Mr W1LUAM H. BEItPjAKP.
WILMINGTON; N,C.x
Tuesday KvmaxQ August 3, 1680.
WINFIELD S.! HANCOCK,
, oy Pennsylvania
FOR VICE PRESIDENT :
WILLIAM H. ENGLISH,
Of Indiana.
othxng can intimidaU mejrom doing a 1 be
litN to to honest and rlgU.-Hancock in 1S68.
nun i'rw nr. cwyM;
a&rf, ofthepress, the freedom of speech, the natural
right cf persons, and the rights of property, must be
preserved. Hanax. in 1831.
mien insurrectionary force has been overthrown
and peace established, and the civil authorities are
rvady and willing to perform their duties, the mM
tary power should cease to lead, and the dvU admi
nistration resume its natural and rightful domtnwn.
Hancock in 1S67. ,
FOR CONGRESS :
JOHN W. SHACKELrOEJ),
Of Onslow-
Election, Tuesday, Nov. 2.1
MKAOCKATIC ST AXIS TICKET.
For Governor Thokas J. Jakyis.
Lieut. Governor J as. L. Robensok.
Sec'y. of State Wm. L. Saundeks.
" Treasurer Jso-M. Worth.
Attorney General Thos. S. Kss an.
" Auditor W. P. Roberts.
" Sup'u of Public Instruction J. C.
Scarborough.
TAXlTToS-DEaOCBA'llO SAVING.
Gov. Jarvifl, in his canvass, dwells
upon the economy of the Democratic
State Government and contrasts it
with the wastefulness and extrava
gance of the Radicals when they
were in control. He does wisely.
The people understand what it costs
to enjoy liberty and the protection
of law when the tax gatherer comes
around. The pocket-nerve is often
more sensitive than any other. " Let
tJe people understand how much is
gained by having Democrats in
charge and you make a strong argu
ment for their retention in office.
Correct figures will not lie, and Ihey
establish the fact that a very great
saving has followed the advent of the
Democratic officials to office. The
lialeigh News thus states the case:
"If the people wish once more the worst
government the world ever saw, and at the
highest price, let tham elect the Radical
State ticket If they want the beat govern
ment for the least money, let them vole for
the Democratic candidates. The Radicals
collected and paid out millions in money
and many more millions in bonds, and
there is nothing to show for either money
or bonds. The Democrats have' collected
little, have issued no bonds, hare paid for
everything, and return a good account of
stock in the shape of permanent improve
ments. No party has ever had a better
showing to make to the people than the
Democratic party makes to-day."
In two years the Radicals wasted
and expended 904,559.19 upon five
items alone. The Democrats ex
panded but $635,719.07 for the same
items, but not in two years ..but in
four years. Mark that. Gov. Jarvis,
in bis Shelby speech, asserts that the
Democratic party had administered
the State government for ten years
for only $100,000 more than the Re
publicans paid out in two yean. Re
member these facts. Be not deceived
by anything you may hear in explana
tion. Facts are facts and no denials
or explanations can obliterate them
There has been a very great saving
to the people of North Carolina by
the Democratic party. This is appa
rent when we confine our investiga
tions to the State government alone.
But when we go into the counties
and see what has been saved to the
tax payers by Democratic rale many
millions will only express the amount.
We should like to see an approxi
mately accurate estimate of the
amount of money that has been saved
to the people in all of the counties
that were first nnder Radical control
but have been under Democratic rule
for a term of years. If the people
could realize the vast sums that have
been saved to them in this way they
would appreciate the beneficence and
blessings vouchsafed them by Demo
cratic supremacy in State and county
and municipal governments, and the
last thing under heaven they would
think of would be to return to power
the party that had oppressed and
despoiled the mi - "
If you desire higher taxes, then
either vote, for Radioal candidates,
or what amounts practically to the
same thing, stay at home on the day
of election, and thus do something in
aiding your political emiesV j
Since preparing, the above we no
tice the following statistics as given
by Gov. Jaryis in his speech at Ruth
ford ton.. We copy the paragraphs
because of the important facts Ihey
oontaiC J3m!&. 3 ii 8 Si Cf
"I hoto In Behind a 'carefully prepared,
statement, Ukso from, the. recoida oj tha
State Treasury, showing' the cost -of tun
niog the State government for each' year,
from July 1 lWHd-ihe 1st of July, 1880, :
wclnalve He had only time, he regretted
to find, to notice a few of the prominent
facts. ,
For the fiscal year ending October 1,
1869. -tho Henublicans1Dent."t77fi,478f4.
For the fiscal year endiat October i, tsf
the Democrats snent' t5BfcTIJl85". a f Uel
ence in favor or Democratic ruie
rds.tq. For the flscaljearfiMin
U 1870, the Republicans speni fi.ioo.ias.
80. Up to the 1st of June, 1880, the Demo
crats spent $i43.O00and ieisthwor$100,000
more, will complete, (he nea making
id our fv$r a tfftenjDca if o5irjj6QXl000.
He defied any Republican to show out of
iheh-vwrwpTmarTOreWd Single" uWlaf lllal
had been applied to permfnenr !arpr"5e-l;
ments of any kind in the Btale.
TUB CONTltADIOTIONS. ANU; IhHt
CONSISTENCIES OF STAWAXIT,
ilSIH. . , , . .,
i The Republwupftjp-4s commit
ted to the abominable and'datigercrus
dbctrine that this country is a Na-.
tjo'n and that States' . i.igts are
i4
a
thing of the past. The iwhQle ten-
d'enoy of Radioal legislation is to de f
sroy the -reserved.,: rights, ml the
States, and to paralyse thev feenefita'
apd privileges o4t local sjsiC-gOyern?'
mont. But how chanfcernel18tf6-.
77? When the 8 wero engaged in
taeir work of cheating th? whole eq? .
pie and robbing the eleotoxs of. two
Southern States, they tlie 'Infamous
8 acted upon the strongest States'
Rights dogmas. They were such
rigid, unbending, unflinching friends
and exponents of the most stringent
interpretation of the Constitution
in 1876, that it was a viola
tion of the reserved rights of
States to go behind the returns
and examioe into the Question of
frauds. Of courso it was the most,
bare-facod hypocrisy qn their part,
but here is what Senator Hoar, of
MassaohusettSjStated to haye been the.
rale of- law and reason adopted by
the 8:
"The Commission held that the 'power
of deciding who had been duly chosen erec-;
tors wu in the States. They held that the
vetes of such persons were to be' counted,
as the tribunal chosen for that purpose In
each State had declared to have been duly;
appointed by its electors. They beM that
Congress had no authority, or pretense, of
suggestion of mistake, misconduct, fraud,
o any ground whatever, to usurp the pow
er to determine who 'had been chosen elec
tors in any Stfte, or to reverse or brertufn,
oa any pretense whatever, the State's de
cision by its own constitutional tribunal."
These fellows, become strict con
structionists when it suits them. Just
now they are latilndinarians of tho
broadest stamp in matters rrtjuning
to the Constitution. In 18T6 it was
the States a Union of States a
ttnion of States with' reserved and
inviolable rights under "the Constitu
tion. In 1880 it is a Nation a Na
tion that has so completely " absorbed
the rights of the-"States that it is a
great political heresy to hold other
wise or to talk of Stales' Rights. In
all the world before bejejwas never
such a party without principle or ho
nor or conscience.
Tha Richmond LHspatch, after-
copying what Hoar saicL, as given in
the above extraotfthaavtbie-to say:
"The Southern Stales ask van. Mi; Hoar.,
and your . party to sUck to that teaching i
What reason can you give for appofetrsg- ft
batch 'of deputy United States jnaishats to
supervise the election of Fr&siaeoUai eloon
tors if Congress has oo right to revmeor
bVerturn on any tsftteBse1 iTn hatever the
State's decision by its own coudtatlaaaT X
You can't go beaiad the rascal r
you ca.o reverse uxe win or tha people Jbjl
- .1 ,rt - . Ti ' -Ti. m. t
ba bed supervisors aad depty marsnals.
Tr'r I
A fia
Repuhilc
epuUicans are." I
The following, paragraph from a
recent issue of that Stalwart orgao
published at Lemars, IoWa, an4
known as the 8mtinilzdtxovtB what
the Garfield set mean by a Nation.
That straight-on t Republican sheet
says :
"'All the Sentinel seeds to knew is whether
its official standard Lester, recognizes the
doctrine that Arhorica ls a Nation, that thai
States are mere provinces, wholly subordM
nate to the National authority;, that this 1
itepuDucxtS- & unit not a 4o. ana jthat
America la a State aad net aggregato at
Stales. In the eitation we makexfroni his
letter Qarflehl says: llie:UnUMSta(es. is
a Nation.' And he pledgeahimseif , tnc&se.
of. bis election.' to exercise his Jmere Ulan
regal authority to mainiain,.tU : supremacy. V.
we care naming joruarjuia i ttrtitesor vices.
Aad here tha &n&n4Tdeolarcs it takes Oar
field as the embodiment of the Republican par
tys ideas of centisf&aliaiL and aaka hanjiefc
lions." 5 , - . , i .
Whilst agreeing with the Baltimore
Gazette in the general opinion that
hanging criminals by mobs is not a
preventive of crime, we must add
that the courts do not seem to be a
preventive either. The Gazette
very pertinently, in vier of the fear
ful epidemic of crime ' and Mllairiy,
and violenoe now ravaging the whole
land :
"Eveiy civilized hDTnaabeinjj, of what
ever race, is interested in the discovery of
an effective safeguard sgaiqst the repetition
jof such atrociUts;iPuttiCatttM5Xperi
ence can be relied on as proving inything
at all, it ought to be evident that lynching,'
at now cooduated, exerts no deterrent
effect, while the degradation of our courts,
which it nccetsaiily involves, cannot fail to
exert a pefpiciooaio fluence."
.!Wo grant alt this, and yet it must
be admitted that the law's delay sJa$
the protecting shield thr9wn over
murderers and scoundrels by tho legal
dodges arid' the Inefficiency of' the
courts, are well calculated to prompt
r unthinking, rash and indgjn.sit men
w taxe tne matter xr swarenng pun
ishment in their own' 'hands. ' Whit
protection ib'life ia.there in Pennsyl
vania or Texas ? . Wheri niurderers
of the deepestdye are pardoned in
tho one Staboand acquitted in the
olhefl byl a oor-it -jury,; as Irf ihy
oaselpf XJrie, hat chamuu-has:
uml J lifandQirhat feartfUiavrf,
riminats ? ttev lauirh at tnelaw
and snap their fingers i n the very
face of the astounded andt panio-
stricken citizeB? t TU f)
Wu are uu'auuluuisufm IjfutUUw
i
or any other form of-mob violence.
At6nelfeve ft isspd;thelav
to take . its. ,oouEse .bu we rarejaon
etraiaed xxs sajiitblsr atf long as joxties
kie corropV andoitl' niefficnl'tria
the 'pardoniiMis freely used
J VirifK .-Kilo :u:!tHq -iiifsfo x4'l
there will be ..cases f lynohins ..In
eHrjomnittny, qun-fin dozons;
6t mjan whe will patioipai in iiangt-
lrJg a'reat' iyillaitf tett then i8any
dttnfas tb hlsbelhfrimkffiwier1
p ocess or law.
Wjhen,eyjeri thft people begin, to
Jc se AQQfidenoj, mi . th .certainty pf
P inisliinf; -crime and in the protection
k E6rded society by- g"dod laws ' and
their faithful execution, fusi'theii you1
jwiil see restiveness anu.a aoiermina-
ttbn ;to give arirnjnala a s , if t aaaage(
from the sow of murder or' rape to
too retributions ojf ejeraistyl
; dsn HsiWkW -in otticaoo.
Gen, m&mH
rdaBter, Qm. NS- P.Batiks, of Massa-
cliuseits, has turned up at Chicago.,
0 n yesterday a week ago he delivered
h mself pi a speeehj T e h,ae seen
the textof said Bseoh' teCeiUty and
,wja refer to i " d say tha). waj f ulj
pi venom and fcatred lo the ' South
wWiniensely.' secliob'ai, and asyfuH
,o ' lies as an egg is of'" meat. He
"fl tunted the old ragged bloody shirt
jiom firsCto laJst, anT the whole piir
p e of the speech was to create the
m ost intense prejudices, against oux,
people whilst exalting the deepest
alarm among h hearers as lo the
designs of the South if the Democrats
should iriuraDlu It is a very vtle
,apeech'7-1lhe speeoft 'of a gmiir de'lna
gbgue withot boiios and without
Wuthi' He iets but wiih "a batcti' , of
falsehoods abat are equal to his
niendapious reports of battles with
Which he was wont to tickle the hopes
pf expectants at headquarters during
the "late unpleasantness. I his lien.
Banks, all the way., from Massachu
setts, opens with the following gush-,
of assurance:
j"ltr. President , and, Ifcjlow-Citizaoa.
This Kepu oilcan party oi this country was
never as perfectly united as if Is at this mo
ment. I Loud cheering. 1 It was never so
strong as it is this hon-Q;ie& of 'Good !
and renewed applause. it was. oeiQf . so
certain of victory in any election as it is
this year, 1880. I Loud applause. "
(.Now that sort ot stun: needs no
comment. The lie is too patent and
b6ld to deceive any one. There is
Bft a well-informed , Republican poli
tibian in America, whA beUoves one
word ot lit. . Tho troth is, the most
8agaxio9l hV0 alnlOSt'ivon tip the
contest; They know that the people
Of this great country have not 'for
gUe the great crime of the century
perpetrated in 1870, and they mean
11 !! 0;a: rr - e .
of following Banks. He is a fit re
t eienutlv. of tb.t type of Northern
flmall-beer demagogues who fatten on
oe garbage, and who are false and
antra omctbinjrv - Wo will collate
a jfeW segregated passages to let our
readers sec what1 this political Mun
chausen told the Chicagoans about
ns : ,
' f 'I coma here to ask. you iL in addition
to; the power oi the House and the control
oC the Senate, you are'wiflfnir to irtre them
that which is necessary to make-their no-
Mocal control f thfis7ntiBfg lhaAlnt'' and
jedmplete? Lories of ,NoV and 'Never I'J
Np., It will. not be done. , Iknow it will
not be done, IA voice: 'Give us
the J&xftcuiivtc Departnsastjof Che Goverav
meat shall be in the possession and ander
Ihe control of The South they will have
realized what was the dream, what was the
txchmum boMun. otlhQ political bhilosonby
on their great Southern leader, their great
nullifler, their great , secessionist, the great
enemy oi tne 'xovernmefli or the United
TBtateewiMr Calhoue; o South1 Cicolina.
I . ODialon, is. suppressed : everv
State oi tha, South opinipn is suppessedV
add,Jtherefore; the Senators representfng
tins section or we rjepuDHO nave more re
spbnsibility to puWlaoninjani i Tbwr.ssia.
uduoub it uocb out matter, w,neu meir
tefmfl expire, beeaarJehey can ledttnl again
od laeii i exactly 'Olthjaic type. PibHa
oriinloa is destroyed absolutely in the South,
lOries of 'That is a fact.'f Therefore
ir mere a soiaier nere appjausei cnes or
'Lbtcctf theC tfkoJiaavuevcKi been iathe
rebel, I BUtajyiiexfUieorer froiahe peor
pie of his State, or the President oMhe
Uiited States.1 these judicial officers' can take
him from his Tume and ;und Afln- into the
South ia be Jrjfdforv7i&teserctewH.
offense tney may ptease to charge, against him.
Twill not speak of the" candidate Of the
Democratic ajarty recently-Dominated as
soldjex or as man. .IsiWill not speak of
biaxat all in Jhat connection bid i say, will
jou, because you believe him to have been
a soldier, and a gebd Sofdherwlll you place
him in a position where ae. will be obliged
to (conform to thosejlendsiiLthe South
er people? I Cries of 'No.' 'No.'l L
have seen the best men that I have known in I
the SouthV Intelligent,1 hprighti'hdnbrahte 1
man,.'Wbdiad-WOfkea-rdr theifJ living and
who ;bsd-ootrjuJated.Jiai JirUl property,
who have told me -with, tears 4n their eyes
betausfe the "welF-dressed brjgfmoffws
call taetti eotltherd men', Demosrats, rebels,
and,whai3flpJbcbeeattseoltha wajl-dressed,
and wtll-mounted, b'saQds4, political brig-ands-l
do not say brigafidSln tbe sefisu of
robbei tint J apaato of men-wbor bavaia
.PoUUWiCJIUB wJiichihey.wUhtQ msiHtai,
ana defend: they have tWs form of the
SYdNmotrhted "inwellaBdbMtfcaT
btigaadi tikenOQ'thryhighWsy front -these
pper laboBiag men theirproperty.'' -;
This is more than enough you cry.
Now it is such abominable falsehood -and
slander as this that' is resorted to
ilheortt!
ex&ectea t
healthyhpr?
nary Northern voter Is so ignorant of
history arid Politics when he has such
Utachers is i&tci plo&G$ .Ig55 ra wis,
tioaii,"'-adaetpeBd
Banks. What can North Carp.lftfa5
eer gain by the success of such a
party with such exponents and offi-
.csais
TiHE NIHCOOLB IN THE
. f OF LUHD8. ( ,
Thp liberal bill, jnn.to chepk
evictions. in Iceland having passed lb,?
House' of Common, only twenty
Liberal having voted against it the
stiraggle'.wiU now. be- la ther House of
lirds. The Home Rnlers id the nam
ber! of thirty-seven : voted with the
liberals. Mr. Gladstone "made a
splendid fight in the House of Oom
pJOus, but he has greater difficulties to
encounter among, the Peers! ( It is
believed he will, triumph if he stakes
his continuance in office upon pupcess.
I he shows to the Lords that he, will
resign or dissolve Parliament sooner
thao . abandon tho bill he will force
iLi-;u;ii.w ikm.v rit iM
jviioiuimj, -u.vu . j
willing to do in Viejfr the excited
..-. ..m: tv,ZnA .ho .wr.
mV trrd nv to do awaV with herdd-
aa ia.a.an in.. iu.u iiu a cuaiai ax. tm ra mm m-w aav w Mm -
4 . m .
itaijr y ecu age. , xuv w vv. .w
not, however, unanimous in support
of the measure. Earl Grdy, a Liberal,!
Iflitrt'mnVe'lta reiecliofi Lord Ports-
latO move US rejeoilOU. uoru runs
mouth, on the other haud, who owns
niaoh lad in Uel.nd, d.fed thel
principle of the measure. He reminds
tbc E.glUh and Scotch opponent.
that the Irih tenant, furnl.h the
buildings and not the landlords as in
England and Scotland: and that the
bill only proposes to prevent the con
fiscation of the tenant's interest. Ue
gave expression io a www aonumeuw
le said tlfat he thodght "confidence
egendered by fair dealing was the
best weapon to use against commu
nism." There is a Tory Lord, George
Hamilton by name, who belonged to
the Beaconsfield Ministry. In a de
bate he was stupid enough to com
pare the case of the Irish peasant "to
the Ryots of the Deccan." We see
it, mentioned that the allusion was
apeoialy unfortunate, as the late
Ministry had carried a bill to pre
vent the eviction of the Ryots in the
Deccan. It is unfortunate for the
Tories that they are less willing to
show as magnanimous a considera
tion for the Jrish as they manifested
for the Ryot. VTe note these things
for two reasons: first, there are many
readers of the Stab who are deeply
interested in all legislation that con
cerns Ireland; second, we know no
history so interesting and instr native
to an American as that of England.
The two parties are uow contribution;
a! fresh chapter to the History of
England in the Nineteenth Century.
'In the last Oxford Free Lance the
editor, Gapt. William Biggs, is out in
a. two-column "card," in reply to Col.
Hargrove. lie says he has other cer-
ti&catea to establish the poneotnw
at the reoort of the sneeoh of the
Radical Elector. The following is
only necessary for us to copy to place
ther whole matter before oar readers,
emitting the merely personal part.
Chpt. Biggs says, referring to Har
rgfove'fl cerwners:
"And now a word as to the men who tes
tifjf im this behalf.' With aierw azeeptiona
they are Granville Rads and members of
ih& rotten aod corra pt 'riag, ' which for
twelve long years plundered and. outraged
tnp people of Granville. Look at them:
iithn Janet. M. B. Jones. Bill Jenkins. Jim
l$6re, B. H. Cozsrt, and company 1
jNfcafly all of the signers of the certifi
cates are bitter personal and poliiieal
nraRmiea of the editor, of , the . Jrree
iAnce. caused so by ''the eXObSUtes of their t
manifold rascalities and corruptioai through
the eolumns of that paper. T thai saeei
and its editor they mainly attribute the
fact that they and their party were hurled
from power two years ago, and hence their
spite nd venom.
MThej? .have nearlv all sauirmed and
wfitbed under the excoriations of "the. Free
IAnce for their mimbeness misdeeds, ana
this is the way they seek 4o revenge tbem-
se
vea.
i :Here is a part of a tender epistle
itten by a modest, blushing widow I
td starving Dr.- laerw il is irom
tne gusning pen m eosmoreu mrs.
Maggie Milltqne, of Fremont, Ohio:
n ?'Seeing by the papers that you ca,n go
without anv kind of food, except water, I
take this opportunity of kBeeliag' at your
feet and offering you my Aar asa .oaoa,
ntfor dear Doctor. I imolore voa to accent
tha,leap year oner irom a young wiaow. or.
twenty-seven years.
X0 Children to potherf
ijetyou intoajrMTey-makinipOT
Dofiaa. as a ereai many wmuo. now. uear
Apiftf Ut hrft nbt leasf 'I nromise von
. T ' --iSsafaJWFa----- 1--
Uiai as long as we live we wiii neirer uayti .
raan cabbage ana. -nog, meat" on ouriaoie.
ear Doctor Tanner, ff you Ibofc favorably
'-onjmy. suit please inform .m by i return
iilsWtrfriP.tt-p.a Atartm!, going
Eaatln abpntthr.ee weeks, , If on. do not
IV w ailO lJUn 1 UV uvi vwj vu ubi ts
fuunuJiLKWiMliflfAiiF '.it '
bAhW4ied,''., h,
f'Anounceof civit, good apolne-r
:rXeCearf lettof Ueoi
fid HoaV plaocu &bfs f
ernhe-brdf- r
cafy t"
V Gotham has a new ; sensation. On
Saturday! tbere wasfto
have
been a
ork:
be
-The impntibeatre;idcattd at the cwner
of Sixth avenue and, 116ih street; will ac
nrpmnHnta 7,003 or 8,000 peoplerand every
inch orspace tn irwilt probable be flHedr
ftve oMtick M. Uttiebour for the com
bat it togin.ATbeaoimalsterOm Tkxhh,
Vainamorn. ma rtpanmn gtiniiPn
maflkhu is.to be; ibeir principal aatagy b ist ,
says 'tljey ate i$ liveiy'4ttima!s'a8;ahr with
wlm he ever ha4 tq dJiqTMadridV :' ' '
' ;th att;Waint
consfifeld plttnced England . iS inoob
more oostly than .Tory estimates led
llii nannla tn nollOVn. It ltt' nflV
. rT , 4? tJJ ,r y,
known triat tttere was a misiaae.oi
10 rjloeiiLLin inaj8.pr5p
per oeht. lfi the record of "aoltfarexi-
rr j , '. t.-.'.i' i l
pjsnses
Mobile .Btartsff iov ne,.;aijr:TV.;:aud;ougbt in by native meaaeneer from Can-
irlvea an Oarhestof a SweeuinDemo-
:. i . : .?-: it- .'; u
Crane victory ifUiuugiiuuii Aiauauiu,
despite the coalition - of the'so called
Groenbackers and Radicals.'
O CTi HUNT COM MKN'f.
His letter contrasts favorabiv5
with Gen. Garfield's in the frankness
a.u i' 'A..a. Vw c.LZ,
and inoisiveness of its utterances. It
1 betrays riono of th Studied, larVS of
MH'..W
raSBiS
J.al 9a.l4 Ad AClt IftdlO iiinKllh E lltflAI St.
- i V-??y W:5Vricf
. o0DJiq,,not;;inaye)3 spoken. wifcU more
I dlreanesacr and
Lfield that-toadasir inamff "imifrortaL
- w w w
defence of the trae principles off
IteO tnsUtouons. no, voter, ; i&tortn
. 0f jjoutn.-can- mistaice ne ponoy nat
I wiU contr$ tts ao
v tissues. settled by W:9P
a. . j. n 1 u . k. i 1 i . -
I "
1 . Avaairtnand dmitrl 4ab-
Philad. Times. Ihd.
; Gen. UaD!ook.8 letter MiSJ'3Sy,M-ht
1 iug the nomination of the Democratic
American who really loves his'cotrn -
try and sincerely desires the happi'
ness and prosperity ofthe whole peo
pie. The. letter is briefs bu it con
tains in its few DaracrraDhe the'entrre
-
i pian 0f our government and tbepiih
J ciples upon, which it, shnld be con-
ducted, as intended by it80fbrjrrders,
and the spirit of which has been in no
respect .changed or modified by sub- .1
sequent alterations in the plan, ren
dered necessary by the march of
events. lUchmond ( Va) State, JJetn.
OUH STATU COtfrBnliUAIllH.
Buxton, while on the bench, protected
his part iz ins and punished bis enemies.
Jeffreys did the same thing. Bat Jeffreys
never insulted public decency by asking a'
free people for their suffrages. yftartotfs'
Vbserver.
None but a dceamcr would eaterlain the
desire attributed to Democrats by General
Barringer. But this declaration suggests a
query, ueneral liarneger was unce a
slaveholder, aad when he. charges the
lMmaertla wuh fmlsphfuul whn rionv lha
wish to rt-establish slavery is lie judging4'n.W be scene, but who were formefly sec-
others by himself? Does he regret the'
regret the
loss of his slaves, and does Jh -desire to
have bis slave property restyrelO'im ?
II no s.ys no, men ne must ciain superior
veracity for himself over some of' the vety
best men id or tn uaroima wno make the
declaration. The elakn is- preposterous.
If he says es, then he stands Self convict-
Let mm choose whichever horn of the
dilemma he Ukea.FayeUeviUe Examiner
I01MTIC.L, P(MVT,
ine more caret uuy ieoeraLi
Hannnt'aranftnfiaiiUniiiihTiaht
itshlnea-ZtoftWisi.Zfem.
! When Arthur looks forth and
beholds loag columns devoted, to Garfield
in the New York Iribune, he wishes ihe
were also guilty. Atlanta OonUitution.
All nghtf f or- Sigel firfrtsr this -
."
za a. i v w .a a - . mw m w. -
I veteran Corps that is now organizing all
UTUI tug UlfUUUJT
Ague Cure
a purely vearetable bitter and
ful, tonic, and. is warranted . a spce
certain cure for Fever and Aerue.
and Fever, Intermittent or Chill
Tl Ill A. w-n w a. a
"i??
S'al
ianai disorders, in miasmatic di3- t
spine
extremities, are
only
premonitions.
of
he
severer symptoms, w
rhich terminate in the
ague paroxysm, succeeded by
high fever
aaa proiusa perspiratioa. . ( . l .
' It is a startling fact, . that uioine, arse
gt&S. aJSte
nic ana otner poisonous minerals, form tb
jrever'tod Acn
"Tonics," in tho mark
market. The nrenara.
nons maae irom tnese mmeral poisons,
aifuongu uiey are - paiatanie, and may.
break the chill, do not cure, but leave the
malarial and their own drug poison in
the system, producing quinism, -dlzamess,
ringing in the ears, headache, vertigo, and
other disorders more1 formidable than the
disease they were intended to cure.
AirpR'8 Ague Curb thoroughly eradicates
these noxious poisons from the svstem.
, arfd. always cures the severest cases. 16
coiatauis no quinine, mineral, or any thine
"Tlthf'Mftllll n J .1 A. .1 . 1 . . .
rwiii luuw injiiiu 1110 iuuau ueucaie pa
tient; and its crowning excellence, above
Hs certainty to cuxaia.jtfcit leaves the
as Ireo from disease as before the
I pos Liver Complaints, Atek's Aguk
CrjltE. bv direct nfinn nn t.IiA livw anA
-biliary apparatus, drives otii the poison
wmnH. jirouuce tnese complaints ana sunin
ulates the system to a vigorous, healthy
20haHion. '; -
We warrant it when taken according to
directions.
Oi'AMSmrl till n. I f . I
ia, the rapid pulse, coated toneue. thirst. 1
lnnoUii1. 1 t 1 1 I . f
woaimuo, juaa Ul HUIJeum, Ucllll in ine DOCK I "pu
aad loins, and coldness - of the snine and i fire
' ; Practical and Analytical Chemists,
; " Lowell, Mass. :
' MU BT AM. DBUOQISTS ETERTWITEBS.
ap 3 eod ly fr aa we nrt&
THE
ILNEWS.
"Kr"
Sr.
ARTfe
F THE WORLD
f i
M-
LLIHUNUK.
Partieulars of the Disaster lo Oeu.
Borrow' command One-bait of
bla Forces glaagnvtered Torktih
Fore InCTAaaedllurTlieMair
Kpirtia -4
, ICy Cablotfl the MoraUijttr.J :u
London. AagU3t3.r-The limes has the
following from-Candahar, Atigust 2d, by
Teiegraph company,
- L iOn thS -morning of July' 27ih 'General
I;3nrrowa,eagaged, Ayeob Khali' , force
iz.uuu men ana iweniv cuns. ntiv mi
beyond Cahdshar. After foof hour? strvere'
PfighUngfflen. Jiuwews was repulsed and
t forced to retreat to Oandahar. British lns
killed t and missjng, mo&tof the losses oc
currine on the retreat. Three ' horse artil-
j 'lery guns were abandoned.'. Preparations
are making ror a siege in Uandahar.
. i nn unjaivi inn rnrotrnt n rr navra oaa
I dkbdr and elgraphcl from Killa Abduilai
:J a postfTOrtyrour - mties
oa 4be Oaodabar
siuaror Qaetta. a - . f : ?;
jThe lime sajs: "We may sesume that
the messengers utt Uandahar on Saturday.
Vfe learn for ' the first time that General
Burvows -Was the aasailaat, aad as; the
Afehans'do Bot take nnaorjers. we fear all
ot tfiefmuisiog may be reckoned as killed.
11?? npshot of the story is that out of 2,400
1 men not more than bait dome ot whom
are wounded) followed General Burrows
into UaDdabar ."
; A Bombay dispatch, under date of Mon-
W ;em f - mmm wwMwawaMa a T UBIUTV IVUUOII IU
tJ; Thevemment it Bom-
Ituay-jaoaoa spw.aoy'iMiropsjaa 'iroops tor
i reanioroementSi '!' - - v . :..
dispatch from
r?raf ?es twt tbe t-orte has deter-
mw , m MaM as. m li 1
iDbreas. the4rbo ps io Tbessaly and Epiru.
td iflfryihousaad; Of these nwedtv-slx
f nusaua win serve in messaiy and four
T,?81" h4msaid of
1 inn w niim inrnsi win nca ra inanian. vAiiiniaAva
r
irpm uowaioft awoet tm mowing, says
1 "Mr. Oladstonn nnol n fir niht Ti,r
is noincreasein thelocalmalady with which
I Marquis Hartington, Secretary of India,
oS&Sl
AStSL
j cdncinded,by saying that the government
J fobkjhis step with regret, btcuuse, while
Ha Bartle irere'a views differ from the
views of Ministers on important questions.
iney xuiiy recognize nia nign personal quali
ties ana aesuneuisned services.
iA Rome dispatch savs the Liberal Dress
express coneern ror Mr. uiaxmone's ncailb,
aiid hope his speedy recovery.' The French
ana u-erman press ' also comment on Mr.
Gladstone's condition.
DRVILISU WOlCli.
Attempt to Wreck a Train on tha
fladtnent Uatlral-Narrow Eacape
f-Arreat or Two t Neeroo Cbarfced
Wliu the Crime.
tBy Tolegriph to the' Morning Vtar.l
DAnvillr, August 3. Last Wednesday
nigui uie iracK or mo rieamont rtatiroad
wha obstructed! by.cross-ties fastened udod
it for the nUTDOSe Of Wrecking .tha train At
anexceeaingiy aangerous point, known as
tbie State line trestle, seven miles s6uth of
Danville. Ihe northward bound mail
iraiu, wuwueu wun passengers, mauo a
marvellous escape from destruction. The
railroad authorities employed detectives to
rerret out the guilty wretches, and vester-
day Detective Wio, of Richmond, arrest
ed two negroes, employed asjarm laborers.
I -"u "anus on me ranroaa. rne evidence
against them is said to beconclusive. Their
'motive is said to be reveDge against the
section master for discharging them from
ineir ranroaa employment
THE tJ1BT.
Ttie Treaty els Uapldir Slsnod
aaervatlB to ba Opened ror seitle-
ruent in One Year.
i lB Telegraph to the Kornln" Star
Dknvkk. Co Auguat 3. A Los Pinos
. J x. i."u,auo ououuj
I lu commissioners quarters an aay
Irday to sign ihe treaty . The chiefs
I lelrfel that unless their ' names aro for-
a nairinit oi wnoi i a wa m a m a naa.M
1 warded to WashiBfrton tbevwill recti no
I part of the sixty thousand dollars which
I the .commission ia authorized to pay out as
HrXP8 arogement3,for the removal
a w u u uv.Aaiaiwu. t u ii, ii n in in uii
sioners leave here about the 4th for the
SOuta TJte Agency, except Col. Meacbam.
wbo roraains at Los Finos to take the cen.
sua. The removal of the TJtes is only a
question oi lime, roe commissioners are
hitrrying matters as fast asTJOBsible, and a
year irom. tais Jail vrMl probably see the
iwurvuuuu opea io Beiiiemeni.
NEGRO RlOTlNUS.
Ai aegro Democratic Voter Ntabbed
3eueral mtelee One JVaxrp Kllla An-
Oiber-Lrnch Ltw Threatened.
: ,LBy Telegraph to the Jornlnj? Star. .
Cincinnati. August 3. A dianatch
from Lexlnetofi. Kv.. savs a necro who
vota tne. uemocrauc ticRet was slabbed
bya Itepoblican negro. The marshal,- in
suempusg io maae mo arrest. was aa-
eaulted and stiuck on the head with a rnrk.
"when a general melee ensued, in wbhh two
UaibstCitF. otBarrvlCrenshaw.bvAlsTan
v'ii''i iwu, ; wnuuaw wcm ou
(oiqmei a noisterous erowa oi negroes, and
from a doublebarralnd Rhnt.vnn v!th
fatal effect. Ellison wad arrestedand it is
leared he will be lynched to-hfght.
MJsXVtTVQMLV,
Tfc estate feleetfanDensoerata sweep
trery ttktna: ritta rev HxeepnioiTa.
OuisvUiLK. Ky.. Aueust 3. The eleo
lions yesterday passed off very quietly
tbloughout the Btate. NotHlnatiobs were
madebv nerrublieafls in verv few counties.
and Ihe Vbte boiled ; wa ' Itehtl Circuit
uupges aod UommouTVeanh'sr Attorneys
' .
were elected in each of the eighteen indicial
diatrfcta. and Democrata were elected in at
leastntteen. Ithe, Eighth Oongrgsional.
ii8trici ine xemocrauc nrimarv election
aomiaated PhiL B. Thomoson. Jr.. for re
election, to Coneresa. Circuit clerks, sher
iff I,- magistrates and constables were elected
in nu tne counties, ana municipal, omcera
in many cities and towns. Democrats
were elected generally. 1
" At.aBAiria.
't - ,- 1 it. . i.a :.. .v, .
Oemoeraue; aiaorliy la the Stat
Fifty. Tbonaand.
MOBILE. AuinslS-Sottikls t6 the'la,-
llJll ' . . " . 1 . .... I
vietcr tnyw y 1 asoaioeea, inerry, xiauas,-1
eat nesTirv- 'uernecrauc.. 1 ireroTnaf iram 1
XT artiann TJmoatrWA atlAir. Xfntrtrar, .. I
hitthlv- favorable. There Will '! be fiflv 1
thousand majority at least for the State I
I
I AT
dV and 4 etor arrests were made. " J' 1 15.000
Twweiw u east oca were anoi ana several fleriniioiv cut i
U6" Flhi- at Wvull..,l Uf ill :i . L I I lllil
i iwa. ua uuuaouLa iiLiiin. r i m. iiii hh i rum i
ticket.
taXAi,
US '
Tbre Klin
By TelaKrph to th Mnralng bu, ,
Galveston. Anguit 8. The jvL. i
the f olio wlngspecitlii
Paris, August 3. Joan Palmar . .1.
a,d instantly killed Saturday b, jlf
Jfewion. the reeuH of a difficult XttlU
J San Antonio, Augu.l 2. John Mch.nl .
rhM ba ari sated ch.rKeU wh. ,b! T"1
.k .- . i . "
r b a -mwmim airu. nini.
oil j.
J&tffle fast, August 27 lo
"effort lo re-
Capture; Ove escaped prlmueu yfi
one deputy sheriff and ., J?
killed
i n.u Austin Rneriai ia ika 7
a a .
.William WUliam.
and biii.t
t ft""-
s.L I
(both colored) yeatardart
VICTOKIA'S hard,
1 1
l Plain Vlll,a Oamma.a Ati.rk lk
; lalaa-Tbuitr UmIu
IDy TalaKTaph to tha Moralng ur '
aALVESTON, August 8.-A special to
ifof. from Ban Antonio, i.y. dilp, Jj
w,aj received at headquarters, jesierda.
ssying that Victoria's baad atiLSlV'
pass, north between Eaalu k. . .
Quitman, when an encasement entu.,1
wbich the Indians were reputed ami ih
pbsltioo held until tho arrival of CiW,
Viele, when a sharp encounter look il
between his troops and the Iun.n. .
iStter were repulsed and satco wcrt killf,i
atid many wounded. Captain Viele Ion ,,.
man mnea; L,ieut. fjallady was woud.I. ,1
The engagement lasted tbrae houu
KLBCTKIO MfaiCK.
The Saratoga races for to-day wue po4rt.
ppned until to-morrow oo account f
Weather. ,uc
! The censas returns of l'vivrhburu v.
jSbl completed, show the school population
there u be 6,893 while 2.90U, colu,td
8,428, or nearly one-fourth of the eDtife
populauou of tho city. Tho return hbow
a decrease of 1,025 duriD the natt ni.
yeais.
COMMKKCIAL.
W 1 l. M INUI'ON MAKK (. i.
ST Alt OFFICE, AujUt3. 4 1' il
SPIRITS TURlENTIHE-Tl.e iiu.kH
continues firm at 20 cents per gallon f,.t
regular packages, with Rules reported of
500 casks at that price.
ROSIN The market was firm at or,
for Strained and $1 10 for Good Hlraincd,
with sales as offered. Also talcs of l,V)
bbls fine rosins at $2 00 for I Kitrt No 1,
$2 25 for H Low Pale, f3 50 .fur M I'.le'
and $2 75 for N Extra Pair.
TAR. Market quoted firm at $2 35 per
bbl. of 280 bbls with sales of riceipu t
quotations.
CRUDE TURPENTINE Ttie nuiktt
was steady at fl 80 for Yellow Dip, lt)d
$2 25 per bbl. for Virgin, with mUi i
quotationc
COTTON The market was nomioally
unchanged. Futures for August opcoed in
New York at 11.38 cents and closed
steady at 11.39 cent; October opened at
10.53 cents aod closed steady at 10.56 oeaU.
The following were the oQlcial quotations
here :
Ordinary 8
cents y It)
Good Ordinary U
Strict Good Ordinary.
Low Middling 10,
Middling 1U
Good Middlini: Uf
A li i v .
lily 'I'elctrrauh to tko Morntny Htw
Financial.
Nuw Vouk, August 3. Noon. Mim
irregular at 22J pt-r c nl. Sti lling x
change 43248-it Stain bond dull .ml
uachanged. Govenuucuts quiet but (inn.
(jmmerciai.
Cotlou dull, with sales of 181 bales; mid
dliogs 11 S-1G ccnU;X)rleans 11 11 1(1 cent;
futures steady, with sales at the followioK
quotations: August 11.37 els; September
lJ.S4cent8; Oclobet 10.54 ceaU; oem
ber 10.43 cents; i3ecemuer 10.44; January
10 51 cents.
Flour steady aud quiet. Wheat white a
shade stronger; red less firm and moderate
ly active. Corn firm. Pork quiet at $14 00.
Lird steady at $7 CO. Hpirita turpentine
28 cents, itopin $1 42J. Freights quiet
and firm
ftlllKlUN ItlAKKKlN
Uy Cable to tho Horning Mm I
'Liverpool. Aueust 3 Noon. Cotton
steady; middling uplands 0 13-10d; mid
dling Orleans 6 15 lftd; sales of 10,000 baits,
of which 2,000 bales wero for speculation
and export; receipts 2,700 bales, 2,000 of
which were American. Middling upiaoun,
1 m C. August delirery 6 11-lOd; October
and November delivery 0 7-32d. Futures
afti fist.
Iisrd 89s 6d . Meats long clear middles
33s Gd; short 40j Gd.
1.30 P. M. oreadsiuus sieauy.
3 P. M. Uplands, I m V Auguat aod
September delivery d; November aud
December delivery OJd.
6:15 P. M. Uplands, I m c. ScplcroDer
and October delivery 0 13 ld. uiurei
weak. . .
Bales of coiton to-day include 8,4-w ii
American.
Common rosin 4s Gd.
Corn, Meal, Hay.
Bosh Prime Whit COKN.
Bosh Water (1 round MS At.
50QBalo.IlAY.
mi nv , a.. n-
I JFllU llTj XLLUllDOCD ougiu
1100
Bbl. FLOUR, Boport.
r HA Hhdaand Bhla Byrop w
OU0 Now Crop Caba aaa torw W
LaBBKH
OKA Bbla MJAK. Cat Uoaf. OraaaUuO.
ZOU Btandard A, Extra U and C,
Bacon, Lard, Fork. &c
2QQ Boxas Baok4 and P. 81iKH.
150 Tmb Cho4oe tJU9 LX1U'
125 BbU CITT MKSS P0BK
BozM STABCU
300 L,K roTA811
175 Boxo" LanJry 80 Al
1 00 80,06 1ur Aaaort4Ml OANWV,
T.l D W.toKa Ihnl HtICa.tl
OUUU, A UUWA, . FI.UJ " w
got. Pepper, Hoop Iron, Bptrlt UarreU, e
ror aaia low dt .
WILLIAMS MUBCnlSON.
if 18 It Wholaaala Qro. Q
The Lincoln Progress
Publiihed Saturdays at LineobUpn, If. C-
Td v M1. mb. nnhllahMl la LUMOla CMBtJ
JLf1ir,r-
tadStata.
T4 .. . V Wa)llll f VflBllllM ''
r-.. u ik r.mi.n
iii!:iiM. k .iwMd on raarly aaTf r
tlaamcnU UuhacrinuoB pnoa,
an
""i.. " ' r n. DbLAK
i
' a,lloTaai1Prlw"