1 y - ..-.', ! To-Day we offer T -r- OUR $3.50 - JERSEYS AT 2 65 8 25 and 3.00 - , 2.30 2 50 " 3 00 " " 1.85 1 60 '( ' " 1.10 ' - ' IS PIECES CREAM CRINKLE ATg cents. . , 500 DOZEN PEAWL BUTTONS AT !2i l not over 6 doa. sold one person ONR CASE PALM LEAF FANS AT 14 cents per down. ten $2 00 parasols, celluloid handles, all silk, 1.40 FOURTEEN 2 50 " - ? " . u.: . 190 OUR 25 cent SATTEENS, ' PLAIN AND FIGURED AT 19 cents 40 " . . FRENCH; " " " " 33 " f i I -''ni n ir The' T .-I. vi-iX. V UDff Meclilenburg Iron Works, CHAKI.OTTJE, W. C. aprUSdlm THE: 0: U .... ICE CREAM: SALOON .. ... ."s . ... 3 ' ' .f-,f J; ' - i - '. ' " Opened (or th season.; Ice Oaam and Water Icea furnished to famiies and parties on short notice '- ' " Fresh Bread, Cakes and Pies Daily. Ju3t received a chpice. Jot' of Potted Meats, Canned Fruit, Pickles, Crackers, &c. -Also, Imported and Domestic Confectionery. r. c; w: .'HRRisoJsr- Successor to Mayer & Ross. A &REAT SLAUGHTER! The raot styli li Worsted Goods reduced to prices never before equalled in this city. A fnw vry hanisjme Spauidh R abes and Combination buits at a sa'nfi(v. Afinelotof the- - Ss ; ' . - B5ST SESBSUfKER m (iLVfiHiaS ; Far below tLeir value New" arriral of Laces. Don't wait,' but come and see for a. Iii;KEESLER 80CCSSS0BS TO ALZXANDSB HABEIS. FRED C. HUNZLEIt. . WHOLBBAI . . . -i LAGEB BEER EAJJEM AIik ' BOTXTLEft, CHARlJOTTE, ;;H.vC Bepresents two of the largest LAGEB BEES Breweries ia the United State - The Bnpir 4c EKgcl Brewbis Co or PUlAelphiaL, and the M. gchafferBrewiax Co., el Ifew ork. . TQS LARGEST LAGEB BEER DOT TLING ItSTABLISHMENT IN THE CITY. Ordra Solicited. " All orden promptly 'filled and delivered free oi charge to any prt of the city. - 4oc80dlf - - FOR SALE. Uaimprorod lot 99x150. adjoining the pr- twrty of J B. Umorj. J. P. Irwin fr. wmwif oa rraae sireet. bums uo rnoe Charlotte Real Estate Agency, V . - -s ? w 1 i 100 Jerseys Talk BAKERY i- t i ..Oriental Flouncing, and Egyptian yourseir. , -o . ; OUR ' SWIStui SUMMER S1YLES - - ' OF MTLLI N E R Y Is now ready embracing all the latest noreltles In Biitsaou Boaneuior . ..-. -; ladies', Misses' and Children, on : & 0. Spii Hmerr. PLUMES; FEATHER3," " - ? - ' FLOWERS, RIBBONS, GAUZES, SILKS, AND ORNAMENTS In all the new and desirable shades. The largest Ktoek and the lowest ptlces of any MllUnery Sslula llsiunentln thd Staat j All . m -. --c-"f HATS AHDi BONNETS Trimmed by Mrs. Query, are a sure (roarantee of their being tastef ally and correctly trimmed. t ; - MADE la the latMTStylea. and at the lowest poas ble iles. , t . '- Eespectfully, - C, 11. QUERY. "Trctbui!b thk gen, eatasmtsa sttkmits to BS 0B3CUKKD, BUT, LIKX TBS 8DN, ONLY FOR X rant." . .: - ; i- ttKbMcriptfon to the Observer. - - DAILY EDITION. Single copy ' 6 cents. Bytkaweekln theclty..l ....... 20 By the montb . 75 " Three months. ...... ...12.00 ' Six months 4.C0 j One year .uu . , WEKKLT EDITION.. - Threemcmih ..... EOeents. fllx months ......1.00 . Jnyear.....i........ t' In clubs oi five and over 4L50.. ; - No EeriJitlon From Thee Rules SubscrlDtlons always naraDle In advance, not only in name but Id fact . LABOR DITTUEBANCE. a tiuelt appeal from: as- 8I8TANT BISHOP POTTER. The Responsibility of the Church for Sasf alninit the Brotherhood of Man and Elevating: the Wage Earners.' - - The following timely letter, con. taining a eeries-ef Christian precepts m regara to toe numan relations which should exist between the rich And the poor, addressed to the Eoiss copal clergy of the Diocese of JNew York by the Kight - Rev. - lenry u, Potter, -Btshop ot the 'Diocese, waB received by the Rectors of the diff ar. ent churches yesterday : ' Episcopal Rooats, New York, ) May 10, 1886. t To the Reverend Clergy of the IHo. eee of New York.' Dear Brethren : Un der . the pros risigafe i of gour,. canons, it is made my duty to address to you, from time to time, such, pastoral counsel -as par ticular exigencies may; qeoaano. A. grave emergency; has arisen, in which, while it seems to concern us first as citizens, it is of supreme im portance that we should see. and own. our duty as disciples of Him wbos9; ministers we are and whose religion we are pledged to teach and illustrate. A class conflict, whose proportions it is daily becoming i more difficult to measure, hss grown up in, this land which threatens not .only the peace .-ini good order , of socety but the permanance of our free institutions. lam not one of those -woo are m rmste to doubt the power of the civil magistrate to control th1 violence of mobs or the disposition of the great majority of our j people to range th nisei ves on the side of law and order.. Nor am I appreuansiye that the constituted authorities will fail of their dut.yin any cciifiiejfc that may threaten ua at this moment, any more than I - am igaor:t that the luruulent elements ia our own and oilier cii !s are largolj. recruitea irom the rao&s of aliens and foreigners. Alreadv it js plain, in more than one direction that those wno resist the terrorism of unscrupulous organiza tions aiming to coerce workmen and wage-payf r auke by such intolera ble tvraumes riot and the boycott have behind them a resolute public sentiment which will not rest until it has vindicated, the' .majesty 5 of ' the law and those-" personal rights to "life, labor, and the pursuit of hap- pinesa" lor wnicn our latners saea their blood. Already in more than one conspic uous struggle, widely heralded as de signed to be a test case as to the pow er of wlorkiDgmen to manage not only their own affairs, but those of their employers, the isaue has been in favor of the employer and not or the worir- lDgmen. -And wnere, as in omer ia- stances, the decision halts or is post poned for a little, it needs no prophet to predict it. urganizea capital, backed by the orderly and peace lov ing instincts ot those large an power ful elements in the community which are not wage earning elements, will be likely still further to triumph, and the wrongs, real or imaginary, of the working classes will not, at any rate, todav or tomorrow, be righted by the means tbey have thus far employed. At suoh a moment i cannon dui think that the church whose minis ters we are hag-a rare opportunity. It is the .moment, of . all others- whea they who have proved tneir strengtn to resist what they believe to be un reasonable demands, accompanied by unwarranted acts and combinations, may wisely be argued, to illustrate that just and generous magnanimity which enoutd iorever cnasten toe ex ercise of superior powers and enoble the possession;! exceptional girts or gains. . And as to tne message ot tne church to such men there can be no doubt. Is it only a coincidence that at the very moment when events are occurring among us which show the two classes in which the ' community is divided, the rich and the poor, as arrayed against ! one another, witti equal menace and animosity on either side, the church should be leading us through, those incidents df her J&n teaofltal history when ''the multitude of them that believed - were of one heart and of -one soul,' neither' said any of them that aught of the Jhings. which he possessed waar his own, but they had all things in common?'' Let it be granted without reserve that such words describe an era of enthu siasm, with its consequent commu nity of possessions, could riot last any more than it would have been for the greatest good of the greatest number that it should last.; Still the fact re mains that 'Christianity' brought into the world a new law of . Drothernood, and l both by precept an 'example, taught men that they whose was the stewardship of - exceptional ; gifts. whether of rank, wealth, learning, or cleverness,-were not to treat them as their own, but as a trust for the whole community. - "Bears ye one another s burdens and so , fulfill the law of Christ." . 'Ye that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak." "Charge them that are rich in this world that they be. ready to give glad to distribute f these words and others like them did not mean the mere giving of doles and indis criminate distribution of alms. It is not by gifts such fas these '.that jthe wounds in the body pontic are to be healed, and the parted tendrils - of dissevered humanity, bound together; and it is an open question whether municipal and -institutional .charity has not .irritated as .mu(?h'as it has soothed them or healed them. What the laborer wants from Hs employer is., fair '- and . fraternal dealing, not alms-giving, and a recognition of his manhood rather , than a .condescen- 'sion'of "his inferiority. ,' , And it is at this point that the out look is most discouraging. The growth of-wealth among us nas is sued not in binding men together but in driving them apart. " The rich are further from the poor, the employer from his workmen, cabital . from las bor. now than ever before. Too many know less and less how the poor live, and give little time or money in efforts to know. -.The wace of the laborer, may be doubtless in most cases it is larger than it was 30 years ago; but bis wants have grown more rapidly than his wages, and his opportunities for gratifying them are not more numerous, but less.; r He knows more about decent livintr. but his home is not more decent, and daily grows more costly. Hia mental norizon nas been more widened, but fit food for it is no more accessible. Instincts and aspirations have been awakened in him which are certainly as honorable in him as in those, more favorably situated, but wealth-- does little either to direct -.or, to satisfy them. The manners of the noorl it is said, are more indolent ! and ungra cious than of old to the rich, and this discourages efforts to .know and serve them. I do not see why pover ty should cringe to wealth, which is as often as otherwise an accidental distinction, and quite as often a con dition '; unad orned by any special moral o? Intellectual excellence. But we may be sure that the manners of the poor, if they be insolent, are earned from those of people whose opportunities should at least have taught them that no arrogance is more insufferable or 1 unwaran table than that of mere wealth.' And if we are reaping today the fruits of these mutual:-hatreds between more arid ess favored classes we may well own that the fault is not all on one side. and that it is time we awaken to the need ef sacrifices' w hich alone can banish them. These sacrifices are not so much of money as of. ease, of self-indulgent ignorance, of contemptuous indiffer ence, of conceited and shallow views of the relations of men to one anoth er. A nation whose wealth and so cial leadership are in the hands of people who fancy that day after day, lite those ot old, tney can "sit down to eat and drink and rise up to play," careless of those who earn the diVis dends that they spend and pay the rents of ' the tenement houses that they own, but too often never visit or inspect, has but one doom before it. and that the worst. - We may cover the pages of our jstatute . books with laws regulating strikes and inflicting tne severest penalties on those who organize resistance to the individual ib-?rty, whether of employer or workman; we. may drill regiments and direct bur police; the safety and wejlf are pf thg State is uot - a these things. It is by the eontautuient and oyalty of the people And tbese me by a different r at. t Wheit capitulis: and employers of labor have forever dismissed the fail acy, wfiich may be trua enough in in j aomam or poiiccai eeonornv, jut essenti&iiy iaise in the domain of religion, that labor and the laborer are alike a commodity, to be bought and Bold, employed or dismissed. paid or unpaid, as the market shall decree i wnen tne interest - oi workmen and master, shall have been owned by both as one, and the share of the las boring man shall be something more than a mere wage; when the princi pal of a joit.t interest, in what is pros duced, of all the brains and hands that go to produce it are wisely and generously recognized ; when the well being of our leilow men, their homes and their food, their "pleasures and their higher moral and spiritual ne cessities, shall be seen to be matters concerning which we may not dare to say,' "Am I my brother's keeper t" then, but not till then, may we hope to heal those grave social ci visions concerning which there need to. be among us "all, as with Iseral of old, 'great searching of hearts. 1 beg you, reverend gentlemen, to set these things before your people with great plainness of speech. - in New York centres the capital that controls the traffic and largely the manufactures of the New- World. In your - congregations are many of those who control that capital. In all our parishes. are people who ems ploy labor or reap the benefits of it. To these it is time to say that no Christian man can innocently be ins different to the interests of working men and women; that wealth brings with it a definite responsibility first to know how best to use it to serve others as well as ourselves, and then resolutely to set about doing it; that luxury has its decent limits, land that we in this land are in danger m many directions qi overstepping inose limits; tnat ciass cnurcnes and class distinctions of kindred kinds have nearly&destroyed in the hearts of many of the poor all faith in the genuineness ; of religion whose founder declared, "All ye are breth ren," but hose disciples more often seem by their acts to say, ' Stand thou .there." "Trouble mo not,". when their brethren remind them not merely of their manifold needs, but of their just rights. These, 1 say, are some of the things which need to be said to your people. Nor am 1 in doubt as to the response which they will awaken. . There are, I am persuaded, not a few among us who long to see the Uhristianity of our common Master translated into new deeds of brotherhood and . self sacrifice. ; There never -was so much intelligent sentiment in the church as to our great social problems as to day J"; There never was more willing self-sacrifice waiting to be led iortn to new conquests for the cross. There is a wide unrest concerning tmngs as thevare; there is an nonest longing to make our Uhristianity more real and more helpful ; there is a fresh en- thusiasm tor uod and 141s courcn, ready to kindle into flame. To these you can speak. Jttay uod give you the wisdom to 00 so 1 . The following pfayer for the couns trv is set forth for use in cnurcnes and chapels under the provisions of cannon 15, title 1. ' " I am,' reverend and dear brethren, faithfully and affectionately yours, " Henry C. .Potter - - ..,. v . -' . A PRAYER FOR THE OOtNTRY. ; AlitiiVhtv Ood. who in the formpr time leddest our fathers forth into a wealthy place, and didst set their feet m a large room, give Any- grace, we humbly beseech , Thee, to us, their ViiMivri that wfl mav aIwavh ans prove ourselves a people mindful of Thy favor . ano giau , w, ,oq ny wiu Bless otir land .with honorable ins dustry,; sound "learning, :,and pure manners. Defend bur liberties, pre serve our unity ? .Save us' from i via- lance, discord and confusion, from nririn and an o rancv. and from everv vil wav. . Fa thion into one haDOv people the multitudes brought hither out of many kindreds and - tongues. V.ndiiA with the I rsniritcof ( wisdom t.hnsA elinm we intrust - in Thv name with the authority of goverance, to a. a m t. 7 ... - . tne end tnaii inure u p.afxs uumo, and that we keep our place among the nations .of the earth. - In -the self-confidence with thankful noes and in the day of trouble suffer not our trust in Thee to fail. All which we ask for Jesus Christ's Bake. Amen.' - ' ; antt,Slian?nf S,W80n Ior - 1 ' A Shot at ""Anti," 1 To the Editor or Thk Obsxrtxb ' ' ' Anti has again taken his position in the field and truly he has made some "sockdolager licks," and doubtless all things would have fallen before hi mighty arm had . he only ; hit what he strusk at so hard, r f " Anti says there are . two sides to this question. I believe it, and will accordingly keep as near as possi ble on exactly the opposite side to where he now stands, and hope that some day he may stray off and wan der oyer to where we are. Mr.' Editor, I wish I could tell, you how much I love liberty. . 1 euppose it is as dear to me as to any on,, uns less perhaps, it be some one who has been or is likely to be deprived of this much loved condition or state. But, sir, I hope that with all my love for it, I could have enough Of the spirit of patriotism that dwells in the bosoms of our forefathers to sacrifice even that upon the altar of my coun try and principle. We have always been characterized as a liberty loving people, and we even now catch up the echo of those words so express ive of the fact, as they come.Trom the great soul of Patrick Henry.and with our united voices swell the strain that shall go on, ever increasing, down to the end of time, telling pos terity of the noble sentiment that was cherished in the bospms of i their an cestors. . ' ; '. : r ' But to the point, Mr. Editor. We are glad to know that Anti is so well up on the Constitution, and hope it will benefit him, but his understand ing is quite different from ours, if he Understands the Constitution: to mean that a man may choose for his business highway robbery, moon shining, j counterfeiting money, or anything else that is mean. Just be cause, forsooth, it suits him best; and yet nis argument would give him that right. . -i . I Mr. Editor, he says that he does riot look upon the! manufacturer and seller of whiskey as being to . blame for the drunkenness now in the land, but that it is owing to loose morals. With this view can he he eo foolish as $0 think he is doing his duty duty to his fellow men, or his duy as an advocate of liberty, which he seems to cherish more than his owu soul, by putting iu the way of these loose morals the very thing they want, the very thing they would go to their death for; and above all by setting the example. He knows that we are apt to do wrong rather than right; he knows that we are more easily persuad d to do what we ought not than to do what we ought, and he knows, besides this, that there are as many barrooms and grogshops in Charlotte as there are churches, and yet, in the face of all this, he des clares that if the ministers did their duty that it would be an easy matter to convert the wayward children and put them in the paths, of rectitude, uprightness and virtue, notwithstand ing he and his party are . working I hard in the contrary direction. Now he knows that statement is positively not true, -and the uttering of such slanderous insinuations is only . an index to the spirit that1 lies within: I He refers to the parallel drawn by one of your correspondents; and says that it is not a parallel case because it endangers the lives of himself and family. Is there not danger as well in a drunken brawl when fired with the poison of this accursed beverage? Men are not too good," were such a thing possible, to commit crimes so horrible in their nature as to make the devil tremble at the wickedness of man. What man, or woman or child is safe when at the mercv of a man mad witn wnissey 1 Anti, would you trust your wife, your daughter. your child to the care of a drunken man? How, then, can you expect other men to do so? This, however, lacks one little thing of being an ex act parallel. This lies in the . differ ence in the agencies necessary to set iquor and explosives to work. Add fire to the explosives and fire a man's brain with liquor, and there is dan ger to life either way. In regard to his parallel of a hardware dealer we would say, that if the dealer knew at the time he sold the weapon that it was intended to do the work of death, then he would be equally guil ty with the man who did the deed doubtlefs would pay the penalty as euch. Even the most weak minded can see that ..this is .not a parallel case, "V for; what- barkeeper does not know that .the whiskey he sells is more likely to be damnation to some poor soul than otherwise; Is that not what his establishment is fort If not, what is it for? Mr. Editor, he would scare us off with a horrible picture of an opium den. True this is a great evil, perhaps greater than whiskey drinking where it is practiced, and al arms that the sealing or. the doom of whiekey in Charlotte would be the birth of the crimes consequent to opi um smofcing, and to all appearances, intends to leave the inference that if whiskey remains there need be no fear of any -other evil. Any sane man can see that this theory will not do. so it is useless to pursue tnat thought further. But but, give him the advantage of his own proposition, and suppose it to be an inevitable fact that this last curse would come to Charlotte, would it not show wis dom on the part of her people to rid themselves of whiskey now. so that when the other does come,- they will have to deal with only one. and so that they will be more able to put it out from among them? One question more : l I MX '-A .;: -O c - ..v "Earth'd up hi-re lies an Imp 0' bell, . Planted by Satan's dibble." Who, then, must have been Satan's devil? Hoping that Anti may soma day see things differently, 1 remain, Gorman .Porter the Wounded - ' Conductor. ' Montgomery, Ala., May 17. The physician who attended Norman Porter, says that Porter left here on the morning after he was cut,, and that -bis wound . was not serious enough to prevent bitn from attend ing to his duties as sleeping car con ductor. He was not in Montgomery at a'l when Mr. Davis spoke, being in Atlanta before the procession started Irom the hotel. , ... 300 Pairs or Slippers at 65c Pair - - AtWltfknwHlrr ABaraeh'a." They contain lines. which are worth as high as $2 25 a pair. They are sample slippers, therefore this unusual sacriace. -.-,4 .... . -..---., mxrauwts&i asAiwum Scott's Emulsion of Pare Cod Xiver Oil, with Hjrpophosphltes. Is Remarkable as a Fesh Producer. ' i , The Increase of flesh and strength, is nereenHbl' Immediately after commencing to use the Kmul : ion xiie uoa iimr uu emulsified with the HT-. poph08phltes is most remarkable for Its healing, sireuginenrng, ana nesn producing qualities. ;;s H : b : 1 BROWN'S IRON BITTKRS CORED MBS. wi R. French, 619 Market street, Wilmington. N. i " iromiiiKu, una a recommenas - " cAwiiGu, iwuc, ncr iHmuy use ' 1 nuuwiun success., . Mrs. JToe Person's Remedy ; Is still the best Blood Part (1st on the market. 1 , , . . : . JAO. H. HcADKN, Wholesale lirugglta.' Absolutely Pure- Tlits powder never varies. A marvel of purity. """us twi wuouuiuenes8 more economical tnan the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold In competition with the multitude of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate powders. Sold only hoans. Wholesale by , - SPRINGS ft BURWRLL, 1 Jan20d4wly Charlotte, N a NERVOUS DEBILITATED MEN. Electrio Suspensory Appliances, for the nwedr ' viS.6?,"5 pei'maiH-nteuie of NenxruaPxbattu. lorn ' of Vitality and Mankocd, and all kindred troubles. " Also f or man v.ot lier aisesges. Complete restorm. tlou to Healrw, ';,or an.i Manhood enaranteed. No rlak l lnouiTs.1. Illustrated pamphlet iumeaUd efei- mallei !:. y addressinif VOLX4I0 CQ., Marshall, Btkli, . . novH-ieo-'fta D E AFN KS !!?.ciS twntV-oitrlt vast m Vm-iaA Vvu mnuO A 4t.& vt.vuuj wiu. Mua UtOlCU UJ UIUi3 VI lira UVH3U onaitlollara 1 i-fr. . eii i -t ocu IU uirco 1UU1IU1B. aUU Bill CO LUHQ DUnilrWlD OI Al-Kau t. . . - i . , . vwicub u tuc iaiuo yiwess. - a plain, Bunpie rtiq 8upeessliil home treatment Address T. S. PAGE. jMWb -wui ou new xor& vity. , I CURE FITS! vTBviix say cwviao not mean merely to scop tnem it a time and then have them return again, I mean a uttaalcare. I have made the disease of FITS, EPI. tP8Y or FALLING SICKNESS a Ufe-lonir tiviv I warrant my remedy to eure the worst catea. Because othera hare failed u ne reason for not now receiving; a euro. Bend at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of mr infallible remedr. Give Eznresa and Pout Offina. . itooetavou nothing for a trial, and I will cure too. ' Addreas 0a, H. a. BOOT, US Pearl StjTew York. XBOWN-3 IRON BITTltRS CITRIC D MTt P T O Wyatt. 218 N. MeOowell street Raleigh. N C. vi luuigesuKu. urrruuauesB ana aizziness, ana ne uaa grown Birong ana neany. CONSUMPTION. I have a positive remedy 'or the above disease ;bvlts ase thoosandaef eases of the worst kind and ef long steading have been cured. Indeed, sostronrls mr faith la IU effleser, that I will send TWO BOTTLES F R8K. together with a TALUABI.KTRKATISS oa thUdlaasia ' to any sufferer . Olve express and P .O. address. SB. T. A. BLOCUU, in PsarlBt., Kew Tort. TIROWN'S IRON BITTERS - FULLY J M- u stored to health and streneth Mr. R H Raa. neya, uoraam, n a. Be aao sunered untold mis ery from disordered liver and l Idney and neuralgia. PENNYBSYAL PILLS CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH." a lie wnginai snu only ueDDine. 7 8aft and alwavs ReliaMe. flmuikrnrthl.H Ii.tt.tfa.. Indiipenaabla to LADIES. - Ask yoar Drawsdst r "Ghlehestes'l EHellnh' and take ae other, or jnoloM 4s. (naropi w u nr parucuiars ta truer oy retura amalli RAms I'atr'tLK. .nienesiepvnenileat uekj. -s wa a aiaaismi Bqamre, .rsillaan- lfc I MadiiHHi 8awre, PklUdsHl SaldbyDrai vf Itntflmt everywhere. As Ibr Ckiekei Ella" Pennyroyal Pills. Te M other. tar-a ttisu janlOdifcwly BROWN'S IRON BITTERS CUBED MR. M. G. Lovelace. Reidsntle. N. C. . when troubled with kidney and liver affection. He expresses himself as moen pieaea men its enecc . sbtatbllalaesl FAY'S isee. milLLA R00FII1GI Coat. CARPBTS and KDi oogBie tae weoimotna .sa. sa ss ssssa. anaas rnn aaaav sssssi a naa CUREfthreDEAF FECK'S PATENT IMPROVED CUSHIONED EAR DRUMS naaivaa vaa JUAanca-aad aerwrm ma wore si tas aatoral drank. Invitibla, eomfortable and always la position. . All eonvenatkm and svan whispers heard dlitinetly. Send f.T iUu.tr t- book wtta taitiiixm tali, FREE. Adorost or call sa a. ruavva. 849 Broadway, Haw Xork, atsntioa Huspapar, WtNTED-LiDYffi her own locality an old Arm Refer artivA and Intelll- nt, to represent In PerraaneLt position and good salary. trAX CO. trnrannw rpnmrpo. 16 Barclay St N. T. - .; , : , . aprtB4w TTT 1 It T C fl LADIES to work Tor ns at their 11 AH I tU. own-homes, $7 to 10 per week Vlf teat Tvt oniRt.lv made. No nnoto ralntlna: no ' canvassing. Foe lull particulars, please address i dbbt-TMP iBTiviirpiNT.lQ rAiitral Street, Bogtoa, Mass., box oi7u O BURNHAH'S I!riPBOTGD i.: ..; STANDARD (TURBINE Is the BEST constructed and finished Turbine in the world. j Tested percentages, with part and fnlf amta drawn, eanal to any other wheeL - ew paiwnieisen. itwj uy -DBOWN'S IRON BITTERi GATEALMOST Greensboro. OAoloX tion, ana ne oiiBiucra u uuh w.w. ..w r.mh Orchard zLVJ ATE R-"aw . - - - m cs i o8s.ra! 14 THE KIDNEYS. . THK STOMACH. THJS BOWEW-i a poexrm cueb fob BOSS'S 3 DYSPEPSIA. O 3 SE.S 0.0 :4 , ted package i auu a-- luine oaii. . ., I ' . . - Crab orcnara vtmav v r rwy. S. ST. TONES. Manage.. LemsvUle. Ky. L. b. WRISTON, Agent, . : - ' '-gf SIM Jakes the lead: ooee not onrrode like an or iron, nor decay like shintneso tar eompositiops ; easy to apply; stronjr and durable; at half tne ooBt of tin. Is also a GS of same material. ca-ctmncN.iwaV u&taiotme ana samples ir?ich2Sdeod4wto lias an viN j iiHh wh fill Hrm ihhk WMrvami nnnniMUi nmmi at i .1 wwir a mem ao a : . pair, and that the bargain was dulv we sold the very last pair.; We had QClf Aalinn MA .1 ALL I ilLSK U KuK Our natrons nBrnhwlArlon1 itf "Ri-it X. , TOITLB SEE - SEVERAL -i it.-,' -..'!;! J( s-.l Til- - I ' . . r 1 m'' . . a jTiacett on our rront counter, oi wnich we are offering the first ONE HUN -DBEDat.only n . . . . b-. ,L -.- . " -(.( : l" 'lit h-'i Our Buyer secured a lot of 400 Circulars, which were manufactured to ha retailed for .- .- . -. .-- cBoo5 Don't fail to secure one of these -CSrcidais1f vnudWinAsd It thin week.' ! t: as this low price low will make them t)r. Warner's $1.00 Ooraline Corset More Special Offers. 1 juiyuuuue auu oautiugn au par ceut uu regular pnws. aw pieces Satins, evening shades at 33c. per yd. 11 .' '- j .-' MORE CHARLOTTE, N.'. C. MAIL OBDEE8 SOLICITED AND Keeps the largest and : ' ill r. , . . . . j . ' JJ UUlrilUUU-UUu-CB-"' " - ,i '- -: 1 . i"i : . i mi . " . . " I rvi r i 1 u Lsi1 . ur i x r t A bed-room suit of 10 Tieces. imitation walniit.S22.00. i -' J ' .t in A v r -y.: J .t A: toed-room snit of 10 pieces, walnut ' ,-witli marble f-top, . d4er r . .... ! ' :l - ' " : . :: ... .1 Elegant .walnut and cherry A ns.ln. enir nr 7 ninnaa -lA " u 7 " I i ihivi duiw vi iAtsVD uvutus . s vi piia viutwi ra.wv IAS wo. . . 7. ..1 . -uounges in great variety Maeboarcia . " ; " !io.uv to io.w. T?V V Babv CflrriafrAa in oreat varietv frdm fS 00, to 35 0O. ' t Wow Shaies, Cornice COFFINS AND METALLIC OASESa M ! :-; f 1 :15 -.i. JraE? at i- T Sim S . n : h Q t a . l .... i t- i.e. . I ... l;,;Nb arcefofe Dackiniff or dray aer Ho fiHo Aim(iDi?ws. ' OaABLOTTE, N. OL - H V n OnT I'l I II llll III I. mimii JB I I f I V' SB.. V iSS. W f ifv amireciated was nroven bv the fact that ': like wis success with the sale, of over . .... -. UtiftlJlM UAUti4Lm I il ;.4.- a. ..": . J.-. 5 v. ! J " '-' .. ' - : 1 'i1- T" ' i'uHii U ;'.' I :, v'i.h(.-:i.u;: . . . ':.'S ''-.- ' " --f - - , : SKBlln. sell rapidly. :. " : .. . .! 14 . : .ij-i-v-i ;: at 75 cente. New arrivaLs of Oriental I . .. , . 4. l:v i-,. ...... -.i.vr Ui,s? I:,:..'. PlMPTLY ATTENDED TO most complete stock of i ii- ' i - marMa ltmfaiianl watlvtriw a ..... aa tmm li a ft as 1 1 1 H Ha suit front f.7a,00 to' 75,00., , HUNDRED imifofinn Afrom olllr' SRfl Oil ..:.-. raw Rilk. trimmed -vvith nlnRh imlV nlnoV, tiAnA 4a ' irom yo.vu 10 ou.w. r . ; ..: Poles : and Oil -t Paintiiigs, i A . 41 .hoijiU m1 mlmim- r ..I - 1-M L-1 1.1J . i i i - i . . fl. "ff ' Vra ' -r ' m , 1,7. JP i's fjZ j sTsT . i'l SSaaaaaasBl ii i t t l t 4 1 t V- -.tl 'taaasl ,:iir--"--. - '.IlK'j ii M ifLtfi- wa. ;' ''i ' 1 ' ... ' 'at, .1 " - "T" mr i ?5 .i lr:i At" V " : time of our prosperity, temper our