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,1 41511 t ' Tie Daily Review. JOS! T. JAMES. Ert. ami Prop V lUiibTUN. W. C. TLfcSOAY. MAY 27. 187. VIEWS) AS U KEV IKU . The Wheeling Democrat avera, as a fact unprecedented in the history of West Virginia, thit not a dollar of delinquent taxes, fines, or licenses is doe from any Sheriff for 1877. Mr Henry, inventor of the Martini Henry rifle barrel and ammunition, is seeking in vain for adequate remuneration from the British War Office for the use of his patents by that Government. Mr. Ottendorfer, the editor of the Xew York Staats Zeit nr, who was one of Mr. Tilden's moat ardant champions in 1876, now declares that Mr. Tilden will not do. In an editorial be says that Mr. Tilden s reform glory has passed away loDg since.' Mr. Arthur Sullivan wiil arrive in America next October. The opera which he with Mr. Gilbert is preparing for this country is said to treat military affairs in the tame spirit as naval affairs are treated in ' U. M. S. Pinafore." The Princess Louise has been making the exciting trip dowL the slides, near Ottawa, on a raft. Through these slides, or ways, sections of the heavy rafts go down the rapids f the Ottawa Tlivir, the passenger usually get scared and w t but there is not much danger. When an old backwoodsman was about to take his first ride in a Mississippi steamer he was asked whether he would take deck or caoin passage. ' Well,' said he, in a resigned sort of way, 'I've lived all my life in a cabin, and I guess cabin passage will be good enough for a rough chap like me.' A perfect fossil specimen of the arch Roptery, the most ancient bird of which there is any knowledge extant, and which by seme is considered the connecting link between birds and reptiles, was re cently purchased by a Professor in Ghent Switzerland; for $6,000. The first spe cimen discovered is in the British Museum but it is imperfect. A man bought soiut' of the Government certificates at the Cincinnati office, and missed one after retiring from the window. He ce-uld find it nowhere. 'Give me a dollar and I'll get it tor you,' said a boy. The otter was accepted. The boy yanked another urchin out of the line, and choked him until he opned his mouth, from which the hidden eertificate dropped out. Hobart Pacha, the English Turk,..is very fond o! boasting of his success in running the blockade on the American cast duriDg the civil war, and telling of the perils he encountered aud the pro fitable cargoes of arms and ammunition that he carried into Southern J ports, and how he ran out to sea between the Union blockadera, loaded down with cotton bales. "Those were times," he says, "for making money." A Denver dispatch of Monday says at one o'clock this afternoon the Denver South Park and Pacific Railroad reached the Kenosha summit with the track, and at 3.30 p m the first passenger train reached the summit, 10,140 feet above the sea level, the highest point yet at tained by any railroad in North America. All the difficulties in the way are now overcome, and tracklayiug will continue at the rate of a mile a day until the road reaches Leadville. Persons leaviug Lead viile in the morning now arrive in Den ver before midnight the same day. Peer, who jumped from the suspension bridge at Niagara Falls, a few days ago, wore a rubber life preserver, to lessen the depth of hisjeuetration into the water ; a sponge over his mouth and nostrils , to pre. vent the water from being forced into them ; and thick cloth over his feet and legs, to protect them from concussion. A brass wire, attached to his shoulders, was reeled out as he fell, with just enough ten sion to keep him in an upright position. To strike the water flatwise would be cer tain death. Peer dropped 192 feet in four seconds. He was exceedingly nervous just before the feat, and it was thought his courage had given out. Mr. Stanley arrived at Zinzibar in his little vessel, the Action, on the 18th of March. The secret of the objects of his new African expedition had been well kept np to the time of the departure of the last mail, but it was generally sup posed that his destination was the Congo, it having been remarked that he carries with him a steam launch and a large cutter, with a quantity of pierced iron plates, evidently intended to form a shield round the boats in case of attack ;in short, a sort of preparation just suited fd river navigation in a hostile region such as Mr. Stanley passed through on his memorable descent of the Congo. He has engaged a large number of his old followers at Zinzibar, and paid them advanced wages, promising them that they shall see Europe when their work is over, HARRIET IS EEC HE R STOWBION THE STAND. While Senators Windom, of Minnesotf , Blame, Maine, and other shiniDg lights of the revolution party at the North are filling the Congressional record with their lying sensational sectional harangues about the treatment of jthe negro by the Southern whites, it would be well for them to take a glance at the past history of their own inimitable Down-east New England States where so mueb sympathy, on paper, is. expressed for the African race while but seldom anything more tangible than words to ameliorate the sufferings of this unfortunate raee of peo ple is ever forthcoming. It is a little singular circumstance that while the bitter partisans of the class above men tioned are villifying the South and thr Southern people, alleging as the cause of the exodus to Kansas from the Southern States of so many of the colored populaU tion, th- ir ill treatment by the Southern white people, that Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, a woman of intellectual ability and Northern birth, produces iu the dune number of the Xorth Ainerictm Review the following scrap of history in regard to the treatment of the colored race by these veiy same how ii.'jg New England era, I which transpired no longer ago than 18o2, in the little town of Canterbury, h. the Wooden Nutmeg State of Connecticut.; Saj s Mrs St owe : . "Miss. Piudeiice Cram onen (X i)i iv ate i arding nil uiiuei took-Ui Kjhool) toi voting ry, ( lob Tl i eiv'ti b lb !:. tnee :i l1 mi u j i is, m -aiiteroi enterprise was denwuneed the people i this pine-; : p When Che" ,t-:ni opeaed ith tiftetsi or twenty young 2:r l'ni l'h.laiejphia, Boson, New i rk and liovideiice, store keeuers. u itch , miikine with one consent, refused to the school, and supplies lad t be hi ough from expensive distances. The schular. were insulted in the streets ; the door steps and doors were besiiiu aied with filth and the well tilled with the same ; the vil lage doctor refused to visit the sick pupils; aud the trustees of the church lorhade them to set foot hi the building. The house was assaulted by a mob with clubs aud irou bars; they broke the glas of the windows and terrified the inmates Fiually, the State Legislature passed ai act making this school an -illegal enter prise, aud under this act Miss Craudall was imprisoned in the county jai:.'"' Now we do uot endorse the author ol Uncle Tom's Cabin and the woman who would rake up the ashes of the past for the sake of a lhtle notoriety, to scattei tilth of such a character as she threw upon the dcat poet's grave, but we pre sume the North American Review, a standard literary monthly which stands in the front rank of the current literature of this Country, would hardly have pul lished the communication unless there was at least some shadow of truth in tl e historical facts quoted . But let us make another quotation: Now, when a new York merchant got a letter from his lawyer, apprising him that he had taken twenty thousand dol lars worth of negroes as security for his debt, and returned answer to sell and re mit, it was but natural that he should hereafter be very excitable under such teachings, and denounce them as incen diary and fanatical. The bitterness of Southern slave-nolders was tempered by many considerations of kindness for s r vants born in their houses, or upon their estates; but , the Northern slave holdtr traded in men and women whom he nevtr saw, and of whose separations, tears aLd miseries he determined never to hear." And all of this comes from a woman who has been a life long enemy of the South and who might possibly be classed among the "strong minded women of the North; "one who has ,in her literary charac ter, forgotten the sex to which she belongs and assumes a sort of masculine manner in discussing political questions and other current topics of the day; who has been in perfect accord with Wm Lloyd Garri son, Joshua R. Giddings and other ex treme ts of the North in their undying hatred to our section -and r eople. And yet.after the lapse of time and a residence of a few years among the vej-y people whom she has defamed so often, she now comes forward with the publication of her historical facts which inall probability wer in her possession at the very time when she wrote her most famous work "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Time works wondrous ehangtVand makes all things even at last. Mr. Blaine and his coadjutors might look into the past history of their own North ern States and learn some lessons for their future benefit. But we have com to the conclusion that they have about spent themselves and ex hausted their subject of sectionalism and bloody shirt theories at last. We have an abiding faith in the returning good sense of the American people. We believe that they can be humbugged for a seasoD, but we believe further that no one man or set of rnec can stick his finger in their op-ics an 1 keep it sticking there for more than'a dozen yenrs at longest.There is cr tainly bound to be a revolution in this country, but not such a one as the stal warts of the North predict. It will be a revolution of sentiment among tne North ern people, the voting masse ho will retire into the shades of private life, iu due coarse of time, the Congers, Biaines, and other stirrers-up of 6trife and turmoil in this country. They will ail follow little "Yewgeeu" Hale and be put upon the shelf where little Schuyler Colfax and the other political aanctimonius hyprocrites of bis creed are being year by year gath ered in by the great political sexton of the Democratic party and stowed away be yond the hope of e urrection for all time to come. THE BUSINESS OUTLOOK. liy all accounts, says the Baltimore Sun, Lu iiiesa has made a great improve ment in the past few weeks, and this not alone or chiefly in speculative lines. The exchanges last week were surprisingly large, being in fact GO per cent greater than during the corresponding week of last year. Exclusive of stock specula tions the increase in legitimate business exchanges is calculated at 35 per cent., and the volume of business in the first half of May has been larger than in any year since 1873. In fact, to use the po litical catchword of the day, things are "booming." NEW YORK'S T RAMP LAW. The tramp law, which has now passed both Houses of the New York Legiala ture, imposes not less than a year's impris oument on 'all transient persons who rove about from place to place.' The act is so drawn up as to put the burden of proof on the accused pe.son, and under it any strollei can be required to show that he Is not a tramp. Trespass, kindling a fire on the highway or auy promotes without con sent , cany it g firearms, or threatening to do any n jun to any one, are made punish, a V tl in law with two years' niprison injent in qiise ot 'ramps, w hile any iesi(ient oi town, where an offense i committed is eiipowrtTtd to make arrests. TBE 0RIET. The situation in India does not im prove. Anxiety has existed for a long time because of drought in the Punjab, Oude and the Northwest provinces; and although rain has fallen, uneasiness has not beeu comp letely allayed. Of late se rious apprehensions have been excited regarding the crops in the Lower Pro vinces, and in a portion of the Eastern Deccan, not yet recovered from the late (amine, excessive and unseasonable rains first and a plague of rats rext, have des troyed the local harvests. Under these circumstances there is need for the most rigorous economy. Orders have been issued cutting down expenditure on public works, and forbidding the undertaking even of works already authorized, without special instructions. ILLINOIS CONFEDERATES. In connection with the recent dhpute in Washington, as to whether General Logan (now Senator from Illinois) , was ever g?ged in recruiting for the Confederate service, the following may be of iuteiest It is taken from a very interesting article called "Vicksburg During the Siege," written by Edward S. Gregory himself one of the Vicksburg garrison surrendered by Gen. Pemberton which was first printed in the Philadelphia Times. tJn con nection with other articles of like charac ter, it was afterwards published in book form , under the title of "Annals of the War." It seems that at the time of tne surrei -der of Vicksburg, Gen. Logan held hih rank iu the Federal army. It is also equally evident that a short time previous here had been Illinois troops in tht Confederate army, though by w hom recruited does not appear. Can Gen. Logan en ighteu us? Mr. Gregory says": To Logan a division w.s assigned the duty of taking possession of the captured town. Vicksburg. Logan himself stood" on the east portico of the court house aud looked with swelU ing pride and profound gratification on the scene so picturesque and historic. By the by, the fact has never been published, but it is no less true, that a company of Illinois soldiers, on the South ern side, once constituted a part of the Vicksburg garrison, though it went to pieces long before the siege. Some of their unassigned officers I well re collect one named Parker may still have been there. The long talked of plan of laying tele graph wires under ground is soon to be put to the practical teat. In New York the wires are to be laid all over, or under, the east side of the city and up as far as Harlem River. Telegraph, telephone, stock-re porting and other wires will be all put down. They are wound In cloth and carried through ramifying distribu tors that branch all over the city. The scheme was first brought up d .ring the efforts to "bear'' Western Union, and the cry to have the wires down was urged as likely to throw heavy expense on the company. Now that the stock is np higher than some men ever expected to see it the thing is undertaken volunta rily . American Wines. But few persons are aware of the great amount of grapes raised in New Jersey Alfred Speer is known to be the larges. wine grower east of the Rocky Mountairut Mis Port Grape Wine is the best, and is conside-ed by physicians and chemists as the best wine to be procured. It is or dered to Londjn and Paris, where it is becoming very popular among wealthy families. For sale by J. C. Mund.-, P. L Bridgers & Co and Green A Planner ;Apl. l-2w We don't feel certeVtw to which letter of the alphabet ia the fastest, but webav.-seen a deoantef. Boston Poet. Little p'acee, where the people live on fish and strangers, will soon blos som out into fullblown watering places New Orleans Picayune. Hedging: Rtctor And what are your views? Candidate for Curacj 'Well, sir, I am an evangelical high churchman, of liberal opinions.' Punoh A small boy threw a lump of ice at another boy on Royal street and came very near being arrested for carrying congealed weapons. New Orleans Picayune 'Do you call that veal cutlet, wait er?' said a customer. 'Why, it is an insult to every true calf in the coun try.' 'I didn't mean to insult you, sir. ' said the waiter. Mr Howells says he saw an English family stop before Titian's 'John the Baptist,' and heard the father sum up his impression in one sentence, 'Quite my idea of the party's character.' We nominate Hayes for President a id Tilden Vice President on the Re publioan ticket, and Tilden President and Hayes fioe President on the Dem ocratic ticket. We aim to please. Oil City Derrick. Mrs Burton thinks the Koh-i-Moor the cause of England's bad luck, and wants it given to England's greatest enemy. That's right: give it to us Wc'ii hste England like p zen. -t. Alban's Advertiser. Wilcox, Cibbs & Cos., CELEBRATED FERTILIZER, THE MANIPULATED GUANO ! The Best and Cheapest ! j COTTONXiUANO J :o: In offering to you the WILCOV. GlBRS A: CO.'S MAS .'PI! I. VI Ki , another season, we do so tftn most perfbet confidence that uu will fin, BEST AND CHEAPEST FEKT1LIZKK in us ANjO It is no new article, requiring exptimjen'fc to atabli&h Us value, hut baslm fnr vnani with iinhdlitnl'il HU(HS Rfi. (rali.h). it. fvir fniinfv &r tji u . : " J "r-J " " " V : r c v J ui,l a r accepted as the STANDARD FERTILISER. " It has been our study, not to make it EQUAL together but Sl'PEKlOK, UiA our success in these eliorts we reler you to the many of your neighbors who hat,' it, as weil as to the thousands in the South Atlantic otton States. This Guano is so well known that it Is unnecessary tr publish any certificates bu- annex a tew testimonials m our circulars only ironi reamers who have ma.le Srwi tests of it alongside the Peruvian Guano, as showing how it compare with Periiv? Guano, which has heretofore been generally esteemed above all other Fertilizers. Uejwill have only a moderate supply for Bale and would request Planters to m, their orders early. Our Agents are authorized) sell payable in cotton next Fall, jan 29-dAw the MANIPULATED on very favorable ter Aent, Miscellaneous. DISLIKING TO NEWSPAPER ENTER 1ST O A s CONTROVERSY, P. L. BlilDUEKS k t04, Have heretofore iehaiued troin saying anything on the subject ol the Duff Gordon Sherries, AND W. T. Walters & GVs Baker .Whiskey , Both of which they have kept since opei ing, although some of their friends and competitors CLAIM to be Sole Agents. W. T. WALTER S & CO. Refuse to make any one their Agent, re serving the right to sell to whom they pese. By Business Men It is well known that sncharticlcs as the DUFF GORDON SHERRIES, MUM'S CHAMPAGNE, etc., have no Local Agents throughout the country, as they can always be bought much cheaper, in small quanti ties, from second hands, than the Agents can sell at, they being compelled to pro tect the trade of those who buy hundred s of packages at a time. THBST rHE SOLD BY r a aVXV a lie r CAL m C DJ j . 1 M BEWARE oP FOR PARTICULARS 'SWBERoSHV address: WhiteSewing Machine Co. CLEVja-ANpoaro. NEW HIGH BLOOD ! Parsons' Purgative Ph make N w Rich Blood, and will c 'mpleteiy change the blood in the entire system in three months Anv person who will take 1 pill each night from 1 to 12 weeks my be restored to sound health, if such a thing be possible. Sent by mail for 8 letter stamps. I. 8. JOHNSON & i:o., mar 'il 4w Bangor, Me. A GENTS WANTEU-rFor the hest and i Fastest-Selling Pictorial Books and Bi- i b es. Prices reduced 33 per cent. .Nation al Publishing CJo., Philad, Pa. may 21 4w $25 TO $5000 Judiciously invested in Wall Street, lay? the foundation for substan tial fortunes every week, and pays an im mense per centage of profi s by the New Capitalization System of operating in Stocks. Full explanation on application to Adams, Browa A Co., Bankers, 26 Broad St , N. T. may 21-4w WE ARE SURPRISED That our friends, witb their long Business Experience, should have brought forward such a weak point as this, but can now understand, paying package rates to the Agents, why they supposed, on account of the low price at which we were selling the goods, that ours was not the genuine arti cle. Respectfully, and truly, P. L. BKIDGERS & CO., The Diamond 3 forlO cents, Cigars, are all the 'go. The P-R-I-N-C-I-P-E: Cigar is the best iO Cent Cigar Ever broughtjto Wiiinimgton. jfAvNew Lot of them just reosived. P. L. BRIDGERS & GO, may 5 J as. T. IPettewav WILMINGTON, N. IC., JS A.GEXT FOR THE.8ALE OF WILCOX IBBS GO'S Manipulated Ooaao. The beat, cheapest aad moat popular Ooaao offer- e. Wiil take orders for Seuvary at Lnm bartoo. Shorn Heel, Laor nburf, Laurel Hill aad iatsmediatepolati. jaa 2T-dlw DEAR SIR : r Please write for large Illustrated Catalogue of Rifles. Shot Guns. Revolvers. Address Great Western Gun Works, Pitts burg, Pa. may 21-4w BENSON'S CAPCINE PORUS PLASTER See that eaeh plaster has the word C-A-P-C-I-N-E cut throueh it. and insist on having no other. Ask your Pt'ysi cian as to its merits over all otheis. may 214w Furniture ! Furniture ! A. Large Assortment of WALNUT CHAMBER SUITS ! I to be sold at the very bottom prices. Walnut Wardrobes, Sideboards, Extension Tables, Marble Top Tables, Ac, kc., as well as common Chamber Sets, Bedsteads, Chairs and Rockers of all sorts. Looking Glasses, Mirrors, Parlor Suit? Lounges, Shades, Bed ding and everything belonging to a First Class Furniture Establishment. Also, another lot of the celebra ed Genuine Stewart Sewing Machines, a real comfort. For sale at F. A. SCHUTTE'S, 26 and 28 Front and 11 to 15 Dock sts. mhc 10 The New and Popular Boot & Shoe Store 32 MARKET STREET. THE PIONEER OF LOW PRICES N LIFE lh A BOTTLF. The MostfTaluaBTe Medical Diseov ery Knqwfip bo the World No More tfse for Quinine, t alon , s or Mineral Poisons Life for t . Blood, Strength for tlio Nmv . and Health for All. AN OPEN" LETTER TO TBK PUnijl, Believing that br cleansing tU bluoj building up the ct-ndtitution the nul vi, wa ot bani fting di-t-a-e nd bein tn uu . with woakneap -pf, the lungs, cnurrh, ter, much broken down in constitution, Jt , L alter tryni: the bt physicians nd ftju out my moue tor many kisds ol icecic;n advertised without rinding a pernjitnest cu r. 1 bian doctoring myself, uam luedicir-. made from routa and herbs. 1 : . . -1 u r- . oiocovered a wondepfal bittfrj or Blood CI.- ansur, the Cr.t Dottle "I whicu v-(iveu.c nor lite and vigor, and in tune eilected j Km nent cure. 1 was ttee troin catarrh, in iuDj," became strong and sound, being able to itud the moat aevere cold and ezpotare, aud 1 a gained oyer thirty poundj in weight. Fee ing confident that 1 had made a wotideriu, disco ve. -y in mediciM, I prepared a quastitj ot the Root Bitters, and was in the habit ! giving teem away to sick fnead1 aad neigh bors". I iounaThe tnedlclne effected tile moit wonderful cures of all diseases caused troo humors or screfala in the blood, Imprudeocc, Bad' Stomach, Weakness, Kidney )kh, Torpid Liver, kc , kc. The nvwt of mj discovery m this way spread from oneperio: to another until I found my ceil' called upa to supply patients with medice e tar ui wide, and I was induced to establish a lab' atory for compounding and hot tlitg th K' Bitters in lare quantities, and I Dtf 4 ft al ,my time to this business. I was at first backward in presenting ei tlx myself or discovery in this way to tbe pabl c, not being a patent med cii.e man tad wit soialLcapitalf'but ' tn f etti"g bravely oh: thaL Kiace L first, advertised tia eic4t I have been crowded witn orders f.r on drtr gisrs and country dealers, and tbe bundrtd.' ot letters 1 have received from person crii, i prove tht fact that no remedy ever difl m tuucb good in so short a time aod hd M s-BC success as the Root Bitters. In fact, I ' convinced that they miil soon take the K ot all otber medicines in use. ea If :' hundred retail druggists, right hire at in Cleveland, now self Root Bitterf, hb ' whom have already sold over oe tLotuu1 bottles. Root Sitters are strictly a medical pHP ation, such as was used in the good old i.T' of our forefathers, when people w re by some simple root or plant, and 'PP calomel and otheroisons of the lUtr,, kingdom were unknown. Tfiej actatrongly. on thaliver an ' keep tn bowels regular and band " nervous system. hey penetrate eten ? of tbe body, searching out eery i bone and' tissue front tha head to t- 'Jj cleansing and sti engtbening tbe .o springs of life, hence they mnst reart diseases by puriheation and nourUbDenL No matter what your f e'ings or VmV are, what the disease or ailment is, "f ; Bitters. Don't wait until yon are . if you only feel bad or misarab e, u Bitters at once. It mav save yoar Thousands of persons in all Pr e ''LT. country are already using Koo Lt They have saved many lives of c"r Who bad teen given up bv friendsandJ cifttis to die, and have pemaaeoa; T mahv oM chronic cas Vtf? Ca'ttrfn. fa Kheunmtiam, Dyspepsia, d t-f ' , where all other treatments bad i led .. you troubled with sick headache, w dizziness, weakness, bad taste in the n' , ner vousne,aml brekeaUown )a Yxyxt wtll be cur.nl If you take Ko OLD STOCK TO WORK OFF AT ANY PRICE ! All New Goods, selected with a great deal of caie, in accordance with the times. All of mr Goods warranted, of tbe prices : Notice some A Ladv's $1.00. " nice Cloth Buskin, from 50c to A nice Kid or Pebble Tie, from 90c to $1.25. A Gent's nice Box-Toe up to the best. Morocco Hewport Gaiter, from $1.2e let or J Br tad Have vou humors and pimp .,.; - fer - ii. in. no hoalth, strength, and beauty Me ¬ ters. I know that jeal. us phjf.' ery numbug because my discovery . many ol their patients, o i ; .; dwtermm"1"' ;.;,,, my Moot .Bitters as last aa p . - . , reach of all those auffenng tnro- &u world. Sold by. whole-al and if " hT ists and couatrv mck.n?, r' ; j press on receipt ol price, $1 00 per .f"- six bottles 55.00. for eernni. derfol cu es, see mv large clJcaiB(j..H each b .ttte ef medieine. ed aC J youraelf. Horse for Raffle. rpHAT FINE BAT MAKE 8 ALL Y -Ji Trotter. One honored chances at $2 each. M j Ladies' and now complete. Children's Department is Aak fumr imm .Han! A call at my place and a fair eesaparieon are au a Beware of old stock, money fer nothing.JJJ You will spendyour or merf z a. " FRAZfkrt'8 Otf flfTTWH-, Blood Cleanser,and take nosutwm" recommend because be mate" ''...r FKA1ZKK, LTTTJ 0 r Remember, no trouble Stock. Hespect u'i.y. to show m v New Ul.iJ.oij c. ROSENTHAL 33 Market St. Sign of the Little Boot. G. W. 338 Kupenorm.. R w 1 1 riTTHTi'mrrffi: I Is a monthly. Valley." price, f3 71 ZJ-Z4 Hoawiioiu .-niuiuo r ,,,mN. . , may 15-tf C. H. LEGG, Ag't. apl 23 Addnesl. S. Wee4,Tribu Buddii W
The Daily Review (Wilmington, N.C.)
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May 27, 1879, edition 1
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