!L.L. ..--J :. -. ; : ' . '', 'l f . , - " 1 . ' 5' 1 I ! I ' , . I , i TA ' I . lift 1 '' ' '-1 ' 1 u ; un "1 ' .i.j j, 1 1.1. j 1 '.',! rrmmTmmrm 7 I (it zfr w 11 II "t ' 11 II II U, S II m Jl ak I JJ aw II U II SV II WL IB J II III II Hi II II II II l -1 A II II r H . II m I II I II I II Established in 1821. - ; ; GEEENSB0E0,1 N. C., WEDNESDAY, JULY-13, 1881. .- i !-..'' - , t j IV. . i It Mi t : - !., - I j. , ... , , . 4 . -L ; J t I5CXD Wuiit AT (jitciiN'Hiioizo. M". c ' 0 oa Sooth Elm Si. ! ij-TBjtwitvirpooalaoopT $t-e ' u. bosi : 59 crxu lor ii.rr aaoatX tee i XirATKtOTiCv:4-lDtocTiIW '.fia North Caroi-aa. luomUooabUrit ; tsecf the fcxnt ectir and i&ueilifrttt per- lwYjiBo .2 bo3 BOj mo I 1 jr. $x.i sir .$1.00 ia.w ixojo fisjo IJH 4 01' C0UlO.CC 1S.00 20 00 2.:. c.oo'io.oo 12.00 3 IX 7.00U2.CO l.VOO 20.00 S4.00 30 00 30 00 34.00 A if)- gCvlli.00 20 00 f tV t2 00 I t.VO if I 00 lOtV .fJU-.'iJ.OC.WOC 43 00 60.00 49.001 GS.00 ei-OC 110.00 - jlS.Cv tX:4J.(i'? CO 1:4.00 rc!aJ BAttora li eanta par Lisa for first 10 rrau jver Una for aack aat K;Bt lnrtiua. . X AJvrUt tseot lcrtI for leaa lba J j:t.wbt lTTtimraU pajabXa la aJ . xMimi y'J aJ'artiaenianta qaarterlj r trJtr. tlx IT. MaeiatxaUt' t' f ' a mdmmct. ') f rc.l rt- f Joubla tola ma adrer- Creensboro Business Directory 4grlru!tural Inipleoicnti, Ilardirare. Jtc. W.H-'f"''J CoSooih Elm ; - iiaokaund Matlonerj. llanklnr Houses. Xi-al cf CreosUr & Elm fit Urj c;ouU. Ilaots, Mioea, A.C. ' Jul til LMltru "W. 3. C,:M. Wt Market at, E.EtI,Eat ilarsjlat. W.2. Marraj, Et Market aU . Irugglats, Ctc V.C, frtr A Cck. Sath Elaa at. Irofrional Cards. SVv k FrC, A .trn At La w. ; . irlrj. Mltrr-ware, Etc J4 CLASibriiain Sooth Elm at lilialtaitleund Retail Grvcers :tJLC Sooth Elm aU Fruit Trees, Tines, Ax. 'J. LtiMiVy, Fomda Hill Xoraeriea .r ilu Cilj, . Jabber la .Notions, Jtc. J V Sect A. Co Soath Elm et. LiT !cnools. Ja, II. b.t.jrd ! arid ali. P.LVk. i: Eat Market Street. Ridirnand Business Directory. Wtttrale Urocers, Ax. XV: i M:::. X3;h aad Dock 81 Caer.sboro PostOlXsa Directory 1 rva a. iaar. at V iM a M and 8 17 rs "Ham aad JWra 3iiK and 7i7rs 5 3t a M aad 37 ra 7 3.1 r m 9 40M '.1 - aavr . . ' - r Uijrx utdondavbyOrM I . w . a mm m. m. ait-se s V 1 B I a l htf, k tf.i T.-lAr aad v .s, . ar. VVi'ra aaJ SAt'i're .a 6am 6r m ar. tt a.-Uaje l'r't Suiar4aja by 6 r m at tf a before de- "XI! .: W 3J savia'et "f ..T.r. l-Sf ffja r4 w)li!, ' t HA.U. J. D WiirTK. r. aad r )uilkoai) tJiiticcrroit'v Ue'aLowa the rsnalng t ?( i to aad froas Grveoa- tat U;:rvii: tzcH "r xu rtttxa aatutoaD- ssj: " I-r .lit. .... nd. K-r K, ciuud. uhoUSi SalLkoaD. V; r - r CrUtta. 9 4 1 j t;f f;i.,t G:.lWro and I , .,i p m aad 7,S7 I ; ,- '-!.V-ra aad iliV;. v.O a m aad 6,21 s-urn r jr. c aaiuiaaD. U t'41 f, , t -r.t- ( ca S. .! tn, a fuew 7.30 io.uu p V W SCHOOL OilLILNiiiOO.X.C. -a . .j i, i.f. A., apply le JOf.N If DILLACD, LOltOiT r D1CJL loO lis - ( - - 4 -. ! i -It"?- un m. scott. w alias r. caxdwxix SCOTT Jfc CALDWELL. GEZENSBOEO.N. C. WILL practice la the Reverter Cartel Gei2XrLJJeaaAe, Raadolciu Darid eon, Fererth, Iowaf lre!:i ud Meeklea. mu. AJa la tbe Supreme Onrt el tie Suit; la the Federal Cesrt at Orubn and feutarrllle. La Beakriptj,aa4 IB eovrte SpeeiAl Attention tint te loans of aaoae eaUortirAge aad ether eeearitiea. i.ellrlj. Jl B. SOTD. JXO. W. AXBKXTSOX. J BOYD & ALBERTS ON. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OrJU, y. C. Fadaral CoarU. rrftctio la lha SUU u4 J. 12 lS3l-Ini. 3ZL ZD. fcTX'JjJKIT-iH ATTOUXEr JL T L A W 111 en Poixr, N. C. Will practlea ia But aad Fadaral Co art. 17 Collactloot SpacialtjCS Dm. X 1379 lrS95- IL. K. Crfc) 'Zespectfulli orrzss ins PROFESSIONAL SERVICES to tW Citizen cf Greensboro. . FEES THE 8 AXE AS THOSE Chxxel by other Practicing PkiticuMM of tk4 City. , ... S5g A. W aB STOTE, 3oasa Fumbling Goods Fan? Uy Orooerles, avaofaatarer of TIN WARE Koofin t CoUerin W. R. 3IURRAY Is exhibiting an unusually Large and attractive Stock of Spring and Summer Good FINE DRESS GOODS A Iarre lot of Fancy Lawns, Prints, Cambrics and White Goods that, is well worth your . e special attention and whicn you should not fail to see before buying. Ladies fine Shoes and Fancy Slip- pcrs, .Mens new styie iiais, Ready-Madr clothing a good stock of New and Beautiful W all Paper, Linen and Paper Shades. First class Goods Cheap for Cash. See and be convinced. Greeaaboro, X. C loril 23rd. tf Call on J.F.YATES SCo. t "Vof CWvex OttOCtTVt, F13IILY FLOUR A SPEC11LTY. Wa keep tba State. bat made la the United Ja!th d2 W. J. BLACKBURN with W. E. BEATXL, RETAIL DEALER IX STAPLE Dry Good. Ilata. Boota, Shoes, ?oUona, Hardware, Croe aery, uiaaaware, nooaeo Ware. Tinware, Fowder, Sbot, Kopea, Axle Greaea. Table Oil Clolba.8oapa, A1a- dta Oil: Groeeriee oaaialIng la eogar. Coffee Spioea, FepTr. Baking powders. Alo TobAcoo aod Cigars. Having boa fct strictly xor c-, l am rreoared to orTrr tbeta at Law rricea -iiK.r at h r Ilartar. (lire me a call . baTior.-EAat Market atreet w . aarwAABi Grvenaboro. N. C IC.e. 4,180. Valuable City Property Parties dMlrinir to po rebate lota fur the rtioaef Cotto r Tebaeco xacloriee. Tobacco WarkooM, ar dwelling ia the CITY OF GREENSBORO, weaid do well to call oa the aaderaJgaed. I bareaereral Terr desirable lota well la. eaied for tba purpoea aaaaed which I will mil at reaaable Bgsrea: and apea aaay term. Craca P. MetdkHAIU Grveoebvro.N.C Jaaa i. lSdl-da-wlw THE OBIGLNAL AND Genuine Durham Long Cut, Durham Cut Plug, AND DURHAM TWIST. Alea Sitting Bull Sa:HufjTo-wc3 Are Maaoraerorad roly ay E- n. POGUX. Darbam, S. C Yor ea'e bv all daln ia CrMoeboeo. April Vi-l ... L. MEETING OF TRUSTEES OF THE UNIVERSITY. VI era will be a catiag af tba Trustee of (be toriT f North Carolina, ia tba Execativa Oea, ia Ealeigh. aa Tnadar. lb Uth Jalr. LJU. at 4 a'elock p Ji at -hich a Profeaadr U lateral Hiatary will be choaea la tba place ml Dr. V. W. tiatooda. reel coed a eeeoaet of 111- health. Appltcatioae abenld be addreaaed 1 Jslj Sf dw 2-w. Chapel HULK, a I TTV Crow Old. Aa w fro old oar jestarjaja 8a rery dim aoddlstaDt; Wa frrp, aa taeogb la drkeoad waja, Tbreofh all that ia axlatoot. Yet tba tar off da a ahine bright and clear W to aans tbatlooc bave faded. And faoea dead em rrjrlj Beer Ta iboaa tbal life baa abaded. Aa wa grow old or tear are few For frienda moat late! lakeo, Bat Call aa fall tba u miner dew From roaea ligbtlj abakea Wbea aoma ebaoo word or Idleitraln Tbeeorda of tnetoor aweeplos; Uolock tba fioodgaiee of oar pat a For tboea wbo ungbt oa werpludr. ' Aa wa crow old ear aaiile are rare To tboea wbo greet aa dill. (Jr. If aoma living caeca wtar The looka, tba beam ao gailr. From ejea loo cloeedwarad we ahoald amile ' i 1 ; Ia aciwtr to their wool ok Tie but tba paat that ahine tba while ' Oar power to am lie renewing. ' 1 i f I ." Aa wa grow old oar dreamt at sight Are barer of tba morrow ; Tber eoaae with raaiabed pleaeara bright Or dark wiia aldea aorrow. Aad wbeo wa wake tba aamaa wa aaj Are not af any morula ( j Bat of tboea la aoma long dead day : Paaaed throngs life'a aaniM portala. VfM. . Cauzaox. .HaUotte'M .Xliserrre. When the lion eats graaa like the ox.' And the Etbioar worm awallewa tbewbale Whan tarrapina kail woolen aocka, Aad the bare is onlraa by the auail, When aerpenta walk aprigbt ss mm, And doodle bags travel like ftogs; When, the gTaaabopper fede on the hen, And fealLeie are fand upon bogs ; ( Wbeo Thomas cate awixa la the air. And alephaata rooet apon treee ; Wbea lneecta ia Samcaer are rare. Aad eaaff neree maka people aaeeie , When fishes eretp orer dry lende, . Aad Bales on vlocipcdts ride ; Wbeo faxes lay gg in the sacd. And women ia drea take do pride ; ' Wbeo Datcbmeo no lorfrer drink bwr, And girle get ta preatnaug ea time ; ben billy-goala ball from tie rear. And treeoa no losger ie crime ; Wbeo the bamming bird breye like the aa. And potato bags eiog like the lark ; Wbea plowaharee are made eat of glaaa, Aad fleaa can be canMht in the dark ; Wbea gee-meter a eeaaa to tell liee, i And tba cow jampeth orer the moon : When 1'ankea toreake pniapkio pie. Aad tha dUb rnnaeth alter the apvon , Wbeo atrvaaa to tba foantaina flaw bacs. And Limbarger emelle like cologne ; Wbea tha akia of the white nian torn black, ' And the heerta of Virginlaas lo atone Not till tkea will they fallow the track Of thy treachery Billy Uabooe. CkHotLrriUt LkrenicU. Damascus. Damascus is the oldest city io the world. Tyre mad Uidoa'bave cram bled on the shore; Bsalbve la a tain; Palmyra is buried iin a dea ert; Nineveh aod .lUbjlon have disappeared from j the I Tigris and Enphrates, Damascus reciaius what it waa be lore the dajs of Abraham a centre of trade aod travel ud isle of verdore in the deoert ; Ma presidential capital V with martial and tacred associations exteudiogj tbroagb thirty ceDtoriea. It was near Damascus that Saal of Tarsus saw the licht above the brighter! of the son : the street which is call ed Strait, io which It wa said " he lrajed,w still roos throagb the city. The caravan comes aud goes aa it did a thoasaod years ago; there is still the shies, the ass, aod toe wa ter wheel; the merchant of the Euphrates and the Mediterranean till occupy the streets with the multitude of their wa'e8.n The city which Mahomet sorveved from a neighboring height, j and was afraid to eater, u, becaatie it was given to man to have bat one para dise, and for Lis part he was re. solved not to have it io this world," is to-day what Jaliaa called the "Eje of the East," as it was, io the time ol Isaiah, the bead ot Syria." , u ' M From Damaicas came the Dam son or biae plums, aad the delicious j apricot of Portugal, called damas co; damask, oar beautiful fabiic ol cotton and silk, with 'vines and flowers raked upon a nmootb, bright ground ; the) damask -rose introduced Into England ia the time of Iieory VIII; the Damas- cos blade, so famous thei world over for its keen edge and' wonderfal elasticitv. the secret of whose- man- nfacture was lost when Tamerlane mi w a carried tbe artist into Persia ; and that beautiful art of inlaying wood aod ateel with gold and silver, m kind of mosaic, engraving and sculpture united called dam as keening with which jboxes, bu reaus, and swords are ornamented. It Is still a city of dowers and bright watr; the streams of Leba non and tbe ilk of gold " Mill murmur and sparkle in the wilder ness of the Syrian gardens. Sit Dotcn, Robert. Elder Travere, wbo lately died in Buffalo; was once fbe most noted camp meeting leader In Eastern New York. Of fp!enJid physiqee, be made short work of I ntetrnpters. Ooce a notorious rough, Chicago Bob,n interrupted tbe congregation, while singing; by crowing. Sic down, Rohert,'' said ! Traverse. Chicago Bob sitsdown fornoone," cried tbe bully. Sit down, Rob ert."occe more said the Elder. Rob ert' reply was a moment to throw off his coat. One under the ear came deftly from the Elder follow, ed up by another, and. another, and another, aod Cbieagoj Bob retired uncooscipas. Next day, he appear ed among tbe repentant sinners. Are yon io aroet, Robert f mildly inquired tbe Elder. lam." Really Seeking for faith V "You bet I It faith' helps a roan to get in his work as quick as you did yester day. I'm boirud to bare i; if I sell my bat.9 He crowed no more. TT'Aaf Does- Cm.' dingman's Document .Heart t Wilmington Star. We have received the advance sheets of a document to be issued by Gen. T. Lv Clingman. It pur prta to be the speech which Gen. Mahone ought to have delivered when be took hia seat in the United States Senate. We, have taken time to ran over this rather prolix document. Il is written carelessly aod is common-plaoe in parts. Gen. Mabone is even made to talk bad grammar, bat this may be in character. ; It is an arraignment of the two old parties. Gen. Clingman first exposes the Republican party and shows up some of its corruption. lie shows from David A. Wells, Commissioner of Internal Revenue under Grant, and from Freeman n. Clarke, Comptroller of the Currency, that one-fourth (Wells said one ball) of the money collect ed for revenne never found its way into the United States treasury. Bat a considerable portion of Gen. Clingman's document is de voted to a scathing review of the Democratic party. Much , that he says is true, no doubt. The Demo crats have shown themselves to be far abler in aggression than in leading or in ruuniDg the govern ment when in power. And yet Gen. Clingman only takes a partial view. It is the work of a pessimist He ignores the great good they did the purity that prevails in Wash ington now c spared -with what it was six or eiguc years since, and the vast saving to the country, &c The .comments of Gen. Clingman on the efforts of Senators to dictate to or bargain with the President as to the distribution of the patronage io the States are timely and jast. Bat what is Gen. j Clingman's object 1 Dp you suppose that he is only bitting at Mabone f That is the least important of bis purposes we take it. He does not care for Mahone and hits him, but there is ao objective point aimed at and Mabooe ia merely need as a name, an instrument, an occasion enable the orth Carolina Con federate brigadier0 to convey his wishes and plans to the public. What, then, is be aiming to accomplish 1 Read the following and you will understand better the drilr of the document and the end in view. Gen. Clingman sys: What, then, Mr. President, is the great remedy to correct these micbirfH and save our country from general, corruption and tb cotiKcqueot overthrow of Its free institutions? Nothing jless, sir, than the destruction of both these parties In fact,' if one of them co-day were to cease to exist, the other irould immediately be pulled to pieces by the people. Itjis merely opposition to one in tue popular ... . . v. . a t a . r a I r ertsx r T n mind that holds its adversary together. Like tbe two sides of a brick arch, they sustain each other. Pull one of thee sides away and the other will instantly f fall, for a majority of the people are ready to condemn either on its own conduct. Bnt we hear it said that they hare principle which are valaable and ought to be preferred. Was there ever, Mr. President, more Mupid and ridiculous claptrap than theae declarations V Gen. Clingman wishes a new deal. He is oat io the cold. It ii necessary that tbe parties should be "broken in pieces. The Demo cratic party most be destroyed, for it has no priuctples, according to the Buncombe county politician, wbo is artful and sagacious and with long experience. Well, the jwop!e will have something to say about this hereafter. We do ' not propose to go luto a disenssion of the matter now with tbe thermome ter in the nineties. Whenever we shall feel that tbe safety of tbe Democratic .party is in peril we shall not be slow in rallying to its defence. It I in the political ark of our people. Oatside of that party all is chaos and destruction. Re move, the grand constitutional principles which are the madsills of genuine Democracy and tbe country is lost. The liberties of the people will be swallowed up in tbe maelstrom of centralization. Destroy that party which has a strong minority iu all the States, where it does not control, and which bas been the very shee atichor of tbe t-btp of State in all the tumultuous and stormy years that have luterveued between 18G5 and 1331, aod tbe strides of despot ism will be as gigantic as is the ambition of many bnngry and disappointed politicians. The Democratic party mutt be Iprescrred.' Break op, disintegrate, aaa wipe out tnat granc 01a party 10 North Crrolina, and then what! Tbe Republican party is restored to powerthe very party that Gen Clingman! says stole- each year euough money to rnn the United States government for six years under a Southern President. Let tbe Democrats follow no unsafe leaders. Let no partial arraign ment of the shortcomings of. tbe Democratio party induce any Democrat to denert bis colors. Remember tbe past. Remember bow much worse off you and tbe country would have been if the Repablican party bad not been confronted from 1S03 until now with theold party of tho people that bas fought many a disastrous CHmoaiu. and yet stands numeri cally stronger this day than its old enemy, backed by all of the tre mendous patronage of an adminis tration that does not hesitate to coquette with Southern repudia liouiaLa, to dally with Confederate generals,, who have their price, unue oeaaiors with an offer large patronage, and to even prom ise oiace as a bribe to members toe ijegisiatnre. In the name puojio virtue what can any honest Democrat gain by breaking up his ui iaeas ana principles T JRrohibiticn and Bights. Personal One of the objections urged against prohibition,; and the one most used and most effective, is, that it Interferes with raen'a rights. fW am m a ois ooieciion seems niansihiA nrst glance, but will not bear the test of logic What are men's per s!aT rights T To do aa they please! Is flvery man to be a law onto him self ; yon do as yon wish and I do as I wish T Will any af2rm that such a state of affairs ought to ex ist. Is any man willing for society to be thus turned loose with liberty to all restraint apon none I I am -- - , sure not. Let there be no law, and might will master, the weak will be under tne tyrrany of the strong and anarchy and savage despotism will reign. Neither government, nor society can exist without law, Ev. ery law is an abridgment of what men term their personal rights. Government exists upon the princi ple that the individual must be subordinate to the state, and the state must be the guardian of the interests and proper rights of the individual. , Society baa its laws, and every one entering society is expected to obey those laws and if be 111 not ne must move out into other society that will tolerate his acuuus, ur ua iuuBbjea out Ol SO - - 1- - t. j. . . . . ci ery, ana an aione, wnere no one else can be effected, do what he chooses. There is then a limit to men's rights, a limit determined by some rule; what is it f Mr. Black stone says: " The absolate rights of man considered as a free agent, endowed with discernment to know good from evil, and with the power pf choosing those measures which kppear to him to be most desirable A W ioire usually summed up in one gen eral appellation and denominated the natural liberty of mankind. This natural liberty consists prop-. erly in a power of acting as one thinks fit without any restraint or eontrol unless by a law of nature, being a right inherent In ns by birth, and one of the gifts of God to man at his creation, when he en dowed him with free will. But every man, when he enters :society, gives up a part of his nat ural liberty as the price of ea val uable a purchase, and in considera tion of receiving the advantages of I mutual commerce obliges himself to conform to those laws which the commnnity has thought proper to establish. And this species of legal I aKa 1 awa anrl a t Am 1 1 r Irs fl nita obedience and conformity, infinite ly more desirable than the wild and savage liberty ; which is sacrificed to obtain it. It will be seen from the above that there is a difference between natural liberty and civil liberty. Natural liberty looks only to the in dividual. Civil liberty -demands conformity to tbe laws which look to the generat good. If we live under government or in society, both composed of nu merous factors, the rights of tbe whole must be supreme, above the rights of one. : The law that deter mines the limit of personal rights iu society, is that no one shall be permitted to do anything that is damaging to others, though it may benefit him. The law will not let you put a nuisance in a communi ty, though It bo on your own pri vste property. It will not let you engage in a business enterprise, when it is known to be injurious to the public health. Yon see wbere tbe question or rights stands. . Now the question to be settled is whether tbe liquor traffic is evil and damaging or not. Whether it is a harmless branch of business or whether constant harm grows out of it. That evil and great evil grows out of it, none deny for none can deny it. And none deny that tbe good thatcomes out of it, if any, which is an open question, ia infin itely less than the evil. Now any traffic that results in GO.000 deaths annually in the Uni ted States that makes panpers, vagrants, criminals and idiots, that blights fair promises, aud sits like a withering demon over happy households, and turns the father into a brote, and the son into an in grate, that despairs the lives of thousands of gentle women and keeps in beggary and ignorance and suffering tens of thousands of children, cun not be a blessing, and if not a blessing, it mnst be a curse, and if a curse, no man has the right either civil or moral to engage in it, and no set of men have tbe right to license him to en gage in it, and tbe licenses and the licensed are both particeps criminis in the damage done. Tbe prohibition bill does not say men shall not drink, but tbey shall not sell the drink, that tbey shall no longer, with poblio sanction be tbe venders of what everybody acknowledges to be damaging. 1 F. D. Swindell. After, setting six weeks each, two oIJ bens -came' off yesterday with one chicken, and each desired to be its mother, whereupon they bad a regu'ar pitched battle, which was ended by both being-cooped and tbe chicken givan away. Evening Visitor. There is a tide" iu the affairs of men that leads on to baby carriages. to nc -ecuniarn Tim of liquor Traffic. LStaiesrilie Landmark. of of I take this iHrU n th t,,.m. oiuon question: i That it is for the . ST ; : . . r . T v f yfjfu pecuniary i advantage of Carolina that the r voters ahonld confirm the legislative act; for the the brand v is mada and all th labor of mannfntnrl k7hi: iaoor ot manufacture and handling tO the last ait of raisin cr th trlanu at (or tin cupjjjwhich carries the fiery iuiu iiume ups di tne urinuer. all,all, is! lost labor. It doot Rustain life It don't add to sob stahtial comfort; don't elevate,1 either ; socially or iniorally. Meat sustains life; bread I sustains life, aad other substance, and tbns are producing fbrces, adding to the otaie-s i capital - Wbicn consists wholly in ' two thin ee: 1st, the m :. , , lands within its borders, and 2d. the muscle 1 and bra zens. Eati Iwhiskev : i C ns of its citi not at all. oranay not at all. 1 that a large -amount a I : Aod secondly bf the muscle and brains of the (oitizens of the State (being a part of the State's destroyed or so ener use of llheee drinks as capital) j are vated by thd to render them incapable or ineffl- cient as, a. brodaciog tcrce. The State is thereby damaged year by year in a ' strictly mnied view ol the .matter, (How many men iu the State who might reasonably be coupted on aa efiScieut workers for I th nn.hniM;nn nf tiki Rt.t no: an 70 in vat n r. I ' . ' ' 7 - ' ! 1 ichollll (dead at $0 to 40, from the use of mr spirituous . driuks f Ag-din, how many are mere so enervated by the constant and immorderate 'these drinks that they are incapable of being the! efficient worker for the up- building of the State in pecontary matters that i - 1 they otherwise coald be and woo d a alia a be! I Anion ? this classes everybody knows, are many of our edoeated business men. Then why may not .the State as a State step in j and sayj "this waste, this destruction of mycapi:al shall be stopped, H I have jibe power to stop it, and ilam going to make the effort 1" And why m'iy not citizens advocate the passage bf a prohibi tion; law and say they intend to vote for it wi hout be ill g denounced as fanatics tbing. ! ! and all that . sort of 4,Qb, but, say anti-prohibitidn- istsiiu substance. "W wo send lots of HU OcJl It. i.L it oat or tbe SLiaie on don't do any harm I in the State. We) admit: itj does harm and, we want to be nlnderstobd as temper ance people.! I Some bri ns practice f Afal a Has f Irtiinnai anri i9rf-in'r iMMnfmi anvbodv that tdrinks tod much. Bat I ! :L:ii' I ' - sureiy you wni give ns create ior the j money Sute from perhaps : in that combs into tbe this trde." Well, j veryj narrow and and isolating North selfiMb view, uarouna interests xrom tue inier eetsj of ; surrbauding Sand sister States, (which really cannot be m a ia? . r . J a T I done,) they Would be entitled to it. Bati there . is a "uaf inft7 a era in at even this credit Tb-it: all the poisoned stuff adulterated 1 i u and brought into and sold and drank iu 1 u . the State.! This v?e jveifily believe would swallow up aHjthe credit claimed and tave a yulplt unfilled. Why don't anti-prohibitfouists give ns tbe figuf -8 of hovs much is brought iuto 1 nd sold in the State from other ' j States) liow f Tbe liquor dealers are ail, or largely ou that;ide, and sorely jthey ought to know. Give! us the statistics, gentlemen.! Yoa have given as what is made icsideanl sold out and we desirt to know from yon that can! tel. Tell; us what w made oat and sold inside. We desire to! strike a balance sheet this side ! of the first; Thursday Of Augast and waut just as much truth! as it is possible tolget that it may have 4 weight! on that day. S. I 1 ' "i The Washington Star 'within the! past few says that tnoutbs a large; number 6t foreign immigrants have passed ihrougb this city to locate in Virgiuia and the Caroli- nas. Ul tneao (tbe majority settling in I Salisbury,1 N. a-v a .a 1 nua n It wn thnnai 11 A being Alsatian f) are ne ueicooorooou 01 C. Mauyj of ibesej German liue in BaIJ anived by the tiruore, whilel Yoik Boston others lauded iu New Utid Philadelphia. A i la nHnal it be great majority ot 1 j the armies nb w landing upon our shores go Wr, bu; tbe proportion already goneiSoutb and the parties Aaiiwi naHsinrllin that direction is encouraging j6 those jwhoj have inT terested tbemseives ia r,uruiug a uortibn of thei tide of immigration that wav. VTlth a vie-w ol settling the country the Associated Rail tt-ava'nt Virff Idia aud the Uaroliuas hnvei throot:B Mr. Alfred Pope, of Richmond, epiablitshed bat may be called an trhmigration pureau.-p Agents of the hue meet the immi grants in iNortbern cities and give tht-m; information., inose wnoue sire it are; forwarded South, along the road the agents ar and all are ready to show lanpis to ucu ab .wisn to ii i a t r uurcbase, or obtaiu employ meni lor tbose wnoi lave to work tor otb ers. !At Salisbury, N? C, an immt- grant's Lome :as been es ab!isbed, where tbey ar lodged and ted for a reasonably ( me, and, in addition, ia cases of! gotiatiou Ipr lands. the services I lecali counsel are given I rue. In this connection it imv be mentioned that since April o.i in! bit grants haveairived at Baltimore llou tbe steamships ;of the North German Lloyd liue. v iXrexnendedin SL ZZfLV freae vWt to EurJpel turallj i prophecrand remember it. If i SrilmuiSg kS S rrCt n"; mAde comparisons between my own Mr Conkiing is beaten, the Repub- , of wbich thl wSfsUv rHa ,n rJ "4 0Be I havejust Tbeen dean party will have won Its Jast 1 'i ' 1 .T?;Mif 1 .-1 . t Xr, Hose t Address. The people of Richmond assem bled in toasa meeting to eive "Passion " fi0. i or tnm shrtAtfne nf ' rhav Veaairfani I and of "jmpathy for the suflereira 1 mmmnrmmmmm we - veav ' St VHIW&U spoke aa follows : if1! & "uu witn new aa.m.irano M II. J - S ' S 9 - a ft- ,auu OI 7 nauvicy ana iob. Thesa hfiav;nil An t hAT11 nvir any land so favored with natural advantages, ao enriched, by mated al resources, as ours, These quifi stars do noti' look down QDon an continent with such possibilities io ours; and jptt with; all by fond uupcu uuu giowiug aniicipauooa 01 the splendid fataro in atote for ni. I am io variably depressed 7ith one apprebensionthat all these pay t ical advantages, all these prospect of prosperity I and glory, !may fc illusive, because of the failure ol our experiment of . aelffgoverri ment, because the strain to wbisp they are subjected , by the fanatj clam of factions 'unrestrained by constitutional limits and utterly contemptuous of the' authority' cf ,aw j j : s ! n 1 rartiea may De essential to tbel bealthfal life of republican! institu-1 tions, but; blind,"' unreasoning taction, mcapaoie or reason, ant mated on ly by j prej udice and batd. these are j the. forms so Ifull.. of menace to ' constitutional j liberty which'bOWcorifront as.' "v n " ' I 11. j Insanity is an awfol visitation even when it maddens ua j single mind. But j whole , communities become insane. Fanaticisms hav often' become j national epidemic and when factipns, at oncej malig nant and insane, begins to work iq the body politic, it. is like! one ol the hateful majadies which! some times infest the physical frame; it Iaa traavfea anH rl I n fr a ' fKa l ! bt ri rtf g 1 avJao .HUU UVItUwO UO TV UVIV I ls Tu iJJi i jn 80me incurafle nicer prebonitd? . .k 1 1 . . -17 1 . il i Such is faction, whose-1 motto never is 'principles, not men' prin ciples, and men, but men without priuciples; loyal not to law or duty but to money, to place, to ambition to power. Applause. I Thtt Was a noble sentiment of Edmund Burke when be declared that all jast political principles wre the principles of tnorality practically applied. Do not our hearts go with him vhn w hoar hfm aa. LNeither do i lQW nor will! Xi ever f firlmir anvfriinrr alflu ! fr ta rrna aau mmM a w wu J a. u s w w ( ssv aay a m va. (Applause. j j ' -. !. "j j I Fellow-citizens, I would impress this truth upon, you: 'Thaj; which is morally wrong can never be politically right.' Applause-1 . if 1 A Gtiiteau may say: I slay a President to secure a unity of a party.' A united party is necessal ry to fractional triumph. But Guiteau had a predecessor. Milton iu bis picture of Satan tells jus of a speech he made, and he adda DnalA t.ytm liAnl anil wttfl nAiMai f w Ii The tyrant's plea exonaedi ma deviliah I , deeds. ,- , ! -' ) . i Fellow-citizens : The great ca4 lamity which j now hushss party clamor and rebakes sectional ani- mosity,and which by tbe fasion of aj common sorrow welds us together,; reminds ns of the way in j which! God in His providence compels us! -.1 . ir to recognize the dependenceipfma upon man, Bcate upon State and uauuu upuu uiiiivu. Senator David Uaris' Jfietrs. He JSpeate upon the Qreat Crime al : -.Bloopington, I . Chicago, pnly 5. Two t thou sand strangers visited Blooming ton yesterday) the occasion being a grand celebration of tbe f Fourth! commemorative of tbe j nltietb anniversary of tbe incorporation of Bloomiogton. !At a meeting a tended I by V 1,000 - people Senator David Davis! presided, and in hi! oueninz sueecn, referring to tne tbell atten,uted assassination -j of DiH.n, ona fiiwa. TW mV 1 CD1UCUVS B7aaSBhV WW StWaSW f mm mmrm. : --.j-- m. JJ profoundly I melancholy. Tbe Klatai. I II.I1M V Hin , CALIaUililllDI 1 B)UU 1 rjj sunshine and, the promise of tble day are darkened by this deep shadow ! of national t miction, but it is the consummation of an iodi vidual crimeJ having its origin of execution in of a single as it is, we the mind audi purpose individual.! i Horrible aria relieved by the reflection that nb party, no section, no creed, no sible for tbe race of men, is respou unocent blood of I this fearful tragedy. It is not the premonition of a coming storm the ; xhio !' rr. ahabA tha fabric I nf onr government tbe repose of our : society.! All over this laqd, n tbe city and on plain, in tbJ homes and hearts of 50,000.000 of iepple, are the grief and sorrow bf a! national lamenta tion. Tbe attempted assassination of President Garfield has no broad er significahce jtban the; cpmmis-i sioo,of a great rime." After not; ing. the lack of motiva for the crime, Mr. Davis : found a subject for a congratulation in the tact that no sudh crime could stay the - o 1 l i J .4. progress ot He invoke: our national career. the! prayers of all for the President's recovery J Hou Georee R. Weudling, the orator of the day, also -referred j to the at tempted assassination, and resolo-! tions of condolence with!tbe familyj ot the President were adopted. ! ! . il :i- j !6 Tbe estimated number of cows in tbe United States is 12,000,000. The product in butter, cheese and uniKf including what is Uea on tun farms, estima ed at 00,000,000. 1 u w r. t w i f . r. ' . i 1 1 .uw . m. . u. mi m-im... ft.. a . w j .1 I .1 Boast and a Prediction. n : Mr. Louis F. late United nai or tnis district, ia f B. " aa-Bk' W WS a 1AI U M I if DOrrea DV an Alhanv mrraannAd. I of the Tribune as employing i I $ Mr.v Cook line will i 1 A iwam -n . B B . ,U!P' ror tne past ntteen I years. He mad th w p1i. deqttv single handed and aIcneFn j Tou surely . don't t mean , (hat be carried the campaign for Hayes by makiue only oneaooech 1" I I 41 1 mean the searing of Hayes at t (iaiugcoa. n ayes would never nave Deep seated if it! had not been nf - r Li; k- . , or pif Conkiing, apl when Gep. j Garfield come on to that conlernnce 1 10 JSewt rork last aooimer the Srate I f Jfew Tork was 40000 or 50,000 ocratic, and everybody koe The prophesy of Mr. Paynis not niltkely to prove true. Tne groan da of the boast are also. indisputably trufe bat! they are anvtbiog but.' creditable to the New York Sena- rori and with how little satisfaatlnri I must be reflect upn them ! For the prime of saccessfal conspiring to put into office an uaelected Prei-' I dent, he received an affront which made him a volnntary exile from the'jWhite House for four long Jfars.- V-WU- :" i i , j Far the folly of rendering soci cessfal aid in electing an unfit I President, he has now received s! now received sn a 11 root wmcn nas caosed him to resiifn bis cherished ofiLie of Sena-i tor-fare-appoint to wbiob he vaioly ' solicits from bis own party, because io that narty be has made Garfield. -a ... z. . . 1 : --: -r at icciqu ieuipurari(.y cjrjre poweriut nan; bimseir. If. 1. Hun. 1 . Ml1 ii i Mlow to Dri re m Mien. VVben a woman bas a nen to drive into the coop, she takes bold ?f her skirts with both hands, bakes tbem qaietly jat tbe delio jnent, and aays, Shoo, there !" Tbe hen then takes one, look, at tbe Object to couvinee herself that it is a woman, and then! stalks majes tically into the ' codjx A man does'nt do that wayj Ho goes out doors1 and says : ii is singular nobody can drive a i ben bat me.". ana picking .up a ck of wood, burls it at t be offendihg biped, and observes: Get Hid there, yon thief.:" Tbe hen immediately looses her reason, and dashes to the other end of tbe yard. The iaan Btraigbt way dashes after beri I She comes' back with ber head ddwbTher, wiugs out, and followed by ku assortment pf stove wood, fruit; cans and clink ers, rear, and a very mad man in the Then she skims under , the and oVer a fence or two, and barn, around tbe house and back1 again to the coop, and all the 'while talk ing as only an excited ben can talk. and all the while followed by things convenient for handling! and al man whose coat is on the aaw-bnek, and whose bat i on the 1 groand, and whose perspiration ban no limit.-f' By this time the other heus have come out to take a haod Iu the de bate and help dodge missiles, and tbe 'man says ever hen 6u the place jSball be sold q tha morning, uiakq sunn uc buiu iu iu JQd d , . hja 8 d(iwijfth; atreet, I ard t and ; goes he woman has every one of those hens hoased and coanted in two nu utes. Jfo- bile Register. j I-.. Bishop Iioodou the Action of the Bepublican Execu ti re Committee. I (.Cor. Af the Newa and Observer . j . i"AVTTEVlLLE,'jane 22, '811 ! , As guardians of the party's interest, tbeci men have be trayed their trust. lit tbejlauguage of the prophet Isaiah, ' They bave maaea eague wun ueu ana a cov- j ' 1 a at HTlL MaV euant with d-atb.n Tbey; bave civen the devil, so t speak, a bill I L i i i . " r - f of sale for the party bat we give lueiu. uuiiuo iuab iuc bubm uvi uo- liver tbugoods. : -jT( j ! - 1 z Ifinetentbsof the party ; in fa vor ot Toe liqaor interest I f You had as well tell as that nine tenths of the holy angels are im favor pf Satan's reign. : The enemies of the Republican party have said many bard things about it,1; but note so slanderous as this. Asa represen tative Republican, feecood to no man in work for auc ievotion to its true interests, I ber shy declare that neuueria iracuou uu uo .cuyio m-o- neither a traction nor tne entire tie to sueak for tbe party in this mat- ter.j ijso convention jpf the party has eyer discussed the subject, aud not even a township meeting of the a r . i r party has ever called bpqnj ika com- 1 100K opon ineiraciiou as iieasou to he party 's intereHt, aud tbeir graiiiiious jimpu expression as deuce. a ! T S I W. Hood. A wkter rattlesnake was killed at m Aden's BloffJ under the gang- wayj bf tbe steamer. Dawson. It wa t bout five feet long and eight or ten! inches lu Circumtereuce at the thickest part of the body. nil- iHtnaton atar. .. ij I 1 5 ii Tom piatt Has gat no fat And lUonklioe batJ( DO lean For I' I obertson ate ped between em ootn n And ioked the p atter clean. Ex. run. ana let w a - 1-!! V ft:-

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