VOLUME XXXIV. C HARLOTTE,; N. 0.; TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1886. PRICE FIVE CENTS. If FOR 1 -:o: Five Bottom SCALLOPED TOP KID GLOVES in tana and light browns ua rnrlAw mice of 75 cents. Other kids at $1.00. $1.25 and $2.00. We guarantee ail kids over $1.00 per pair. Line of 'II H AMBURGS, WHITE GOODS. &c. Sale of Remnants in Ribbons, Scrims, & HMITII BVILDna. MissLavinia Hunter is again at her to serve her friends. - -:-o-t New lot ol i TABLE LINEN, at S7ttc 60c, 75c, $1 00, $1 25 and $1.50 per yard TEA CLOTHS, " With Doiles to Jmatcn, n every grade. while and colored. Dottles Big IM of Towels, at $1.50, $2.25. $3.00. $3.75.$150, $6.00 perdoz. : MARSEILLES QUILTS, at $1 . $1.25. $1 50, $235, $4 00, $4.W each, to see the quilt I am Belling at $U5. Ask New Lot Scrim Curtains, at 12& and 20c per Tard. iniING8iIrx CURTAINS, By the yard and by the pair. AND PILLOW CASINGS at bottom prtoee. BUTf ARltF.R'8 COPSET and JaEJKS DOIL4R SHIB V ',: T.L.SEIGLE. House Furnishings! Ha 7S just received one of the largest jand.besV; selected 'Stocks of - -1 i - a - U''J -tc . CORSETS Ever brought to Charlotte. . A good corset for 50 cents. ; A better corset for 75 cents. The best $1.00 corset in the city. . . A Batteen corset (French pattern) without a nraL A first-class woven corset (French ) A good line of nursing corsets. ' t . 'y Misses coite in good style and quality. . afk.a Don't forget to examine the Unbreakable" and "Jewel" corsets. All the above are new and selected with care, and nt will be to your interest to look at the -same before buying. " E. LviMpiLltl ;.ci.r: SUCCXSSOBS TO ALBXAHMB HABRI3. " . .. PEED C. HUNZL1R. WH0LK8AUI - : - UkCtER BEER DEAXJ3R AIW BOTTLER! ' CHARLOTTE, N.lc I Eepreeento two of the largest LAGER BEER Breweries 1b theUnited States. ; TheBerfmer Engel Brewtaf Co., or Philadelphia and the . Mr. atMner Brewtac Co. of New Trk. ' ' TFTK T.ATlflTCST LAGER BEER BOT TLING fcSTABLISHMENT fi . IN THE CITY. . - tTnrders Soliciced. All order nromntlY filled and delivered free of charge to any prt of the city. -deoSOdlf WANTED. We win pay 15 eents per bushel of SO pounds for good sound new cotton seed ae?erea at our mui In Charlotte, M.C. - ; ' ' We will trade cotton seed me or seed, gmng one ton of meai for two tons of seeo, ... ' OLIVBB OIL OOMPANT, v ... Successors to Charlotte Oil Company. ; septlSddtr . . THE LATEST AND MOST IMPORTANT! COTTON SE We are now nmolng on full - time. 'Tumlture manufactured by as Is ' kept ; by ths enterprising furniture deeJert In this dty. ' We make only the best and most substantial .is the (market KO SHODDT GOODS. Ask for goods made by us and you win get tkt worth of yonr money. Oar name Is en each piece. We solicit the patzonaga of the pubiie and guarantee sausfaetloiv -&. 1 i Bespeotfully, , ' " ' ' ELLIOTT & HATJ3IL . imam BARGAIN. Lais TORCHONS, Curtains, &c. A1LMMI post over our store, and will be glad IL C. KCCLES-& CO' AUCTION AND COXHISSIOH 2 l" -AND SltrchaQdi rokers, BUY . . -.s'. ; V. REAL ESTATE. CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED TOE BELS10ST G0TEL Is now open to the public . 1 . Electric Xalljeils, Gss & Water, - : , ' -AND ALL f JlXodern . Hotel : ' Convenlencef JTEST CLASS IN ALL BESPECt3.;f Bate - - fa.SO Per Iay. ! JanlSdtf, K. W. OySBBXUGH, Manager. Housc3 Rehtcd.t 1 - - Houm rented and rents solleeted, In the an Adf "1lrm oi cnargo. ClAuLGX'X EAAL ZCTAT3 ASZNCTt B. S. COCHHAXX KanagWi Underwear 1886 SPRING. 1886 THE LATEST STILES ' OF- Spring .Hats I JU8T BECGITEO. I - Call and See Them. Petani & Co. 3E-ISO. CO. iv ki in lllliiUIfUUil 1 Ul v"i tf Trade CJet rrcU Cs-alEottJ "Truth, ukm the sdh, bomktimtcs submits to BX OBSCUHKD, BUT, LSI THX SUM, ONL.X FOR A Subscription to tbe Observer. DAILY EDITION. Slngieoopy.... By the week In the city. By the month Beenta. 75 . $2.00 ' Three months. Six months.... One year ....... 4.UU 8.00 WEXKLT KDITIOK. Three month .............. " BO 8tx months ...$1.00 Una year 1.76 In clubs of five and over SL60. Ito Deviation From These Rules - Subscriptions always payable in adTance, not oiut in name dui in iaet . ; The Tariff Tinker. Now the tireless tarlfl-tlnker With a tins: Would persuade yon he's a thinker, See him v. Ink; See him walk along the aisle ..- -With a veiy lordly style And a condescending smile, Vor a drink! . Morrison they say's his name; V Illinois Is the State from which he came, And his toy - Is the hobby of free trade. But his speed is greatly stayed, '-- Kor the road he rides is made Corduroy. . . NOBLE OLD W0LF0ED: MORGAN'S CAPTOR MAKES A CHARACTERISTIC SPEECH. Jostiee . to Jefferson JDarls and Tsk and Arms for the Boys In : Gray. '' '"' " ' Correspondence ol The Obseeybb. Washington, D. 0., February 28. Saturday havingbeen set apart ex clusively for speechmalpng on" all sorts of sub jects-a very saturnalia of oratory the House fairly rioted in the fat things yesterday of the Congressional imagination, i Silver showed up handsomely, and the sol diers of the Mexican war were zeal ously championed by one fine !old gentleman of the Kentucky school of politics. Col. Frank Wolford is a favorite of the House. He is the last remaining Senator of . the 'Forty eighth' Congress, Belford the tawny having been reared by his partyand the far abler Sunset Cox having gone to the Orient in spite of the protest of his party. But if the quaint dress and manner ana the still quainter speech of the backwoods Kentuckian are provocative ; of pleasantry, his honest views of men and things and his manly . sentimentalism always command respect. Brave but some- what insubordinate in war on the Northern side, when the conflict was over he laid aside his prejudices and considered the Union restored in more than seeming. His speech yes terday was full of the milk of human kindness and the wine of brotherly love. :' It is one more evidence of the great fact that the Democrats have as a party more of the true national spirit than the Bepublicans. In the beginning'of his remarks Gol. Wol ford said thai his bill the text of his speech was 'perhaps the first pens sion bill ever introduced in Congress that ignored on its face the existence of a civil war. He stated that he had been overruled by the chairman (Mr. Eldrige) on the majority of the com. mittee' who had put on an amends ment providing that persons under political disability shall not draw a pension. Here I quote him literally: "When I ask a brother Union sols dier, or a man zealous in the Union cause, .'Why do . vou want that in it f" he says; 'Well I can forget everybody and everything else,' and I speak plainly, 'but Jefferson iavis; cannot torget mm.' wny, wnat is the matter with you f Why can you not forget f : Is not every man who entered the confederate army, who understood its purport and meaning, just in the same position, and has .he not done exactly wnat j enerson uar vis did, attempt to divide the Gov ernment f ' lave you concentratea your hate so as to hurl it all upon one man's neaa v A moment later he yielded to a question from Judge Reagan. Said Mr, Reagan: - - , "1 fonlv wanted to say that my friend from Mississippi, Colonel Sin- fleton, read upon . the noor or tne. louso several years ago five or six years ago a letter - from. Jefferson Davis, when a bill ' was pending to pension the soldiers of the Mexican war, stating tnat ne naa oeenemmea to a pension from the time the bill was nassed to nension : the; Wounded and invalid soldiers of the Mexican war, but he never felt it, necessary to ask the Government tor it ; ano ne would prefer Jihaluhis name should beexcept from any "billj passed for the benefit of the -soldiars, so that it should not stahd'in the- way of : the Government doing justice to his com rades in arms' o ' v , Quickly came the reply " If Jefferson Davis, rising, abov the ordinary grade of. mankind",-wa8. so noble.as to resign nw pension ior the Hake - of his; fellowssoiclierscin Mexico ApdaswUUg'that he al never to "beowed avpensiorj'-tJr any tOTsideTatioTrforlsf vices, I nope to oe no - less magnanimous, t, will be no less magnanimous than he is, because he done so I am so much the more in favor of putting in his name." -f- ' '"f Tbe rough and. 'ready..- old veteran of two wars wasr not yet' done with the great civil leader of the Confeds erncy..-" n-'- , : "But I wantto call back' the atten tion of my friends upon this floor to a little bit of history, and it happened to beaittle history in which I was personally Interested, for i took part in it. Whin I was a'young man in a 'fnroitmfnnuntrv we were ' fiehtine in ilMexietyal a place called Buena Vista of it in the ' English language. We could see away up-he valley.; we had got that far into the Mexican country in our advance upon the Mexican capital We hadbout four thou anri effective men and were surround ed by the army of one j of the most celebrated generals ;-of the Mexican Government, General Santa Ana, who thought it would be easy - work wun nis twenty-oaa tnousand men, inclosing us in every - direction, to capture the little band of American invaders. I remember in that fight tnat one ot our regiments, overpow' ered by a ferocious charge, a brave and gallant regiment, commanded by Colonel Bowles,' of Indiana, left the field, and I remember At that critical time that we were forming a line to resist the attack of the Mexi can lancers. '. We were, in a critical condition indeed. .1 saw some sols diers away up in the valley who were coming towara our . rear and others coming toward -s us in every direction.- ;; Suddenly V; we found that we were surrounded. Shortly afterward ' I heard the r : clear ring of a rifle, then a volley, then another. . I turned to my regimental coionei, wtio Qiea tnat day," uoionel Clay, son of the great Clav, and asked, "Who is that!" His reply was: "It is Jefferson Davis with the Mississippi Rifles:" and I remember how Minyone and his lancers retreat ed before the powerful volleys of the Mississippi Rifles, commanded by Colonel Davis, and I remember when they left the field, a little afterward we were fearfully engaged in a great contest to liberate the great General Harding,--of Illinois, who had gone too far in a charge following the re- treating Mexicans and nad been sur rounded. --.r , .. 5- , 4,Our ; colonel, McKee, fell I dead and was carried off the field; our; lieutenantscolonel, Henry Clay, was. killed but victorv was ours. 1 re member after the battle we brought' tne dead bodies and laid them down before General Taylor's marquee and tnere wept over our dead, lor Ken tucky was almost literally massacred in tnat ngnt. While mourning over our dead, with hearts full and beat ing but still feeling pride in the! re suit, for glorious victory was ours, I remember hearing General " Taylor say to his adjutant general Major Bliss; to go and call Jefferson Davis to come to him. He came at once while we were standing there and General Taylor met him. That was the first time I had ever seen Mr. Davis. "General Taylor said to him: "Myi daughter is a better judge of men - than -1 am, 4 Mencetortn your gallant conduct m saying our army makes you entitled to be my son, and I forgive you." "l understood tnere nad been a difficulty about a marriage," li sir? nave notnmg to forgive in Jefferson Davis. ; He did as an hon est man what he believed to be right. But I look upon :bim not as Davis, the president of the Southern Con federacy, for ll forgive all that. I put it baoini m& when the war was over. I did not wait, as J heard a distinguitihrd gentleman say in the Fitz-John Porter debate, I did ' not wait ten years for cooling time. God knows I was cool enough when tbe war was over. Laughter. When it was all over I forgave the men we had been fighting. I have 'looked upon Jefferson Davis as a great man, who saved our army in Mexico and who saved the country." "I - want the attention of my Southern brethren. You pay a good deal of taxes, and I honor you for the way you have voted pensions , for the Union soldiers. God knows what we would do if the case were the other way, if all the money went to you and none of it to us; we might be selfish., fLaughter.l But you vote pensions' with a magnanimity that has aston ished me. And I want to say to the country here and now, to the credit of our Southern brethren, that thay have come up with the love of the Union, and tne love of the soldiers, and tbe love of liberty, and the love of the country -in their hearts, and have voted pensions, freely to the very men that they fought. ! Mr. Reagan: We have voted the full estimates, of - the Department everv time. Mr. Wolford: Yes, sir; they have voted the full amount called for by the Department every time, and they have done it nobly." But brave old Frank did not stop here with his magnanimity. He ad vocated the payment of "all the debts we owe the South, the cotton tax and everything; else," and the pensioning ofgali the soldiers. newed laughter. J - With charming and characteristic naivette, he asked : i "What more do you want? One man said to m6i Why.I-believe you would be for pensioning the rebel sol diers.' Well, all . the , rebel soldiers who fought in,the .war with Mexico I do want to pension.'-' I think nothing less would be just. These men say to us. 'We are poor.' God knows thev are. TheysayQur country has been ravaged by war.' God knows that is true. But say ome of our Union men. 'It : is right for ) the Southern people to help to pay the taxes to provide pensions Jor? the Union soldiers.? But what aabout tnose noor fellows whom- we da the Union iderwoundBd?Ilntehd to in troduce a bill " next Monday--and 1 avow it - to give to every soldier of ?tne Confederate ariny who, lost ia -.fog; of arm by our. ; bullets,- or any thing that we did, an artificial leg or ai artificial arm atthb-. expense1 of tria eovernment." - 1 V t j'I tell you," geotlemen, that a long way in advance of this -Congress stand the Union soldiers and jthe Union officers 1 have had correBpoas dence with them; I have received nu merous letters : that I intend j some dav rto lav i before Congress, and I feel justified in saying that twenty different Union soldiers within -.my khowledge who are - now '. drarwing jpenstons trom tne go vernment are giving the money to, Confederate:sol diersv I say the Union 'office3, and RoldferS"-stand in , advance of you. Thev are willing to support legisla- tidn which will say to these men that they shall not sutler, : f'But vou sav.v'Wemust not "give a nensioncto aoan who does not love the country. Qf course pot ; but do vdu' 8UDDoee!Ihere is Anybody now who.ioiiSliLlldyjeliis: countrytiDo. you suppose that any : man who was brave enough stohttdoeaot'jn'gw1 love this country: ot ours 1 His final arguments were clinchers; f'ThA i Ravaere- Indian has '-'been bountied and pensioned, .although he has fought the government. : scalped vour men and misused your women. He is the ward , of the government and receives: its bounty. - But, ;great heavens, we cannot; o anything tor our brethren.: 'fe can do, everything for the Indian; .we can ne Kma w him.; we can love him; : we can 'show oni Jove bvunmistakable evidences. But. we cannot love our brotheral though it is claimed the , Union ia to be) restored in . heart,' in'feeling,; in mit. Now. gentlemen, do you iot think you are going too far? Do you not thmk you are going in the wrong direction? wax sr : j-mi v - ow. iu.r. tjnairman. 1 am re minded of a notable thins in the his tory of our country, going way back to the days of the revolution. I had forgotten it lor years, and it has only jubk uuluo again iuo my memory. A am reminuea. sir. tnat ' alter tnat terrible struggle " through which our roreiatners rougnt for the purpose of gaming our independence, tnat after tne revolution nad been J accom plished, after the trials anl tribulas tions and dangers of that dav. iust bq soon as our rree government was Buccesstuuy started on us career oi honor and glorv. the cries of hate engendered ,; in that ' revolution ; of Tories and Whigs were forgotten! At one time those party cries bad led men mro con met and were followed by. blood and devastation." and - vet. when peace fwas iestored thev were restored x The words, "Whig and Tory' are not to be found an v where in the constitution, and I thank God for it. - It was a manifestation of the magnanimity: and statesmanship of our forefathers. Everybody was able to hold office: no matter wher-a thmr; had fought; with the British, against us, or with our own people for inde pendence. They ; were united and harmonious, and moved -right along uuaer tne oiessmgs or liod.- Whitrn and Tories. alike, at the ivery begin ning, were elected .10 state Legisla tures and ; to Congress. tWhig ' bovs marriea xory giris.o and Tory boys marriea.H wnig , gins.; Applause. J And let me tell you; Mr; Chairman, that this thing of -marrying and giv ingc in marriage, will go -right on whetber-s-vou eo on or , not. fOron laughter and applause. 1 ; - . ;; j - - - 4!The chairman The gentleman's time has expired.. - a ;j ; ?? ; , i v 'Mr. Wolford Verv wfill ? T t.hinV I have expired too." Laughter H ;.:! STATE -1B WB. The Hickory Prefs savs that four hundred-thousand feet, or sixtv car loads of lumber used in the new ho tel at Warm Snrings wasi furnished by Me3srs. H . W., Uonnelly & Co.. of Icard. ; The greater part of this order has been fiJled since the first of Jan uary. h ,.a,--r..:;r k:- v' ; "- Greerjeboro' Workman :; There was an altercation in the bar of the court here today between two cf the oppos ing "counsel in an imnottant suit. during which there were some rough woraa ana a diow or two wan passed which, however, was nrOmotlv stoo bed by friendly interference. Jude Clark imposed a fine of $100 on each, which was promptly paid on the spot. . ' '; : . ;. AshevilleCitizen; We are informed that a young man named Roland Huff atetler, from Rutherford county; was recently killed on the railroad between Spartanburg and Augusta He had left home in great distress of mind,: growing out of a love . affair. At Spartanburg he took passage on the ireight train, being seated in the caboose in the rear of t.b.e car. Our informant says that he drank heayi ly to drown his Sorrows. . At a point on the road of which we are not in formed, he bade those in tbe caboose good-by , and went out on the plat form and stepped off. He fell on the rail and was crushed to death. Wilmineton Review : We are glad to hear of the nromDtness with which the insurance companies are settling their losses by tbe late conflagration, and have no doubt this promptness is fully appreciated by those of pur Citizens who were prudent enough to i , . -. 1 . - n 1 M ...... -19 . . be insured.- oy tne disastrous ijre last Sunday the Front Street, M. E, Church was destroyed and the con gregation have no place of, their own m which. to . worship. They ' need a church building at once and they are also in need of funds with which to defray the expense of erecting a suit, able edifice. The congregation will do all that their means will permit; but their loss has been, sov great that they will need the assistance of friends in order to. accomplish', their purpose. We hope and believe that there, will be a prompt ana. , generous response in tbe shape of material aid tb enable them to go to .work .vigor? ouslyLtind at once, ..... i; ,5 k mn erne for Blind. BieettH , Itching and Ul- eerated Piles has been dtscoreri by Dr. W: llllams. (an Indian Remedy 1, called Dr. wmiams' Indian Pile Olntmeht.! A sinele box has cured the worst chronic cases of 25 or SO years standing. No one suffer five minutes after1 applying this wonderful soothing medicine. 4 Lotions and Instruments do more harm than -good. Williams' Pile Olataient absorbs the" tumors, allays the Intense Itching, (particularly at night after getting warm In bed,) aetsasapr4tlee,glfe8 instant relief , and is pre- pared onl 'or rues, 1 toning oi iniri. un for notht X elsec- Pries- 50 cents. T. C. Smith & Danarlaterw, Wlvs aad Motners we emphatically snarantee Dr. 'Marchlsi'S Cath- ltcoDva Femaletemedy; to cure female diseases, siish as ovarian troubles, lnoammation,ndulcera tionj' laumg ana emplacement or Deanng auwq toenail, lrregulia'itles, barrenness ehange ot life,' teaoorrnoaa, -besides many weaknesses springing frsni' the above. like headache, bloalne. SDintQ weakness, sleeplessnessi nervous debility, palpita tion 01 tne.tparu a 1 tut sueoy aruggiatsi jrnae $1.00 and 11.50 per bottie.. bend to Dr. J. B Mar For sale- by 1 v Wrlstooi ' druggist, Charlotte 1 i, ., -(.JulyI7epdlT ! N.C T JUr:' RECEIVING . it d " THE BEST STOCK OF GOODS D THE CITY LN OUR LINE. ; - A. R. & W- B. NTSBET, , AUCTION SALE.; The sale of GOLD AND SILVER 1 1 - WILL CLOSI ON ! Saturday. rVfRbt, 99th- lnafant Mr Allen has Just returned fromNew York with a NEWSfOCK AQl vJOl remain only for four days longer. Parties not: having supplied themselves had better do so . atdnee. . r - , . H. C. "ECCLB3 Sc CO. febM . -- t FIRST-CLASS.; Sverythfng made In ourJBaksrr Is nrst-class. .Made of the very best material. - : . , - - Tlestsiss . Xlolls, TIem; Ilresvd, Cakes .r tU KLsida, . 1 f t " . T i Fiesh every morning at ,.(A tVf: ., :V, N. PRATHER, Trade Street. - 'Absolutely Pure. THIS MWnf rumr nriM A msMi a sttength and wholesomeness More economical than the ordinary Mndx. and mnnnt imuim in eomDetltloa with the mulUtude-of low test, short vr iiuuninste powaers. sold only .jjvnnuv ut feorwl, 1 SPEHtGS ft BURWKLL, Jan30d4wly Charlotte, N. C. , ASERVOUS DEBILITATED MEM. Ktcta Smpemrory Appllimees, for the irpeedr Sirea5L,er2ltne,ltc1 f A"t, Debility, loaa of VUaMty ao4 XanhooA, and all kindred troaMaZ j2f ?'enMS?wr Complete restora. Hooto BJth, Vta and Munbood iBaranteed. No rhk is lscarred. ninstrated pamphlet In rrelmf tnvioyc mailed tw. bTd(ireHnt V0LTA10 2SLX CO., IfarduJ, Sieh. novl7deodwTm. : i-- DRAFNEShrtKrJl twenty elcut years . Treated bv moot at tha spectellsts of the day with no bent fit. Cured him self in three months, and slnoe th"n hundreds of others oy the same process. plain, simple and successful home treatment. Address T. 8. PAGE. 128 Sast 26th St., Hew York City. . , T BN thaUSa"!. O t (Will Ol 1 Tn j f..r Tn1T BnnTn , u ui l to. want ktne and of lone nwini mt, 99m CHi-aa. I udeed, to .tronfr Ismrfi la it. .ffleacr. that I wi:l Mad TWO BOTTl.KCii hVltlur with iTl I.UABI.K TBS ATIEB en this IUhm ItuiHffflrar. AlTa.xDrfws.tid 9 n Ajt..m . , , - A. aLOtiCM , ut rearisc, Terk. A dies WANTED to work for us at tbelr own homas. S7 to $10 per week caq be easily , uuvw, uv i--uitiiui5; iii5tiinm.iii2 ana steady enQD .ijment Partfoulara and samnln nr th work sent for stain". Adress HOB1K it'lt'ti Co.. P. 0- Box 1916, Boston, Mass. . . M rf" K WaNP SALB3HBN everywhere, local and traveling, to sell our g xxls Will pay good a ary a d all.exoenses. Write for terms atonoe. and state salar wanted iiiiiiui STAND 4 ED 6ILVEK WARJt COMPaivT. Wash ington Street, Boston Masa. mar34w Established 134U. Incorporated ISM. liH TteSi ; Bradford Go. ' Successors to - . Sole Hanafact- urers pf the ' Old Rr Uabla md Celebrate BRADFORD Perils Mills For Any Slnd ol SMALL GRAIN. Also Manufactur ere ot Ginira! Ffaur W Maclilnery Nes. 33, 37, 90, 31 nad 33 Lock 8t Near Highland Hopse Inclined Plane; Vrif! for OstaJotia;" CINCINNATI Ot " decl2deadAw!ni. ' . - NOTICE; ; ; ; : I offer for for sale privately my farm tn Anson eounty, N. C, lying on the Pee Dee river, Just be low the crossing of the C. C. B. R. Said tract eon tains about 1.0U0 acres, with good Improvements, and is one of the best grain and cotton farms In the State. I will sell as a whole or In Darcels to suit purchasers.. For further lmfonnstlon, ad dress H. M. DlUtzS, - . : - Abingdon, Va., .Or 8. ft. WaI4 Luesvine, N. a . .. . seUdawtf WALKER, B, K. BBTAN. I L.J. I & CO., Wholesale and Betafl Srooers. - ft r- WEVT FIRM HEW OOODfl iltlf the first day ot January ,1886, the nndersfened V Centered lntoa eo-partaerahlp-foe tha purpese of carrying on a (iencral G rocen Chsincss I i ' i At the old stand f Springs- & Burweu. corner Tryon 4 Fourth streets, We are qualified by long experience, ito meet the demands ot the trade, and give satiraction to our customers. - TV e wul aeey on nauo iu hu uuicb b tuu suiua FAIHIT SUPPUP.1 Which win be delivered tn any part of ttf dtll res of eharge. I .V. we will not be undersold in the Charlotte market. t There Is a ood wagon yard In the rear of our store for the accommodation of our easto- mers. ... ... . . , . j i tt- t, jiALSER & CO: iTHE''CEnU'MCC IW THIS. ABOESI1 OCtU JOE SOUTH. AXIiKtIUSOFC SElEDSiiPLOTS Bead for New Illustrated CataTogue for 1886s : c . and prices of Field Seeds. Mailed FKEE. t: w: wood & sons, r ; Wholesale sod Betsll Sesdsman, BlcUmond, TsW JanUwSm. . . . , ,. ; -A' ;GIear Skin -, a j3 only part .of beauty; it'isa part . Every lady y. it ; at. least, what 1; i like it." .Magnolia'; A freshens, and ' Loth 1 ifies. rail Hon will - - , .New Yoek, Jan. 21st, 1886. . Met. . WittJco w tley Barueh; , -. QxaTLEXSK : I have this day purchased at a . Manufacturer's ; Auction Sale, 2650 pieces of Muslin Underwear at a great sacrifice. Would advise you to close out at once all stock on . hand as low as 25 per cent, below cost. . Will forward goods at once. ; Yours truly, ' s v- H. B. MASTERS. When it appeared in these columns time over 1,000 pieces of , Ladies' Under Garments ; And were awaiting the lot purchased by bur Resident Buyer. - .. " , : i v "it i' t " i1 1 . , . THE ENTIRE SHIPMENT HAS ARRIVED 1 THEY ARE ALL FRESH' ,, GOODS I TUlUx WlSKlfi BOUGHT AT A GREAT DISCOUNT I WE ... CAN THEREFORE AFFORD TO SELL THEM CHEAPLY t We have placed them on our counters with lower prices attached tn thnm than you can buy the material to make them up with. ; READ THESE PRICES. Come and Examine the Goods. (DGnenmnb WELL . MADE, OF GOOD FRONT TRIMMED POINTED YOKE MADE OF FINE FINE MATERIAL TRIMMED WITH MADE OF GOOD . MATERIAL TUCKED FRONT TRIMMED with Cambric Ruffle SQUARE TUCKED YOKE trimmprl with nine Pmhmirv ' ' YOKE OF TWO ROWS OF INSERTING rows of tucks between BEST WORKMANSHIP AND MA.TERI L TUCKED BOTTOM AT Sfic IJAMHKKI Kl 1 MADE WELK CAMBRIC! RlTKFT.ir. HA.NDSOME MATERIAL, with wide. TUCKJLNQ, CAMBRIC RUFFLE, and HDi?awei?s WITH TUCKED - BOTTOM 4 OAMBRIO TRIMMED, .WITH TORCHON LACE AND TUCKS " 75C. CHAKLOTTE, N. C. MALL ORDERS SOLICITED AND PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. The largest and mostcomplete stock of IN ; THE ;. ." r "; PIANOS ANDSORGANS Of. jthe' best ; makes onthejinstalImeht"plan. 6w' prices :'and?easy:terms. ISend'for, prices. j "I1 1 11 ii.iii.,.- i i i i in mil i i ani .i -. ... -'vj V-v-L J ;i : r:..; -. A-ft) & tfu,r, .''. ? . i to I 1- AGENT FOR iJtJDDEN: Wo charge for ESo CHARLOj-TE, 1ST. C. Eeneobep about a month aeo. we sold at that MATERIAL, ALL SIZE. AT 21c. W IT d EMBRD. Rt fc'FT.TC 29,i TU0K.S. CORDED BAND - 48c TORCHON LACE 71i WHS -with rnfflrl nnr-t nnrf fmnt t. S9c. " 60c. 41 75c " 7c. rTH 1 .w. A Nil omhl Arl " 65c. " 78c. " 87c. niffl nf Torchon Lace embroidery AND CAMBRIOTRUWIXaTTSSc - Ruffle of embroidery 1 ' 46c. " " torchon lace 75c. " wide embd. " 70c. STATE. - - ! rsur.-smffr jSpastsBgwaawssssss PliAjlDIB -AND . ): JDelivered.. FUEIGHT PBEPAin, & BA.TT58 packing or draysge. i Pi I V i ! i

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