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Th Daily Review, joMl. T. JAJltS, Ed. and Prop VriUHlNGTOll. if. C THURSDAY. A PKIL 10. f'.9 V IEWS RB V 1 r- S The fight which the Democrats are conducting in Congress is a fight for tht preservation of the principles ol a repub lican government and agaiiii1; the estab lishment of the Empire. The spied of East Indian cyclo"es sel dom exceeds 100 miles an Lour, but of late the wind baslown across Mount Wash ington at the rate of 182 miles with low temperature. Nobody could stand out of doors during these gusts. A telegraph operator sent a message from Boston to Springfield for accommo dations for twenty 'irisoners' instead of 'persons,' and the condequence was that a travelling diamatic coaipany was received at tne iailroad by a party of deputy sheriffs. Frye of Maine grieves over the absence of Dfgro Congressmen, Lut he will never use his influence to send one from hit own State to the Houfcf. No Republican was ever known to dedre a Northern State to be represented by a negro. That is Republican philanthropy. An Ohio farmer was lately annoyed by th inroads of sheep upon his grain field, and raised the height of his fence. A ran. was the only one of the tiock that could then leap it hut ho enabled his com mpau ions to do so by plaeir g himself alongside and oliering his back foi thtm to jump on before clearing it. It .is remaiked and this - a curious commentary on the alleged proepiiity ol France, upsetting the hitherto generally accepted views that at no period did the French marry so little as the did last year. The average for the half century was 0.82 per 100 inhabitants, while in 878 it was only 0.7-3. A Bridgeport woman declared that she wonld whip the girl with whom she caught her husband walking in the street, and did it. She also said she would scratch the husband's eyes out, and tried to do it. Then she started for the water, declaring she would drown herself, but didn't do it. A committee of tho Britihh House of Lords is inquiring into street railroads. The representative of 10,000 cabs bitterly denounced the damage done by "tram ways" as at present laid. He said the wheels were sometimes wrenched off and the tires constantly injured, and estimated the increased wear and tear to cabs in consequence at from 15 to 20 per cent. Engineer Shillinger was buried under the wreck of hii locomotive, on the Le high Valley Railroad . Crushed by the mass of iron and scalded by the steam, he pleaded to be shot, and curstd the spectators for refusing to put him out of misery. They worked hard, but he was dead before they could get him out. Cincinnati policemen thought they recog nized an escaped convict in the person of a big Kentuckian, and tried to arrest him. He slipped oat of bis coat, ran to the river, plunged into the icy water and started to swim across to his own State, but hi strength gave out, and he was fiihed out. It turned out that he was a remarkably innocent rustic, and had fled from what he believed was a murderous assault. "Whenever a Republican thief is caught and stopped from stealing, he cries revo lution. If the army is forbidden to in fere with elections, it is revolution. If barbarous test oaths are stricken from the statute book, it is revolution. If free elections are demanded and hired creat ures to control them are abolished, again it is revolution. They are likely to get plenty of such revolution before Congress adjourns. 2V". Y. Sun, The total amount ot salt sold in the United States during 1878 was 7,GG2, G58 barrels, of which 3,075,553 were imported. About 1,856,000 were made in the Saginaw district of Michigan, about 1,4S4,Q00 in the Sj racuse district of New York, 850,000 in Ohio and Vir ginia, and the rest at other points. The imported salt chiefly comes from Liver pool, but Trapam in Sicily, Cadiz, in Spain, Hyereg in France, and Turk's Is land and Curacoa iu the West Indies fur nish a large quantity. As the domestic manufacture yearly increases, the imports naturally decrease. There is ground for a strong suspicion that the Okolona .Southern States, whose rampant, fire-eating editorials are now regularly used for the purpose of firing the Northern heart, is really published in the interest of the Republican National Committee, and with funds furnished by that organization. The ostensible pub lisher of the Southern btatesia ah Ohio man, and copies of the paper are regularly mailed to all the leading Republican newspapers in the North. A small and inaccessible Southern t own has been selec ted by the Radical leaders in order to prevent the exposure which the scheme -would be sure to meet in a larger place. THE NEGRO EXODUS. Commenting upon the exodus of negroes from the South, our esteemed 'on temporary, the Morning S'tjr$ in its editorial columns, this morring. gives the whole animus of the matter when it says: "If they can succeed in 'ett ng a hall million or more i efri-es t settle in the Northwestern Stat s and Territor'es, they hope to retfuce the representation of the Suuth iu Cougrc.-s, whdst increasing that of the North ' In that sentence is contained the whole truth in a nutshell. By the machination, instigation and money of Northern politi cians has this exodus been planned and is being carried into effect. It is done from no feeling of love or hope of advantage to the poor deluded negro, who has failed to learn wisdom from the experience of the past, but it is only and solely for the purpose of the recovery of a political prestige which the Republican party have lost through a hate-engendered blunder in giving the colored man the right of suf frage. 1 he right ol suffrage was conferred upon the negro, not because he was qaal ifitd or fitted fcr the duties and responsi bilities which fcro fchpposed to accompany that privilege, but with the expec" tatiun that thereby the Repuolican party whijh conferred the gift, would'secure a perpetual control of the gov en men t. It was an outrage so glaring a upon ev? ry principle involved i-n its jenjdymjent, that Senator Moi?on, of Ohio,; one of the most bitter and extreme partisans ,in the Re publican party, aLd whote hatred of the South was blindly vindictive, denounced the idea as a gross and palpable wrong. But the Republican party, in spite of right, justice, and all opposition made it a part of the organic law of the country, and the negro, uncultivated, uneducated and unintelligent though ha was, had conferred upon him, without any pre paration on his part, the highest privilege of an American citizen. Having elected tho negro to this proud position, and thereby given tha South a .largely in creased representation in Congress, the Republicans were confident of an nnlimi ted lease of power, and they I pasted that they should henceforth control the South by the vo they had created there. For several years their fondest anticipations were fully realized, but as the negro be gan to be tired of the domination of the carpet-bagger as he realized that he was being used merely is a voting machine to he set in motion and directed by,.( and for the aggrandizement of some white adventurer; as he became conscious that his true friends and well wishers were to be found among those with whom he had played in boyhood and tolled in manhood, he ceased to be-, come a prominent and certain help to the Republican party. When Democratic victories began to take place in the South, the Republicans at the North saw the blunder which they had committed and became more exercised than ever about negro suffrage As they saw this increased representation from the South, which they had made through giving the ballot to the negro, working to the ad vantage ,of the Democracy, they were for a while appalled, but true to their parti san instincts and to their hatred of the South, they sought for means by which to recover what they had lost. They could not take the ballot from those to whom they had unwisely confided it, and their only alternative was to attempt to remove the negroes from the South to such am extant as to materially reduce the representation from this section. To effect this, and for no other purpose, they have inaugurated the present movement. Now, we predict, this will prove an other Republican blunder, more disas trous to the party and more beneficial to the Democracy, to the South and to the country than the first one. The colored race, since they have been made citizens, have always been a bone of contention politically, and a) laborers they have been unreliable in many instances. We may never hope'for a large immigration, either of capital or labor, so long as that race continues the all-absorbing 'feature in our political economy. Our rice plantations, one of the most prolific sources of Sjuthru revenue, will never be cultivated extensively by them. But they being removed iu such numbers that they cease, to become an important factor iu Southern politics .thousands who have been deterred solely on their account will migrate hither and give thtir efforts, influence and capital to the build ing up of our waste places. Not only! this, but the Chinese a aocile, indus trious, willing, frugal race can be read ily induced to eome, and with their ad vent a complete, radical and permanent change for the better may soon be es tablished. Fourteen year ngo the Soldiers of the Army of Northern Virginia and those of the Army of the Potomac agreed to terms of peace. , From that hour to the present time, Blaine, Conger, Edwards, Hoar, and little Eugene Hale, all of whom bad been snug ly ensconced in the rear, out of harm's way, commenced a war upon the defence leas South and have continued their merciless Mows unceasingly lpon their prostrate foe ever since to the great admo ration ot Saintly New England smiling Schuyler Colfax, and many christian statesman of the great North and Northwest. VTHAT NORTHERN MEN SAY OF THE SOUTH. Such is the title of a pamphlet con taining the proceedings of the convention of Northern residents of the South, held at Charlotte, in this State, on the lath of Jauuary laat. It is edited by Mr. N. Dumcmt, himself a Northern man, but now a resident of Charlotte. He was the President of the Convention. The pam phlet is valuable as being the medium through which Northern settlers in the South may interchange and give ex pression to their opinions, besides being a compilation of valuable topographic, climatic and statistical information, and it will, of course, have some influence upon the minds of a few at the North. We doubt, however, if it will prove re markably effective in removing the prej udices which obtain among a majority of the Kcrthern people. We know very well that it a man comes here from the North with the iuteation of making this a permanent abiding place, working with our people for. a mutual benefit, is in dustrious, temperate, honest and honora ble, he has nothiug to fear in the shape of social ostracism; bat if he comes here, as thousands have, with no other purpose than to ride into pesition and aruasg wealth with which to return to the Nortb again, by pandering to the passions, j re- judicei and credulity of the ignorant colored race by which he may obtain their votes; if he mixes with them and becomes a political leader among them, our intelligent and respectable white people will say to him; "you have made your choice, you have selected your con genial associates and your social inter course must be confined to them, and it is the opinion of the Northern Ex-Federal officer who is the writer of this, that such a decision is a jast and righteous verdict " The Confederate Brigadiers have been kind to Republicans. They retired Cor. bin of South Carolina to the seclusion and quietude of private life ; but they gave him $10,000 that he never earned, and to which "he had not a particle of a claim. WASHINGTON LETTER Washington, D. C, April 8, 1879. The vote on the Army Appropria tion bill 148 to 122 insures solidity in the party in carrying out the re mainder of what must now be consid - ered the Democratic programme dur ing the remainder of this session, viz. legal assurance of fair juries and of free and fair elections. Every Demo crat voted for the bill as amended, and only two of those known as Green backers voted against it. These were Forsythe, of 111., and Barlow, of Vt. One of these, it is understood, will vote for the Legislative bill with amendmentslabolishing the test oath for juries and modifying the super visor law. . In the discussion which dosed on Saturday with the vote above men tioned, many speeches were made 1 111 . ft M wnicn win uave a wiae circulation in the next two years. On the Republi can side Mr. Garfield doubtless wad most effective, though Mr Frye, with leas preparati n, made a speech that has been thought worthy of preserva tion as a campaign document. Mr Frye always speaks well, always be haves well, and bas, perhaps, as many friends among his Democratic asso ciates as any rigid partisan could have. Among Democrats the best speeches were made by Messrs Hard and Blackburn. Mr Hard does not often make speeches. What he said on the Army bill, and the right ef the people to vote peaceably without in terference from the Army, was so well said that it created a profound sensa tion on both sides of the House. Of his remarks and those of Mr Black burn, large numbers will be printed at onoe, and, unless I mistake, they will be known long after the present d'spnte is settled. On yesterday there were numerous 'rumors7 that the Democrats would 'compromise' would pass a bill ap propriating money enough to support the Army for six months, and then adjourn, leaving the regular session to deal with the disputed amendments. This sort of noasei sioal idea might have prevailed a few years ago, but the party is in much better snaps in Congress now than before, and there is not the slightest prospect of any baefcdown step being taken. People generally have underestima ted the tendency of Southern negroes to colonize in the Northwest, its ef fects, so far aa they have been felt in the South at' all, have been seen1 in M i s ippi and Louisiana, but I am assured that only the beginning has been known there and that she move ment will unquestionably extend to other States. If it were wholly spon taneous on the part of those ignorant, and poor and misguided persons most directly interested, there would be only pity felt, but in the last few daji targe amounts of Northern amd East ern money has been pledged to aid in the movement. Most of the money thus eootrtbote will be Jjr unaided people who beiee tfcej m te elevate the colored ra7rnee mld, in my opinion, be no greater mistake than this. Almost every negro who leaves the South will take a pro ducer from a section which needs his labor, art!, unl in'erpose in an inflict a pauper fPrideo shsll til hea of ibann, WW says a cvnic. 'is likp putting your hand in a bag containing ninety-nine snakes and one eel. 1 ou may get the e-eJ, toojfc the euanoea are against you. ' Governess (desirous of explaining the word 'enough.') 'Now suppose. Freddy, that you gave pussy all the milk she ,;an lap, all the meat she can eat, and all the sweet cake she cares for, what will she have?' Freddy (with surprising alacrity) 'Kittens. ' Marion (O ) Mirror. A Philadelphia dra.natio troupe about starting for Texia are having their suite made of boiler iron. Phil adelphia Chronicle- Herald. It is Colto i who eays that 'men will wrangle for religion write for it, fight for it, die for it, anything but live for it.' We suppose, when a woman has all the pin money she wants, she has at tained the pinnickel of her happiness. We are ashamed of tbi, now we have said it, but never mind; it will help to fill up. Burdette. A Syracuse sohoolm stress thought to puzz a her juvenile class, and ked them where ail' the pins go. A little boy replied that all the other boy bent 'em and laid 'em on the seats, hat he didn't want to tell where they went. A wealthy but illiterate man, who was advised' by his arohiteet to build his I suburban residet oe itithe Tudor style, replied: 'I (lent want two doors. One door wil do foi me. My family in small, and there'll be ies to loefe up.' ' A pod ajqgs: 'I must and net for write because I praise.' This is what ails us, too. write D( cause we mast irrai bread and beef. e won,t buy Jboots and A great many poets however, write not for prise, but for the waste basket.-.-Sornstown Her ald. ' f BOILED DO war. New taxes, to the amount of $150- 000,000 a year, nave been imposed on France since the war. Well bred fox hounds are very val uable; at Lord Poltinaore's sale in 1870 forty three hounds produced oyer $15, 000. Last year it was estimated that there were at least 150 casks of dewberry wine made in Point Coupee Parish, La. It was a tough gardener of 70 who fell from a New Haven tree and smash ed an iron fence, but was not much hurt himself. Eighteen valuable beasts have died at Willicgdon, in England, in conse quence ol eating branches cf yew trees, probably through sciroity of or dinary green food. Contributions towards erecting i sohool-bouse somewhere i i the South have ceased in Brattleboro, Vt, since the eloquent lecturer got drunk with the money that he had obtained. The author of the San Francisco passion play has decid d to put it on the 8tage again , and contest the legal ity of the ordinance passed by the .Board of supervisors prohibiting such representations. Barry more, the wounded actor, at Marshall, Texas, is slowly recovering. Paul Messergale is a blind Geor gian, from Warren county, who is said to Oa a genuine Blind Pom, He will take the road with the fiddle and the flute shortly. - General Garfield is not a Methodist, as nas been reported. Me was never ordained as a clergyman, but was lay preacher in the Disciples (Campbell ite) ohnroh. , The head line 'A Fatal Fatality' appeared in one of the country papers the other day, and it was matched yesterday by "A Mysterious Mystry'in another. Major Black is the hero of the day among the British troops in South Africa. He it was who, with a party of volunteers, revisited the scene of the recent m issaore and recovered the Queen's colors whieh had been lost in the affray. Everything Goes Wrong In the bodily mechanism when the liver gets out of order. -Constipation, dyspepsia. contamination of the blood, imperfect as similation, are certain to ensue. But it is easy to prevent these consequences, and re move their cause, by a course of Hoste Iter's Stomach Bitters, which stimulates the bil iary organ and regulate Us action. The d i rect resu It is a disappearance of the pains beneath the ribs and through the shoulder blade, the nausea, headaches, yellowness of the- skin, furred look of the tongue, and sour odor of the breath, which characterize liver complaint. Sound digestion and a regular habit of body are blessings also se cured by the use of this celebrated restora tive of health, which impart a degree of vigor to the body which is its best guarantee of safety from malarial epidemics.! fNerve weakness and over-tension are relieved by it, and it improves rSdth appetfoB and sleep All Kiglit at Laat ! W1 E AJb& PLEASED at being able to tate to oar friend and the public that the tore occupied by as, dsmag ed bj the late fire, has bee a thoroughly repaired? and tha we have now hi stock s fall line of Fresh Family Groceries, ' 1 lilt .... i aid a prepafodto.'n all orttora. uy toe late ore whwn win o aay price.: J. W. jVLDEMBLN k CO. Family Grocert, Cor. Chestnut aad Water streets. damaged I e sola at aim on j a f - a ilcox, Gibbs & Cos. CELEBRATED THE MANIPULATED GUANO Site The Best and Cheapest ! i.; il COTTON s Trt AffAfini tsi ws-i.-i tVkA WI1 .POV Rl RUS another season, we do so with the most perfect confidence that you mill find it ke;n BEST AND CHEAPEST FERTILIZER in use. n It is no new article, requiring experiments to establish its value, but hag beta for years with unbounded success, gaining in favor from year to year, until it accepted as the STANDARD FERTILIZER. " It has been our study, not to make it EQUAL to others but SUPERIOR, n(j our success in these efforts we refer you to the many of your 'neighbors who have uv it, as weil as to t ue thousands in the South Atlantic Cotton States. . This Guano is so well known that it is unnecessary to publish any certificatea hot annex a frw testimonials in our circulars only from Planters who have made stcu tests of it alongside the Peruvian Guano, as showing how it compares nith Peruvian Guano, which baa heretofore been generally esteemed above all other Fertilizers. tie will nave only a moderate supply ior their orders early. Our Agents are arrthorized.to sell the MANIPULATED on very favorable ttnat. pav able in cotton next Fall. jan 29-dAw 'AS- T- PBTTEWA7, Jftgeat A New Departure. P. L. BKlDtiEKS & CO., Following the example of Park & Tilford, Ackler, Merrill & Condict and other large Grocers of New York have commenced keeping BURNETT'S COLOGNES ! Which are acknowledged by all to be THE FINEST IN AMERICA 1 WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LINE OP THAT Old North Carolina Corn Whiskey! Which createiTsuch a sensation, among the lovers of PURE OLD CORN1. It is made by a Farmer near Charlotte, and we are the only parties in the State who can sell it. OGuaranteed to be Four Years old.ffl P. L. BKIDGERS & CO. THE CAPE FEAR STILL TAKES THE LEAD ! Our Rockbridge County Is the best $4 Whiskey in the World ! n THE DIAMOND STAR CIGAR Three for 10 cents, is guaranteed c Clear Havana Filler. P. T. WDTTsDQ kr I'd m. v JJtlUUllU iV VV,. DOJS T FORGET Even if we are. THE LARGEST RETAIL CIGAR AND LIQUOR DEALERS IN WIL- MINGTON, THAT WE ARE AL80 THE Cheapest Grocers. i P. L. BRIDGERS & GO. mch 26 Bonitz's Hotel, QOLDSBORO, 1ST. CL ty ii i -. i i i i ti ( 1 1 r t 4 1 ei'n f pftlOES KEDUCKD TO $1.26, $1 59 and $1.00 per day,acco ding to location of ro omu Single Meals 25 and SO -cents. Bar, Billiard Boom and Baiber Shop attacnea to tne Hotel- Accommodations for Ladies and fam tliet ananrpaaaed. Boeedal adTsatairi ir.r. rd to Commercial Tr a Ttilera. .. j,UJ aitJ a-,. .. teb 14 . Pretiaart Thm. H. McKoy, ,Aobt H- McKoy WILALTNGTOX, ffice North side Market ecoad and Third jan 27-tt FERTILIZER, for CUANO! :o: i Ar fYVS MAVIPTTf A '1 Vni m, saie ana wouia request nanters to This important organ wafams but abm k pounds, and all th -SaST! oiipe,vy kali hour, . to Juvc Wk?, otler impurities Btraind r filtered Tna Bic U rtie natural purgative of the bowel, , if hc Liyr becomes torpid It not senary W 1H tryiagu,, ,, Uifu yellow of a drrtybrowa color. T!iio. matron, Coiistipition, Headache, Biliousftev . JatuKUce, Chills, Malarial Fcrers Pile, Sick S3 and Sour Stotaach, and general debility follow A I PvfPtWMNl patimb, thegreat veteubledi ofxjwvo0j4yfQuncevotbilc each t,..: tA the blood passes Qi faugh it, aslong as there oi e ; ana uie flct of even a to. dose Mpon yellow complexion or a brown dir '' lopku skin, will astonish all who try it u.. binr the first symptoms to dium rr Tj euro rf all bitious diseases and Litr complf " ,c uy iBKing 1 1 mf ati rr l n ac . . ' ano with directions. Headache is genets cur in twenty minuter, and no discus tV . aris from the Liver can eotist if a Uir ttk AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR WLw VX ALL LI.UOOIi It Price 25 Cts. and $i.C; j The faulity of Consumption or Throat id T.ung Diseases, which Iwccb tc the craven T unui s viciiras, ansa from the Opium or Morphine trewtir.tnt, which stntply stupefies as Vhe work of death goes on. $i o,ooo will be paid if Opium oi Morphine, or injr preparation of Opinm, Morphine or Pm aic Acid , can be found in the Gloek Flowii Cough Sxkup, which has cured people whr are living to-day with bat one remaining hug. Ko greater wrong can.be done than to say tkt Consumption is incurable. Gloh Flown Couca .Sykut will cure it when all other' fieans hare' failed. 'Also. Colds, Cough, Asthma , bronchitis, and all diseases of tie thro. u arid lungs. Read the tMtifnoniaftr sf the Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, Gov. South and Ex-Gov.Brown of G., Hon. Gen! rifi'- S body, as well as those of other rcraarkalk fHi Cures in our book, free to all at the drug stores. na te convinced that U you wish te tx cored ou can be by taking the Globs Flowm :ot;h h Syr UK Take no T roehes or Iweneei for Sore Throat, when you can get Guu Flowek Sybup af same orice. For sale by I all Price 25 Cts. and $1.00 Gmw mistake are m'ftde in the trWtmeW all dt jeaees that arise from poison iu tae htfod,. M 0 te M Not one case of Serofula. Syphilis, whia Swelling, V lcoreas Sores and Skin Disease. a thcj$wid, is treated without ttte use ot Mtr- cury IB some form. Mercury rots the and tne disease it produces ; anvnAer kinrf rtf nioorl ertlrin veorse than Ik. Pimssiitom's Stu.1 lmrjA or Oi-skk' I)i;r inw-r Im t )i rtafv nffrfvi finon WbiCk upon whK i " tope of recovery froWtu,Svphui. f4 Mercurial diseases in all stages, tan t res in all stages. han he itmm 1 that will curt Cancer, e paid by the pronetocs f rngredienr riot fsssely ejktS" ' 1 ih ably founded , and lio.eoo will be H 09 I Mc ercury, or afty e ana nariaicsa can be toun Price by all Druggists $t.o it Globb Flower Covom Srvr aad JiPf kef.l's Hbpatinb for Y35 Divan for lak if all Druggists in 25 cent ana i.o bottles. oo. A. ?. UEBEBLL ft 09., TropttoM Jas. T. Pettewav a' WILMINGTON, N. C, 4 ' I 8 AGK.VT FOE THE SALE Of Wl J. IBB3 ft CUM Maiipalated Oetv. iSP best, cheapest uTd aost popmlar Qu ef' 4. WiU Mke erdef tot ,dellrtrj t Shoe HeeL Uarinbrg, Larslu aad late atettat point, v.ai. fan 27-d kwi 41 Harness A 8afiUfi vrsu oii.e at :33' 3 W iTa. REP AIMING I' !ffe' iwW AND DIBPATCU. ' - t api i-n i SC..i If A VINO AGAIN 11 meat of the Purcell oughly renoratadi and am now prepared to baaatf0 cut uatriur OTorynuuy. - . l . UTa ... Pnreell flosse BarbarBhsp LIVEft LUNGS Si I BLOOD a Tkt Rn trtri ndf Uiiii Ipsatad Ja
The Daily Review (Wilmington, N.C.)
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April 10, 1879, edition 1
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