Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Aug. 5, 1880, edition 1 / Page 2
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V.- . . , - ' - - ,'-.,. --- - - , - .. .- a n i -in- - -"-l 1- .iC,.,,--.-.-,'.. . Sl . ' - . - ". t I WILMINGTON IT. C.i WkdvesdayIEvknixg. Aug 4, 1880 EVENING EDITION. WINnELDS'MCOOK Of PenruylTania. FOX VICE PRESIDENT : WILLIAM H. ENGLISH Of Indiana. Nothing can intimidate me Jrom doing vhat ... -wr -a. 1MO r.-i nfirisii htt 4m. tXs habeas corpus j. am ny v r" airty Qf Vt press, Vufroedom tfipneh, Vu natural rights cfpenont, and V ngu or property, pre9trtaBaeock to 1S57. TT iaiT(caar force has been overthrown caul peace estaiiuhsd, and the civii authorities are rLdandioiBina to verformthHr duties, the miU- tary power should cease to lead, and the civil admin istration resume Us natural and rvjfuji aomvwm Hancock in 1867. FOE CONGRESS : JOHN W. SHACKELFORD, Of Onslow- Election, Tuesday, Nov. 2.1 democratic statu ticket, For Governor Thomas J. Jab vis. " Lieut. Governor Jas; L. Robinson. 44 Betfy. of State "Wm- L. Saundkks 44 Treasurer Jno- M. Worth. 44 Attorney General Thos. S. Kenan 44 Auditor W. P. Roberts: 44 Sap'L of Public Instruclipn J. C. SCABBOBOUGH- THE BEST OF OiSIPAIGN DOCD ABUTS. We very much doubt if the Stal warts could have done a greater service to the cause of Hancock and the country than by fussing about that letter of the "superb" soldier to the head of the army. They were in desperate straits ; they had heard that a letter had been written by Gen. Hancock that could be used to his detriment that could be tortured into a grave offence against the loyal sentiment of the North. They kept on asserting and demand ing, until at last the hero of Gettys burg obtained a copy of it from Gen, Sherman, to whom it was written; wheD, lo! it proved a perfect boome rang: it hit equarely the fellows who threw it into the campaign, and now they are wriggling and bellowing under the self -inflicted torture. We are indeed glad the letter was brought out by their demands. It is the cam paign document. Written in the freedom of a private correspondence, as one soldier would write to another who held him as a friend, it is the frank and honest utterance of brave, a loyal heart, and will create a great impression. His masterly letter of acceptance, that meets with such hearty, universal approval among Democrats and Independents, was written after his nomination; but his letter to Gen. Sherman was writ ten in 1876, was private and in re sponse to one he had received from his commander and friend, and will be read by all without any suspicion, or grounds of suspicion that he was saying aught than what he believed, or that be had an eye to public ap proval. We would have rather written that letter of Hancock's, under the sur roundings and peculiar condition of affairs, than to have been Grant at Appomattox. The one was the pro duction of a noble nature, of a patriot and statesman who loved truth and honor as well as his country ; the oth er was one of those strange chapters in a life made up of vicissitudes and contradictions, and might have hap pened to any man of a stubborn will, with indifference to human suffering, and careless of the lives of his sol diers. The moderate Richmond Dispatch says of the letter: "Day by day Gen. Hancock grows in the estimation of -the people. T&e more tbey see of him the better lhey like him. The more they read of bis writings the more they admire them. He is evidently ot merely a soldier. He is a statesman as welt. If there had been any 'doubt on' the subject before, -it would have disappeared on the appearance of his letter of ,1876 to Gen. Sherman, about which the Repubfl cans have had so much to say." As ; far as we can gather from th various reports Gen. Barrows was first ont-generalled and then - forced to fight some 8,000 or 10,000 Afghans with not more than; 2,400 troops. We would suppose that the latter force, unless surprised, would be able to take care of" at least. 10,000 Af ghans. . ? A HiVefook would hT-8i? ri?k f? ? them. The? British seem: : to be lackfoffi ia 'men of kmte'8emM nd enterprise. Sir Garnet Wolaeley U ..about the only 'soldier relied upon by the Eng- not improbable at hemay: be sent to take;cjomndL5;;QenrK ihoagbVW tie nasjxnamana pi ine lorces that Wll!,arch t0 th!rehef of Caidahar. If .V the relieving - column V numbers really 10,000 mei it ought to be 8trongenough to" clean oat-'aUpba ing foroes and even dictate jeace. It strikes us that a Wellington ;would ask no easier task tbaulopuhish and overwhelm the forces of Ayoob Kahnv :We hopeHpiTBn out of Afghanistan safely where they have no business' beingrrBnt H where is a Wellington ?' : .; We have heard before of Decern-: ber and . May getting , ; together or; winter lingering in the lap of spring.; The proposed marriage of a joung American, aged .29, ,Mr, Ashmael Batlett, with that -oharitable5 and! rich old spinster, Baroness Burdett Coutts, now 66 years of age, is well calculated to arouse the newspaper paragraphist. ; She loses a matter of jialf a million dollars 'ann dally by i .yielding to the violent flame that con sumes her bosom, whilst he sacrifices all age, pbveriy, and the prospects of an immediate marriage with a pretty lassie of his own age, at the shrine of Eros or Cupid or some other of the gods who know how to enthral and entrap. But from im memorial time the tender passion has wrought many wonders, and this uni ting of a wintry old age and .life's young spring, is not the least of its fantastic tricks. But the Baroness is rich, lean and almost seventy, and if she were only poor they would not say I that the faithful Secretary had an eye 1 K0;r,- TW I VWho hath not owo'd, with rapture smit ten frame. The power of Cash, tke magic bf a Name ?" The other wing of the New York city Democrats rather slighted John Kelly in their recent demonstration. John is said to be sore under it, and he proposes to get even t with them, but in a way that will do good to the Hancock boom. He is going to have a grand meeting of his own one that will completely extinguish the efforts of the other wing. He says I toe "Wigwam i, .till ahve." HU only trouble are tne speakers, it ne i can get them he is All right. 1 he 1 lflttsrof thflNflw York eorresnondentl f th PhilaAhU T1ar va of J ". . . -, jr ' :.7;.v...tr 1 the proposed toasa meeting: I "They are pretty sure, however, of se curing Senator Kernan, Senator Wallace, possibly Senator Bayard, and possibly the venerable exGoveraor.. ; Seymour. '-' Kelly says 'the TUden flavor at the meeting last week was too strong for the- good'of the ticket in New York or any where else, and that "something must be done to counter act it.'" Mr. Jackson, living near Savannah, Georgia, has over thirty-five thousand tea plants on his farm. He has sent several samples of his tea to Commis sioner Le Doc. Here is what fol- lowed, according to a Washington dispatch : "The Commissioner subsequently took the samples to New Yoik anof wentlncog. nito tt one of. the largest tea estabiiahmegu there, repreaeritiog that he had some tea- W selL An e-rhert waa railed tn In eYarnirie the tea, and he proaauneed it India.-; tea, I r vr ; , r u ,wu"u,u,u" 1 Le Duff then had difficulty-iir convincing I h0m .h.t ik. to- ... i th, I country and could be produced for one-1 third the price named. The tea is repre-I BBoiea as oeing very paiatapjo ana qudcxih I to dislLaguish from the Imported article. We see it stated that a Government tea farm will be opened at some point in South Carolina, when t he plant will be fully tested. Gen. Le.Duo thinks before many years this country will produce all the tea'and sugar that will be consumed. Can it be true that Garfield has strength in no section ?' Is he iq'get no States ? Can it be so that eVenr New England is about to turn its back upon him ? We expected Han cock to earry Connecticut, but we did not suppose he - would sweep nearly all. But only hear the New York World talking after, this style r "Of the six New England States not more than one is really-safe forGarfleld, while in a second the chances are stronfflv and in a third slightly ia his favor. As -for the re maining three, Connecticut is reasonably sure for Hancock. i-r.'New: cflamosblre be longs to the partrwhiclt fiK.hUhharde8t. and in Maine, according to rh&Eerdla? cor respondence, the sanation is decidedly un favorable to the Republicans." The House of Lords was over whelming in its opposition to the Lib eral measure intended to" protect the Irish tenant. Nearly six to one was -I- the vote. Tbe people the working classes will see from this action more and more that their -only friends are among those eleoted by themselves and not in the House of Lords. They. B will see more and more how ittle sympathy the wealthy PeerB have for the struggling masses. It is well tor Jingiand that so much power is vested m the House of Commons. - I That body is the breakwater against despotism and injustice. The present I very advanced condition of the peo-1 pie andSuniments of .freedom tratJ 8aronnie a?fe SPJ! mons with the-Crown ano! its noble adherents. A defeat i the House jt VV.' ' 'a -'dCiti -mir Aiords has no direct, -con trolun fir -efrect over thejtenure pf a'Mbr. If the f f-vote of disapproval just given by the Peers of; the Realm had been given by tne airect represeniauves pcwiov wuuiuiimo oouih-iuo .u.u;.- als intoretirement at once; Gen. Hancock told & Merald re porter" that- he ' wrote1 his -letter' to Sherman "franklv and with Triri re- 1 atraintAever.expecUng it toJbe pnb?. lished.;'4?HeWa8,inaWestern town on private business, without secretary f.ff Ta aaiA! f;tt. ?lf? PrSe VI never wrote anything I am afraid f V . t. nmn that T mnnM RAl oliolr .There is: honesty in. every line of his letter. It is a capital campaign document, -but written in IS 7 6. Mr. John 8.4 Wise, the late Govern or's son, declares that, if eleoted, he will undoubtedly castf his vote for Hancock and EnerlishVHe says he will obey instructions in so doing. He is aMahoneite. ' The official register of the North Carolina Military Institute at Char lotte shows, six instructors and seventy-five matriculates during the last year. OUR TAB1B. We have received from J. Fitzgerald & 'Co., 143 Fourth Avenue, New York, the eighth number of the Humboldt Library cf Popular Science, containing Marcelis excel lent work.The Study of Languages brought back to True Principles. Price 15 cents For sale by Hefnsberger. From I. K. Funk & Co., Doy street, New York, FroudeV Aurestes or Readings of Modern Painters ." by John Raskin. Ma nilla backs. Price IS cents'. " Joan of Arc, by Alphonse do Lam art ine. Manilla backs. 'Price 10 cents. Orations of Demostbeues, translated by Thomas Leland. Vol. II. Price 20 cents. - JUDGK BLACK ON HANCOCK. Hancock bontataua Order . (lie '. "spoken Act" of a Soldier wo Saved ; Ctvll Liberty. ' .t I From his Letter to the New York 'World from Paris. I neither wrote those papers nor suggested: a word of them; 1 had no P-f Z?l nothing from him about it until he had taken the public into his conn aence. indeed, my personal ac- WntanC! with h!m. WM tbeD VeT7 uight, and our relations not at all intimate. The opinion that I would offer or he would require my aid pro ducing such an order as his No. 40 is abburd. His . determination to stand by the Constitution and the laws needed no expression but what he could give it better than any man man alive. It was not an argument, not an exposition of the law. not an essay on the rights of man that was wanted at that critical time. The spoken act of a patriot soldier in high command alone could save civil lib erty from the destruction with wbioh it was then threatened. That was WHAT HANCOCK DID, and it was the ' timeliest lift that the great, cause ever got from any hand except that of Washington. t I hope my admiration of the order in question and the gratitude I have leit to mm xor issuing it can oe read sonably acooanted for without sup posing mat i iramea or naa any fi,.Q , fMm: pi,a ui,..f share in framing it. J he belief was general among the friends of couati- 1 tutional liberty, and expressed bv t many others as strongly as by me, that ten. Hancock-had done much, and 'doneit bravelv, to rescue the nation and saye it alive, first from se eessionists, and afterwards from the more dangerous and more unprinci pled. oligarchy into whose hands it ell after the war. At tbe . date of bis service in Louisiana the bean ideal pf a "strong government" was in full operation at Washington, conducted, by men whoannwHto-be absolute masters of the' country. State, rights' I and. aa a necessary consequence, indi vidual liberty, were violently trod- den i down, .and the Constitution, wbioh should have made us free, was habitually over-ridden and insulted. What those men called '.'the Goverp ment" was not only wondrous wrong out corrupt beyond, all example in modern times. Between its force and its fraud the' people were power less, and their despair was aggravated by 1 arf: indefinable1 dread that the wnoier army mignt at any moment De used tot sink the nation into still fur ther degradation, if below that lowest depth a lower deep could be reached It was id these circumstances that HANCOCK f SPOKE OUT THE7 SVOEDS OF TRUTH - and soberness Which , reassured the friends Of free :goverumenti and in spired them with new hopes. All who were near enough -to watch tho cur rent of that unequal contest between absolutism and law can remember how the enemies of the Constitution were startled: and soared when- they found that the most brilliant General of the; U nion bad qmcially declared himself opposed to . their . savage policy."- lhey could. not go aponJxim, nor send upon him, nor iq. any roanner destroy aim. ior.noi. pmy was ine law or me land on his side, but the army was l.-iouuu ,io oe iu iuu Bympauiy wun us fJ?pta - "A tt.uu; ia"UIU1 lohrtor J Srt thaw worofam fAAAftfAnt themselves with harmless sneers and petty persecutions. Bnt':they re- ;nioved hinlfroni thelce where his .w01.0";1"8 Vnf"tu".n WT )to subvert it. r Wbeii thernade nr heir minds to strangle the liberties of a State, tOTdi8perfie: ffiegal Legis- tojq-by irnte oree,;to: inaugurate forGoverrioT a vrfameless adventurer vrv.ii . -. pbl, dr-tb bin the people 46 wn with bayonets while they were plundered by. alien thieves - who claimea ; to oe their representatiiresv andqffioers, ' SOmeMy1 else was i employed tcr'do i XQQ miamons work, f otiuuxore carts- fully ; did' they"; avoid. his presence wueu m&vnoie naiisru -;wa w . swindled at a Presidential election. It was for 8nch reaaona-tbat ihe -j-.-.-r. HEABT OP THBOUNTBY -,WAKMED TO ' - OSNBBAlT HANCOCK s ? as its predestined deliverer. - - " J.t has often happened that the.oeat things of tho' greatest raiew t; tributed to others whd -are- wholly in- cabkbie of thfn. I induatrianal nronaerated andAoaeW I . - T ' manyasntrne-tnai Hamilton wrote the Farewell Address of WashiugtbaVbat the evidence is conclusive which sbeWs cthat 5y?ry word of that-, immortal production came f rom Washington-lumseltj;a,na any more thad he c6nld'nave3Qe a world. . Some oJtl JickaoBi" most characteristic papers, bearing the fall I impress' of his oWn'mibrlfbta- ability. " When it wai'bhafgod against Jefferson that he wrote , .Logan's speech, he solemnly declared that he was unequal to suoh a composition. I am not affecting modesty when I olaim credence of my present' denial for a similar reason. J., could npt have written Hancock's No. 40 not beoause I pretend to be dumb or altogether unskilled '- in the use of English words, but beoause if I had undertaken to write it the chances are ninety-nine in a hundred that my argumentation would have marred, its majestic simplicity and greatly diminished its power. When a public man, especially a military man, meets a grave responsibility, saying no more nor less than jost the thing he ought, but saying that with unequivocal clearness, you may be sure he is the interpreter of his own thoughts. At any rate the attempt is unjust to bastardize No. 40 by as signing to it an origin totally differ ent from the true one. Why should my opinion be asked or volunteered on GENERAL 11 ANCOCK AS A CIVILIAN? Anybody else who has watched his life is as good a judge as I, and there are thousands who know him much better. But since the ques tion is propounded I will answer, suDjectto larr correction, tnat nenas in him the highest and best qualities of a republican ruleh I think his fidelity to sound principles, coupled with his sound judgment, will entitle him to rank well with the great Pres- dents of former times. . I do not compare him with Washington, for the grandeur of that oharacter is and will remain forever unapproachable, but I do say that - Washington, if plaoed in his situation, would have acted precisely as he did. TEXTS FOB PATRIOTS Quotable ftentencea from Gen. Han-. eoeka State Papera. Publio office is a trust, not a boun ty bestowed npon the holder. The bayonet is not a fit instrument for collecting the votes of freemen. The great principles of American liberty still are the lawful inheri tance of this people, and ever should be. . Power may destroy the forms, but not the principles of justice ; these will live in spite even of the sword. It is. a vital principle in our system that neither fraud nor force must be allowed to subvert the rights of the people. The army should have nothing to do with the selection or iuauguration of Presidents. The Dooole elect the President. OH it ST1TK CWNTBRIPOUAKIKH. For twelve years Judge Buxton has been eating the bread of tbe white taxpayers of. North Carolina, and now he wants to repay mem oy putting uarneia and, tbe party of hate in power over us. Raleigh Nev. Heed no other bugle blast than the straigbtout Democratic. There is no un lying in wait to pick up the lost, strayed wr stolen. Watch the Professor. 5watflto lime. syHPTOUSOF: toi r. TORPID LIVER. jLoas! of jLT&Bttte. If iga bowelsc8thm. . fain in toeBeadyitBTcSneBtSonTa ClaSeT mem ory with a feeimfi: ouiaving neglected some AvArTwil'iSSSSSSr&'iSScSR' stag at the Heert?TSobelore teTyeeT I IP THESE WASSriSQS AKE TTSSEEDED: SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED. TTJTT'S FILLS Are especially adapted to t each caeee, one doee cHecta.alch achaAfe , or reeling RajtoastmnMiMi8afrerer4fr , t A NotiaTfSfiie says! ; Dr. TUTTt-yDear SirV Forten years Ihava been i martvr to DraDanauk Oonatination and Pilna. Tac .mi..ni Pill. MITMVimiuUU .1. -M J i) i am no' perfect, lorty Thev increase ADDetite. knit" aatiha thn - body to Talte on jneah,. thtM the- system is nonriabed, and by their Tonio Action on iha . Dbreatlve Orsmns. B.ea-nlnjr'Stoala nrn tm. , dnced. Prico S5xents135Miirrayt.yN Y.:: BrAOK by a single application of edtoa Globbt by prasgiats, ereena pf etpm. on receipt of $ I. Qfflco, 35 Murray 3t NewiYorki pons a namrB vuiw. umm "WranT.ltnnfnnlr . at Oolor.aota InstaataneouBly. Sold ?,, J apl3Deodwiy " ' 'tt th sa arm WtaPlntendtoSell :;,frie Balds TIHOTHT HATi D)JT'; . (Peas, Pearl Hominy, and The "Best Bolted Mealla the 01? ..,.t At flffUTea that will aatoniah the natives. .a" ,i:-PaKSTON CUMMXNG CO.. au4tf Miners and Grain Dealers. certain sound about a regular oreanirMl 1, U6,n6DU ixiuaa 1 utum,cwra aaecuona, rqenmaaara anaraae Ucket. Don? strav too fa? off Wfo?rl, r and Independents;. Shelby COtmty ,gives I pt troubles. R is an unfailinq solvent .of UCSei. lJOn l Biray too iar oil lor the Old I;, y, -n-ri, for th tati'ratirl ;Mint Ifatewt Theae waters have proved of great valae horn to reach vou. The Rannhlfeana arA I iww niajoniy ror tne mate ana couniy I innianT otivar dime, but u he mon nnflriti. tTawenrnMi.qa.yy pooq anparita, Qlgeation reoular atopla, piles goqe, and- bare gained pounds uesaocj "reTTOrtniaew weurbtin cold Rev. 11. L. 8IMPStJ. tZZEsHZ t f THEXATEST. NEWS, FROM ALL PARTS OP THE WORLD Report of n. Barrow Bb(- " HpiePOoodHIon Clonlns ot Coiion T"wiiVi itoeUdalo DefeHt of Com- 'peDiiiilon lor Oliinrbtnee lu Ire- land BUI Irttonte ot borda . I By Cable to the Hainins Staril f j . London, August 14The Viceroy of Isdia 1 teleKrapbed t.ther, foUwng report from Gen John unde UejUiejf-Q; dahar, July 29; , , u5jwn.i Rdrtowa 'Marched v f rom Kushk. 1 iw.kdaamaiaoiirtB!r.aiaW J 402 - heardf 4hatr. Ay9ob.. ,Kbao' , advpee I guard , tadcuwed, the mala road ihree ilMffiai: 1 ?'irw27?h JiHartf aa 1 i.aalryrofi'ed tbemrabaur, -o'clock in 1 whole force df the enemy apjeareUj;an4 I formed In a line wregi- I r in tne re8ervef two tbousaoitisvalry.'on tne right, four hundred cavalry iM two serve: and, llve.J Or 8trGartlin gut,fl'r in eluding one of the breech-loaders. The total force being 12,000. The ground was highly - undubuing, and .iha enemy -were posted Jmthe: best position. : Until 1 u'cioek in the afternoon; the action was con ftnod to artillery Are,, which was so well sustained and directed by the enemy that our - Supe rior armament, failed to gompeusate for the inferior numbef of "guns:- After the' rifle fife began-crar breech-loadeisioid;- trot ! the vigorous advance bf the cavalry ajjaitrst our left and of ' the ! Ohaz 'Along3 oorrroht, caused the native infantry to - fall back in conf usion ; on the 69th Keglmeataiaodon ing two guns. 'Our formaioo being, lost the infantry retreated sjpwiy, in fpite f iije gal lant; efforts of OenQuirowa to-rally them, and were cut offf rom the cavalry aud ar tillery.. This ws at, .8, o'clock in the after noon.and camp foJloWers and baggage were streamlBfic towards' uamfanar. After a ne vere fleht on the enclosed ground-Gen. Bur rews'succeded in extricating the infantry and brought them io tolino in the retreat. No efforts would - turn tbtf fugitives from tbe main road, which is without water at this season of tbe year, and thus a majority of the casualties occurred from tbe men fall ing from thirst and exhaustion. , The ene my's pursuit continued to: within lea miles from Candahar, but was not vigorous.' The cavalry and artillery',' with a few infantry, reached tbe Danksotjhe riyer Arganaaie, forty miles from the scene of the action, at 7 o'clock next morning, mafty not haying laaieu water since me previous morning Nearly alf of our ammunition was' Ipst. as also were 1,100 rifles aad two nine pounder guoa. Our loss ia estimated -as follows: killed and missing, 66th regiment, 400; Qrenadieis. 830; Jaeobs' Kifles, 850-. artil' lery. 40; sappers, -24; civalry, 60. Tho Ouranis have been expelled from Canda har. Provisions and ammunition are plen tiful.i' ' London. August 4, 9:80 A. M. Sir William Jeoner and Dr. Clark have just seen Mr. Gladstone. Their -bulletin says that the patient passed a good night. The lung congestion has- ceased, and be is cow free from fever. Dr. Clark will visit the patient at 1 o'clock and again this evening. Sir William Jcuner will not visit him again. Twenty-four hundred cotton operatives at Kocbuale have oeeli locked out in con sequence of a refusal of the masters to comply with the demand of the weavers for an increase of wages. London. Angus 4. Th c vote by which the Compensation for Disturbance in Ire-, land bill was defeated in the House of Lords wa9 not reached until half-past X o'clock this morning. Tbe galleries were densely crowded, at tbey were also on Mon day night, and the announcement of the immense majority that were on- posed to the bUl was greeted with loud cheersr- Lord Cairns, Conservative, spoke' for nearly three hours against the: bill; The 2u7M says be practically dlsposeu of every argument adduced by the 1 au p porters of uw UIU.WU tuik uiun luuruuEwr uaiiroc- Uve speech has not of ten been ; delivered in Parliament Tbetmes,in a leading edi- lorll .lm ..v.. MThnTfofoat: ot thn Kill haa brought a long andembittered- controversy to a close. Its rejection by a large mi j - - jority was fully antlcipaled, aud ' tbe speeches in its favor pat took of the gloom and languor of overshadowing defeat ALAnjiuA Detailed Itepori of the Bouli u( the Sileeiloo, . . (By Telegraph to the Morning. Utar. Mobile.: August 4. A sixmiai telrgram' , from , Moulgbmery . to .Register- says iMailison.cuunty'gives 800 majority -for the Clair l-AOO maloruyt JJtoWah 3,0001 Att- Uuga 050; JUrwsdes iaooJjee county gives 500 majority ' tot the Democratic State ticket, but is mixed ;oiLttIW4nir Democratic ' ; tickets ; 1 1 Limestone LrmeatOne COUOtV larcelv Democratic i ori all 'tickets: Elmore ; w" ; -r-r tnali. v.!jj -m ...: county - -gives - oou iv-rnocrawc- - majonty; , 1 ijuaicu.u giT vb lira - xcuiuuibiiu uvaet 2,800 majority ; Jefferson gives the Detno- cratie Bute tieket-600 majority, -bnVis; aouDtrui on- ine-ijeeisrauve ana cemmy ticicets; Morrow. ioaepenaent, beats f new Ian, Democrat for- Judgeln this-cunnty Bollock county gives the Democratic ticket 90u maierttyrrerry county 1.400:-Macon county 1,800; Biount county 1,600; Tusca loosa county 1.600; Chilton -connty 1.800; Uonecua county gives toe .Democratic State ticket 1,000 in. jority and the county ticket aw majority r jailer couniy elects, I'Dwen, Democrat; by 70 ma jority, and gives tbe rest of the Democratic ticket no over whelming majority. GEN. OIRPIBLD. Ovation Ta4erel Him at Bur- IBy Telegraph to tho Morning Star.); 1 Buffalo,1 N. Y. ; . August 4. The Re publicans of ihe city tendered an ovation ' to Ged. Qarfleld ori his visit to the city last ovening..-ine amerent ' duos. and. organi sations, accompanied hy a large, delegation from the adloinlnir ftfinntrv tnn ; tn tha dumber ofl 8,060,formd.in procession with torches- and Chinese laflterns, and escorted him to Congressman "Pierce's hotel, where oe maae a snort speech, thanking tnem.ror tne reception tetrcerea him. - v.; t BLBOTBlO SeaKKN. ; Chief Justice Pryor has i been reelected Judge of . the Doort of Appeals of Ken tucky. , : ... r-,n-r ! A. dispatch to -the Galveston . ftew, from Hempstead,' says' a partjr-of 'sixteen- broke into the jail in that place arid Released' all of the prjabaersV sefM fe-.Vi.s. -v I 'ffi'fu: &tt,;Secrelary of flLha T Missouri otate.xoaru, .01, Agncujiure, oi ,01. LiOUis, wafl nominated veaterflav Tnr TToncresa . hv. I thellWocpleujt I d.ti m f r ADuta ties and ; ;srr. r. tfi t iPPtS, IN', ,QBSAT variety. A few more Pairs of those-desirable Low ouarterett Buttoahoea at? S3 60. .Gent's Low Quartered Bhoes of various Btylev at a will a oanna nn Mutt ' ' J -'-- v-V ' ' ' an t u -r ; .xto. wort&jaKef ft.. iiAmiARarin.iutB'aTa' COMMERCIAL. W. I.LYM I N G T O N : M A It K E T. ?I.WaR OFPiCE. August 4, 4P.M. 1 SPIRITS TDRPJSNTINE. The market was quoted quiet at 26 cents per gallon for regular packages, with light receipts and small sales at quotations. - - - tJSIN-Tbe market was dull at $l CS IeifalWd"'aDwfli'Watr$l10vrordo6 Strained, with sales aa offered . ' - -- TAKMatket quoted -firm a! 2 83 !per bbl. pt 280 lbs, with- sales pf receipts at qU0ta.-pns, ,;,,;'. r f f.fJ. ,, CRUDE TURPENTINE Tbo market was Steady at 1 80 for Yellow Dip, and $3 23 per bbl for Virgin, with Bales at quo. .tations.Wr?"- ' tciCOTTON-rTThe market was quiet. Fu tures for August opened in New York at 11.87 cents v and closed barely steady at llill VtOt VktUUWl UJJOUCU Cafe lVUli WVUU and closed barely steady at 10.63 cents. j ne loiiowing were me omciai quoiauons here: Ordinary 7i Good Ordinary &J Strict Good Ordinary Low Middling ..... 10i Middling. 10J Good Middling..... Hi cents lb. it ii ii it it i ii ii ' ?iraacanrio nAitKM. - By Telegraph to the Morning Star. IFinancial. . Nbw York. August 4. Noon. Money irregular at 22 per cent. Sterling ex change 4S4oxi State bonds dull and nominal., Governments quiet. , Commercial. Cotton steady.with sales of 210 bales; mid dlings 11 9-16 cents; Orleans 11 11-16 cents; futures steady, with Bales at the following quotations : August 11.38 cts; September 10.86 cents; October 10.57 cents; Novem- oer iu.40 cents; December 10.47; January 1U 60 cents. Flour dull and uncbaoged. Wheat quiet and firm. Corn quiet. Pork steady at 114 50. Lard firm at $7 60. Spirits, turpentine 29 cents, ltosin $1 42. Freights firm. fOKBlftrt (TI A K. K. tv'I'rv Illy Cable to the Morning Star. Liverpool, August 4 Noon. Cotton very quiet; middling uplands 6 13-16d; mid dling Orleans 0 15-16d; sales of 17.000 bales. of which 1,000 bales were for speculation and export; receipts 5,850 bales, 3,950 of which were American. Joaddling uplands. 1 m c, August delivery 6 ll-16d ; August and September delivery Cd; September and October delivery 6 18-82d: October and November delivery 6 7-82d. Futures quiet. Popular Monthly Drawing of the Coinmonwealtli Ditritfllion Company. At Blacanley's Theatre, ? . In tho dty of LonlerOlo. on Tuesday, August 31st, 1880, LBQI8LATURB and BU8TATNKD BY ALL TlliC COUKT8 of KENTUCKY, according to a contract made with the owners of the Frankfort grant, will occur regularly on the LAST DAY OF BVXRY MONTH, Sunday, and Fridays excepted, for the period of FIVK YSA.KS, terminating on JUKJB SO, The United State. Circuit Court on March SI ren- I dared the fellowine declBians : 1st. THAT TUB COMMON WEALTH DISTRI BUTION COMPANY IS LEGAL. Sd. ITS DRAWINGS ARB VA1B. The Management call attention to the liberal scheme which has met with Bach popalar favor nerctoiore, ana wmcn win again De presented ror THB AUGUST' DRAWING. r. t 1 Prize $30,000 100 Prizes $100 each $10,000 1 Prize 10.000 300 Prize. 50 each 10.000 l l rnze 5.000 coo Prizes so each li.000 ijg&S1 lfi0 10 10-000 ; 9 Prizes $300 each. Approrimition Prizes, $s.700 1 Prizes 200 each, " " soo I : " iweacn, swu I 1 900 Prizes. i 12.400 i- wnoieuicaeis, . uair TiCKets, zi. i TJcketa, asa ; .66 Tickets, $100. ! Bemlthy Poet Office Money Order, EegiBtered l'wr urm, or .zzpreea. Tallinn inlint tnfittAka Toineare airainat mlatakee and delava. correa- I:pondenta will please write their names and place. iO residence plainly, giving number of Poet Office AU communications connected with the Distribu tion and Orders for Tickets should bo addressed lm 'it. si. BUARUMAN (Courier-Journal Bali dine.) buuuYibUL, -aLT.ovo.w:BUT a sov Hroaawav. -aa s-aodaw . ta th aa bn Sjtingo and Baths, (AtfcUJCSB IlTHXA. WAtXnSj HAMPSHIRE COUNTY, W. VIRGINIA. f - I LaIbo Chalybeate Waters, 'rich to iron, and a fine ( WMtoSidphiirtathenejghborhoed. vpkn from may isth to isth October IfX ly:vUtuJieti,yJiny mineral water, in aUmenta, rout, dlaeaaea of I killed on lii th6 above n&mnd th&n tit nthr I Wapriaga lathi, county. 1 euarantoe a care If en- J rahln h mln Aral mutmrm Tha hatha hnt n11 nl rable by mineral water. . The baths hot, cold and shower are unexcelled anywhere. Tna new and alegant awimming pool of alkaline water, the lar reet in the United States, If not in the world. Is ea eelally. at&ractiye. HTNa aafer or better olaee bf, this elevated region Is pure and delicious, it i. oFtaoieaana cauaren u iramio awim. td air tare, inat nay rerar panenu part witn, tneir tronoieev fox pleasure or health the traveler need not go far nor. "ooara oy ine montn, vt, ana f oo, aoeor ling to location;' board by the week. $U to tli. . A Uacount .for the season also to Ministers. Good mnUd. boatlntf. hnntlnff and nahlnr tn mton. lino hvery Paasengera from Norfolk and vicinity come Via Washington, - as the ahortest route. (Send for pampnietflirec& or eau on ttantoa, aruggut, Nor- i9ia, ya. , a-noee sun er ing witn cnuis and malaria find entire relief atOapon In lees than a month, of t JeldSm Propnetor. Mut maiaa-oii m wbqkbt: w. m . haul. T BWARB OF RASCALS, IT HAVING OOMB JL to my knowledge that persons were aolicitln Ing work "representing gtnemaeive. aa oeing connet .emeelvea aa beln ig connected witn my sstabliahment. I hereby not! fy the public that! eniDlOV no Airenta or Canvaaaara. When work, either Dyeing or Cleaning is sent me by ger rants-A rare a receipt ror it ana hold mjsolf re , ,? ' ;r i.-itB. H. KENG. rropricter, : w aiaiuiiiuAvu aajau-VJkaaaDi!. adI tf - Market, betweetv M and 84 btt. The Place .pyy.ijnuQs," '..' ,'. .; ' I Oi. i ;?.; PATJBN'T MSDICIKBS, Is v BOTtBAOTiarmacy, Corner Front and Princess Sts. -aa we . my 3; 3a w t i .: hi Via i. .Yiii i valltages., taper every deDartmenV.n6guaran an 1 tf nhMTint hot. Walar Jk Wnnf ata sPori Sale Low, - friWO iinORSE 'THTJCKfll fAisUff : ONB ALMOST TWV f - Both in thorough .order U4 t ! Can be boaght cheap, haov 1 .:;. 5-.; t.i 1 ,a!lii -;vv;UAW- Ml ia-S! ?f myJOtf ; f i' THIS OFFICE. "O KHsoyAL pkvxinftfok'ijsb . a- ' wklc i A--, iwaiatad wotuhop; haya placad duxestabilah; '- 4 tnOarfor work from vrv Ar4-mi' .nf imtMnu. tea eausiacuon in OTeryc respect.-. The patent; Two-DOW1,Top Buargy vmahufactured only oy , VMVi MODOUGALL A WDLLIAMSOS' : " U A MISCELLrTRfiTTs ' . . , Trmity CoUegeTNTa nulla fa . . w . 1 w I auu-ikji WILL BtGrw ui. A- 1st,' and end December tit expense for aU Items U from $m iotM We aave a good rieparator. dS;, 'a hou aSpeeUlOouree. Hnd for cluw! "Ufc to .,iyttlm .. CKAVKp - BETHEL. AJ. A. G. SMITH, Bcp't., '' A Bethel AeatUajj p. 0 , yeodtw f,eawe yoqBtor count, Vl CAROLINA MILITARY lNSTITUTanI LOTTB.N. C. TIe8iaaMliZ!Lfia4' InaUtate will open u araal on 8tomS!l110' "U in the 4Claalcl OoarM" tttdem?mLJ'', anyoX oar College. or UafreraliSi. lffiSLi? JySSoawlni we tftfSg I a - - , - 1 iHarl0tt6 F6HiaIe In. stitute. pt.8.188a Can la that flrn Beulon beds. Boot. 8. lsao. n.n teattmonlab from the irat taae w. Ill In the Booth at to the thoroughae. KJw",ri dard of Instruction.- MaMc and Art iStiifn Ms Oooking School will beopenadetSr. SSS1"e, wonng Bcaooi will be opened avert iirT TT- we rrincipai. Key. WM. K ATxi' B ATK.Inki.i71 je so uswim Ctarlotta, Corn, Heal, Hay. 15 0 0 0 801,1 Prlme Whlto COKS gQQ Bnah Water Ground MKAL, 5QQ Dale. HAY. Flour, Molasses, Sugar 1200 Bbl yL0UR- 8np CAA Had. and Bhl. Byrap. "iw LA8BbS,P "d 9Prt Bbla SUGAR, Cot Loaf. OrUii LDJ Standard A, Extra c andc. Bacon, Lard, Pork, &c. 200 Boxc Bmoked nd D' M-M,i,t!4 150 Tnb" Cholc LZKr LAttu 125 Bbl MB88 IoaK' 99 r BagaCOIfyEE. Rio, Lagoyra and J.v. 150 8TABCU' "'. 3QQ Boxea LYB and POTASH, Boxea Laundry SOAP 100 BoZM Para Aaaorted UANbl, Snuff, Tobacco, Paper, Matchoa, Shot. Bj,icel(i, ger. Pepper, Hoop Iron, Spirit Barrel, c yor aale low by WILLIAMS A MURCHIBON ij 18 tf Wholeaale Pro. Com, Meru TI112 New Boot and 8hoo Store, 32 MARKET 8TRKET. J WOULD RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCI To my friend, and the public generally, thai I am aow offering the balance of my Spring aod ttommw Oooda, conaUUng of BOOTS, SHOES, SUPPER. HANDLES, Ac., AT COST, in order to mako nxim for a Very Large and Fine FALL AND WINTKU Stock in my line. Call and examlno yonraclf. HeapectfaUy, C. ROSENTHAL, 32 iriAKKET T. Jy 11 tf Slon of tbe Utile S.H Groceries, &c. FULL STOCK ALWAYS ON HANI), CON .istug in part of Butter, Chocae and Lard, Uama, 8. C. Canyamcd, Moats, Smoked and 1. H. Mackerel, Flour, all gradca, Meal, Watcr-gronnd. Potatora, Norther. Irirh, Cider, Sugar, Croahcd, l'owderod, Uranalated. A and Yellow a. Codec, Java, Lagulra and Mo, all grader, Molarae. and Syrnpa, Tobacco, Chewing and Smoking, all Naila. Appolinaria Mineral Water, frceh anfval, . bea Foam. Hterllng, Palapeco. aud ulbrr brand, of BakTnr Powdcra, Beapa. Laandry aad Toilet, March, Ac., Ac. . . ADRIAN VOLLRKS. Whole lie Urocer. Jy 15 tf B. K corner Front and f at Reductions Price OF I W a. . ! I I 1 sT I O II r Rl KGXclll I I . T i ALL GRADB3 UEDUOBO IULP OSNT TIRI THE QUALITY TUB SAUM- EST" Look ottt for LOW I'RWiH oa all kl4i of U 1 ff t Oooda from AUGUST 1ST. I am going to " THINGS LTVSLY. I aat hara the trada Small tot at (inoiCK N. C. BIDES and SHOUL- bias. F2BBI8' " ALWAYS BKLIaBJJa" ltlATS. . ...... .. . .u. ..ManNOLla." j a sxslm can't oa aeiicr waa too m for sale by ;Jas. C.Stevenson j aultf MAJBXKT BTRJBT. The Lincoln Progress IubUsAed Saturdc atJUneoinw IS the Only paper pnbUahed ia tlwsota o"2 nd haa an artanarva elnmlatloa among tha ehanta. Farmer, and aU claaaea ef boiln mn It otter to the Merchant or wunu"--- Sirohie meillwia for adrartlalng tnaix thro f Lil us host W astern North Oaroltna, Uheral tsnni will ba aUoVed on yearly IT adW tlaementa Subacrlntion. price.. H Mpar aan in a ' H. DatArlS. tdtfor and Propria" a4iraaa u in its ltrn volum. Th ft . T?.n i Aih News. kf ttixai Kdltor. ' L.L.Vi. Corrat. Kowakds, BaocaaroK Oo.. Baainaae Maaajwa. k ' N. C. DEMOCRATID ' JOURNAL flAILY AKD WEEKLY. TkKMS : .. Dally, 1 year. $7 00 1 Weekly, one jrea., sj. ! " 0 montna, a 1 I . InMthi. 1 7B I ' '''I'J..-..
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 5, 1880, edition 1
2
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