FCBLUHXS AT - AT ' - $1.50 a Year, in advance. 83S3SS3S3S3SSSS33 ; wrtwwrii-lwnag SS8.S8S888.8S888888 11 w w v W WW UU W W T 88888888888888888 I a 3 S S H a at a s a SS88889gS!gSSSgSa8 I 88888888888888288 I SS33SSS3SSS3SS3S3 8 8 3333 83 3 S 3 8 3 3333 waVf S5aS5g8'a'sl8'88 88 8849SSS288888SS8 , SS5315S5J1ISSJS a" OD Subscription Price. : The subscription price of the WEKit lt Star is as follows : - Single Copy I year, postage paid, $1.50 " " 6 months. " 1.00 " "3 V " " .50 ft A II BOA DS AND SELFISHNESS. It is really amusing to see , how friendly certain North Carolina pa- pers are to Wilmington during ex- cursion times and other occasjonB when the interests of our city are in no way involved. It , is all lovely then. I How the gashing rhetoric streams along the types. What a de- lightful place is that "beautiful little I City by the Sea," and so on and so on ad nauseam. But only let clouds lower, i Let there be moneyed com- initiations to injure, if not destroy, the only seaport of importance in North Carolina let the time come when 1 we need friends when we need a I manifestation , of genuine State j pride and an unflinching advocacy ! of a North Carolina policy, and j then Wilmington has but few J friends, and all the flourishes turn I out to have been merely rhetorical J and nothing else. When we protest I against unjust, unpatriotic, unwise j legislation we are charged with sel- hshness, and it is declared that Wil- mington doas not and cannot offer the advantages of rival ports in other atales. this is not true in the first place, as a matter of fact, and, if true, H is made so by the fact that North J I .i rrSi iniina amn I rt Mfhor nmln nn t no 1 markets of other btates than their But will not such a scheme be cha own. ;There is really no such Uhing racteristio of North Carolina? yl& it as State pride in North Carolina, not true that we would rather Bee We have been" tributary to other J Slates rail our lives, and will I continue so to be, we fear, as long as I the present generation lasts. When I papers in North Carolina use their I influence to build up Charleston, Nor- ( folk and Baltimore at the expense of J the only seaport in the State, what I else can; be expected than that rail- J road schemes will be adopted the I only purpose of which is to break J down those already constructed, and j to make, us for. all time a mere strip I of land lying between States over I which conduits are built for the en- r:M.:nnf riching of other sections. We wish our Wilminston peoule to h- . tha pQ0 xrrio, Statei The idea of asking a Legislature to see how well the Cape 1 ear section refu8e a raiiroad companf the right to ex is appreciated in some portions of the tend its linejthrough a rich country, toitMis j,. rtnf ot i own, money, is not only selfish and unpaid Statc-what strong friends Wilming- olic in tnl'extreme, but monstrous. Their ton has in the Uharlotte Observer. I and to that end vve make some ex tracts from its issue of the 29th: "The opposition to this bill, and the only opposition which it has encountered or is nicety to encounter, comes irom w irmmg ton and its friends and from the Carolina Central! Railroad. It is claimed that this proposed line will divert business from Wilmington and carry it to Norfolk and Portsmouth. This is the whole head, front and bowels of the opposition, which is en tirely and confessedly selfish. Wilmington claims the right to control. the shipping of me products or western JNortn Uarolina. on what ground ? Not that , sbe is able to oner the facilities which other ports afford, oat Decause sue is a noun Carolina cuv. o I. r ii t . ouBjrB, urauucaiiyi i we cannot compete who JMorioiK ana Jrorumoutu wnen on the 1 same footing with them, notwithstanding we are nearer to Charlotte than these cities; it is true the people of Charlotte and of the west can get their products and their goods through with more expedition by way of Norfolk than by Wilmington, but still this is a North Carolina oitv. and the balance of the State should be made to pay tribute to it. Let us, therefore, go up to Raleigh and use our influence with the Legislature to funnel the State so that trade can find no other shipping' and entry port and what boots it if the balance of the State does languish so long as we expand?' "They may put the case differently to the prive a great section of privileges and ad- vantages which are offered it ' without money and without pnee, umtply because the business of this section belongs to Wil uiiugion, ana to give it a livioe chance to communicate with the markets of the world .--u .muugemew upon cuarierea ngnis." We do not think that this is a fair, aimougn it is an adroit statement of the case. We can but admire the skui with which the Observer makes tne wprse appear the better reason, n certainly draws an ogly picture of our people, and we . pronounce it'a caricature, in Us xeal to glorify the; advantages of foreign ports s it does injustice to our own. Wilmington r VOL. ID. i - - does not wish its own interests to be protected and advanced fat the ex- pense of other sections of the State. Wilmington says, here is a seaport nnnn which hnnranf tlinnaonrlgnf f - ' i-w- dollars have been expended in deep ening the channel and making it ac- cesalDie to snips pi large tonnage, vy e have already a large 'and growing commerce - We are much nearer to the West Indies than . Charleston or Norfolk as to iht 'time Required in making the trip, i We .olfer certain groceries cheaper r than Baltimore or Norfolk. We can! offerj still farther advantages as j we grow stronger. Wo can offer as many and as great facilities to the West as can Norfolk or Charleston, h Wilmington, there fore, protests against any and - all legislation that puts her at a disad vantage and that Tfatoijrtoinu other States. , 'i We repeat,-1 Wilmington . claims that she can offer land, does offer as good inducements to Western North Carolina as Norfolk offers, that a has already been constructed at a large expense connecting Charlotte with Wilmington, that the is a North Carolina city, and that she has a right to expect from the; btate government a true parental watbh-care -a genuine fostering spirit, and not a j system of rule and legislation that j will retard her growth, if not cause her streets to be covered with grass and her marts to become desolate. She insists that thenruc North Carolina policy is to help develop home; resources, to pro tect and foster home interests', and to do nothing whatever that shall de stroy those great lines of transport tion and travel that already exist. Wilmington asks the; Legislature of North Carolinafto give; her people at least an equal chance with those of other States. The Western people have already outlets to the North and South. It is now j asked that a road shall be constructed that will give the finishing blow to some hundred anj ninety miles jof Yailway, and all that a foreign corporation" may carry oat its ambitious schemes, the end of which will be to impoverish or greatly injure North Carolina and enrich sec t 1 - ' J ; - ; Norfolk, Richmond, Charleston great and prosperous than to see Wil mington or Moruhead growing or wi dening in itr i operations? North Carolina has been so long a hewer of wood and a drawer of water for other peoples that we suppose it must con tinue to be so to the end The Charlotte Observer in its zeal to injure Wilmington, and to aid the managers of the L'ttle Ambition," as Joe Turner ! was wont to call the Raleigh & Augusta road, says fur- ther of -our people: "We are astounded by the position taken upon this question' by some of eur Wil mington friends, i They seem to have en- tirely lost sight of the remainder of the position upon Una ! question cannot be defended upon grounds of, philanthropy or business principles. They are playing llie part of trie dog in trie i manger. They cannot offer us the advantages which other ports would, and they are not willing that those other ports should be put in a position to do what they thus confess they cannot do. Theit argument falls to the ground by its own weight. i j , "We shall hear much, ; when this bill comes up for discussion, about the 'North Carolina system,' and keeping trade at nome. we are just1 irreverent enough to take no stock in this antediluvian system." How does the I Observer know that the proposed road will be built "with its own money?"- I We j have not the .i:-!, f,.-Mft- ikM- thd-tniA to Ham. - "i i " let from Raleigh was built "with its own money, i We nave no doubt that at least a half million of dollars was expended in its j construction, much of which belonged to women and children all over North Carolina -in Wilmington, in - Raleigh, in Hillsborough, iu Oxford, and indeed jQ a hundred places. That road t " Fawo? , " ought toibe made! to disgorge. The in hand, and show for all time that a " L -i ' u . I UK uuv "uo ujvucj J of the women and children of North l A u t.' - i Carolina who haye been , greatly re i aucea in circumstances, to build up I railroad lines for foreign corporators I who have no interest in the welfare bf North Carolina beyond their own I selfish schemes, j f j The Observer is pleased to assume all along that Wilmington cannot of fer the advantages of other ports,and that, therefore, it is highly proper in North Carolina legislators to do al I they can to put her farther in the Weekly WILMINGTON, rear, and to make it only . a question of time as to her final and complete decadence We might "retort with propriety that the Observer is as selfish in its own argaroents in favor of ''Little Ambition" as it charges our people with ' being. Its .whole burden is that the road ought ' to be built because it would benefit its own section. It forgets that in enriching itself it may bring . rum or. disaster upon its neighbors. It oannot be shown that the people ofc its section would suffer a great' and serious loss if the schemes of "Little Ambition" are nipped by judicious " legislation. It cannot be shown that trade- with Wilmington would not prove as ad vantageous every way to the people of Western 'NorthK Carolina- as it would to have a new outlet to Nof- olk. On the other; had, Ht can be shown that to build the new road i proposed by. "Little Ambitionwould result iu injuring veiy seriously a on; line of railway already con structed, as well as a - large sec- ion of : country, i and the ; chief commercial citv in the State. ' With the! lesson before us we are tempted to say that we hope never again to read in j a North Carolina paper anything about State pride, or a North Carolina policy, or building up our great material interests. , It is the veriest humbuggery and clap trap it seems. It is. all sound and ury, signifying nothing. It is wind, wind only, nothing but wind. The real thing to do is to join the popular chorus in singing the praises of for eign towns, foreign corporations, for eign enterprises, foreign manipula tors. Let us all bow down and worship the Great Golden Calf now set up, upon whose ample forehead is written in letters of brass Dowsr with State en xbpbisks Up with foreign schemes an jobberies, j Whilst it might have been too much to expect Charlotte not to favor the scheme of "Little Ambition," it was not too much to expect it not to be blin ! to the interests of other sections equally important with its own. j I If the present Legislature charters a road from Cojcord,- via Honroevor through Union between Monroe and Charlotte to Columbia, we wonder if the Observer would advocate it with the same vigor and heat it does the scheme of "Little Ambition?" We trow not. It would- then find out that it does make a d:fference whose ox is gored. i t There is a strong lobby at work in Raleigh, as we learn, in favor of the new scheme. We learn there are in fact two schemes which "Little Am- bition" has in hand. Possibly the Observer does not understand that one of these projects may not be so very beneficial to Charlotte after all. One proposition is to build a road from Hamlet, N. C, to Bennettsville, S. C, with the " rieht to cross the Carolina Central i ani the Wil mington, Columbia & Augusta Road, with the fixed purpose of extending the road to the North Eastern Rail road. This will give the Raleigh & Augusta a direct line from the South to JPbrfolk, leaving Charlotte out in the cold. I .- .... i The Robinsons, who control the "Little Ambition" and Raleigh & tiaston, that makes ; heaps or money but gives no dividends, al control the Seaboard & Roanoke to Norfolk, and the Bay Line to Baltimore. They also control the Richmond & Fred ericksburg road. They will not run in connection with the Richmond! & Danville road if they can get either or both of these new schemes carried out. Of course they will force I all freights to go over their lines, as they cannot go the other way Our Wilmington delegation at Ra leigh are not selfish as charged. They are fighting both schemes. They in sist that the Bennettsville road will seriously injure Charlotte,'as .would be the , case inevitably. A road North between Charlotte and Wil mington would very seriously injure the former, because the party who controls the new road controls also the line beyond Richmond, Va, and would not' connect with the only other outlet Charlotte has. Wil mington would be injured but Char lotte much more. It will give the new road an air line from Augusta to Baltimore. We had other points to urge, ' but our space' is up. We may reour to the matter as necessitymay require. w e ciose wica me aeoiarauon ina tne legislature win ao a oaa tmng for North Carolina if it charters either road.- N. a, FRIDAY; FEBRUARY 7: 1879. A pliAN TO BBBVOB au4 VAY OFF BIR1LLT THB rAT DEBT. The conference between, a Sub-com mittee of the Virginia Legislature and the bondholders adjourned' with out results. No propositions were made nor indicated by th reditors, Whether this is ominous :. er not we are not informed. . It is a good Bigq at least - when debtors , and' creditors get together and talk oyirj the mat? ter. -' We hone good will orie of U. Our own iJtate debt is at feast at" tracting tie attention of tho press. The larger part of our exchangesj W6 believe, have had some sorejbing to say 4 about it, and all are Agreed that the Legislature shulp make an . honest effort to .effeei. a settlement by oompronois. : Our esteemed contemporary, ueolda boiQ Jfail, in itsMSt sVerrof' f era its own plan - for a settle ment. It proposes that a- sinking fund off $300,000 annually be created, to be used in cancelling such out standing bonds as may be voluntarily offered at market value. The Mail believes that : by - this means "the Treasurer would settle up the whole debt of the State fairly, honorably. and to the satisfaction of all honeBt people, both of taxpayers and bond holders." Without indorsing this suggestion, for we doubt its practical value, we have this to say. nj honest, well- meant plan isbuterthan no plan. Our Legislatures in the past have dawdled so long and done so little that the creditors do Lot believe that our people have resolved to make a sincere effort to pay their indebted ness, in part or in whole. Something I should Ld done to remove uiisimores-1 , . a . sion aud to restore confidence between the dobtors and c: editors. It strikes us that the proposition of the Mail will meet v ith this diffi culty. As soon a i it is known that the Su terms provided au aunual sinking fund of 30O,00G, the market value of bonds will at once be en hanced, and it may turn out that the price1 paid may be excessive, or more than we can afford to pay. It strikes us. tbtrefoie. that a compromise i is better, and will work out more satis factorily to all concerned. v - The Mail says, in addition, that an economical administration of the Government abolishing all unneces- sarv offices will leave a balance of $100,000 in the Treasury with the present r-te of , taxation. It also wisely, as we think, favors the adop tion of the Moffett Register, and thinks it will make $200,000 at the lowest calculation. This is a very moderate estimate if the law is en forced. It ought to raise $500,000 at the lowest fizures. and will if oroner- I lv enforced. The Mail concludes: "Our plan, in a nut shell, is to purchase our own bonds at their market value, and to raise the money to do so cut down ex penses: have our officers to live on small salaries while ar people are made to bear heavy burdens or taxation, all mutually suffering for the ultimate good of all." A well i known colored legislator, Syphax by name, lus written a letter to Senator Windom, in which he strongly opposes that Senator's reso- tion in regard to the migration of the colored people. Syphax clearly sees through the whole movement, and does not like it. He understands Mr. W mdom perfectly. We quote one paragraph: , 1?,' "Your measure refers to Congressional districts iu which it is alleged the colored people are denied the right: of i tnrrrage. JNow there is no material trouble in any seetion in which the whites are in the ma jority, but in such as have majorities of co lored men. So the effect 3 would be to get rid of this problem by retfiOTlng Amrtca citizens from their native -omea in order that undisputed control shaltpasa into the hands of the whitea Let such a request come from Southern Senators, if they de sire it, who are interested in this matter, it interested at all, and tot from a Senator from Minnesota. Who able to state that it is less possible for the white people of the boutb to live, on proper terms with the colored DeoDle or their section, wnen the coljweb of confusion shall be swept away, tnan it is lor tnem to live on sucu terms with the pedple of the North f " Have time aud opportunity justineu such a judg ment?" Why do the legislators, delay in the matter of cutting down . the sala ries? Are they afraid to do right? Are they afraid of the people? The peoplethe tax payers r-of North Carolina are with them. Nay, they demand that the expenses and. sala ries shall; be lopped. Then go i to work at onee and do the lopping. Do not wait on the lobby any longer. Of course all- present office-holders and their friends, and all expectant Barkises will din your ears, but act,; I men of ; the Legislature, and act at i once Wilpon has just sent fonrcon- I victs to ike penitentiary, an tor stealing. -y 4t;? ?r : - . ': "- . ' '. The Charlotte ' papers - are piping sweetly about free railroads - and broad schemers of 1 policy. They no doubt think Charlotte willet a ben efit.; It matters not bow much the injury visited upo i others so they can get a big lift, fancied or actual. The whole railroad system s of our: State must be made to shape itself hence forth for -the benefit of r Charlotte abd the tegiorbeyond N$rth Caro; lina. And thif is the 'golden age When a new pojicy -was to be adopted ftnd a grand North ; Carolina 'system of internal improvements. was to be set in motion. - Bat it is to .be only a continuation of the old. policy ba p- tized with some' new name, - which makes North Carolina a mere:;feeder .of : other sections. Jt is really an ex ierhal policy for ll the good : goes ; dutside. " . . If the' present Legislature u nder- takes to carry out the plans of the raiload schemers, and to thus destroy old and important lines of railroads as well as to injure the only commer cial city in the State,- and all this to benefit a few clamorous foreigners who have no real interest in North Carolina beyond what they can make oat of her, then it will pave the way to some astonishing - results in 1880 in the Cane Fear section. Our reo- . . nftt - . avfi the:r' :n. ..a B.n.., . t, ftf .-- their friends. If jobberies and plots succeed then a profound silence will follow, and that silence will be on' nous. Bisbee, the present Florida mem- ber,-will keep his seat. The Demo- cratio sub-committee on Elections have reported favorable to him in the contested case. That is right. If the people elected him he ought to hold his seat. i V Tne Uamlet connection. In Bpite . of the Weakness -of the flesh where it was least expected, a manly voice in beha'f of Wilmington is -heard at Ra leigh . The News of that city, in iM issue yesterday mernin proclaims that oi" pro test against the Harriet (or Sanford) con nection is r.jtsonable. It says: -'- "The Gentral I sembly. are earnestly neutioned by tbe pre i and people of tne cnier cur oi jxonn ufouna to , rvtuse tne Raleigh & Augusta Air June permission to extend that road to Ubsrlotte. i '.They sa and say truly that such .per mission once granU.4 will be used to ea- tablish a trikde channel in every phase of its make-up inimical to their most vital in terests. Their city . -iust now developing an important commerce with Europ' a commerce Having forf ts cnief support tne ireignts or toe uarolina uentral Kaiiroad The building, in f"eat part, of. this high way is the riucipal return by the State to tne (Jape v ear pjople tor their uniform liberality of half a century towards i all other sections. -: "It seems but plain justice to protect them in the exclusive and ' unchallenged enjoyment of this. .Neither- native nor alien Ahabs. should be flattered ' with a gleam of hope that tbe vineyaid of our generous JNabothcan be coveted wrh suc cess.'- - "That Norfolk would set much trade at the expense of Wilmington, if this charier is granted, will hardly be denied, and we are uuauvi: 3d of any advantages, wnicn are likely to follow tbe grant, that wor'd serve as a set-off to tins certain loss." i The Railroad Excitement. . Under this caption the Raleigh Observer of; yesterday says: "The Treasurer's pri vate offloe was filled jes erday evening until there was scar' i standing room by the crowd of interested parties and'Jookers on in tue railroad war. - Tbe committee on Internal Improvements sat patiently and listened to the arguments of Ma-jor Winder, Major R. S. Tucker and E. R. Stamps, Esq.; .in favor of the extension of the R. & A. A. L. R. K to Charlotte, and of Major C M.. Stedman and D. R. Murchison in opposition to granting a chatter for such extension. The speeches were interesting, and those of Mr: Stamps and Major Sted man (the only ones that , we heard) of a high order of ability. - Major Stedman speaks with peculiar force and earnestness;" Tbe Pentienriarr ' h flew Honover Representation. . This coHnty, while its people are not par ticularly immoral, is well represented in the State prison. The,;"roll of : honor" of that institution bhowa that New Hanover ranks as ore of the five counties which sent the largest delegations. The count of noses runneth thus '. Wake 27, New Han over 23, Edgecombe 21, Rowan 24, Wilson 23. Seven are sentenced for life,' three for 20yeara, and five for 10. .The result in the whole Btate, for larceny 367 are sentenced, 40 for. larceny and receiving stolen goods, 18 for manslaughter, 0 for : murder, and 9 for assault with Intent to ; rape. Oar county is third best in the list i for num bers, m m m Sheriff A. H. Paddison, of Pen der, has settled the taxesMue by hia county to' the State. He paid in for public taxes $1,848 62 and special taxes to the amount of $1,678 S3 in all $3,622 95; Well done. - A Word for Wilmington. Raleigh News. J THtf the pros and sons were even our vote should be cast for Wilmington. That fine old town ought ; not to be refused a reasonable request at : the hands of any representative body of North Carolinians, and such we be Here the present - Assembly to be.; NO, It. A - Plea' for Wilmington from the ;";.'' - West. -- I Z -'''' LCorrespondence of the News. ! Mqnt Aiby, N. C, Jan. 28. Reasoning from analogy and. the success of other States it will seem that the ratVoads ought to converge to a common centre, and that centre should be the best seaport. ' Look at tbe railroad 7 maps; fesuth Uarolina has : her Charleston, Louisiana her New Orleans, Maryland her Balti more, Pennsylvania her Philadelphia; New York her New York, Massa chusetts her Boston, Alabama her Mobile, Georgia her Savannah; Vir ginia her Norfolk and Richmond, and so on through many more. vJn ortb Uarolina has her, W liming- ton, but does her railroads radiate to the mountains from the mam com mercial centre? No.' If we had a more important seaport where the nost of the citizens could resort to as is usual with a real metropolis, .wouldn'ot lour -people, be better ac quainted? Yould notthre be more unanimity and t concert of action, more homogenity more State pride and prosperity f : How many North Carolinians go to Wilmington to buy goods aye even groeeries and tropi cal fruits? Every true North Caro linian, if he will reflect a little, will see that theBe things ought not to be so. i unarteston reioicea noi many , months . ago at the pros pect of tapping by rail our western transmontane section - at Asheville. Why should not Wilmington rejoice at the prospect of tapping the nearest mountain section to her ? Would it not look fair since the long way of the State has one road , from the mountains to the sea that the short way should have one too ?. I was glad our patriotic Governor recom mended State aid to the Fayetteville & Greensboro Kaiiroad. This through the Cape Fear, would for the present be a step towards' recognizing more fully than we have heretofore .done the fact that we have a commercial metropolis. But to make this a pay ing road to the State, and thus lower the taxes and more fully carry out the first named object, it should i by all means be extended further north, near Danbury, Stokes county, be cause it would utilize ,and develop the great mining interest of that section highly favored by nature, but hitherto much neglected by man. Here are to be found inexhaustible mines of iron,, coal and lime which if developed by means of a railroad would in return make it yield rich dividends to the State in the way : of freight and travel; for be it known that these mountain counties are ex ceedingly romantic and attractive, not only as affording delightful sum mer and winter homes, but especially attractive to the summer tourist, who needs the eool, invigorating moun tain air and health-giving waters, which are no doubt designed by the great Designer for the invalid of the low country. Let them have a short and cheap Narrow Guaee to set to these places. But this road should not only penetrate Stokes county,but, to ensure its success as : a .dividend paying road beyond a possibility; of doubt, it should be extended to the village of Mount Airy, near the Blue Ridge, not simply because this town has a very extensive back country . never in the na ture of things to be much if at all penetrated by any similar roads, which : might direct trade to the detriment of the scheme under con sideration, but also because this grand back country must necessarily come to this railroad at Mt. Airy. And why so? The dirt roads! many in number running through i the mountain gaps, all converge to this point, aud they are remarkably good l roads coDsidenng thev are not graded. The citizens in the adja cent counties of Virginia will come south, because it is so-difficult to go north to the Virginia fc Tennessee Road. Horses,: cattle, hogs, bacon, lard, hay, rye, oats, apples, buck wheat, iron - ore. . coal, lime, corn, wheat, tobacco, &c, would swell the business of this road. Would : the Virginia & Tennessee Railroad lose something? Uf course it would. But Virginia is-pulling for the trade of the Dan and Coalfields, and why not pay back in equally good com? Wnleb One Owns I7 ? .. . Raleigh News. Raleigh will only be a way station between Norfolk and Charlotte, so faros western freights are concerned, if the R. & A. Air Line get leave to extend to Hamlet. It is well enough to have two lines of travel to the West,-but this we at present enjoy. It is fallacious to re gard the increased competition which is promised in the light ot a blessing. Richmond is now building up at our expense by reason of the switch-off at Greensboro and our. representatives are asked to build up Norfolk by al lowing a foreign line to enter Char-" lotte. - We have the miserable and unman ly satisfaction to know that our sub jection to Richmond is in part paid for in the lease s of. the jn.A. Jtt. which yields a quarter of a million dollars a vear.t Norfolk would have us don our hat .without getting the customary shilling. We are fallen, but perhaps not so low as this. -Let salaries and fees be reduced- Let - the- - officeholder receive " a ; fair, but not an ; extravagant compensation. Every man who serves his State is entitled to a decent livina as a reward for . his ser vices, but in no Republican government should that embrace a luxurious living. WamngUm Fost. - ; " - Spirits. TurpentmV: -i Judge -Kerr's ' health is , still feeble. - ; ' ' - ' v',. . , ' - . ;r Dr. Tippo S. Brownlow, a vmt" p table and highly esteemed citizen uf Wsr- rtutoD, is dead, aged 85 years. " . The Wilson Advance is in er ror, ' Col. Saunders was editor of the Wilming- - toa Journal now- defunct and - not the : Star. ' - " , - - The Raleigh Observer savs there are not enough lawyers in tbe Lower IJouse of the General Assembly to made a juJir- ..-" ciarv committee of lawvers. " . " Shelby Aurora ;;There has been : over 4,500 bales of cotton shipped fmm i he W depot at this place this seaEon.. This ' an r iateign uxews: "iit'irencnmwit h l." fiaid n Drne Mnlnti nl - Hnaliik7rf selling in this city at twenty-five ceui pers :: aozen . in mv countv twentv-nvc rents ' ' would, buy a. waeon load ItetrechuR'ni lucauH me removal oi inc cspuoi upytta - . . the Ridge. . '; - Salisbury Watchman: Messrs. 17 N. S. Qiggins, S." M. Woodward, Jwaeph - have nnrchased the O'Neftl Sr. Snvrfir rnl.t - mine tar xh.imni: a inn tun Tivrinr nulla nH - are puBhiBR ahead energentically, erecting ; i stamp mills and other machine. to extract v Polkton.'4r7s:i -"We,- advise' our friends in aH the townships to hold ' : meetings at once and send up tbe names of good men to the Legislature for Magistrates ;- With tbe powers of the Justices of ihe x -Peace enlacgdd it will be highly 'important- ... that men of stability and. intelligence . selected. : The majority of oar Maeisttales?s are lamentably ignorant of law . -s . - flooded Tar river. - It 'was a foot higher - than tho hpf ftf 1HR7 ' M Hobgood, President oHIhj Eileigh Pemale : seminary, tens us that' lur ve months no physician has been called in to attend a 1 case vt sicaness among the large number of f pupils at his school. This speafes well for . the health of the institution and of Raleigh : ; - Clinton ChrohicleX Mn Robt.'- Ball, a soldier of the wan of 1812, died- at - nis resiaence in iuis vicinity on caiuruay -last, after a protracted illness. He was - anout eighty years or see. Mr. Thos. tr..n. i i: o s -i i t ciuuui nuv uicsuu'uouuj wtccav, : iicni Kingold depot, while walking on the track - of the Richmond & - Danville Railroad a : few days ago, slipped and fell, which so n stunned him that two trains ran over 'his head while he was dowp. and. etranea to - - say, he was not killed , . Chatham Record: We regret to . learn that, en last Saturday night, the store of Mr. E. D. Patterson, of this county, had his store broken into andi robbed of about r- iiuv worm oi roous. r ve are nlAnapft 1q lflnrn that strnnir hnwa rfi(n. ; tertained of inducing Mr. IS. J. ilale. Br.. - to tase cuarce oi tne r ayette vine uazeue. . H7hih ronont o . enanDnnan : . nnrfciltfitinn Such' an acquisition to tbe. journalism of - thfi Rtato wnnlfl hft xepiinmrti with rpfn1iRr ' b t s gratification . - Raleigh News: : A gentleman :- reported yesterday that on Haw River- , persons were destroying great numbers ofv mite in the liver. , The committee ot - alann AHMnSnlnj U t T A f A 4it " " mice, ayyuiuieu uy tuc licnisiaiuiu tu . u- vestigate the W. N. C O. R. leaves lo- I morrow evening. They slop at Salisbuiy.v Ntolatiotri lla VA iflrrxr MrTi9anffn a ni. Ihu r head of the road. The following JkuibB f iiiui Aaava i iuwi tvu - . - -1 i e . i i - I. appointed as an Executive: committee ot thn I Lmvaraitv - 1 hft l-irtvpfinr. PX-oftlfiKl-- Chairman of the committee; Hon. P C. - Cameron. Q. V. Htroner. W. li. Saunders. ; R. H. Battle, J. S. Carr, ifl. Unssom acd A. L. Lewis. - Raleigh Observer: Wake pays more than twenty-five times as much tax - as some of ber sister counties, sne paia J:: Ibis year fB,l 41 for the support or the Deaf and Damb and ' Blind and Insane Asylums, and $4,130 94 for the erection of. the penitentiary ana support or convicts. Tbe total tax paid, both special and pub- Mo vana Sftft (HI i Th Tflftl hlar.k minstrels gave a creditable performance at Metropolitan Hall last evening, which was xvitnnBOAd hv n. Inrcrp rrnurt amonc them "'I " " W - - - . -.;.. many legislatois. A Martin Btreet runaway, yesterday afternoon came near ninvincr a hrar.a or ie?ieiators. ana . tneir fripriflB near hv-thnnpht there wouia DBIWO vacant chairs in the.House to-day. , ' - Winston Sentinel: : On Town Fork, abont fourteen miles north of Win ston, the robins have established an im- stream', and every night thousands of these . birds gather there, and the neighbors : go : with bags and gather tnem in witn their hands in such quantities as they desire. . -Joshua Rights, the oldest citizen of . Winston, died at his residence on last Sun dav night. Mr. Rights was born in Salom on the 20th of April, 1793, in a house that stood on the corner where the Baiem Bans is now located. -The growth of the f business in Winston may be gathered from.",' the fact that five years ago the salary of ,r the Postmaster at this place hardly reached : $300. Now tbe offlce is a third rate omce Charlotte Observer: It is known to most of the readers of the Observer that the lmnA nnnn vhiih Htfinflwall .Tftekfion Was - riding when he received the wounds which ; sion of his brother-in-law, Mr. Joseph UM.J.vM mliA a t K A Alii MAWIOAn MV1IWVW V" V Mm v ww - - '-. homestead in .' Lincoln 'county, flrteen .or . twenty miles irom inis cy jut. juwrrmou - mda him rinnn voef prHav. anil Mf ' "Van Ness, the enterprising photographer, got a : first rate picture of him. The gallant old sorrell Shows theesect ot age, out is- stui able to travel and do enough service to pay for the expense of keeping him. r- n w , stated on good authority that the Simpson gold mine,' situatea sdoui ten mues east.ot . tha nitv h hAn nnrnhaflp.il bv a "Northern company, who propose to. operate it. Tarhoro Southerner: A little colored boy, son of Jim Armstrong, of Rocky Mount, was killed by having a large ' limb cut down on him on Saturday., On; tbe day before a little son oi nea rareer, colored, fell from a stringer of the bridge across Tar river at the Palls and came near being drowned. He floated to a raft and -Was rescued. . The colored cook on the premises of J. H. Chapman,- near Rocky Mount, left her crawling child in the cabin alone with tbe fire. Theclothing of the child ignited and burned it to death. Another victim to criminal negligence . - Tbe Trustee of 3i B. Coffleld offered ; m m m . ' M . ' - - t '"ItT- his large eight room resiaence in ; lacooro for sale on Monday and did not get - a bid on it There is a mortgage of $2,603" on it.. $6,000 was offered for-the place a few vnara bito. That's hrink(?C forvou I ' Taxes are bound to be reduced,' The galling bands must now be loosed,' ; ' Or th' - people's heads by the sherifTlf be noosed " " , T ' in execution tney maxing me oucea- . Est cry for retrenchment. -Rocky Mount items: We were shown m f.m 1.B ot.... lie U. .T :; T TOaamv a-. B 9 T. UBJO - UUtQ . UJ MU. . A.. V. MVVUIj IS model of an improvement - on the . street car. Mr. K. will take it to Baltimore in a short time to have it tested, r -A negro boy was killed nearthis place on last Fri day by'the falling of a tree. Whita ker waifs:- The dwelling house and kitchen of Virgfl Walter, , a worthy colored man, nrorn nntirAlv mnanmMl hv flrp, .one nipht last week. A tinsmith could find steady employment .here, as could, also a good shoemaker. .-Farm, bands are commanding from $6 25 ; to $7.00 per month t demandiogj$10.- -r--