast- Golo r summer Silks, 25c French Ginghams, 8cf worth 15. White Goods, LACES AnDEMBSOIDEfilES AT AUCTION PRICES. Bargains, in every department. ' CHARLOTTE. N. C. W. iiainifiBiiaa k o. 3ULa O dII? Our great sale continues all this ODD SUITS, nor are the sizes limite be of INTEREST TO YOU to LOOK THROUGH One Hundred Men's AU-Wool Suits, Sack and Frock, at $6.50: worth $10-on $12.CO and $1 j.Op. . One Hundred Pairs Men's All Wool Casslmere Pdnts at $1.30, fi.C0 and $i2o, worth $150,, . $3.25, and $4.60. , , Boys' and Children's Clothing at remorktblr lj - - v: '- '; - . . -, i. r- - - . r . . ..- Seersucker Coats and Vests in very large varieties, which we offer for less , v ; than they can be bought for elsewhere. . ' STRAW HATS 1 We Intend to close oat at & great sacrifice. , A Ju.1 line ot ' . , , ., .... -v;v-- .',:..:-... . Gftnts' Furnishing: Goodr. One Hnnrlred Dozen Gents' Summer - visit the Cheap .lots1 tfdr Salfi: ' l oner lor imie xaui! uuw , V. L inenort a western corner wi mo u""u city Umlts)Tanxl north of the cemetery, cheap. , Any one wishing to secure a cheap lot,-ould do well to call Boon, ; as the prices at which theyare offered means aulck sales. coCHRAKZ. imarSSdtf' , Mwuuter;. T7I V V - ' . -if eat -A 'J 4 1 7 Vf-: ' 7 MONEY YOU It Z7 Ii n e n Law n - n ly: J.0c. 9 ISLM - 'S'iSr'i moath. Our. variety is not confinbd to i. We have all sizes and styles. - It may THIS PRICE' LIST. STRAW HATS ! Scarfs, 6 for 25 cents. - It will pay to store or 4 , , try LL B. S. MYERS. .. Brofor aM Connassion "Hereby And Dealer la Feed of all kinds, " . COLLEGE STRSSTf
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 4, 1885, edition 1
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