Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / July 29, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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- r VOLUMEEXXXIV. CHARLOTTE, N 0;, WEDNESDAY JULY 29, 1885. PRICE FIVE CENTS. SOIVIE AND ENDS Fine White Goods a . Per lad SOME 50o. GOODS at 25o. ER YARD. iee. nni-m fliid 15 cents Dress Ginghams at 9 cents, are haying a big run. Call and get one. Another i of Oriental and Egyptian Laces and Flouaclngs. Bemnants and Datterns o , ; ; ; at About Hi Their Summer Sis Former Free WAhAve alareestockof Linen Ulsters. Also a law stoc of Valises. Hand Bacs and Saratoga TmJS: Sine I SathVFans very cheap. : Job lot of Elbbon from 2c. per yard up. Mosquito Cano-. pies ana r uwiw. ; - f ' i - , Wliite, 1 ; "- SM1XU 1 BBtt.niro. Belts ftlLIBSMIIDIE u Mil A BIG LOT OF -v, 'f'i. .'"::'::. :. ? i'-i ' U JERSEY JACKETS Liatest. Truth, likk ths sra, mktimes submits to KB rroSCOKED, BUT. UXX 'THS SDK, ONLY FOB A Subscription to the Observer. .r- I DAILY EDITION.- - - , Single copy. ..1... - 5 cent t5y tae wees in ineciiy zu ' By the month..... ;..........,... ' 75-. Three months.... ..$200 , , Stxmonths:.... 4.oo ; i One year .....i.....: 8.00 i l ' - WEEKLY EDITION. . , - r' Threemonths..."...;...........!...... 60 cents. Bixmontng.;.....; , ..,.......$1.00 One year..;. L75 : in clubs or nve and over $1.60. : , - , Xo Deviation From These Roles "Subscriptions always parable In advance, not only In name but in fact. - in all sizes styles and prices. No garment so comtortable for the season. - ' GITE TnEM A TRUL Respectfully, t' s - f . iLo mwm. ; Every, lady is respectfully invited to -call:, and examine our stock of Kid Button Boots. A large and "elegant line of hand sewed- Kid But ton and French Kid Boots, the' finest land best that are made. (We al ways.show the best that are made;) KID LOW BUTTON, : ; y NEWFORT TIES,' . OPERA. SLIPPERS, " f V AND SANDALS, N o finer line has ever been shown in this market and our prices are always as low as elsewhere. Orders by mail have care ful and prompt attention. '- --'..''. ." ' i. .' "" . Alma Polish for fine shoes is the best and nicest. retail 25 S. CHARLES STREET, BALTIMORE, WSD. - PURE OAK LEATHER BELTING, MANUFACTURERS And Dealers iu RUBBEIt BEL.TIjVG, PACKOG, HOSE, &c. . rhTTOJr. VVOOIiE and SA1V MILC SUPPLIES. &c. j , . . ... . . , 1 Rubber Belting: " - -in Hoyt'aLeatherBelt. Mt.' Vernon Beltincr" WW - ' " - - J w Joseph N bones' Sons Roller Slasher arid -1 . " " Clearer ClothU IT. K.' Earle sCarcj;;:; Clothing, &c. v Y BUSINESS DEPRESSION. r : -The business- depression which is so seriously felt in this country is not confined to this country, but is felt to an i extraordinary. ; degree in Great Britain,, and to a less degree in Ger many and other countries in Europe. It is impossible that business stagna tion should occur aDd continue for any length of time throughout the United States without making its in fluence felt on the other side of the ocean, and vice versa. Where nations have close commercial . relations. any material derangement in the business affairs of one must necessarily - more or less affect the other, v They, act re ciprocally upon each- other. Europe buys a great deal of American ma chinery, grain, beef, pork, &c, and as hard times, want of work and scarcity of money limits the capacity of people to buy; rigid economy bes comes a necessity, and the American manufacturer, producer,' farmer and shipper suffer in proportion as , this economy is greater or less. It reacts, and the cpnsequence is a curtailment in manufactures intended for foreign markets,' a reduction ; of ; the general shipbaents ; and a fall in prices, that results in closed shops- and - over stocked pork houses and granaries.' Our, own laboring people deprived of employment; and our farmers unable to sell at reasonable profit the pro ducts of their acres,' are compelled to scramble i along .the best" way they can, economize,-1 stmt themselves. deny themselves the little comforts and even the ordinary indulgences; of better times ; they eat less, ; wear Iess,: and thus the trouble spreads until all feel it more or less. At such a time capital, proverbially timid, s becomes extremely; so, and the millions of dollars that ; in ordinary 1 times would go out to seek business and in .vestment are locked up in vaultssin idleness, ' beyond ; the reach of ; the borrower who cannot furnish better security than would be required in ordinary times. As hard as the times are there, is as much money in the country as there ever was; enough to meet all the demands of business, but it is lockedvup,and will remain locked up until the tide turns. If the money now locked up were turned loose and employed in the building of railroads. in' sections of the country where they are needed, and where within the near future they "will be built, and in the construction of other public works," the money thus put in circu lation for the payment of labor em ployed, and the purchase of material,, rails, cars, &c. , would have a material influence in lessening the depression and in hastening the business revival and prosperity that everyone is so anxious to see. ." In dull tiimes,' when labor- is "cheap and material , cheap, the cost rf the construction of great works is small in comparison to that in flush times, when ; labor , has rea sonable compensation, all hands find employment and-prices run high. But the owners of the idle' millions do - iiot take ' this view of.it. arid are better conteu,t to let their millions be injocked security than to go out and seek investment for5- it" in new-enter prises, wuicii iiu nine, alter ousiuess equuiDrium , nas oeen recoverea ana theyJget over-their scare, they, wil eagerly take hold of. ;r v ' 1 DORSEFS SKETCHES OF DIS- TOG1JISHED REPUBH-; " ' '; CAIS.- " - ;. ; V The (jalveston, TeNews, furnish- es the following sketches of ex-President Arthur, and of Garfield's cabi net, fron an interview with ex United States Senator Dorsey, of star, route route fame. : Speaking of Arthur he he said: . I know very little about him, but he has his good "points. His charac ter is equal only to the obscurity into which he has fallen; Detested by those who put him in power, shunned by the ablest and best ; men of his party, he wilLhave from this time on on in his maudlin moments leisure to reflect how expensive ingratitude is. Arthur has not political influence enough to make a lean, shadow, and he is scarcely remembered now: by the masses of the people as a person who ever occupied a public office. v In reply to an inquiry as to, what had become of Garfield's cabinet, he answered thus: " You mean the personnel, I suppose? As to Parfield's cabinet, Mr. Blaine is writing a book with wicked thoughts aoout the past: Mr. Windom is build leg a railroad in Mexico; Mr. Lincoln is oearmg an np ever haa his name; Mr. James, who gave Vanderbilt $500,000 ,out ' of , the United States treasury, is running a little bank- as he quid, pro quo. which Mr. Vander bilt provided for him, in the ' upper part of New York ; McVeagh, that moral, intellectual dvsDeDtic. havinc quarreled - with every body he ever Knew s now- Dgnung nimseir. i think in the course of a year or two he.will die of a morbid , hate of. his own name He is a little son-in law of a great father in law. ; As to Ar- hurs cabinet,5 Brewster was lying drunk in New York the last I heard of h.im, and they were preparing to ship him to Europe as, the great curi osity of the western hemisphere. The only , two' respectable men Arthur bad about him;. Senator Teller and Judge Gresham, you know all about. U k BARi; AiTK OU A CE TI1E CO MM E3. CEM EXT OF XII EI U MONSTER a I I --FOR Monday, Jnly! 13, 1885, LINENS, The present ; month has been a notably warm." one throughout the TkT : 1 1 T "XT' TT 1 m-. a ' A 1 , iNortn. n iewiorK uilv ine merv mometer ' from which the official record ismadehas marked for the past eleven days; 90' degrees at three in the af ternoonj the warmest period of the day: Jn recent years, the N. Y Sa remarks " the lieat this month has been surpassed but once, in July of ' 1876f which ? was an excessive- y. warm month, when the average ;or thirtheen days was 94 degrees'. The heat becomes greatest about three o'clock in-the afternoon when the warmed stone' Davements and ..) Will prove the most tempting, the most startling, the most profitable tolthe accumulated heat. ' public, while its shock. to competition will be terrific. ,1 The prices we will - -mm - - - , v oner gooas at wiu oe iainy amazing, lor regaruiess 01 cosi or vame we snax i .1 ; it . ... a. a j. r m 11 t . j. x Mr. B F. 'Jones chairman of the Clear oui every department m oruer u maKe room ior ail ampoixawons. 7 . y pieces, qe! i . ' s:-: HAVE A FEW.1 hi J-. . ? -5 v A rrl y-' :- C ' Also rine French OrgandtetiTtil2Uft!i'- tom t 3"c Out emjiantof StmimerBteck wess Goods must be sold.;, Our friends can "get a' Mosqi to" Canopy cneape rrora us uiaa swwre. tWehavflftnman atnobnt rTa vlzr.'.. w,T.Xr that we -are tffering ai less than -half Price. una P, S Wfl ian fiiiith cfiJie-n-V" ' or, n,fi;h Yiav9r orders : at thi stow; Th?y irake i' - i ii uiiuiiMi viiu.i in.nuj iuuul t j . - " ' - : .-- ucr joiiy ana preserves tnau any ctlierirult. THIS GIGAXIIC SALE OF ESEIEBEallIESRir, m. TOWELS AND SHEETINGS CD mi t EMU .wsei ft Mira CHARLOTTE, N. C. W.; -Eaofman ft o. LOOK THROUGH 'THIS .PRICE- LI ST. 3ohnDailey( at Coney. Island, L I., engaged in ine iooi-naray ousit ftess las i Sunday of holdmg a cigarette in hia, mouth for' a Mexican sharp shooter to fire at. The shootist miss ed the cigarete and hit the- man in the jtemple inflicting.a probabljr fatal 5Vound., If he recovers he ought to be sent to the lunatic asylum, and the sharp shootist ought to ' be :.in - some working house breaking rcclc.u ; r. A number Of Northern papers ; are pldblishing wood, cuts oV Geh. Grant, famflyV and the physicians, .who 'ats tended;bim, -The cuts are nearly; all horrible daubs.-. . The picture of Dr. Douglas is. a reproduction of Jeffer son as lie appears in Rip Van Winkle after his Catskills Republrcah National Committee in the Blaine campaign, thinks that Mr: Cleveland's administration has ' been good so far, and that : Mr. Cleveland is honest. On the whole it looks ;, as if .Mr. B. F. J. was disposed to knuckle to the inevitable. y ' i Judge - Foraker, the Republican candidate for; Governor of Ohio,' has respectfully 'declined the invitation of Rev. Mr. Leonard, the Prohibition candidate, to canvass the State with r him Prohibition is one of tho ques tions that Foraker does not ; care ' to touch with a iorcv root poie. . . ' . ' fn nl irTTT - TT J LTTSTr ' 3 O ison ' AVenue Methodist Episcopal church, said in his sermon on Grant last Sunday, that Grant had an aver -, Qur great sale continues all this month. Our variety is'notconfined to sion to music, and would go a .mile ODD SUITS nor are the sizes limited. We have all sizes and styles.1 may out of his way to avoid coming in be of INTEREST TO YOU to contact with a brass band; The British" government has ap pointed a commission to investigate and report upon the causes of the present business depression v in- that country which seems to puzzle the statesmen. A Joker on .tlie Coddling Motlis. San Francisco Alta, July 18 The plan: of feeding, the . grasshop pers on arsenic worts to a cnarm, -v .. - . ,l . f inar nd thev are being killed off by the Seersucker Coats and Vests in very large varieties, which we offeffor less rn OThi rOVflr tllAV A1A T.f ntl niPRfllTlH n . Llliill LUCY UU1 W wu.frlJ.B lUi uvouv... - . , ,., Trr-rs the counties A of the San Joaqum yKK.," ,aJ STRAW HATS! ' ... . 'STRAWOHAfBSt i witJi hues and insects. 'A new and ingenius way of ; setting with the . . y. 5 : We intend to close out at a great sacrifice, .. A fan line of . coddling moth,-the insects"; that purs worms into all the apples and spears, ,: . . 1 C", i. Set-iirirr P.ftnHc has just been discovered: , When the , UentS ?" UrniSrling , UOOaS. insect tarns into a grub it crawia ; up the trunk Of 'the tree, looking for some to deposit oerforated with small holes, is -fas? ten'ed around the trunk of the tree by; the wily faT-mer and the worm thinks that one of the orifices offers- a fine home ,,for hi3 ,( family1 and enters; without questioni- JSut atier, going in it increases so much in bulk; that it cannot get out. t andlfalls an , easy prey to vne iarmera iiireu- uiaw , o are glad, that there is now. a prospect of getting apples not plugged full, of wormshoes. - One Hundred Men's All-Wooi Suits, Sack and Frock, at $ 6.50, wmth $10-00, LJi.f One Hundred Pairs Men's All Wool Casslmere Pants at $1.50, $2.00 And $125, worth $2.50, . , - - . $J.25, and $4.50 ' . - , , -, ' . Boys' and Children's Clothing at remarkably . ; . . - r apujn Ihlch One Hundred Dozen CJg& 25; centeIt wOl pay.to, posit ftsegg3.VA piece of tin, - -. (Z ' , ; , ... Tiat the Btore of . ;. . , - . . . rated with small holes, is .fas- , t ,-'.:. . ' ' . : ' 1:. LEADING CI-OTIf IX?RS. CETTUAL HOTEL COXXXEIX. Cheap .Lots, For Sale. t ffo fn a! lht'Lots 50x200 fet.lyln2' n ' If hffllous.orsuflerSgTom impurity of ;tu66c, HlSSS5? or we ak lungs, and fear of consumption scrofulous 1. one wishing to secure a cheap lot, would dq n,o tho iwt, tato Tir piRrm'R " "Cnirtpn r.u tn nail soon, as the prices at Which they are twenty .years Hap. in the Medieal Discovery - and It will cure you. Bydrug- offered means quick sales. coCHRAJfi -. ' ' l gists. . ; . .. ..- ; - mayffidtf , , Manager ; B, S. MYERS, " Broker- and CoznnissionT Merchant, ' ' And Dealer in Feed of aiyinds, , v ' . C0LLE8I stbsst;, ' ' '
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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July 29, 1885, edition 1
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