. 1 ' - -tr? i ... L POBLISHBD AT 3T. O. $1.50 a Year; in advance. SSSSSSSSSSSS8SS88 . ' 8888888888,8888888 8SSSS8888S88l8lis 88888888888883888 SS3SSSSSSSSSS388S jo t- as 5 ec c t- op oo o cs SSSS8SS33SSSSSSSS 8888 882388888888 888S8888888S88888 'ST .s o ! cT t-t i c - . S r m HrlHHHG4CIl J a a 3 u EntererVat the Post Office at Wilmington N. (X, as second-class matter. ton Price, - The subscription price of the Wkkk ly Star is as follows : -Single Copy 1 year, postage paid, $1.50 " " C months. " " 1.00 " " 3 " " " .50 A NRW POLITICAL SO AN U A L. A letter in the New York Star from Washington concerning Mr. Tilden and tlie "unwritten history" of 187G, will no doubt attract wide attention and excite much comment. TTTleclares that Mr. Tilden offered to buy the electoral vote of South Caro lina that two persons went from that State- to New York and inter viewed Mr. Tilde'n, telling him that die' Republicans would give the elec toral votes to Hayes unless he paid 30,000 that the money was actually ent to Charleston, but that the plan was changed because it was be lieved that Florida and Louisiana had leen secured, and South Carolina was of but little consequence. The account is long would fill two columns of the Star, and we have not space for it, even if we thought it worthy of being copied in full. Ve do no'; - know how much truth there is in it. Possibly thorn is none. The account appears to have been prompted by Gen. Gary's at tack oil Senator Hampton. We copy one paragraph from the "futile dalli ance" account : " "This is a page of the hUtory of the fa muud election of '70, which has never been given to the public uulit now; and as Gen. Marl Gary has been interviewed on a sub ject which baa a direct, bearing ou what was attempted to be done by Hanipum and bis friends before the election, so now we hive here in the foregoing facts ihu history of what was attempted after the election. It has been staled that Tilden lost his elec tion through being counted out in Florid mid South Carolina, and he lias been charged with 'attempting to buy a vote in Oregon, tie certainly attempted to par ch ise the six votes of south Carolina by . paying $30,000 for them, if the story as it has been told to your correspondent be true, and thu-rc is uo reason whatever to -doubt it." Without indorsing any of the state- uuenls in the least, wc give the1 above sih a part of the political gossip and - mcandal of the day. It may be true, but it is probably false. The Charles ton Ifews and Courier has this to say "Whatwc huve said about the alteinpt ta&de by Governor Tilden to secure the South Carolina electoral vote, by bribery or purchase, is conurmeu. we find, by the writer of an article published in the New York Staroi Saturday. Tbere ib something in it. The charge is made that Democrats in South Carolina knew of the scheme and had a hand in it. We do not believe it. and we shall not attach any importance to lUti. . ihrt lit anr nrtlnaa t Via Ifiin A vw nn of the persons implicated are given so that J IMia uait oi kuc Diui y uuicoo uk; uuu uaiuco I ihey can speak for themselves. MIiTl AIICK. AND GKEAT A 11.11 IKS. Iii the -last numbers of the British Quarterly and Westminster lievicics there are elaborate papers on Prince Bismarck. One is depreciatory to some extent; the other appears to be discriminating and fair. We gather, lifter reading both, that great as the Herman Chancellor is, his success has iot been marked in directing the affairs of the Empire since it was formed. In other words, he is greater as a war minister than as a peace minister. He created literally the Empire as much as Count Cavour, probably the greatest statesman of modern times, created Italian unity. But Bismarck has made some capital blunders afcpce the Franco Prussian war, notably his financial schemes, tho Falk laws, and his dealings with Socialistic problems. His. greatest blunder, it would seem, is his keeping up such a heavy armament which provokes other Powers to do like wise, and which only embarrasses and impoverishes. We refer to these things because recent intelligence from Germany shows that the great minister is learn ing by experience. It is certain that he begins to realize that the arma ment business bas been overdone and is the real cause of the financial de pression and socialistic agitation. We VOL. XI. say there are -indications which show that Bismarck is awakening to a sense of the Iheavy jburdens he has piaceu upon nis own country by his military'system. lie has s.i expressed himself, and he wants the Powers to disarm to give up their immense war equipments and to come down to a peace basis. He began the work of arming and lie must set the exam ple of disarming.! Fiance, Austria, and the other Great Powers, will not begin the good work until they see Germany taking the initiative. As the Baltimore American says: "If Bismarck wishes to crown himself prince of peace, as he has already prince of war, he will lead Germany to take the ini tiative hi this matter The other Powers will be ouly too happy to follow." ItlttKK A BOUT THK Mitt F ITS. In the rtcent Georgia-Le'gislatte' a speech was made by Mr. J. A. Aw- try, in which he referred to cotton manufacturing. He showed that the cotton crop of the Stale was worth $22,500,000. He said: ' "If we had converted this law material into yarn and exported it in that, shape, it would have added 100 per cent, to its value. Instead of $22,500,000 we would have had $45,000,000. If, after converting it into yarns, we had made cloth of it, we would have so increased its value that the crop would have been nearly equal to $60,000, 000. As a matter of course I do not pre tend to accuracy in this statement, but offer it as an approximation merely to indicate the very gieat increase iu value that results from the manipulations of the manufac turer. ! The most exten sive cotton spinner iq New England, perlups in the world, has traveled over the iSoitih aud attentively considered our ad vautaies, and he admitted that he could spin cottou at from 5 to 7 percent, cheaper ttinu he could in New; England. But the liuln is we can spin cotton. Iroiu 10 to 12 per cent, chraper in Georgia than in New Englaud. The expenses ou one hundred pounds of cotton shipped from here to Providence, Fall River or Lowell, will amount to 12i per cent, on present prices. This expense the spiuner can save, or very nearly snve; this gives us in the item of cost of raw material a clear advantage of 10 per cent. This of itself is a good profit In addition to this we have great advan tages in climate and water power." We copy this mainly for the refer ence to the advantages the South has over the North in the facilities offered. Latterly we have noticed in several Northern papers that they appreciate these advantages. In legard to the experiments now making iu this Slate in the nse of the "Clement Attachment,1' we promised to refer again, to the letter of Mr. C. F. Harden. According to him tho machinery used in liie factory at Windsor, Bertie county, cost $4,338. The Italeigh Observer takes his figures as a basis ; of calculation, and makes the total cost, including houses, $7,500. ; His j cotton costs $10,000, besides incidentals amount ing to $1,000. Hand?, oil, repairs, &c, $3,800. Interest: $1,000 total expenses, $14,800. We do not know, but we incline to the opinion that this estimate is excessive, j The- Observer next shows the profits, which it places at $16,300 net pro fit, after deducting expenses, $1,500. We think it probable j that by good management this mill cau make $2, 500 profits. If this ts correct, then some fifteen per could be realized. We coufess in this speculation we are groping in the dark. - The West minster mills experiment ' turned out well. When l-jwe can get an exact statement j of operations like those published by the Georgia mills, we can then speak more conn- dently of the value of the small mills. The subject is certainly very impor- tant, and well worth the most care ful and intelligent investigation. If two things were done in North Carolina the children would be much more favored. If men were required to pay tax on what they were worth, and if no man were allowed to vote who could not show his poll tax re ceipt, then the revenues of the State would be more than double what they are now. It is evident that the country at large is troubled with the problem of how to collect taxes on personal property, m We are satisfied that not half of tho actual wealth of the State is taxed. This makes, the burden unequal, because it makes it heavier and more; oppressive on those who do fairly list their property, Take the case of New York. We copy from the Baltimore American: "Since 1872 the collections iu that city have fallen off from $8,906,343 to $5,036, 1)01. and the assessment from $306,949,422 to $197,532,075, and this in the face of the fact that there has been a large actual in crease in the amount of personal property which is really liable to taxation. TheUif ficulty seems to be that citizens take undue advantage of the legal exemptions accept able as excuses by the commissioners, and by stretching their consciences a little swear off entirely, ui lo.ozs persons on the com missioners' lists but 1,899 acknowledged that they had personal property subject to taxation, while 6,219 swore that they owned none that was taxable, and 8,505 paid no attention whatever to the notice that -they had been assessed. It will be seen that the difficulty la this case is precisely that which imoeded the collection of the income tax tall swearing." WILMINGTON, N. C, FJUPDAY, DECEMBER 26. 1879. Mr. Lewis T Clement, the inven tor of the "Clement. Attachment,,, was born in 1803 in Rutherford county, lennesseo. A sketch of him in the Nashville American says:' "On the iesloration of peace his patriotic heart responded to the cry for help for the impoverished South, by a more determined renewal of an enterprise that he confidently believed would place the cotton States On their feet again; but his surroundings were entirely new and embarrassing. Penniless, he resumed In bis old age the trades of gin wright and furniture maker, in order to eke out a decent support for himself and invalid wife, and it was only during short intervals; of resp ite stolen time, I may say that he could prosecute his work on his models.' ma progress was necessarily slow, but he 'worked and waited a wearisome time, un til his patent Was obtained, and those fa miliar with his Ideas were convinced of their ultimate triumph. Two or three of nis mends then advanced means sufficient to construct a small machine and put it in operation. Jnt at this turning point in his fortunoB, whilt on the road to 'Nashvilre to look after sooM -tfiaue? connected with lus invention, he 'was fatally injured by an ac cident at Mill creek bridge, on the Mur freeaboro & Nashville turnpike, and died on the 22d September, 1879, in the 67th year of his age." Prof. Ledoux, the chemist of the North Carolina Experimental Station at Chapel Hill, attended the organi zation of the American Agricnltural Society in New York. He has writ ten an account of what ho saw and heard for the Raleigh Observer. We give a paragraph or so: "A Vice-President has been elected from every State. The Vice-President for North Carolina is Col. L. L. Polk, our Commis sioner of Agriculture. As a compliment to North Carolina, the address which I had the honor of delivering before the Association upon the quality of American seeds was put down us the very first on their programme. A letter from Gov. Jarvis, endorsing the movement, was read and received with tokens of pleasure, and published in a prominent agricultural journal of this city." A CIUCDLAR concerning ira.tii GHATION. Col. L. L. Polk, of the State Agricultural Department, has issued a circular on the subject of immigra tion. He desires tho people of North Carolina to cooperate with the De partment in its efforts to attract im migration withiu our , borders. He says ho is tecuring reduced rates on various steamship lines from Euro pean and English ports, and he hopes to establish agencies at an early day in Hiiiglanu, Scotland, : Holland, Switzerland and other countries. This is much to be desired. It seems to us there is no other way "by which a desirable class of immigrants can be drawn to our wide State domain. From time to time hundreds and thousands of English immigrants have found their way to Texas. In Virginia there aro colonies of English, and in some counties they are numer ous. Wc are sure that North Carolina can offer very genuine attractions, and that too without overdrawing the picture. There is no State that is better watered or better diversified. In many counties the lands arc un commonly productive, and farming is singularly remunerative. The Ra leigh Observer well says: "Immigrants will find here Scotch still conversant with the . Gaelic, Germans who preserve all the characteristics of the Vater land, and Englishmen who live on the same land granted to their English fathers by old George the Third. They will find us changed in the course of time, but close' ly adhering to the old customs, faith and traditions that still exist across the water. North Carolina opens wide her arms to re ceive all immigrants who hope to find with us lovely homes, health, wealth and happi ness;" . ! Suppose a large pamphlet contain ing actual farming statistics were published and sent to agencies in Europe for distribution, what better system or plan could be devised for spreading information? If the results of judicious cottou planting, rice growing, sheep raising, tobacco grow ing, fishing, mining, ruck! farming, cotton manufacturing, grape grow ing, fruit growing, &c . , were gath ered aud sent abroad, people who are thinking of homes in the -Far WeBt would, have their attention thus di rected to our admirablo State, where there is so much to encourage tho in telligent, industrious, persevering la borer or the man of capital - seeking investments. It is because what North Carolina has done and can do in the way of farming that the Stab has delighted in publishing-results of special labor from time to time. We have even tried to spread the facts beyond our State, and to induce the large papers to publish them for the benefit of all concerned. Col. Polk asks the farmers or land owners who wish, to sell to offer their lands through his office. We copy a paragraph from bis circular which ex plains itself: '- -rv "Under sections 16 and 17 of the act establishing this, Department, the Board is authorized and required to keep a Land and Mining Registry open in this office for the sale or such lands as- our people may wisn to sell.1 Accordingly, I have prepared the necessary books, blanks, f orms,explanatory circulars, &c, for operating the agency. The agency thus established is essentially different from any adopted hitherto by any Southern State. It "fa operated by the De partment of AgriculRV 8tate institution, whose action is und(? fh direct supervi sion of the General AsfetnVly, trad whose powers are limited and Well dtAmS hj law, thus . carefully guarding again in, fluenceat, or even possibility, of speeviafion a feature which moat &mmena it wooin buyer and seller." Gen. Gary, of South. Carolina, says ho has no personal opposition to Sen ator Hampton, bat what he has said is a conscientions difference of opin ion. As the quarrel for controversy has assumed a personal and even bit ter tone, and as we have given some thing of the dispute, we copy a para graph from the CharneKW and Courier's Columbia, letter, In which the Edgefield Senator is interviewed. Gen. Gary is represented as saying: "Senator Hampton took the initial step in the opposition, and I propose to strike back when I'm struck. A conflict of ideas is like any other conflict. You've got to fight to win it. I always haver and will, repel opposition with opposition, i desire the unity of the Democratic party as heart- ly as any man, and as a man of She parly submitted to be gagged in 1870, and to be dictated to by Hampton where and when I should and shouldn't speak, add if I ever received courtesy from him, or those asso ciated with him, I don't know it. I am willing to retire from public life if it is necessary for the unity of the party, but 1 am not to be driven out or it by anybody. I know I am charged by Sen ator Hampton with writing articles that I didn't write, but my fight has been open and not a secret ODe. I'm not that kind of man. I use neither muffled dagger nor stilletto. I am willing to meet him or any other man in open political contest, if it is necessary. Even the interview pub- isbed in the Herald was not a deliberate at tack on Hampton or designed to do him in justice, my only idea being to do Tilden ustice. My idea was to give full justice to f ilden. though I'm no champion of hip. You can say now that I regard him as a great leader of the Democracy, and think he deserves consideration at my hands, and Hampton's bands, too. 1 am willing to give him his dues. He has done more for the party than any man in America." Senator Ransom's speech on the negro exodus made a fine impression evidently, if we may credit tho re ports from Washington. We have only room for a portion of the Rich mond DispataWs account, which ap pears in its Washington letter of the 18th. The correspondent says: "The Senate to-day considered the reso lution of Mr. Voorhees to investigate the negro exodus from North Carolina to In diana, aud it gave Senator Ransom an Op portunity to pay a splendid tribute to the white people of the State of North Carolina for the liberality and kindness with which they had treated the colored people. There was not a bitter word in his speecn.nor a sen timent that was not American and national. He was listened to with profound attention bv Senators of both parties, and when be alluded to the people of the North he called them my Northern fellow-countrymen. Al though one of the most influential Senators, General Ransom rarely speaks; bat when he does, his utterances have great weight with the Senate. He told Mr. Windom, who has advocated the exodus of the ne groes, that North Carolina is dotted over with schools for their education, and churches, in which they worship. She has given them asylums for their deaf and dumb, and is erecting one for their insane." Representative Martin, of the First District, a Republican, introduced a bill in the House, which has for its object tho advancement of American interests on the ocean by establishing a steamship service between the prin cipal ports of the United States and tho principal ports of the world & a. A abroad., The text of the bill is very long. Wo do not know whether it ! I contains any subsidy features or not, as we have not read it. The Wash ington Post likes it, and says Mr. Martin is on the Tight track, as it is a movement for foreign trade and American shipping. It regards it as a "practical etep..towards an Ameri can navy and merchant marine." The Baltimore Sun says it is a huge subsidy scheme. The best informed Republicans in Maine admit that Gov. Garoolon and Council have obeyed the letter of the law most rigidly. They do . not see what can be done. A dispatch from Portland, dated the 1 7th, to the Washington Post, says: "In the eastern counties, where the Stal wart Republican element is strongest, there is talk of capturing the State House by force at the beginning of the year or of set ting up a rival Legislature to 'Dr. Garce lons legislature.' The Democrats are exultant over the " application of the rigid constitutional principles to the official canvass of the vote. Gov. Garcelon and his Council have certainly followed the let ter of the law in their action, whatever un fairness that action 'may have wrought. The fact seems to be that the chronic looseness with which the election laws have been observed during Republican supremacy in the State has given Gov. Garcelon and his astute adviser, Hon. Eben F. Pillsbury, a chance to reverse the Re publican majority in the Legislature simply by obeying these requirements of the con stitution for the first time in many years " The Richmond State has a good theatrical critic. He gives Miss Agnes Herndon great praise, and even prophecies that she will equal if not surpass any tragedienne now on the stage or who has preceded' her. Well, if she comes this way, we will see for ourselves whether she has the material in her ont of which to fash ion a Janauschek, a Cushman, or a Mary Anderson. IfllPOKTANT VIBWS NOT GBNB- RiLLTKNOWN. We ask the readers of the St Ait to consider well the extract fronj a Very important speech Which wo will pta-' Benlly give. It is the opinion if j a verjr eminent panne man and shouiq bo read and preserved. '''"' If the folio winga8sage were to ' car in a speecli op&iato HilPV 9f in a paMW .Mdf2Wfcf Gen. - Bob ToombsXw&k plam constructrfj s5eCrp " R every Republican ftf 4S4 of Coft gress. Here is the extract i i I TsAa i'a L,., ' it torce id iai quesuoB. not sumcienuv at- i lenuea to. u is mis. vutt eoci iWM pob- l . . -r. ... ' , . - BKBSlSH 1M ITSKLJ.' THK FULL POWERS OF GO- I VBBNMKNT 0811 W once, m A stKOTraVR I tor thenpreservvtion of Tfrs right . ln, tempt to establish a tyranny. Vie peopUsY can only .dtfend tkemsOoes fy a tumulr withoiitpnnrprtopniftn.ihiithnKiimprii clothed with the forms of legal authority, j t.u uiuyivj uio luivw ULiua Dtaio .u ou y- have time or opportunity to eive system to their opposition. With us Vie case is widely different. Eeach State has a government com- I pletely organized in itself; and can at once kntkb into a reqular plan of defencs I nuu iud iuruca ui lucuumuiuuiiy akibauuui mand; it can immediately form connections wun its neign oors, or even with foreign POWERS TP NECESSARY." If that passage were found in Mr. Stephens's "War of the States," or Albert Taylor Bledsoe's very able work, "Is Jeff Davis a Traitor, or was Secession a Constitutional Right prior to 1861," would any one, North or South, fail to( comprehend at. a glance its drift? ' We think not. It would be even regarded, specially in the North, as verv foolish and dism- i genuous to deny that the passaze favored States Rights and justified I what the South attempted to do but failed. But be that as it may, the passage is remarkable, and occurs in a SDeech bv a verv famous man. I The words were spoken bv the sreat man who is supposed to have repre sented the most advanced ideas in favor of a strong, centralized govern ment. If the reader will refer to "Select American Speeches," by J. C. Car penter, published in 1815, by J. W. Campbell, Philadelphia, vol. 1, page 479, he will find them. They occur in the speech delivered in the Assem bly of New York, on February 18th, 1787, "when the impost was under consideration." The speaker was Al-1 exander Hamilton. WHIT A COLORED EDITOR saits. The colored Republican editors are exhibiting far more intelligence and humanitv than the white Stalwarts. tt . . , iL "oua' " opinions of two North Carolina co- lored editors upon the exodus of some of their race under the manipulations of bad, designing men. It is gratify ing to reproduce apart of an editorial in the Washington City -drM5,whose editor is a colored man of evident sense. He heads his discussion of the exodus "A Great Shame," thus show ing at tho outset that he appreciates and measures the cruel outrage now being perpetrated against so many flolndpd nerrroes. We have onlv space o for a part of what he says so point edly: "We cannot believe that the President or Secretary had any hand in this matter; we know them to be honorable men and not accustomed to being used as tools, and therefore we do not refer to them when we say that those men who influenced these people to come to Washington, on the pro- . r . . - . . T 1 1 1 mtae mat tneir expenses to xnuiana wouiu be paid by the Bociety, were paid tools of 8-HaTWash with refu- gees from South Carolina, Mississippi or Louisiana, it would have been no more than could bave been expected. But to leave North Carolina for Indiana is a shame and disgrace to those engaged in it. "The colored people in North Carolina are better treated than., in any other State in the 8outh. .They have not since 1869 been bulldozed in any part of that Stale. They have always"been allowed to vote as they pleased, and for the work they have performed they have been as well paid as any other class of laborers. Of course the wages are small the times are hard but no one ever saw a negro begging bread in the "Old North State." There are more beggars in Indianapolis alone than in the whole State of North Carolina. 'To carry these people to Indiana for political purposes is a shame; next year, after the election is over, they will be begging for money to return to their old homes. "Why Indiana is the worse Slate for colored people north of Mason and Dixon's line! , "They have always been treated badly. During the days of slavery when other States were receiving fugitives, that State ..-. nnnn ViAi- cat ot n a Yinrklrn that lift. S,a,r - "The result of this wholesale emigration will be the re-enactment of that law." Mr. Parnell, M. P., the eloquent Irish defender, is to have a rousing reception in New York on his arrival on the 28th inst. Talmage defeated his enemies by a vote of twenty-six to thirteen.. He said if he had done anything wrong, he would apologize. , 1 -NO. 9.J We have published our .owfl -view of tho Maine affair in our leader of to-day. Since we read the proof, t: type we have met with the foilowirig paragraph in the Washington letter of the Richmond State: . t. ."Northern Democrats do not very heart ily approve of the action of the Democratic Governor and council in 'countiog. oqi' the Republican legislative majority, merely technical eronnd. " They fear lit will have: a bad effect upon the vote" In doubtful Northern States. Most of the Jfe-' trablteamr whose opinions have bfte-iulv- E Ul;-"t 0nl advise thai no - forcibfe mel- 9X9 re taken to regain control of th State s3ib.urv wra -executive macninery, -ib- lowcl by .a Hhoroueh awakening of ale5 roW" feteete of -the outrns' nnM m.Mti,.b .n;v.vn 'w.twjpw iviuiiviwo avTar xiuiwiiu ftntflrl-;r utt. 7ir.atLi fFa k msatlw trnrthnprl Okant nr ,hd PrP, demialjftMsS- TEr i&3nW dCt 0 the Democrats." I ur waders will see that our fears as to the effect are justified by the above. Ihe Democrats will lose more than they can gain. General Sheridan, it is thought, will accompany General Grant in his . , . , . , . ! . tour through Mexico and Cuba Thev are "verv thick." Hayes has been invited by the obituary poet of the world, Mr. G. W. Childs. of Philadelphia, to visit Gen. Grant whilst his guest. Alleu 3Iatbla Ibe murderer, purine tor Ilia Doom. Fre- Allen Mathis, colored, who was sentenced at the late term of the Superior Court for this county to be executed for the murder Of one Reuben Herring, of Pender, on Fri day, the 9th of January ensuing, begins to realize the near approach of his almost in evitable doom. First along he seemed lo I I be buoved ud to some extent with the idea lhatJf fatnce would ;be com; mntofi nut Va 10 rrvannnllt? lAQinnr his rrn dence iQ chaQce of e9cape from lhe naiter. His appetite continues excellent, but in manner, to use the words of the iailor. he is becoming quite week. One or more of lhe colored clergy call to see him every uay, sua seem iu uu uuiag lueir uesi to prepare him spiritually for the great change awaiting him in the near future. It seems to be understood that the execu tion will be private, the gallows to be erected in the yard back of the ia.il, and a high fence built on the East so as lo obstruct the view from Fourth street. Anoiber Teat of the lee RIacuiue. Yesterday, by invitation, we witnessed a test of the new ice machine indented by D. J. E. Winants. The engine was started and a current of cold air pumped into a box at- tached lo the machine, and in a very short 8pace of time the temperature was reduced I from about sixty to twenty four degrees, and the Doctor informed us that it bad been I reduced, in a former trial, when more time J wa9 devoted to the experiment, to ! ten de- J grees below zero. In a half hour from the "tmg ot me engine a very tmcK irosi I had formed on the pipe leading into the b0X and a cake of ice: had also formed in the bottom of the box. The question of the capacity of the machine to I reduce the temperature to a freezing point being thus settled beyond "dispute, it seems that there can be no room for doubt that ice can be successfully manufactured by this process. Several of our prominent citizens were present during the progress of the experiment. Pender superior Court. This tribunal adjourned for the term J Friday evening, at 8 o'clock, after doing a J good week's work, mostly on the Criminal I AJ0CKe1, I mu r rr. cr xiits case ui viiyci ixojcii, wjiuicu, charged with burglary, and with assault and battery with intent to commit rape, was continued until the next terra of the Court, the defendant to be confined in our county jail in the meantime, without benefit of bail The case of- Dock - Mathis, colored. charged with placing obstructions upon the I Wilmington & Weldon Railroad,1 was con- tinned until next term, the defendant to I give a justified bond m the sum of $500 for hi3 appearance. William Murphy, convicted of larceny and sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor for five years in the State Peni tentiary, craved an appeal to the Supreme Court, through his counsel, aud was ordered to give a justified bond in the sum of $400 for his appearance. The case of Thomas Croom, colored. charged with burning his own barn, was continued until the next term, the defend ant giving the necessary bond fur his ap pearance. In the case of Nick Baker, col,;, charged with killing another colored man at Rock Quarry some months ago, the Grand Jury found a true bill for manslaughter, but the defendant was let off on the payment of costs, the evidence tending to show that the killing was accidental. The Grand Jury failed to find a true bill in the case of Buck Walker, charged with I kiliins a colored man named Frank Oliver Hargett, Dock Mathis and Wm Murphy were brought to this city yesterday by Deputy Sheriff tland, and lodged in the county jau. military Matters. We learn from Gen. M. P. Taylor that the commissioned officers of the First Regi ment, N. O. 8.-G., will meet at Newbern, those of the Second Regiment at Wilming ton, those of the Fourth Battalion (colored) at Raleigh, and thqse of the Fifth Battalion (colored) at Fayetleville, on the 13th of January next, for the purpose of electing field officers for the ensuing year. j ' Rockingham 'Sjpfrif-? We tret t if urn of the soddeb deat&ittfc. Mr. .Tohn- l Covmgtonrf MnM:ral SpruBfiuwDPhip, wliicU.tt?carred a, few days agr.;,, 1 Asheborofdwfer:' &Zr were 1. toarrjtfgelieen'ges isuti -in-l-d h h tht jhe yeaK ending' December Is?, lfcTS, ver?i was not a good year a-rrosryirig, rS0- &&F " We have 'JUeen:!xhrmed that the dwelling house of Mr. Miles Creckman, on Durban)' Creek; 'was burned Jast w?eW, bsSn'g.evi'ryibiniJ 1 herein.' V " ; ' - -rtSaturday'.Jar misrepreseiitiifw wouid like To in form h r 5&r"tm.iWW-Vi has a bank, and that it:is in- itfafroua way. : Please make a note t ,ifr,--rj$m Advance. We wrote WeldorJ;- JfoT bew .Wilson' had. one. SnowHnteort- pceirt of -the Wilson w4tftwnfe;Tto In diana feverjs quite an epidemic among iho negroes dl this Beet ion, since one old darkey i w bo went thett'l nwn Green: county, vera l dn;awrU Jck that hbd a iw- 1 $torj kouae'and was riving ofTjfihj tt tf olinaacc;de4hiri,!8hip toblbco to Caw Town, Afrlct. 4- -i-sthe Dlslrfel, Port, flijger 4icge jici.aw a good ueal'ttf. bn- -wiTlratirrtheprewaVffeK: Brown, wo reside one miM9 from teraville;'irt.liiia eouotv. Ltito-AMlttT ..ri.ct Mllbat rtJimfs Jo. th'.1t-WHi of nine children, and only iwiliailishhv er e occurred in his house since 1880, being bin grand-mother and a sisier in-law. lie ha always paid for his paper in advance Winston Leader: The Nissi-n Wagon Works, at Waughlon, near Salem, 13 an old institution, and is TavnraMv "tnown far and wide. Their wat-ons are generally ueil ihu.ugh this section, an:! frequently do we see five or six new wi f their make go out of town an a ir gnns ram. Liule Blanche Martin, of Chanel Hill. swaliowed a needle recently. It lodnt:i ih her throat, and worked its way through the dsck ot ner neck. Dr. Harris cut it out. Blanche is doing well. We get this from tne l.eager. Mr. 1. W. Durham is now at work upon a memorial slab of Dr. W. M. Wingate. for the new buiidirmat VVuk-: Forest. It will be a neat niece of woik wnen completed. Raleigh Observer: There are over 2,800 while members of the churcbi-s m this city. Died, at the Hospital of St. John's Guild, on Thursday,. December lSlh, 1879, Charles W. Walkius, iu the 04th year of hia age. Some of the negro drivers beat their horses in a shameful man ner. Yesterday a drunken negro lashed his horses with a heavy whip for fully fifteen minute?. It is a great pity that we have no I JBergh here to regulate such matters. u'iJsltu cioewutsic pnuieu luiorma us a . ; . i. l 1 - . i :r that on yesterday the Governor of the Stale, accompanied by a number of citizens, passed through the mountain tunnel, and made the first trip by rail across the moun tains into the valley of western North Caro lina. - Oxford lorchlight: Ten pris oners are now in the county jail, a larger number than has been in the past three years, larceny, torgery, and house-burn ing are the principal offences. A no- gro baby was fished up out of a well in tiendersoc a few days ago. suspicion was aroused that something was "rotten in Dec mark," when baby garmentswere drawn up with the water, lhe perpetrators of this fiendish act are suspected. Quick and steady is the march of improvement. The result of the carpentei's hammer is seen in every portion of Oxford. The two mam moth warehouses, with all the modern facili ties, will be ready for the auctioneer by the first of January. Mr. Robert R. Bur- well, lownssville, has again been the object oTsome incendiary's malice. During the night of December 1st the torch was ap plied to three oat and two hay stacks. situated within ten feel of the spot where he lost, in like manner, twelve months ag. last April, his eutire crop of long forage. The Charlotte Observer of the 18 Lh contains a long account of lhe killiug of a noted negro desperado named Bub Fharr, at that place, by policeman llil!. Pharr had murdered his wife and another person, tie was round in the bed-room 01 a sraau bouse, lie refused lo surrender, said he would diesrirst, tried twice to shoot Mr. John Urr, when he was killed bya shot in the head fired by policeman Hili. He died instantly. There were four men try ing to capture him. The Observer says: Pharr has been long known to the police as a most daring and reckless criminal. Their first encounter with him occurred about two months ago, when an attempt was made to arrest him in a negro bouse in the First Ward. On this occasion thm? members of Ibe force surrounded the house. Discovering their presence, he leaped from the window, firing several shots from Inn pistol as he went, and, after being shot at himself three or four times by members of the force, and a long race, he escaped. A few months prior to this occurrence he es caped from Lincoln jail and liberated four J other prisoners, by shooting Sheriff Robin- son with the pistol which he snatched from the Sheriff's hands. - PittBboro Record: Mr. C. W. Bynum informs us that he recently caught on his fish-trap in Haw river an eel that was 36 inches long, eight inches in circum ferences and weighed 8 pounds. Mr. Burwell Ellington, of this county, was found dead in a turkey "blind," on the 16ih inst. He was quite a noted huntsman, and had gone that morning to a "bliud"that he had prepared . for wild turkeys, and it U supposed that while watching there he died from heart-disease. The Baltimore drummer, Jacob Weil, who was so severely injured by the cars at Sanford last winter, brought suit for damages against the rail road company. The suit was tried in the Federal Court at Raleigh, and was decided against the plaintiff, as it was through his own negligence that he received lhe injury. We very much regret to hear that Mr John Harrington, a most worthy citizen of Oakland township, in this county, receutly met with a fatal and rather peculiar acci dent. He was hauling a load of wood in his wagon, when one of hi3 logs fell off, and one end catching in the wheel 'caused the other end to fly up and violently strike Mr. Harrington on the neck and shoulder?, from the effects of which blow he died in a few days. Tarboro Southerner: Mr. Wm. J.' Weslbrook, of Grantham's township, caught an eagle in a steel trap a fewdaya- fc ... of Grantham's township, died on the 13th inst., in the 82d year of his age. -Dr. McDonald, of Washington, this State, has a three year old colt named H, W. Beecher, that trots a mile in two minutes and fifty seconds. Among the exodusters who left here Tuesday, was an old blind darkt y, named Peter Kennedy, from Lenoir count . Air. VV. U. eulton, who farms in Duplin, near the Wayne line, last year. made 10 bales of cotton on as many acres. The present year he did even better, having increased his crop lo 18 bales off of 17 acres. ile never .buys manipulated guanos, but composts heavily with proper chemicals and home-made manures. The, James vi lie & Washington Railroad and Lumber Com pany, composed of foreign capitalists, hold title to about 40,000 acres of land, and we are pleased to learn are doing much to dc velope and build up the resources in that section. They bave built a railroad twenty two miles in length, from Washington to Jamesville, on the Roanoke, and they have also a handsome steamer, the Oriole, plying between Plymouth and Hamilton, and con necting with cars at Jamesville.