:4; I. -: I I 47Tr (iiJJ.'raDa j . iti fit CELI8H2D AT - $1 .5Q a Year, la advance .,1 .-"w'JSmSS. ;S888888S. 838SSSSSoioeSSSSS i .... ... i .-.- -. . W d or-- o oici """JO 00 CO CO OS 88SS8S88S. 3.3888 sgssesssssssssses' 4 a. 8.8,8888.8888888888 r (3 OS- .. - - - - gt I ,, " . . -v - ' - nmiHriHatlS 'EDtered.etthQPost Offlco at Wilmington; ; N.C., as;seeond-clasa matter. J.- '. 'i !;! . i l I'iN i 'in.,,. i i i l i S .? V UiiwUl JLJJ i-lUll. X 1 1UO. The subscription Jrice of theWKKK I. v SAR Is, as follows : Single Qopy l year, postage paid, $1.50 44 4V ' 6 months, " " 1.00 V IX 2 " . " . " .60 KKTAASTKH UVOALD OALGET- I V ANDTI1B J The Republicans will be forced to break the dead-lock enough to tranl important V public r business, vv nose victory will that be? Not the le publicans, surely. For nearly i wo months they have, been .resisting all attempts to go. into i executive srtssioin. T The sense and judgment of the whole country revoke at their untenable and corrupt attitude. They m.iy determine to stand by Southern liepiidiationists.to the last extremity, but such an attitude will do them no good: in the North among honest, reflecting " people.,; A j harder ' fight will have to be made in the South in consequence of the Radical alliance with Southern Repudiationists, but thatfw all.; sThat moment the whole South pees and understands that the Uepublicao : Administration I and its friends are endeavoring to break down the rule of the true people, of the jSoath, and this means full, ihorougb, immediate restoration of the full old corrupt order of things a return to power of , the men who robbed, abused, persecuted and : de graded the South alter tbe'waf that moment will the South be more solid than ever. .' i .: - "j " There are two things that cannot une. The "solid South" cannot be broken by either iotimidation or 'I'"- . bribery. It would be well for Presi- denl Garfield to understand that. Ho pan buy a few hundreds in all the butee. State He can strengthen the Re- uublican blunderers a. few Lhoncindii in rsortn fjarouna, but in doing this ii o uiiitco tut; ucbi, fieme-uia iulu a mote determined resistance, and causes thousands who failed to vote in the preceding election to come to the! pol is to record th eir con d emna tion of the unholy and damning alli ance between Northern Radicals and Southern office-seekers who ride re pudiation as a hobby by which to mount into office. ;T ' ; F j Senator Lamar, as early as the fi rst instant, gavenhe jNorth ; warning as to this very,; attitudes Sl lie showed that the attempt .of the North to break up the South by embracing the repudiating faction1 was degrading and would fail c of its end. He said, and" we I may well, quote with edito riai indorsement what this able and highoned statesman uttered : V. - j fsjr. with fcquai confidence I venture to predict tbat this movement will- fil in the bouih. The moral sentiment of that peo ple is Bound. The majority of the Demo cratic party there la standing op for the ob aerVaoce of tile strictest good, faith in pub lic obligations, and those who would disre gard them are Blougbiug Off from that party aad seeking other alliances.. Spewed ont of ita moutb. Republican Senators! are snappip at and -astounding : the couatry with their; convulsive- efforts to utilize this cffaUr ft ia, sit, an attempt to bring the Repubjiean party, lin the South into rela tions witb this element sncb as it held to tbd carpet-bag" govern men ts there, and to substitute the one for tbe other, using the Federal , patronage, now .where, they used Federal bayonets then." . ,: r .; j 1 3 . When'Richard IIL: and, Duke of Richmond,, afterwards, tienry VIL, fought at Boswbrth - the . stake was tne xungusa crown. : lora Stanley, with seven: thousand troops held aloof a few miles distant awaiting the issue of. the battle.: ' When at last it became apparent to his watchful eye tat ilenry wouldbe victor he united quickly his forces with him and has tened the; hour of Richard's over throw and death. Ever : since the year 1S0, injNorth Carolina, and no doubt in all of the Southern States. there have been men of predatory in- stincts mere Soldiers of fortune men Who had no more principle than the. highwaymen or than Artemns Ward who was in the show biznisi? TTt Vli h.MA . all. . '1 v - ' - " ' ' "' ' r 1 :t , - ' " ' ' ".' ' " t'. ' i1 1 - - you. xn. like Lord Stanley, ready at any mr" ment to unite with that army whose, banners Cor ihe ti'me w.ere aloft. They, awifefy iboft?frd.'f rampant . in cam-' paign time, but- ter "ardor blj wonderfully if they jsuffer a defeat; Some of these rDSgald Dalgetty&are ready three months afterwards to take serviee with : the very . party against whom ; they : had warredun successfully. " -" : ' ' ; '-"-! Butj there i is this; attending fate; as soon as they desert their colors for plunder or pelf, they are at once and forever under suspicion. They have not as much power, and Jnflaence: ; with !. their ;pM- friends whom' they have deserted -"as. the; leaders -have acrainRt whom ' thv latftltr Vl Alivftrftrf -L & v:ri?-i:r deserters -rfrom.men who are bought up by promises or hope - of. reward. Let one of tnese captains appear in' the field booted and spurred , and wearing the colors of Radicalism and he is despised by all decent men and of both parties. ; The only danger to the Democrat iC party is in nominating unworthy men.;' A mistake of that kind can do more barm to the prospects of the parly than a thousand desertions among chronic office seekers or fel lows out at the elbow. A ticket can be nominated in North Carolina any year that can win. It is quite possi ble to nominate a ticket that can be beaten. If "machine" politics are continued there will be disintegra tion and ruin. Mark it. fltKNCII AGUBBS8ION. 1 . .-i - ---- - - - The news from French operations in North Africa indicate not only progress but absorption. It is.some thing to be observed how readily the great European Powers can trump up an excuse for hostilities against a weak Power, and hostilities once be- gun now creases in rapidly the situation in interest 'necessitating still more decided measures, until it is an nounced finally that it has become imperatively necessary that the terri tory of the enemy should be seized and ho! I ' Thia anrt' nf AAnnnut Vi 4 a i I' been going on in Europe all through.6 f i be centuries. The States have no more conscience now about gobbling up other people's property than the nations of a past age had. The only restraints seem to be that unknown quantity described as "the balance of power." ' The French have some sort of excuse for making some sort of de mands upon Tunis, and the first thing ihe telegraph - brings us is an inva ioo, then rapid advance. The sequel f the matter will be absorption- conquest, and the Great Powers will look on and say well done,' uriless France, perchance, should be trench ing upon the preserves of some'other Power.' ; ;;; ' ' .;;" ; ; ; ;;; "; Of course open absorption will not be the game at the first. The terri tory will be overrun, then held for porno excuse, and afterwards Tunis will disappear from the maps, save only as a French appendage. Algiers and Tunis may nnite hereafter. The Philadelphia American has this view : : It is quite possible, indeed, that Italy and Turkey will exert inflaence enoaeb to prevent either step. - Italy owes Tunis her support, as it was the terms of her com mercial treaty with 'Tunis' which first prompted tbe war. Sooner than see the French swaHow-TuniCHnlbts summary Way, tbe Italians have driven- the party of the Left from power as a punishment for their indifference, and have puttbe control of affairs into tbe band a of the Right, who have' been in opposition almost ever since the death Of: CavoUrT- AttS Turkey proba bly will insist that one suzerain the Saltan, to wit Is abbnt ar much' as Tunis can bear. - r cxi; c- ib'p-.u I Possibiy other Po wers may say to France if you take Tunis we shall seize Tripoli or other portions of Africa, j We may have again the old game of partitioning desirable territo ry among grasping States; The cause for the present' Frenoh war is very. slim, we judge. The American says: 'Whether the people of these -two States are civilized or barbarous thev have a risht to their autonomy, since they oppress no one at uome ana occasion no danger to their neighbors. 1 A war on - Tunis on such flimsy pretences as France puts for ward is in no Bense -parallel to the wars for the expulsion of the. Turks from Eoropei In neither country ia there a Christian ma jority living under. Moslem rule. In both, as throughout all the Barbary States.Chris- tianity has been ' exterminated for over a millennium. And there"- is room to doubt whether civilized countries, render any real service toi others less civilized by snch in vasions as mis." . , . . ; Any excuse is sufficient to answer the purposes of a warlike power, es pecially! when the object of attack is feeble and easy to be subdued. ! Mo dern nations have ad vanced in wealth in the size of armies and military equipments, ; but hey hav not ad vanced in ;I- :h moralityji in a deter mination ; to 4? nsnt, and inj sense ol justice sad baianity. : ; " ' ; ?;Senator,utler'i' speech was . con cinsive as to .one fjoint cerlainly: ! that jyele& j; a baigain between the epiiblicanand Uahone. ' If the : Iattet eieinl6rtou l one half of the e?hience introdaced in this case could be bronghtjagainst him, then he would r ha Ve-; tei Wangle from a gibbet unless ihe iitc&id ?'get away with the law nrn "flTol"p1ea of . emotionaVrnsanity. -The factys.- that iwould be the natural defeni.Can. 'anyrsane, man, :ho9gardi khr ovn Cactiggi; llf he is not not corrupt must not there be a screw loose some whe're. We think, a Pittsylvania jury, would acquit the little Brigadier once "Rebel,"- but now' R. R. R. B. G.-Republican .Readjuster Repudiationist Brigadier; uenerai. . . .... -:. But Butler's speech was good and effective. The Stalwarts .will ' come back heavily about tissue ballots and intimidation in South Carolina. That will be the weak place in Butler's ar mor. w hen a : charge is made ana sustained, that there is a corrupt alli ance i between Mahone and the Re publicans, the answer of the Stal warts, , all clad - in their red shirts freshly dipped iin ."sanguinary gore," is, "You South Carolinians know you bulldozed ' . the colored voters and stuffed the ballots." When the dis franchisement of one hundred and fifty thousand voters in Massachu setts, Connecticut and Bhode Island is established by irrefragable evi dence, the answer is, "You know you have no free .ballot in the South and: the negroes have no rights!" ' It is thus they dodge the issue, and pull the wool over the eyes of the Northern people. Instead of . re moving he inequalities, - injustices and iliegalUties in their own State; instead of curing the evils of a re stricted ballot at home, they prefer to go out on a crusade against others. and bx,dinLf false-swearings deny- vfS rr slanrlonnnr Qnn itaralinn (n malra. the world believe that they are mar vellously proper fellows themselves whilst it is only their Southern neigh bors, out of Tvhose labor they are growing rich all the time, who are the guilty ones and, need the curry ing and curing of the very paternal, hand of a Republican Administration. The Stab has never condoned any wrongs against freemen .and a free ballot that have been perpetrated in the South, whether in North or South Carolina, or elsewhere. It has insist ed that the safety of the people and the perpetuity of free institutions' de pend on a pure, "-. free ballot . and an honest count. It has said many times that the frauds of 1876-77 in the matter of the Louisiana" and Florida oount, and the bare-faced corruption of the Electoral Commission,together with illegalities and frauds in South ern States and in many Northern States, if -repeated or persisted in, would end in mm. And so " it will, and he who would jdeny it is beside himself. - -w; ; J 'i ),f.;. ; How can any free country stand the disfranchising of citizens as ' in New England; the bulldozing as prac ticed under Radical methods in New; York and Philadelphia; the schemes by which ten thousand illegal voters, mostly negroes, were hurried into In diana' and Ohio ? If these things continue where will they end? Can a Government resting upon the foun dations of public virtue and intelli gence withstand snch assaults as these and live ? " WhlT'isT'fpolenough to believe it! ? .' i.; i.-.... I The Stab, condemns unmeasuredly wrongs wherever perpetratedwhether in North CarolinaorMafiiaohusettsj; in South Carolina or -Rhode Island.; We ha ve! W doubt that iUegalybtes are polled in every city jand cou nty in the TJniori and ; in , every election,; Such things are wrong whoever the offenders, whether Radicals or Pern-' ocrats.' - - lj z ! There is an election contest in the Fifth South Carolina District." L One R, Smalls, Radical, is contesting: the seat . of ; G. D. Tillman, Democrat On the 26thinst.iatColumbia,certain witnesses were examined. We have not seen how many; Democrats were examined. V The ; evidence bn ithe Radical Bide is serious ; enough. The iNe w York i Times, Republican, 3 gives the pomts 'as follows i '.V; ;;3 ':2 - ' VAt one poll nearly 2,000 colored I?eppb Ucans werakept back .from voting; at an- i'l a I (If;;;J Is. WILMINGTON, N. FRIDAY,5 other 400 to 500 went similarly intimidated. and one man was silled; at a third the polling place was covered by V piece of artillery,- said to be loaded with grape-shot, and at a fourth, a band of armed ruffians drove 400 negroes from' the ballot-boxes. The votes of one h&avHy .Republican pre- cinct were throwhoct because the mauagera closed the poll at 1 oclock,- and of another because a second box was needed to hold, the surplus ' tickets, while in a third the poll was not opened all.' ;.-' r a t oWill;pfitit8ij evidence maybtft fa.;dnik(io whether witnsles jtro Ifwhat & i sworow t,Ktrue then great outragea.fwere .p.erpetrated, ,. .It ; is, that, nothing mora tror less. But is the evidence '-;'reUabre'fr'We"'wili'Se"eT' hereafter, y:. .M : h It,g is - saidji nat rSsnatorr;Hamp ton admits that-tero' has been some iotnii!datioV5Iriwliis: 'Sftteyanja : the Charleston News and 'Courier con fesses to something similar. "Reports of such r a dondition of affairs ran rife soon after the election. It is oertain that no good in the end can oome to any one or any party by re sorting to unfair or severe or corrupt measures by which to achieve suc cess. v The Radicals; tried that; all through the South under the protec tion of Grant's bayonets, and to-day the Demoorats hold the - fort and present an nnbroken front all along the line. Justice, right, fair-dealing; a fair, free election and an honest , count these ;. shotird be the Democratic watch words " and practice. The Radicals give us dec larations of principlein abundance, hut, alas! their practice does not com port in the least with their theory.. jThey are prolific in glittering words that signify nothing genuine, but .when they deal with the suffrages of the people they corrupt, cheat, falsi fy, bulldoze, intimidate at will.. Read oyer their past; history in nearly every Southern State; behold what they did in Indiana, in Massachusetts and in other States, i ? l r THBNEW BEVISIO!) . Let it be borne id mind that the Bible, as we now have it, was not a new translation but a revision that mrsi of. it . was. the language of an other and former .translation. Let it; not another translation but simply another' revision and that some of the many errors of the James revi sion will be corrected just as that ref' Vision corrected some of the errors of . - - - - ; - ...... Coverdale ' and Tyndale. - Let it be noted-that in the James revision j the bopies of the Bible1; as we have it U-tHere are 24,000 variations in the different editions published, so a man does not know when -: he reads his copy whether it is an exact copy of the Bible, as issued by the James re-r visers.or;not. ;.- -.; : ; -The best scholarship of ' the world demands a revision. You can not open a volume of sermons, or a theo logical work of any kind, or a Sun day School volume of lessons even, or a'oommentary On the Scriptures, that you do not meet at i every-: turn corrections of the James revision to bring out the precise meaning of the original. . r ,n;M:'ik-s c-j -t'A'apj : It ia proposed to give to all men the advantages of large learning, an improved critical apparatus, and newly discovered manuscripts, fcc, that now are the property of but a few; All men of ; theological train ing and generous scholarship kno w that there are many, errors in- the James revision, and most of them are agreed that it would be advan tageous, that it would be promotive pf a better, a . clearer understanding of the sacred volume to have these I 'if.':' ,' '' . i . . a . '. u ! ; errors corrected. ; ; ,;v. c; ; ! It is not expected, we suppose, by the soores of - learned gentlemen who have been for some ten years engaged ppori the revision ' that it. will be adopted generally now. -Most people have no learning. ; Most people have prejudices and attachments. Most people do not' know' when" they read a verse in the Jiible whether that par ticular verse ought to be in the Bible ornot; and if Itjbught tojbe in Bible, whether the original- tongue. has been rendered accurately into the tJlfil!aVr ' tA5Am'1';iTlTrtot: norinla YiMVa been reading some verses in the JTew Testament alt; their i lives and .never suspected l for a ' moment ? what" all Biblical; : scholars ' know, ' that said verses ; have, 'no. part '? or , lot , in, the Word of God, and ought t.o be taken but. ill 1.' -1 1 What the people oOKs'Ume need is ..tne jJibie ; accurately j renaerecu Every lover of truth ;must desire tto Know precisely wna& uie spirit o bet4mebfalttliaIWfaTXewJ& sWis-xrinisaM he wm going ment to be issued ltf a few weeks is t . . , lito do with IL.when he replied that he might -e-l JI .1 iti .'iiiiiitr- nouy T il' . r -w . M. i IVTAy; , f Truth said. It is possible for scholar ship t6 improve npori the -James! ver sion as to precision of translatiotIini certairs passages or wotdsln We have said that it is riot expected Hhat thef new revision will be addpted nhiver sally now. J But-we venture to jsayi hat by 1885 th6re--will be" tens "of thousands wbo wlirp'refec it, and by-1 the end of the Century morpertdntf -,:n t,i-Lj:. u .i..- i..v j:.- ia I w. yo.uH,s n.u o-u.uk wr . t6 the old y ames version.Itr othe? words, m the coarse bfmme' it -wilLI cotoe intdveneral;1isd; ;,J8t'as W te i quired - time to. -make" the Janies VANiftn n rLMrtA ! The Resent frevimonwa;' private enterprises f is. not by jauthonty of j any Government or Chureh, :and it will' stand or ; fall upon its' merits. We rather anticipate that after the hundreds of criticisms that will be made - upon ! it ', by t scholarly s men: throughout the English-speaking world that the new revision will receive other revisions, so that it may be a year or two before :; the final results of so many earnest and con scientious laborers .in. the large, rich field of Biblical1 learninsr, will , be ascertained. The final outcome, we have no doubt, will 1 be a far more accurate revision of the Sacred Scrip tures. Finally, let it be remembered that the new revision does not molest the; unapproached English of the Bible save in such places where , the trans- ation is at ;fault.':;.VThe';'mbstvEng-: ish English"; of all the world, as Kit North says of it ' in "Dies Boreales," will remain a perpetual inheritance to the generations still ' unborn. The greatest English classic will be handed down as the noblest monument of our ; great, flexible, comprehensive tongue, but the most gUrg'n::e'npi'; will have been removed. We wish to give some tobacco sales just made in Granville county and reported; in : the last Oxford - Ju Lance; They tell the story as to where the fine tobacco is fromuIt,K suchr figures ?-that would .do s North snow sucn sailor uytrouuiaj i i. 1 otber.;UtegJtejKe4joiVm ing, fifijures were per hundred pounds :; 56, 1 $55, $5 s$59, ,$90, a $125,' r$60j $80, $71,: $7P, $Ui $75, $70, $7P,$125,: $65, $75, $100, $65, $90.,. j These sales. were made at AsBV? Kingsbury's warenouse,at yxiorq. vvt meagows, warehouse, Oxford, prices were $53, $80, $125,$45.$75,i$7, .VlOO-liSOlj At ; Cooper's, r in , Henderson $!35 $105, ;$73, $91 75j:2Pi. $68,:.$87x $74.58, $250, $80, $78, $75,; $72, $74,. $79, $100, $160. Mr. Grady, will, please take notice.' nv-. T fr. aon of the late Rev Dr T W Moore of Richmond. , Va.. has been suspended, from.tho terv of the iLbenezer .Cleneral Assem-; hi v of Kentnckv because - sav that bv 0 entuolcy .W8-81, Doay, ne "uniorms us uiasaie wut not. doe, .not intend ,to bmit A car, aainomv: Becuuuiv. uiat 110 una tihth fWrTn F4 rz?rr?r:. . "2 rrrz'z held and interpreted by the Freby te. rian Church in the IJnited States ,otl Amenoathirouy, tnat, he.nas most ( - . ministerial vows. it :i i:Tcrii.!-i.. ! AvepuoiioauH ia t asuuigwu trying to console themselves by say - i. -' !. '. i- .. -tm ! 1 ,ng that-the uemocrats wiiisurrer also by the Star -route' exposures.1 'Turn on the liht"5" tyi oFfjdj i-um on me iigni. r From the report of Mr. James Anderson,'! Secretary and Treasurer of theE CarbHha CnualIfctlrbadCom receipu of the roadforthe fiscal year end ing March 81st, 1881,: amountedVtp ,$584,- 028.63, and the operating expenses for tbe. Same period footed up $313,192.94. show ing a net earning of f250,835.69. " For the year previous, ending March 31, 1880, the Receipts - wereT$J6- ope rating expenses $87T,319J85,! leaving a net eamihg : oti j $189,269. A.- comparison will ; show j that .tha, increase of ; last year's bet . earnings over,, that, ot the .previous year's amounted to $71,566.04, or about 82i. percent xuis troiy asrauiyxugMuiuik. tos the people of Wilmmgtori and ' the - - friends of the road everywhere, and showB ' v. trr, mA nf-,. ! ... w . KSSrif a!JeS puevigoronajandrogressiiHrpr wawwv 'l-w . w .wnuMWfai- mih naaaw.- splendid re8ultsand refletfl i the greatestl credit on his wisdom and ability as a rail I road manager. Tbe President's .. efforts have been ably seconded: by Capt vv U: Johnson. General Superintendent: Mr. F. W. Clark, Geneml Freight and Passenger Agent, and the -other orScials of Ibe-comi nanv: andrthey.i:ibo. hate" iudanseto be. proud of the splendid sbowingJof their last ' years Dusiness.: .;s -.trvi I S1 1 . .a i 1.. . 1 U r liVunk . I. ...lila .ifina Blttk rmn n in. h ia 5Vt , i'Vi'.I 1 : NO? 272 Ani ttai irjMiiDK 61 tb aicKbotaen k-The stockholders of the , Duplin , Cans! Company met in annual session at Magno lia on Wednesday, the? 27th infit.; W. T: Bannermah -being called to the chair : and R.X). Cowan acting as secretary. Uits iai&q After, ascertaining that a majority of jhe stock, was represented, eittoein person, or J' ine mi?:i"V""l were read and approved. " , roliowing names were puHr homP fi -iv 5 mniwt- elected : tW4S;Miller,r;Tyaiiam WilhafflV Jr-. ermn, lUara it0900??! Eiia"a5t V -Lfc. XOUHg. The following- resolutions were offered rflry Parrior, is4ef upilnIiad. lUtolved. That ihe steckholders of tha Duplin Canal Company respectfully sug gest to the Dlrectors the great importance of i directing their immediate - efforts t in draining tbe overflowed lands of Gum owaoap, tnereny- placing m tne naaas or tbe company one-halt of. the lands . re-, claimed. "T L' t"T : Besolved- further: That we deem it advi sable to work at such points as may riot necessitate tne blockading or Holly tsbelter creek:, below ; the head of .flat .navigation J and that tbe true interests of tbe company require the cutting of sluice ways and AW rectlng all adjacent streams through the; same, tnus leaving tbe canal way to tbe action of the water, without forcing upon the company the immediate expense of making the same navigable until tha North East river is directed through it. s f.uj iSeaolved, , further That the Directors should, if they deem it advisable; j cat a pass way for - flats tbrougu tbe blockade across Shelter creek. ., ir, f , .- , ,vh Beaolved, further. That ' we recommend after 4ue notice -has been given 1 efforts shall be made to collect by law- from each and every delinquent subscriber all install ments daehe company. ... . r rr ..'i On motion ; the meeting ad j iurned until March 10th 1882. , , T . 3 . V Cm Bailroaiil neetlDC of Steele boldera-Eleetlon of Directors &c; ; At a meeting of the stockholders of the Carolina Central Railroad, held in this city yesterday f morning, the following gentle-' -men were elected Directors:; F. French, A. Y. Stout,: T, H. Porter, A. B, Graves, B. A. , Lancaster, J. S. Whedbee, Branuen Matthews, D, R. Mnrchison, C. M. Bted-, rnanVM.'Pf.Leak.Dl W; Oates. "M'jf'f 'At a Subsequent meeting of the Directors the following were reelected ofQcera: i30 l: R. Murchison, President, i .: ' . j j X i -Y.' Q. JobnBon. General Superintendent: James. Anderson, Treasurer. . -, I , ' f-. P. -W Clark, General Freight and Pasi jenger Agent. Beportea Wnmlfldn Wnar FlfTUle pied by a number or bad characters, and sobn thereafter the report of .a gun. was heard in tbat direction, which was follow ed subsequently by the discovery of the corpse of another colored ' man in the road a short 'distance from the locality referred to. These are the somewhat vague and ua- aausfactoiy. reports thtt come .to ins, our inf ormant not knowing the names of the parties or any. additional particulars. An. Eipeeted .Visit-sugareatioat. ! &e i We learn that Goy. Jarvis is expected to pay a visit iw, iuib vnjr oump uuio .u juvj and Unas been suggested that it would be well to invite "the State Geologist, the Pre Isidentpf the University JJt Charles w . MDUBy, tfr,,vii LRt:?iTt I tha 'Governor in "the' bronosed trip and I have been hroni?ht to lleht in 4 this section I within the last- few years, not me leasi 01 which ISithe remarkable; phenomenon alT indedto a lew days ago as navmg ueen rgMSiS SSdSS. 1 aain to exist in me waters m iub 7. bood bt the Frying Pan Bhoali onourtof 1 mediate coast ;r mveryj iacuy wouio oe I afforded them in their explorations, and the 1 cerned, as wen as prouueuye or penem w w r a tMTBTllarB nr wniwnnR - - - - TJent. Panl. Assistant Lighthouse In Bpector. returned: to Baltimore on the 27th muV frnrn ft tonr of the North Carolina j gJoere he has been looking, after l tne iaoys and beacons. 11 He reports that I Dui Imhv in' Paennnt.ank river.'- f-V fr0ni aired- spar. 4 Miles' Point buoy ha been removed, and Blufl Foint buoy nas -h- -,hio-Aii to second-class can. First Bar buoy, at tne entrance w xiorui v n h hnnn . removed ; because it . was w--fejr.-- T, ;imD0BS:Difl I keep it io place on account of the rafts. 1 The iron inner buoy in Alugator 1 : . a .aK aaa4 aa BMaltJt rk fi 0 haan tmnoraril V - BUbStilUtCd. hnova of the-'Paaauotank . river bave been nl.ual anil urn In ffOOd DOBltion. LieUt. Paul says the new gaslit beacons work like a charm. : .if.-: .t PCUSONAL. f I Senator Brown seems to enjoy the deadlock. He is collecting material for another speech. ! r Of all the Generals of the Mexi can' waff.tmlvl two! Jurvive-Ge".. Harney, f Rt Trfinia. acred eiehtvone. and Oen. Patterson, of Philadelphia, aged eight-nine. it uol. JPTea wans uas - iei vm- I cagn f or.New York,.wbere he goes to as- - I " . a 1 a.l . Itl.aFaa WAAAfl sume tne presiaency OI. eJf ST 1 Jarrow-gaagc rwiuiuau -"J- ' i ' " 1 r l.liVU' .T.iKia : KnhmSMl mhn i in mmrmm v m ta BfiMnwiniion ma nnrnnoa warrra hehilsj e amirabltfcrder and- thmen 5junflt0Dend to their task. , i ; I r ' 1" T T? ?VT . ' ! : ; k - I j . wen. wrans was giveu a uauueii at tbe City or Mexico,' April -zaa,' by Jose Iianiannir, who iaweUJtadwn as beiog a clairnapt for thafland pn.iwhich vSan Franclaco ; stands.. Another . and. larger banquet was -given GerfGratt "and" tbe4 Hon. Matiaa Romero bv the Senators and Deputies fromCSxaca;'7 iooi-vi-"'3!f I Died? April 23d, near his j rest- . dence in" Warren "courity Mr.- Jame9 T. : TwiCtKiS fh;6th jear,Qf hia age.j-. 3. r u lialeigh Record : - Senator Zeb- i ulon Bnrt31&OkU9i44sterday. i The Goverpor i& looking as bale And hearty h asuauai.i tVi .'tji Warsaw Brief Mention: iJaoob i Tayfo'K -Esq".; 6f Magnolia Township, tlied n at nlTesWen6e on : iaC Thuraday nlbt, in thlgWyeigbth yeart iiie ae.-n tle was a' soldier in the war of d812 and oce of the few left MfcltUey tBiabop, residing,, near -Magnolia, now in bis ninety- second year, , being the only surviver in this county, we believe. WliUaoMoUbb. E-a. t-f I Samp- 1 son coantyVtDut , the same .age as Mr. ; Bishop, is the only survivor In that county,' as far as our knowledge goeB. TbnV one , ' by .one these, .gallant?, men ro- .1813 . bave ; pasaedjaway.until-onlyAone here nd there, temaica. tr-Ty lor wa a most ex emplary man iaeVefy resjpecC " f -"' ' " XRfttighrMinniri fti .Mechanic;- Thirty-five coavjcts.at the- Louishurg re vival. .We are'pleased to learn that a . new i6vel. of instructive tendencies; en- UUeditt Day long Ago," by -Mrs. Sarah J EU' Em6tt,"ol Tjxford; Granville ! county,' ' author 6;yMr EllitfttXPouse pfeM and. alsoxaeveratusefulittventions, will ap pear thirweekTrom'ln'e" presB of 1 Messrs." Uzreir a&TJSiteyi x8 Fifty .Dollars in GoidThat's .the. amount, my f young frlehdttbat yoUaymr irtrnmarried, and-hoteyaaxiaif ga.it you: wear breeebea by hriogiig toihe State Fair, the greatest varfetyof -products ' Ofyolir own- hand8.V -'A&dZU&sstd pd Jje&t lot iil bring 35 in .gold,-v ; ,i,., . j , X'i: . Concord SunV 'M.eikra.' Od'ellan ' Col' are manufacturing as nice goods as eg ' be found on any market and are ibcreaslna their capacity giving employment to -great number of bands and spending .thou. ' sands yearly fpr the staple and for supplies JackBlack," at Rocky River" Factory, is doing the same thing. Still there is room for several more, . and we wish to see this scheme "pushed to' completion; -A young miner by the name of Gray met with' a serious accident at tbe rbceniX last Mon-. day.; 'While down In tbe mine a" rock be-'-came dislodged.and fell on him, crushing him to the ground, . He was taken out and. received medical attention from Dr. Fiok,- who ronnd Gray a spine,; eboulder and face injured,- ; f f, -: . . . . . .,, ) f . I , Asheville American:, A correspon-. dent" Of the Observer stales that $2,000 has . been subscribed In : Charlotte to purchase .' votes for prohibition candidates. Can that " be', possible t " Success in that manner' woulcLbe worse than tbe evil sought to be removed. We have never-observed the Wheat crop in this vicinity more prom--' ising atthiaseason.of the year.fc-r -Nine; - hundred and nrty dollars in .special pre? miums are offered for cotton and tobacco through the North Carolina State Agricul tural Society.. Simonton Female Col lege will close its spring session with -the commencement exercises on tbe 25th and 26th of May, after a most prosperous 'ses sion of several years. 1 Kev. ; is. Jordon, of.; Henderson, Granville county, will de liver tbe literary address oo the evening of ' the 25th. - - - - I t j - otecasi Patron: " There are nine live subordinate Granges in North ampton county, six of which have an aver age of seventy ; members each tbe total membership of theOrder in the county being about 525. v i The Wesley an Fe- male College at -Mwfreesboro has nearly reached completion, and, will be ready for . use by the" "fall " session." Dr.' J; C Law rence is in New Tork,' ::soliciling funds to furnish it,.- - Tbe analyses made by u. W. Dabney. .Jr.. 8tate-CheniliVdiBClj0ses the fact that the average coraraersial valua of feriiuzera sold in this state la about 33 per ton .' Now these fertilizers are sold to the Xanana ny -agents;- ia- 45 to 07 oouws pet$ ton payable the 1st of November. It is readily seen that, for a credit of 8 nronths,: we pay from dial to. per cenrj it .lor. our manures. -I 'Mr. George - Allen, of New Berne,write to tbe NewTork Boulh: 'W are pleased tujepdrt considerable progress in this section- Immigrants from Holland, England, Michigan, Illinois and Virginia are settling in ibis eounty,j Nearly two hundred persons havaJheenadded to the population of Craven county by immigra- tion 'during the- past year--uneap- lands, ten months for double crop, fine -climate, and splendid shipping facilities for truck and other produce, are bound to make this section .of North Carolina prosperous. This can be considered our ronrth year or trncK- ing. and my estimate of the present crop is 1,000 acres of peas, 700 Early (Rose pota- r toes, 800 berries, tomatoes, icacamDers, melons, etc., etc. 2,500 acres in all. t Our , prospect or a good crop is fine. ' The ! en tire 2,500 acres will be followed by cotton v or.corn! nr.rini.l1' .i.u.'ij!i.;'i.iL If.-iW.' 1 r The following story is related by the Washington correspondent of the At lanta : Constitution : ;- "Tbe other I evening I Witnessed an Incident which was an ) elo quent answer to the slanders of the South-' era people on the- negro question.' I iwaa ." stapdingin the Metropolitan. Hotel when an aged neero went up to. Gen. Ransom and genial Zeb. Vance, who were conversing in the lobby. In a few minutes I saw them go but with tbe old " negro" between them,' ; Just as if he were a United-Stales 'Senator, -take him into a ticket ofSce next door, bay him a ticket to Charlotte, and ! put him' in i a back which took him to the depot with a; crisp $5 bill in his hand. He had been in .Virginia for some time, but IOnged for his ' home in the Old North State, telling Vance that he wanted to die ,'on the old plantar tidu.M ' ' ; j ' : Laurinburg - Enterprise'. iThere are two crazy . women one white and one black running at large in our town, j Tbe replanting of corn in some localities In this section is necessary ; corn: planted three weeks ago has not made its appearance above the surface of ground yet. We understand that the commissioners of this ; county will, refuse to renew "the licenses of retail liquor dealers until after the election in August.,: A , little negro boy ten years of age shot and killed an infant son of Mr; John H..Hont of Cleveland county, r last Tuesday. It is supposed to have been an accident. The present session of -of Lauriaburg High Schoot will close on , Thursday, Jane the 2nd. Rev. Dr. Pritch- ard, ' President ot- Wake--Foreat College, will deliver the address before the school at 11 A M., and tbe declamation by tbe Phil otecnic Society and the- awarding of the ! Walter H. l?eal medal to the best declaim". er.'wiU occur at night. ".; A X J ; ; I JU Qolisoto Mmenger: : We learn ' that the new Fire Engine is expected f here about the 10th or 15th of May next; At a meeting of tbe Board of Commissioners held on Tuesday, Mr. Chas. Dewey was elected Superintendent of the Goldsboro Fire De partment - We showed recently tbat Graded Schools were superior; to: others in the five points of economy, quality of in struction, quantity of instruction, discipline, 1 -and the stimulus which; it gave rise to. A gosling with four well developed legs and feet was brought to' this office last Saturday. : ? We. learn .that a negro by the name of Abraham Thompson.yesterday -dealt Mr. Joseph Mahler a blow on the head v with a3og hook, inflicting a serious woaod' that may prove faUl. 'Last night's mail i brines us a letter from J; B. Brown &.Co. . wholesale liquor dealers, Baltimore, offer ing to add 200 to. 300 subscriptions to our lists if we would publish 'good matter in ; 'opposition , to Prohibition, to be furnished . us from time to time." ' We care not about bargaining just now, and have turned the proposition over to Bro. Robey, , of the -Meutodte Advance, who edits a' most excel '. lent Prohibition paper, i .! w. I i ',1r 'l 4 5 i i i 1 s VI