Newspapers / The Weekly Record (Magnolia, … / April 13, 1876, edition 1 / Page 2
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' ' v.. - 2b . 4 .kSC. Editors. OUR CAlfDIDAT; FOB' PRU DENT The ji ipers aref having a great de t0 jay, jc.t now, as to who .hali be nominated at St. Louis, as CnU htc for the Presidency of the Kepob Iir. Some of the journal seem to think it essential that a. specie basis shall be adopted on the currency qaes- ;,. sarifl that a hard money man suau l,e nominated. Others think the candidate must come from particular State or ection. We are ratisfied that the first position is all wrong. The currency jluik of the platform ought tD be, and we presume will be, a compromise between the hard money and soft money men. We do not think there is much difference be tween democrats about this matter, when they : understand each other Wo iinntim tlat enjrv - Icraocnat wants a hard monei basis; bat ettrry tlerrfjcrat, who thinks a little, huat know that an immediate return to specie payments is impossible, and would l)o absolutely ruinous to the country. And it will not do fur the parly to take the position, that those democrats who are opposed to imme diate resumption, can be ignored, and east ofl and repudiated. The World takes snih position when it declares that the democrats can elect their candidate without the "greenback'' men. Our party ought to have, and we believe will have, more judgment than act in any such way. We ought (o ho manage as to invite and secure the co-operation of all who are op posed to the present corrupt, extrava gant, unprincipled set who control the ;nniuit. We must have the manual plank of out platform such as every democrat can'' stand upon, a id not, by an expression of the ultra (1 cti iiies of the hard money men, drive out the greenback men. There in no i.-e of any micli course. It this siilj'.rt cannot be ignored, let it be stated so that ail can accept it, as it can be done. Then us' to the can didate; all we need id a statesman ,nd patriot. A man with Jetfersonian principles. One who is uncontarni nated by frauds and official corrup t'ons, and who sets the Constitution of the Country above everything else, and whose life has been devoted to to princrfttTS vS-tiie" dtfniDetac; w want no time-server, but a man of principle, and whose course has been actuated by principle, and not by de sire for plaiw n;t th'i candidate be themaii'to whom the hearts of the people turn because of his devotion to principle, truth, honor, virtue, Con stitutional liberty,, and he will be elected, be it Bayard, Tildeu, Thnr- i.ian, Hendricks, Hancock, Black, or any other similar man. It matters not in what stale lie live;, so it is nort i of Maiun and Dixoa's line, and h s record is n it such as to arouse the fanatical war spirit against him. We wa-.t a Matesmun, not a dema gog, le a man whose record shows devotion t principle, not a time-server a man the people week, love aud admire, not the man of a clique, or "taction, or section. Such a man, we hope and believe, will La given US, ami w.ll bj triumphantly elected. Connecticut Election We lake coinage at the nsult in Connecticut It is true that Gov. I liters 1 1 has Iwuu elected by a re duced majority; but th two thousand Kieet.backi r-t, who in tlir madness, vutvd fur u eandiUie who hsd noj chance, but who might have defeated: the regular Democratic candidate, ad ded to his majority, would lucres , rather than diminish, his former vote, While we d.i not recoguizo th.-se, uo'r a y other bolters, as"good Democrats. n the Xtivember isUction. they will vote for the regular cuudfdafrj Again, the democrats bFincraaad their majority in 'the WMltart, OB joint ballot, by about fortT; which Is M-ry enconraginj, ft, wn r.m. nibc that the LegiatBre Voald have chosen ,he Governor, if thete u:ul U-en no c'toice hv .1 . and that a V. S. f ' We kn w th.t :.ni. Chosen. U!K" '"vt .e admadstrutiouHele coace, fated um U,e S.a,e, and ii.tiilst:..H,,,glK. trcmt4ylB saes Tcndent upon the result, the democrats, ulon the whole, have Bhown au increase o! Mten .h We feel pcatly e.oraged, and our hopes foi the political .alvatiot, of fa trv arc mnHi m. 11,.. New Ilampshir, went radical m the faceof the revelation ui me nagrant and stupendous 1 -i.iaio.ui of the Ifcpub' c ... party, from I Orant down, we arin st !ost hope- be j eausewe fe:UCi, p . ' j eaough vote.s, wi,.., c-,.dJ M. unffu uooglt, j n. stagings, V A. MOORE. .rnv .. ...AFBIi. JlLi!!!; to sustain the corntptionisU in office. Glorious old Connecticut baa shown that this is sot so, and thai a majority of her citieMf least, re incorrup tible and nnparcliassble. All honor t Connecticuttl Let every State emulate her BUe example! VTliere is hope that tbe'conirtry may be re deemed. She has inspired i', and every patriotic heartf beats " more quickly, and every patriotic hand is readier to f tnae more certainty ana strongly than before. We must -win this fight. We must win in the gen eral election, and, above all, we must win in North Ca&oux. We copy the following from the Wilmington Journal. The brief con ments of the journal express our views exactly. The Journal has never attempted to vindicate the cbaractei of the dis4 tinguisbed, irreproachable Senator from xiorth usronna. u neeaea no vindication. In his own State5 where he is known, and -' where Ida lendid abilities and, spotless integrity, Se attracted to him the love and "admira tion of the entire people, such a work of attempted vindication would have been uselew, chiiaisD. ntn n may ue of some interest to our readers to-see in what light the newspaper press, of other States, without distinction.of party, view this malignant attack on ope of the most eminent members of the United States Senate one of the purest men living. The Washington City Chronicle, a Republican paper of "the most strictest sect,'' published by that great light of Republicanism, John W. Forney, thus treats the con temptible charge against General Ransom: "Bo thou m chaste as ice, and pure m miow, Thou ahait not 'gespe calumny." "The great Bard of Avon never wrote more truthful lines than these; and while we feel anxious that "no guilty man shall escape," we also feel that every pure-hearted and hon orable man will frown down any un deserved attack upon the character of the good and innocent. In the State of which Gen. Ransom is a native, and which he so nobly repre sents, we are assured that there is not a man, woman or child who gives any credence for a moment to so un just a charge. In this we have not seen any one of any party wno does not deprecate such vile slander. Not a single paper in the city has noticed it, fond as some of them are of any thing to produce a sensation. Nor would we do so except to express our contempt for such conduct and our admiration for the high-minded, chivalric bearing of Senator Ransom who wins all who approach him by the suavitviof bis manners and genial native modesty of his character Hie' has not been obtrusive in the Senate; but we had the pleasure of hearing him address the Senate (Feb. 17, 1875,) on 'tho South faithful to her duties,' and we were sensibly remin ded of the days of Clay, Calhoun and Webster. We then said, and now believe, that no such speech had been made within the last decade, aud re cently Mr. Morrill, a political oppo nent, declared in the Senate that it was a speech unequalled in eloquence, unparrajjelett ju patriotism. No Senator is niovp pespected. or more popular; but there ar soie insects so depraved in temper that tliev ex tract venom from the fairest flowers of Nature." Iu connection with the above ex tract from the Chronicle, we make the following a Is from the New York World- The latest folly is a chargo against Senator Ransom, of North Carolina, that he paip ex-Governor Vance $2, 500 to resign his position as Senator elect in order that he (Ransom) might be elected jn hjs place When Vance was elected by the legislature of North Carolina to the United States Senate, to succeed Abbott, and on March 4,1871 applied for admission, evedofhis pom' bill t. relieve k T?ri;.l be bad nat been relieved cal disabilities, and him Wai defeated by the Radical maj rity in order o keep hpu out of ills c4. mbcu uic.i ucurriuiuu tion to exclude htm was thus made known, Mr. Vance resigned in order to allow his State to b.; represented in the Senate, and in January, 1875, Gen, Ranaotti was ejected by the Legisla ture of his State, jind alter . a close contest, in whiek. hia present col league, Jedge Merritnon, and Mr Warp'n were hit e .nrpetttors (having bora aaalaired of his political dwabW IUe9 Caee two yeare. bufure,! ptaseut ed hfrrr.lffor admuaion, tna after a Jbcxst d!y of three zoootha wa adxsittedto Ilia scat on Aprd 24. 1872 On & 47 following Mr, Bayard, of Daiawale, introduced a resolotjoi that ' Eausuni should receive pay from March 4, 1871, which was referred to ile Committee on Priv ileges and Elections. Not until June 4 committee report, and by a report siguod Uyiiu,, Thur niau, Anthony, II ll,OaTpeutcr,Logan aud ilice approved tlio resolution. It was well known to tuauy members of tiu Senate that Mr. Ransom, be lieving Mr, Yapp to hare been justly entitled q his scat, aiu haf hp had been kept at great expense in Wash ington urging his clams t it 111 vaiu, inu uled, aud proclaimed his inten. Uoij, in ca ? the resolution should be "greed t laux oyor to Mr.-Yancc the full ammnt of pay accyucd xjp o tle date uf h'. (V or was te tuia generously ud voluntarily rauier attcmptea to do, far the full um ( about fti onoN u'cu 1 auce i.c reinsea to re hx,TeJt.Hl snbsexjuently consented to take one-balrtlie amount Thus an act ol gciu resity ami justice which is quite beyond the conception of the originators of this false ami malici-ms charge against two honorable gentle men, is sought to be pervcrtel fr their injury. When the t ue fads. however, are thus made known, .n.th ing but what U highly c; editable to the go Kl feeling and ,encroity ot Mr. Hansom" will be perceived in ih affair. Neither Ransom nor Van.e kuew, or could have known, that the pay frm March 4, 1871, to January 1872, would ever be allowed by the Senate to Ransom. The resolution was introduced by Mr. Bayard with out Mr. Ransom's knowledge or privity, and when informed of its object he at once stated: "If I get that money 1 shall give it to Vance." To all who know hii nature the re mark will seem characteristic of the man, aud the real transaction is in strange contrast with the poor, mean spirit which could seek to erect an injurious calumny upon a basis so really noble and worthy." "Plantation Manners-" Mr. Boutwel', of Massachusetts, is what Mr. Ilosea Bigelow would call "a dreffin smart man," and, in his time, has played many p-irta. But 'It is to be doubted whether he did not go beyond himself and ' bile oft more than he could chaw" when he under took to lecture Mr. Bayard, of Dela ware, in the irt and science of senato rial deportment. There is something irresistibly funuy in this under bred New Englander'a conceit. The an tithesis, however, is perfect; for if there be such a thing as a piincely American gentleman, the Democratic statesman has a claim upon the character, and is fairly deseribable as one of the princeliest. But Mr.. Bontwell did not slop with an ill-tempered rebuke of Mr. Bayard. He turned upon slavery and the slavc driveis, and gave the Senate iu his own person a Yankeefied conception of "plantation manners." This was very good. The North used to tend us our overseers i:i the old regime, and their manrers were of the worst But they were up to the lull murk of the class from which they, and. the Republican leaders of the present day, were taken. Indeed, if slavery still existed, the men who have been ruling-tbe roost at, Washington would be cracking equally venal lashes over the backs of our negroes The Records of Congress show that dignity and courtesy was the rule in debate until the advent of the Repub lican party. From 1850 to 1860 the tone changed and deepened; and it was the Republicans who made it vicions and vulgar. Still, there was a sense of decorum left until the South disappeared from the scene, and the men whose manners Mr. Buiitwell extols occupied it all to themselves. Then there was a not of ''plantation the Southland back again, oy ovprser class. The restiiunrTf&tSar of personal accountability being with drawn, the bad passions of bad men found their vent. These low fellows indulged themselves. They whacked each other with adjective and adverb, smiled, made up, fell out again, and went to it as before. For filteen years the proceedings have been full uf shocking personal episodes. The spirit of unjustilu d and irresponsible insult has been perpetual. It has become imposssible for a Republican in either house to speak upon any sectional topic and speak like a gen-' tlemau. The moment one of them touches upor, such- topics he brawls and bullies and shows himself to be thoroughly mean and coarse. Ibis may be said of he best of them A to the worst nothing elso could be expecttd. Men who owe their origin to the leveling iouuenees of war are likely to be warlike when there is no enemy in thuir l'timf. Mr. Bouiwell should have e riched his lecture on manners by a few illus trations from the men around about him. lie should have compared the noisy Gordon with the spotless Spen cer. He should have dia vn a d ima ging comparison in fay or of puritan man nt rs between Maxey and Clayton should hve shown ut tlio turbu- ce ..r Stevenson the red-Jni.ded irreconcilability of Kansom, tiie abu sive vehemence of Co per, on the one hand? aiif tle meekness (f Morton, he amiability of tonkjlng, and Ulu chaste moderation 'i Logan on the other. He uvghl b ive gone into the Houoe aid piinied to lb? uifliatdy Laio;ir and the in l ti'-, polishe.l and Coiirlg his Blaine. Zaeh Cliandl-T is no long-;, iu the Senate to mtand as a beantitu', living tnouumi-nt ot the graces and vinuesof a public career. I'he pUcid. pitiiotie words of a But ler, a Bingham and a Pomery sre 1.0 longer to'be heard cheering the heart, in rigor a tin r the intellect and elevating the-thought -nd purpose of debate But in tin ir , stead such savages a Withers and Jolmston. of Virginia, Merriwm, :J N.r;rlS! i!:,r ! N"1 wiHJ.I, ! ( o gb, Key, uf Teum-see, ami Ooldibwait", ofAbtba;;j 1, ,wh keep tie Seriate bid. ous by fter howling, c imuiunicating their "hd,iiita tioii tiiatn.eis" to Thuruun and Ier imii. U C'ovyn 4-rS;ry keeps Us ii, perpetual fear lest be break out s,orqe day in spite of the moderating influ ence of X'oi tun and the g.mial sOvietv tit C'onkling Mr Ihmtw. II should eitiier hold l is leciifii- taj-k b r u vis:o;i o. pr pan another. If '. lvo. !, e..er: th u!d llu'., rather tha i miss the thing that is wa ! d, why, should b- wdliti'- to li-t. n to l.'-uaii.- v . u - , Mb"' , hw vt r. to jesting. The IUH is a fHl yUr, g"llf ti!-'- ": uatirf," ui ijiual g-H d lreedipg then is a nrS"poJy anywhere. There arc ill-inanne.ed people cnoou'j both North and Suth. The Nt.tn, lo-Avwr, st nds iK wrst in-, l. int p .i"ies, Jtie S 11 U its Usi: s ithit Im '.i t h- ft- scourings of 'Northern society in Congress undertake t deliver Iwmi lics upon courtesy (hey make them selves ridiculous. That is alL-Cou ricr-Journal. ' ; Tl i e Exit of A me.. Adelbert Ame, the son-in-law of hut father in-law, has, on his own motion, stepped down and out. Tnu3 at last Mississippi is rid of a disgrace and a distiefcs. Ames can not be fairly des cribed as a monster, or a gorgon, or a griffin. Among beasts he would rank as a juvenile harpy; among sores as an irritating wart. He could never, for all his viciousnesg, rise to the dignity of the buzzard, or the inflammability of the carbuncle. He was Mississippi's bete mir; the debble in her shoe; the fly in her ointment: the bee in her bonnet. He lia3 thrown up the sponge and presently he will be "gonested away." Of him the camp-mecting Mississippians may now feinj: 'Eolloiif roll on! sweet moments, roll on! And let the poor dinner go home, go Jiome." He did a power o' mischief iu a small way; but like Mr. Booth's little friend, Richard the second, he Las conic "down, down! wanting the man age of unruly jades," A year hence peopfe vvill'5skVrAmet Arnes? Why, wasn't there a chap of that name married a daughter of Ben Butler?'' This voluutary retirement of Ame leaves Kellogg the last ot the carpet bag Mohicans who went South, "some 0:1 'em for offiis, an' some 0:1 'em votes," nnd who, for ten years, have scattered demoralization and disaster throughout that unhappy section. The gratuitous malevolence of RaJi calism and the well-setoose of scoundrelism begot tcj54txtton. The world has never known anything halt so barbarous and cruel. "It lev' eled the greatestof political offenders with the le:tst, brought the least up to the standpoint of the greatest, and struck at the population en masse It made tho baby in its cradle the peer of the general i'i the !:eld dhe ruin of both being its ultimatum. Nor was it content with wasting the sub stance of the country by confiscatory taxes, by destroying its "land with its labor system, by debasing its man hood by disgracing itg standard; but it set to work to corrupt the currents of political life at their source, placing the bottom of society on top. The result we have seen. That result the North the cruel, vindictive, uncal culating North is now feeling, and, before tins foul crime is. answer ed in the sight of God, shall feel either in a bloody revolution, over turning the rcpu blic, or in a direr misfortune still, the repudiation of the National credit, universal bankruptcy, agragrianisrn, anarchy, and all things that have befallen its -neighbo s on this side of the line. This in its pyer. .-. jAmes goes and Kellogg taf-iiie foolish masses ?!?0:?&A& are .made to 1 Jtoce,", and quences of Uifir mad lolly, lhey are preparing to make another campaign of hate. Belike, they will wiu it. The bloody shirt, like the red rag of Riga, has wondrous poA-er yet. and they are flourishing it in all their con ventions. But if they win, their vic tory will be 1 heir ruin. "Robespierre,'' aid Desmares, '"I die because thepeo pie 'iavc lost their reason. Yru will di when they recover it' ' It was Mr. Blaine who, as a set-off against the exclusion of Jeflerson Davis from amnesty, charged th.at the Democrats of Mississippi were about to outlaw Governor Ames, having al ready outjawed Ciovcvnor llolden. It is this Xmfusion of ideas in the avt rage Republican mind which car ries the most intelligent of the Repub lican politicians astray and is slowly misleading ami corrupting the Noith ein iniud. The South has been de moralised by inisfurtu;. and debauch ed by the political machineiy set up during the reconstruction epoch. The North is undergoing the react ionary, or reflected process It is heedless because it is still unconscious of what 'ails it, and dismisses the warnings which rt,mc 10 it as "the raving of traitors.'' Last year, while contending for sound money aud opposing inflation, we declared ihat inflation - meant repudiation. So it does, and the next tim? the rag baby crresrcpudiatioti vviI be Mie wuid. ''Down with the National debt" a id ' Down with the R public" are synonm ns ;md c mvertable terms, and by tin ir sectional course the iii publieatis are doing, all lhe cuii to makethein pr-.-sen; and real CdurWtRfurrial. Wiulv Seaator Bjutwcll, who rat tles around iu the eitof Webster, i. preparing ts campuign of invtstiga- tion tuto the purity of electious in Mississippi, a few members of the nous.? of -Representatives- might be well weeuped in investigating the purity of the election l.y which Bout Well, aher his itrp uiiinigns ictreat from the Tivasury, contrived to get himself returned to tho Senate. An unpleasant story was unearthed yes terday' ol h I t le operation between Bontwell an lbuler, in virtue of MlrcVl'mlci's Bertram., Jayne, is said to have Jaiu hands upon $25,000 as a condition preliminary to the Sen atoiial Success of I xitwcll. " It must by highly gratifying to ihe friends ol Mr. Richard Henry Dana to reflect tba- B. uUt ll W;is Lis leading cham ,ii n 111 t.,e jJknaiii un ' two great questions of good .breeding aud ol integrity World. ;hinds rs -rccuid wa.V t: at of a ii-unkei., d qsulult; aj;d ttc pfilili clan. II- h .t j,0 1, c,,Rt by his p.irij his ,iWn S.t , anti yet his .IP iiiiuicui . iiu -iuteii r Depart 11. nt ws roc..' md as a i,ivat kign o. the roruUti; w'u;ih we mc told isg;ii on within liie Rev ml Kcan party. HU blnfl brarty-Itonesty was commend d eometUiug, . beyond price, and now we have him contrib uting $1,000 to aid BabcockV cscapo fromrjustice, Te man whom the counttyThas ajljnded guilty after the jury had 'acquitted him, and -wfom e'cn Grunt abandoned, is made tho object of his bounty: What ii 13b Cock to him Jr he ti B.ncjick, that he should give sorb a sum to pay the lawyers who kept that gentlem in oat of the penitentiary ? The Persians for a long time obey ed a lunatic as a king; and whenever he drove a spear through a courtier by way of amusement, the attendants carried out the carcass, returned with a salaam, and waited patiently for the next expression of imperial eccentri city. They did not dream that their ruler was a madman. The slowness T7ith which the American people have oeen able to natize tt;e true character of their present ralers is soaiM8 morp rpm.i rt-iV'f fir wi Eastern awe for those in author ify'.fov. blind us. However, it ought to be prett' idain by this time to the dul lest comprehension that the country is in charge of persons more closely resembling Australian tieket-of leave men than statekmeu. World Just as we go to press, ami to Ifte for insertion in this issue, we secure the 11 i!eig"'i New, wit'i u i.ew charge against Uowerton, Secret arv of Slate. Itf.eems that Uowerton, last Novem ber, charged the State $2.25 per yard for carpeting which ould .have hcen delivered in Raleigh for $1.25. The bills were made out by Geo. Bro.vu Sc Co., New York, and Mr. J. Turner Morehead writes the Neic.i that Geo Brown & Co., never had an existence in that City as no such firm is found in the City directory. Morganton Blade. The Republican papers aie busy trying i ligure out Republican gains in the Connecticut election. The Dem ocracy of 1h:it State send back the response, as a Centennial greeting; that they have 43 more majority on joint ballot in the Legislature than last year ; that they have secured a Democratic Governor, Democratic State officers, 15 Democratic majority in the Senate, 74 Democratic majori ty in the house, and a Democratic United States Senator. The Repub licans are welcome to all the comfort tliey can obtain from these fact'. The Detroit Post: "The Demo cratic House this winter Ins demon strated to the American people that the Democratic party is wholly unfit to be trusted with the control of the Government.'' Yes, even with its present limited control, unless a speedy stop is put to its infernal pry ing nonsense, it is likely tD land the biggest part of the Government in the penitentiary. Courier-Journal . The pigheaded nets' of Ue Senate is likely to defeat whatever reform meas ures may get trough the House. Instead of seeking to correct the errors that m'av be committed bv the lower house, and working m harmony with it, the policy of these wooden statesmen seems to be to squelch everything that comes from that body. The Republican Journals of Yer mont are complaining bitterly that their State Convention was captured by the-"bummer" element, and did not represent the party at all. - But then as the hummer element usually captures tho Republican State Con ventions ther; was nn hsj tor these Yermonters to get mad. They ought to be used to the thing by this time. Wil. Star. Charges hae been made against Col. Pool, Superintendent u' Public Instruction, for misapplication of tin Peal ody Fui. (is, which have come into his hands. Col.Pool only asks a stay ot judgment f.r a d-ty oi' two, u.itil he can hear from Dr.. Sevs, when,' he says, he well completely vindicate himself, which we feel sur-e' hi will do. f 'ihe New York Sun savs three months of-a. Democratic majority in the House has made it as impossible for any candidate for the Presidency who favored or atered or used 01 protected fJ rant ism, to be elected, for Grant hi 1 se'f to gt a nomina tion for a third term. Governor Tihl. n, on the 6th inst. giiinted a respite until "the 2 1st insfi to John Dftlan, convietetL and sen tenced, tii. 1A ItAttitttuL ilio. of James II. Noe in New York last summer. It was rumored in Was'tiiigton on the 7lh lha Secretary l'Uistow had resigned for the reason that General Henderson had testified that the Sec retary had deel ired to him that he had w confidence in the Adm'mistia tion. Secretary liristow will now be re quired to explain how he I as spent the $30:1,000 alllowed lat year fcr fuel and lights. An pposition ma jority is always so very inquisitive! NEW AbYKRTISEMENTS. s 1 r dav at h rne. Ase its wa ittd. Oat Li- St and tvrui, free. TurE A CV, Au UEta, Maine. ly - DANIEL F. liE.vTi'V W.tslihito i. v. J. r s. v WILL SELL QS EXCHANGE. ik w.si i. r a c -mi. r i. iue l 6i e iuc luca io w .ud d by ad i; g, Post ufct.x- B -, N- l, IreaontS. C. goto 30 i o tfand, 3 ainr I e djj b. fcu. wo: hit f-ee. K. a u d 22-in MISCELLANEOUS. iiUiiil 1 D tooia moneyjfAaJrcs, U. 8. SAPETT POnEET CO. Seirtrk, IT. J. WANTED AGENTS For the Great HISTORY to ths close of tlio first jag years of our Na tional Independence, inoludiug .n account; of the coming Grand Cedtfuoial Exhibition, 700 pKc, lice eagrfcving, low price, quick pa&c, liitra terms. Send for circular. 1. W. Zxxa les & Co., 513 Area 5L, FhuWPa. 4w A FARM ONE AND A HALF MIiES FE0H MAGNOLIA. Xt cont abont 279 acreo, SO of which are JL fee Bvr About one-third of the whole is cleared.. lkl rT.rltn. e Dwelling: ia & large, comfartt- nftjrooa renau. mere are au tac e&t-koused 11 T. Tbcra is aa orchard 01 Apples, and F, ,w, aiad a Vineyard of Scup iChere are jjood spools ia ortunity for a profitable in- eft aia can Da uaa. A pan or a J. STALLDfGS, Aot Magnolia. " BEATTY'S PARLOR ORGANS., r EL.KGANT STYFjKS, with Taluablo Im- proTeaients. Kew assd lieautifnl Solo Stops OVEftOXJ$TnGU$AD Organist pd Slaai ciaas iad33 theso organs and recommend them as BTIilCTLY FI1WT CLASS 4n Tona, Mechanism aad Durability. Warranted for six years. Most Elegant and Latest Improved, IHvobeen award;d tho HIGIIE3T TREMI UJLs ia ;ora-M3titd3a witli othara for Simplicity, Durability, Promptness, AND PIAITO-LIKE ACTION PUKE. SWEET, r.a.l ETESKV BALANCED TONE, ORClIESTItAL EFFEttTS, and INS TANTAKEOUS ACCEbS WHICH MAY BE HAD TO THE REEDS. Send for Prico List. Address, DANIEL F. BEATTY, Wasbingtoa, New Jersey, U.S. A. MJJtlS. i. 1 W IsTrfttt liished in lWi0. PHOTOGUAI'IIERS, first-clasB, can learn sorMCthing to tlieir advantage. Addrcs, DANIEL F. iiEATTY, Wasiiinsiiaa, New Jersey, U. B. A. TJOTICE. r S. INTE1INAL REVENUE. EGIAL TAXES. May 1, 1S7(V April 1, 1870." The Revised Statutes of the United Stat'-s, 8232, 3237, S238, aud 3239, require every person engaged ia any bnsinsa, avocation, or employ ment which reiidera Uim iiable to a SPECIVl TAX. TO PROOC11E and PLACE C U N SP ICUOUSLY IN HIS ESTABLISH MENT OR PLACE OF BUSINDSS a STAMP denoting tho payment of said SPECIAL TAX for the Special Tax Year beginning May 1, 1S7G, before commencing or cjntinuiug busi ness after April 30, 1876. Tae Taxes Ejiesaced Wrrui the Teovis ioxs of the Law aeovi rooted aef. the Fol lowing, viz : " Rectifiers. '. $200 00 Dealers, lelail liquor 20 00 Daalers, wholesale liquor 100 00 Dealers in malt liquors, wholesale .. 50 60 Duaiers in malt Uquoa-a, retail 20 00 Dealers in leaf tobaooo 25 Ofl Retail dealerg in leaf tobacco 500 00 And on all sales of over $1,000. fifty cents. for every dollar in excess of $1,000. yesuermui manutaotureu tobacco 5 03 9eC2mt,ilitt. .w . r:.li(0ili And for each still manafactured 20 0 And for each worm manufactured 20 Of) Manufacturers of tobacco 10 00 Manufacturers of cigars 10 00 Peddkra of tobacco, first f l-ss ( more than two horgts or other animals) 50 00 Peddlers of tobacco, second class ( two horses or other animals,) 25 00 Pedcbers cf tobiccco, third class ( one horse or other anim?i) .. . . . 15 00 Peddlers of tobacco, fourth class ( on foot or paonc conveyance). . , , 10 GO Brewers of less than ;00 barrels. . . .50 00 Brewers or 00 Uairtls or mors 100 00 Any person iso liable, who ehall fail to com ply with the foregoing ruquirementa will b subject to Hcvcro penalties. Persons or linns hablo tap.r any of tho Spe cial Taxes named. &We mftst apply to Tbo.nas l owers, c;uuector or internai Jtieveiiuo at new Bern and pay for and pi-ocuro ths Special Tax Stamp or Stamps they need, y.rior to May 1, 1-17G, aid Without 1 vbhieb Notice." D. D, PRATT, Commissioner-of Internal Reveuu Orrici: of Internal Revestje, V,'a.shington, D. C, Feb. 1, 1876. HANOI Grant! Square and Upright. 3 AN 1 Eli. F. UEATTY, , Washington, New Jqvscy, VB. JL rjotico IS hereby given toaili-erson wboait ind cd to ma for tuition to conie at oec a settle the account and save cott. ,f W. A MOOBE WATERS' PIANOS. Giund, Square, anaURlGHT I AKE THE 'BEST MADE; the Tone, Touch, Workmanship,-and Durability - Unsurpassed. WATERS' ORGANS concerto. New Orchestral, Vesper, Chape), YSalesteakd Cymbella, cacn.irt bo excelled t tone or beauty The Concerto S'P ia a flae iifiitation of the haman voice Warranted for aix years. , - Prices i? xtromely low for cash daring 'ticjs Month. Monthly IostaUmdUta recmretj. ; 1 A Literal diseaual to TeacJiers. MinUterg. Churches, Schools, Lodges, tfo. AGENTS WANTED a peei allud nyeiwo t to tkejrtde. T S5C7- TIND ItEADDiG, rSYCHOSIAKCSY, FAS llJL CIN ATION Soal Cbirmiug, ilemnar-nn, and Marriagti Guide, khowin bow either sex may feaciiia: and gain the lore and affest.'on af any person they choose instantly, 4t0 parea By mau 5? ta. jjan & uo., 199 a. 7tt bt,. t'thia., 1'a. 4w CtLEBHTEB GOLD EX - From fin. Pool, Niagara Falk, K, Y, '-.Set ral moasliS n of tt:e tlegaa Prki Oran jou se .t me, sasiscs mc thit it ut oiit ol the lest mule, it has a riclt toxe : ita va :i run ten s ar :- most p't asaut. ' I most bcartiiy rexinn-e d yotr orftna t.-r parlor, school, ch ireb . o c thist .se, " j iits K. ceo. r. nwcU & co (sr. i Newspaper Usporter, say. : Taniel F. Batty, tha wpn luWo1, ol Wahin jio , S. i j r j ( . :i wit h the 3ri catest vigor." Mr, A. E, Benedict, e lit.-1 1 lie C rjat Bend Eerorte -, tfter:e tTJijr hi ori, wnu s : "Yen fi e : cifi Pari r Organ ca ne t a eir. f evert n.r.a'i ia- b have nu..l i aad ir i ouncd it A. Ko. I. li i$ lightly turned ;hs 'Goldea Tongue, Beat offer ertr gi rer . Xl mey n tea le 1 on ntarn of orpai od "tehi at;' i paid by tte (Dank-IF. lJ. tr;bith raysl, tmtlfie- cry, aftor a test tri? of b e dts, t rga war anted for fire yi a.s Bj -.t f jr cUei dl :U t of cettimoni-J -1 e' r bayia a parlor Crgap, DAX1ELF. i EATTi', Wash ftjan, N;w J r 7, y, h. A. Fin iminvp WiKOBliEGAI&Co I JL I DEALERS IN HiaflWARB, AGRICULTURAL " IMPLEMENTS, AND - 3VT..A. O HI 3STER Y, Keep constantly on hand a targe and Well-Selected Stock pf all good appertaining to their busi ness, and guarantee that quality ot goods and prices will compare favora bly with those of any other, Maker North or South. 1 Citizens of Eastern North Carolina are invited to examine tlieir stock b- r fore purchasing elsewhere. Irom 100 to 300 Kegs Old Domin ion and Chesapeake Nails constantly on hand at W. F. KORNEGAY & CO S. A large Stock of Sashes, Doors, an Blinds, at anufacturer's prices, for sale by W. F. KORNEGAY & CO. The largest and best assorted stock o uggy Wagon and Cart Material the State at W. F. KORNEGAY & CO S. 100 Cooking and Heating Stove for sale at WfF.lCORNEGAYfc CO'S. The very best Rubber and Leather Belting is kept at our Hardware and Machinery Depot. W. F: KORNEGAY & CO. ggyJVagon and Cart Harness a large stock, good and cheap. W. F. KORNEGAY & CO. 20Q pairs Ilames, Traces, and Col lars at W. F. KORNEGAY & CO S. White Lead, Oil, Colors, Putty and Window Glass. W. F. KORNEGAY & CO. SHAPLEY" ENGINES AND - QllEQllrTH&SOllTHiRIST KILLS sraciAvnxs wrra W. F, KORNEGAY & CO. We can supply Vertical and Hori zontal Engines and Boiler from 3 to 5Q horse power, at factory prices. W. F: KORNEGAY & CO. Our Machine Shbp is supplied with ex ' i perieuced .workmen and the' Tery best tools. Bepairing done with nea- ness and dispatcrt at reason1 able prices. ;w, f. attmtQM & co
The Weekly Record (Magnolia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 13, 1876, edition 1
2
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