The Daily Review. JOSH. T. JAMES, Ed. and Prop WILMINGTON, N. C. THURSDAY, AUGUST 23.-1877. VIEWS AND REVIEWS. The Czar annouces tnat he w ill close the campaign this year on the lin; oi the Balkans. The Sultan exepcts to close it in on the line of the Danube. At Sock Miil, Als.f on. Ihe ilth iri.se., says the Montgomery Advertiser, an old n?gro woman died whose age was 105 years. About ten years ago she lest her husband, who died at the good old age of 1 (A V0ilTfl- Mary Mapes Dodge; editor of the ' St. Nicholas," is a handsome brunette, below t'-ie middle size, and quite stout, the em bodiment, of vivacity and mcrrimcr.t. She is a veritable humorist, seeing every thing at jl droll angle, and 'telling stories that keep her hearers in a gale of laugh- terV:'-':";".-;' . , . ; The annual report of the Texas and Pacific Sailroad Company, which was read at Philadelphia on Wednesday, stated : that 4R0 8-10 miles of track had been completed of which 110 were finished during the year just closed. The receipts for the year were 2 381,97017, and prof its $318,985 02. TJiQ Bev. Phillips Brooks tells the sug gestive speech of a backwoodsman who heard;BUhop Mead, of Virginia, preach without manuscript, in a frontier church. ,;He ia the first of them fine fellers," said the homely critic, "'that I have ever ecn who could shoot without a rc$t.:' The Adjutant-General of Pennsylvania has issued orders to' carry out the recent determination of the Governor to enlist for service in preserving the peace volun teers from the National Guard. Xone but men in good health and physique will te selected, aud the surgeon will re ject all men under twenty-one years of age. Frivate telephones for business purposes are now in successful operation iu New York, and there is a prospect that they CwUlcomc into general use. The circuits vary from one to five miles of wire in length! and the instrument at. each end consists simply of a wooden tube, which can be used at pleasure for the transmis sion, or reception of sound. "I wouid like to whisper a word in your ear,"; bids fair to become iUo comr.rttirct:nf snlutations. . ' . The manager of the French Democratic paper, Mot d'Ordrc, has been condemned to two months' imprisonment and 5,00fj fraVwa firm fnr librllinr Marshal Mr. Million . One of the objectionable passages was this: iif Ur.ir.i 1 l L. r. . iu. uicaianon, wuu ue&enui num a meiu apothecary, . arriving from the British at laics at Autun to seek his fortune, has dextously allowed the rumor to be circulated, without ever contradicting it, that his ancestors occupied the throne of Ireland." " Secretary Shchnan appears to have get the Treasury Department into a very atvkward scrape by allowing the national banks and certain private firm?, which figured in the old syndicate, to be' ruled out of tho new one, when, by the with-J drawal of the balance- of kthc four-and-a-half per cents thoy were deprived of the full benefit of their original contract, without receiving any: compensating in terest in the fundiDC the new loan. The ultimate: Tcsult of this injustice 'will pro bably take the. form of a suit at law, but the immediate effect is felt by the new securities, which instead of conimandiug a premium. have fallen below par, with every prospect of going still lower. The Mid-way, Ky., Sun says about four weeks ago John loung s large uog myste riously disappeared. He could .hear nothing from it.' Last Sunday Mr. Ed Scott was attracted to his well by 'the story of a little boy, who said that he heard and saw the dog in a well. The neighbors were summoned, and Mr. Young himself descended by a ladder and brought ; the dog out. It is supposed ' that the dog had lived in the well four weeks. When taken out it was very lean and faint. Mr. Scott heard the dog bark in the well three weeks ago, but could not perceive it on looking into the well, ond concluded that the noise came from some other direction. Fcacc is concluded between 'Egypt and Abyssinia, on terms which make the mis erable, war between the Khcbivc aud Cing John a drawn battle. The old frontiers ar-ftplHsjrcstored, and the Bogos country will bo given to Egypt; and on the other hand, Abyssinia js to be at liberty to nave an agent at juassowan, and to nave free, communication with foreign countries except that thoimportation of po wder and guns is limited to fifty pounds of powder, ten guns and five thousand caps an ar rangement not likely to b3 long satisfactory to warlike, powder-loving Abyssinians. Col. Gordon is not, however, ' yet free to begin Ms often-postponed task of putting down tht slave trade in the Bed Sea,, for an insurrection has brokenjout in the pro vince of Darfur, and he is busy.supprcss- HARD TIMES ENERY WHERE. jThe recent stagnation in business affairs (bbt wo hope that it is rather recen than present and that the near future will prove this) has not been confined to any qne locality or for that matterf to any one colintry, but scemc;d to have been univer sal, reaching almost every where and affect ing every industry and every department of business and trade; ThcL New York Lulldiit in discussing this' subject, says : The great iron works of Germany are in a very depressed condition, and her com petition with England and Franco in that branch of manufactures has not turned out very satisfactorily. , ' The Germans arc look M; forward'. to a better and cheaper system of freight to aid them, in competing with forigu countries; and canals, which at one time" were looked on as, rivals to railways, are now looked at in the light of adjuncts. The railways are. advised to construct canals, and to use them as a useful auxiliary for the transportation of stone, minerals and coals. In France country of Bastiat though it be there is a regular recrudescene of pro tectionist theories, and the Chambers , will soon be stormed with the representations of different interests. The meetings of these 'tbreat-'ened industries,' which are being held all over the country, recall the words of Adam Smith, ' When manufac turers meet, we may 'expect a conspiracy against the public poc-'ket,' It will! not be veryeasy for these gentlemen to agree among., themselves-. The iron masters . want high duties on English, German and Belgian iron, but they want to buy Eng lish and Belgian coal cheap for their furnaces. The cotton spinners want to be protected against the mills of Manchester; but they wish to have the mill plant im ported free.. In short every interest is antagonistic to the rest. The wjiole -political and social condition of -Europe is, in fact, in process of trans formation and while some great works, like railway enterprises, may have seen their best for years, other interests are go ing through ft process of evolution, and seeking to adjust tho immense productive power of modern machinery to a certain demand for their products. Unfortunately, however, the consumption of the world has not kept pace with the increased pro duction;. and a Frenchman, who is a serio comic economist, is not far astray when he -gives the tollowing 'opinion on the sjtuation: 'Wc have machines which 'turn out 10,000 pair o'f sjbeks a day, and 'others giving us 100.000 coats a month. We 'cannot, or do not buy all this, .and the factories have to stop. ;I see no way out of the 'difficulty, but by bur wearing out a coat 'every day.' WASHINGTON LETTER. W a b li i i o ton , D. C.; Aug. "21, 1877. A gentlemen occupying a place in the Cabinet of Mr. Uaycs ought not to make political speeches iji a Sate campaign. It is smipiy an attempt tu tmn-aozu tuc peo ple by an authoriative statement of what the Administration wishes . If a Collector of Customs should preside over a conven tion, and should say in substance, that he thought certain men, should be nominated and certain measures endorsed, the prin ciple would bo the same but the actual offense leas hcindusi because the Collector would not go directly from he President to the convention. It is not possible to acquit Sherman and Hayes of a gross im propriety in the matter of the former's Cfhio speech, if they are held to have been sincere iu their reform notions. Sherman indeed, prefaced his speech with a state- met that the order against interference of oiiiicials with politics had no bearing on the case. The mere fact that he thought such an cxplamatton necessary shows that he knew his hearers did not agree with him. He justified himself by the letter of the order, knowing the while that the spirijt of it condemned him. i Of the merits of the speech I say noth ing, except that all the Republican papers in America are1 hunting excuses for it. One paragraph in it suggests a few re flections as 'to matters here.' Every De partment of the government, is needlessly hiring private buildings for the transac tion of public business. The rents paid are such as to give the owners, in from four to ten years, the whole cost of the building. Ben Buttlcr gets from the Coast Survey from 11 to 18 per cent. ojn the cost of. buildings put up by him a ew years since. There are many even more flagrant instances of extortion than this. While the government borrows money at 4 per cent, it should not payi 4 or C times as much for the use ot property. Mr. Sher man speaks of saving on rents, etc. The administration can make a real and mate rial saving by inserting in its cases here a provision that when the rent paid shall have become twice the amount of the val ue of tho property hired, the buildings and land' shall become the popcrty of the United Statcs. i Not o;ie in five of these renters would accept the terms. The camp-meeting season of 1877 is at its height with us. There is manifest a considerable falling off from the attend ance and spirit of former years. As con ducted iu out neighborhood these affairs become more expensive to the visitor each year, and the hard times affect them. Seretary Schurz is again credited with an intention of displacing all his present Bureau Officers. When this factVas first given.to the public there was good reason to believe tho changes would take place at on early day, but several months have elapsed without action. The present re port comes 'directly to your correspondent from a gentleman in position to know the facts. Changes in the Treasury, also, are rcelv spoken of. Gukdse. , " ' -P ' The Senatorial Commission appointed by the legislature of California tol inquire into the Chinese question, have embodied the information obtained on he subject in a memorial to Congress.' It is nnder stood that tho memorial takes strong ground against Chinese immigration and suggests a remedy which it is hoped will obviate further trouble on that account. The People of Winnebago County, Illi nois, who two years ago refused to per mit Jefferson Davis to address theray wi" on lb 13th of next month, at their coun ty f fair, listen to Governor Wade Hamp ton, of South Carolina. 1 ' Bishop Marvin, of the Methodist Episco pal Church, South, writes from Japan that One-half the money spent by the women of the Southern Methodist Church for gewgaws would support a hundred missionaries in Japan. - m m A very suggestive fact is given by the Philadelphia Eccninj Jhdlctin, to the ef fect that cut of one hundred and eighty prisoners sent to the" penitentiary last year, one hundred and seventy-three had never served ' an -apprenticeship at any trade. At Lake Charles, Calcasieu parish; La., a most exciting scene was witnessed by a number of people on the shore. Some Ia,ds, among whom was a bov-.i name 1 "Wm. Haskell, were in bathing, when the attention of all were attracted to the cries of the latter, and an alligator was seen swimming in that direction. The little boy, not perceiving the approach oi the alligator, dove, and just as he rearched the surface the open jaws received him The alligator drove his teeth almost through the boy's skull, making several wounds in the scalp three inches in length The boy's comrades rushed into the water and began a loud outcry, when the alliga tor let-go his hold and disappeared. The The little fellow, although seriously in jured' ill probably live. Miscellaneous. SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY. The Channels of Kxit From, the human system bear tlic same re lation to it as sewers do to a city. They carry oif the waste, the refuse which it is essential to remove in order to prevent dis ease. One of the most salutary effects of Ilostetter's Stomach Bitters is to renew ac t ivity of the bowels when these organs are derelict in their duty. 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SEW REVISED EDITIO.V. tutircly rewritten by the ablest writers on every subject, l'ruited lixiiii new tyie, ond illustrated witti ..several Tliousaud Knirravinss and Maos The work originally published under the title of TliK i h. W AAILiUCAJf CYLCOPK L1A was completed in 1S73, since which, time the wide circulation whieh it has at tained in all parts of the- United States and the signal developments which,' have taken place in every bianco of science, literattre, ana arii nave uiuucuu me euitor auu puu lisher to submit itl to an exact and thorough revision, and to issue a new edition entitled TI1K AMKKICAM CYCLOIMSDIA. Within the last ten years Uie progress of discovery in every department outnowieage has made a new work of reference an im perative waui. i'he movement of political affairs have kept pace with the discoveries oi science and their fruitful application to the industrial and useful arts and the convenience and re finement of social life. Great wars, and con sequent revolutions have occurred, involv ing Aiationai cnanges oi peculiar inoineui. The civil war of our country, which was at its height when the last volume of the old work appeared, has happily ended, and a new course of commercial and industrial activity has been coniinenced. .Large accessions to onr geographical knowledge have heen made by the indefati gable explorer of Africa. The great political revolutions of the. last decade, with the natural result of tho lapse of time, have brought into public view a multitude of new men, whose names are in every one's mouth, and of whoso lives everv one is curious to know the particulars (ireat battles have been fought and impor tant sieges maintained; of which the details are as yet preserved only in the newspaiers or in tho trasient publications oi the day, and which ought now to take their place in permanent and authentic history. i tin preparing the present, edition for . the press, it has accordingly been the aim of the editors to bring down the information to the lowest possible rates, and. to lurnish an ac curate account f the most recent discoveries in science, of every frehs production in literaure. and of the newest inventions in the practical arts,as well as to give a succinct and original record of the progress political and nistorical events. 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' A larffe proportion of the artic!cijWPerii?, those descriDiivn nf ravai ;n w.' ' '.T PEOFUSELY AND liEAUTin'U ' ILLUSTRATED. The pictorial embelishments of the lliriiu In addition to tbe General Attraction! . Lippincott's Magarine, the Publisher invite attention to the followine BY SPECIAL FEATURES FOB 1877. 1. A new serial story, "The XVXarauis of Lossie," by George MacDonald, author of "Malcolm "Alec Forbes" "Robert f.i.av To those of our readers who are famiYut With 'Mftlcnlm thianctB' tnt. r .1 of this distinguished writer will need no tt4 nmmonilafinn .nil ki. nHi.i! I tee to nfhrrs nf a rioontv powerful story. It began in tbe Notembt: number, which issue, with the DecemWr pr; will be furnished graits to all new lubicribei 1UI iOI I. I 2. A prof llustratcd scries of ikctcb- 01 Swedish Scenery and Life, by Prof. Willard Frisk, author of Cora. University, ' who is throughly, familar wi: awcucn anu 11s people lrom personal owern tlon. 3. A series of popular papers on Art and Art Matters, - .. 1 by Edward Strahan (Earl Sbinn), author c "The New Hyperion' etc. 4. Illustrated Sketches of Trarel, nliW Pictures from Spain, by Edward King, author of the "Great Sonth' etc. 5. Mrs. Lucy If. Hooper's IntereniDf aiH Piquant Papers and Letters from Vint will be continued through the year. 6. The Beauties of theHhine will be described in a richly illustrated icri ofnaoers. " .7. During the year will appear a tuabo of h andsomely illustrated short artklet, )" scriptiveof Life, Travel and AdTetttare the United States, England, South Jmericij Japan, Mongolia, ana otner couotrier. Bccrs 1 OCT foil SALE BY ALL BOOK ANDOT i DEALERS. PRICE, C5 CENTS. Terms. Year Subscription, fl; Iwo cT Ten copies, $30; with a copy gratia to tj person procuring the club. &ioze nnavf. 35 cents. NoriCE-The JfoTember and Decent bers containing the earlier chapter! Marquis oiLiOSsie'wiii oeprcsenicu annual subscribers for 1877. Specimen Number mailed, postage l to any address, on receipt of 20 cents. r- To Agents a Liberal Conflow'01'1 De allowed. Address. , J. B. LIPriNCOlT, & CO., Publisber, 715 and 717 Market ' bt., YUtotefi- " J11 5 I : Spartanburg :& R- R. New Rout6:to:tlie:jlounta No. Co. VTA W WWAA . NEW ROUTE I travelling public. rf-J'J. 2 r ihe Depot of the U.. mills N 1 to tbe tra leave daily the Depot of tne .tetli in Columbia at 12:45 p. m., .brf minui of S. & A- K. K. t P close connection is wl,aiencMi coacres lor j-iat wvf vigK Asbe rUJe and Wa m tsr"nSfc r 'T will have choice to go through of ud 5iL Tryon, where tbe fare u "ctIi resume their journey "J.JV w and tbe-eby enjoy fome. o i talh scenery on the Uowaxu y-K h-foondin Western Aorth. tww.B ArransemciiU have been W. C. A A. I, K., for round tnp the fo lowing rates : i-riwS' From Wil. to Flat Rock d rli"Vi AshevUle and T-trt " to Warm Spring j ' to"lieBdersonvnJe $15.85. -Capt. S. S.Kirkland, of tM merly of tbe A'r Line B..R.. 'aj on the arrival of the Uains ltJtA of the S. A A. R. K., to see tbt J p d are provided for and seat forwaid ij ' 4 lay. On arrival of trains P'p quested to a ior vpu and TraitrporUtiop Agent. . Try this new route. Washington fJoi m, CTR I Repaired Seeoad to docjt p.t ifwtratfi and Bew Mb h . i8- ( li ',11