tollna lUatrijmait. BJLLlSnCnT.TnURSDArXOTEMBEKi 7" v , FOR PRESIDENT: CIO II ACE GREELEY. IX)ir VICE-PRESIDENT: If Greeley hu renamed hU position u editor f the New York Tr6u. '' United States soldiers paraded the streets of Kw nrloiK . Ik. .1 .1 ..... ! T... III! . wan no intimidation. . -' mere politici inthe fellow who is always ready to "endorse or repudiate etch and every public mew ure'accorduig as it may promote or obstruct his own privatpnds waa thrown overboard and iznored. . The chronic oGce seeker is not Urn style of man. for these times, 'd-t the nfSce. seek the man and not the man the office Mr. Biwringec1' would SM thi jiiacjs'nf Ih S. Senator with dignity and ability. And so far as talents, or merit, or devoted Conservatism an concerned, he is as much entitled to the honor as any gentle" man whose 'name has heretofore beeii suggested. .He baa been a devoted, ac he is not prepared. The faculty have tbe con science and the nerve to say "no to unqualified j applicant?5'"S;r ."-" fckferiij-fite flhe 103 are members of some Christian Chnrch, several churches are repre nenteJ. : Darifton College is a nnrsery of mor als and religion, but not of bigotry." ' The ' pro fessors are animated by a liberal catholic spirit. , After theVevival of religion that occurred . last spring, the converts were not allowed to Join the Colleze-Chnrch, tintiljhey had freely con ferred with their parent. It miy be proper to stat e that tbe ill new of omens In its favor, would have disdained to g rtwlef 4t Vforaiiizition for la candidate.'- 'I is not Mr.jGreeley'a nomt nation at Biltimorei but 'the previous" de moralization that rendered such a nomina tion possible, that , has cost us this elec- :-V New York Evening Express. This taction took over all the bummers and all tbe billing politicians to tbe side if the. Administration, strengthened the Graut men, and discouraged others, hence the natural result proclaimed by the great tive Conservative, and he has been actaat Gea Meade died at Philadelphia on the 6th etT solely by principle and patriotism, and stint at l'nrn-n."r.i ' ' I . . ' . . i not by any hope of getting an office. Such men deserve reward and are alone trust-worthy. instant of Pneumonia. T.ef. James Reid, of North Carolina Confer-. erice, died suddenly at Greensbore, N, C., on Friday, November 8, 1872. The deceased was elected by the. Rad to the position of Superintendent of Public Instruction, lie was about eightyears of age. lCoL Robt II. Cowan, of Wilmington, died at his residence in that city on last Monday morn ing. Deceased was highly esteemed and possess ed great influence in his section of the State, , The stock-holders of the Washington Pqiriat have resolved to suspend its publication. ANrwPAPEB. The Daily Iiberal ia the title of a new paper just issued from New Berne THE BURNING OF BOSTON IS IT RETRIBUTION! It will bo seen from despatches given in another column of this, paper that a terrible conflagration has visited Boston, the hob of Yankeedom, the seat of fanat icism and contention, and has laid a goodly portion of the great city in ruins. Millions of property have been consumed, and s mm w the adjunct professor of Greek will make no majority vote of Tuesday. dmerence in the course of studies. . nix alue professors are at their pout, and Greek is taught bv the head of the'department, Prof. Richard son, ably assisted by Prof. Latimer, whoisfreHh from the lecture room of Prof. Gildersleve, of the University of Virginia. Davidson College Philadelphia Pre (Forney Radical). Fr Mr. Greeley and his partisans iu this liour of triumph there should be noth ing hut kindness. lie entered into its spiri and became its leader, not be is now giving a more thorough education than ever before. R. thousands of poor women, factory girls, by E.S. Gather!, Esq. - It is quite small, bft and laborer8 ro not " ed H of wall filled, cleverly edited and neatly" printed, f; employ ment and of house and home, but Success to it. , . . - ,' 1 reduced to actual want. For all these on the 9th instant the things we ar? sorry we deeply sympa- At Savannah, Ga managers and magistrates at the late elections were arrested, by a U. 8. Commissioner on afS ' davit Of an Ogeechee negro, charging them with noiauoa oi lue entorcement act, ibev were released on giving bonds for twenty-five hun dred dollars each. thize with those who nave lost property, with the suffering and destitute. , 1 The loss of Boston is a great calamity, and it will cause much suffering through out the country, and especially those sections of the North which have iinmedi- ( Th Gbldboro Mctttnatr aavs that Curtis II. Rrogdea rejoiced muchly .over the result of the te commercial intercourse with it recent election. Turner'Davis, col., was atabbedby his step- eon, near Raleigh, on the 13th inat., and died soon af Ur. Writs;of habeas corpus bave been applied for by the counsel of Mrs. F. h. Mann and her Wnen we remember tuat uoston ! was the cradle of abolitionism ; that there the doctrines which culminated in civil! war first found favor and endorsement, j that the cruelty and severity of the lte; War Were attributable in a great measure to Mother, Mrs. Smith, now in jail on a charge of the bitterness of her people, we are prone, to aek whether these direful calamities poisoning the late Rev. Dr. J. B. Smith Capt. J.Q. DeCarterel, of Raleigh, is dead lie was 45 years of age. David Clorienger, of Catawba was arrested a few'dsys ago, charged with violating the revenue laws. are retributive visitations from above. We do not say that they are. We would be sorry to know that such Is the fact but there are many nersona who wil . 1 t 1 lV.l tnuiK so. ' aiiu wny not f is tnere no Mr9 Wm. J. Unell of Petersburg, and father sncb ihing as retribution No avenging of Mr. Uzzell of the Raleigh Xocj, died at his home Ian Thursday. A Mrs. Hull, living near Mt Airy, cot her throat list week and has since died. Dispatches from Fort Gibson say that Lewis Dawning, uliief the Cherokee nation, died at Fallcquah Saturday night last. The Raleiga News says thit Judge Shipp was married to Miss Maggie Iredell, daugh ter of tbe late Gov. Iredell, on the 7th ult. JOUK RUTHEBFOKD, Esq , has donated Additional 200 acres of land fto Ruther ford College, located at Happy Home, Burke county,' N. C. The i nslitution is under the management of Rev. ILL. Aberaathy, President. THK Southern Home is pained to chron icle the death of Col. E. Erson, of Lincoln connty, from rapid consumption He was Lieutenant Colonel of the 52.1 N. (. regi ment, andjwajs'dislinguished for his courage and coojeess Catawba county, in the late election, gave 1252 votes for Greeley, 441 for Grant, and 1 for O'Conor. In Angust Merrimou received 1,266 and Caldwell 422, showing a slight Democratic falling off and small Republican gain. 1 Ox Friday last Jerry Thompson and York Martin, colored, were hung iu Rutherford ton for the murder of a colored man named Samuel Martiu some time last Spring. Tne7 received their sentence at the hands of Judge Logan. Tn editor of the Jefferson Messenger evidently intends going into the ''produce business. He says he wants wheat, rye. oati, corn, buckwheat, bacon, lard, butter, 'SEN dried fruit, chestnuts, etc., etc.. in exchange for subscriptions to the Messen- , ger, line Wilmington Journal of Sunday says : "UaptainTMornson, of the W .. C t & R. ft. R., says that Steve Lowrey and Andrew Strong, the remaining two of the outlaws, were both at Moss Neck yester day morning when the train pissed there They Were tyeavily armed, but evidently not on the war path at the time. ' They conversed very trcely-on all subjects, be ing particular in their inquiries in regard to toe health of our city power ? No punishment ou earth for great crimes committed 7 And have there not been great crimes committed growing out of North? Abolitionism and fanaticism? Let's-fice : ' t - . The late civil war grew out of the aba- lilion doctrines, bitter persecutions, and outrageous meddlings of the people of the North. And such a war ! For open un concealed vandalism and cruelty if had no parallel in modem times. It was waged by the North upon the poph- of the South in a spirit and manner that would put to blush the Golhs and Vaudals of the 5rh century. The South was made desolate, her people were robbed, murdered, driven THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION. The most remarkable Presidential elec tion in the history of tbe country has just closed. It was without precedent in the character and political relations of the candidates, and in the character and roli tical relations of their supporters, and al most 'without precedent iu its overwhel ming result. Asa political contest it is without material significance, but in a sec tional aspect it presents the most anoma lous and wonderful features. J udged by the returns alone, it shows as striking a sectional feature as that between Lincoln and Bbeckinridge, in I860 ; bur bow vastly different in its significance and meaning. Then, the South, strong in its mainte nance of rights, jealous of encroachments upon its constitutional prerogatives, proud of its prestige in the Government, put forth a platform and supported candidates representing there fetdjugs. A defeat at the polls was followed by an appeal to arm. Now, ' defeated in battle, its ignorant lahnjers transformed by wonderful legis Lative legerdemain into law-makers and rulers, its constitutions overriden, its peo ple beggared, its territory overrun with merciless Federal tax-collectors, spies and informers, its citizens the prey of corrupt marshals and judges, the South has outy asked for peace and reconciliation. At thp expense of its pride and prejudice, and at the sacrifice of much of its principles, it hasvoled with wouderful unanimity for the foremost abolitionists in the United States, who has done more than all other living men to bring about our defeat and the enfranchisement of the slave. And bat for the united opposition of thse newly created citizens, the voice ct the South would have been unbroken. Tbe effects on the country of this elec tion are to be tried. The lesson to the South cannot be misunderstood. The hatred of the Northern masses, and the prejudices of the Southern negroes, for the white people of the South, being d- feat upon any and every political associa tion they may form. 1 heir sib-nce is held up as the sullenness of disloyalty their aetiv co-opernlion i denounced as the renewal of rebellion. Allied with the Northern Democracy their ff irtsnre only sources of weakness. Uniting with the Liberal Republicans, under tin b-mner of their niOi-t pronounced leader, and support ed by much of the character and l iainsof cause, like too' many of its adherents, he desired an occasion to revenge a personal hate, but because he saw an opportunity to engrifi certain reforms upon the ad mi nist ation of affairs. By his great services to humanity he has won the love and admiration of his people, and the memory of the good that he hat done will survive long after the bates and passions of this eampatgu shall have bceu forgot ten. Washington Patriots. i nere are Higher considerations tuan mere party disciplince, w hich commend itself 4o much to th machine politician. If the Democracy saenhed their organiza tion by acci pting-Mr. . Greeley, they cast off by that eiample of moral courage the impediments which checked its progress, and clug to it like b.iruacles on a chip's bottom. Tbe Liberal movement the North has been partisan and sectional. e make no fartbei commcut. - ; (Charleston. News.) L ; - U It is idle now, to indulge in rain regret. and it i 'i! be ' honed ' that ' the Liberals throughout the country, although along by defeat, will not attempt to make a scapegoat 'of linnet t Horace Greeley, whose overthrow is due,' rol tor his own shortcoming?, hut to the apathy, if not stupidity of the Democratic masses, and lo the immense ixiwer, unscrupulously exercised, of the Federal administration. What Horace Greeley has not been able to do, no other anti-Grant candidate would have had any chance to accomplish. Nor is the Liberal movement dead. . It is ibe party of tbe future, which will whip the administration into better behavior during the four years to come, and shall burl them to political perdition in Novem ber, '76. Sarannah Adrertiw. But by trials like this one which is upon nsis the temper of men 'a tools tried. From nut of the crucible of such tests are cliiuina'cd the strongest lementa and roost exalted virtues of human character. In times like these comes lioui with force the grand sentiment tLat huoiau en durance should always be equal lo human calamity. Sarannah News. Th result is upon us, and we mutt make the best of it. It may, perhaps, uot be too late to profit by the Ieou. Augunta Chronicle and SentincL In the support of Greeley and the coal ition platform upon which be was placed. boitthern Democrats, ever taunted with CoCXTlES. Alamance, Air lander, AllrgHaney, Anoun, A -be. Ilea it fart, IWnie, Uladen, I 'run wick, Dancocabe, Iturke, caitsht next. cellar to ueXt is temporarily checked, but not defeated, disloyal and treasonable purpose, have . - i . -i i .1 l : i e .i Its ultimate triumph is certain, and there aro thousands who conspired against it that w ill live to deplore their mistaken opposition, and join hands hereafter in a patriotic effort to redeem this error to elect a Reform candidate in 1876. The great principles and ideas which underlie this cause can be no more suppressed than the order of the seasons can be arrested. In tho language of the Keutucky hunter, "Let us pick our flints and try it again." Baltimore Gazette."! It would serve no good purpose to mor alize over the past. The past is behind us, with all of its delusive hopes, and all its errors of omission and comruifsion. It is to the future we must now turn. We must look the situation squarely in the face, and resolve to do whatever men may do to build up the party on a stronger and a purer basis mid, like Henry Smith of the Wyod, in Scott's novel of the Fair Maid of Perth, "figh; our own hand." Ve must stand firmly by our party, and the men of our party who are the best ex given to the wotld the highe proof of the sincerity of their attachment to the pre servation of the old landmarks of consti tulional liberty. Columbia Phojiix. We have but in yield to the storm which we cannot resist, and, like a bVii ble plant, only beud to rite again erect aud stately as ever. Iet us not lose fiib iu ourselves, nor in (Jod. Let us uot abandon our country, nor despair of its fortunes. Aiken Journal Nothing is left us to do but to make tbe best of the situation. Honest Horace Oreeley has been beaten, but he stands higher than ever in the estimation of the Southern people. B-ateu though he may be, he will continue to fight the plunder ers of the land. Ljnthlmrg Republican. We are "cast down," but not destroyed, imps stable. The :engioca'werp3riven back from station to station.' Graulte blocks weighing inany ton split iii frag ments and were hurled acrosi the streets. '.H LATER.'? .)! Scxday Mosxixa, 10 o'clock. Buildings were Mown np oa LiadcII ami Congress street to check the flames. Berbve block, on v luthrop Squaie, the finest business structure in the country, is burned. Stewar f rooms, in si roe buildiug, only fed the flamea. Pieces of dry goods went whistling across the tqnarr, firing stores on I Jevonslme street. Every building was toon healed to tbe verge of spontaneous combustion, and caught like tinder. Deafening explotions are con stantly beard. Tbe tenemut boutea on tbe upper vnd of Federal street, occupied by tbe lrih laboring classet. are now on fire, and crazed women are rnthing to and Cabarru, fro with clock and betiding in their arms Caldwell, . Tbe woajI bouses in Federal ttreet ! Casadtn, Th-y wre crammel from i )nTT n garret. The paper boute came 2mxo. The Frrerous National and Bank rhaiLam. of North America have beeu burned. : Cher.ker, Several insurance companies mutt uc i eumb. ' CleaTtlaiK' Tbiw square miles of property lve j J bien bnnud up to this time Oarm, 1 1 o clock Si'niiat Mousing. rrJSc,J"d The Pnot-r.Cicf , with mt of CoMg rts j 'it. - c i L-j j: d... t ,4r, I tie lire naa icicuru uiuiruiiom iiibi simply defy detciiption. Tbe people find themslves in duger of their lives. The loss nf h-ue and proprty is now tenree- ly thought of. The jHoplo are rt tiiiug be fot e tl-imes toward Treioout and Cnn streets, where it is thought the fiie will be unable to reach, but a hcavv rale is blowing which teem to hare no positive Halifai, direction It is probable that Fanu.l II.ll j jf, and Qnincey market ill gn. The Wrs- ! udrr-m tern L nion I ele graph ofuce vif aUaaUoii- j ed al 8j o'clock. The fiic is ttill tagiue with unabated fury. BOSTOX, Nov. 1 1. j General boundaries of the conflagration: The whol- length and both tides ct Sum-! mcr street across Federal, and ucarly down to Diake's wharf; and I hence on neatly a dirtct liua lo Fort Hill aloiij: Haiiiiluin aud Battery March to KiUy OFFICIAL BirruRN ty tbejolcfof Governor at the KUu,fJ held on tlefir$l day Av just, itf' OoYenxw. Pre-54, o n lKj!in, llcecuntbe, KytKe, Franklin, (taioa, (taieo, (i ranrilSe, (ireene, uiirirf. IIertf..rJ, lly. Irethil, J4inlun, I Lcloir, ! LincXiln, Maoon, 1 Manin, I MclK,-tlI. s'rect at fnras Lindellaud Central ttrcet, I lburc and win rise trorn tlie Mfhes of defeat, purged of the dn?s which naturally en tered into the composition of our organi- poneua of its principles, and if e are ; zatiou au,i iH jr0 jor,h four years hence, from their homes, and their bosses and their cities and towns burned out of mere wantonness; her fair women were insulted, ravished, by a brutal soldiery; stock was destroyed and driven off, fencing destroy-i that party, aud under leaders, too, who had organized and built up the 11' publi can party, the sympathies and support of the Southern' whites are followed by a defeat almost without, parallel. It is high time that wc should compre hend its meaning. We shall accept the situation just as we ed, orchards cut down wearing apparel jwe gh;ln f,rn,dvinr with all laws. however -harsh and unprofitable', rejoicing in every material advancement, we shall LIDERAM8M NOT A FAILURE. Notwithstanding the Liberal movement hai met with the most overwhelming de feat over, experienced by a political organ ization, this country, the newspapers, of the extreme Liberal-Greeley persuasion, tell ns that Liberalism is not a failure. If its not "being a failure consists in having succcedcoV in electing Grant, then it is a grand succesr; otlierwise, it is the most complete failure as a political movement ever witnessed in this hemisphere, yrhis'ls the way we, look at it, and this It what the result of the election would seem to, establish, i We would be glad to ee It tasome other light, but wecan't. There hi nohalf j way ground between sound Democratic-Conservative principles and Radicalism.! , . . - i'. ..... - ?iew. departures' and liberalism are T - - - i mere offshoots without strength to back tbeta lh6 breams of theorists and sim pletonp Cv't r HON. D M A writer in 'the BARR1NGER. Wilmington Star re commends this gentleman for the position of IU) ited' States ijenator W heartily i ivibsy tho ttnmljtation, and hope that lie, or somefcttrh Mt)itHr)g gentlt-roan, may. icccive Me .endorsement of the Lcgiala- Ufa ! Vd. totnjt n awout ww iuw of Women and children were tor.i to shreds or carried off; valuable paintings, pictures. souvenirs, books, jewelry, in short, eVery .1.! .1. l..:L1 . . I -11 . Tl iiiurg iirai was raiuaoie or utgniy prizea by the unfortunate people of the South, were seized, stolen or rendered worthless. Not even the sanctity of the grave was observed. No act that could inflict pain or impoverish our people was neglected, such was the bitterness, the bate, and the cupidity of our enemies. ; The war being over and the South having been ruined and made desolate, it was hoped that onr enemies would relent and cease their bitter persecutions, but not so. The daily accounts of incendia ries that reach us from the South, the stories of outrage and oppression, are the fruits jof the teachings of the carpet-bag fiends the North has sent among us. ThesVscape graces are made the iustrn-j mentB of our torment. They are sustained aud kept among us byNorthern influence and Northern sentiment. The eiu bouses. stock, and other property of the South are daily consumed by xthe savage fiends whom the outcasts of Northen society are! ent here to instruct aud manipulate for political purpose. .: ) . .rJ, ' Since hese things are so since South, ern cities; fields and farms were laid! waste by fire and sword merely to gratify Northern hate and prejudice, since the property of the Southern planter is still at the mercy of the incendiary's torch! while the Northern people are indifferent! to the wrongs they have inflicted, and to the incendiary teachings of the vile; emisaries whom they sustain among us - is it unreasonable to suppose that the great calamities which have visited many of their great cities during the past year are intended as a chastisement for the many wrongs they have imposed upon us? We think it uot unreasonable to suppose that the wrongs of the South will be avenged. and in this way. He to whom vengeance belongs will repay. He will visit tbe sins of the fathers on their child ren to the third and fourth generation. 1 DAVIDSON GtiLLEGC A receat Jctterfrom one of the professors state that there are now 103 students in the four regnlarclasses of the College. Davidson has no preparatory department, and her- students are all bona fide Colkgians. It Is encouraging to know that the standard of scluriarshipi high, and that stwicat tan eater tiass fcirThith -i i - f nevertneiess protest in tne future, as we have in the past, against every usurpation laud encroachment upon the rights of the people, whether they come from the edict of a President, from the vengeance of Congress, 'or from the corruptions of a indfre. true to ourselves, true to our Slate, and faithful to the best traditions of lhetest days of the Republic, we shall merit vie- 1 tory even iu defeat, and we tdiall be worthy f victory when it it ultimately won. Baltimore Snu. What is to bs the tflVci upon existing party organizations of the new triumph of the Republican party lemnius to be seen. It has often happened, however, in the history of parties, that such an absolute lease of power breeds iis own dissolution and decay. New parties are likely to rise as n'w iitertts giows up, nufl new lines of policy suggested by change ol time and tiircumstauce. The prospect for the South aud the country will be gloomy indeed if the tnaguatiiiuily and personal impulses of the Presideut are oven uled in litis matter by malign and irresponsible Counselors. The chief aspiiatiou of pa, triotic men of all parties is, ''Let us have peace." Richmond Dispatch. Let ns say, however, that wc have no idea that Cien. Grant will assume imper ial antlmiity at the end of his second term. He s not the man for that. Nor do we believe the country has reached the period in its history when the "one man" can usurp the power to rule. Therefore we look for a h ippy, contented, and, we hope, and from Milk to Summer on Wafhiutou street. Within these boundaries, an area of about 70 acrts, every building is con toiin d. Five miles of the etrccts have been burned. The gale is increasing, but tbe fire seems roiuewhat tutided. Boston 1:30 o'clock. It is now confidently believed that ih fire is under control. The looses, j no moie buildir.gs nre burned, will uot fjll hort of S200.UOO.000. The burnt ilislficl is bounded by Sum mer, Ftdersl, Broad, IVnrial, Water, Washington uiid Bedford streets. PUIXCII LE TKIUMPIIANT. Bu-T -N, Nov. 1 1. r rom iie luti!n journal .um.) I .n.e htiiuirea ami iiiiity Oiitnur-s It is a t i.d triumph of piiucpb. re- ! h-us s l'rr. d and i'x-v d-.iilii.p atil buke to the sl ii.derers w bo luve in.iguil b'dii.g houx. . Tb- tire is i..w coi fin d (ieneial fj.iant, and a Verdict of inilt v ! " ruins, i h r nptreheus:i:is. A lar-e :.uint-r ccnqiiert'ig and to conquer. That our readers may see what Radi cal Northern papers think of the election, we collite a few extracts : ef e:iiii-n re fi'i llie watch ainst tlne di.-coi:tent-d ei'iiils u lio , h. iud to ric-e to ini'ience bv i.nllin th- The SaiirJiif F.rcuivn (UiZ'Ve ws Republican party down. A'! the schem-s , 1 nrned. I he Paikcr 11 uc wuj Mil- hell, Mrr, Na4i, New llanorrr, Nrt!iui;iMn, ( ulv, 'ranje, l'n;lieo, jOo'anL', l' r.jiimji., I 'er-n, I'iti. Polk. K.l:.l..!jb, iiit l.iicrti.l, H.'tan, I; .ill. rf. r !, 4n-on, luii. , .11 r-. l"ran-. ai.i, Tr. !, tt'kr, W.i rrcn. W IVtif, WiJki. Wil n, Yadkin. Yancry, 12T0 MS 3 9 1191 ',UZ 1S31 9 1J08 711 V 1161 im 12G1 ini arc im 7 CI Z22 14 lr 17-10 1474 1013 1475 tZ7 7'il 1376 73 1M9 1C73 Tj' '43 ' cT4 H1G 1731 il 14-1 I4 to) CV Ci 1CC 7t0 2..li Ki 470 10Vi iZSi l (. VJi 1 J 4 4H Ct? 1101 17a2 221 1.V.4 1(15 1M1 G45 ! y.n Urn 1HC AT 4V 17 t'J HUt 1.19 7i9 u w A 6 10! ZZ2 m 1019 761 lid 1M4 1444 70S 1114 m S3 W4 739 142 422 433 742 142 &47 m 270 1KS3 U9 270 ms Ml 135 1114 e 512 2r 917 1MI 6 42y 719 C10 -W4 ice 1371 127U 7irt 130 lots i9 25.1 i2S f.3 fe.l 1233 Ml 4 1 .eJ 43 1221 2-$ inn vio iy 177i 312 133 l(t 1MI 1K-I 3V 2i 21 i3 S17 031 x-n ?I7 3 VI irt ir.2 w, 2 M U B 0 ) 0 00 0 (O 0 (0 o uu 0 00 0 00 0 oo 0 oo 0 oo 0 00 0 00 o 0 00 0 OO o o 0 0m 0 (Hi 0 oo 0 00 o to 0 V0 0 00 0 OO 0 oo 9 00 e oo 0 W o oo O 00 0 00 0 00 0 oo 0 oo 0 00 0 00 0 OO 0 00 0 t0 0 00 0 eu 0 00 0 0 0 u 0 (st 0 Ul 0 OCi 0 W 0 6 0 0 0 Am 0 O 0 o 0 0 0 0 0 o t 0 0 0 0 e (i 0 0 c o o a Q o (i 0 K 0 o og 0 d o o o ua o oi 0 o 0 oo o oa o oa 0 0 o . 0 i., o on 0 J 0 tw 0 03 o to o oa 0 CM O 9 0 OJ 0 03 0 00 o of 0 CO 0 Oi 0 OJ 0 03 0 00 0 iJ o oo C Oj 0 oo 0 tg ( ( (I kl O (.1 V 0 0 0 " it w u (' 0 r, v e it C o O 0 0 o 0 i. o 0 0 0 c Our immediate people 'harft political I prolonged period for the Republic. rk enough before them to reform their J3at ,'1(lUK, Greeley is deb ated, the wur owu State government, aud re-establish their State credit. Let as address oar selves to that work with the affection of sons and the enthusiasm, at least, which comes trom Belt-interest. Wilmington Journal. What the Papers Say. Through Night to Light." -t-. New York Tribune. Let no taiin accuse the able and slirewcT politicians who, as the Republican Nation al Committee, directed the canvass for fyren. Grant re-election, with squander i,og the unprecedented sums raised aud disbursed by them in this contest with laving played a whole park of artillery o kill a fly. The Libers! movement was nt one time j formidable, and had a pros pect of success. Had not millions been eipended to arrest its progress in the State eleclioins of the last three months, it might even! have swept the country, though all the money raised in its behalf would at best have been pence to balance pounds. j And, while there aro dangerous tendencies de veloped by this canvass, which forshadow a government- by the rich and able few, subsidizing aud enntrohritr such portion as they may require of the ignorant, pen- niless, venal many, let us never despair of the American Republic ! Sew York Sun. Not only did a large body of Democrats refrain froni voting for Mr. Greeley, but another large body of them voted for Gen. jrant ; and to these two classes, rather than to the Republican r party, he is iu debted for hit election to-1 a second term. . These facts illustrate in a very striking manner the I instability of parties aud the tucoiiststeucy of politicians vNew York World. ' The Tammany frauds were ibe source of all onr woes. New York was the chief eitadel of the Democratic party ; and it is creditable to the moral sentiment of the country that' the hideous revelations of last year brought ' the Democratic party into disepue. Had not, been for the Weakentog, prostrating effect of those revelations, the Democracy, ith all the us datua.' eJ si glalv. HosTON, Nov. 12, I A. M. The Stieets now n:c p'lfcctly quiet To hundred and tifiy uiounlid soldieis patrol the street, aud no oua not bavir.g effici-il authority trom the comm tndanl i permitted to pasl the lines of itifv.try. One man wtic atu-mpted to enter a store on Winter street, and w ho tefuscd to leave after being repeatedly ord red away, start ed to ran when about to be arrvsud, and was shot b the euaid. hx'ensive lines of hose are strrtched tg f, witUilri w as a candidate lor all overthcruins, and engines are station- 'S C'leik of the House of Representative el at almost every hydrant ready at a on account of batiuees of an iinperauve j moment's notice to be woiked if occasion nature. j should requite. Points where persons are' . i j known to be buried in the ruins are bein; SPKCI AL NOTICES. I cooled with water preparatory to digging I : 1 . I out the corpses of the victims. Immense ASTHMA Any ro-Jleine whieh will all. l t ir tii" i miua r-usv a. i a & ui 4 ram uiMi-r a V,72l 1,093 Jno R. Huttcy, Kq th voang editor uf the Hickory ul t.'t cause of Liberalism is not defeated, and it is a great satisfaction to feel that Grant'i election is dne, as we said above, to other causes than those of sectionalism and the passions engendered by the late war. The bloody i hasm has been steadily clos ing even during the champaign. Men have listened to the arguments and sym pathized with the stritinie ;t of the Lib epalists who have voted for Grant. The seed sown will germinate and produce a rich harvest. The next campaign for the Presidency will be freed from feeling. Pari'S will be thoroughly interlaced, binding all section together, and men will seek popularity by proptiliating the the popular interests everywhere. Greeley himself, looking to the future, said that be might be beaten, but that the eauae of Liberalism wrufd ultimately triumph ; and it will. Petersburg Index. One substantial: sabfct of rongratnIa lation reruins, however, nmid the gener al wreck 'nf our plaas. far reform and re conciliation tin Southern States almost without exception, have developed their power to thake t.S the shauu less local1 rule which has for years oppressed their citizens, it remains to them to maintian the ascendancy thus asserted within their own borders, and whether anyipartin Na tional unair.118 to be theirs hen after, or not their, condition must be immeasurably tm proved by the failure of radicalism to per petuate its hold on their homes govern incuts. Norfolk Virginian J The future historian will pause on this page iu our history with mingled wonder and admiration, for he will sec a na tion, for such the South is, counting its voters by millions, subordinating every private consideration and sentiment to a supreme idea that nt local liberty an idea born in tbe forests of Geituauy and ! embodied iu the Great Charter at Runny- meue. in one word, we uave done our duty as we understood it, and to the Ust syllable of recorded time this great fact will remain to oar credit on the ledger of the Historic Muse. .We have behaved i.obly as a people. We have adapted ourselves to circumstances, and shown practical statesmanship, and devotion to Republican institutions. Tbe reply from nubiican party of our opponents h.ive conn to uaiigh:, a!! llnir falsehood and mirepn senla'ionr have recoiled upon iheir heads, i;d the people have asser.'ed in tones not to be nn.-uiileitood that the Democratic party, under whatever guise it my appear, will he rebuked by the suffrage of a fice peo ple. GRANT'S rOLiCY FOUND GOOD AND hVY HC1LN r. From the Thilatlelphia Inqe.irer ( Adm.) The popular verdict has been delivered w ilh peculiar force, in favor of Gen. Grant an i in opposition to Mr. Gieeley. The former's policy ha been practical exeuip 1 fication, atid of lab rdclan d yesterday, by their votes, that they f und it good and -sufficient. Gen. Grant has made a record as Pie.sident with which the coun try is satisfied, and, tM-lore mat, he l.ad , of coA al tl)0 KumU mafff abf)Ul . vau-in an.ir.ui. oi made a record as a soldier, of wh;ch every j r(0 Aru on fiip T. rn . ; ""'VJJ'l . . . . . j ; i - - - - - - - - iii'Ti-iuHraTP uu vihii ti4J j rfu,a un Amencan citiz-n was proud, and which , Rranl,.J .IC Jry eoofl m, rchants ihe pri- ! niMK'i Kimlpt are frtiai Ui inot reJimWt r-1 n j iiiii' leifc " "uin ue uiiihiciui id forcet or iirnore. Gratitude and interest. ' rr w i liiip i k w i i'i rt.s4.u u isjvtib iuu iriv a. tia w n i n hai n C 4 A I And t.k I.AMaA.a A ' 1 mc... ...m u yllLK a 1 ) Y C ItT I S I N G . From other structures lor temporary uc. for once, went hand in band to reward a trusted public servant. A TKIUMPII OF nONESRY AND VIRTUE. Fiom the Utica (N. Y.) ireralJ (Adra.) The indorsement ri the present Admin istration is one that will cause universal rejoicing. It is not only a triumph of j honesty and virtue over misrepresentation, slander and abuse, but a vindication of the principles of popular government, showing that no arts of the enemy can deceive the gnat mijority of intelligent citizens, and that they have the patriot ism and discrimination necessary to pre serve the institutions inherited from Washington und his compatriots. It is another tiiumph of Union and good gov ernment over the hosts of anarchy aud hate, who, under tbe pretense of reconcil iation, aimed to renpen all tbe issues settled by the war, and whose triumph would bave entailed upon us long years of bitter struggle, if not another civil war aud tho final dissolution of th Union. Ternble Conflagration. THE HUH ON FIRE. Boston, Mass , Nov. 10th. An alarm of fire was sounded about 71 o clock last niiMtt. followed bv other alarms in rapid sucression. The first engine bad hardly reached the gronnd when the names burst from tho fourth story of the store corner of Summer and Kingston streets, occupied as a wholesale dry goods establishment. The fire origi nated in the engine room, the nanus fol lowing tbe elevator, and was first seen under the. roof. The building in the vicinity were four-story granite Mansatd roofs. The flames soon reached the Msnsard roofs on the opposite side fsr beyond tbe reach of the engines. In thirty minutes the whole city in one direction was at the mercy of the flames, which leaped from roof to roof. One great dry goods house after another succumbed, tbe granite walls falling la tbe Streets, and making then 1 hie ru2u we.e dtcove:i d attempting to break into a room iu the Parker ilouv, but tuadc their escape. It is rumored that a drunken wretch late yesterday evening attempted to set t fire to the gasboase near Cbarlestown ! biidge, but was seized by the iufutiated crowd aud unceremoniously hung to a lamp-post. Three men weieburiel under the falling walls ou Washington street, leaving th-ir heads only visibly. Efforts to rescue them from their horrible position proved unavalingand in a few minutes afterwards remainder of the wrIU fell, eras hint? and bur ing them from sight. 1 It is estuuatd that nearly ten thousand girls nie thrown out af emyloyment by tlie nrc. It is known thit thirty lives have been ost. Detachment of the lt and 2 id regiments are quartered in the old South church. This Lui dinr has not been thus used since the British officers quartered iheie iu tbe llevolutiou oue hundred year ago. Six mm were arrrstid this moinine in the"Nottlicrn part if the city caught iu the. act of fitii g buildings by kindling boiidfiies iu the rear ot the buildings. 1 be street aie patrol ed by tbe military. The remains of John Howard Payne. the autlior nt "Home, Sweet Home." till rest in Tunis, and. wi;h the exception nf tbe stoue placed over his crave bv the United State government, no iotiuiDeui was t ver en-cted to his memoiy. It i the liiuuliob or the ' J: ast Iub, a soviet y of journalists and prufi-ei-ju men, of Unnik lyu, Ne lork, to en-ct a suitable monu ment in Prospeit Paik of that e-ty, and, if possible, to biiug lue reuiaiu from Tunis t Greenwood OuieUry. Mr. Payne, as is wi 11 known. wh l-.ru In lbs city ol New Yoik, i 1703, and for sever al years had bis Lome in llrovklyn. ' Tbe loo full heart ovetfiowa anwining ly happy; and shamed at the enrrent of joj aud new seuaations with which an un known feeling hat flooded cr.-Taine. faniily.fnim city to city, from state to Ulr, th fain of Da. Walkers Y eg eta elk Vdm.h HlTTEas as a pecitio for all deranren-iit uf tbe floiuacb. bowels and lirer, is coutciualir exteudinfT. It v.JuntArj" njiioune, rr in numerable, any public entt.ui-m ia it Lor prfaU faster thn a prairie tire. l0 NT SI.1 G I1T YOU U TEhTH T Ueinen:-U-rthat npn tbeir labor, tbe l.tsUL ( stomach depends Kep tt.eiu jxtreet. : ' : ortler to do m. uiiuipulste tbem itb dij it-d ia the fracraul ix'lcX3t. oi c a Uaj. WHO TTILLSUFFKR! ltiuw-; ixx Dr. Tobias' Yenitiau Liuunei t v., ; or tbe public; warraLUnj; it U me RbeunUin. UeaJaebe. Cut-, ttur:.. ' Old &res. I'aius a tb Lim!, l' s s kimI It ha nevrf failed. 8dd by Yi .. Dcjx.t. 10 Park Place. New Yelk i mm'tf w lj la Ik U m'm - -. rrtUili t-S 'ohi4 l(M, l4U Urrr. N kr f r-ripiif S ! I . -1 - - Cur U'ifrll O-, r Yr. 4 lr f ts to tmmW. m4 k. a I m'r ftftwlm tim r vU- r iri'M. ) Li 'STo" !! riilV Tur tuou - - .-. ll U n.ti l- eir-.t r S f r.rr . I'. I rn. Hl4 hj 4I Dr !. rtr tt 4 Ml r. v. Wri a c s. i luii.ti aikiuh ii uunm iiirt.nu' in tlie world. T Is1t nf featto of 1ir two ux-a inj f'ther. Il is litr taat-l wr1-1 r nl c.T-rt Hair ! in lbs wori4. Ui,' 64 Maden I.soe. New York. CAItiKiLP' sil.TE. lrJlltt..lrJ b eisnsaatbe rent Mt-sMsg ('orn(Qnl teats xir box. Jol llmrj. im lu "ller I'isee. Xw York. BIsLEY'jS BUi'HU Ur isb'e (heic: . le fr aU drarceau oftbe ar!aa .a oiirsaa. Tbe irenai. as lorax-rlr la a. Harral k U, 4 lU-ir eraaete prepared fejr If. W. kn er. tbe orriistor as. firieloe; and tb tr.Ae Mt4wi4 bs mvmi Hurt lUley. New Yrk., SY IPXI . or ejii p-irftel.tkc hcm! arr VI a . d taiaemaaet ade 1t rore of IH. J. m. Bifrlow, fietoit Meitievl t oilert. I a: aja lirra iatrecra wkkb Urartlj tie ease la atbrt pa ra U u of opiuia PaTTe KriltLOJL Vast wri.mA nr' ttoa aa lbs aartst aa4 lllaaiiaalisf mi'. lleer a it!Jin f allocs Varc lea so '.4 Ivr Us pa-t twa eeaea, ti mm wafcb ar-4ats af ary Ar reipttoa ke aecarrea. sJ f rinatsr. (al iUaofriiaa. Pratt. KatablUbe IT7S. X Tr WE HAYK IBEVft'tXTLY HKARO aMrtsT say I key woai4 wt bs wilVtat Mr. SoolViar (rra. froM lbs bin a mt lb clIt4 aaul H laUWd wits tb tsrtalaf skera. aadtf lujc iJeaUoa wbaWesr. TUB KKTEET OF BTOSTT. Viil hi Ul aa Wfurv aak4.fof tka wel4 mi faakiaa aa4IW,a4sa kaawtaail tjroeHftr4 by aatsf a det ritW aa4 asmteaWMWfeefaraUakaaa (. W. LateTs Blaaa oT Taalk." IU beaatfjlsr fCH aa) ra'y waadsrSala TfK . CU Ba, Jf. T 'V -1

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