r - :.a .. J - ' . . j ,. ' ,. . '' " 1 J ' . . i !''" V"L . . a t ; ' . y - J. A. BONITZ, Editor and Proprietor. 'For us, Principle is Principle Eight is Eight Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow, Forever." Published Semi-Weekly 14 00 a Tear. VOL. XV. GOLDSBORO, N. C., MONDAY. FEBRUARY 10, 1879. NO. 41. New Advertisements. GET A GOOD FIT! OLSSON. : ' ' TUB Fashionable Tailor, ' 'AT GOLDSBORO, ft, C. Would inform the citizens of Goldsboro and surrounding country, that he is pre pared to guarantee enure satisfaction to all who want a good fit in a Hnit of ClotHinfir. ; From his long experience in the -business as cutter of a large Philadelphia house, and more recently at Raleigh, he is prepared to guarantee a good fit ana entire satisfaction, and make to order the latest styles of business and dress suits, and at the very lowest prioes. Cutting and repairing done at reasona ble rates. O. OLSSON, feb3-tf . Opposite IL Weil & Bros. School Notice, . Capt. W. 8. Btkd, A, M., will open his School in Mount Olive, on Monday, 'he 27th Inst Terms per Session of Twenty Weeks, From 3 to 120 Ihci dehtal Exr ski, SI. This School affords every facility for acquiring a good, sound practical Educa tion. The Principal makes Mathematics, both pure and applied, a specialty. Hav ing graduated in one of the best Com- merciai vxmeges in me uniieu oiates, xih is fully competent to instruct in Double Entry Book-Keeping and the Collateral Branches of the Science of Accounts. Students charged from time of entry to the end of Session No deduction made except in case of protracted sickness. January 2o, 1879. 30-2w " Spanish Chufa," Qrjr Bushels, saved clean and 8)und, OlAJ expressly for planting, for sale at $3.00 per bushel, $2.00 per half bushel, $100 per peck, shipped in strong bags, delivered free on board ef cars, or at Ex press office, at Magnolia. Order early, and get good seed, lower than ever sold before. Send money by registered letter or P. O. Money Order, on P. Office at Kenansville. Any information desired in regard to the cultivation of the crop will be cheerfully given. Address R. H. BROWN, ianlwtf Hallsville. Duplin Co., N.C SCHOOL BOOZS AND Staxionery, Slates, Fens, Pencils, Inks (SC-, &c. A full supply at greatly reduced prices at EIRBY & HILL'S. New Boot & Shoe Shop. The undersigned beg to inform the citi zens of Goldsboro and the surrounding country, that they have associated them selves for the purpose of carrying on a first-class Boot and Shoe Shop, and may be found in the corner room of the Cobb Building, where at all times they will be pleased to receive orders for new work of any discription, and do all sorts of repair ing, at lowest prices, lower than ever plrered before in Goldsboro, and in har ony with the present low price of every- hing else. I We are both practical shoemakers of many year's experience, and guarantee entire satisiaction as to styles, fit and prices. In repairing we make invisible Patches a specialty. All work promptly attended to. J. P. WEDDON, dec9-tf WM. SULLIVAN. Wholesale Liquors. E. JLehnian, GOLDSUORO, N. C, Importer and Rectifier oj h fYiolesate Prices. Not presuming to make any broad asser tions, excepting those to which I am justly entitled or claim but I can say without hesitation that I keep as good and as Pure Bye, Bourbon and Oorn Whiskies, Apple and Peach Brandy ! as any Liquor Dealer in North Carolina, not excepting some of tbe Wilmington dealers (on tbe Cape Fear) who claim to be triumphant and put off on tha unsophis ticated dealer,all patent Barrels and Brands "IT IIS T RIGHT''' But jUSt glT6 TU9 BL call and try our ' Challenge Rtk," Pnre and Original, and you will not be deceived Call and examine our fine stock of Cigars ICP Also Agent for Ale and Lager Beer octl4-tf K. M. LEHMAN. IF YOU WANT SOMETHING OOOD M For Christmas, 00 TO A. H. KEATON'S, Where yon will alwajs find a fall supply of My Groceries & (M&cttary, dull mo vuia caiPf isw t r" S Ia1 mwaam Aia flAnr ri Aftl laruaanH mall hominy, rice, buckwheat, sugar, all grade MffaA all o-raAam wAatfiH Rln &n(i 1 Air ooffeA. beit brands, soap, starch, lye. potash, allspice, pepper, aoda, baking powder or an Kinas, moiae sea, Tinerar, and oil, cake and crackeri of all kinds at bottom prloes CANNED GOODS. snch ai fresh neaches. tomatoes, cherries, straw V 1 I 1 II 1 . lika owa oysters, sardines, Wilson's corn beef, pig's feet ana tongues, oranay peacnee, picKies, onisup, pepper-sauce and horse radish. Plain and fancy candies of all styles, and variety, nuts, of all kinds, raisins, one-quarter, one-half and whole uvxes, curon, minces meat. Jellies orau siinas extracts, all flavor. n. Miltwi a-ranes. Dears. apples, prunes, currants, cranberries, oranges, lemons. conna.nnta n,M.n&1 crlnorAr and nftjh. -' appies ana peacnes, onions, lrisn poia toes and codfleh, snuff and tobacco, all grades of lM?'ar2' w,den-ware and crockery. f w rul a Senerons publio for past patron fJFeiIopeoby fa'r dealing to continue to merit the same. Remember that full weight and meas ?t . lway" b Klveh. Those indebted to me wuj yioaeo come lorward and settle up. Respectfully, nov. 28-tf A. H. KEATON. LUMBER. LTJLIBER. The undersigned begs leave to inform the citizens of Goldsboro and surrounding country that he is now prepared to fur nish them with Lumber from pines that have never been bled, at very short notice and at satisfactory prices. . Orders left at the store of Messrs. Baker & Broadhurst will receive prompt atten tion, who are authorized to contract. - JOHN F. HUMPHREY. Feb. 25, 1878.-3m THE HERO S GRAVE. Where yonder moantals lifts Us runny head 'Mid nature's lor 11 est wllda. the trareler see The unpretending rrare of one who led Ilia people on to rictory and peace. i No sounds unholy mar his peaceful sleep Near where yon foaming rtrer rolls his ware ; AU nature breathes, or seems to breathe, a deep And settled calm around his hallowed grare. Te need nor marble bast nor storied am To keep his memory or his deeds la mind ; In every loyal breast, where'er ye tarn. A fittlnsr tribute to his worth ye find. In times that tried the Yery soal, he mads A leoord centaties ean not eTace, And more through lore than fear or favor swayed The rode bat honest fathers of his raee. I The storms of winter howl less fiercely round The humble dome that guards his sacred mold ; With greener verdure rammer decks the ground, Their rarest tints the autumn months unfold, i When Spring returns to ehr the frozen earth, She breathes her holiest benediction here. And conscious of the spot, she eheeks her mirth. And dews the soil with many a precious tear. He sleeps In peace, beloved of all who claim. By birth or blood, his country as their own ; There is not on the page of Time a name That hath a nobler sound, a richer tone. 200,000 POUNDS. 1 shall never forget the uncomfortable position that I found myself in through too free a use of that unruly member, the tongue. I was a young fellow then, clerk in a London bank. My father was an of ficer in the army, an d he often told us boys that setting each of us up in some business or profession was all he could ever do for us, as the scanty pittance he would leave behind him must belong solely to my mother and sister. But my brother and I were energetic and hopeful. So ong as each day brought us enough to satisfy our wants, we reckoned little of the future. One bleak, cold, January morning, I was greatly surprised on my arrival at the bank, to find my father pacing up and down before the building. I was not living at home just then, and his presence there made me fear lest something was wrong. 'Philip,' he began, 'are you in time? Can you spare me three minutes ?' 'Yes, sir,' I replid, 'for a wonder I see am ten minutes earlier than I need be. What is the matter ?! 'Do not look so startled,' he said. 'Nothing is wrong. You know Mr. Fov berry ?' 'Oh, you mean the half-crakled old man who is awfully rich, and is my godfather, as well as cousin, thirty times removed?' 'Yes,' was the reply. 'Well, last night I received a letter from him,- after years n 1 1 s. a or silence, in wnicn lie asks alter you. . Atd he read me the letter. 'What a queer old boy !' I exclaimed. 'What does he mean ?' for I did not ex actly understand it. Mean 1' cried my: father excitedly, snatching the letter from me, and crush ing it into his pocket. 'Mean why, to make you his heir, Phillip his heir !' 'Whew !' said I, blushing; 'that's a good idea!' 'You must apply for leave and go off at .u t r . . once, said my latner. i mice while the iron's hot. It's a splendid chance Phillip, splendid 1 Use it well and your fortune's made.' So I thought, applied for leave, and set off for the Paddington Station soon after, with my ears ringing with a legion of in structions for pleasing old men, given me by my fellow clerks. The only one I could clearly remember was to rise whenever he came into the room, and then eschew every comfortable arm chair for tear he should want it. I felt bursting with importance, and actually treated myself to a glass of hot whisky and water at the refreshment room. 'Hello, William !' suddenly cried a voice. 'Why, Jack, what brings you here ?' I replied, recognizing an old friend. 'I'm going down to Gloucester,' said he. 'Where are you off to ?' - 'Oh, to such luck 1' I said. 'I'm off beyond Hereford, to humor an old gen tleman.' 'What?' said Jack.1 'Come along, and I'll tell you all about it,' said I. 'Second-class. Yes, all right. Here we are.' After we got settled in our places, an old man got in. He was poorly fixed, and had a green shade over one eye, while his other looked weak and drooping. We grunted our strong disapproval at his en trance, and made mutual grimaces, but as hi blind eye was towards us, they were doubtless lost on him. As the train moved off I told my story, which you know al ready. 'Well done, Phillip. Your bread is buttered for you ! he exclaimed, when he had heard me to the end. 'What a glorious chance ! Man alive, I wish I was in your shoes, that's all!' 'Yes, yes, my boy. ! All right !' I ex claimed. 'Well, it's a shame if I don't secure a good smoke before the light of my pipe goes out in obscurity. Do you object to smoke, sir?' ! This latter question was addressed to the old gentleman in the corner, who ap peared a curious mass of seedy old coats, railway rugs, and newspapers. 'I do object very much,' was the old gentleman's gruff reply. Very sorry, sir,' said L 'I'll keep my head out of the window, then.' Shame seizes me when 1 recall this in cident In lieu of attending to the old man's wishes, I coolly lit my pipe, and though I knew the wind would blow the BmoVe richt into his eyes though I heard him growling with Jrage I puffed on heedlessly. I should be sorry to be so rude, now, but you see I was young and very excited. j The short January afternoon was draw ing to a close, and very soon after we were dependent on the lamp that hung from the centre of the carriage roof for light. Whether it was the old man's example who had gone to sleep, or the monotonous noise of the train as it speeded along, or that our powers of chattering were ex hausted, I know not, but anyhow we too began to feel inclined for a nap. But we found the lamp an intolerable nuisance, with its incessantly flickering light. 'Bother it ! Can't we blow it out?' I exclaimed. 'Not if we cracked our cheeks. But I've a notion I' cried the ready-witted JacV. 'Hand me the old boy's hat' 'What for ?' I asked, as I handed him the article in question. It was worn and rusty, but well brushed and well shaped. 'To make an extinguisher of,' said Jack; and so saying, he fitted it on to the lamp, making the globe act like the bald head of the owner of the hat It fitted to a nicety, and so tightly as to keep well in its placer The' arrangement 'answered splendidly, and not a glimmer of light was to be seen. When the train stopped at Swinden we awoke, and rushed out of the carriage to get refreshments, quite forgetting our fellow-passenger and his hat. On return ing we found they had both flown. The train started, and when we arrived at Gloucester, Jack left me. I had a cold, lonely journey to my destination, a little station just below Hereford. When I arrived it -was nine o'clock; a dark, raw night; I was very sleepy and tired. For some moments I could not find my port manteau; then my hat box was missing, and while I was searching, the guard was exclaiming about the delay of the train. At last it was all found, the guard whis tled, the train moved off, and I was left standing on a little country platform, in a strange place. 'Any cabs or flys to be got here ?' I asked the station master. 'Dear me, no, sir,' was the reply. 'But we can get you something down in the town. Where is it to, sir?' 'I want to go to Mr. Fosberry's of Cas tfe Hall,' I replied. I paced the wretched little station till the conveyance came, with my mind full of the coming meeting. I asked the driver how far we had to go. 'How far, sir,' said he, 'Oh, only about four miles.' I got in, and we bowled along the dark narrow lanes. After half an hour's drive we entered some handsome iron gates, and drove into what seemed to me, in the dim light, a very extensive park. The whole aspect impressed me with the idea of a grand estate. And I questioned the driver on the subject . 'Indeed it is a big place, sir,' said he. 'It's about fifteen miles around the estate. Eh, Mr. Fosberry's very rich. People do say he has two hundred thousand pounds to leave, if he has one penny, besides this property.' i Soon we were at the house. My driver jumped down and pulled the bell. The peal resounded through the. house like the clang of a triumph. A footman in livery flung open the door, and 1 was admitted into a hall glowing with light and warmth, and then shown into a large, brilliantly-lighted drawing room. A moment later and the tall footman reappeared. He apologized for his mas ter's non-appearance, and requested me to obey the instructions of a note which he handed me trom a massive silver salver. I tore it open and read : Mr, Phillip Fosberry Williams : The next time you travel by rail do not smoke nor annoy old gentlemen; do not make the infirmities of age and seeming poverty your laughing stock; do not tell i your friends of your great expectations; do not speak of your old crack-brained relatives; do not make extinguishers of lold gentlemen s hats; do not be slanev. vulgar and insulting to strangers; do npt jnounsn vain nopes oi innenting me, and I finally, do not lose any time in leaving for- jever the house of your old 'fireworks' of a fellow-traveler. Phillip Fosberry. P. S. I enclose 20 note to pay your expenses. How I got out of the house how I got back: to the station, and spent the night in a wretched inn how I returned to town and told to my enraged relations my woeful tale, wherein 1 played such a isorry part how'ray abject letter of apo ogy was returned unread -1 cannot tell. I only know old Fosberry died worth the 200,000, leaving his niece sole heir ess, and that I quarrelled with Jack Evans about it, nor have I ever spoken to him since. COLD WEATHER STATISTICS. In view of tbe great severity of the irvroaonf cpnonn a. Knmmarv cit the Btntia tics prepared by the philosopher, M LArago, covering the last four centuries in Europe, and printed in the j Paris Adver tiser of 1835, will be read with interest: In 806 the Rhine was frozen over, the cold was from 18 to 20 centigrade degrees below zero. In 1172 the Po was frozen from Cremona to the sea; in 1234 loaded wagons crossed the Adriatic in front of Venice; in 1305 all the rivers of France were frozen over; in 1314 it was possible to travel from Denmark to Lubeck and Dantzic on the ice. In 1334 all the rivers of the Province and Italy were frozen; at Paris the frost lasted two months and wenty days. In 1468 it was necessary to reak up the wine in Flanders with atchets in order to serve it out to the ildiers. In 1544 the same became requi site in France. In 1594 the sea was frozen J from Marseilles to Venice. In 1657 the I Seine was entirely frozen over. In 1750 the Seine was frozen for thirty-five suc cessive days. In 1709 the: Adriatic and Mediterranean, from Marseilles to Genoa, were frozen. In 1617 shops were estab jtablished on the Thames and finally, the Seine was entirely frozen i over in 1742, 1744, 1766, 1788, and 1820. GOVERNOR JARVIS' INAUGURAL ADDRESS. We are indebted to the Raleigh News for the following copy of Governor Jarvis' excellent inaugural address : Frllnw-Citizens A time-honored custom renuires that I should, on assuming the duties of Chief Executive of the State, give some expres- sion of my views on public affairs. In yielding to this custom to-day, I shall be as brief as the subjects upon which I shall touch will permit As I am simply filling out the term of an Administration which was begun and continued so well, it will not be my purpose to address a General Assembly formerly, which is in posses sion of so exhaustive a message from tny predecessor. Yet, as I speak to-day, at their request, and by their courtesy, as well as in accord with my own inclinations, I willmke some suggestions intended for their special consideration. Government has its blessings and its burdens. Good laws properly adminis- tered constitute its blessings, the taxa- ation necessary to its support its burdens. How to make its blessings as great and its burdens as small as possible should be the constant study of all to whom the people have committed their interests, either as makers or ministers of the law. This study should embrace the substance as well as the shadow, and if it is as search ing as it should be, it will not disdain to look carefully after the little matters. In fact the little things should receive the special care and attention of the public official. It is here, in my opinion, that those who wish to practice economy and lighten the burdens of the people can be most successful. And yet because of their seeming unimportance these little amounts are! so often overlooked or indif ferently examined. It is too often said what is a hundred dollars to a great gov ernment like the United States, or ten dollars to a great State like North Caro lina, ar a dollar to a great county like and yet it is the aggregate of these very items that swells the disbursement ac counts of these governments to their mil lions, their hundreds of thousands and their thousands. The time was when in making contracts for the government, the agents exercised the same care and economy as if he were spending his own money. Then wj had true economy and the burdens of the people were light. Now, with some, it has become unfashionable to stand on a few dollars and undignified to look after these little things, and the man who at tempts it. is by some called penurious and laughed at as an old fogy. The people are as much interested in how their agents perform their duties as they are in what they pay them. And the retrencher whose purpose is to serve the people and not to make a little cheap notoriety for himself, will devote himself earnestly and impartially to the work of publishing to the people how the public official docs his work as well as what he is paid. If he is proved to be faithful in the performance of all his duties, cau tious and prudent in his contracts and always on the lookout to save every dollar for the people he possibly can, the people ought to know it. On the other hand if he is found wasteful or extravagant or in dulgent or corrupt or in any way unfit or unfaithful, it ought to be known and pub lished. For after all this question of practical retrenchment and economy rests with the people. They choose the offi cials. Upon their choice turns the whole question. If they choose proper men thev secure practical economy. There fore it is that the people are entitled to know the whole truth; what a man does as well as what he gets, so that when they come to make their choice of public ser vants they may act knowingly The public mind has recently become greatly excited upon this question of re trenchment. It is no new question with me. I have been laboring for it For ten years, i nave studied it, taiitea it, ana practiced it. Under its banners I have called the people to rally. I have wor shipped at its shrine, and I Deneve it is for my devotion to its cause that I am to day so richly rewarded. It will always be one of the cardinal principles of my politi cal creed and must be of my political party with which I act But I want the sub stance and not the shadow, the genuine and not the false. I cannot and will not yield to this cry of false economy that stops the wheels of progress, undo what has been done to help the farmers and cripple the efforts of the State to educate the rising generation. These are great interests upon which de pend the future greatness and glory of the State. A wise statesmanship in my opin ion demands that there shall be no de crease in the appropriation for the Nor mal and common schools. It would be unwise to strike down the Department of Agriculture or to paralyze its energies. This department was create 1 but two years ago. It was the first organized ef fort by the State to foster and aid the great agricultural interest That its work- in its should as vet be imperfect and its benefits but dimly seen is not surprising But when the plan of its operations are better matured and the farmers have taken hold of it more cordially, I hope to see great benefits flow from it to tbe farming interest of the State upon which rests every other interest I speak of these matters because they have been attached to this cry of false economy. The property of the State is taxed for tlie snnnort of the State Government and for the support of the county governments. The whole amount of tax collected form property for State purposes including the tax for the support of the Asylum for the Insane, for the Deaf, the Dumb and the Blind and the Penitentiary, was, as shown by the last Auditor's report last year, $434,232.45. The aggregate amount of tax collected from the same property as shown by the same renort to irannort th J several county governments proper was .$1,024,459.39. Add to this the county tax for school purposes 1327,143.04 and we have $1,351,603.42 tax collected for county purposes than for State purposes. lne People pay annually nearly a million f dollars more to the counties than to the State. Where the burden is heaviest is ne P"" where the burdened most needs neip. uut the relief given here cannot be SO easily shown to tha relieved, anrl - nence inis Droad field for retrenchment is, x, rear, too much neglected. And yet a dollar saved here is worth just as much to the people as if it could be demonstrated to them by palpable facts. One of the chief items of expense in these county governments is the adminis tration of the criminal law. The witness tickets and officers cost paid by the conn ties embrace small amounts but the ag gregate is great I will hero make these suggestions by which I think money may 06 saved to the taxpayers without any detriment to the public good. First by simplyfying the forms of all bills of in dictment. How often is it the case that a Solicitor in the hurry and pressure of the court fails to put in his bill a "not" a said" or an "aforesaid" with which our Bill of Indictment bristles so frightfully. Witnesses are subpeened and attend from court to court; official fees and cost accu mulates, and when the trial is had the Bill is squashed or Judgement arrested. The result is a guilty man escapes and the county has a big bill of costs to pay. We need a statute which enacts, "That every Bill of Indictment which charges in words sufficientlyclear, without regard to form, the offence for which the defendant is to be tried, so that he can know the charge he is to meet, shall be held by the courts to be good." Second. By giving Justices of the Peace power to try and determine certain petty cases upon proper complaint, so as to largely reduce our crowded State dockets. But it ought to be expressly forbidden for the county to pay any cost incurred in any trial before any Justice of the Peace, where he takes final jurisdiction. Ihird. By making it mandatory by statute that, in a certain class of cases, the Solicitor shall not send a bill of indictment before the grand jury without endorsing thereof a prosecutor, and that the judge shall have the power in all cases and at any time before judg ment to direct the Solicitor so to do. The tendency of the legislation in this State since the war has been to create a large number of new statutory offences to pro tect private rights which were formerly redressed by civil suits. Injury to real estate, injury to personal property, injury to live stock, entering upon lands after being forbidden to do so, removing or de stroying mortgaged property, removing crop by tenant before rents and charges are paid, and the like, are some of them The public are not interested in this class of cases, and the counties ought not to have the cost to pay. Then too, when a man resorts to the criminal law, as is often the case, to harrass and annoy his neighbors, and it so appears to the court, tha tax-payer ought to be protected against the cost in such cases. 1 think these modifications in our sys tem of admistering the criminal law, cou pled with a rigid scrutiny of every bill of cost to be paid by the county before it is allowed, will save to the tax-payer an av erage of one thousand dollars to the coun tv per annum. In some counties it will be more, in many less. If I am correct, this will give a net saving to the people of $94,000 every year. But if I am too high in my estimate, and it should be reduced one-half, then it wi11 amount to $47,000. This question of costs paid by the coun ties in proceedings in eriminal cases is of much more importance than one, who has never investigated the subject, is likely to suppose. But add to this the $115,000 paid annually for the maintenance and custody of the convicts, and one may well say "the crime of the country is eating up the property of the country." The sub ject is well worthy of the thoughtful con siderationof the tax-payer and the re trencher. It is the part of wisdom and sound economy to make this crime contribute as much as possible to develop and increase the value ot that property which it so heavily taxes. And for one, I desire the declaration to go forth now to all men that they will find it to their interest as well as their comfort to live by honest toil and labor. The man who commits crime expecting to live in idleness while in the custody of the law, will, so far as I am concerned, find he has made a great mis take. If he never knew what hard work was the State will teach him. I have no patience with crime or idleness, and a provision of law ta bire. out persons by county authorities, who commit crime and will not voluntarily work to pay for it, will, in my opinion, tend to lessen crime and relieve the burdens that rests upon honest men. ' We have already accomplished enough with this convict labor to teach us that if properly used, we can make it an impor tant factor in developing the wealth and resources of the State. With it we have slowly but steadily climbed the mountain side, filling here an immense gorge, and there making a huge excavation, till a splendid passway has been made for the locomotive, where but a few years ago the I way was impassable for man or beast With it we have removed barriers that rose up in our way mountains high, and a when they were too high to be scaled, we bored through them. With it the engi neer passing under the backbone of the mighty Blue Ridge will, in a few days, appear on the western slope to make glad the hearts of those whose hopes have so long been deferred. In addition to this great work which I hope to see pushed forward as rapidly as possible, there arc other enterprises for the development of the wealth of the State in which this labor may be benefic ially employed. The railroad from Fayette ville to Eirvnt i large interest claims our attention. The States interest in this road should be se- cured and then the road with the convict labor extended up the fertile valley of the YdV!n i awr vuw a ivia UiiulM upvoiU VI the Northwest. When this is com pleted the force may be withdrawn and with it extend the road from Fayetteville to Wil mington, thus giving railroad facilities to a large portion of our people and greatly increasing the wealth and prosperity of the sections through which it passes. There are several lines of projected rail way on which this may be profitably em ployed. Thousands of acres of lands in I the eastern counties through which the I moor-foul now wings his weary flight, but I need the canals which can be cheaply con- structed, by this labor to make them con- tribute rich harvests to their owners, and much to the aggregate wealth of the State, But in the employment of this labor there are certain principles of business and State policy that ought to be observ- ed. It ought to be farmed out where it will be kept actually at work and never al- lowed to be idle. The p-reat wnrt nr. which it is most likely to be employed will not be eomnleted In veura tn enme In our empoverished condition the pro cess of construction and development will necessarily be slow. What we do now ought to be so done that those who are to direct and control years hence may wisely build upon the foundation laid by us. But above all it ought to be used to enrich North Carolina, to build up her cities and towns and to make more valuable her lands by constructing lines of travel and ways of transportation which tend in that direction and which conserve a North Carolina policy and a North Carolina system. I very much doubt it thesse end can best be obtained by farming out the con victs by legislative enactments. When it is done in this way there is no power that can change it till tha Legislature meets again, although there may be manifest reasons why there should be a change. A better plan it seems to me is to organize a Board of Internal Improvements which . . v r and certain members of the now existing Boards which may be done without any extra cost to the State. Give this Board sole power to i3nonvicts for the best interest of the State under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by law. Such a Board will be free from local influences and I have no doubt can make better contracts for the State than is se cured by the present system. This board can also hear aM determine all complaints as to treatment of convicts or alleged fail ure in compliancs with the terms of the contract, A common interest, and a common pa triotism require every citizen of the State 1 11 1 1 1 1 . . . ment ot her resources, and the increase ot her wealth. Did I say a common interest? T , ies. it can oe aemonstratea upon me simplest pnucipies oi political economy .... . . that the farmer in Currituck is pecuniarily interested in an increase in the value of lands of Cherokee. The poorest tax-payer in Buncombe is interested in seeing Ral eigh grow to be a great and wealthy city. Raleigh in seeing Beaufort and Wilming ton put on a new era of prosperity, and all in seeing Charlotte maintain her steady step to wealth, and what is true of these sections is true of every other section and its people. The taxable property of the in two States. The line between Tennes Staas shown by the last report of the see and Virginia is in the centre of Main Auditor is $146,370,493. To raise enough street, and it gives rise to many funny money ironi this property lor btate pur- poses requires a tax of twenty-nine and two-thirds cents on each hundred dollars worth of property. Now suppose by con- structing highways that lead to our own cities and towns, by encouraging our own people in their efforts to develop the manufacturing interests of the State, by fostering our own trade and commerce and by a just and equal system ot valua- tion. we could in a few years double the taxable value of the property of the State, and it may be done. Is it not perfectly clear that any one individual no matter in what section he resides would only have to pay half as much tax on the same property then as now, for as you increase the value of the property to be taxed, the amount of money to be raised remaining the same, you decrease in like proportion the amount each hundred dollars worth of that property has to pay. But this common interest and common patriotism not only requires the construe - tion of our lines of communication, sol ' i.j , , . l , ., uut mey require tuat uur pvupiw buou :- t-u Wk;ia T m IV .4: l'ttuuulic IWUJ- " "" w that the trade and commerce of the State cannot be controlled by legislation without . . , . :. TileiT. i dot cost oat a inue. see anoiaer iuj ui j ia uiaujr vi vui mov wiaauo, m. at the same time insist that if the shipper in Raleigh or Charlotte can get an outlet on our own coast on as good terms as he can by a route that tends to build up the cities and towns of other States he is in duty bound to give North Carolina the prefer ence. So when our people can buy at home as cheaply as they can abroad they ought to I chemists and physicians aay rivals the rvr tW ham mrW. ifcrirf"1- On Weakly t. v.: .v:.v r era and every enterprise ot their own State. I aa a All petty laiousies ana rivalries between individuals and sections which tend to keep one down because it "may outstrip .lt.A.n.l.Auau an1 th. AlMaA I.UVM1VI V W wwww, ... n. 1 1 I w V.V I WWW 1 11 11 n Ana park1 mrl.Av wa viuiui wia v vuu mwiu iuvuivi , akt to UW together, to help eh other and to make her prosperous and great- - I hope 1 will be pardoned for an allu sion to myself on this occasion. In my childhood I read about j the Governor of North Carolina, and invested him with the highest honors that befall mankind. As I toiled and labored on the little farm by the aide of the sea in noble old Curri tuck, I wondered if it were possible for me ever to reach that high and exalted position. The prospect then seemed gloomy, but I said I win try. Guided in all things by the lessons of honesty and integrity taught me by a pious mother and a holy rather, aided by devoted and generous friends and favored by a noble and chival rous people, I have to-day reached the goal of my youthful ambition, and am about to enter upon the discharge of the duties of that office which then seemed so far away out of my reach. Now it is mine by the free gift of the peeple, but I still think it is an honor of which the greatest ana best of men may be proud. Although it comes by indirection and by what some may call accident I think it none the less great I am aware of the fact that while this position confers upon me such great distinction, it at the same time places upon me great responsibilities. Now my ambition is to meet these responsibilities 43 40 merit the approval of the people. To this end all that I have and am shall be unresevery dedicated. All tbat I do shall be done with an eye single to the Public and with entire impartiality. The humble and the weak shall have the protection, in all their rights, of the strong arm of the law. The strong and the mighty must obey its mandates. And in all things so far as in me lies, I will try to so discharge my duties that the people will feel as little as possible their loss of the great man who to-day surrenders into my hands the important trust they com mitted to him." The delivery of these remarks was in terrupted by frequent applause, and at their conclusion the Governor elect re ceived the hearty congratulations of the distinguished gentlemen around, the first to grasp his hand being Governor Vance. PRINCESS WEDDING PRES ENTS. Among the wedding presents which Princess Thyra, of Denmark, received, the most costly was a complete garniture of diamonds from the emperor of Russia; frtA vnQf VwiantiPnl tt ioTTmlT7 mqa frnm Danish ladies ; the most curious an enor mous Jcringle, or wedding cake, trom the baker apprentices of Copenhagen. The jewelry case consists of a restagular box made of silver inlaid with gold and emaille mounted with bands ot sapphires, and bearing on the top of the lid the name of the princess in large diamonds. The box rests on the necks ot four dragons with diamond eyes and teeth, and ugly enough to frighten away any thief who might ap proach the shrine, lhe cringle was brought to the palace an hour before the wedding by a deputation of five young bakers, who were most cordially received by the queen, and shown the other wedd ing presents. Meanwhile, the young bride I O sT "-a entered the room in her bridal attire. r SUD(juej uuj nevertheleM Audible i .: i, i uu . :,.v I c&uiauiaiHjua bug augnEicu niiu a uiv ..... . nrnm:j fcpK.Vera tW iivuv I' the krinole should be served the next morning at her breakfast tabic, and, ac cording to old Danish custom, every one belonging to her new household slioul have a piece of it- A CITY IN TWO S TAJ ES. Bristol is perhaps the only city in the world that has two mayors, two city govennents, police, &c, and that is taxed scenes ; as, tor example, the runaway I couple need no coach-and-four, put, arm in arm, step across Main street and are wedded. The fugitive commits a crime in Virginia, goes to the pavement on the I other side of the street, and talks defiantly to the officer on the opposite, who has a warrant for his arrest A" stumble or a too bold disposition will sometimes, how ever, bring him to grief, feeveral in stances have occurred of fugitives being hustled across the line by a party prepared I while in the act of holding such aeon versa tion,; and they tell of a man-who defiantly .perched himself on a pile of store boxes within six feet of the line. jeering the officers on the other side, but unfortunately for him, some more law abiding citizens tilted the boxes, and when he reached the ground, to his ex J treme mortification, he found that he was in the other State. 1 FACXOIXY FACTS. noss crannemcBt, eareiai attention iio an cae- I tory wora, fires tne operatiTes paiid races, pooi i iuciitv iiver, uu7s ana urinary irouDies, ana i m tbe physicians ana medicine la the world ean not neip mem nniess tney ret oat doors or use H0p Bltterf, made of the purest and best of remedies, aad specially for such cases, banns; I ahnnnanM Af haa th nnsnlnsi an1 jtka.lrai I in them. None need suffer If they will ase them I COIUHin Grape Culture and Wine. Mr. A. Speer, of New Jersey, one of the largest producers in the Jst, com menced, but a few years ago, in a small way, to make wines from currants, black- Demes, ana otner iruiis. no now con trols large vineyards, from which his fam I ous Port Grape ' Wine i is made, which ged persons. or sale by Drs- i nmT Rronmow 1 n Durham Smo 1 kingTobaeoa Reduced to 60c a pound, I t Griffin Bros.', under Gregory House, I W IT OSl VUl C6. I I I - . Uo tot 8., tF stsam buildin g, U now opened, and he ' aohcita a liberal share of patronage. T STATE NEWS, Ex-Sheriff Albert Murry, of AUmance, died suddenly last Sunday of paralysis. Fifty vessels arrived at the port of Wilmington during the month of Jan uary. Tho Press says a man lighting a cigar set fire to some bales of cotton in Hickory, and there was a few mi notes danger of a destructive conflagration. Dr. Wingfield, the newly elected Epis copal bishop of Louisiana, u a brother-in law of Rev. Dr. Marshall, rector of Christ Episcopal church, Raleigh. The Economist regrets to learn that Lfecil fool of Elizabeth City was wound ed in the leg by the accidental discharge of a pistol which he was Undling. The Dau was remoreo. - A very ncceesful reriral rf tJ7Jitti ' closed in Lnmberton a few days ago. whole neighborhood was affected byita fn-, flnence, and the accessions to the Baptist church were very large. v irfflsboro Recorder: Cant "JseVIT" Waddell is at present on a visit to his aged father, F. N. Waddell, Esq., who, we regret to aay, ia now. ia his eighty third year, in very feelble health. A man named Cook stabbed a ntm three times, in Morganton, a few days since. He is about to die. The difficul ty occurred about' a banjo. The States- ' ville Landmark sires this information. Harry Worthen. of Shelby, was wound. ed, by the accidental discharge of pistol, while getting into a buggy near Dysart ville. McDowell county, on Friday last, . the ball ranging down from the thh to the knee. Wilmington Review : On the nia-ht of Thursday, the 23d instr, the barn with the whole of its contents, of Mr. F. J. Anders, residing near Realty's Bridge was totally destroyed by fire. Thia entaua a severe loss, estimated at $800. The Durham Plant learns that the Supreme Court has refused to grant a new trial to the Uharpel Hill burglars, and adds ; "This is nothing more than every one who knows anything of the case. expected. They will be re-sentenced at the next term of Orange Superior Court" The Shelby Aurora says Fred Martin. a negro, was lodged in jail in that place,, last Monday, for attempting to commit rape upon the person of Canzada Pursier, - . - I l:. .: mc A T.--1 - I n- ucgru KUI uviug Kb nix. A. 2ns, ID. Clcaveland county, as they were returninr from church last Sunday evening, the 2d . inst Statesville Landmark: Mr. Jacob Wallace returned from a trip to Florida last week and brought a little pet along with him a voung alligator. Thii am phibious and curious animal has been, creating some excitement among the natives, it beiag the first that a great many ever saw. , Alamance Gleaner : The Blobe com- -edy company concluded that it could defy ' the law and tbe county authorities by giving theatrical exhibitions. without pay. ing the required tax. The members were brought before Esquire Scott and mulcht ed in the penalty of $20, which amount was after awhile paid over. - Raleigh Christian Advocate: Bishop Peck is in Greeeaboro, holding the con ference of the M. E. Church in North Carolina. Dr. Fuller, of Atlanta, Gt, is there also. The doctor has a wonder ful tact at stirring up the colored people against the whites. What a pity that his tastes run in that direction t Concord Register : A bill passed the Senate last week giving increased criminal jurisdiction to magistrates. It does not meet the approval of the people, and while it has some favorable features, that portion of it which relates to sexual de bauchery, should condemn it in the House. The evil in the measure outweighs tke Kood. and we trust the' House will squelch it Raleigh Observer: Myers & Sneed have filed a bill in the chancery court of Shelby county and in the United 8tatea District Court asking the appointment of a receiver for the city of Memphis. ' W M. Sneed is a North Carolina lawyer, and a descendant of Chief J ustioe Henderson. He is a young man who went West a few years ago and has won great - success at tbe Memphis bar. Southerner: A woman was found dead on the bank of Tar river, about six miles above Washington, on Friday last, nearly opposite J. H Clark s. Her head and one arm was gone and the flesh was torn from her ribs, ohe was so disfigured by decomposition that it was impossible to ascertain whether she was white or colored. As she wore a No. 7 shoe, it is con jectured she was colored. She evidently drowned above and had floated down. Washington Press : Messrs. Hornthal and Johnston, of Plymouth, passed through our town some days since, on their way to Bay River, to m serve some legal papers on a Mr. Robinson, who, they alleged, had left Washington county with stolen property in his pomeflskmj Upon the return of Messrs. It. and J.. they had in charge a horse, mule and negro. We presume they would also have taken Robinson, but he died within five minutes after the service of the papers. Rev. Dr. Pritchard is requested by the board of trustees to state that Wake Forest College has not made application to the Legislature for aid for a normal school to be held there, because by so do ing Baptist principles, which are opposed to all union of church and State, would be violated. Wake Forest is a Baptist institution, and by asking State aid its trustees think that in some sense it would be favoring a union of church and State. Raleigh News : It may not be uninter esting to give some facts in regard to the Roman Catholic Church in this State and in this city. In Raleigh there are 150 Catholics, while in the entire State there are about 1 ,800. There are 7 priests and 11 churches and chapels. There is one convent occupied by the Sisters of Mercy, , at Wilmington. There is also a xnonas tery, belonging to tbe order of the Bene dictine Fathers, situated 10 miles from Charlotte. They there keep a boys' school. Rockingham Spirit: Little Honors Worley, daughter of the foremaa of our office, came very near being killed on Wednesday evening last She was play ing on the piazza at home when one of the large heavy pillars to the piazza sud denly gave way and tumbled over, striking her on the head and knocking her sense less to the floor, bruising her head in a fearful manner. By some means she did not fall immediately under the pillar and receive its full force, or she would more than likely have been instantly killed. General Grant, accompanies by Mrs. Grant, their son Fred and a few otheis, left Paris on their way to India. r