Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Dec. 1, 1873, edition 1 / Page 1
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VI If 4 i '0 hi is I I W.F.Kornegay Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Foreign & Domestic HARDWARE si I m M II 4. HI u! 1 m VII 1 ' a. i I i: . I aj . . I ST I K IWllflPX. IB' 71 Stoves, Carriage Mate rial, Builders' Sup plies, Paints, Oils, Glass. GOUSBBRO, - - - - N. G. Arrera successful buFinesscarcernf sev--eral years the undersigned feels that lie is acquainted with tho wants ot the far mers and mechanics of North Carolina, and especially solicits the attention of this class to his extensive stock. Many of his goods are purchased di rect from manufacturers, thus enabling country; dealers purchasing from him to. save the' per-centum made by-Kbrthjerb' jobbers., ; ;.;"'f He ' has made Carriage goods ' a spe cialty, and defies 'competition, llo buys twice the quantity of any , house in the State, and is thus' prepared to offer goods in this line at the lowest prices. " V. F. KOllKEGAY. Painters! Painters! Paliee arid DevoWhitIaa.- Varktv es of all kinds. Colors ground in oil and dry,, . -at ., ,..,.if ,,:'! . . w VY.'F. KOKNEGAY'S. .Carpenters! , Carpenters!;; Saws, Drawing Knives, Braces, Bits, Augers, Squares, Spirit Levels, Hammers, Ilatch'ets, IManes, &c, at ' ' " "a ' 'WVF. TORXEG AY'S J . Ay BONITZ, Editor and Proprittor. Tor us. Principle is Principle Right ii Right Yesterday , To-day, To-morrow Foreyer" Pablished 8cmi-Wekly and Weekly. VOL. 10. GOLDSEORO, N. C, MONDAY, DECEMBER 1. 1873 NO. 23. -iitfsw Prayer I Don't Like. Builders! Buiiders I Nails, Butt, Strap and Blind Hinges, Locks, Latches. Door Handles, "Wood Screws, Draw Pulls, Sash Coids, Sash Fasteners, Frame Pulleys, Patent Brads, &c, at W. F. KOlixsEGAY'S. Cucumber Pumps! At W. F. KOJiNEGAY'S. Table CutSen Including Landers, Frary & Cmrk's weli , known make, at V F. KORNEGAY'S. Pocket Knives I Imported and Domestic. At W. F. IvOltXFGAY S. ' Window Glass i All sizes, American and French, At T W. F. KORNEGAY'S. I don't like to hear him pray, ho loans at twenty-five per cent.; Fr theDI thinktbe potroCerTXfay TT Bpressed tofptty forfocrlTid renfH And its tha-trooiewe-alr shnifldlheettfl"-, Which says the lender shall be blest, As sure as I have eye's to read, It dots not say, "take interest." I do not like to bear him pray, On bended knees, about an hour, F r frace to spend aright the day, Who knows his neighbor has no flour, I'd rather see him no to mill. AiidiQUjiy the lucklesl brotfier bread, And see his children eat their fill, And laugh beneath their humble shed. lido not like to hear him pray, 4Lct blessings on the widow be," Who never seeks her home to say, 4 It want overtakes you, come to me." I hate the prayer, so long and loud, That's offered for the orphau's weal, !y him who sees him crushed by wrong, And only with his lips doth feel. I do not like to hear her pray, Wirh weld-ear, and silken dres, Whi'e washer-woman toils all day, And then is asked to "work for less." Such pin s shavers I despise ! Vfii folrlvd hands and face demure They Ht t II-aven their 4k.-tngd 'y-?s" Then steal the earnings of the poor. I (' not like such soulless prayers ; . Ii' wrong, I hone to be forgiven ; . ' - i - -it . .o ;:i.4ei i wicg lucui upwaiu oe.'irs, Ti-j-y're lost a million miles from Heaven ! A Russian Order. . Harness ! Harness ! buggy, Cart and Wagon Harness, at W. F, KOllNEGAY'S. Trace Chains ! At W. F. KORXEG-A Y S . f - Axes! 'Axes! At W. F. KORNEGAY'S. Carriage ' Goods ! VSpokes, "Rims, fiubs,' Carriaga; iPalta, Shafts; Long and Short Arm Axles filkb Trimming goods of every description, at W. F. KORNEGAY'S. The MonumBiital Mm Stove! For. size, vcighty'beatity, larie oven, powerof hat, fapldity of baking and roast ing, size of fire box. economy of fuel, lanre flues, good draft, simplicity and durability, can not be excelled. The testimony of thou sands using them fully justifies the asser tion, it has become the most popular and ine leading Cook Stove wherever mtro duced. Forsala at , ' " AV. F. KORNEGAY'S GUNS ! PISTOLS ! A. large assortment of fire-arms, at 1 W. F. KORNEGAY'S. A GOOD FAMILY PAPER. A rich banker named Saderfaml 'jnjoyed for a long time the favor of Catherine II of Prussia, but one day lie snddeuly saw his house surroun ded by an armed force, led by a commissary of the police, who de manded to speak with him. " My deaf sir," said he to the frightened banker, " it grieves me deeply to have receive orders from our graoioua sovereign to execute towafdVyou a severity beyond any thing I have ever yet seen. I know not what extraordinary offence you have committed to excite such ex-f tremity of anger in her majesty as to induce her to' command a punish ment so horrible and unpreceden ted." " I do not understand a word of what you are saying," answered the asionished banke. tMam aaftfmch amazed as if you had fallen from Ihefclouctej Whkt 'are tii'e brdeti you received." "I have not the courage to tell you; and yet I shaji becqmpelqd to execute them." " Am I so unfortunate as to have lost her majesty's confidence ?" su Ah4 'It-that f rf all, .fid would not see me so disconsolate You might and even her favor but "But then I am banished from Russia ?" " That would indeed be a sad misfortune, vet with your riches yon could rind a hospitable recep tion in any other country. But uOh, heavens! is that possible that I am to be exiled to Siberia?" Even from there you might, sooner or later, be recalled to Rus " I did more than any other would have dared to do. I did not con- peal my grief and surprise, I lin gered in the imperial presence, and bad actually began an humble re monstrance to her Majesty, when5 our gracious sovereign, turning to look on me, with a look and voice of anger, bade me egone and per form her. will. I still seem to hear her Mifeatening and appalling wtfrd'sV " Gd" said 1 her ajefety, and jriever fdrt?et that it is'Vour in- 7 m dispensible'dnry to fexedntb without questioning th6 commands I think you worthy o receding-from mje.'" ItMlmpossible to describe the agitation,, and apgfiisbr pn the de spair of the poor Saderland. After ho had for a time given vent so the violence of his distress, the com missary told him that he wasallow- affairs. In-vain the banker prayed for a longer intervalv,or at least an op portunity to write to the Empress and implore -her clemency. At length, although trembling for the consequences to his own lite, he consented, and he immediately fol lowed the letter himself, but not having courage to present himself at court, he went to seek his friend ami protector, Colonel Bruce. The count thought that the com missary must have made a mistake, and took him directly to the impe rial palace. There leaving him in an ante-chamber, he obtained ad- mission to the presence of the Em- press,to whom he related the whole all air. Yhat was his astonishment to over hear ihe Empress, exclaim : A ' "Just heaven! what atrocity! There can be no doubt Niecloff (the com missary) is mad. Quick! Count, take the horse before it is too late, and deliver my poor banker from his alarm, and assure him of my favor and good wishes. The count- hastened to communi cate this orJer to the commissary, and was yet more astonished when returning to the presence ot the Empress, to hear her exclaim, amidst bursts of the loudest laugh ter : " Now I understand the cause ot this strange and incomprehensible scene. I have tor several years had a fine dog, which I valued highly, and I have given him the name of Saderland, both for the sake of a joke on my good banker, and also in cpihlilimebt to an' En'thih gentle man of that name from whom I ob tained the dog. Early this morn- dubtles with the intention of fre-' them. This is the torching of fig- quently recurring to them and re- ures and a:. -greater lie M'.is never' awaking old emotions. The chances taught. are that they were never examined Now, I affirm, that it is cheaper again, and that the sacred recepta- for you to raise your own provi de onlv asserted itself at a distinct sionsthan to have them brought nuisance when a change of habita from the West, and given to you at tion became necessary, of a lumber- the nearest depot free ot all cost room had to be cleared out. They and charges ? How is this? In the were originally p.rjPH?rT.e-d as a kind first place, if we raise 5,000,oCO of of pledge that the sentinaent ass o- bales of cotton, we will get no more ciated;with them should be perma- money tor them than we would getj neut ; and as.'luckly the pled fees tor halt that nlnmber.1 Then, out otl which every ,one makeitahimseJI the same amount realized, yoa may are void ' of any biding force, they pay for raising 6,000',o6u just double have survived to be merely a ghast- cost production. The labor and ly reminder of smallness of the supplies employed in raising 5,000, Hpace occupiea by old memories. A Q's'ft baei ot cotlpn would be em- pile of letters may not occupy much ployed in raising supplies without roonin.aliou:srebutat ii odd that reducing the vala-4- the cotton it will, in a year or two, occupy rtp orre,jdoU.at I5ut halt this la mpre room than proportioned jthe bor woald raise more than you need influence of the past upon the mind for supplies. You could employ of the proprietor A person who much of it, in enriching yoar lands, Spanish Statements. STORIES ABOUT ALKERK FKT's APPEAL. Beauregard and ZfOiifjtroet El Cronista, the Spanish journal put- lithed in New YorV in the interest of the Spanish government, contains a letter purporting to have been addressed by Pedro Alfero, the day before his execu tion, and other Cubans, found on the Virglnins, offering their services in de fense of tire Spanish cause if their lives were spared. The letters s?nt to Gen. Barriel by the TJnitetT States vice consul Scbmitt ar also published, buttWej coataia aot hi ng different irom what has already been telegraphed. Captain Frj, of the Virginius, wrote a letter while on the Tornado, appealing to the Spaniards to spars the lirvtof a number of persona found oa the vessel who werv ignorant oi its destination when thy embarked, and declaring that his blood ought to be sufficiea. to atone for the acts of the Virginias. Alfero in his letter bound himself to It It painful to aea inch statetBtnU as the following, from a New Orleans let ter to th3 Colomboa, Ga.. Sun. In reply to a question concerning Longstreet and Beauregard a friend simply said, nothing politically dead, and memory abhorred ; and, if possible, , the latter thought more illy of than the former, inasmuch as he went rainy lengths ahead of General Longstreet la his concessions to the blacks conces sions disgraceful to the wh ta people of the State. The itar of Beau regard's destiny with no more flash a!ong the unclouded sky of fame and glory, start ling the people w tb its purity and bnl liancj.Lut will remain in the grave pre-, pared by tbo hands of one whose patb way it was woat to illuminate. Twask an unfortuuate moment when the cMtaI rous Beanrrgard turned his back opon the people who lortrd him so well, and joined himelf to their opprr ssors. The President's Organ Cuban Affairs. on' resrain her confidence delirer over all the official secrets which systematically purns every letter as and improving your property in 88 Que8adl'g private secretary, he pos soon as he receives it is urobabK manvwavs. Then romp to the pnd'i se88d if his life were spared. He a'so accumulating'fewer reasons tor re- of the year with your cribs full ot gret that the person who religious corn, and your meat houses full of ly preserves thein in the 'hope of meat, you families lull,of smiles. some future effusion ot pious eentl- yourself full ot independence, and ment. The question, therefore, your pockets lull of monev for in- which any one should ask who is vestment. And how would you thinking of preserving memorials is invest it? In cotton factories on the very simple one whether they the waterfalls which God sent all are dead or living ; whether that is, through your county to run spin they are calculated at a future time dies. to revive fading impressions or to This would make you indepen- be merely passive, deriving such dent of Old England and New Eng- interest as they may possess trom a land. Then, also, you would mine reflected light without intrinsic il- your own iron and make your own luminating power. In the latter implements of husbandry and this case they cannot, as a rule, be too would make you independent of soon destroyed. What is the use, Pennsylvania founderies and Mas for example, of preserving a docu- sachusetts workshp. In a word ment in which A. B. presents his every improvement would be built complements to C. D., and requests up in your own country, and all the the pleasure of his company to din- profits of these improvements would ner ? Can joa realize any more J go into your own pockets. 'Usuncuy the character ot cither oi jo on as you are now going, the correspondents, however re- making cotton your chief crop, and markable they may be in themsel- slavery is the doom of your cbil ves ? Is there not rubbish enough drens children forever ! A people in the world already, and sufficient who depend on other people for material stored up to perplex the their food and clothing are and future historian ef the nineteeth must be slaves. century? Indeed it may said that Make cotton vour surplus crop, is a rule all the private correspon- and your wealth, independence and deuce should be burnt. Nobodv power will multiply as surely as the writes good letters since the intro- years increase. duction of the penny postage. The art is lost, ard the practice ot pre- The Spanish Navy. servinsr the documents which now premised to reveal certain negotiations with the government of the United States and the bribery of American ot ficcrs. His proposed treachery, however did not save him. Frem the Santiago de Cuba corre, spondence of El Cronista it appears that after the British vice consul found his enorts to secure a DostDonement of tli shooting of the persons claiming British citizenship were vain, the British com- mooore at Jamaica took the matter m hand and telegraphed to the Governor of Santiago de Cuba. To this urgent request Burrlel curtly replied : "I do not possess the authori ty ('no tenego facutadea') to accede to the petition you sent me. The law must fulfilled." Three letters of United States Vice Consul E. G. Scbmitt to Burriel are pub lished. The Orst, dated November 2, asks why a dispatch sent by the consu late of ihe United States ot America, at The correspondence that was recently4 begun does not promise an immediate ter mination, the desire of the Goternment' beinjf, as already expressed in the nepabli-' can, to obtain fall information as to alt the circumstances concerning the capture of the Virginins and the atrocious executions hieh followed. No American, bowerer' deeply he may sympathise with those who1 hare suffered by the murders at Santiitgo de Cuba, can expect tbt Goeernsatnt to; hastily resort to force in the absence of well-ascertained facts which, when tbty are known, may justify the most stem and decisive measures. The President Is free in his utterances concerning bis duj in lbs matter, an J only yesterday said that this Oorernroeut will take care that the national flag shall be erery where respected, and, American citizens verywhere protected in 11 their right-" The Constitution and the law rests the. war-making pewer ia Congress. Under the circumstances it is apparent tkat the Kxecutivc cannot uc force,een if he were so di.iofeJ, tj riul the wronjn of which t e liAre so long and so frequently com plained. Hence Congreis will be made acquainted with all the facts in the cafe, to far as they shall hare been obtained at the time of its meeting, an 1 the responsibility will rest upon it to direct such action as the circumstance at the time my demand. Inflation. ing l gave, orders to NieclQlf to tabs oif bisskm e'alire,1 in order to haVe it stuffed, as the poor thing was dead. He seemed tohesitate whether to obey, and I was very angry, be cause I thought it silly pride on his part." . 1 Reserving Worthless "Mermo- Yjf ar A.aLg i v en, Xo hu.tin g ter1 a fashion. The"' irrstinet "is aft Everybody should subsribe for the FRIEND OF TEMPERANCE i IT is next to the largest Paper in North Carolina. IX isone of the best, if not the very best . jaierary ana a amiJy Jfapers in the ' South. IT is one of the cheapest Papers in the courltry. IT is one of the oldest Temperance Papers in the South. IT is the Official Organ of the Order ot the Friends of Temperance in the Uni- ted. States. . It I the Official Organ or the State Couucil of North Carolina. IT is the Paper that every. Temperance man should subscribe tor. IT is thePaper that every Family should have. " . Price onlv &2 00 a Year. Address Rev. H. WHITAKER, si:i. Ralegh, N. C. J. FERNBEEGEE & CO. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Wiiies, Liquors, Cigars X Tobacco, -Ji No, 32 Notth. Water Street, .MK& Wlliissaoiiniclc BVrSM ft W m. -mm - ids VOU.r45) Merojants iand .Laaupr cttiers wiiiuuntt it to tneir interest to give tis dill. v Orders by mail receivG'prbmpt 'Perhaps, then, you are going to put me in prison k I wish it were so, tor then you might be liberated." Am I, then, eondemed to under go the knout ?" 44 The knout is a dreadful punish ment, to be sure, but it is not al " Then, oh ! then, you would lead me to death ! tell me plaiuly ; this suspense is worse than death it self." - i " Know, then, that your most gra cious Empress has given orders to take ofi your entire skin." " To take jofF my skin !" exclaim ed Saderland, seized with horror to Cay the" alive !" T3fttregainiug his self-command, he added, " Mo, pp-r(it cannot be-; eithftryoa have lost vour senses, Mr. Commissary, or your most benign mistress has nonswer Jvhen-you receired'-iWh cruel orders ?" The New York Nation has : as jet to hear of anj netpaeror man of influence and reputation far financial tagacttj who is in favor of inyatioa. IuJccJ, one of the most remarkable things about the 9 o'clock to-day, to the office of the tele- preient criis is that, though it ii takea for graphic company ot the West Indies and granted on all bnli that Conren, ai Panama, directed to the consul of the oon as it taeets, roust inflate, the avowed United States in Kingston, Jamaica, fur 0,,jcl of TrJ " who speaks ot writes ii. formation m.m tn th ntinnnlit. f ih on tb sabject, iacludinr the President steamer Virginius, was detained by Burriel. The second letter, dated November 3, repeats the above inquiry, to which no reply had been received, and says : "I respectfully ask your excellency to per mit me to be admitted in the prison and on board the vessel where the latter are and Secretary of the Treasury, is to get back to specie payment as toon as possi ble." Those who speak and write, including the Trefcident and the Secretary of th Treasury, may faror specie payment, but those who work and rote want currency, aud more of it, and we opine that the Doliticians will heed the wiahet of th detained as prisoners, to enable me to ,atter rathfr than h f . ... . fulfill my duties as consul representing 8afe t0 prtdicl tbat no Weilern or Sooth. the Government of the United States." era member will be returned to CoagTWS usurp the name is bidding fair to The Washington Evening Star ruin the art ot biography. The life thus advises us of what we have to of a remarkable man is now, for the counter against in the event of war, most part, a set of dreary scraps ot so far as the Spanish navy is in utterly faded communications about volved : trifles connected by thin links of As there is a good deal of talk barren dates and dry statements of indulged in just now about a pro tact. A biography ought to be a bable war with Spain, and as such liUM-ary.work of art of the highest a contest would be waged almost Lrirtil it iq rorclu r- tw n .rai)iin(f I . ' l . . . 1 J l II ' lv ' WJ ""to 1CiiCou...5 eniireiy un waier, it wuuiu uu won i .,; ,r r n , - . i . ,. - ... i.umuniuui.uu.1 ji aii aiDg omz ana a. nee oi miZJAXX. Boil than O '1I no.hAnb a! ,...-.nf,.Hnr I - . 1 I x 1 : . t- I . . I . ' -'4' ' v. c vjyja. yiiay.Ai.wico. i f nouga iq reme ru uer in a i o u i s .a c i gaintS' kjb tne evening oi toe same !ay tne who does not use his efforts aad cast his consul seni JJurnei a luird letter, saying rote for " cheap money." The people la he was still without replies to his let- tend to bare it, and those who speak and ter a. write cannot keep them from it. Burriel in his reply began by saying mat one reason why be bad not answer- Boss Tweed, so lone a big Iarin ed the first communication was that the among the politicians of New York, nd consul ought to know that it was on a grand mogul of all municipal thieve, day of religious festival, in which the em- ha, after all the ingenuity of eoentet ployes of the government devoted, like and the weakrws of juries, been con- all the world, to meditation on Divine yicted and testeac! to twelve veart in and of All Souls, as nrescribed bv tnrnnnt th& It U littt r the hero, as the author asserts with second maritime powerinthe world, our religion, were not in the habit of re- in New York to steal than it la to kill meek humility, -shall- paint himself, Her navy is surpassed by that ot mainiog at their offices. He first refers Stokes, the murderer, ges for two years; and he does it b'y the hurried scraps England only, and is regarded as to the telegram, makes a facetious all u Twee!, the thief, for twelve. This ver- of scribbling which now do duty far, superior to ours, both in the 8ion to tne conn9el a expression of the diet wi 1 have a happy effect la restralo- for letters, and into which no rea- quality and number of vessels. American collore, saying that there were ing the arms that were so familiar with sonable being thxnisjt irorth while This fact probably " will not, and "J"7 Anrifan "ion ftDd " 13001 the public treasury, and In bringing Datural enough, and yet it is a rather troublesome one, and apt oc casionally to defeat its own purpose. Most voung people, and especially young women, are in the habit of accumulating museums of objects which have a sontimental value. -They possess miscellaneous collec tions of odds and ends ot jewelry, i looks ot hair, and perhaps frag ments ot clothing. A child's shoe m:iy become a piece of embodied poetry, and be valued at an indefi nite price. As for the piles of cor respondence, they are preserved till their ink is faded and their paper tattered ; they are enough to strike with awe the librarians of the Brit ish Museum. Any one who has ac cidentally come on an old deposit of this kind in some forgotten chest has found an admirable text for melancholy, and, perhaps, cynicai nrusing ; tor not only are they sad by force ot the contrast between the interest which they once excitad and their present want of meaning, but we cannot help asking how far thev ever served their purpose. Was not even the first proprietor intolerable bored with them during his or' her life time and only re strained by a half superstitious feeling- from summarily "consignin'g them to the flames ? ' When they r-firsta , laway in a sacred receptacle, it was 'I 1 n m ft n K sV sn A rt Iham sVa ma I .1 .1 . . to insert a fragment of his soul or certainly. should not, make any dif- , 1 " .r si. i. T - mT " mlnlstra- i ' V, ' J rtfers. He said that the counsel's de- tion of nublic affairs in New York cltr Intellect. Our reverential affection ference as to the dutv of our gov- . tn Mt f. mnn w -,v t P . . ? . ..... . ; , 6L mand to visit the prisoners was without The Boss will have abundant time to re exceeds its proper bounds when it ernment m the premises, but at the foundation, as be had received no official fleet on the vicissitudes of snUtln, endeavors to preserve that which is same time it had better be'kep. in information of their nationality, and, so politician's life daring his twelve year? eoocuwaipciiouauic. view, ruiuenuurc, as ouaiu is uui iaru uenerai uurnei anew, naa not i retirement. Practical Advice. a party to the treaty of Paris, there been requested to visit them. Alluding is nothing to prevent her sending especially to the case -f Mr. Ryan, he out privateers under letters of mar Hon. B. II. Hill recently address- que." ed a meeting of planters at Jones boro, as follows : First, make cotton your surplus crop ! In these five words lie the Sampson locks of your future power. Make your own fer tilizers by resting, cropping, grass ing and manuring your lands. Thus you become independent of guano merchants. Raise your own pro visions. Thus yon become inde pendent of the provision merchants. Your cheapest and safest line of transportation runs from your own fields, and hog pens to your barns and meat houses ! With no debts for your supplies, you will need no accommodation credits at two per cent, per month ! Thus you be come independent of brokers, and cotton factors and lien merchants. You can then sell your cotton, at your own chosen buyers, and for vour own prices, and will get your own money.' None of these things can a cotton planter do who plants bna 'credit and'borrowinioneyto buy his provisions. But you "say, the; Western .States can. raise provi siops so mucn" cheaper than we can that we can make .more monejrby Occupation. What a glorious thing it is for the hu man heart ? Those who work hard sel dom yield to It. c led or real sorrow. When griei sits down, folds its bands and mournfully feeds upon its tear?, wt aving the dim shadows that a little exertion might sweep away into a fun eral pall, the strong spirit is sbyrn of its migh and sorrow becomes our master. When troubles flow upon you dark and 1 of eItrcme,y annojing qaeations The cotton mills interest la emfner 8aid that Ryan claimed to be an English gr4nd,y forwJ ,a Georgia Tne M subject, having been burn in Canada. Mn millf wcre bum a mi liurriei tnus concludes : rrttk nf alR, Mn ... ... Mn v,tWVV,. a ujiua uv g,wv spindles and 120 looms, ami tnm nt that Ryan was English, makes it neces- 5i500 yardj of domctUcg -The sary for me to propose to the Govern- company have recently put in new en - ment that your exequatur as Vice Con- g!nes ,nd boilers at a cost of $15,000. sul be annulled, because an official who since thc mig hrft a aUon send protests upon such slight founda the comoanr har nirl ri. . At tion, and who tries tn deceive the Span- vidend of leQ pcr ceflL ish authorities, accustomed to transact ... mt , , . T business with a rectitude and loyalty high in Louisville and Cincinnati, where which are notorious to all, cannot but thev find readT sale. Aa . compromise the dignity of the country sorptions to the amount ot $10,000 heavy, toil not with the waves and wrestle not with the torrent; rather seek by occupation to divert the dark waters that threaten to overwhelm you, into a thousand chacroels which the duties of between countries which should regard each other with mutual repect. J. N. Bckriel. It seems that Vice Consul Schmitt wrote another note, to which Gen. Bur- ntighboring city, to the capital stock of one of the contemplated new factories a that place. u Why, Sambo, how black you art l life always present. Before you dream n th- said a genUem-n the other day to a . ol it, those waters will tertilize the pre-1 , . ctrOD(rW nf (h tu.,u. Uro t a boteL "How. ia Um w "DU K WMM4 . , , " and officioasnessof Vice Consul 8chmitt . , . ' W4' will tcome pure na e .an- fa wUhaJ to q ,1 shine which penetrates to the path of which he had no proper concern, Intl Why look here, massa. de reason aui dis ds day dls chila was bora dere was dut, in .pit. of , ob.Ucle. Qti,f I mtiDg that If tie Vice Conjal hk uk I J ftZ 'r lwi1' "hi?'.7 for hia satisfactory explanation aad af frr. alter all. is but a selfish feel inc. . . , ... - I ATI TWrmininn T, TIKI Th. mms.mwm mm m and most selfish is the man who yield. fATor it would haTe but t inning thanks wntUaed te himself to the indulgence of any passion . you what it ii massa, dis nigger Day M .w.Msaialhl.fdlo.Ln. kJP8 officially, m a right, it would . . , hich brings no joy to his fellow-men. Qot u black, but aint green so how r ble f ver. the cradle aad hrtak your nec making cotton and baying from l my dear, won't you T It won't do to be so devoted to a ten- . .1 , . . t- . "Sam,, why don't yoo vajcw.jww der.Kearfrf-wife as to comolv with her LJTI 'ZTlt "T"." ' ii"! milter, and tell tiro to uj up in ."'.1 .' I NmS lalaMall lUan m7 . I t...4 a. I . MB MFl.l). Am tt lxTlfitf I Patlaau wba bav one tafcem it prfr It to au 1 op Mkava - - - - -- - . - - 1 - wawv.. m mtjmmm iMrv M wa a aw aw . 1 aay out La markc serlHv I affau.
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 1, 1873, edition 1
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