Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / March 5, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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of DRE33 GINGHAMS, SHEETINGS, PRINTS, SEERSUCKERS. A uice hne In Bleachings Bi'kir, FrBit, WaisnitvN. I Mills k Pride West We have opened XioitfURG EDGINGS , f thpm if vou want some cheap aged with our Bale of U dies' and Misses' ' kerp that Department up to n.iii riii luuceuitj wurtuiui : poj uiur brands of CORSET S. D nt forget to look at our new $1.00 corset, Misses and Young Ladies Cor nets and Corset Covers. Our 5 BUTTON SCALLOPED TOP KIDS . t ; ail the neve shades, are having a bis run. Will have a new lot j of them into morrow morning. Other gMITQ BUIUDIWO Anotiier Installment -OP- NEW GOODS X-o-X Jbe popular . I0MESNN CLOTHS 64 Inches wide. Full line of colors In spring shade of JERSEY CLOTHS, At 62ft cents per yard. SI! BLi'K GQOnS STOCK Is complete, embracing everything new ani de sirable. Ask to see my leader In Black Cashmere, Best in the city lor the price. . - Beautiful line oi Me Mi k Embroideries. Call and see them whetheiyrra are ready to pur chase or not. . . - BUT W41INER' COKSET and SEII,V.'SIH1 iAR8UIRa T. L. SEIGLE. Have just received one of the largest C O R '.B 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 Satteen corset (French pattern) without a nvaL A first class woven corset (French ) - - A good line of nursing corsets. . . - - V - .Aliases corsets in good style and quality. , , , Don't forget to examine the Unbreakable" and " Jewel" corsets. All the above are new and selected with care, and it will ue io your interest to iouk. at tuo .... - , : i SUCCESSORS TO ALEXANDER HARRIS. 1 FRED C. UUNZLER WHOLESALB LASER BEER DEALER ANV BOTTTJELR CHARLOTTE, N. C Bepresents two of the largest LAGEB BEES Breweries in the United States The Berber A Evgel Bwta Co., of PhQadelptaia and the P. & m. SchadTer Brewlag Co.. oi Mew York. THB LARGEST LAGER BEER BOT TLING ESTABLISHMENT IN THE CITY. f70rdero Solicited. All order immnti. filial und delivered free of charge to any pirt of the city. docSOdlf WANTED. We will pay 15 esnta per bushel of 80 pound for rood umnri n eexxan seed dvered atoormUi Iii Charlotte, N. C . - , . j We will trade cotton seed mea. or eeed, glnng j one ton of. meal lor two tons or seea. ; : . OLIVER OIL COMPANY, . SnceesMn to Cnarlotte Oil Compaoj. eeptiSddtr THE LATEST e are now runolng on roll time. Furniture manufactured by us te kept by tne enterprulng forMtuie dealersln tbta elty. We make only the tat&nd most sobetantlal In the market NO 8H0DDY fiOODS. Ask for goods made by oa and Jou win get the worth of your money. Our name ! a each piece. We solicit the patronage of the PQbUe ami gtiaranlM satisfaction. ; - BMpeetfoUy, ITT SB AND MOST IMPORTANT! HKT, we have - up a nice line of & TORCHON LACES. goods. We are very much encour-. Muslin Underwear. the full standard, and at prices that i..uv. w bargains. P. First TJational Baft Biillini, South Tryon Street, - - - -DXALBBSIN Charlotte, N. C. Ladiea'Misaea'and Children's , rrai button, Congress & lux shoes, - Gents' line Hand-Made and lfachlne Sewed BOOTS, BUTTON AND LACEBALS, - JBOTS AND lOBTOS' : . ' HNS BOOTS AND SHOES OF ALL GRADES ' GENTS' FINE Silk, Soft and Stiff Hats, TRUJSKS, VALISES and GRIPSACKS, UMBRELLAS OF ALL KINDS, - 1 SHOE BLACKING AND BBTJ8HES. AJma Polish for Ladies' Fine ihoes. Stock' alwavs kept lull and of up to the demand. ORDKK3 BY KAIL OB EXPBES3 PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. Co, and best selected -Stocks of B IT S iuo wiwv "j H. C. & co.; AUCTION AND COMMISSION Merchandise- BroKers. BUY AND SELL REAL ESTATE. CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED THE BELMOYT HOTEL la now open to the public.- Eltetrle Call Bells, Gas k Water, - AND ALL Hdra Hotel Conveniences. FIRST CLASS IN- iLL RESPECTS. Rate - - O.ow rer y. ' - K V. OVKRBAtTGH. lanlSdtl. " . ' Manager. Housed Rented, Eorioes rented and rente eolleeted, In the etti 1 Pegram k ECCLES ni e no his "TXjJOTiaAjS WU A6XNCY, C E. COCI3AKX KanarTi "Tbdth, ukb raa row, sokrtocbs suBHimm BK OBSCUSXD, BUT, LDE THJS BUS. ONLY Mm A tna." - - Subscription to the Observer. ' DAILY. EDITION. Slngleoopy... 1. By the week in the city. By the month M 6 vents. .. 20 ..15 ' ..$3.00 4.00 ..8.Q0 - Three months Bix month .... One year ... .......... f WXSKLT.XDITION. ThrMmAnthir - Six month , 60 cents. $1.00 jne ye.. in cium oi nre and over SL&U. Mo Deviation From These Ble Snbscrlntlon Rlwnva navabla In idwiM. not vuit ui iiune dui in met. TO FIGHT UNITED LABOR CAPITALISTS ARE BEGIN NING TO ORGANIZE. An Effort to Have the Many Pools tlfat ConfTST CapttaUsfIFro dluction Come to an Understand ing on .Labor Questions. . ' New Sork Star. - A few years ago there was not a single trade union in the country able to ; stand a protracted strike. Skilled labor bad partly organised, and unskilled labor was at the mercy of rapacious employers. -The condi-? tion or. partly s&uiea lanor ten years ago was illustrated by the mill opera- tives of New England and the fiataarsJ ei rennsyivania. . fe'SF Adjoining each factory, in imch, cities as Fall River, Lowell and Wor cester, there stand the many-peopled tenement bouses and the company's stores, living witnesses of the way in which the employer in the mill was the landlord, the butcher, the baker, the clothier and the shoes maker of the men and women at the looms. Every operative was forced to live in a tenement house owned -by tne factory, and to buy provisions at factory stores. Books were given I thorn Ann nxra-r t.hoir aimnt.iima r.hAV w w O J were permitted to have as much-as their wages would pay for, . minus the amount of their rent. They were ground down as fine as the corn in the mill. : fetation alter petition was sent to the great men who lived in the grand houses near them. Legis lative committees were appointed to inquire into their grievances, .and laws were passed to ngnr tnexr wrongs. Uut wages ieu lower and lower, till the pet brutes in tne nouses of tha mill owners name to be envied SSStSftS.Stsrifsa tne labor or. tneir iitetimes wouia not let them save enough to exist a sin gle week unemployed. The factory- rents and the factory Dutcner Dins took all. The factory and mine Jbarons had forged stronger chains than the old feudal lords who killed their serfs at will. In the heart of New York great cigar factories were built and gigantic tenements were raised in their shadows. Cigar making be came one of the greatest industries of the country, and there was not. room enough in the factories for the hands. Toe tenements became we factories. Fathers, mothers and lit tle ones turned from their chairs at the breakfast tables, and toiled on the piles of tobacco at their sides. AU day long tbey worked and far into the night, and left the nauseous heap of unworked leaves by their bedsides. Each day was like its predecessor. There were in these tenements no school books ; only yellow-faced men, hazerard women and cmidren wno had never laughed. They grew older, married, lived in other tenements, and continued the lives of their childhood. The other toilers in the city were like them. In some or the tenements fathers worked in the smelting works with their sons, and mothers and daughters in the shirt and cloak factories. There was no redress for them, The foot of capital held them - down, and pitilessly ground out the love and joy pf their fives. In other States it wasjihe same. Boys went down into the coal mines of ' Pennsylvania and then bodies Th in tne evening oi cneir uvea tneir hands were as empty as in the morn ing. Here, too, were the coal mine butcher snops, tne coai mine cioin- iers, and the coal mine shoemakers. They were hardy, stubborn men, and now and again when tbey came into the light of day tbey beard men speak of the dignity of labor, and that the workman was worthy of his' hire.' ? So they ? rebelled. They met in the mines, and at the same time their brothers met in the factories and tenements, There were disor ganized, dissatisfied -bodies of men. This was the infant child-trade un ionism. The capitalists determined to strangle it in its birth. A black list was created, and it was decreed that any man or woman who com' plained should be discharged, and tnat discnarge irom one mm vr one factory meant : discharge from all mines and all factories. JThia was the other infant organization of capital. Soon every factory had a- biacic list. Every : railroad had one, ,andevery mine had one. - uiscnarge ' in nose early days meant starvation. . There came a Dreas in xne laoor; ranks. The most skillful resolved on organization. - Engineers, the buildr ing trades, machinists, better, paid and better skilled workmen, every where united and prepared, i These unions grew vSiowiy - du5 surongry. Skilled men were few; better tducat ed, more thoughtful and more apt to assert their ngnis. xne engineers formed their - brotherhood and the bricklayers and stonecutters- tneir unions. Tne men in tqe io wer sirata could not see how the grand idea of amalgamation was working for their benefit. They saw tne men aoove strike for higher wages and lewer hours of toil and win, but their lot was the same, and the shadow oi the factory grew larger ana darner. Time and again tn ssuied men struck and failed, lney aiscoverea tbat the factory pool could afford to allow one section of its factories to be idle if the otners were at wors and; the men lontop caiieaon me men belpw io ;39iuvubu. ekillel ; then formed jnio, uiswnci. bodies, and hence came the car driv ers' organizations ana Kinureu mwwbs. But capital was all powerful stilL But one day a man cama before all the workmen with a new -gospel and said "the injury to one is the cpns cern of all - It was a new idea, born of truth' and experience.- The Kniehts of Labor were its fruits. TT.trnrv workman ia the land was ana to stand "shoulder to shoulder against the allied capital of the country. , There the weapon of suc cess was fashioned, and in time it came about that if a man was un justly discharged from a railrod an other man wearing the blouse pf las bor could by lifting his hand stop ev ery car wheel on the road. - Soon so perfect will be that organization that the unjust d scharere of n cirl in n New England "factory can result in the destruction of the offending company. Single organization has fa-Jted. The Western Union tele graph operators left their batteries one day, but were forced back to them. - - A few days ago the Pennsylvania Railroad tried to make the men ins sure themselves in the Railroad in surance office, and said if they didn't they would be discharged. Chief Engineer Arthur told the road to re scindithe order.' He was ' a single man, but behind him was organized labor. The order was countermands ed before the blow was struck. - Sev eral weeks ago the car drivers on the Thj-f """M Urn demanded twelve hours' work and the same pay as for fourteen hours. They got it. ' Men on one road after another demanded tha same thing. 1 - ; The demands of the ' workmen are based on reason, but not on what the capitalists can -understand. Worar. now araera irom work years ago m me intensity ot application which must be given to it, and the rapidity with w hich it must be 5 done.1 - The human machine is - run - with more friction and tension, and naturally enough it burns ud sooner, or. in ijfihar - words, men working seven hours, today do as much- as the men who labored v fourteen hours years ago. , f In consequence of a reduction of working hours, more hands must be hired, and the wagea naturally ins crease, for the product of the labor is much larger. Eight hours work of high efficiency does more - than four teen of cheap labor. The capitalists must surrender as before, unless they, too, organize, as j tney are doing. The meeting of the street car railroad presidents at the Fifth Avenue Hotel to form a street car pool to resist the demands of their men is only an example of the way the combination and pool system, is extended, Already there are oil combinations, railroad "- pools, coal, cotton, iron, wheat, lumber and oths erf combinations to extort high prices anidepress the price of labor. Tttere-was published iu the Star a few 2ajs ago an account' of the for mation of an association of capitalists for mutual protection not alone for their properties, but their ; lives It is certain that such an - association has been formed by the most timid rich men of New "York. The cattle men in the Wett and South have formed a like association. The cigar manufacturers have formed a union. The mill owners of New England are a solid body of men constituted to crush labor. There are today four railroad pools, and in a few days there will be but one. The mine owners of Pennsylvania have formed a unkui-aod so also have the large coafbuyers and sellers. The cloak manufacturers, the steel rail manu- facturers, the iron mongers, all have umons. It was in this way that labor orsanized in the bperinnins. but the quick' r brained men of money have already brought their plans al most to maturity. -' - Jt will need only the uniting of these poois and combinations to make as solid a wall of capital as organized labor U becoming. Mutual advances and cross proposals have been made. Labor needs strong pledges and fast ties, for when a man's wife and child are hungry, it. is hard for him to keep from bidding under bis fellow workman.! Capital needs only an organized understanding. The capi talist cannot starve. He wins by waiting. Though many capitalists have not yet entered into it, the scheme for the alliance of capital is already begun. How Jumbo Was Skinned. The manner of the skinning and mounting of the dead elephant Jumbo, which has just been success fully accomplished at Rochester, N. Y., by Prof. H. A. Ward, is very in teresting. In the hrat place the skin was removed by slitting it along the belly and then making circular ins cisions around the body and taking it off in stripes. It was then soaked for two months in a bath of arsenic and other ingredients until it was thoroughly tanned. During this period of time the bones were steamed and exposed to the sun to bleach, a treatment that not only caused all the flesh and ligaments to drop off, but caused much of the oil of the bones to exude and evaporate, until they, are now. as white as snow. Professor Ward had taken the meas urements of the monster, and while the skin and bones were in process of treatment he had constructed a teavy wooden skeleton, supported and braced by stoel rods, two of which, tiro inches in diameter, sups port each leg. Jumbo's weight was about seven tons. The skin when first taken off weighed 1,538 pounds, and varied from half an inch to an inch' and a half in thickness. After it was tanned it was scraped ai cleaned until it had a unitor nees of half an inch. .The stuffed skin, nlatform and all, w three tons. ..The skin is nailed to wooden framework with 94,480 nails. and actually retains the folds and the grooves as natural as in life. The skeletOnwill be taken around the country for exhibition. TEXAS. The Chinese Go-East. El Paso,. March 4 In the last few days large number of Chinese from (jai norma nave passeu iuruugu xii Paso on their way to New. Orleans and Texas cities, Many of tm are also locating in the territorial towns of New Mexico," and Arizona. ; San Francisco is represented as swarming with Mongolians, who have been driven out of Qregan and Washing? ton Territory, and-the pressure it is nlnimnd ia beincr relieved bv the "Six Companies" shipping .".them: East, where antagonism against the Chinese is- not as strong as on the Pacific slope: This influx, however, into the : territories of -Arizona and New Mexico has aroused the latent antagonism there and iantMJhinese leagues have already been organized at Sacorro ana other towns in New Mexica and at Tuoson and Tomb stone, Arizona, which .places are suf fering from a heavy .increase iiv the. Chinese population ai which may loarl t.r thflir violent eviction, as was recently the case -.sn Was fling ton - t POLITICAL POINTERS, FROM WASninGTOIf ECHOES., Senatorial Eyes ; Bloodsbotten , Impeachment of the President Said io Hare Been Sasrgrested Plan of Democratic Organiza tion juapnea unW - Correspondence ot In Obskbtxb. v Washington, March 3.The Re publican; Senators ' are said to have blood iri the eye. rjCertainly their visual ; organs ' seem ' bloodshotten since the President-'s message. Some' body has struck Billy Patterson. One of the jokes of the occasion is that the men who train with Mr. Edmunds h propose to impgach the Chief Executive. Since the House is how more strongly than ever favora ble to him, it is difficult to see how the constitutional .." procedure by which to depose the pungent wriw r and,firmdministrator of ; the laws is to i be set in ..motion. -A week ago, probably, the house was in the mood to impeach the silver policy of the President.- At present J it would Vcomp" by letting things alone. Not withstanding .the mean., warfare waged ; by the New York , Sun and World, and their characteristic mis representation of , sentiment here, I am able to state that some of the Re publican Senators are persuaded that the' message has solid foundation. Some of them have been hea'fd to say that their party,' was wrong in the present contention and the President entirely right. One of these Senators remarked yesterday that he approved of the positions taken in the message. Nevertheless, the Republican party will as ' a whole oppose the Presi dent's construction when the time for Action comes. This is a very bad theatre for candor and moral indes pendence, and the Senate is the worst part of the arena on which to display moral courage. There has never been a morr pitia ble spectacle for the disinterested or kind-hearted than the scalping of Dudley yesterday .by Matson, of In diana. The House seemed to enjoy the brutal sport much as a Roman audience in ancient times took pleass ure in gladiatorial contests in which scores or hundreds of persons or beasts lost their lives, or as a modern Spanish bull fight is relished by all classes and both sexes. The whole official correspondence of the , late Commissioner of Pensions was ran sacked and the material found used with truly terrific effect. It was a Democratic field day, the echoes of which are heard even this morning. Ex-Senator Norwood, in a vein of brilliant irony, paraphrased Henderv son's bloody speech, and kept the House in a constant roar of laughter. His literary allusions were -frequent and effective. Henderson was thor oughly pricked a bubble of small dimensions but excessive sound. Mr. Reid has placed in the petition box a memorial from the monthly meeting at New Garden of the very respectable Society of Friends, ask ing for the passage of Senate bill No. 355. This proposed measure looks to the settlement of international dis putes by arbitration. ., If its princi ples were adopted, how. much better would the wild, cruel, ambitious world be The Democratic caucus last night mapped out a general plan of organi zation not different from previous plans in use. Under this the various delegations will choose members of (he Congressional" Committee. The North Carolina delegation have not held a meeting, but are expected to do so soon. - ' ' H. ii i. ii ii .in .It-. . His ! Tick. "Old Sexton Brown," the once fa mous sexton of urace iJburcn, isew York, used to show his friends an epitaph, which he copied 'from a tombstone in Wales - as one of the rarest curiosities of churchyard lit erature. It has never hitherto been published: "Here lies in a horizontal position the outside case of: George Rutleigh, Watch Maker, whose abilities in that line were an honor to his profession, Integrity was the" mainspring and Prudence the regulator of all the ac tions of hia - life, Humane,1. Honest and Industrious, ; his. hands never stopped until they had relieved 'dis tress. . He had the art of disposing of his time in such a way .that he never went wrong, except when, set agoing by persons who did not know nis key. and even then was easily set right again. He departed this life Novem ber 7th, 1811, wound up in the hope of being taken in hand by his Maker, thoroughly '-. cleaned, regulated and repaired, and set agoing in the world to come." Atlanta's Taxation Raised. : During the late prohibition contest at Atlanta, Ga., the main argument advanced by the anti-prohibitionists was that the measure would raise taxation to make up the deficiency in 'the city revenue caused by the loss of the whisky tax. . This was de nied by tbe prohibitionists. Monday it was announced that the city asses. sora have advanced the assessment on all . central property. Among those that it affects are many of the property-owners w no were entnusi astic prohibitionists, 'by : whose aid the fight was won, They are objects ing heroically; and it is said that an indignation meeting win oe caiiea. They giveia sensational turn ' to the V; . . ' i w . a is matter by! charging that the asses sors are inlsympathy with the anti nrohibitioiists. and that they , have made the extra assessments, to make the prohibitionists sick of their work, thereby bdping to defeat the meas ure at the next election, two years hence. , cPoslilve Care Tor Piles. Ta tHo nan tin of this eountv we would say we have been given the agency of Dr. Karchlsl's Italian Pile OlntmenV-emphatlcally guaranteed to care or money refunded Internal, external, blind, bleed ing or itching lilies. Rrioe 60c a box. No core, no i g WJm B,Wrutwn, drugeirt, Charlotte Absolutely Pure. Tnls nnwrtnr rwmr -nriaa i m- - sirentn and wbelesomeness More economloal than theordlnary kinds, and cannot be sold In eompetitloa wlth the multitude of low test, short in ml l '""'V'iavo powaers. bqia only SPRINGS ft BUB WELL, Charlotte, N. C. ana0dftwly L. J. WALKZB. a K. B&XAN L J. i CO.. Wholesale and Retail Grocers. NEWFIRM NEW 0401S ON the Orst day of Jannary,1886,the nnderslgned . entered Into a co-partnership for the purpose of carrying on a General Grocm Business At tne old stand of Springs ft Parwell. corner Troon A Fourth atmnta Wa km .mnllfliwl tiv lma experience, to meet the demands of the trade, and give satisfaction to our customers. we win Keep on nana at ail times a full stock of FAMILY SUPPLIF0, Which will be delivered In any part of tt ( c' - lee of charge. ' TREMEMBER. We will not be undersold In the Charlotte market. There Is a isood wagon yrd In the rear ot our store for the accommodation of our custo mers. L. J. WALKER & CO. ERVOUS DEBILITATED MEN. Ton are allowed a free trial oftKtrty day of the Be of Dr. Dvfi H (:!hrntmt Vnltfc Rlt with Eiectrlo Suspensory AppUances, (or the speedy relief and permanent cure of Eervous Ik'biHty, Iom of Vitality and Manhood, and all kindred t roubles. Also lor many ooner uiseases. ijompieie reacora ttou to Health, Vtor and Wanbood guaranteed. No riKk Is incurred. Illustrated pamphlet Inteaied . tivotlope mallKl tree, by addrenlnfc V0LIAI0 EE1T CO., JlMaliall, Xiefc. novl7deodftw7m. ' . . Fi I? A TTXT I? CSi ItsCAOdESandCTJKK, xJrjlxr.Vi by one who was deaf twenty-eight years. Treated by most of the noted specialists of the day with no bent-fit. Cured him self in three months, and since then hundreds of others by the same process, a plain, simple arid successful nome treatment. Address 1. 8. x AfarS. 12B Sast 26th St, New York City. - CONSUMPTION. I hm a ooaltlTe remcdr (or tbe (bore dlaua : br lta s thouandsofeaMvoitfaa worst kind andoi IoHr taadtniF hmn boon cared. Indeed, not tronr ( mynuta ! iu emeaey, uiac i win eena twu Burrijjfitf ran toitetber wu& Yi'UABl.lt TBKATtMl! b tnie dii to b; anfferer; fiHS. A. BUKSDK. in Fearl SL, K.W Tork. 6L.eexDreu.nd P 0.addr.M. ITT 111 T C fi LADIBS to work for ns at their 11 An I tU own homes, $7 and $ 10 ner week V can be quietly made. No photo painting; no ' carrrasslna. For full narnculars. Dlease ad dress at once, CBKSCENT ABT CoHPANT, 19 Central Street, Boston, Kass i Box 6170. , , WANT SALBSMBN ererrwhere. local and traveling, to eell our goods Win pay good t alary ar d all expenses. Write for terms at once, and state salary wanted. Addram STANDARD SILVER WARS OOMPANl. Wash ington Street, Boston mass. -. - - - - mariMw -' Sstabllslied lMu,' Incui'ij.raied 1664. the.TIios. Bradford Co. u i i , -'T1" ' Successors to- Sole Manufnct . -. urera of tha,,. . Old Reliable .. BHA0F0S1D. F crtaile Hilh . Tat Any Kind of . SMALL GRAIN. Aiao Mxnufactur- rb of - General Roar Fill Machinery , Nos. 25, 3Y. S9, 31 mttd 33 liflck St., "- Near Hlgnland IIoum Inp.linod Place, - Wrft for Otitefno. ' CtNCIMNiTI. C- deciadeadftwGm. . NOTICE. : I offer for for sale privately my farm In Anson county, N. C, lying on tbe Fee Dee river. Just be low the crossing of the C. C. R. R. Said tract con tains about 1.00Q 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 parcels to milt purchasers.' iror runner information, ad dress H. M. DltrtrS, : " Abingdon, Va., Or a d. Wall, Lflesrtue, N. C seUdawtf UBGE8T SEED HOUSE y m i gintnunrr SDSImPLANTS Send forNew Illustrated Catalojrneforl886 . and prices oi Field Seeds. Mailed FREE. ' T. W. WOOD & SONS, Wholasala and Betall Seedsman. JUchmond. Va jaal4w3m. A Clear Skin is only a part of beauty ; but it is a part Every lady " may have it ; at least, wJbat looks like it. Magnolia Balm ' both : freshens and beautifies. WM1 Ion will 111';:! ; . New York, Jan. 21sti 1886. Mes. Witkowsky dh Baruch: '- Gentlehev: 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, .- . - ' ' H. BJ MASTERS. wv,ar, ( .nnoaroii in t.hflsfl nolnmns . v w uvu M W 'ym w time over 1,000 pieces of Ladies' Under Garments - And were awaiting the lot purchased by our Resident Buyer. f THE ENTIRE SHIPMENT HAS ARRIVED I " THEY ARE ALL FRESH GrOODSt TUEY yvmKHJ AT A liKEAT UlSCOUNTt WE ; , CAN THEREFORE AFFORD TO SELL THEM CHEAPLY I We have Dlaced them on our counters with lower prices attached to them than you can buy the material to make READ THESE PRICES, Come and Examine the Goods. .(Dlheimife WELL MADE, OF GOOD MATERIAL, ALL SIZES, AT 21o. . . . , tt , TTR.n'WT TRTMMIlin WITr FMPRD PTTWITT W 4i oQ. , POINTED YOKE MADE OF FINE TUCKS, CORDED BAND " -48c. FINE MATERIAL TRIMMED WITH TORCHON LACE " . 71c. MADE r OF ' GOOD MATERIAL ' with ruffled neck and front . atlf 39c. TUCKED FRONT TRIMMED with Cambric Ruffle "60c. SQUARE TUCKED YOKE trimmed with nice embroidery . - " 76c. YOKnJJl, twu ituwa UJJ" JJNisJiiKTJUNti, rows of tuefcs between - 78c. I BE3T WORKMANSHIP AND MATERIAL TUCKED BOTTOM AT 36c. " " CAMBRIC RUFFLE AND 41 4i " 47i. MADE WELL, CAMBRIC RUFFLE, emb I. edge 44 44 44 55c. HANDSOME MATERIAL with wide ruffle of embroidery . 44 78c. TUCKING, CAMBRIC RUFFLE, and Torchon Lace embroidery 44 87c. ; EDITS. WITH TUCKED BOTTOM 44 " - 44 44 44 CAMBRIC TRIMMED WITH TORCHON LACE AND TUCKS 14 -75c. J CHARLOTTE, N. C. MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED AND PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. The largest and mostgcomplete H ' stock of . ; IFnDL?imMijQii'B IN THE STATE. -:o: PIANOS ANDDORG ANS Ot; the .best -makes, on Low prices andjeasy 1 4 Ik I I . . r AGENT FOR . . ' ' . LUDDEN fe BATES No charge for packing or drayage. - . 'CHARLOTTE, N." 0 Eeaeciber It about a month aco. nnlrl nf. fKof. . O - J "-'-" them up with. WDS AND CAMBRIC RUFFLE AT 83c. Ruffle of embroidery 4 46c. 44 44 44 torchon lace " 75c. 44 44 44 wideembd. 44 70c. the installment plan. terms. Send for prices. PIiA.lV:08 -AND O D'-.a AEX:0 Delivered; FREIGHT FKEPilV. ELLIOTT & IIAESH. calladupon to on.3 great body Territory, i H.c. :. luWeodl. JooeMg c"J tt Tr'9 rroc Central Hotel
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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March 5, 1886, edition 1
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