Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Oct. 16, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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m iin - w . ri a ir Bit -r w f m KhI VOLUME XXXIV. CHARLOTTE, K. C FKIDAY OCTOBER 16,-: 1885. PRICK FIVE rs. i i ' glue TtlDtit tefexxxxx ' "TECTEt. LIKB THE SUIT, SOUtf F3 SUMTr3T0' OBSCURED, BXTT, LIKJ? THB -OP- m I "HI M ill! Child esamers . - , . :.V' tfv ...:':-'.. .:.t. . ' -' ; ' " , .- . . , . ' "..''. i ' 1 ' .." . t; , In Hayerlocks gd. Plain Circulars from $1 00 to $3 00. Swfesciriptioii to the O Ferrer. DAILY EDITION. ' .1 . . ' Single copy Scents. By the week la the city . 20' By tne month..... .... ....:...-.f... 75 . Three months... t. .i ...$2Xia Six months...: ........ .i.,:.. .... 4.09 - One year . 8.00 " - WEEKtY EDITION. Three months i :'. - .t . B0 cents. Six months;.-. ...$1.00 - une year, xva in clubs of fife and over $1.50. : No Eevi2itiT JVm These Kules Subsalntions always nayable In advance, not only In name but In fact. - llis'siil Boys' Coats TV Kief From $150 to $7 5G. ' . ( RUBBER SHOES, FOOT HOL-lOS, &C. Umbrellas, &c. MlIflES I AtESMBKB 9 Was pronounced by visitors at the opening to be unusually attractive, all being charmed with the handsome display of Silks, Velvets, fine. Dress Goods, Ladies' and Chlldiens' Wraps. . . ; No lady should purchase a Silk or Velvet before seeing my Stock. No lady can afford to purchase a Flannel, Cash mere or Jersey Cloth before examining my prices Remember That I have the greatest variety of i Childress' Wraps To be found la any house In the city, and at ' ' prlcts that no one will complain at A case of 22-lnch Cashmere, with all wool filling, to he sold at 10 cents per yard,- Excellilig Ourselves The Most Attractive Stock Ever Offered in the State. oots, lioe s, JL. Trunks FIFTY YEARS. of systematic division of labor, which in turn has .been made possible by the phonomenally larg6; amount of Capital now at tbe command of the manufacturer. Social changes'" have been no less marked than those of Van industrial character., . v The "sphere of woman has been greatly enlarged, and nev theories of the relation of the citizen to the State have come in vogue the world over, producing unrest and at times disastrous wars. . . In literature realism has been sub stituted for, romanticism, ajid in phi osophy Herbert Spencer, Darwin and Maupsley have for many minds tak' on PC a IT W VAUSEB, UMBRELLRS, ETC., - ( - -"- "' . -" ' ' . - ' Is now being received and placed in position for show and sale at our old and well-known stand in the First National Bank building, bnWestTryon street, nearly opposite the Central and Buf ord Hotels. .' - Call and Examine For yourselves, brders by Express or Man prompt ly attended to. . , . SPECIALTIES. ' . ALMA. POLISH and BUTTON'S RA VEN GLOSS for Ladies' Fine Shoes. Pegram Co. 25 S, CHARLES STREET, DAL7lfJ3Cn2, MD. LT 5 MANUFAC TURERS H IBM & H Una - UaSssu to a And Dealers In RUBBER BEIiTING. PACICIVCV TIOSE, &c. v, - COTTON, 'JVOOIiEIJ and AW MIUL SUPPLIES, &c Boston Belting Go.'s Rubber Belt mgv s Leather Belt. - Vernon Belting. mm i Pit uf Joseph Noones Sons ittoller blasher and , Clearer Cloth. 1 i5t!T. K. Earle's CaroS Clothing, &c .KS. f Til o "We are Agent forEikin Wop'Yavn and Blankets. A few. days ago Col. R. M. Hoe, New York city, visited A. S. Abell, en the place of philisophers " of the proprietor of the Baltimore Sun; at school of Sir William Hamilton hia home near ttyat city. v ' v ' In a word, in all the walks of sci- Both gentlemen have passed . the ence and learning changes extraor three-scor-and-ten mile post, and dinary for that) extent and character their acquaintance has extended over j have taken place within the past fi a period of Wore than half a century, ty. years, , and it is worthy of note iNaturauy tneir ccuversation turn, tsiati cnese two oia trienas, . pioneers ed backwards to a panoramic review in: their respective callings, have kept of their business life. The Baltimore steadily at the front in the march of Sun thus refers to the meeting: ; v 1 progress The fifty years of their friendship vThey are the only survivors of the and business activity embrace .chan- original board of directors of the old ges, industrial, political and social, Magnetic Telegraph Company, the that constitute a veritable revolution precursor of the present vastly tele in the conditions of, existence as they graph system. first knew. them. . ne worm or . ineir eany mannooa THE PJLUPERISM OF LABOR, is hardly recognizable today. Gov. Colauitt, of Georgia, while in ' They have seen the beginning, and Chicago recently, was interviewed by have step by step traced the develop- Q Inter-Ocean as to his views on ment of most of the great powers that ttie attempt to force a bloody-shirt science has placed at man's disposal campaign in Ohio and Iowa. He powers - the utilization of which so condemned the brutalism, of course, sharply ' distinguishes modern times nd sai(i . notice that the Repub, from the sluggish ages that preceded licans in Iowa make their fight upon them. a platform that denounces the pau Few perhaps realize the number of perization of labor in the South, and new agencies piacea at our aisposai B6ek to determine their State politics in the last fifty years or the vast ex- and polity by the$agitation of an by pansiou given in that time to mvens pothesis with which their State has tions and discoveries previously nothing to do., i think I should talk known. m6re truth than demagogism- did I It was within this period that the attempt to show that labor is pau Baltimore and Ohio crossed the Alles perized elsewhere than, as charged, ghanies and by its advance to the in the South, and if I should retortr I Mississippi valley began the great era wouid speak of elegant taansions of extended and cheapened transport with their domes and colonnades, tation facilities that has so profound- their lakes and lawns, of splendid ly modified the industries ' of the equipages, with uniformed drivers Eastern States of the Union and of j ani footmen, and of those that ride Europe, i ? in them, blinding, as they go, with Within.this period also falls the es dust the miserable poor that haunt the ablishment of the first line of trans- way. Friend, labor is not pauperize Atlantic steamships and the shorten ed jn the South, for if it were some ing of the time of transit'from Europe WOuld, by compensation, become ens to Amorica from fifteen to less than riched, but of the enriched there are seven days. none. Save a few who may be seek-. The iron, and later, the steel ship, jng health and salubrity of climate has to a very large extent displaced y0u do not see our people in the tne wooaen vessel, m mo uuiiumg oi South. Iowa and Georgia know one which Baltimore once excelled. annthesr but sreoranhieallv. We The; wooden man of-war, with its have no rich men there. If one has many decks and numerous guns, has $5000 or $100,000 we call him rich given place to a steel fighting mas jndeed; up here your rich men must chine clad with metallic armor of ims millionaires and then are noor at mense tnic&ness ana armea witn a at." few lOOton breech-loaders, not to mention locomotive torpedoes, Gat- irxr. co in araccas. lings, Nordenfeldts, and other wea- The Hon. Chas. L. Scott, of Ala- . nnmA Ati bama the new minister of the United pons unknown even by name to our state8 16 Venezuela, in a letter to a tars a generation ago. friend in Mobile, dated Uaraccas, The steam engine, which had fifty Sebtember l. writes: years ago accomplished wonders, had 'I am delighted both with the, peo- since been so much improved, both md aQd hospitable! while the other ashore and afloat, that it now con- is most beautiful and attractive I sumes but onesfourth of the fuel that have been the recipient of much at- it then employed, and has more than tention and kindness since my arri- , , . ' . valhere, and havmg made myself quadrupled its efficiency. ; .: familiar with the routine duties of The Morse telegraph has revolution- my office, I find my official labors ized business methods, and by tras now more : pleasant : than arduous, versing land and sea with its network My relations with the government ;.. 5. -nnaA v,aVoii are of the most friendly and cordial of lines has co-operated with the rail- character. The longer I stop here road to alter most of the conditions the better I like the country ; and its under which the arts of peace and people. . war are to be successfully prosecu- "Uaraccas is situatea m a oeautiiui , vauey surrounueu ,uy luyvenug auu tU. , hnft-ir Tnnnntoina An all Qi'rlpfl Tf". hflS The telephone is a thing of . yesters a population of nearly 70,000 people, day. but in its narrower sphere has and many handsome public buildings, already done much to modify busk and a number pf fine private resi- mt 1 - 1- M1- 4- m,r M 1 1 mm mm A mm A. I ... -mm- . xne eiwirio xiguu ia buu wu&o and the best description 1 can give cent aDnhcation to practical purposes vou of it is to say that it is a perpet nf . wnnp.rtv of elfictricitv loner fa- ual sprms, ana resemDies ; mucn ; our ... monthof Arffil in old Alabama. utner great luveuwuua ul iuo iaou fnakm g the acquaintance of a num- half century are the daguerreotype, ber of English sneaking families, who and its sequel the photograph; the I have both wealth and high social pos sewing machine; - the McUonmck wuiuu, m v, 6 . . - very kmd and attentive, ana made reper; the use of iron for purposes of me-leel at home by their marked and construction in nouses ana Drxages; generous hospitahty." the Hoe type revolving cylinder .' " '-. " - press ; the Bessemer and other quick Swapping ,Off John Sherman. processes of tmaking steel; the makH "-VI . ingof aniline dyes and various arti- AU m favor : of swapping John , Sherman for a hyena and kilhng the ficial vegetable colormg prmciples gyena will say Aye.' Those oppos- from coal tar, and the introduction of d will say "No." The ayes have it by the paper inache matrix as a resource a large majority. Governor Hoadley of the stereotyper. ' will please proceed- to jnake .the Omitting W-other things that swap Before his term of oflexpires. deserve mention, it inay be' observed jositiVe Cni-ciSr JPiles.1 generally that there has "been a vast J to the people of this county we -would say we improvement in all the mechanical have been given the agency of Dr. Marchisi's Italian luipiuvcmw- -firtivX fnJ-rr i Pile Ointment emphatically guaranteed to cure or processes, SO that articles formerly m money refunded-latemal, external, blind, bleed- the reach only of the wealthy are to- ing or ltchmg piles. Price 60c. a box. No cure, no aay to yo.i '"WC1'13. ; ' Yov sale by L. E. Wrlston, druggist, Charlotte, ims naa ueeu j Hcwuiuuaueu uv aiN.C.---' : juiyiveoou. It is true we entertained a multitude ol people yesterday and : added all in our power to their vamusement. Ilarely are amusements remembered any longer than th last, hut for; Which they neyer will forget, we have concluded to make-: the following offerings - " , FOB inio WE I ONLY These, we know, will attract the - Ladies : WjUmmV 23-inch black gros grain BiiKs, extra heavy, at 1.32 J, was considered cheap a L $2.00 per yard. There is a limited quantity of these only. A full line of Silk Velvets in blck, fawn brown, seal brown, myrtle green, navy blue, garnat and cardinal, worth $1.25; this .week 92 cents. . ' . r . , " ; THIRD OFFER.' ,-A. magnificent assortment of rich colored and black Broca-" ded Silk Velvets, worth $3.00 per yard ; this week $1.65 FOURTH OFFER. 1 The best value Ladies1 solid, colored Cotton Hose at 25 ? cents. They ai e regular made, good weight and have no equal at 35 cents a pair. I iSIjIL - ' ! ' ' t' INOUR Mnei Kemember, all of above Prices for This Week Only; w n y CHARLOTTE, N. 0. DC I Xaufinaii COBHER CENTRAL HOTEL. CLOTHING. GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. . . HATSr .. - , . . - tfall ana f ioter &tyle&, T m. V M mt MM J Mm -2 . M m m M M WW tM MMUmmMMM V. 1 r . . . - - - ----- . .; . . 7e are offering the very" finest of Foreign and American manufacturers. Our stock is the largest, most varied and best yet shown,' and represents all the choicest patterns and latest designs in Mens', Youths', Boys' an.d , Children Qothinsr. : , Worsted; Uork bcrew Uassimere and Diagonal buits, Sacks, Cutaways, Double and bhigle Breasted. : ' - . ' .' Children's Norfolk Suits. . ; - . ' Plain and Fancv Knit Undervcar. Latest and correct styles, of Soft and Stiff Hats. These good's have been" specially maniifacir d for this season trade. An early isit of inspection vi3vf; j o o our customers a choice of selection and correct fit. O
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 16, 1885, edition 1
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