Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / Oct. 19, 1876, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THR REPOI^TM. J. PBPPR&, { J. T. DARLINOTON, iMd* JWfor. TBURSDA Y7b(rruug'i9riß76. T rVational Ticket. i- - •«» For President of (he United States, SAMUBL J. TILDKT, q f New York. For Viet-President, THOMAS A. HKHDBICKB, • of InditAta, RLBOTOM FOB STAT* AT LAMB, DANIEL Q. FOWLK.of Wake, J AS. M LEACH, of D»MM. Dnrmicr SLSCTOSS. IST. PISTBICT— LOUIS C. LATHAM. ID " —JOHN F. WOOTEN. to " —JOHN 0. STANFORD. 4TH " — J. H. HUSBER. an " -FRANK C. BOBBINS. 9TH •• R.P. WARING. TTH » —WM. B. QLKNN. BTH " ALPHONBO C. AVERY. Ntate Ticket. MVIHOB, ZEBULON B. VANCE, OF MaCKLBWBUBO. LI BUT. OOVRBNOR, THOMAS J. JAR VIS, OF rrrt. ATTOBHBT -GBN BBA L, THOMAS S. KENAN, OF WILSON. BBCBRTABY or STATB, JOSEPH A. ENGELHARD, OF KBW BAHOVBB. TBBASUBRR, JOHN M. WORTS, OF BANDOLFH. AUDITOR, SAMUEL L. LOVE, y OF HATWOOp. BUF'T PUBLIC IXBTBUOTIOH, JAMES C. SCARBOROUGH, OF JOBNBTOR. FOR COHOKBBB— ft/A District, ALFRED M SCALES, OF GUILFORD. THE RECENT MLMCTIOM. The October elections, n for, bin km quite a triumph for the 'aatioo >l Democracy. Georgia, with her eleven electoral rote*, Indiaaa with her IfUea, and West Virginia with her Aw, hare all declared ia favor of refora. The Republicans hare carried Ohio, it ia true, bat no reflect lag Democrat eooid hare expeoted otherwiae. Nr. Hayes sorely would aot be expected to ioaa hia own State, especially when assisted to earry it by the most strenuous sffbtrts of tho Government. Yet, if tbeae Fall elections indicate anything deflnitsly, ia oar opinion Mr. TiMon'a laaassa is Ma ply foreshadowed. And we WBB onr opinion upon the following calculations : Snppoae the Soathern Sutes east their undivided electoral rote for Mr. TIMM, ho wooid then bars ia all 138 rolae only 47 lea than tho number to slset hia. These, with the vales of Indiana, wonld number 163 It it eon iidcfW 9M44as ftlflMjpt bt?>opd doubt that Now York will add her 36 votas to thia Dumber, whioh will IMFSSM it to 188—being 3 mors than tho anmber required to sloot. Yst Mr. TMM m *n Sonth Carolina, and is iiwunnn bm has MVM votas; and it may ho that M or (an others of tho Southern Stain will ho ensvisd by the Bat thTsonth by gaiM ia UaSteLnf Wis eaaia, California, Oregon, aad Now Jaway m nil M aleataral volea Theao bnt wo hstten we will gaia MM rotes from Asm than he win k«e in tho Sooth, aad ia that oaea, if twoosssTal in Now Yorh, Ms eleotioa will ho sastaht. How ever, last yenr Cueasuliart veSod * Dem ocratic majority in her Btate iles*iin of 6,638, and in 1874 tho RepahßonM ware defeated by a majority of 1,8t>9, and the year before that aho isiii ap • Dsneo orotie majority of 1,8TB; thsnfrn, wo oan positively oount ou the aaltaM S i her ail rotes. V But tb« people of the Bonth mnsl re member th it everything depends upon faithful labor and untirinj* effort An itaTduaMn n. The' Republics of the North have eiilravored to clini North Carolina; bat in thia they an doomed to oertain diaappointmcot. Onr pnoplo can ao longer be deceived. They real iae what Radioaliam has done for them, what rain k has wrought, what poverty it has n tailed They will M longer allow themselves to bo delated, robbed and impoverished, when refbra nad prosperity ia n»w within their ptap. Soath CaroliM, too, arising from tho dost aad asbcu ot enforosd humility, enters tbs polities! arena, asid, eatobiag tho inapiration of hope, proadiy takoi her place in the ooatest. She haa frit the heel »f tho tyrant; aha hn experi enced a degradatioa and oppramion that only Radioaliam could have inflicted. Had Sherman wreathed the State in funeral flames, it wonld have been an act of mercy compared with subsequent misrule. Bat, true to .by afivalroas spirit, Sonth Carolina will in November make an earnest effort to hurl from power tho ignorant and brutal authors of her greatest ills, aad install in their plaoae thoee of her owa sons who will restore la her her former proapssily. Msy Heaven help her ia thia noble ef fort ! And lot M all labor ia tho grand and patriotic week of political pariflsatioa. Let M endeavor to inaugurate M era af reform, of honesty, of economy, of pros perity, and of pases aad good wiU to ward all men. Lot us defeat onr polk ieal oppoaeata for tho good of our eoaaaoaaoaatry, and then invite them to forgot their enmity and become oar frieada. Lot Tildoa's olive hranoh of Peace take tho (Inn of tho Admiaietra tion'a blood stained shirt; Ist ths pros poet of s geoains unity drive away the rapalsivs details of tho post; Ist notions bary their malice aad haired; aad lot oar people, irrespective of nee, creed or ooodilkwi. Baited ia A CODBOA dvrttnj, labor for the good of ths nation. Pence nad tranquility is what the Boath sssat nssds, and we OM never prosper nndor other conditions. Tho Republican party exists oaly through malios, sostional hatred, and politinl outrage. A failure ia tho past, it prom isss M hope ia tho future. Its host and truest pea all ovo* tho oaontey hfve renonand their sllegiaan through mo tives of the parcel patriotism, sod have carolled their a ansae aador the baaasr of Ttides aad Reform. Ths day of oar dclivsranes is breaking; if wo am oaly trae to oanohm, bettor timet an now R hand OUB BOOK TABU. The America* Farmer for October is fall, as Matt, of varied aad aseful matters suited to every farmer desirous of improvement in his profession. This old agricultural jonrnal treats exclMive ly on farm aad garden topiea, aod is not givra np to subjects not connected di rectly with rani life, all the hranohoa of whioh are thoroughly oared for. No farmer, on any scale however large or Mall, hat wonld flnd it to his iatsrsst to subscribe for snd read this standard periodical, the snbseriptioß of whioh is $1.60 a year, or anly 91 eaeh to clubs of Ave or aaore. She publishers, Sam'l Saada t Bon, Haltimors, offer to soad all MW subscribers, whether coming singly or ia olabs, tho lest throe samben of this yen, free. Mr. D McNeill, Bhoe-H«el P. 0, Bob coon C*., N. C., is oorrappadiag editor nad agent for the Former for North aad Boath aroliaa. Peterson's Magazine for November ia M oar tthto, ttnaliff ■* RkMa • his book. Tbs priMipal stosl plate, "laasnan," ia from an original piotan by thn world-fraons srtist, Bir JeshM Reynolds. A promi nent fonlivu of this HagMtM is its capp right Novelettes, two of which Sf§Sn ia this aaahsr, "Mia Ah- Flirtation n br V«aav Hodtrun Barastt, and "The Daya of Bevaaty -Bix," by Mrs. Ann S Blepheas, both MM MmgMAB IA |ka MfrlittMd »«'J FFRIMIRPI ally! The priM of this Maganiae is bat Mw deltava a yen Ths.Prospeetus for 18T7 is pablished with this aaahn, sad walnd that ths prioss la slabs we astoaishingly low» SpeoiaMS of the MagasiM ere aoat, grata, if written for. Addren Charles J. Peteraon, 30fl Ohest nut street, Philadelphia, Pa. f Snob real revival of tasiasa n pwr tioM of the eoaaljy sn sxpsrieaeing is saasnd hp tha impetM gknaaataade ia she Isawsiii Snm off the saw*. Rellevs ths south of the foar of farther Radical robbery aad oppreaaioo, and the 1 country will rej iee in a period of true ' prosperity. VAOkirOTOHr IJETTBH. [from Our Own Correspondent. J WASHINGTON, D. 0., 1 f Oct. 12, 1876. ) The election in Colorado recently went Republican bj a ■mall majority, and tbe Republican papers arc in truly jubilant. The fact ia that neither Col orda nor Weat Virginia, the one with five alsctoral Votes and the other with three, hare ever received much WMMIW tioa in the Oe»ober elections—the seal and aotivity of both partiee being con centrated la Indiana and Ohio. The Territory of Colorado was habitually Republican tnm 1862 to 1872, jlith f not sating majorities. A Republican delegate lothe House of Representativee waa ehoaen Ira tinea ooaaeoutively. In 1874, the tidal vara swept away the aanal majority and Thornaa N. Fateiaon waa eleoted by n Democratic of 2,163. The Republicans were split into faetiona that year and pnhi the Aty of diviatoa. All the Federal oM are af eonrae, held by Bspuhtteaal ußfrkfe ■•■t prononneed type, and the patron age whieh atwaya counts so largely in a Territory baa of aenisu been aaed foita ntmoat extent. The lergeet total rate af Colorado only reeehss 16,668, and n oonaiderable part of the population eoa sietaof Mexicans who ean be boaght and aoM like cattle on election day. If the Democracy bare any, even the leaet, regret lor the loas of Colorado Ikey hare apecial canae to rejotoe at Ikn pros pect of affairs in New York. The nn many nnd anti-Tammany partiaa in the city whieb at one tiaac threatened djMiter to the Deasoerntin party (a that Stata bare all been naaieebly adjusted, and now, that the party will preaent a solid front in November, bnt little fear need be entertained of the result.. The Re publican preaa and the horde of stamp speakers of that political complexion are making a territe outcry agaiaat the Democratic House in relation to Son th ere War Claims. The New York Stm says Henry H. Smith, who *aa clerk nf the Committee on War Claims af both the Forty second and Fortythird Coo gremes, and ■ now the general clerk of the Hocee, baa, after a earefnl examina tion of the official records, made a state ment of the faet» in regard to the Southern claima whtyh were printed tc the Forty-eeeond, v Forty-i»tijF*B* Forty fourth Congress- Of the one hundred and forty biUa which have been paraded aa having been introdaced by Democratic Reprcmtativaa in the present Congress, it appeara that one handrad and nineteen ire old claims whieh have been pending before the Forty-reeoud and Forty-third Congreaa sa, and that the greater part or theee claima are exactly aimilar to those claims whieh have already been paid by the Republican Congressea and by the War and Treasury Departments in the last ten years. It also appeara that ahp number Of theee claims were introduced by Republican members aa welt from the South aa from the North. Petitions saw pwasattd by Mr. Blaine and other mambaaa Area Maine, covering exactly Much ia aow sari by the pram, and ew the atoaap, of what amy be dene by cither bowse in regard to the soantiag be eloce. Tbeae comments are predicted Cn the eajpoeitien cf the ninatacath joint rule being stiM in force. This rule gave the power to either Haass to re ject the veto cf nay doubtful State.— The p res sat Howe took the view tbnt tfcia Joint rseelwuiia mast be re wurtii by each ans sanding Congrem. and early is the laatamafcaaeat tn the Bennto a ' .ii. .Mt.-t i.ail^iim >dnt vwlce eff Mia eww Mi M I, This resolution Ify on toe table dike Stoate and there ie no dssbt aknat it, the whole newer over- the wan tin | af the electori! vote W remitted, ebcstntely, to the bands of the president of the Senate, li ia to be hoped, however, that the vote ia all the States will be to decisive, one way or the other, thai it will leave ne room lor a difference of opiaion The election *|u Georgia, whieh took place on the sth, waa for governor, leg ialatare and county ofioers. The Deam eratic candidate for governor waa Alfred 8. Colquitt, and the Republican nomi aee waa Jonntknu Norcrote. The Democrats had a majority of MB on joint ballot in the last legislature In 1872 the vote in that State for President was Greeley 89,278, Grant 62,715; , Dcmocratie majority 17,563 In 1874 the vote (or Congressmen was Democrats 93,847, Republicans 38,161; Democratic majority 60,186 _ _D«t ia- MM Th aM n■■ m I iailh. flfrmim AMnKi ■IVJWPBFW"* VUM ovgni | 1 to aitend to having his name registered. It will be too Ute in a few dy*. To tke People of Wake County: On the ,11th day of Soptember, 1876, f Was nominated by the Republicans of Wake county for the honae of represenU tivea of North Caroliaa, and ainoe that time I have endeavored to give the matter my amat serioua thought, with the following conclusions: I am satiafted that the interests of my people requite a change in the adminis tration of the government and the sys tem of persecution inaugurated by the Rcpnblioaa party ia productive of maoh evil ead distrecs. 1 believe oar eonatry to be prneperoaa the people Mat be at peace with oac aaother, and the Republican party in atriving to promote diaoord ia destroy iog our proepcrity. My own people among whom I waa bora and raised aad with whom when I die I hope to be buried need my aams tanae, and daairing to promote their interact, which ia my owa, I feel it to bn my daty to sever my connection with the Republican party aad affiliate with the Democratic party of the oonntry which ia aeeking reform aad reconcilia tion. J. P. H. AHA us. Vanning with Uplifted Sword. The enormona preparations for war whieb the great powera of Europe have made are the ableat counselors of peace. The nations kaow that a ooafliot once begun will be mora terrible than any in ancient or modem history, and that vie tory will of neceaaitp bring with it enor morn losses. Therefore they all dread to lake the frtal atep that will plunge all eeatoca Europe into war. AU the recoarcea of aeienee have been applied to of the fight ing force of the Russian, Austrian and German armiaa> Theapdcra faciiitie« for rapid traocportatioaof troop* btfi /or supplying tbem with aubsiateaoo and manitions of w*r, exoncd what could bare been thought possible fifty years ago. It ia easier now to victual a half million of troops than it waa a oentury ago to victual sixty thousand The populations of all the great nations nave increased vastly in tha last three or four aspscpti nii snii the foioe of fighting material ia thna enormously in crcaacd. Russia haa over two tuitions of aten now on n war footing. The Ger man empire ean put into field 1,200,000 men; Aastria, 1,100,000. The armies of Englnnd are almost insignificant in oowparieon with theee; bat her anvy ia nf immsnee strength. Thna it is not impaaaible that four nnd a half million 1 nf mea may fce arrayed against each other, armed with the la teat weapons of preoisioa, led by akillful oftoera, and fighting for aapremaoy, territory and aelfcxiaLeeee, and possibly doubly em biMsrni by race hatred aad religious faaatiaiam. Such a praapeat aa thia may well make the grant powers pa ate with apliftod a word.— Baltimore G:- xette. A Word to the" Workingmnn. What party haa controlled the affairs of the nation for the peat sixteen yeais f The Rndiaal party. Who haa levied oolWcted Mormom uxci, given away »H|iana of acree of onr public pißfldfff'i ill# PltioDll sfaaadered onr W»ma, paralysed oar hdtotoiaa, doeed mm miaca, rolling milla, furnaces, forgaa aad workshop#, aad brought onr people to starvation, banhruptey aad rata; thrown t booms da of haacat men oat of work and baniahed them from their homes to ''tramp" upon every nnd highway in the land in pursuit of employment? Is it not the BapakVaNfc party that ia rcapoaaible for all tkia atogantioa ia bsaiasm; for aW tkii miaary and mm t Shall we give tkia party whieh haa beoa guilty of theee crimes, nf tkia aatrag»aa career, aaew taaaa cf pamerT Shall we vote for Hayes nnd Wheeler and tbua perj etwatc Aa aafpacf Gmatiara I ikali went est like wiae men aad swte with the army cf reform that is aow marching aa nadar the lenderakip af tkato fimrlecn, galinnt nnd leaders Tilden and Hendricks? There ie bat one eeenpe from oar preaent diffi culty ; there ie but one rood whioh will lend no est of war fenrfnl, condition, bat oaa ccarsa M for at to parctm, aad that ia to vato for Tildaa aad Headrieka. Business and working asea, shall we not do tkia, aad achieve a victory decisive nnd comptetc? i" In the event of the election nf Tilden mi- Bsadriskc, a new sra will dawa M, wy rw^c, act the is laborera and artmaaa n avcry vocation and nchiag Vato for Tildeu, I ration of oniirimlidhh>»kliyl * general revival of onatneM.— Wilmington I Journal. Sfvcry Tas-Payer Bhoald Vote for Wbcrfcnr the Rkdieal party baa had the ascaa&ut in Eastorn ditnties, waste fulness, extravagance, higli taxec and miaapplication of funds have naturally . followed. Wbntovcr party dominancy has passed from Radloal bands into the hands of Demourata in the Eastern eountica, retrenchment, enrcM raving, greatly reduoed taxec. and a rigid expeaditurs of the public fuodaimvc resulted. We esn remember no exoepticn to tbe rule that applies to many esuatias. Many of the Eastern counties still remain in tbe peseasioa of the Radicals, and upon tbe adoption of the ansead ments to the Caaby Constitution depends the relief of the people of thoao heavily burdened and oppressed eountica. Tha West should reatember this. Tbe peo ple of that section may not feel very greatly tbe serious inconveniences that the cumbrous machinery de vised by carpet-bag ingenuity, nor, it aooy be, have they auffered very muoh from outrages that hare been permitted or authorised by the inatrament that waa forced upon the people of North Carolina by soldier-strap power, bat they should know that onr sections have not been ao fortunate. Wbilat the West may bare enjoyed the comforts of rest and the sunshine of peaoe, tbe people of many Eastern and Central eoentice have been worried and disgusted and afmoet driven to d»»ptir by unfaithful nnd cor rupt officiate who bare wasted tbe cub stance of the toiling tax payers, and have rrduced the credit of tha counties so low that their paper is hawked about the street* at a shameful dm- I count. Tkat it may be teen bow important it is that reform and retrenchment abould pervade our home affoira, let na oitc the oonn'j L I" Edgecoml". one of thoeelarge rich countiec of the State that are ex cellontly cultivate.!. In 1874, th* county tax amounted to 650.000. In 1875, it waa reduced to 135,000, and in 1876, it was 630 000 Bear in mind that the State tax for the oounty aver apftt about 925,000 annually Here in 1876 we find the people of that count) pa)in« : n Sta a and oounty taxes the ent'rmonti sum of 655,000. Is it a mat ter for surprise when we arc told that 1(3 order a will not sell for more tT.A fifty or sixfy cenu in the dollar? Ts it any enbject of wonder when we iearn that the honest laboring men of ifint county are anxiuuj for a cbai-ge, and are i iie unwavering friends of the constitutional aa.eudnients ? The R.tlei-jh Sentinel tays tliat each poor pereon maintained by tbe oounty. coats 6300—eimgh to b »rd them at a first olasa hot 1. It guys also that 66,- 480.42 waa expended ia one year to maintain the prieonera in jail. The miecellsoeoua expcncea of the eoaaty under the preeions Radical rale amounted to the mug little fortune of 66,331.17. Who will aot join Vance and Jarvis in their rfforta to save the State, and bring pence and prosperity upon the people ? Let every tax-payer vote for the ameodmeata. It ia n grant and imperative doty.— Wilmington Star. ~~ Thalairidimßd Tbe incendiary oourse of Jadge BeUle in bio oanvsaa with Gov. Vance exhibits the bad manners and the worse policy of tbe Radloal eandidnte to a light aot at all tattering to the soberer lenders of that party in this Stnto and elsewhere, who kave ludicroualy built np bopea of carry iag the election. At Charlotte the judge, who ougkt to kave learned kow to do better even on tbe supremo court beach, behaved in a manner that would have done discredit, to a fish monger in a market town. He foiled atterly to oontravert Vance's arguments, aad railed at him furiously. Tkia oourse of Judge Settle ie aot oaly diagraceful, bat it ia aa anwiae as aay that could have beea adopted. He will alieaate every reapec. table man ia bis party by peraieting ia it. Already haa be caused defections I It show* that the bottom is fklliag oat , of bis can vase. His cause ia weakening , fearfully when it becomes neoeaaary to stir np alneping paoaions, and enter to i the lowest nppetitcc of bit followers. All ■ wise men nnd nil deocnt men repudiate I auoh utterances aa he haa aeveral times j given expreesion to. The pereon of lowest intelligence ia tbe Republican i pnrty knoas that neither tbe Democratic i pnrty in North Carolina nmr nny other party tkat eaista, or tkat eon Id exist 1 here, ia aompaaed of lenda of hell. Yet | Judge Battle has employed that identical i language ia characterising tka *Demo i mats cf North Carolina. Judge Settle • was ones rcapccted in tbia Btoto for lia ; intelligence. . Has becomin|j a Mio.l ! otndidate for oßoe caused bitn to lote hit will wUk Wit telf tmpd 1 It would appear tfct in %\» has lout all ooutrol «f himself. Tba waning ,of his fortuneeWy aapsr antMmbitter bita toward* those who from principle W sojiport bim, but W baa DO right to tarn the anna into a fiab brawl or a mob. There ia something in the sober sense of the Nortb Carolina public that will teaeb him MUSTS if brand so rachlsasly without eeorohing hia hanfri Wihnmyto* Star, NEW# or th« wm. BTATB NIWB. Edgecombe's sotton orop ia above tbs average. Tbe Oxford orphaa a*ylem ia la groat aeod of heir. I Lenoir county la patting oa airs over bsr Ine tobacco. Tubaeeo bars burning prevaila ia epi demic form all orer the State. Snow (*ll Jf • considerable depth ia the western port ef tie Bas» recently. > Col Joha A. Qtlaser, of Greensboro, had his pocket picked or §BO at tbe Cea tennial. Tbe Wilmington Star reporte a Wa ry freight bueinese on all tbe railroads. 1 of that region. Under Radical laaaeiering, a wooden 1 fenee arouad the Qranrillc oounty court ' house cost 12,000. Messrs W. T. Bleekwell * Co., of ; Durham, N. 0., receired aa award for . the fineat display of tobaoeo oa exhibi tion at |ba Ceutsaaiel A riot between draaken Irishmen, nativee, negroes and soldiers, took place in recently, nnd ss the Mayor was sick snd the town oonetable bad re signed, the riotera fought uatil they were content. Tho AsheviHe Cltiaen ssys : Tbe bard ! times disclose autay extraordinary foots. . A newly married eoaplo were foot J up town, who lived two weeks on broad ana ' whisky. She ate the broad aad be ' drank tbe wbiaky. GENERAL HEWS. i Gen. Hraxton Bragg's life was iusared I for $40,000. The Douineratis Majority ia Georgii t is eighty thousand at )ea>: The price of corn in Texas is t n vents per bushel, tbe purobaser to gather it- New York has subscribed $23,814 for Sa -*nn»h and Brunswick yellow lever aoffe-i ra. i r Geu. Croik sa>Uhnt activa operations against ltd Indians will begin in about : thirty du)s. Over $19,000,000 of silver baa been 1 pwid out siaoe April. Two millions re > uiain in tbe treasury. Tbe receipts of tbe Centanaial Exhi -1 bit ion thus far bare been orer oue t million fire thousand dollars. 1 Germany is about to follow the ax ample of America and Franee aad bold i a groat iateroatioaal exhibition, i It ia estimated by tbe Western Giaa gera that tbe eurpiaa wheat orop this , season will amount to 600,000 tons. | Abundant aora, wheat, potato aad fruit crop ia Sbeamadoa* oounty, Va; heavy orop of amet, and eoasequeat pro | fusioa of paa. Tbe entire oeffm crop of tbe world 1 last year waa 900,000,000 pounds of ' which tbe United Btatea imported over I 300,000,000 poaada. Tbe Bevaaaab Now says tbe para blooded aegro is not a It subject for yellow forer. Those who have died . from It bare invariably baa* persons ef ( mixed blood. F POLITICAL NEWS. ' Goorgia and Connecticut have gone f Democratic by burge majorities. There la » suspicion that tbe admin r istratioa, after all, will Ml dare l»at , tempt t« earry the slectioao isi tbe South , with the bayoaet. k Tbe Charleston Mews and Courier f says tbatlba mMtsatrf Saatb Caroline mast earry arms so laag aa they are left 1 to tbe anaad mercy of their former » sis«B3ffC4 a YAa ' A colored mea living Bear Murfrees * boro, N. C., says be bse found oat "the ■ awe you make tbe wbtta poor, the I more you make the colored maa poor."— 8o be vetoa tbe DeaMeratia ticket hereafter. a g The Petersburg Judex-Appeal says: . North Caroline is eoaefsred to be so oertaia for Yanoe and TUfca.llH €eo. ? Leach, one of the atoata« a* large, baa II crooned over iate Seatb Carolina to lend 0 a helping head to Gen Bamptoa. 1 (Ida; isn't It; that all tba wbiaky eon • victs, la and aat ef Jail, «*ppaM tie ad • ministration and clamor for tbe iboeete f of the typubiieaa ticket at loudly as , before tbey were oonvioted f Suob loy alty wea never kef see eeaa. Truly, 0 there's honor among thieves. [ Tbe Yiakabufi H*** paps: The . oolured r ters are not isgirtsrißg la any * greet sateut ia tk. coaMry Thsf eeam to bave become tired of polWea. Aa wa i- heard one of them nahik jaeterday, e tbey are more inters*ad fc J flat-of oo! tun tbaa ia tba p«AtM ot Haacnaheeleror anytHhermmi. We 1 Lope tbey will be sensible «««> » e this busy season of cotton piekiag to let il politico sloue sad eMead 40 'be croja.
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 19, 1876, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75