Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Oct. 29, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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it fife 3S Suggestive of comfort, "and we have exercised ourselves un usually to meet the wants of all, so don't forget our Stock of LADIES', MISSES' AND- CHILDREN WRAPS, ; , : : ' -' ' ':, ; " ,. . 1 . ' . f. . ,:" '..'.. . '. : V : - "wim the plain NEWMARKET at $4 00 to the fine RUSSI1N CIRCULARS SACQUE3 and NEW :jS&T3 at $40 .00 and $50.00. Come ana see them before buying. Also, a big stock of - MENS', LADIES' anJ CHILDRENS UNDERWEAR, - , f - : ';!!",':. .-- .. ? ,, : . V -, . -A. AC A-nM 1 a A a A "m-f7lT n l-V A vr A. - ' ' . from the coarsest - DRESS GOOM seUlng falt, 811(1 SILKS ! SILKS Combination Silk Bhadames Suits; SILKS ! ! ! i w have a toll line of Leatertlle BLANKETS, TARN3, BLEACHXN6S and MACRAME C0RD3. Aii- Special or Come and see our Stock. Attention to Orders for Goods Samples. AlffllMlES ..& AILlSMMIEJlSil. mTn diidlditva. Si I Gil -:o:- Buy your Silks from T. L. SEIGLE. Buy your Dress Goods from T. L. SEIGLE. Buy your Ladles Cloaks from : - T. L. SEIGLE. Buy your Misses aoaks from ' t T. L. SEIGLE. Schoo Mrel Site Cltarlxrttje (Dhszrvsvi "Tkuth. ijks thx son, souxtdcbs' sohhtis to EX OBSCURED, BUT, LXKK THX SCK, OSLT FOB A Subscription to the Obserrer. . DAILY EDITION. .' . . Single copy , 5 cents. uyineweeKin tne city. a) By the month.. ........1... 75 ." Three months .; ....$2.00 ; Six months.. .....-... 4.00 t . une year......................... WEEKLY EDITION. Three months........... .. 50 cents. Six months $1.00 une-year.. i 1.75 in clubs of five and over $1.50. ; IV o Deviation From These Kales Subscriptions always parable in - advance, not only In name bat In fact. as;. . I. t ft, . -:o:- WE MATE JUST RECEIYED Buy your Gloves and Hosiery from T. L. SEIGLE. Buy your House Furnishings from T. L. SEIGLE. Buy your Clothing from T. L. SEIGLE. Boy your Boots, Shoes and Hats from - T. L. SEIGLE. For good value let all bnyfrom . T. L. SEIGLE. Magnificent Stock -OF- 26 Inch Solid Colored MIBIIEILILA! FOR SCHOOL CHILDREN. Price 75 cents. O . THQRIiASK-.' CAREY CO. 25 S. CHARLES STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. PUR MANUFAC TURERS ' E OAK LEATHE R BELTING, and Dealers lu RUBBEIt-BEIiTIJffG, PACKESCL HOSE, &c COTTOX, WOOiiES and SAW SIIIiL) SUPPLIES, &c ;;iParaBP.to negro suffrage. .W "f mmmmmmm:- Rubber Be t nor- . y were , ngnt -:3f2II& Hc l MiU, R,,r Union, and that Mt. Vernon Belting. ilf'fSlijiipliP Roller ;Slasher and , f;ipp:iC!earer:CIo I. K. tarle's Uard : : Clothing, &c "A JU . Our stock is being rapidly reduced, butthere are tho out, and thev are of thp most dnrahia lines to ba found anywhere. This Stock Is positively to be ciosea out by January 1st. .... . ' .. now wii.1. TnEi do it ? John Sherman and his little man i? oraKer are apparently naving a good time in running the bloody shirt business. . John says if ' the rights of his colored friend in the Southern States to the free exercise of the ballot continue to be ignored (he takes it for granted, as it suits his purpose, that they are ignored), then Southern representation in Congress and in ihe'electoral college based on the colored population will be reduo ed, we suppose, though he don't say it, to a strictly white basis. But in undertaking a little game of this kind Mr. Sherman will find himself mixed up in some very entangling entanglements. There was a time in the halcyon days oi the Republican party when it carried through Con gress any legislation it "saw fit bears ing upon the South, and if there was no warrant for it under the consti tution, as there Was not for any of those so-called reconstruction meas ures and much of the legislation which followed, they cavalierly dis posed of the difficulty by proclaims ing with "Iliad Stevens that they were Vextra , constitutional." Perhaps when Mr. Sherman proceeds to move on his proposed line some one will suggest to him that the day of extra constitutional legislation has passed by, and that he had better proceed with a reasonable amount of delfber ation and slowness. He .will , find himself attempting to . perform fWith an elephantine Jumbo too bigvfor his tent.4 The1 fifteenth r amendment to the constitution,; the only one under which he could have any pretense for action, provides that when any State refuses the right of suffrage to col ored citizens on account , of their color, the basis of representation may be reduced, but it will devolve upon him to show where the State does this, which will be a difficul featfcfor him, as no Southern State has done or intends to do it. . There is no statute of any Southern State which discriminates against any class of citizens or deprives any of the ballot except on conviction for certain crimes, which provisions ap ply to white as well as. to : black What Mr. Sherman and his clackers propose in this line they will have to do outside of the constitution, and right there they will run agains rocks that they will find some diffi culty in steering through. Mr. Foraker is a -younger man than Sherman He is brasher, no so cold blooded nor so cooKheaded There is less method in his howlings He declared in a speech he made in a New York town that the men who carried bayonets to secure the rights of the negroes would again; take up bayonets if necessary and " march to see those rights secured. ; Why, bless his soul, the men who fought in the Federal army never dreamed of They were told that mg simpxy ior me was how thousands of Democrats,- while Republicans were behinfl bombsproofs or buying substitutes,' were induced to go into the army and give their support to the war. It was not until after the war, until after the South had laid down her arms and her soldiers and the Federal soldiers had returned to their homes and " engaged in the avo cations of peace that the plotting Re publican politicians conceived the idea of springing the negro suffrage question, as a means of holding the South in partisan subjection. If they had attempted it before .the war closed, when the armies , still cons fronted each other, it would have been impossible to keep a Federal army in the field and the South icans would have it all to themselves. and Mr Foraker would find himself onely for want of much company, entirely too lonely to be cheerful. But we apprehend that Mr. Foraker, fresh in his enthusiasm from an un expected victory in Ohio, was talk ing without - due reflection and ins dulging in ; nonsense that in cooler moments would not have escaped his ips. ' . The latest reports from Ohio make the joint Republican majority in the egislature not over three and some is low as onei Some of the Republis can members are said to be opposed to Sherman's reseloction. It would be delightful to see the bid reptile laid out in his own household. Tho factional fight in Maryland continues lively.: In the meantime the i Baltimore . Sun publishes -i the cards, speeches, of the, respect lvejsiaes as aavertisetnents at so much a column and rakes in the cash. - It is. interesting, if not, funny. for the-Sun. The Holston conference of A the Methodist Episcopal Church South, at Chattanooga, Monday; declined to Change the Dame by omitting the woijd South Dy a vote of 119 to lf t !. .. ....... -., .,j Gov-elect Foraker, uf Ohio, made a speech for Wise at. Staunton, Va., Monaay. xne speecn was very cons ciliatory and didn't abound in', the bloody shirt. xne iNew xqvbl wona, keeps pegs ging away at Secretary Bayard, whom it characterizes as "Mr. Cleve land's evil genius." A PUEBLO BELLE. ! IT10KY ll lllUljiii EXTEND A W eD(b(i6LBQG5" -ALSO A- TlifTTn TTX fi n i Hf Hii tt n rr TrmTTmrm n mTTOvrvT niLU JilM V UliUilUVUlVJ TO VISIT HBIR -EJSTJLBIilSSZMSlJr'T' -:o:- 4 mm I ii du com en ts FOR THIS WEEK. IN The Way a New Mexico Indian . Girl Dresses Up. : r : v Louisville Courier-Journal Correspondence. . - We felt ourselves in'; luck one day when' w heard that a large party o: Indians were in town. They were o: thevfriendly tribe of Pueblos, which make and sell many curious images of Possible gods, devils, etc;, in their ugly looking eastern pottery. They were evidently decked out in all the idiytowbat the tribe could. muster, and had . their faces orna mented with bright patches of red paint, ana a nand&ercnief, or so twisted through; their long black hair. One of the dusky maidens we called the "belle of the tribe," as her costume seemed a little more stylish and aesthetic than the rest, and she herself appeared so perfectly satisfied with her appearance. . Her short dress reached barely to her knees, giving an obstructed view of her long buckskin leggings, and a red piece of calico was gracefully thrown over her shoulders to answer the purpose of a shawl, in lieu of a better. Her "bangs" were marve lous, and hung over her forehead so low as to almost conceal her eyes, which peered but curiously on the world from behind this straight, black mass. She and I met face to face, and with souls" above the cons ventionalities Of ' social etiquette, stood quite still to take a good - look at each other. I saw a look of most intense disgust light up her counte nance as she took in the details of my plain tailor made dress, then, with a sweeping and approving glance downward at her own irre proachable costume, she passed on, as much as to say: "Such horrible bad taste!" Sarah Althea's Plans A San Francisco dispatch says: "Sarah Althea Hill, who will soon make her debut on the stage as Por tia, will be billed as Mrs. William Sharon, the decision of Judge Sulli- van in tne aivorce naving given ner a legal right to the ex-Senator's name She proposes to ; play six nights a week and lecture on Sundays. ne is having her celebrated case against Sharon dramatized and i will produce it about Jan. 1st. If the plot is faith fully followed it will put the indecen cies of the French Stage to the blush. Mrs. Sharon'says she - will travel and live in a special car.. In the means time the aged defendant, whose at torneys f are becoming enricned, is very - sick at the Palace Hotel with an attack of malaria. Should he die the prospects of his alleged wife would 1 be much improved . for I the heirs, among whom is the wife of Sir Thomas Hesketh, would be likely to end the malodorous case by a com promise. " DRESS GOODS, - . . - :. .-i,. . - ? SILKS and SATINS - - '-a l . VELVETS, VELVETEENS, - .. . r ; KID GLOVES, HOSIERY, - . v . . ' . LACES, HANDKERCHIEF, ' v HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS; - 1 CARPETS and - CURTAINS, . , . CLOAKS and- .MILLINERY; : LADIES UNDER WEAR: - . ' ' ' :'r ' x We do not put forth these inducements as a temptation to' allure you to our. Store, andl then charge you ' fabulous prices for other articles you may purchase, we make these offers ix& a mark of appreciation for thpatronage extended-to ' Us through our Mail Order Department. t , " . Will buy more, goods irom us . than ', twenty .dollars wm wouid today.be an independent govs i eisewneitJ - .-..! I ernmenu , ju-r. a utaei. , wim an uia COTTON FLANNELS BED ?rd WHITE WOOL FLANNELS, COLOEED bombast forgets that when he talks ! DEESS GOODS?HOSIERY, GLOVES, GENIS', -LADIES' and, about taking up arms agam the cry ' MISSES', JTLANNEL SHIRTS and every anzi eisa reuuveu. wouiu uui uo v w muu, uui ttt ' i,T a nrr 0 "'-rxwnTy TjnPMTT'Ttf'T to save the Republican party by se OUR :-: BLACK:-: GOODS :-: CAPAK-lMJl-iNl curing to it the southern negro vote, Contains an piPaT1t linA zvfl verr'ir or-.rw r rr.n i fc i-a e-ywHere else..' We are going to a -j0b in which Northern Democrats Wte buslceE3 AND THE GOODd MDoT B.t bbl-D." " ' f 1 .1 f V. nrf. fn f ; V- o - R A r4H" v' TV:' TWCa part. JnsuchacrusadeUhe-Rspub- FEUIBEBTOK'S FBENCn WINE ' COCA.'. .. ; . A Dellglitf ill . Werre . Tonic . and Stimulant tliat JfeTer Intoxl- . .... . . cates. - - , It gives strengtti tone, and power, for complaints of the stomach, Liver and Kidneys; It is par-excel lence, a balm for all these troubles produced by care, worry, and overwork of - brain, all, mental troubles, Melancholy, Hysteria, Blues, 4c. If you are wasting away from age or dissipation, or any disease and wea&ness of the nervous system,'; you will obtain relief from all such troubles by the use of Pemberton's French Wiiie Coca, the wonder cf Tonics and Stimulants, which will build you up at once, and the n:sl Cose will prove Its mvlgoratlrg powers. ; . , ,' , . . For sale b? Cru:lsts. . , .; oct27d2w. , , W. H. Vion & Co., Assets, Crlotte, N; C. . - DO NOT FAIL TO It is the largest within a radius of 200 miles of Charlotte. GIVE US A CALL, WE WILL GLADLY SHOW YOU OUR G00D3 EVEN IF YOU DON'T BUY. CHARLOTTE, N. C. MAIL OEDEES SOLICITED. ' .: - ' - . w CLOTHING, GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, bit Full a nd Winters life We are offering the very finest of Foreign and AmerieaD 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? and Childrens' Clothing. ' ; - , . , , t. . - Worsted Cork ; Screw ; Cassimere and Diagonal : Suits, Sacks, Cutaways, Double and Single, Breasted,- ,: ;j Children's Norfolk Suits. ' r ; " Plain and Fancy Unit, Underwear. : Latest 'and correct' styles; of Soft and Stiff Hats. "! -These good's have . been specially manufactured for this sea son's trade. - An early visit of inspection will insure to our customers a choice of selection and correct, fit i : : , i. ; s . i ', i i . is ' ' if 'j .41' ' !!" ' ii." it if . w '. ' ' 'IV i . 5,;'S Ck f i 4 I .- - X - -4 i
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 29, 1885, edition 1
1
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