O L IT ME XXXI V. CHARLOTTE, N. C TUESDAY. MARC13 9, 1886. PRICE FIVE CENTS. JTUSTP nice liue of DBE33 GINGHAMS, SHEETINGS, PRINTS, SEERSUCKERS In Bleachings tor, Wit, Wamsntii, N. I. Mills k Prida ! f est fin if- We have open ad up HAMBURG EDGINGS Look at tbom if you want some cheap aged with our sale of bidies5 and FVI i sseV Vo will keep th:t Department up to the full standard, and at prices that will givrt you fu :1 100 cents worth for fl. 00. Full line of Warner's and other popular brands of .;, ; ... - - ' OR8E T S Ddiitforpettolookatbur new'll.OO corset, Misses and Young Ladiss Cor sets and Coraet Covers. - Our ' ' . 5 BUTTON SCALLOPED TOP KIDS At 75 cent, in all the new shades, are having a big run. of them io to morrow morning. Other bargains..- SMITH BtTELDIWa AnotheriDstallmcnt or NEW GOODS J-o-J Tha iopular E4 Inches .wide. Toll line of colors In spring shades of JERSEY CLOTHS, At StUs fonts p? r yard. MY BLVK GOOns STOCK Ii complete, em'or.iclne everything slrable. new and de- i A to ee my leader In Blaqk Oashmere, Best In the city for the price. ' - Beautiful line of , We Goods & Embroideries. Call and see them whether" jon are ready to pur chnse or not BUY WARIfKITS CO8ET nfl SEIUE'8OIX.ARSma'. T.LSEIGLE. b.- -"3c..' Bxsttssi Have just received an elegant line of 4 r j Black Colored Embroidered and ChinchinaS"carR something entirely now. A full line of LADLfi' MISSES' and CSIRKN'S, HQSE. A beautiiu line of FIGURE! A niceiaaortment of DBE3S GINGHAMS and SEER3U0KERS. Anew lot of Everlasting Trimming, Torchon and Valencennea Laces, Colored SUfcsana Satins, the best line of . .. j - ,. CO USE T 8 In the place. . Call and examine pur stock of WHITE GOODS. Our stock is entirely new. No old goods. .'"". - - ..,-.... . .... . .. . - - - li. L. 4 SUCCESSORS TO ALEXANDERS HARRIS. FEED C. HUNZLER' WHOLESAlA LAUER BEER DEIXER Afl!s CHARLOTTE, N..C Represent two of the largest LAGEB BEEB Breweries iathe United States The BerKoer A iSitffel BrewU Co., or IMsIladelplala, and the :: P. & M. Sell offer Brewiatt . ot New Tork. ,r THE LARGEST LAGER BEER BOT TLING tSTABLISHMENT 1. IN THE CITY. isrAi.H Solicited. All order rM-m flllfMl and -delivered free of charge to any prt of the city. 1 r. & ; WANTED. Ye win pay 15 cent rr bushel ot 90 poradg for good souDd new eooon mxu uu-w v Id Charlotte,' N. C: We-wUl trade cotton seed mea or seed, gttlng one ton ot meal lor two tofis ot seea. . , j - OLT7EB OIL COMPANY, Bucoeeaora to Charlotte OU Company. THE LATEST v, Ve are now running on ful! time. TumlUire inanulactqred by us Is kept by the enterprising furniture dealers In this cjty. Wf make onlv the bestand most substantial to the market NO BUODDY GOODS. Ask fornods made by as and yon will get the worth of our money. Oar name U on each piece. WesoDctt the patronage o! the public and guarantee satisfaction. Bespectftiny, fcJ.-r!r : . '"M': - ' 1 ELLIOTT ,& 2IAE3XL (fri AND MOST IMPORTANT! we have a nice line of & TORCHON LACES. goods. We are .verymuch encour-. Muslin U n d erwear. Will have a new lot First National . Bant BiiliinL South Try on street, - Charlotte, N. C DEALERS EN Ladies'.Mieses'and Children's BUTTON; CiSfiKBSS & LICE SHOES, Bents' Fine Hand-Made and Machine Sewed' BOOTS, BUTTON AND. LACE BALS, v BOYS' AND YOUTHS FINS BOOTS AND SHOES OF ALL GRADES -V I - GENTS' FINE Silk, Soft and Stiff Hats, TRUISKS, YALISES and GRIPSACKS, UMBRELLAS OF ALL KINDS, ' SHOE BLACKING AND BRUSHES. ilma Polish for. Ladies', Fine Ihges. Stock al 4va V3 kept tall and up to, the demand. . OBDEB3 BY MAIL OB SXFBES3 PROMPTLY 'C ATTENDED TO. 0 mm k Co. SRAv GO- CiCCLES.iCO, AUCTJQN AND COMMISSION 3 Merchandise Brokers. ' BDT ASD SELL. REA L ESTATE. I. CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED TOE BELM0iT HOTEL L , : Is now opei) to the public. ,- Electric Call Bells, Gas k Water, i AND AL 9fodrn Hotel "Conveniences. v j: ItBST CLASS IN AW, RESPECTS, V Oate - - -' $9.S0 Ier ! E. W. OJWSSAVGn. - janlSdtt t - .,Maiiaer. : Houses Rented tiivnaMmntad-and rents i'rvar. Advertised free of charge. raiiKurrra luwaai J KSTATS LBXSCY,' t- .H. x. a;n ha way uanagsr,' ' Trade Street front ; cntnlHtel tf y 1 (Cashmere vxn Ilxje Itarlotte bscttiet:, - HTBOTK. tiTKK THS ST7H, nVRDIB SCBXTTB TO EK OBSCDBKD, BUT, 1XSM TBM BUM. OHIiTVOBA TOO." .. . - -. , i 1 Subscription to the Observer. DAILY EDITION. : ! ' - - Single oopy .. : Seents. By the week In the city. i 20 By the month.. ! 76 Three months ........$100 Six months ;:... 4.00 One year........... 8.00 ' WEEKLY EDITION. , . Thpeemonths.......i..;. : 60 cents. flti months.. .$1.00 toe year........... d L7B In clubs ot five and over $L50. : - " . IVo Deviation From These Kales Subscriptions always payable In advance, not only In name but in fact " . j i TOE ELECTRIC TELEGBAPH. The following telegram in f regard to the discovery of the electric tele graph was r sent v from Washington City. It will be observed that it is nearly a summary of an interview which waa.first published in The Ob- server something over two weeks ago.;-;. : ' .) We publish it for two reasons,; 1st. To show, that the subject is at tracting general attention, and , 2d. To show ..the enterprise of the average Washington correspondent. Washington, D O., March 6. -Junius Lynch Clemmons, who claims to be the first person in this country who brought forward the idea of the electric telegraph, is 72 years old His thick hair and beard are snowy white, and so are his bushy eye brows. His shoulders are round and his step is slow; but his eyes are bright, his voice, is firm, land his handwriting is beautiful to is and has been for several years the clerk of the House Committee on Rivers and Harbors, of which Albert S. Willis, of Kentucky, is Chairman, and which works more and works harder than any other committee in the House. Clemmons married Wil lis' mother after the death of her first husband. Clemmons is a modest, in dustrious man, who says very little at any time about himself, and makes neither boast nor claim because he thought out the electric telegraph bes foreMorse didi It waawhile he was at RandalphtMacon,'the Southern Methodist College, in Virginia, ; and while he was about 20 years old, that the idea came into his mind. ; He was fond of physics and spent much time in experimenting, particularly with galvanic batteries. 1 He graau-i ally figured out the entire theory of an electric telegraph, batteries, poles, wires insulators and all, and sketch ed it on the walls of his room for. the benefit of his classmates. . They all laughed at him except one youth named Clegg, afterward a prominent Methodist preacher. This ridicule discouraged Clemmons for a ; time ; but in 1883, having heard of Page, an electrician in Was bington, he wrote to him telling him fully his plans for an electric telegraph, and inclosing him a sketch of his system' and a complete . alphabet of , signs. Page never answered his letter. Tbis fact so disheartened the young1 scientist that he turned from his studies - in electricity which, the people ! around him neither understood nor appreci ated, and devoted himself sedulously tothe study and the practice of the law. He- thought no more about his electric telegraph until in 1844 he saw in a Washington newspaper I an ao. count of an electric telegraph invents ed by Morse, which Congress was be ing asked to aid by Morse, Amos Kendall, Page and' others. ; The de scription of this invention was, even to the alphabet of signs, substantial ly the same as the description of his own invention, which he had sent to Page eleven years betore. This sim ilarity, finked with the fact that Page was interested in the Morse in vention, convinced him that it was the same. He wrote to .th,e Wash ineton newspaper, detailing his own investigations, giving the contents of his letter to Page and claiming pris oritv over Morse, -Page practically acknowledged his claim by admit ting in the Washington ' newspaper that he had received the letter which Clemmons sent in 1833, but said that he thought nothing of it then. He thought better ot it afterward, but Clemmons, with characteristic mods esty, has ajlowed'the matter V rest right there ever since, He does not think that the electric telegraph can be claimed as the invention or dis covery of any one man, Scientists had been - developing the idea for nearly a century. It was grown by the natural process of evolution, and not a happy accident lh one man's mind. ; - '". . ' ' The TanderljiU of China, The Vanderbilt of Chinahas just died and been buried. Not! much is known in Europe of "his life, less of his death ; but his burial is reported to have been very picturesque. His palace of Hang Cnou was a miricle of luxury, and in creating this banker a provincial juage,- ana r speciauy authorizing him to wear a yellow jacket, the Emperor, of China made him the envy of all his other " sub jects. But the glory of his funeral seems to navetjurpaxi vwo upiouuuj. of his life." The whole jcity turned out to soe the procession Nothing in Europe or1 America ce'uld parallel it. First came a mob ol coolies weighed down with'. leaflets; oht.whichr-- were written -oral sentence:and apoL thegms, t Then followed a procession of lantern-bearers, supported by a hand ol musicians with jrongs, sym- bals, and trumpets. naru w conceive anything legs funereal. A hundred little 1 boya came?' after the band (this wasihexnly item in sym pathy with -f Western experience) brandishing the arms (heraldic) of the deceased ; the boy s were followed by the bearer's of his portrait. Glroqps of guests-next came in' procession, some in white, some in scarlet, some in yellow ; then bearers of lamps, banners, parasols and fans; next the master of the ceremonies, in white robes, on a white horse, preceding an enormous tent, under wich the rela tives of the deceased moved, entirely hidden from public view, and last the coffin, borne on the shoulders of $wentyfouypepu ' i . - i American Girl. Toiee, ,,. Al London lady asked a visitor from I tho-TTnitfl SCates if all American ebris did not have fine voices. That depends. -. When they whisper, Wnva Aivrvinin snores enchanting than "afiir nana, il hjbuiwmiu huuu ucj thesireDB of', ths-asgean isles, out I !Lu .ncaor "I hope We shall nlnnva hfl friencia.' n ; is rtnarsea that ther iVpicesVhaye a harsh and repeuing tone,- . . . ; : t- - WROUG CBE8. -. UVCI.OS. An Innovation Which JHsbes Ev ry. tetter Its Own Envelope, Savins; Time Expense and Mis takes. , N. Y. World. . ' -'- - ' At Nos. 157 and 159 William street there is now in operation a system of machinery which, simple as it is, seems destined to revolutionize this letter writing world. When one stops for a moment to reflect that 10,000,000 envelopes are, on an aver-' age, used levery day in the - United States, the force of the proposition that envelopes are in the near future to be done away with becomes strik ingly apparent. And yet this is pre cisely the purpose the manufacturer at the above address proposes to acs complish. j It is difficult, as you look at tne uiege invention, to compre hend why, it was not given to the world long ago. Imagine a sheet of letter paper, precisely like any other sheet of paper, except that at the top' it has a margined nap one-half inch deep ; that it is gummed on one side, and that, extending from the sheet on the right hand side, adjacent to the said marginal flap,' is an ordinay shaped envelope flap, which is also gummed as they usually are, and you have a - fair idea of what the Clegg combined letter-sheet and en velope is? j Having written a letter on one of these sheets the writer simply turns down the top, or marginal flap, then turns up the lower half of the sheet to meet it; thereafter he folds the letter once more lengthwise, when be has a perfectly formed envelope. He need, then, first, only to moisten half of the said marginal flap, close it,and thereby complete the envelope. If desired, insert enclosures and seal the envelope flap, as usual with all envelopes. : Although the invention is of very recent date it has been car ried into a high state of perfection from the new and improved machin ery and is : continually receiving the indorsement of many prominent bu siness firms; besides it having been (highly) indorsed as "the best" by the United States Postoffice Depart ment, at Washington. Its many ads yantages are apparent, two of the most conspicuous of these being the fact that the postmarks axe always found on the back of the letter-sheet itself, thus furnishing proof of date of mailing and delivery, and which are so frequently lost by the destruc tion of the envelope of today. The other apparent advantage is that in opening the letter properly no harm can follow to any inclosures therein; also, the envelope being destroyed in opening it, nothing within it can be lost sight of. It also, as will be seen, saves tho cost and waste of thousanas of tons, of paper, made up into en velopes annually; besides, their cost of mail transportation being saved. The letter-sheets may be of any size, the double sheets needing only the same folding, viz: twice. They are furnished in pads also, for conven ient use, just as the business paper of today is put up. Bill heads, state ments and other business sheets are made in the same way, and it is the not unreasonable belief of the manu facturer that the invention has Rounded the knell for the fall of. the unnecessary envelope of the period. The Thins; ,That Troubles Span : ish Society. From 8 Madrid Letter. The physicians of the Spanish Court are waging a war in the Madrid press. The cause of the trouble is this, given by La Epoea': "The Queen is an Austrian; at the time of her accouchment she will be sur rounded by her family, also A.U8 train ; she will be attended by her physician. Dr. Xtiedel, who is likewise an Austrian. Her Majesty, has re peatedly declared, in the most em phatic manner, that no Spanish phy sician shall attend her. She has not even allowed any Spanish physician to certify to her approaching mater nity ; ana sne nas nnauy unormeu her Ministers that she has no need whatever of anv physician attached to the palace. If these circumstan ces remain unchaneed.l and if the Queen stilV PWts.. jri refusing ad- mission to. tne representatives of the Spanisii Faculty of Medicine, who will be authorised to certify and pro claim the arrival of the heir to the Crown f And if this event is not cer tified by the Spanish Faculty of Med icine it ' . mav renew the ancient dynastic struggles that have deluged Spain with blood." : Upholding the Iron Tarifl. Arguments of the iron men against any tariff reduction were heard Sat urday before the . Ways and Means Committee. Wm. A. Ingham, of 1 Philadelphia, spoke in behalf of the Pig-iron Association. He said that about half the furnaces had been out of blast for the past year. Mr. Hewitt inquired if the effect of cheapening the ore would not be to start up many of our idle furnaces and give emolovment to 17 worth ot labor on every ton of -pig. Mr. Ingham did not believe that would be the effect of a reduction of the duty on ore. It would not injure the iron-makers,but a u -T 1 1 t L l would nun tneir neignoora itne wait ers further west.) i Mr. Breckenridge, of Arkansas, in quired whether the furnace men had not combined to limit production. Mr. Ingham replied that an attempt of that kind had bee,n made at Pitts burg, but it had-come to. nothing. and Pulman, of New Jersey, also ex pressed their yiews briefly upon the .oronosition to reduce the duty on ores, and strongly negatived any leg islation in that direction. 8am Jones and the takers. . A Chicago Sermon, Sometiines I've asked everybody that never told a lie to stand up. Everybody was looking arouDd to see if anybody was going to get up. Ii anybody had a-got up up I'd as giyen them the floor and sat down. If you'd all stop lying you'd starve the lawyers to aeatn. x use a granu lawver who defends the good man from ; the assaults of the wicked. But these mean little five dollar law, verst ! Thev do some mean things, and then say : "I did that as a lawn yer, not as a man." w nm wev diop down in hell I supnose they'll go about saying; "I'm here as a laws yer." .. To be District Commissioner. WASHiiiaTON, March 8. The Presi dent sent to the Senate - the nominav tion of Samuel E. Wheatley, of the lSistrict of Columbia,:-: to be Commis; eioner of the District of Columbia, Yice James B. Edmunds. i c, wo more ; . A Cloelc of Clocks. Pan Han Gazette. ; - v. mi . m o b m. : ine xamous ciock ot otrasburg is put completely in the ahade by "the great World Clock, or the ten thousand-year tirao indicator." "It was constructed in Oermany during many years' labor by Mr. Christian j Martin; cioct-maker. - The clock marks the year and leap years, and will run for a hundred centuries. when, as the bill frankly admits, its "mechanic, works" will have to be changed. The face of the clock is about 10 feet square, and has a large numoer or, dials and little niches, where 123 httle figures have their abiding places. These latter, as the ever-ready bill , explains, are "to allegorise human life." Every min- rite a sorrowful-looking angel hits a bell with a sledge-hammer. When he has done this fifteen times apother angei in a red rooe strides tne first quarter The Genius" dressed in a Louis XIV. costume, turns to a dial so that the figure is shown.. At the same time the figure of a child appears ; at the lower door. At the second quarter a youth appears; at ine tnira a miaaie agea man with spectacles and a high hat, and at the fourth a decrepit old wreck with a white wig. While all this is . going on Deiow, aeacn, m tne snape or a Commanche Indian with wings, . has been vainly endeavoring to hammer a bell in an upper niche, but an angel nas neaaea nun on m every case,and protected the human family "by raising the right hand in an allegori cal relation," as per programme until tne iourin quarter, xnen aeatn gets the better of the struggle, strikes the nour ana nuaaies tne old man or! into : etermty. The twelve Apostles are trotted out Y each hour. Above them n a figure of Christ, "who blesses with both hands each Apostle in passing," as the bill I states; with mathematical exatctness. a.s morning, noon ana nignt a nums per of bell ringers ring their respec tive Dena .... - witn vmaictive ener gy,t and 'an old man drops upon his knees as if some one. had kicked his legs out from under him. All these and many other wonders, ex- j posing the -family secrets of the zodiac, the heathen gods, the seasons, the moon, and the globs all run reg ularly. The whole structure is sur mounted by a cock which crows at 6 and 12 o'clock, v Castor Beans. Elizabeth City Economist. The attention which our farmers 1 and.business men are now bestowing upon the subject of tobacco and other paying crops is a favorable sign for our future agriculture. It will at least put farmers to thinking and get them out of the old ruts of thought and practice. Bread stuffs we must raise. Meat stuffs we must raise for our own use. Other crops are the money crops by which we buy artic les tnat cannot oe produced among us, sucn as sugar, corr.ee ana articles of luxury. But while' the thoughts of farmers are turned toward tobacco they should not be turned away irom tne crops tnac are ot easier cul ture .and vwruch are paving crops. Among these we consider the castor beau, which, according to our esti mate, will pay at least twenty dollars an acre ana tor wnicn tnere is a lim ited home market. It is said to be a comparatively certain crop in its product and one that does not ex haust the soil, but like the pea crop. possesses fertilizing propersties.. It is a crop too, which does , not require expert culture and preparation. We offer it for the consideration of our farmers. The crop is largely grown in South Carolina and Kansas, from which States seed and . information could he obtained. The Western Strikers. St. Lotjis, March 8. The strike ot part of the Knights of Labor on the Uould Southwestern system of rail ways Saturday was followed yester day at various points along the lines by a general suspension of work of all Knights employed in any position by the railroads, until the number reached between 8,000 and 10,(K)0,and included shopmen, switchmen, train men, brakemen and. firemen. VV. L. DOUGLAS Best t material, perfect lit, tquali any IS or asshoet Mir warranted. Take none BDleas stamped LVDoaglM' 13.00 v : .. A every w. : Shoe, warranted.' greaa. Button ana Lace., If wan canaot nt these vtmnuu.- vo r yon eanaot pet these' hoes from dealers, sead aririrMH on neatal to W.l. Dowlas, Broek toa. Mass. . ora . At X. BANKIN A BRO., . Charlotte, N. C. Tor sale by JanlSdeodaui. -AND- SILVERWARE Ever Brought to Charlotte, a new lot of We, haye Jugt received TEA SETS. WATER SETS, FRUIT SETS, FILTERS, CAKE BASKETS, JEWEL CASKETS, - PICKLE : casters!, butter dishes, NUT DISHES, CARD RE- , CETVERS, PLACQUES, ?' c WATER STANDS, &c, WE GUARANTEE These goods to be superior in quality to any ever before offered. " EALES & BOYIJE, West Trade Street r " Charlotte, am a asr MM Most Beaatifnl Assortment H.C. 1 Absolutely Pure. This Dowder never varbw. A murrol of tmrit. strength and wholesomeneas. More eeonomloal than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold in competition with the multitude of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate powders. Sold only means, wholesale by . SPRINGS A BUB WELL, JanaOd&wly - Charlotte, N C NERVOUS DEBILITATED MEH. "lowed afree Mai tf thirty days of tb MM Of Dr. Dve'a 1lAhrrf vitC nil Bleotrie 8oM)emrT Annli.nM r tK. . . relief pd permanent cure of Nervoiu DtWHty. toas of Vitality and Manhood, and all kindred troubles. " wnu(n7 otner diseases, vompute reetora tiou to Health, Vigor and Manhood guaranteed. No rbdc la incurred. HI unrated pamphlet In lialtif tmviupt mailed free, by addreaalnff VUliXAiU JSi,I CO., AJffShAU,ZUesV novl7deodw7m. twenty-eight years. Treated by most of the noted specialists ol the day with no benefit Cored hlm- seu in tnree monins, and since then hundreds ot others by the same process, a plain, simple and successful home treatment Address 3. & PAGE. uo jhm iui ow, avn xura. uthj. CONSUMPTION. ataadlnr have bean carad. Indeed, sostronr U la IU effleacy, tnat I will aend TWO BOTTLES M thonaanda of emmnm a umww m pwun mHT lor ui BOOT giMH byita 9i c n i ma worn aina ana of long tonttier with a VALUABLE TBKaTIBI an thii du. K8 VRBK, lYfl faith to any aofferer. Bin ezpren and P . O. addrea. v&i.A.ouiKua,uininH,f XOrX. ANTED. -LADIES to work for us at their own homes, $7 and $10 oer week can be quietly made. No photo painting; no dress at once, CBESCE NT ' ART COMPANY, 19 Central Street, Boston, Mass 80X6170. . cauvasHiiiit. r or run Darucuiars. mmum nn. DstabUshed ii j. lDUk.rpul.tU.d im. ih Thos. Bradford Go. buccessors to Stp-S-9n Sole Manu'aet- tonal Celebrated mmmmi f crtai Milh For Any Kind of "a- it' W iS i-. SMALL GRAIN. WaV-- t7 Alan UaTiiifaMnr, en o General Floor ill Maefcin Si? mi Nos. 35, 27. 39, 31 and 33 Lock St.. Near Highland noase IneHned Flsnc, Write for Caoguc CINCINNATI & decl2dead66m. I CURE FITS! When I aaT enre I do not mean maimrT to aton thM for a time and then hare them, return again, I mean a radical core. I hare made the rtinsaat of FITS, EP LEP8T or FALLING 8ICKNJS8 a Ufelong study. I . warrant mw remedy to oure the worst eore. Send at enee for a treatise and a Free Bottle a otaera nave zanea ni no reason tor not now my IntnUiWe remedy. Giro Express ana Poet Office. It N&9 7W nothing for a trial, and I will core Ton. AddMDB.HTG. BOOT, lh Pearl at, XewToik. L. J. vTALEEB, B. K. BBTAN L J. WALKER (S CO., Wholesale and Betall Grocers. NEW FIRM NEW GOODS y-vw the flrst dav of January J886.the underelgned V entered into a oo-partnershlp for the purpose ot carrying on a - General Grocery Business At the old stand of Springs Parwell. eorner Tryon ft Fourth streets. We are nuUlfied by long experience, to meet the demands of the trade, and give satisfaction to our customers. . - we wm Keep ua uiuiu cu. cui uum a xuu owvm. vi FAIULY SUPPUFf Which will be delivered In any part of tl 6lti ree of charge. IgTREMEMBEItSZ We wlUnot be undersold m the Charlotte market. W There Is a cood wagon yard In the rear of onr store for tho accommodation ot out .custo mers. L. J, VALKER & CO, NOTICE. I oiler for for sale privately my farm In Anson Mumtf. n. c. Mns on the Pee Dee river, lust be- i imo th crosalne of the C. C. K. B. Said tract con tains, nnont 1.MU acres, wim aooa annnmnwDB. and 1b one of the best grain and cotton farms the State. -1 will sen aa a wnoie or ui paroeia u salt purchasers. For farther lmfonnatlon, ad - dress .:,v fc- s : n. jh. vmrto, . AOingoon, vs.. Or i fi.WALL.Lnesvnie.il. a : - eel2owtf WANT SALBSWKN everywhere, local anrl travAllnff. to Sell OUT KOOdB wm fffwxi fa arvara auexueusoB. wnieivrienna it .nm. and state salary wanted. Address STANDARD SILVKa WABS COatrAST. Wash ington Street, Boston- Mass. : . , . ; marstw t A Clear Skin is only a part of.beautyj, but it is a part Every lady may have it; at least, what looks like it. , Magnolia Balm both ; freshens, and beautifies," - " - Of the oDDorttinity to' secure to you novr. They are goods which are strictly new and desirable. We are having big success with them. - THOUSANDS of yards Are still being sold by us at in 4 yard lengths Tlaese stre (Jhe 7 Ill 35c. IV 40c. 20c. 80c. Our Ladies Underwear Department, Was visited by many hundred ladiss since the opening of our Mammoth Sale' last week, we did a splendid business in that line, and will no doubt had it livelier this week. GOWNS, CIII UESE, SKIRTS AND DRAWERS For less money than you make them up with. can NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE Oar new line of Embroidered Chrambray Bobes, at only $160 ' The line of away down. Brocaded and Our Magnificent Assortment of at 16 cento for Boys' Waists. Onr Special Madras. Seductions NEW ARRIVALS - OF . Ingrain Carpets. CHARLOTTE, N. C. MATT. ORDERS SOLICITED AND The largest and most complete stock of IPoDi?LiDiid;aLiL?B IN : THE I8TATE.D PIANOS AND ORGANS Otjthe best makes on the installment plan. Low prices and easy terms. Send for prices. ) (?t In I D 8 1 I pay i i iOrier direct "i 1 deliycrfreightpaid :to;ypiir nearest depot as cheap ag yon cui.buy from the head office, and will attend to your want in rine anvthinff Bhonld be wrong in ' the factory guarantees. . I - CHARLOTTE, N. C. - . . - the ) Bargains we are offerinc of EMBROIDERIES the popular and low prices Isota we are Offertas;, VI 65a vn , 85c 55c. buy the mere materials to Plain Silks exhibited on our Counter, Prices Wide Checked Linens at 25 cents, and Cheviots on Lace Curtains Nottingham. Antique and NEW ARRIVALS OF , Brussels Carpets. if PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. OnCKEDMG PIANOS, PIAIfOfl, BEIfT PIJJVOSs ) Klathushck Pianos; liASON k HAMUN' HANDS. BAY STATE ORGANS. .' PACKAED OEQANS, Oason & Uanlia Organs. . : ' i 71A