MECKLENBURG TIMES' PUBU8HM 1TBBT THUBSDAT- T HE CHARLOTTE NE WS. DAILY EXCEPT 8TTNDAY - W.C.DOWD, EDITOK AND PROPWF-OB OFFICE 25 8. TRYON STREET. Subscription in Advance: " Ttmrs One vear v.- $1.00 Hix months....: ... '.50 Three months....: - .25 Kkws Onft-year....,.. Six months . Three months... 4 00 2 00 1.00 THURSDAY, JAN 16 1896. UTAH AND HER CHURCH. We shall soon be able to deter mine the attitude as well as thepow' er of the Mormon church in the new State of Utah. The convening of the first legislature will afford the opportunity and perhaps reveal the necessity for the display of both the intentions and the potency of the church in the law-making branch of the Government, which will be, to all intents and purposes," the Govern ment itself. The "St. Louis Republic says it has never been apprehensive of any danger to free institutions in Utah from this source. The Mornion hierarchy are well aware of the power lodged in the Federal Govern ment to compel their recognition of the rights and liberties, as well as the interests, of the Gentile popula tion, and they cannot fail to under stand that the prejudice existing against them and the distrust of their intentions, which are doubtless more general than are justified, would force the exercise of Federal authority at the slightest provocation on their part Under such conditions, the State of Utah will certainly have a Repub lican form of government. That once assured, the inpouring of the Gentiles and their growth in num bers, wealth and industrial activities will in a few years take away the political omnipotence of the church This is a consummation devotedly to be wished, for it is certainly not a desirable condition that any religious body should have to be reckoned with as an oigani.ed and despotical ly controlled force in the politics of udv State. The withdrawals of gold from the' treasury thus far this week are looked upon as ominous by treasury officials but this result is not altogether un pected by the administration. They would not be surprised if. a serious raid should be made, taking practi cally all cf the gold out ot the trea sury, and if this should occur they will be disposed to say, "I told you so." It is what the President and his secretary expected to result from au attempt at a popular loan. It is s:iid that in anticipation of a raid on the good course has always been "de cided on, to be followed as soon as the reserve is run below a certain point, As soon as it becomes appa rent (if it does) that the gold in the treasury is being drawn on for (ho purchase of the proposed bonds, the President will, it is said, withdraw the advertisement for bonds and at once make a contract with the syn dicate for gold. It is believed that he will not wait for the reserve to sink much lower before doinjr this, provided it is evident that tne gold is being withdrawn in consequence of the offer of bonds. Ik New York the dinner df the Confederate Veteran camp will le taten at the St. Denis hotel on Sat--urday evening January ISth, the an niversary of the birth of General Lee. It will be a swell affair. The army and navy are to4appear in full uniform, and the old rebs in even ing dress. The speakers will Mood the earth with eloqnence, and all the songs of Dixie land will be sung in chorus. Colonel Edwin B. Hay, of Washington, will have something new to say of General Lee, and other subjects will be amply covered by able speakers on both sides of the line. To the huge aggregate of the bonded indebtedness and other pe cuniary demands npon the resources of our people, the Kepublican party proposes to pile on the additional "burden of a revenue system under which, as' experience has amply demonstrated, the people are requir ed to pay a tariff tax, thirty or forty per cent, of which goes into the public treasury, and the other sixty or seventy per cent into the coffers of trust and corporations. New Jersey is a good State for young men who do not desire to get married to keep away from this year. The new State census shows that the women greatly outnumber the men. When the girls come to understand the awful meaning of this fact they will make up for the deficiency of mr n by extra personal efforts during the time when ancient custom allows them to propose. Approximate estimates of the gold and silver output of the United States for 1895 have been reported to the Directors of the Mint. The total is $56,614,000 of gold and 51, 000,000 fine ounces of silver. The Director of the Mint thinks this a little high. THJS END OF THE WORLD." Mrs. Qoinby, the Kansas seeress who had predicted that the world would come" to au end on December 29, 1895 and- who : had worked up quite a list of believers, has retired from the predicting business and did not make much fuss about it She has been laid on the shelf with Mother Shipton, Michael Nostrada mus. John Tillinghast, William Lil ly and the host of minor ' prophets who in time past set dates for the consummation of all things earthly. In the Mother Shipton rhyme it was more poetically than truthfully said that Then at last the w rid to an end shall come, In eighteen hundred and eighty-one. - Nostradamus, the Famous French astrologwyeaid that the world would come to an end in the year in which Good Friday should come on St. George's Day, Easter on St. Mark's Day and Corpus Christi on St. John's Day. Iu order to reassure the timid we will say the coincidence which the great astrologer believed would "immediately precede the final wind up actually took place in the year 1880. One peculiar thing about this end-of-the-world literature is the widespread belief that the earth's existence is to be divided into three periods of"2,000 years each. The foflowing, from the fly-leaf of one of Martiu Luther's books in the Berlin library museum, was written by the great Ueformer himself: "Elijah, the prophet, eaid that the world had existed 2,000 years before the law was given; that it would exist 2,000 years under the Mosaic law, an 2,000 under the Christian dispensa tion, and that then it would be burnt" Some writers contend that the "six days" referred to in Holy Writ really means 6,000 years, and that the "Seventh Day" is the type of the coming mellenninm, or "Sab bath of a thousaud years." C. A. L. Totton, the cranky pro fessor at Yale, says that the end of the world will come in March, 1899, but does dot set the exact date. The late J. S. Willetts settled on April 11, 1901, as the date for closing mundane affairs for all time. We have the astronomers on ou side, however, for they declare tha the old earth is good for a half dozen million of years yet at least. No will the earth be burned, according to their belief. On the contrary the sun will gradually die out huo the human race will eventually per ish from excessive cold. The car wheel works at Raleigh have made 1,000 wheels for the Sea board Air Line, as many for the Southern, 400 for the ( ape Fear & Yadkin Valley and also filled orders for all the other lines in the State save the Atlantic Coast Line and th jorrolK & Western. 1 he iron comes from Alabama mainly and th moulding sand from near Gibson Station. Ohaicoal iron is used for wheels. Most of the other castin of the Seaboard Air Line are made at these works, under contract. The snb-conjmittee of the House Appropriations Committee having charge of the pension bill has de cided to increase the amount for the next fiscal year from $138,000,000 to $140,000,000. The last sum was that asked for by Commissioner Lo chren in bis estimates. Inlluentia Republicans thought that Congress should not put itself on record as allowing less money for pensions than the Commissioner thought was needed, so the bill was raised to the original estimates. The recent census of Durham taken by ord r of the Board of Al derman, shows the population of that thriving city to be 11,700. The Durham correspondent ot the Ral eigh Observer says: "Completed the census shows 11,6.99 and before th report reached ths Board of Alder men a nice little girl baby made its appearance at the home of, Mr. W i. Morgan. ae lioaru named her Rosa, put the name on the list and now the population is 11,700.' It will require more than $141, 000,000 to pay the pensioners of this government for the coming fisca year. I his immense sum will be disbursed under laws passed by Con gress from time fo time, the majority of which originated '"n thejcommittee on invalid pensions. The Scientific Color of Sin The Methodist Ministerial Asso ciation, in session at the Meridian Street Church, yesterday m ruing listened to an interesting lecture by the lie v. John W. Milam on "The Color of Sin." Mr Milam made the assertion that scientific experiments nave developed that sin is scarlet. These experiments were made in the Smithsonian Institution. By means of a chemical process Jthe perspira tion oi a person aroused by sinful passion was subjected to a test that uiscioseu a pinKisn color, f orty ex periments were made and in each test the results were the same. Some of the ministers declined to accept Mr. Milam's new theory, and one member of the association asked if it were meant that people could sweat out the evil in them. Mr. Milam replied that his assertions were based on scientific facts; that it was a con vincing argument that the Bible and science are in accord, for the Bible speaks of the color of sin. Indian apolis Journal. IN KENTUCKY AND MARYLAND. In each of the two Democratic States Kentucky and Maryland which were captured by the Repub-.. licans last November, a seat in the' United States Senate was one. and perhaps the most important, of the stakes. In Kentucky the Republi can viHory lacked the full measure of completeness in that it failed to secure a majority of the two hous.-s of the Legislature in joint coven -tion. Sixty-seven Republicans, six ty seven Democrats and two Popu lists rmike up the -membership of that lody, thus giving to Populists the balance of power But the two members of that party decline to take the responsibility of controll ing the election of Senator, and neatlv evade it by an equal partition of their strength between the two great parties. In other words, one of the two goes to the Republican side, the other to the Democratic. Should this situation continue, no Senator could be chosen, nor could any appointment of a Senator by the Governor be lawfully made. But it is reported that the Republicans, who control the lower house, will un dertake to break the deadlock by unseating two Democratic members. This, however, is a game that two sides can play at. The Democrats have the Senate, aud will furnish a Roland for every Oliver that the Republicans can produce. The scheme smacks of revolution, and the Republic ins cannot afford to en ter upon it In Marylaud the Republicans have a clear majority on joint bal lot, and the Democrats, although in control of the Senate organization, will offer no impediment to the election of a Republican to succeed Senator Gibson. DEATH PENALTY. Gov. Crr Set the Date for the Execution nl M urderer Covington of Ctibarrua. Governor Carr has signed the death warrant forTnos Covingtou, of Cabarrus county, fixing the date February 13th, l9fj. Covington stood trial at the Spring term of the lower Court in Cabarrus county, 18!'5 for murder. He was found guilty, and the sen tence imposed was the death penal ty. Covington was sentenced to be hung April 4th, 1 815. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court and the decision of the lower court was affirmed.. Governor Carr today fixed the date for the exe ution and Cov ington will be ushered from-earth' in the coldest, bleakest month in the year. Covington is a brutal murderer. He murdeted his employer, who is a part owner and general superintend ent of the Long Island Cotton Mill The superintendent had a merchan dise s'ore '2'io yards trom the mil's. Soimone had beu io b ng the sto e systematically for sometime bv tl e use of a false key. The robber made fnonent visits and the superintend ent determined to-put a stop to it, eo he went to ih store on the night of September 27, '1(4: He was .found next morning in a pool of blood near his store entrance. Proof of the crime was abundant and Covington was the person. Covington worked in tlie mills, holding the position oi superintendent of the spinning room. Rakigh Visitor. CoroBltios of War. On January 1, 1895, the armies of the world included 4,209,000 men. On a peace footiug the regular army of China comprises nearly 400.000. The total cost of our navy during the civil war, 1801 f!.), was $312, 000.000. Creat Britain owns 3.212 cannons; France, 8,212, and Germany, 5,920. After the great battle of Canna 50.312 dead men were found on the field. On July 1, 1895, there were 261, 000 men serving the navies of the world. The Jews' war was the twenty years' war between France and Ale geria, 1827 to 1847. The largest Krupp guns have a range of seventeen miles, and tiie two shots a minute. Switzerland has a population of less than 3,000,000 and a standing army of 130,000. During our great civil war 61,302 men on the union side were killed outright in battle. In time of war France reckons on putting out 370 men to every 1,000 of her population. In our celebrated "war with Tri poli," 1801, the United States did not lose a single man! It cost the government at Wash ington $345,543,880 to cloth the Federal army from 1861 to 1865. x ue iieeu oi rmgianu can ueoiare war without consulting her ministers if she wills so to do. j At the present time all Europe is I a well armed camp and has so been for -more than a quarter of a cen- i tury. J The most expensive army of the world is that of Germany, which costs from $86,000,000 to $105,000 -' 000 per year. ' 1 France boasts of a naw of 408 ships of 290,000 tons and" 612 000 horse-power and 80 others in process of construction. A Solitary Drag Store. f.l bj-aan f h00USht to know that there is in the whole 1 -i country oujy one drug store, and that is in 5th avenue. New York xt i l ,. -. . No patent medicines, no Dronrietrv articles of any description are kept rorsaie there. It is simnlv JIT! c nil- ely a prescription drug store. The iV T ?" e8C mi?ro8copes in the tZ Vl!? a -e-m co"8ta,nt nse- The leading physicians of the citv oka ., , , y are the patrons , of the place, and all their analysis done there. The annual income of the Drowietor ponyjrescnptions and ittalyBes alone jm $25,000-New Yort.Tim TBS PENSION LAWS. Important Amendment Provided in Ma Jor"Plckler Bill Confederate Service N'-t a Bar. The chairman of the committee on invalid pensions, Maj. Pickler, has introduced a bill in the "House, which will be urged at this session, proposing some important amend ments to the pension laws. Among the n'ew provisions are the fallow ing: That no person otherwise entitled by virtue of any law of the United States shall be disqualified from re ceiving pension by reason of the soldier'jrior service in the Confed erate army" Or navy, widows general ly may prove their marriage and birth of children in the same man ner as now provided by section of 4705 of the Revised Statues in the case of widows of Indians and . col- hereafter be reduced or discontinued except for fraud. That all pensions reduced Bince March 4, 1893, except for fraud, shall be restored at the rate the pen sioner, was receiving at the time of reduction or discontinuance, and in case of death the accrued pension shall be paid to the widow or heirs; that the common law presumption of death, after the laps of seven years without tidings of the missing per son, shall obtain in the administra tion of the pension laws; that the presumption shall be that the injury alleged was received "in line of duty" when the soldier was with his command at the time the injury was incurred; that in notifications from the pension bureau the claimant shall be informed as to every fact upon which further evidence is re quired, and of the character of the evidence necessary to establish the same. Every claimant -or his attorney shall have the right to inspect every paper or writing in any department or ortiee that may bear upon his claim. The oath of a person who served as a private or non-commissioned officer shall not have less weight than the oath of a coniinis sioned officer. That under the act of June 7, lSDu, a service of ninety days and an honorable discharge shall be efficient -o give title to jen sion under said act, notwithstanding i r a prior or sunst oueni service ironi which said soldier was not honor II 11 1 1 . ! Div uiscnargeu, ami me service a as shown in the discharge certiticat i ' t l i i i , t snail oe conclusive; proviueu, tna the death-of a soldier while in the service of the United States shall b equivalent to an honorable dis charge. mat an application under said act shall be sufficient if the appli cant alleges a disability, which ren ders him unable to earn a support and every disamlitv found to exisl which is recognized as pensionable under the general pension laws shal he taken into consideration and tb ratings shall be the same, not to ex ceeil as untier tne general laws providing that pensions heretofore allowed at less than such rate shal oe rerated ana tne amerence paid the pensioner. 1 hat in all claim.- for pensions under said act the pre sumption shall be that the disabih ties alleged are not, the result ol vicious habits, but this presumption may be rebutted, and providing that the pension stialj le allowed units it conclusively appears Unit the disa bilities proved the result of the vie ions habits established by the evi deuce. No Small Pox iu Gtif louia. " There is no small pox in Gaston ia There hasn't been any and there it no likelihood that there will be anv. The report that has gone out is ;i foolish rumor and a very silly scan that sail Hut it has been taken so seriously in some parts as actual I to interfere with business the people or some localities tearing to come to town. Word went out on Crowder's Creek, so we hear, that Dr. Wilson had served a warning upon the pub lic to stay away from town. When asked about this, L)r Wilson denied and denounced the report in terms both picturesque and energetic. Up in Lincoln, the rumor was handed around that Gastonia's small pox case had died and they wouldn t even have a burial just stuck fire to tin house and burnt it down over the corpse. The facts of the case appear to be these, nothing less, nothing more: Mr. Ed. Whitesides returned from the Exposition and a western trip about four weeks ago. He had the grip then and has since been kept at home by it One of thesymptons in his case, following fever, was a slight eczem 'tic eruption on his forehead about the roots of his hair, and on his hands. This trifling eruption was confined to these exposed sur faces and did not extend to any other .part of the body. But somebodv heard that Mr. Whitesides had been West, somebody else heard he had been sick ever since he came back. j which was true, somebody heard he as now nroKen out an over his body in "little sores," which wasn't true, then somebody else whispered "small-pox," and the way it went. Caonia Gazette. : - Pen Picture of the Snltan. The Sultan is the most wretched, Pincned-"P little sovereign I ever 8aW- A niost uPhappy-looking man, of dark complexion, with a look of aHS0,"te terror in his large Eastern 'e'es' 1 eoPlesay he is nervous,and no wonaer considering the fate of his predecessor. Yet this is to be regret- ted, for if he could surmount these fparn riia winTt VQ o .kl j refined countenance, eminently Asia! tin in and ;t, a r ' -"-t. niuu utVl UilU UUttlUI of ex nression. All T nan cow io fkof nia a Un(7.1 .i Z uio liana lcu ijic iui uavt. as or L,ntr i so emaciated and unnatural in his gnnaararinn rkn 1 Tl we should pronounce him in a swift And no wonder, for he must need his constant care, considering the life he lda tt ' n . on iuc lauieu state oi the Oriental potentate palls before such a lesson in royal misery! The noorpsr. Wo-or ir. vwa asJ?s happier than he! "W T Stead in Review of lieyiews. 1BE LABOR KEPOKT. Some Facts Pertaining to the Slate's 'Pro gress. The ninth annual report of the Bu reau of Labor Statistics for the year 1895, made its appearance today. It is-au admirable presentation of facts pertaining to labor industry, .enter prise, etc., in this State. Too much credit cau not be accorded Mr. Lacy aud his able assistant, Mr. Logan I)'. Terrell, for the compilations of the facts which comprise 408 pages per taing; to North Carolina's progress. The introductory begins with Mr. Lacy's report to Governor Carr dated November 30. Quoting from his re port: "It gives me pleasure to say that this report is a decided improve ment on the last. I cannot give too much credit to my Chief Clerk, Mr. L. D. Terrell, who, by efficiency aud faithfulness combined with the knowledge he acquired while in the employment of the government in W ashington, has proven himself to be the "right man in the right place." There is no doubt that this bureau is doing a good deal of good in a quiet way, and as it is becoming better nown and its objects understood it ,. ... ,,J , , - is meeti np with the endorsement ot both capital and lobor." Mr. Lacy recommends that the sal ary of the Commissioner and his Chief clerk be increased so that the best talent can be obtained for the work and that an appropriation of S-000 per annum be made to collect dates, figures and facts necessary to the making of an accurate report A law aioo iuM.uiciiucy i es.i icung i....r ., .- i, . i -i: mills in tne Mue to 11 Hours per day, also no child be allowed to work in any factory until they reach the age of twelve years, and children between ages of 12 and 14 only allowed in factories when they have a certificate shnwing that they have been to school at least twelve weeks during the year, and that the Commissioner of Labor be empowered to see that these laws are enforced. Mr. Lacv does not think we need any law to compel questions to be answered, as the mill owner answer questions re markably well when an agent waits on them; and there are only two or three that need such a law. Mr. Lacy states that in some inst ances there was trouble in obtaining replies as to labor employed in mills and factories. Only 5 per cent of the tobacco men answered blank No. 4 sent out. Mr Lacy states that if a law is passed compelling them to make answer, as is the case in Mas sachusetts and New York, they will have themselves to blame. Ihe tables are very accurate. The state ment that female labor is 8.75, when the general impression is that it is $7 50 will be doubted, says the commissioner. The religious, moral and educa tional features at some of the milling districts is very remai kable. An employee at Swepsouville, who re ceived his educatiou'at that place, cau speak three or four different lan guages and is an expert stenographer. There are 136 cotton and woolen mills in active operation in the State and eleven in course of construction. In these mills 913.458 spindles and 24.856 looms are employed. In 1R90 fbere were only 30,000 spindles in the State. There are 15,752 persons employed in these mills; the amount f capital employed is .f 1 5,000,000, r about $952 33 to each employee. Of these there are 4,888 men, 6,175 women and 4,689 children. There are 1,558 children employed under 13 . e rr i i " i years oi age ine mills nave con sumed 309,147 bales. Tweutv-six counties have produced 89.473.949 pounds of yarn, thirteen counties 87,- .42,655 of domestics six counties cl, 737,547 yards of plaids. Forsvth and Cabarrus have produced 18,424, 200 yards Woolen goods. Forsyth leading with 18,000.000 yards This is a great improvement on last vear. Alamance leads in the number of mills, having twenty-two, Gaston couies utxi-iwenty. Average waees paid per day, engineers $1 dil ; fire men, 89 i; skilled men jjl 10; un skilled, 70; skilled women. 65; un skilled, 50; children, 30. The aver age number of days worked in a year 286. Wages are paid in a majority of mills weekly. Only a few mills favor a state inspection. At only two mills are there libraries. The per cent of adults who can read and write are 95; children 75. Air. Walter L. Womble, who has traveled the State over gathering data, states in making his report to the Commissioner, that he has visited every mill in the State and obtained reports from them. Last year there was no traveling agent, and ot lv about 15 per cent of the blanks were answered. Mr. Womble savs his trio was very pleasaut, and he was often given voluntary information. He found improvements in many places that did not exist last year Mr. Womble says: "Many mills that ran on half time last year, ov ng to the prevailing 'hard times' are running night and day.and now have on hand more orders than they can possioiy nil, many ot them are build ng additions to their mills that arc as large, and in manv mfnnps vrger, than the old mill 'itic-f. Quite a number of new mills are gointr ur. and T am o-lail fj-i oav tiof J-k jority of them are large buildings wen ngntea ana ventilated, and are being equipped with the latest im proved machinery. These mills are model onesr JNortn Carolina now operates more spindles than any other Southern State, and is putting in at the pres ent time more spindles than any ciate in tne u nion. From the present- outlook it will take from 25,000,000 to 30,000,000 pounds more of cotton next year to meet the demand of manufacturers than this year. The majority of our mills, with only a few exceptions, are managed well. There is room for improve ment in all of them. More comfor table houses might be built, less hours worked, and the scale of wages raised. Mr. Lacy makes his report partic ularly interesting by the contribu tion of a large number of letters from factorymen, bearing' on the milling question and its labor rela tions. Under the head of agricultural statistics, the condition ; of the farm laborer mentally, morally, socially and financially, is given. The wages of the laborer fluctuate with the prices of farm products. In 1893 the average price of labor was $9 50 for men, $5.50 for women and $3 20 for children. Last year t here was a decrease and this year still more. Men average $8.75; women $4 65 and childien $2.40 this rear. Tfee Commissioner this year esti mafes the cost of a bale of cotton, fiom the time the ground is broken until it is bagged is $22.50, through the entire State. It costs 5J cents to raie cotton in this State These statistics show that in nearly every section the cost of liv ing has been decreased. The ques tion is asked of many persons "has there been decline in value of land during the past year, and if 60, what cause?" The answers are varied and amusing. Some of them are "low prices, panic, standard 5 cent cotton, no money, general depression, hard times, bad government, storms, rail roads bad politics, various causes," etc Letters from farme s are selected , , , ,. - , 1 and a great number of them printed - b . , , , ? giving various iue;.'s. inmost every letter-touches on the financial ques tion. Early and Late Easterg. Easter Sunday cannot happen ear lier than March 22, or later than j dated it hag & of 3- . Afc the time of the c n ,(f N;L ;-2, i ' A Jj jt wag affreeJ A. O., it was agreed bv the repre- sentatives present that from that time forward Easter should fall on the first Sunday after the full moon occurring on or next after March 21; or, in other words, "o:i the first Sun day after the first u 11 nuon after the sun crosses the line." Since the above arrangement was adopted by the great ecclesiastical council referred to, Easter has fallen on March 22 and on every date be tween that andApril 25, but it is only after long intervals of time that it occurs on its extreme dates, in 188G Easter fell on April 25, its latest possible date, an event which had not before occurred during the present century, and which will not again occur until the spring of 1943. The last time Easter fell on its earliest date was in 1818. This will not happen again during this century or the next. In 1895 it came surpris ingly near breaking this century's early Foster date record, falling on March 25 The F'aster dates for the remainder of the century are: 1806, ApiLa; 1897, April 7; 1898, April 10, 1899, April 2: 1900, April 15. " Hope for Hi in Mudgc "There is no doubt tha woman is losing all those liner iu stincts she once had." Wickwire "Vell, if that is tb case, von may find one of them yet who will marry you." S'ate of Ohio. City of Toledo, ' - i.Ul ilS I'ou t I ss. Frank. T Clu-iiey makes oatli he is the senior partner of the lir:u ot i'. J Cheney 4 G ..doing iuMiie."f in me cuv oi i oieao. county ana State aforesaid and 'hat said ilrm will pay the suunitii.t in .Miur.u iKii.i.Aita lor eacn and every case of catarrh tLat cannot be cured oy the use ot HAI.IS t ATA Hhli l Ktv. FltAXK . J. CHENEY "orn to neiore me ;ml sunsenbed in my presence, ttusbtn nay ot DeeemiK-r. A. u. insti KtI A. w . ii I.EASON, Notary Public, M .1 ( atarrh ( ure is taken internally and aeis uireeiiy on ine OKiO'l ana mucous sur face ot the si cteni. Send tor testimonials. free r . .). I'll EX tl Jc CO., TolUo, O fc-r- im oy urutrgisis, ..tc. Erysipelas Hes bren my affliction from childhood. It was caused by impure blood and every spring I iras sure to have a lotg spell and my general "health would give w ay. Doctors did Mii e tnt little good and I became de- spondent. Last spring erysipelas settled in my eyes and I became total ly blind for several weeks. Hood's Sar- sapariKa was recommended and after tak ing one bottle my sight gradually returned, my blood became purified and I was restored to good health. With Hood's Sar sapariila oi.e is well armed to meet any fnP " MlSiS T.T-T.TT Iff 1AA Ma.L.nt Cfr Memphis, Tenn. Remember ood's SarsapariIJa Is the Only True Blood Purifier promi nently in the public eye. fl; six for $5. Hood'? Pl'll? -r al! liver ills, bfllous. Oh! My Eyes! -Don't suffer -with your eves. SHELL will -examine them -FREE OF CHARGE and have Glasses -made to suit them. -REM FJMBKK -I carry -a nice stock of -JEWELRY. -All sort REPAIR WORK -done rijrht at -Fair Prices. J. E. SHELL, Jeweler. WILL SLIP THROUGH YOUR FIN GERS. Don't let our $2 shoe escape you. It is the thing to wear. You will get more so'id comfort out of it to the square inch than out of any other shoe to the square foot at anything near the price, and talking of the square foot, it does the square thing by the foot. It Isn't an ex ggeration to say that its cheapness is phenomenal. Every consideration of economy justifies its purchase, aid ev ery consideration of comfort justifies its use. We never recommend a shoe that will do more to recommend itself. It wont try you much to try it. A large stock Umbrellrs, Trunks, Valises and Handbags, always on hand, BR L K 11 R o Cheapest Store on Ecirlj, Our place has been crowded since the first wo cpened for business; customers begoingtr waited on from early morn till night. Th C . force has been added to from time to time, j' ness growing every day; loads upon leads 0fr goods every day, opened and marked ;ut ready for eager buyers. What's the explanat It's simple enough SE0T gets all the discounts, and our one short p added (and stop) to goods bought right, does---work. Think of, what a figure OneCeM Will Cut With U; 25 slate pencils, cake of toilet soap, one qu!.e note paper. Oj ead pencils, 1 pack envelopes, half pint tin cups, 2 balls of s i of matches, a nice colored bordered handkerchi f, and tl,,.u practical articles. Then ladies' black hose at 4c, men's sock ::, Suspenders 3c, 4c, aud up; cloth bound slates 3c, 5c and k-; tin. , Shoes, Hats, Clothing; Children's, Ladies' and Men's Underwc:ir. Caps for Babies, Men and School Boys; Capes and Jackets m.Tl. , Dress Goods, Trimmings and Findings; Trunks and Valises; v. i the people want, and CHEAPER T WE DO TIIE POCKETBOOK GOOD. ASK II AVE IT Watch the hacks and wagons as we load them. Watch tb.- .-iu time for lively shopping is at hand and the place is BELK We have all grades ot goods in the Crockery, China, Glassware and Tinware lines. I.are t stock in Charlotte and the 'owest p-ices. French aud Austrian China, English Poreeiasn and American ware in dinner sets. Austrian and Eng Hsh ( hin6" pieces Tea sets. Tinware of every description Glass ware all styles. Lamps ail shapes and sizes. To our country friends. W e solicit your 'rade and can furnish yo i Koods from the cheapest to the best. special inducements to mi-ri-hinia hnw ing stock fur retail. No. 20. West Trade St. " Smith & Flournoy At the Washington Stand, No. 20 West. Trade Street, Charlotte. N. C. 1YBRT PARMER SHOULD A -KNIFE -FOR- CUTTING CORN TOPS SUGAR CANE, AND WE CAN SUPPLY YOU With one made for the "PURPOSE. CALL IN AND SEE THEM. -:o:- m PRICES! i. Wecan save you money on Cane Mills and Evaporators. J. H- WeddiDgtoo A Co. ;29 East Trade Street. CAS1 HAf ANYBODI; : FOR WHAT Yu a M STORE: LH', Prices" io Suit llir Our friends will please tak" notice that we have openr one of the Most omplete Stocks of 1 BROS. m otfli ever brought to this city at our . spltndid stand No. 10 West Trade St v .-H-v - We bought our goods a1 the very lowest cash price .lit ;. will surprise you to see how g Tow we sell good goods. For example we sell a good suit of clothes that wears well and looks well enough to wear to J church, for only 5. wjl SI We want your trade aud make it to your interest to give it to us. We will be glad to have you inspect our stock at any time. oq & Shelton. CLOTHIERS. ; 10 W - TRADE STi ho lid - i ov do bu in bo! an as "th larl Ma L- L E Rankin & Bro