Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Nov. 1, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOLUME XXXIV. . CHAELQTTE- N...C,, - SUNDAY NOVEMBER 1, 1886. PRICE FIVE.OENTS. b gu ggestive. of comfort, and we usually to meet the irarits of all, tt- AND LADIES Troffl the pla!n NEWMAKKET at $4 00 to the fine RUSSIAN CIBCULAB3 SACQTJES and NBW4 JIAEKET3 at $40.00 and $50.00. Come ana see them before uurlng. Also, a big stock ol i y . MENS', LADIES1 and CHILDEENS' UNDERWEAR, ' . ; 1 ! ftom the coarsest at 25 cants to ttajyCAJffi lUnSt,8,11 10,00' 5 0ur and SILKS ! SILKS! Combination Silk Rhadames Suits. We have a full line of Leatavllle BLANKETS, YARNS, BLKACHIKG3 and MAC&AM2 CORDS. - Ar oJerlotof JERSErBfrom75centito$3W v , . 6 t t . Come and '.see; v.our.,8to'ck;: Special Attention to Orders for Goods or ;& 1 ?. L. .it Bay yourSIlfes from . . - t.r T. L. SEIQLE. Bet your Ladles Cloaks from T. L. SEIQLE. Baj jour Misses Cloaks from " T. L. SEIGLE. Bar your Glores and Hosiery from T. L. SEIGLE. Boy your House Tarnlshlngs from . T. L. SEIGLE. Bay your Clothing from T. L. SEIGLE. Bay your Boots, Shoes and Hats from T. L. SEIGLE. Tor good value let all boy from T. Li SEIGLE. f . L SEME SI THOMAS C 25 S. CHARLES STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. MANUFAC TURERS - PURE OAK LEATHER BELTING. And Dealers tn RUBBER BEIiTIlffG, PACKIUG HOSE, &o. .IfT!:.;.. Our stocfc is hsin. w ti.u a fVivn at, and they are of the most durable lines to be feund uj tituraary 1st. , Cnieeo Will buy more goods irom us IP " Of Interest , eisewnere. COTTON FLANNELS, RED and WHITE WOOL FLANNELS, COLORED ft1 MISSES' FLANNEL SHIRTS OUR :-: BLACK r : GOODS r: DEPARTMENT Contains an elegant line and very runch cheaper ttian can be Itun anrsSMre elsew We me getog te ulte snalness AJfD THE GOODS MUST BIS SOLD. las have exercised ourselves so don't forget our Stock of CB1L1BB' : WRAPS, ! SILKS! ! ! es, AILEMEIilSE ID! The Most -Attractive Stock Ever Offered in tne State. DUSES. ; MQllElifi. M s - Is now being received and placed In position for chow and sale at our old and well-fcnown stand In the First National Bank building, on West Tryon street, nearly opposite the ; Central and Boford Hotels. Call and Examine Tor yourselves. Orders by Express or Mall prompt ly attended to. , v , SPECI4X.TXES. ALMA POLISH and BUTTON'S RA VEN GLOSS for Ladies' Fine Shoes. ves HLats. Pegram & Co, COTTON, WOOLEIT aad SAW MILL SUPPLIES, Sic Boston Belting Co.'s Rubber Belting Hoyt's Leather Belt Mt Yernon Belting. rn . Si .1. ' " 1 nouer oiasner ana .' Clearer Cloth, T K. Earle's Card ' ; ' Clothing, &c - n f AniTarft worth of floods vet to fee closed anywhere..; This Stock Is posltlTely to be closed . - - DoIai?3 than twenty 40lars and. rerytliiDg else reduced. "Tkuth. Lisa tkk suh. sokbtxbgbs suBMrrs to ES OBSCUKKD BIIT, UEB TEg SUM, OKLT FOB A TUCK." . , - ' , ; - Subscription to tkeObserrer. DAILX EDITION. Stoglecopy ; - 6 cents. By the week In the city. ao By the month.. ,75 Three months . .... . . i 1200 ' ' Six months ; Jm . One year...,. raoo ; , WEEKLY EDITION. -Three months'. .' ' RnVwmtn. StemontJis...;... ..$1.00 - One year....: 1.75 in ciur 1 nve and oyer .J: If a Deriatlom Front These Rules) Swbacrlptlons 'waya payable ln advance, not only in name but in tiv&t DEMOCRATIC IMJK.E , Ilf , THE - '-south: - :i If John Sherman had his way the work of reconstruction would begin oyer again, ancUthis country .wouid be thrown into political ,and busines$ chaos, while, the Republican jjolitiW ciahs manipulated and ciphered out some new plan to keep the Republic can party on top. - That is the sole inspiration of; the renewal ol the sectional cry at this late day, twenty years C after the hostile armies , had' stacked their arms 'and ; peace . was proclaimed. The ' business interests of the several 'sections of this coun try are so connected that one section cannot suffer - without more or less involving other sections, and while these f bloodyshir t ,j incendiaries are laborinjr to tevive sectional animosif ties .and,war. upon the outh;-they also war upon the North, whose pros J perity is dependent to & great extent upon, the .DrosDerity ? of. the ,SouthL W allaio w.! ; w;hat the ; cohdition ok the Soiitb wass for several years under the '- reconstruction measures.;' that John Sherman and. bis political allies invented, and under the men who got control ot the Southern States through the operation of those meas i upes. They were years of business paralysis, marked by a saturnalia of crime and ) plunder, never before wit nessed on this continent and never since repeated. But since the over1 throw of the Republican party in the Southern States, and the State governments have passed into the hands of the Democrats the change has been so marked and the progress so great as to become one of the mar vels of the ? times. The Baltimore Manufacturer's Record runs up the result of this progress within l the past five years as follows: The assessed value of property has in that period increased $900,000,000. Home rule and hard work have achieved great triumph. . . ; Eleven thousand miles of new railroad have been built. With the improvements on old roads, this in volved fh expenditure of, $500,000, 000. The cotton mills have doubled in number and capacity since, 1881, and are still rapidly increasing.' The cotton-seed oil mills have quadrupled in number and capacity since 1880, and now have a capital of $11,000,000. In four years the production of pig iron has doubled, and 4,000,000 tons of coal were added to the aggregate in the same period. , - The phospnate rock, well known as a valuable fertilizer, mined on the sea coast f South Carolina, last year exceeded that of 1880 by more than 200,000 tons. ; - And not a week passes that new enterprises are not established or those already1 in ' operation enlarged. The Southern people busy in the work of development give but little attention to politics until called upon to elect men to take charge of public affairs.' i They are building railroads, factories, opening mines, making new farms, improving the old, build ing towns, erecting school houses for the education of the children of both races ; in a word, they are attending to their own business, and are - not worrying themselves over the affairs of their neighbors. In the meantime the colored man for whom John Sherman professes so much concern, is moving along quietly, is more pros- perous and contented' than he ever was when the Republican party was in full power. John Sherman, how ever, would reverse all this, he would clap a big stone under the wheels of progress, 4 right here, and ; make a reign of chaos again in the v effort to fixup - a little programme by which John Sherman might be eleeted Pres ident, and thus realize the thus : far baffled hope' which" he has tiherished, lo, these many years. But,"' in ; the language ot Aoranam juncoin, Joan has ' "bitten . off . more than he can chaw.w A colored member of the Georgia legislature, after trying law-making for some . time,; concluded he could make more ; money, laying brick at from $4 to $5 per day,, and resigned. . Gen. McClellan was born : in Phila' delphia, Pa., in 1826. - The delivery of natural gas from wells in Warren county j Pa., . thirty miles distant, at Jamestown, N. Y. isnow an accomplisbed fact.5 The gas when admitted to the pipes was I , iuu vjr - ujiuuica iu ezpeinng - ine air and forcing its way to the point of delivery- This experiment goes far to. justify the,, expectation that gas may be readily delivered ' through pipes at much more considerable dis tances from the, places, where it is ob tained with no other motive-'power than the . enormous pressure' under which it. escapes from the earth. ' . A - - -v'' ipen. Sherman writes a private let ter to a 1 friend in-. Washington, in which he says that President Cl6ves apd doubtless desires to do right,' but that be is too much under Southern influence.: He don't object, he saysj to seeing ex-(Jonfederatesr holding lo cal offices, ' but it goes against the SWMP. W wenl sent .abroad, , to re present the government. The hypos critical pld galoot didn jand1 it , so much against the grain: when Gen j Lcingstreet-and Col. Mosby were sent 'abroad"by,Gra;t, - - ,J' 1 ? uxwyii ;rnLo'gaii aad other bloody. shirt! orators: are asserting pn the jStuniri 1 in New York that G4nvitihugh Le is making thempaigrr in ' Virginia -riding in; thie sadclla oi. hiliricle;- aci 1 companied by an fiscort dressed in ! Confederate uniform, and carrying a Confederate flag. This is simply a uaouv or tn& wnoie ciow. unere isK neunec tne,saaa,ie, v;onieaeratelimii.f wrm. ornag TODaseionDutianlThat wer L0O Der vkr 1 im n u 1 Liin rnt in- . . . .... . ...... i . ... - .. t ,. the convicted ex-president .rine Bak, whis :nowsH n of ten years in! they Aul of ; the Marine burn, N. Y , : penitentiary, is - ini a frtime :of 'mind to .enjoy - any things perhaps he wUi take some soHd com!- fort from . the' . conviction of.Ferd.i:: r .,;mw ? 1 Ward, who he claims was the cause of all his troubles. ' i . , , 1J . j The Prohibitionists are not . carryj ing many States in the elections, but tb4y are increasing their votes very considerably. : ' -: - : Mrs. McClellan showed good sense in refusing K to have any , military foolishness at the funeral of her huss band. . Turkey can put, about 600,000 men in the field in the event of war. " The Spanish ' ftablnete negro, ! . London Graphic. The Spanish government seems adept at opening letters. There is a gdbinete negro, a black chamber, in the post omce, wnere letters to ana from the capital are opened, read, re- mclosed and forwarded to their desti nation, retained or destroyed, as the case may be. Steam for gummed en velopes, and red hot platinum wire for those sealed with wax, are no longer adopted to investigate public and - private correspondence. The mode of action is - almost sublime m its simplicity and effectiveness. Gum and seals are no longer tampered with, and the most careful investiga tor of the fastening, of .the envelopes in which his letters are inclosed can not find, any trace of their having Deen toucnea. ne naraiy ever tninss of examining the bottom of the enve lope, and if he did he would possibly be no wiser. A knife sharper than a razor is run along the bottom of the envelope, the correspondence extracted, read and replaced. The artist then with a finer camel's hair brush draws a fine line of liquid ce ment along the opening,: applies . a light amount of ; pressure, " and on tearing ' tne: envelope open tne last part to give away is that which is ce- j 1 . Tfc ' . ' I - 5lt" 1. .' . menieu. isut accidents wm nappen when these operations are conducted on a wholesale scale, and the receiver of. a letter is sometimes not a little astonished to find, inside his envelope a letter addressed to, somebody else, from a place and to somebody utterly unknown to, mm. Gents, to maKe a good appearance, should have shapely looking- feet. Fine fitting 8heesr con structed on scientific nrinclDles cover no defects, and at the same time develop all the good points tn one's feet. . For these reasons, and for ease and comfort, always ass your dealer for the "uajsah" shoe by far the best ever made. A. B. RANKIN & BBO. agents for Charlotte. . feblldeod Im Life's DecUae Inflrmiaes beset us to which our youth and ma turity were strangers. Weakness of tbfe loins, rheumatic ailments, dyspepsia, , loss , of appetite and unquiet sleep, are among these. As a means of counteracting the infirmities of age. Hoatetter's Stomach Bitters is ttnrivalled. It quickens and enriches the sluggish and impoverished circulation, begets a hearty appetite and youthful relish lor the food, and enables the stomach to digest It It soothes and invigorates the nervous system and ehesksa tendency to rheumatism. Its quieting action upon the great sympathetic nerve, which eosnects the stomach with the brain, results- im the speedy departure of the restlessness by might and disquietude by day, which are the reflected Btaalf estations of dyspepsia. It is a most effectual antidote to the pokon of malaria, gives a health- till imnetus to the action ot the kldners and oiaa- der, and is an admirable means of resuscitating idgr when impaired by overwork or other, cause. m t I . ,- A CARD. To all who are suSering from errers and imdls eretlons of yevth; nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, Ae will send a recipe that wlu ears ye, HUES OS CHAB8X.- This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send self addressed envelope to xv. Jomsra T. kmah, EUtWnD. New York. , wtmautwly. 00 00 -:o:- Mills He We will explain these When we will have oner. ij DXJLCK'AND COLOQED SUHAII siXXtfJ . 5 . 1 .s . w ' . ' . : . t 4- j ..t www . nav. m iw 11 . mmwm i,!,' ; - ' s " ' " ' hat, t? ' , ' COIOIZISD S.1T0S ft Jjl J-fiat werey o&: cent s ; per yard, HI BiUWDEQiS If o. I " M ' i HI . Our $1.10 a.oo Quality Which readily sold at gl,25! per Jyrd, we are offering now at 85 cents per yard. 1 ggTl BLACK BROCADED SILK VELVETS That were $2,50 per yard, we offer now at $1.25. r ' We are not merely naming imaginary Prices, we are posi tively showing everything as advertised. Parties ont a town should . hurry their orders . to secure the above Prices. CHARLOTTE, N. C. MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED. . 1 Miiniiai CORHEB CEHTBAl HOTEL. CLOTHING, GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, - HATS, ' : ' - , : Eta a OTSF0IPIEHIS1 We are offering the very finest ".of Foreign and American manufacturers. Our stock is the largest, niost , varied and best yet shown, and represents all the choicest patterns anii latest designs in Mens', Youths',; Boys' and Childrens Clothing. . t f - i ' ; ' 4 Worsted Cork Screw Cassimere and Diagonal - Sui!s, Sacks, Cutaways, Double and Single Breasted. . Children's Norfolk Suits. . - j ; Plain and Fancy Knit Underwear; v , v Latest and correct styles of Soft and Stiff Hate. ; ;?These ; good's have been Especially manufactured for thb season's trade. ' An early visiti of inspection, will insure to bur customers a choice of selection and correct fit, : , W.kA UI.IW.li il- TP I MiO Inl ; ;Beducti6nV'ly-::'ijL. t 4-' a few inor lines ' :' " i. we offer? now for 92 cent;. ; . wm n m n nea wnmm-. weoffer;; now .for 60 ;cents.. TOE IDirVG 0QADES, ' . we offer now for ,32 cents - , ' - e -. ; r . OP DL4CK SILK. '. for $ 87 1-2 . ent per yard M Below iGenilii a rmTTTnrr '.r V ! , r A 'S 'I -i - :l t
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 1, 1885, edition 1
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