TttK MORNING STAR, tho oldest daQr am oec in Nortii Carolina, I Uhs week to one year. TUB WEEKLY STAR is published W r ?W mamin at SI DU DCT TWU, w !"-- - cenu for three months. ss;Vs 'suz&gst fmeTof sc&d Nonpareil type make one square. All announcement or Fairs. Fertlrals BaMa, No advertisement Inserted in Local Column at any price. toTt'C .XeqaentiMertion-' r p nrtienttinBertedonceaweekinDafljwoi I charged i qo per jquaw for r,thr rilr. three fourths of daily rate. Twice a weea, two niniii w Notice, of arrlageor Death, Trttnte. of Re- . mart Rwnin usni oi 'rnanna. osc ro iu orkTS advertisementa. but only half rates I .Kn fnr atritl in ailvanCB. ' . . . . . ata Kjt i A, ima w.w ww cenU will pay for a simple announcement of Mar riage or Deatn. - - . . . V ) liimrtiiAmmitj ta follow readlns matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra ac cording to the position desired. ' Advertisement on which no specified number of insertions is marked will be continued "till forbid," at the option of the publisher, and charted.. to the date of discontinaance. s. i i t AdvarUaementa discontinued before the time con ' tracted for has expired, charge-, transient rates foi the time actually published. ". : j ':.;:'::''H K ,;-.'T: Advertisements kept under the head of "New Ad vertisements" will be charged flity per cent, extra. An extra charge will be made for double-column or triple column advertisemento. Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements one dollar per square for each insertion. All anno-ncementa acd recommendations of can didates for office, whether In the shape of commu nications or otherwise, will be charged as advertise ments. i-:y:i--j u..,-' Contract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed their space or advertise any thing foreign to their regular business without extra charge at transient rates. ..... . ...,,.:.'.. . . Payments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Known parties, or strangers with proper reference, may pay monthly or quarterly, ac cording to contract, r-; -, ;.;;. . Advertisers Bhould always specify the issue or, is sues they desire to advertise in. Where no issue is named the advertisement Vwill be inserted in the Dally. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement is In, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his address. Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, Pos tal Money Order, Express, or in Registered Letter. Only such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. ;.--.r..: - , ;,v:.; Communications, unless they contain important news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real interest, aro not wanted; and, if acceptable in every other way, they will invariably be rejected if the real name of the- author is withheld. By wii.i.iJLin a. bebnabd. WILMINGTON, N. CL : Th jesdat Mokning, J une 12, 1879. 1 IMPORTANT PACTS AND FIGURES The voters of the country will be kept constantly reminded for the next eighteen months to come of the great political issue made up between the Democratic and Republican par ties. They will not" be allowed to forget for a day that the Republican party is pledged to bayonet rule and a jury system that is an outrage upon the rights and liberties of themselves. We have no donbt that illustrations 1 and cuts will be made to do good service, and that the ballot-box, sur rounded by a cordon of soldiers, whilst the box and its ballots are pierced with bayonets, will be con spicuous features of the campaign. But whilst the people remember the assaults upon justice and right sation or official deliverance. We and freedom by the Republican copy the following without attacb party, they must not forget the great ing any special importance to it,-but economical questions that : so much give it as current news. The Wash concern their interests. The Repub- ington special to the Richmond Z lican party has wasted, misapplied, patch of the 9th says: and Stolen hundreds of millions of "I asked a Vireinia member of the Honsn the people's monev. The rascalities. I the frauds, the peculations of that party were on a scale of enormity that is almost beyond belief or esti mation. The people saw this, and hence the tremendous reaction that followed. In a few "years a party that was overwhelmingly dominant in every department of the Govern ment was driven from power, and to day they "are - in- a great minority. . .. . They hold but one department, but I nnlv hT a mnr,t nn.n a r J I J J v vuuagc auuifauu. mi Trv ' '-" . . ': j ne democrats nave, hadcontrol of the House only .during 1877, '78 and so far in 1879. In March last uVy vuwuieu ioe ascenaancy in the o t. i-:::.. . . - I 18 .."wresung to Know what they have, been able to do in the way of retrenchment and reform with only ontbranch of Congress un. uvr wrjwwtn, ana Wltn a JJraUOU- lent Chief Executive and a corrupt Senate to interfere with and check to a large extent their efforts at econo my. There has been very great im provement. The saving , to the hardly taxed people is already very great. A comparison of Republican expenditures for four fiscal years mm with the expenditures when Demo- .. r i crats naa control, of the House of I Representatives - shows the 1 most gratitymg results. .. The New York Sun has a caref ullv prepared exhibit of the expenditures We avail ourselves of its wli . uv- , t . well-directed ' name?;. 5SBfflai ConrDio&awrte ccutive and Judicial, Sundry tCiviland r"- - t"""" , "Y,cacy ana miscel laneous oius .are irregular and, depend upon exceptional circumstances But in the two periods of four years each eiven below, the appropriations of every kind are included in the statements: ... TOTAL PUBLIC . EXPEUDITUKE8 APPK0PKI- ATED BT KEFUBLICAN COKQBE88ES. ' ' -1R7S : . - - - c1on 000 - - 1874. :-Tr.T ;;;789;o25;793.04 ll7n::::::::::;:::-g , 1 TOTAL PUBLIC EXB.fi STDITURES APPROPRI ATED ST THE EE.JUTK AHO DEMOCRATIC HOUSE. 1877. , , ....... $154,090,943.53 1878 158.544.745.66 1879.... 160,292,75a 58 160,919,695.82 $628,848,185.49 $731,029,382.12 '628,848,135.49 1880... Total........;, . Four yean1 appropriations by Repablicarn. . . .. .. . Four years' appropriations ;. by Democrats " Tv.fw,, in fa Tm: 102. 181.246. 63 f Thia reduction averages twentyfive and a half millions a year, and it la fuliy one :l -Taia,.i!.In 1869 Baltimore; PbiTadel hundred and twenty-five millions a.year . , . , .p 'k i .i iu ..iim.i.. Ka rtannrtmonta I Vhin nnrT Hnsr.nn pxnnrtfifl S4I.3uU.tiUU Whatever mtybe. in other respects, this is a good showing for I the Democrats, wheii contrasted with , the I extravagance of tho Republicans :&i ,ri ,m Let it be remembered that the &m ; - , ft -. fl A Rain tin t r , ri".' --txr- .www - w . v - hhi'lTH v ui ivur uuudi ijiuuuiu that he is an old .Republican who stood by the party until it ' liad bet come hopelessly corrupt. ' J' It should be remembered that as cheering as these figures ': are they would have been" much, larger,' but a Radical Senate would not allow further retrenchment!' The effort was made by the Democrats, but they failed. The Sun says, pertinently: , , "It will be borne in mind that the appro priations are always made, a year ahead. . so that although the Democrats- had the House of Representatives at the beginnins: of the Forty-fourth Congress, the supplies tm to the 80th of June. .1870. had already been voted by their predecessors. :: There- I fore the retrenchment which they made. only began to appear ia the appropriation for 1877." , - ; I do it may do saia ma. since juarcn 4, 1877. the Democrats have saved the heavily-burdened taxpapers of the country over one hundred and two .million dollars. They have to this extent red eecaed their pledges to the , country that the cry of re- trenchment and reform should not be meaningless a cry and nothing else. ; These faets and figures are. impor taut. , No country can prosper with such tremendous burdens resting upon the energies of the people. The I hnndrH of milliona wrongrfnlly tk: ken from the p6ople,and then wasted, stolen and misapplied, caused kb lit-: ue 01 tue nnanciat : couapse . mat ne i gan in 1 873, and that has hung with crushing power upon the country ever since. . " I f We do not intend to . allow our selves to be deceived again by His Fraudnlency. It will be remembered that before the first veto it was con- fidently asserted time and again that Hayes would sign the bill." But he did not sign it. Three times he has used his veto power for the purpose of coercing the Congress of the United States. He has shown him self the pliant instrument in the'hands of the Stalwarts. We put,' there fore, no confidence in anything he may say, whether in private conver- this evening to teU me aU the poUUcal news, and he replied : Mr . Hayes stated to day to a member of the House that Coo gress will not' be here longer than two weeks, and that. I take it. in a measure confirms the rumor that the Republicans I UV UUUUICUU lUUjJUk U1B HOIJ mil wuu I any great earnestness.' He then informed me that Senator Thurmaap Mr. 'Carlisle, and other Democratic leaders, are delighted with the situation, and say the' Democratic party is bound to win on the issues already made. While it has exhausted every means; within the Constitution to repeal the ob noxious and unjust laws, the Republicans have resorted to every expedient to keep these laws on the statute-book. With such they say the Democrats may safely " The New York Notion Aa z very able Republican; nar.er. ft mn. raUy regarded by all parties as being 1 eahal if not snnerior in fnW tn ntr J " j I of j its party contemporaries. It is not an organ: It discusses measures Qp0n their merits. -It does- not echo th iosane ravings Of the Stalwarts whn thfiv nrir rWAl,,t; "new rebellion." It wishes to know; wherein has the South offended. Its last issue contains a striking editorial in condemnation of the course of the Stalwarts. We can ; only reopy one paragraph,-and it is good reading: "If the Stalwart view of the President's .a. a. huu Eiu&i vw ai s iina xsa ..asm r rF.animiL a dutytowsrds the South,2 as expreMeditt ""'criucisms oi the course pursued bs Mr. Hayes and in their longmgs for Gene- ral Grant, be accepted by the party, it will w owmuwu ui IUQ UMIY, It Will be Tefydifflcult to deny the reatonaWeneas we will go so far as to say that.if there be t:.: the Republican party claimed for President I Urant and denounce President Hayes for not exercisingthe. Democrats would not ZYtJth &rttZ& Pr?ry derangement of the Government." Kuere is a nattering prooability that the rebudiatioriiatR of 'tha Ioii. IflKin. ' Mfrn'.. -It .1.1 State 3 Convention will be n5ii,ft!i'.i.i'i.v.. i 1 'u'" uiiaiiu vuuveniinn win na cheoked in ; their plans.; Not only is public sentiment beyond: thotaUl against such a course: but there is powerful reaction going on at home ... . . . . again8t tthe 8p propbsedrTte Hew 1 passed a resolution protestinff affainst property holders of the city have pe titioned against suoh an unwis and dishonest policy. There" is more of honesty left than ia sometimes sup posed.: Tho Southern people, a im? all theirnancial disastershavt) no! become corrupt enough to favor general Repudiation." " ' TTIJ i r.jk v.' Baltimore is steadily aavancio& commercially. ..Jtvjajfilly ,pro-: ing as, rapidly. as ,8omeof iU larfcer together; mSj&lBalidmoni alone ... . iJrr ,.V-Sr. exported $45,496,000i-and the intee UV.ieiltfferier tli3'iS?54'66':r:au in- F ma.ma hin OOfi nn siant in - ' "T.Tr.L' - hmnn tinfi onn An moreaga ""VT-"'- in their several. proportions.: of . the trade of the bun'try: as follows: Bal timoref vOSi f per centofo J&r cent.; Philadelphia, iOSr& per centi to ; .061: BdsioriJ .033f tf ierj'tOC i. In its exportation of grain it isigo ing rapidl 'ConpiBiring jfthe , first four months of 1879 with the same period Jin 48780 increase was 3,- 878,109 1 bushels. It gamert 30 per !cent. ti e w ork , gainea . du a jcent. during the same period! The bill reported from the Appro priation . Committee,' making s appros-s nriations for certain ludiciat expenses SaA ,Wo rJnn pf tB.Governinwedhe House y a strict party vote. The President win prooaoiy ao as n uas uecu uutug I follow the lead of his bossen, and, Withhold his approval. . The folio w- ing, from toe Philadelphia loess's Washington letter, may ? throw some light upon the situation: ! "The Republican 'members of the House aa well as the Senate Committees, however, are suspicious of possible construction of the bill appropriating $2,700,000 for the Department of Justice, which prohibits ex penditures on account of elections. The Pemocrata say that should . the . President fail to approve this, bill tbey will notaN tempt to pass another, but having approved of the Legislative and Army bill, ihey will ad1QPrp-" " j During'the year 1878 forty-eight xailroads were sold under foreclosure. These roads were 3.902 miles in length. -The entire bonds, debt, and stock amounted to 1311,631,200. Du- rinir 1876. ' 1877. 1878. there have been I sold . 132 roads, ; representing il,623 mile, and $728,463,000 capi tal. There axe great mysteries con nected with railroading we do not pretend to understand. Who were hurt, or whether anybody was hurt, in alrof these salsa is more that we can tell. i George Eliot's ' last work "Im ptessiona" of Theophrastus Such"- has been republished in this country by the Harpers. . It ia a series of pen- portraits - of imacrinarv characters. bit at the sami time life-like and drawn with exqakite akil!. It has blen given' out that Vthis'is her last production. That will depend npon her health we suppose. She is-about fifty-eight years of ' ago arid will be certain to write unless she dies. Vanderbilt, with his $75,000,000, 1. paid no taxes, because, he said, he did not own any personal ; property. "Whereupon the paragraphers made 4 jokes at his expense, and called him a pauper Van could not stand this,so no sneuea out iz,75U taxes on $500, uuu worm or property, "roe sun move.' 'Rah for the ; paragra phers.. Texas is going to try the Mo ff et t Register. ; It has watched the work iDg ot the new way of raising revenue from liquors in . Virginiar and' the people have determined wisely to give w a fair trial i their immense State. Representative Hawley, of Cop necttcuV a North Carolinian by birth; is aid to be John. Sherman's man for McCrary V snccessor as Secretary of mn-'.rV'''":';;' .'v;';.;;v i ... , Radicalism la'.. Main. 1.3 1- Boston Herald.l,v . , If Mr. Blaine eonld Rnend-ft-wflk ravelling; among' the- peopIe;whomi he represents be -would see the blu n- der which is " beiffg taaderi Beyond the activO - politicians,' not a : single Hoill in the Stite cares nef straw ab&ut "the tbreaUuedew rebellion" wei read of. ' Such : puerile I trash has I t ,.- ' - . t. . i : .. i.."!iv :; -. .. easea to irigniea anyDoayf ana tne South and her representatives exoites is Jne of disgust that . able and intel-! gtnt ahonld think they can win votes toy fostering me spirit J Of dis cord ioihe nation for their .own self Uhlends.- Mr.' Blainewill, find this outf before September. He should go and talk to the ncrjttrrS6tf t)e0ple and vnei om. Hoiuiere. . jt ney cou ia teact him many thin irs he does bot know It & riot yet too late for his bartvto realize the full magnitude of the irrW pending-dangerrrandbow-whvdowkbt him on his knees, with haodi I vifiwjwrjjj oik. J . . . ;se, . - - -ri r . ' i .n i.wn. iu ii.-.w,.j 1 not want 16 aeefa New'Ebgfcitfd St4te tacle would signify japrppom Ka7 7&M i "nau7 ru 1 1 v i.fi iiii l uiiwii i.nn rnnn imnKi : aw. w a mij ST w 4 w v w a a aw a . f won't put down the honest roea wbo, thoiagh misguided and mbinsifacted; are'thorbughly in Earnest, eager for a change,:and hopeful of acooraplish ing' it. - The rag-baby can't be smo thered with a b)oody shirt." Z ; ; CCIlEKNTCOraHENT. ltepubrica newspapers have, fotTa lorfi- time, h'aB a certain supers cilious 'way of 'referring to Demo- r ratio statesmanship. Not a fe so- . called iiidependent ioutnalshaveVta- 1 ken the same line. Mow, then, we want , to see whether they will be oonttnt to go before -the- country on j t i0i,T J?' rff theother 'side. 'We Whnt to kfiow their1 riresent1 awfcwtfrd ' and mbar rassiug attttudea 'We retort 'ootn i their charge8,evoliition and political 4mbecllity.-iVe7 r Orfcaaa Jcayun uuw, wuuuu me "'--'.u"" clUonne, and sulphur ,- otteii charged upon tne .V.PW8' JouncLtbat.. when , hour as a crime and a oiunaer,.iue ipuuicaii., u.e great - cauBiBuiiu 1Sects,!fungt,Vibaoieria, audi vintusoria. statesmen; -Conklin ' Blame,' ;Ed- iThe 0bjecuore td chlorhm was its coBt, munds, arid stheest of ' tfia follow- i;he difficulty of lisiiig itV arid the in ing.'could- haveS'befn forced 11 into iarious effects-or'tf etaln" I abrrcs ktid h ai si") r Mha n r4 I v I- li sirt i 'A n f AnliOr. 1 .i-tJisF the men, of the Blaine life.;. -iArticles pf food..aud: clothing type, who -keep the country in .trouble were I riotinjured by the strong all the time He; has .had" no more est sulphur '-ii'reatmebt'-meHtionecII ueiuju Himweii inait: iv. can. Luc an.t5u.r won ot n.e .jNortper.il,; people ;tQ ,tne fact that, ,s Jarga, number of Southern '.'brigadiers'? are , to be found tn -Con, gress: ana, we wouiq tain nope ,inau Tv. uv.cu Y.i.i.- Wi'kAi.. tuv icoun way utj jiwn hw ubviho substitute for him a brave and gallant Federal .soldier. Blaine, like, old cu. vjiiauuier, m uuc ja hic ujcu ou described" by Ben. V Hill ' as . .oiuivi u . n ii . . . . . w in peace." Liet the ' JN ortnern 7 people correct thik wrorigi a ud elect to Con' kicot uion -wuu-wcm-iiniusniiij in wari-- Nobody irf' ihis ection iwould- ever think of complaintog if half the Northern iaeat8tntKtb'Hoa8eaM.of; Congress j (or all iof them for that Boldiers. We honor our-, soldiers, and we would-be- glad -to have the Northern people; follow.so; good an jexaniple.--i2icA; Dispatch, Dem. ; Why Did Not 01 r. Tllda Take Office ;;' :: IN. Y. Suu; 1 ;;' . ; "He was elected to' the office once, but did not take it." This is the rea son given by many stalwart Demo brats why Samuel J. Tilden should not be re-elected in 1880. Why did not ;Mr. Tilden take the Officer Because the JJemocratio House of Representatives . united with the Republican Senate in the creation of a strange and unconstitii tional tribunal to re7eise the verdict of the people, and afterward con sented' to the completion of the fraudulent count in accordance with the decisions , of that . tri bunal. Becanse Grant, .after hav ing used the army to protect the Re turning Boards while engaged in mak ing and certifying false returns of the popular votes in their respective States, assembled it at Washington to overawe Congress during the count of the electoral votes, and the Demo era tic party, terror-stricken by this show of military force, surrendered the cause of the people, and submit ted to the fraudulent inauguration ot the defeated candidate.- That is why Mr. Tilden did not take the office to which he. was elected.. Ilia party be trayed itself, its. candidate . and the country m, aujeot iear oi toe . army, which, as was weir known, the lie- publican Administration would not hesitate to turn against .the liberties of the land. .. .; . ,;,.r. ' tVaahtnetoa News Items. 1 Letter to Richmond Dispatch. Mr. Blackburn vill deliver the Me morial address at Arlington on Fri day, Confederate decoration day, and Gen. Hooker, of MissisBinoii another of the orators of the House, will de- liver a memorial address at Alexan - ArW t.hA ama dav. Mr. for nf Nw j- j York, manifested much opposition to a i . f 1 ! 1 1 IT . it. . i tne legislative onu -xie is a Dtaiwart. Mr. Thurman to-day, as President of the Senate, appointed Mr. Kernan, Of JN6W torK, one oi tne rsoara Ot 1J1- reothra for Columbia Hosmtal. Sen- ator Lion tjameron aoes - not enioy being in a minority in the Senate, and there is a rumor that he would like id transfer his seat to some one of his friends., Mr. Vest introduced a bill m1 the Seante to-day giving the widow and family, of lien, obields a pension of $100 pef mpnth.HSt tJerome iuimunds, nowever, would, not per mit it to be acted upon right away. arid it went on, the calendar. Gen. Rice, who is here,. will certainly ac cept the , Democratic' "nomination for Lieutenant' Governor of Ohio. ' He told Gen; E wing so to-day. ! Kepedtanee and Beatoratiou. LSpringfleld (Mass.) Republican.! i Ureadtal epeecu tnat ot Wade uampion b iu iuo uuiwu oiaies do nate on Thursday i tiow it would have sounded if uttered, in Springfield by a man on crutches. "In no event, T consent' to aid in disbanding tha rmv or imnairinff its effimT,tr he says, this rebel brigadier. . "It is . .... , : l ' 1 1 1 ' ' the army of , the South as ; well as of the .North." Suoh a sentiment from a $outh Carolinian Would' be the best evidence which could be adduced be f oife a FOnrth of Joly audience that the Union was really restored and the war was not after all in ' vain.1' "In the late civu contest on jaanys; a bloody , field I tested, its valorj ;arid no word or act of mine shall depreciate its .Valor or' lessen , its value.' . Mr. Hampton ' certainly, does' nbtTdeny. whatever you please to call him, bat !-. . - s, 'i-iii.t i-i .'. 1. Si amnestied ana agaiu cuargea witn 1 la-it- i.1 -ni. m inVnrAflflhtf h A 'aWi M Xa nlo nfimmittun man Tkow Clasped in suppucauuu. pucnaspec tacje would sigui y, cr 10 them tne resturatiuuutn u niou. aami tanw JldJ John King is a remarkable news- ho rinplnnail nubile llhrnrv Ha Is thirty-nine years old, and has been since be was seventeen a hopeless cripple, the result of several accmenis. j -me one ae- C. . . ... .... 1 ...sit.... light of bis life is reading. , - Effective Blslureeiauia. , TCynp.rimentR madrt iimlpr ilia di reCtiQrVvof the International, Cholera ,i:.,rtr Phni1a nf fliainrt Wiftrfl UUiUllllKDIUU Ua(D OUUWU lllilt vi- tnttfF.ant . Tn manv innt.h.-PH JUin- f0,;, afonta r nnnfiAentlu AUoA . nnnn frtP ,Trtt Action Whan ;t.hv ar rpai ,iaeieB8.-Actini? on the suDiio.-: gjtjon -"tnat- "complete disinfection 8210110-uestrov iaiu itBown torms or ,:f pYprlmpnt,K Were n ,niiulailk fumes. , ..It was :! used ..: in;.; sum went quantity, these agents - destroyed in- ftlbrsTheburrjmg of teq gf ains of BQiphur in a tightl y -dosed, air space ntaimo xWrty cttbio feetwould rlotkni ijisebtsmn fuifgiiJt XffM rroin in is 11. woum appear tnafc.eiLeo- i tiye clisinrection; by this .meansre t quires ..elaftteenpuho 1 orbne thousand ubid"feet.", The suI t pnur snouiaDe-Darnea over water, or 1 j iv . i .t sauu. iu arum uaner iroio nre. -ana should be: placed in different Vessels lif:theooui is .lareA solution o jomoriue oj. zidq tone part.ot iurnen a I disinf eotin fluid to two hnml r&A I- of wslci i uuiu&iy . kins uaiiLeru which have been: btaced .in if arid l arrests I; putrefaction. .0austio? 'n .to luuu ii uuureu i eel vou. euuaii Ta weii.- :but leaves Vserfirneiit.' "Carboffefacid1 jih!sutBcient strength (one hundred to '"'one)"" is ','mnch.rhore' jexpeniiye.; 'fOhevolum j jF.,5 absorbed thrrtyrsevLvolameatif 'finlpburio acid, eimusrh'to kill all low organisms. Disinfectants simply used in quantity sonlcient lo destroy, . bdd ameiia ao not necessarily kiu micro scopic living oigatMsms.. , ; I OOK KT1TK CtHrKinPMKJlUlKS. -Newspaper' nrporters invade the- sauc ily or ibe domestic -circle and parade in mblic thia cs lb at ought never to be men tioned outside oi (tie family circle; visit the hannu of vice and parade ia glaring dis play heads and seBsaliobal letters crimes nd vices that ought never to be named in ! he presence of refined- people,' and scour ha country for scandal, in order that1 tbey' nay pander to the vitiated tastes of some1 Who eagerly citcu up and devour such Vicious mutter Such a policy is corrupting and ruinous: in its effects Upon society. Raleigh Christian Advocate.- There is no diet so delicte and delicious 4s the fish. None that minister aa pleas antly to the palate, and' none in which there Can be so great a variety both in the cuisine and the species.' It has been said by. some of the-lusty mountain boys, that fish-diet would effeminate men: that U3uleeders bad no courage; but in the "late unpleasant ness" it was fully demonstrated that ; the shad and herring dieters could stick as long (if not a little longer); in the IbicR ot battle as their robust brethren of the snow- clad peaks, who had been fed only on beef and mutton. And we certainly do not concede that fish diet has any such emas culatory power. Newbern Democrat. POLITICAL. POINTS. The New York Times and some olh r Northern papers seem to have found out that there is no political capital to be made by waving the bloody ..shirt.- 2si&-. mond Dispatch, Dem . , : r The Reuublicans ' themselves have made the issue byAasserjeg lye light to station armed troops at' the polls. On that issue Gen. Ewing issouad. and c -iise- quentiy be deserves the support1 of - every man wuo wishes to preserve the freedom and independence of the ballot-box New York Sun, 2nd .; i One" interesting, peculiarity of the Ohio campaign, remarks the New York World, is i hat lue only party -which has uot placed a Union soldier at the tread tf its J ticket is the Republican party, which ao r,oud,y insists that the Uaion is in danger I aaa must be saved again ' by the use ot i I'CI&SOIW A L. I McCrary' successor should, be a I military man. We nominate llenry Ward I Beecher. fMiad. Uhron. I .Walter Beckurtb, a prominent farmer of the town of Stanford, Duchess county, was goied by a bull, a few days ago. in such a manner that be lived only two hours after. . Ue was about sixty years of age. ; Lord Beaconsfield, it is said, shows the effects of age and his later public addresses are marked by an incoherency of statement and a general commingling of facts quite unknown to the great man of the past; Boston, -June 8. Three young men, Charles JfiBeld, William a. ftnkham and , William Rowell, were drowned! in Salem (Mass.) harbor toad ay by the cap sizing of a sail-boat. The bodies have not yet been recovered . TWIXKJLING. M n ia id that manv Tem'oraiif.. i Germans in Ohio will bolt the ticket be I cause Ewiog is a Ureenbacner. - - .I I When a babv stuffs his toe into his mouth he little realizes how hard it will I be for him In later years to make both ends mceU2feu Haten Register. .'1 'A .,.nw n'ntAmn Vkr f .1 filtr in 1 XX D n ttl If U UbV TT u UUJ lAbOII IU formed bis grandfather that ho didn't like to bear htm joke "it's .: bad-in-.age," he explained. Ulevelana voice. j c A' man in tTtica has been de tected in the act of translatitfg "Pinafore" into Welsh. Wehatl ,i ovgrt wielL hrdg'y ey jr. Mew York vommercial Advertiser. Though she be dead, yet let me, think she . lives. ' And feed my mind that dies for want of ; : her. . .w ; oi- ; . Marlowe !-A Fnnnhman .and a hfiori wn, Ma ; . -rn-z. "w j ma have been married in Austin, Texas 4 Tka lriH Anranm hoQ hAaUVoaWrAaiiitel I earned Henry Prnett accidentally- sbol elf with rifle, aqd died within- a few hours afterwards.. . ., .,. - i3i if Tnj4iHew Orleans Pii cayune missionaries, some sav thev are froni Florida, have been o xmeirh. in Mrkiitherft ' M Issiaslnnl more thran fV'yfearV-principally - in . Jackson county, t selvtes. . Tbey ' have planted a Mormon chuhh at Three rivers. and one arBluff f Creek, and one somewhere near Dog Riven; ai omu. icc. iusj iiu ou wcicu --. I i.M tha hnrh thirtPAn in nnA rfnw , ' IUW .MV . J . MISCELLANEOUS. SPECIAL NOTICE ! --. (t;'v:-. - - - - -7 - V-: ' 4 B row n r R o d d i c k etrSt: ill; A 'H : iit -fi -h.il .' ,r. n I n'Y .io J;.J ill t. r.L'K rr ORE A:T B ARG-AINS tfl.i'J.-4 HXi h i:-tU .-t JV .,-:i iiKliilil i) i i. LOT 1. PRINTED LA.WJ4S, UnenFiaish, 6c, worth 13 c ixn on 3 in aunt M ATTIKOS, Uc.wbhi 2C6 .j'i T aiiiijajiiaal mh j . K, .'til -uavi L0T?iWw t SO LOT?4. i LADlBS LINBN COLLARS, Sc,' worth 10c. , r JiADIS'j LINfiN, C1JFF3,. 15c. wortli 85c, i lot 6... ; r f. c LAD1K3 KDFFS, 1c and 6c eaca." k : LOT 7. -i Ur , i . ..... .; ? - . :, i . '.. i ... ,. f 8TKIPE01QRENAD1NES, 5c per yard, worth 2Ec. i,: .,. ... i; ii S.t ill :. : i- .. ,. I ,vi .na. : i ? ' ' LOT 8. '' An. . i ... i. J BTRIPEU FlQUa, 8c, worth 10c, t n ' ' ' ?- . . ,ii ,,;' . ANEW LOT OF PARASOLS and SUN UM BRELLAS, .last received, from 10c up. I. KKEPCOOL! ' FANS ! .V . FANS' t FANS 1 , ,;j Bcspcctfally, BROWN & RODDICK, ,45 Market street.. . ' HevieW and Robesonlan pleate copy. je3tf -' . AND Jdnstantly - Arriving; ' ., .j 7 a full line of . GROCERIES, $cc. ; . .' -Consisting in part of ' - Corn, Meal, Coffee; Flonr, Sugar, Tea, . Molasses, Meats, Crackers, Candy, Soap, Starch, Candles, Soda, Potash, " . Lye, Snuff, Matches, Ginger, 8pice, ' Mustard, PepperfmftBWgl'TIckles, Batains, JcHy ana Baking Powders. ' ALSO, Mackerel, Hoop Iron, Nails, Bongs, ; Glue, Hay, Paper, Tubs, Buckcte. Braoaa, Brusnes, Twine, Bags, Blacking, 1 : Copperas, Cigars and Tobacco.-; " : "'' ' ; . Tor sale by'1' .. .,. . ,. ADRIAN &VOLLER3.I 4 " Wholesale Grocers. fie 8 tf S. K. corner Front and Dock Bts. f 1 Til IGU PRICES FORVURNITURK SINCE THE -liM advent, of tho MEW FURMirUBJfi sstokk. Call and see, 11 . , , . I BBHKENDS & IttPNROK, '' N.K. cor. Market and M Sta., WUmiBgton4 NvC e 8 tr WararoomB 31. bet. Market APripceeg. ; fire x Jjisttf aiii IVEJtPOOL & LONDON & GLOBE. AMLICO, or Tartwro. N. C . TtfERCHANtS'; MECttANlCa', i 1YJL - ' " ' ef Richmond; Ya, SOLUMBUS, of Colambus. Miss. M iiljNO. W. GORDON A BRO , Agents, je 8tf 'r : , ;n i North. Water Street. Hubs, Spokes, Rims, j ,? J-?;i'! 1 ;s , f '-i- Hill ' VU TtTAGON Wheels, buggy bodies, cart v wneeis, euggy springs saucy wneeis. xire Iron of alt sizes, tihafts. Beats. : Carriaee'. Parts, Azlec, and Steel ef all descriptions.' Also, a- large - assortment or Trimmings or au saaas. ir yoa want gooa uooas bo sure ana mane your selections at tne uia itstaaasnea iiaraware tioase or -i s nun a -s i . JNa DAWSON. & CO., je 8 "tr ' - l" 19, si. 23 Market street Buggies ! , j-, Buggies ! : Harness & Saddles, FORSAtB'AT. , 1 . ' ,m' til ' J t t GERHARDT. & CO.'S, 3d Street, opposite City Hall.. REPAIRING DONE WITH NEATNESS AND " U V .DISPATCH. y r . 1 MORSB-SHOEINa A SPECIALTY: Ja 8tf . . v - Sast, Blinds and Boors, JpA.tNTS, OJLS AND GLASS, : - r ' ; ' t' ' BUILDERS' HARDWARE, ".; J4-- ' At Rock Bottom Trices, by i o 1 -GEO. A' PECK. - jeiatf - --"'.; No. SSSonth Front Kt Exchange Corner ! iM till GLQVE3 FOR SHORT SLEEVES;"; oli. . Jti .... 'A Handsome Line or LAPS GLOVES.-"" . v' - Long and Short.' . tit ,- r ' j Jiae SATIN FAMSTIES.ii i ! BRETONNB LACE, Black and White, ' f y M " And olfier Fancy" Articles! V' -tarDon't forget the BEST; SCISSORS In tha world an.l 64-LlNEN HANDKERQHIKFS. '' 1 . 1 'j1 isliur Exchange Corner. :; Stereoscopic : Yiews; .'. OX tV EVERY THING IS( f ANn a Rnnwn wiT.uTvnmv. - Photographs ot allnxea aad kinds gotten up ia I Y&TBS ROOK STORE AND PHOTO ROOMS." je a tr IVOur qnouaions. ftVRould bo nsutsratotwi. n-n esent the' wholesale celraoralVyf ni: Waku.t ais b si all orders klsaer incc have to be charged ft BAQGlNG-Giiany. C '? 00 1134 10 'ft' 00 it M li 11 8 s iij 5 .8 Standard... ..... BACON NorlhC&rolink. ilams, 9 B(cew;.....; Shoolders. &..... i. Hides. N, C ?Uoice,a.fc. Westero bmoked i Hama......i,...wi kv-i., 1 .11 -it uu... Ma. r Sides. tt ury Halted Sides fi Shoulders . . U&JECP Live weiebt Ks KRKT.lt 'BplriMTttkeTititi secona Mana. eacA BdHaad,eaca....... , I New York.-eaeh i oj a , . to . "New ?r t ry 9." IW VJ, BCBiw..i..ri i'VI :,:oo. gt lo wjsjiavvAjt w z )- an c ; B&kJKS WlimlBgton, lUtJ l7M0to; 0t Northern. ,3S ; 14 00 jSOTTKS NorthCaroiu,a. ft -i6 IS 30 S7 ,'sW"ffi S" w, a 10 x ! o -ii t 11 o n " o 10 10 Q If. " S7 ig - 18 65 . 6V3 1 TO ' g 35 . Oi X 00 O 8!i wi& J ji 16 00 es oou 8 50 10 tf- ' -If 60 13 00 5 00 Q 6 (0 M O 8 X) 8 60; O , 5 30 t 08 4 00 00, 87 60 6S6D ! 00 00 soot 45 00 60 W. s 00 00 4000 AO 00 46 00 00 00 67 00 66 00 66 00 00 08 & 67 CO 00 00 70 00 00 00 -70 00 eo 00 00 oi. , 65 90 Cf: lt ' 0 00 & 4 00 0 00 4 75 5 00 6 50 6 00 7 60 0 00 "'6 00 5 50 ; . 6 73 6 co & a tt 6 60 676 8 , vi 60 ' 6?jtf i 64 .. .65 59 CO OAKDlJSS-fiperm, ... ... .i..sTailow,i.D.;t8ii.iUii..'i Adamanune, fi CHBK8B-Northorn Factory fi. 5 State, fjftj... ;.; 1 ' Bio, "yilrae LEroavr: CORN MEAL S.bushaUB sacks COTTON nES-fJikdle.....: DOMESTICS ShecUnsu 4-4, yd Yarn, V bnncn i No. lvtf a bbt . . . . .. Mackerel, N. 8, ft , bbl. t . . No. s. vbbi.. : Mackerel, No. I, V bbl......: Unlln. ttt.1.1 N.O. Herring, Ho,Si keg...' .- Dry Cod. .... i.-. . . FERTILIZERS ' ' - Peruvian Guana, fl SOwj Baugh'B Phosphate, ; Caroilaa Pertilleer, " ; , Ground Bose. . ". , " ""'-BoneMeal,:1-"''' ri'- : ; r.Fiom. ? ..; Navassa Guano, " : ,1 Complete Mannre : " . -. . Whan&'s Phosphate , . :? Wando Phosphate. ' , 1 Berber & Blitz' flceytk . . ificelienza Cotton Fertilise: FLOUR Fine, H bbl , ; Super. Nortbem. bbl .. . ' Extra de.; . " W bbl FamilT . " . . bbl , "J City MUle-snptT;, j bbl... -. . v Extra, V bbl.- . FanUly, $ bU . . .: EX.F&1&.U7. . bbl . GRAIN CcTii-,itt store, to oags. , Corn, Cargo, 9 Duanei....... Corn, mixed bushel.in bags. Corn, wholesale, is bags. ... Oats, U bosbel . Peas. Cow, f bushel.. i... 68X ? 46 5 5! ia ,.fe 6 '0 00 1 10 90 100 80 5 00 70 flu 8 . 00 10 00 1 10 HIDES Green. ,-. Dry. HAY Eastern 100 lbs....... W cetera, 9 iw ss North River, tt 100 .... tlOOP IRON V ton.. .. .. LARD Northern, 9 ..... . . North caroiinai v a.... LIME bbl. . LUMBER Cm SraavBAwxn Ship Stuff, resawed, M ft.. Ronsrh Edee Plank. 9 U ft. . . 18 00 00 CO 80 00 16 G.J WestlndiaCargoes.accordlng to quality. M ft i 14 00 18 ro 18 00 86 06 ureaseairioonsE. aeasonea.. ScantllBf and Boards, com- 13 00 16 06 MULASSESNew cp (Cuba, hhds SI 88 New crop caaa, DDIs v gal Porte Rico,hhds.... ........ ' bbls......:.;. Sugar Houee. hhds, V gal. bWs. gal.. 00 00 00 40- Byrap, dib. i gai... . NAILS Cat, Wd-basisv f keg;r. - w " 13 OILS Kerosene. 9 gai Lara,gai;...,., ... ..... Unseed, 9 81 -- Rosin. S 'sl. w ; .-. 1 10 90 so a 18 '- 1 30 40 a POULTRY Chiekens.live.erowa r ti t v. o " .-j Spring... PSAUTB-!- Duscei FOTATOtts uweet, V ouanoi. 1X1B11, ilUIWOiKf TP UUi .... FORK Northern. City Mesa . . . 3 00 00 00 a 11 00 Thin, fl DD1.T7 ... .... V-. . Prime bbl...-. Rnii5. bbl. . ' .. 00 00" 00 00 00 00 11 00 00 00 10 00 6Jtf 73 90 100 . IX ' ., IX 1 1 6 - M RICE Carolina, V ........, aoueh. -bnsn.. ; RAGS Conn try, City.-w lb .- :. ROPE . i .... ....... $aLT Alum, 9 bushel ... . :i ' 00 - 00 ' ' 00 1 00 " 00 00 i Liverpool, vsock, ! -" Lisbon, 9 sack....;..... '.. American. 9 8fck... SUGAR Cuba, 9 PortoRieo, 9 lb . av .Kfl ex :.T 854 ( 00 6 a 4 00 3 60 4 60 9 60 ! C tti.-......-t,i,- Sx;C- m. 1 Crashed, S ft......... SOAP Northern, 9 t.. PHINGLES Contract, 9 Jtt.; common, 9 a....: CypreseSaps 9 M,.vt.... Cypress Hearts 9 M.'. (0 15 IU' STAVE! W. Q. Bbl., V M. . . 18 00 10 00 0000 fCypresstJB M.. all6w- ft......;;....... 00 00 0000 7 8 10 90 a iaoo TIMBER Shipping. $ M . s Mill Prime, M Mill Fair, Tf . . ..Tr.Vr. Common MUL... ......... .. Inferior to Ordmary, '9 M. WHI8KKY Northern, gal.. NOrtb Carobna. B eI ..... . h 7 00 ' sot s 00 a .6 oc 4 Ml ;6 00 3 00 400, . i 00 a, 600 ' 1 00 ' 3 60 1 I 18 WOOLr-uawaehedv i Washed. 1 - -St'! ricnriRGTOM money Exchange (sight) on New York, . Jf dlsc'U , Baltimore..'..,....... Ja' ' s Boston, . :'X'.'. ...... x " Philadelphia, ..... .i Jtf , " Western Cities. . . :". : . V ' Ekchanjre so darrTW cenCrrr.-- :r - Btok of'New Hanover Stock ... i v , 86 Dixst National Bank.: ,v 75 Navassa Guano Do. - r 130 M. C. Bonds Old Ex-Co 183 .8 .-8 f , Do.? Fuadlng 1 I u Do.1-- 1 1868.; Do. Newx. .......... - Do. s Special Tax .... .". Do. to NCRailroad.... .80.. W. W. R.R. Bonds 7 e (Gold Inti . 100 " Carolina Central R. R. Bonds, 6 flc. , .40 . WUi Col. Ang. R. R.1 Ui ::.30 Wilmington City Bonds. 3c. 76 - i ' - 7c.......; 80 ! , . " , Old 6 9c. .70 i ' '- " " -: w 9t?. . .TO (Gold law 1 . - . 8 e .. ....75 ( " ' DO. - - dO. 9cV.V.75 (Cur. lnt) W. & W. Railroad Stock . ........ 45 Nerth Carolina K. K. ......... '. .60 v WU.GasLishtCo. . . " ,...,..... . WUmington Cotton Mills. .. cy. ....ItW ' Furniture ! Furniture ! I A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF WALNUT CHAMBER 8 UITS, f tn lu anlrl wkt. tliA vwv Knl.trtm nriirAa. f . - .-; - ; . ."..i.... , i -..J. A.'.JL. j i .d ...... Walnut Wardrobes, Sideboards, Extension .Tables. Marble Top Tables, Ac , Ac., as well , as common Chamber Sets. Bed Steads, Chairs and Rockers of ail sorts, Looking Olaspea; , Mirrors,' Parlor Suits, Lounges, Shades, Bedding and everything belong ing to a Firet-Clasn Furniture Establishment. ' - ' Also, another lot of the Celebrated Genuine Stew art Sewing Machine, a real comfort For sale at t- F. A. 8CHUTT E'&, ' 26 and 38 South Front and 11 to 15 DockSt -mh9tf ! The New ana Pounlar . J " Boot arid SHoe StoreV 32 . MAHKET STREET. , HE PIONEER .OF IrOf PRICES ! THO (JJ STOCK TO WORK ' t :AM; .... ;i7 V ; X)KF AT ANY PRICK I ! V " ' .... . f. . , All New Goods, selected with a great deal of care, la accordance with the times. .;.. ::. . . j AU. of my Goods warranted. ' Notice socae of the prices:.' ''- - " ""'- - ' " A Lady's nice Cloth Buskin, from 60c to Jl .CO. '. A slee Kid or Pebble Morocco Newport Tie, from 90c to $1.. ' 1 , ' ' A Gent's nice Boxt-Toe Gaiter, from $LtSup to the best. . , ' r, ....... ;, .-.. .. My Ladles' and Children's Department ia now: complete. ' - -u : . . . "' .-r -1 A eal at my place and a fair comparison are ail I ask. i j ., r i j ' Beware of old stock. .You will spend your mo-, ney for nothing. " ., ., , - , n Uememoer, ao trouble to bow my New Stock. a ' i : ; . Respectfully. : i ,j. - . . . 33 JEIAIIBlET ST. Sign of the Little Boot. ai37tf as 34 36 :a 19 ao 80 850 M 146 , 100 40 85 SO ' 130 CO 385 76 " SO , 75 s 85.. 8 I ''IS lb fi 00 . SCMi -800

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view