Newspapers / The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, … / Jan. 8, 1882, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE WILMINGTON W. P, CAN AD AY, Proprietor. ' WILMINGTON, N. C, F 1 i. i',. . - Vice-President Davis has been siclc 'fur a few days. - "' Attorney General Brewster i in full charge ipf h U department, and things ore. eajd to be working finely. Ex-Senator Sargent, of California, is, thought to be the most prominent can didate for the Interior Department, in placa of Senator Kirkwood. . J. Stanly, lirown, jrrivate cecrciary ti the President, has tendered his TTfmaf inn 'wtiirh tins been aceeDted. " and Mr. Reed, oftfew York, will prob ably get the place. ! , 'President Arthur received on Mon day last, New Year's Day , The recep tion is said to h ave been Tery largely attended, The display was , not Tery extensive, owing to the fact of the na tion's dead President. Postmaster General; How has as sumed control of thePostoffice De partment, and will tery likely put things in order. We will not hear so much about reform now, but hare more substantial business effected tian be fore, :;V , . . ; Whitaker, the i West Point cadet is no. to be dismissed after all, he is to hare another hearing. We are glad that the Judge ' Advocate, General Swaim, had the manliness to stand by him, notwith standing the strenuous efforts made by - our aristocratic army officers to get him dismissed.' . . ; , . ' . ' m i m -if Attorney-General Brewster has an nounced his purpose of taking persona' charge of the Star Route prosecutions, and he says he shall go in the Courts and personally attend the trials in de tail. This looks like reform in the right direction, and it evidently means business. .-We mar now XDect some thing to come of the long talked of re ; form; hen such whining curs as Mc V eagn is out oi tne way, ana square rit,. it is ir4d tLat Mr.', Blaine has de jclarcd that he will not be a candidate- for the Presidency in 1884, but if the people nominate him he will accept. . In other words, tie - office must seek him, anil not him the office. You are , right,' Mr." Blaine. If you had dene r tiiat'before, you would now be Presi dent. It may be too lato now for you t succeed at your new policytime will and can ; only prore. . Yon haTe ble friends, but Tery bitter enemies You are a good manager; and by work ing quietly you may accomplish' more than you bare be working openly. . Mr. I. IX Abbott, editor of the New ' bern Lodge, published the opinion of Col; Duncan K. McKah concerning colored jurors, lie deserves credit The able opinion took up all of his . little paper, but Mr. Abbott was study r ing the interest of his people as he has Ntlwaja done, lie sacrifices personal i interest for the geueral interest of his - man In the stato who looks out more i r .l. ii . .nt. t : tivweij mo .utcrest vi mo cuioreu people than Mr. Abbott. The fact is , ue might Lave been holding a high , position and possessed of a plenty of i this world's goods if he had studied j -self more. But the day of his' reward f" is near, and we hope to see him receire the recognition that, belongs to him, and we hare no doubt he will. ; JA11YIS T1IB WAURIOK. ' Who would ever hare thought that a , man of Jmis's sge would again nn- sheath the sword. - But Jarris Is a $ great warrior, and it is necessary for r him to see blood; he cannct sleep, la fact he his not; enjoyed a squire night r for fifteen years; since killing the last ' Yankee, and his friends really got Un easy about him. Ills eyes showed fire and they knew he must hare blood; nothing but blood would soothe him, i A small glass of blood for Jarris .acts like a charm; his physician uses it With him as he wiuld paregoric with a child , la fact JarvU got so bad his (Heads rent him to Pitt to spend Christmas, and the news was sent orer the state that soma pretext most be Urealed to giro this warrior a cAojk once more to draw4 his aword and drink the blood of . his fellow man bis brother la-law is physician; he Urea at Plymoath, he determined login Jarris a chance Oa Monday, the 20th of December las. two colored men got too xanch Christ amaboard, and the elciteaeat brosjht together a crowd of good natartd bet curias people to set what the excite meat was abiut. Finally a draatta white maa struck a drunken colored man; the ccrt arrested the colored ma, t st the white caa tltj Ui gv The Colored sea wert frc!l& cacttgU ta desxaad etjpal Justice; If the coisrtd era wis arrtuti tlsyrrct kZCzzZj iIztU U ItUm tit w,lj isia sl:s!I alt te trtsul' Ci a C;:srd cati:!r rartwis c-:l liia crtillr a i. i, 1 C: tzi rti .? i.r. . M ...... r Wvundei;-lf he had done. hU duly ! e would not hare teen molested, but playing the 'smart Aleck" he got pun ished for his rmartness. If he had ad niniatersd the law with equal iustice for both the colored and white alike, hi would to day be attending to his duty but he did as thousands of his, brother Democratic officeholders are in the habit of doing using one' official spoon or the negro and another for the white manv Thix Tory justly enraged: the colored people, and in cases of greit excitement there is danger for the offenders.- The colored men in North Carolina has, as their brethren of the whob south, suffered as no people ever suffered before. Insult and .wrong hai been heaped upon them it has been stacked mountain high, and they have borne it patiently, and if they now show signs of restireness we are not surprised in fact we hare long been ex pecting it and if they are thorbughl aroused the consequences will be seri ous. Our ad Tice to the officers of the state is to gire them- their rights; equal nice in au matters, ror mere are co better citizens under the . enn than the eolored people t ? In this row one good officer could bare put a stop to the whole matter. But the occasion furnished too good an opportunity for Jama's friends to give him a chance to suck the blood of a feir negroes. His brother-in-law, got the sneak who presides OTer the town goT- ernmentat Ply mouth.to telegraphed for Jarris to send the military, and he at once ordered Colonel Cotton to proceed with his regiment, and Jarris himself drew his sword and mounted a war horse . and at the head of his military marched intoPlymouth at double quick and with red eyes he commenced hunt ing for negroes to scalp. But, low and enoia, tneir were none who were Tiolating the' law to b jarrcstcd, and his ; disappointment was . great. The men who had been enjoying Christines the day before had. all gone home.--- What was Jarris to dor In casting about for bloed,!hesaw in the lower end of the town an old negro woman with thirty or lorty children, at a can dy boiling, and he ealled around him his old guard and, with Colonel Cotton by. his side, the gallant troops dashing after him, the Gorernor stormed . the candy pot, (molasses) and it being of 5the color of blood, he immediately dc Toured a. gallon and a ba'f. The ei" feet was marrelous. He a! once calmed down, his eyes assumed their natural color, and he allowed his staff to escort him back to the war office, and tele graphed tjo his man Friday, at Raleigh that the war was orer; peace reigns in Plymouth, lie paid off the troops at cost to the state of thousands of dol lan. -twit tne uorernor is once more happy. His physician has telgraphed to Raleigh, to Dudley, to keep on hand at all ; times, plenty of warm molasses candy. By such means the doctor be lieves it will not be necessary to declare another war. " A new discovery, UOIT. FRANK 1. DaKCX. The distinguished colored Mayor o Tarboro, N, C, Hon. Frank D. Dancy, was In our city on New Years Day, and was giren a reception, by oar ; leadin colored citizens, at the residence of Mr. Wesley Arant. The gathering of the leading colored citizens was Tery large, and t&e whole affair we understand was one of the most pleasanf that eter took place in our city by our worthy colored citizens, and Mr. Dancy enjoyed the compliment exceedingly. We are de lighted that our people hare seen pre per to honor Mr. Dancy, for in doing so they but honor themseires. He is a leading man In the politics of the state, baring served in both houses of the xegtsiaiure, was chairman or the last congressional - district convention, and now la Mayor of his city. There are but few young men who hare enjoyed greater honors. May he continue in the foil confidence of his people, by being in the future, as he has in the pas, worthy of it. : POSTAL 8 ATI I O BA5K8 We art decidedly in faror of estab- lishinr postal minx banks, and we hope that erer j member of Congress will support the bill. There is no set of peo ple that a bank, backed by the United States roTtrnment, would benefit as mdeh as it would the jpeople of the south. We want a saTingsbauk that the people aaT perfect confidence in. Such a bank would take a rery large aaoant oi the money that ; b new spent for whiskey, tobacco, fine clothes, fast hor ses and ether extraragances. The peo ple of the south would hate as much oonty laid up la Ira year tke of other states. For the Wurit X ibm poor people we saust and should hare a taring bank ol this kind. Theexodoa luacosassenced in South Catoltaa la dcad earnest. Whole coon tits ru fcecaa&Inj depopulated. 'Wt L?r It wul krt? oa uatfl rrery colored man will teara the stale, as4 tear the lazy fe&Ioxca to da their own work, tzi &t iiy wiU soca cs when they vx3 b terry & their cst-lkroat treat sent of the colorel pecpie. The d;e Cell ssta, til kcrst of LzZzr, tttst U l tt crlxt tzTtr la tlis txsZzt tstltrstsV ITtlawl!Urtc;!tcf JJfflrta Cr,"' C c:t r.ra tla cclt J ftr;U C !r t-ta ca i-Irs, w r- till C ci!:rrJ n f-t -z tr 0 y r.5 tn t::'.:l ti IND KFEHOHC IN THE POUTH 'The independent morement going on to day in politics is of such magnitude that we give some extracts from lead ing papers, and the riews of public men below, i - which wJU be . interesting in North Carolina, where the people hare commenced thinking and acting for themselves, as we hope to see the case all OTer the country soon. ; We will hare good government when it is so the bourbons cannot flourish the bull-whip over the backs of the ' business .men and the boor white men. and force them to act in accordance ; with the will of the caucuV and; the ring masters, as it has been the case in North uarouna lor tne past , twelve years. Senator Coke is a North Carolinian. but he to day represents Texas in the tT. S. Senate; bis riews are particularly interesting. The news from South Car olina and Georgia s also important We hare more intelligence in this state than any of the others, and the men who are at the head of politics and con' troling the affairs of the state are much worse than any of the others, but the outlook is good for the future. South Carolina is in a political fer ment. ne uemocrauc party in that state has : been splitting into i factions ever since Hampton left the gOTernor ship for the Senate, and an open diris ion is threatened in this rears canvass. There is no lore lest between the two Senators, ; and Hampton has. his own candidate for Butler's seat, which will become vacant next year. Many Dem ocrats oi prominence are quite readr to kick orer the traces, and it is even said that Senator Butler is prepared to lead a sort oi Aiahone morement against the regular organization; The Republicans are doing all they can to foster the un pleasantness, and will hold themselves ready to throw their support to the wing mat promises to secure tne deliverance of tne voters from the thralldom of bal lot box stnffint!;. BdUimore TimctIn dependent, , j j The prominent Republicans and In dependent Democrats of Georeria haTe held a conference looking to aTunion of lorcea against tne Douroons oi mat state.. The probabilities are! that i union will be formed of such a charac ter as to sweep the state at the next election. The defeat of the Virginia bourbons has broken the backbone of Democracy in the . south, and before the next Presidential election it will not be surprising to see mat section almost solidly, Republican. When the -tide turns down there it runs swift and strong, Inter Ocean, .Republican, THE FLAME KINDLED BY SEXATOK Ma I HOME SPElDING Iff GEORGIA. - WASHiKflTOK, Jan. 1. It can easily be seen that the bourbon Democrats from the south are decidedly ticklish over tne prospects of tne political fu ture, and some of them are candid enough to admit that Democracy has been staggered, somewhat by the Virt ginia blow. The Times correspondent to-day had an interview with) Senator Coke, of Texas, who was twice Govern nor of h is state, and perhaps is better posted in its politics than any man from that region, He is intensely prac tical ana always lraufc an earnest in his riews. i "Any Greenbackism down there. Sen ator; to disturo your calculations?." "Not now. we were a little bother ed with it for a time, but it's all dead now. If it. became a straight and square issue to-day I doubt whether the Greenbackret's proper could poll more than 20,000 rotes. No: we're tucked that away in its grave and had a wake over it at the last election, and I den't believe it will!ever appear again in the flesh it Texas. Jones is trying; to run ior uorernor on that basis. J ones is a good fellow and perfectlv honest, bnt but he's full of the wildest sort of the ories, and people of our state don't like monomaniacs very long at a time." "Well, then, any Mahoneism?" The Senator stroked his long beard for a minute and then said: "That's different question. I suppose you mean to ask whether any influences not strict ly Greenback are at work to brtak np the old party organization!" That's exactly it," replied the rep resentative oi ine vu me. 'Then I can answer" yes," remarked the Senator, "I've been in political life a great many years, but I can't remem ber a time when there was such a spir- it oi independence in onr sute as can be seen : there to-day, and it seems to spread in all directions. For instance, we haye about two hundred Democrat ic papers in Texas, that heretofore hare been flat and unswerving in their sup port of the Democratic platlorm and nominees; but gradually they hare been growing restless under the restraint, and shooting off onto radons side tracks of one sort or another, till it can hardly be said to-day that more than three or four of them can be called re liably unchangeable in their devotion to the party under any and all circum stances." . :;-. ::v MHow do jou account for thi?n "Well, in several ways. You see we hare an orerwhelmiag majority ia Texas. For my second term as Gerer- nor I got a majority of over one hun dred thousand. Aow,yoa let thia dilion of things hast lor. any length of of tune ana the plainest ruses el pout leal experience will bring about i break. It may come sooner or it may come later all depends on the strength of prejodkes inherited and cultivated bat you can be sure it wul coes. great snany people go into politics tar a livelihood, anji when they and there are not enough kares to go around they wander oa" into fxesai pasta res find them. Talking about lfshont issa la the oease craerallr understood. I doat beliere that its cardinal rriaci- ples hare lake a any root ia Texas, fct it carries wiUi tt the &a ox a break an on ceaenl rrincipes that strike t&e fancy of the you2 asesi dawn ear way. They art auracud by tie rrcslso of costisx U tie ' frcit tzZzx ite new dui, aad ia tie ahee aav lire issues dlridlss t&o razl eaeaa asyUirj that srsald ktr? tZrt mUuxtt arcusal titrth ttals!rz-tley? i-iy to tsard thtlrdl talerucd coiu ta a great fjueit, asd trrrcrt tla ta asd art tity tlk w-i sr?y ttta Izi U w-s it-i:. c:----:d tl: t'.cr.-if t. 5 r C l ra tTt t3 more than anything else to open the dDorfor the neNOUthern morement. On this subject iSras struck the other day by the forc)f a short - colloquy between Mr. Eden tods and the Senator from GeorgisL c T0 Judge crossed over from the Bepublijan side after some remarks Mr. Hill ad made, and asked the latter with i r twinkle m his eye: "Hill, iwhat im we two beliere in nowadays anyhow!?' 1 f 1 f .-Well," HU1 Ty quickly replied; "why yon belief in the Ohio law, W1UB we UTM1CTO .JjU UIO. buueucuuwu. Edmunds seemed po enjoy it hugely: You see it points moral When two great poiUcal parties in a people of nny tpinioos oavpnouung' more iua tbatui divide thtM you can depend on it that the unea.f demarcation are getting dim lnde-lr Yes, I look for Dreax-upa ana arjaions in tne bouuj, to be followed brhe same disorgaii- zation in the norta. We can't expect to hold two rast aimies compacUy to eether in opposition unless both have some Tital principle to fight for.? Baltimore Time? The Cape Feand Yadkin ; Yalley . Bnlroad: The agreement lately made by Dr. O and the csnmissioners appoint ed by the Legislaire to sell the State's in the above nanm corporation lis too lengthy for us to jint IxLextensd. We haTe compiled a Synopsis of the moat important proTi&tcrfts. The state sells its 5.500 shares of steBk to the New York and Southern railway and Telegraphic Construction Co.Q7panyto be held as the -present private stockholders hold their stock, and &id company agrees to pay within sixtdays alter the rati fication of this i; Agreement, fifty-five thousand dollars to the Treasurer of state and one hdrtlred thousand dot- ! l:-wWl . A- I lan to resident wray, . to be used in paying off the floaDg debt of the com- pany. i Within twelve ii'ionlbs from the rati fication the road'ii-te be completed and equipped in good gunning order from Baumont, near tbouth Carolina line, by way of Shoe JLjel and Fayetterille, to Greensboro.- tWjthin two years it is to be built and eqnlppcd ia like man ner irom Mreensooso to aiw. Airy, past ing by Brace's Xt&oadj, Walnut Cove and Germantown:Within three years it is to be lully elfiipleted from; Fay etteville to Wilmington, and up the ralley of the Yadkj$, by way of Wilks boro, to Tattersoji3 in the county o Caldwell, and also ihrough the county of Surry to Ore J&ojbb, according to ti provisions of the carter. Withrn thirty dfjs after the p&y ment of illie $155 ADO the work is to begin, sufficient .fjree and materia' and be continued lauiil completed. On the payment tl55fi00 the cer tificate for the stock sold is to be as signed on the bonis of the company, but the newecrtifickq? is to be deposited with the lreasurer cT the state as trus tee for the state andfor the purchaser, and if the pnrchasefails to complete the road in three yeirs, then it forfeits all interest in the Clock and itreyerts to the state, the purchaser losing, en urely the fl&0,op( 'me mortgage bonds of the railroCompany are also to be deposited witathe state Ireaiur er. and are to be delivered up ' for sale only with the approval of the Gorern or, and then in aflunts not greater than $300,000 anHpon an affidavit that the proceeds a3? necessary to pay for work done or material delivered. The purchasers are-0 rote the' stock at all meetings of the3 ailrOad company. 9 If the 1155,000 i not paid withia sixty days after the ratification' of the agreement, the sale'lls through, bat Dr. Canedo has tweafy days to get bis syndicate to sign it, sd then the rail road company has twenty days to ac cept it. If Dr. Canecg does not return the articles signed in Stwenty days, the agreement is not te b$ bicdinx on the stale. The gusge of nhe road is not to be changed.?! 'tV The failure to betiL work in thirty days, or to complete, e diffeient pans of the road according h this agreement, subjects the purchased to a penalty cf $2,600 per month aa'lng as the default continues, which, fcotirever, the Gov ernor 'can remit in h& discretion, and if not remitted the penalties are a lien on the stock which a&ll be sold to sat isfy the same. ( And i the entire . road is not built according to the contract the entire stock is foriled to the state. Such Is the substance af the sgreement. It appears there3 that the first thing to bo done is fx' Dr. Canedo to get the signatures of ba associates, tie next the acceptance oftho contract by the railroad company These have x'o be done within forty tfs. Then withi n sixty days the money yt to be paid; and withia thirty mors the: work is to beeid. If things work right, Iherefore, withia four months the purchasing company will hare its hands jat work fiaUbisg the road. ant Ae Oftmrrer. The Coajrreaatoaal Kectloaa of 1S2 pJt .... .. . It will not do tor nsfje "sneUow down lis these infant days o the New ! Year ial aa idea thai theilkaaiaai has ar ri red. There will fef political strng' glea this year of sssaal Intensity. The people of the eemjil Congrestlbaai dlatrfcta Im alt of Uh stales wCl be caSed apoa to chDoas embers of lb seal , Coerw, wsww t jnsts wia coa meace Uarch 4, ISSi Jhe dost dis tncts wUl b waxasly tested, and ia tha sonthern aUlcs caqr ditrieU mUX be fjc;ht am which sra Jsr atrml ytaxs been ssmadmlrWlh XcuWes wikoat sir? !a. Thalrptisias ia Vir gtiia win bear frail Uvc&c ponk cf tha acrth. Tla Dcknlsho are tdcfllaclea-yjary.aad tU dsatrj b j wtki tezjilrj taalatala lia 'aexsZssj: la tdt a ntCl KT-zA tla Zitux cra!x Cax It wH ia tla C&tt tla wU tJ U wlrra te I tit c:a w ia tin ! :Cr? ir It 4: any honest and capable candidate who goes before the people pledged against j farther cooperation ; at' home and in Washington with! the Bourbon Democ racy. Beware of Independents who are independent only to get Bepnbli- can rotes, and who, when they reach j Washington, are ten times more bitter than the Bourbons who made no pro I essions of liberality, Take Senator 1 Joseph Brown, of Georgia, as a sped- men of those who proclaim themselves I Liberal before election, and who, being I in their seats thus obtained, are ready to hold the coat ot a genuine Liberal ike Mahone while he is stoned yea, I and join in throwing the stones. None of that sort of anti-Bourboniam is I wanted. The man who secures Ee-. publican rotes fir Congress should de- serve them by braving the hostility of their enemies, He should come here the open enemy of the Bourbons. i j llepublicanUm for the past twenty years has Bimply meant Unionism and the enf orcement of the laws. The re construction measures were based upon the belief that they were necessary to the maintenance of the constitutional authority of the nation. Their enforce ment has been suspended for fire years. and use result is that there ' is now so much of genuine acquiescence in the amendments to the Constitution . that the ex-corifederatt s inf many districts will furnish all the force necessary to overcome resistence to the laws. Every law and order man' is & Republican without knowing it. And so every anti bourbon by which we mean erery Democrat who is unwilling to sustain fraud and violence ia elections for par ty success every anti-bourbon is as good a .Republican as this country now needs. . We are . not now divided on slavery extension, rebellion, abolition. or force-bills. These are gone with the tic things that happened before the upoa. living, Dreaming pairioiism, tlkcaa cocsUtute the, best political creed ot . true Republicanism. ; Beware of treason among Republicans, showing The adminbtration will not bs used in this direction. me pourDona wiii not fiato the fede- Hi uuit i mat uuiu luowuM. Ji rR' i iL.: i : : .1 .v. under President Arthur. I Republicans who have been holding bourbon horses in coasideration of certificates of good character to be used here as passports to federal sppointments Will find the time changed. The font Republican postmasters in a single congressional district of a southern state, which could be . named, . will i be recruited, and Democrats now in office will take toj better1 business than holding oSice uixler a "radical ' administration. j If the civil-service reform, which means hatred of certain leaders in the Kf publican party and1 the proscription of U eir friends can pass muster In lesthetic circles why may we not inau- curate a civil service, reform which shall mean proscription of the bour- baiw, wun have been roted 5 dowu by ther topleatBix successive 'presiden- ihil i lection? It is in this spirit that lk?publicans must approach the coming Biruirir'e for the ascendancy in the next mm of itepresen tatty es. tl Altl'IELD AMD VIRU 1MIA. An Kye-Witness Tells of a Conrersa- tion with, the Late President. Virginia Republicans who. favored coalition wi.n certain procressiTe citi? sczis to secure tne repeal oi laws made i . . . . -. .! . a large class of Republicans called on Presi- aod bear onr cause. The facis'eo shock dent OarEeld on the 1st day oi Jone,: iag to manhood and disgusting to: de- 1S5J As soon as tueir names were .eeujt in In private eecretarr. J. .SL Dr wo, came oct and stad that, as tb:a President wanted to bare a full conversation with them, if they would wan a lew momenu mi the rush was oyer be would be glad to see them. Goterhdr John F. Lewis,; Dr. C. S. Miijla, lion. J. Ambler Smith, and others were present. Mr. Lewis stated Vy the Presidett briefly the situation, declaring that in his opinion the state csull with certainty be carried for the Liberal morement, and that we wonld eccijiro the enfranchisement by the re- ;cai cf capitation, tax of 45,000 rotes, wuo could witn certainty be counted on to rote with, the Republicans. The barbarons whipping-post law wonld be repealed, and colored men Would be placed on iuries. thus aecnrinr inliee to ipem wcicu was men denied to many Lpiaccs. uenerai uarbeld spoke op t .m m - m quickly and decidedly and said these were the most important things, and tnai u te were a Virginia Republican lit; WDCLD TOTE WlTO GkvSEaAL MA- v.!;; j: ";: - j, ; . . lie stated further that neither partr. far as he could see, favored paying a: f e . . . ' . w iuii sia:e aeot, nor had the debt tet &.cenained. IV. C. S. MilU here staled that the ,iei cement of Democratic Eeadjoster pKJiWsed to place Uon. John F. Lewis oa the ticket, and that the Republicans nnantmooaly favored his accepting. Presi-Jeat QatSeld placed his hand oa GarcraonLewU' shonlder aad said la a mo4t kindly, even afectionate, manner, eator. I advUe too to itrnit I stand iast where I did at Hen lor. whrre I stated that were 1 a Vlrgiala ipoh- i w, cum mm WiiS -vi 5rr!vrinry irbT:.!? T j "j sswva swsaSksBV. majority co.xurcssiusai. iTaus. I2ri3 the wh ole of the 41 g:ea, twa year., C.I tUU aa d join I rtsclauws wre Utrbdnced. Dariaw the4khartt.oyrarsa;iia,litid an hoocr to the eta!. aaaiber arcs to aV5S. tia tcrrn. two years saorc, tha tX9er was Ujm, and tha ladirattossi I:-t ta a ccc'Jtned Ucrrxse Ut tla irtlCecrrna, Ttera baa already beta 2pH tatradattd, aad ea abet tlrca wsck dnaa. ,; ' 'i v . j rather la Gutar XTZL f y itsittmiaT, Il5wttzchUxr tUt is tlzca Im twd ntim. lit cttar wta ar 1U I fa a Cteata stageJ--t.-rrrn . CLAlllAJiTS TO $3,000,000 Two Men Katabllsblns Tlielr JJelr- ebip to Jonxt Bumaidc's Estate Puiladelpbia, Ja?. 2. Among the passengers who arrived in the ateant ship Pennsylvania was Robert Given, ot 3S52 Ellis avenue. Chicago. Mr. Given i one of the claimants to the estate of John Bucheide. said to "be rained at $5,000,000, who died in New Orleans on June 20, 1SS1.. lie wss found at the Merchants Hotel y eater- day evening, and said: that; his trip to Ireland was to gather data to establish hi r.Uim wbirh h hmA nrr in t n;n Hnrw! tnnht in. Mn,imnkr Pmdence Burnside, was a sister of the aa miiiinn.! rhimmt ig j4Boes Burnside Wilson, who lives ia Wyiie itntU lhia city. Mr. Given tablished the relationship existing between himself and Mr. Witn. who wilt share equally in the distribution of the vast possessions of which, John Burnside died possessed ''Outside of the Wilsons and my own family." said Mr. Given, "there are no heirs to the estate in America, a fct of. which I hive positive evideuce, and will make pibuo at the proper time; The late J ndge Burnside, of Pennsylvania, whose Heirs Jay claim to a share in tne esiate. was no relative at an, or n he war the relationship is too distant to he trace able." The estate consists of sugar plantations near New Orleans, a vast amount of personal propertr. and $1,- 000.000 in bonds and cash in tbo bank of J. J. Stuart, of New York. National jRfpublican. , - i A Commendable Bntcrprlse v One of the most successful and de serving newepaper enterprises in lue country is tbo Trademanl published semi-monthly at Cbattauooza, Tcnn., l - d - T0ted to tbo industrial intere&U of ... nttlli n .i-i,m,.i nf t is rendenng most valuable aid. I An office has been established at the Cotton Exposition beini? tho onlv news I thousands of copies hare been dwtnb- l uted cratuitously: each diflerent issue -ftrflin!n .n .niri mnurrm u - - - t- . 4n nf thm uiulnrn ltes and complete'direclory of their industries, These lists are published entire in the issue of ' December lSlb, and form a complete directory of the industries o the sonthern states, compiled with great care, giving name. location; and. busi ness of every industrial concern iu the south. It also contains the name, ad dress and nature of goods displayed by erery eahibitor at the Cotton Exposi tion and a summary of the resources of the south. This impoYtant issue, which is designed by the rublishers as their Souvenir Exposition nuraber. will be of great benefit in giving. Infrmaticn in regard to the south to capitalists and others, and should be in the hands oi erery: business man. Mailed to any address on receipt of 10 ccritn, by ad dressing Tradesman" rublikhing : Uom pany, Chattanooga, lean. RocKIsciljAM, Richmond County, k I , January 2d,18S2 J t Editor Post: In the nam? of the 1,800 Republican voters, and In the A interest of ocr grand old partyf worW I mA m nl mirhl r-rV nr. I " w r I rllo na snace in vour excellent ionrnal. ti.M n1.li.DHr.:.n. .rA follows: Richmond county is a stroor Republican section, with a colored rote consisting of about iK) per cent of the ecllre Republican vote cf this coaniy, and we never fail to; rally onr forces for lie success and miistcnaoce of oar common caue. We more en mane in this direction, and br this means we bring in a rojority eTtrjr campaign racsiog from three to four hundred majority, while there are scarcely t9 hundred wkiU Republicans, (or about ten yennine,) there Is as much intelligence,' independence1 and itlfgi rity amoogus as is reasonable. This is none of the I ark ward countia; yet! I haT not a inv1 An r.f iM Sm I Imd. A,.r,ri t ... - - w W - ate. ' VeC M SUI position within the gift of the people nor by appointment at the bands of those we risk onr all t? anpport. Nay ! we have never hid one of cur eo(te in any placrofprcGt, booor or essoin snent save one brief spell. The fact is that pretended while ErpttbUcans path wr contentions and staff dclrgttes. bricglog to War the dcviiV WitT in- strnments .ti?r and money and tlanduh caitr. Wonld ke Jhrnvcru: do such thinriT; Add to thiV the hol low, Inure, brrthen, dUrnited and cea sing promiws which are the fwy 4 ill. Editor, is this the way to kwp ta tact tha ptincipke cf the grrat na tional party that has doae sach tot I MW I tha ccotrj J that has rattsdeJ Iu ma- aaaaaclatioa, (rose sea tt aad Uessed the world ! I this nnbScaabat'T It Is as tal as the lov eat depths of Vtmocntj kstlf. TTe haveo:fr4 asea la Uli caaaty &? frprJ tx bassinets of aj hied, aad WSV9 wVSW ffVTW B CTe4i 19 tt TUt bat ary Lscixncna 11 ceauaai .la tha ml rtpmm tha rtj" r mk tacsw -waited sealchrr wi3 tla. atlrrs nlJLizi a ttkrrd fUelfj. aai ere nicy a ia( UseaXl tic sladcs af d&at Ui Imy tm tltlr ssasten. Vca bj tux &sca ex nzk t-ajaj; tw wa Izuz,! u mi tlra ess TTa art r: ia fesl! tltna.a bzlam -tia1 -wtwll aal srtr-! tie wmdra la cu J aV. . t . -A:Ctetcax.flw5. ILmtilrast. 1 mi tl?aJ- atsilfltsEtal la arttlrr eslx.a t NEW ADYESTrSISIEXTS. PROCLAMATION, SIIEniFF I1AUGKJG! T AU OT TBESIIEttirr.BUTI WILL Uo the handsomest n - Papar llangins Of any man In lli fHle. I Jmv Sh.ad.es or ftll atn'a anUXqualltlet. The rrsuittt iu iiiswaraei. UPHOLSTERING AND REPITT NO- Of old rarellnre done la the anort setetaa- nnnotr, t c y arpcts cut, uad and pnt dowe. . . '-. ' . y -1 .r- ' .- , TWENTv YA.n3 EJ PERILS CE, GOODS AND WORK GUARAN. TEED. niij. i, wnif e, Market btwca X ud SI sttl. -U ' I . ' i HOT ( Coal and Wood I GRATE, STOVK AND CD EST WIT- SIZES Best Quality RED and WHITE ASU WOOD. OAK, ASUi LI0UrWOOD.de, Sawrd for Stoves or is leaf Very low. ? - ticl, byr J. A. BPRINOXR. nor 0-1 m ri nnr nki Annt m mm w w . ..- We. W VII 16 Market Ct QArr. JIM MOUOWAX WlLLfTRVlVt me best Whbkey for the Honey la tkt Cltf. line Clcsrs, Oysters, a. CaU aas m Wp ' oct so-ij . rjUlE UXDEtUSIOBED kTt( tesH S. competent aad esptrteseed TLt'Mll'a. from the North, btf U notify fke rH that tbry wUl here fter eetnktM with tWv preseatJron an I tppr Wrk IM tew nnn ot "v ' v' ' ''''' ' " P1UMBIXC AST) GAS KimG. Cy dulBg riUST CLAM WOUK at we-, at!e prices they hope te srtt asy erow' their custom re aaay irmr with thesa. . tfee -lm I ti art aaiLT a Homo r.lodo Cnndy, TUBE AND WUOLEJOiiE All kWi UMIt rra mrjj 4f ml i dec IS ly ' ; :..' '.l'.;i j'"-- ' : jr. French Confectionary I m maw mttymiy4 to IMba tk 4 cSfMNt MMiMMl t Lmm$mM im lm n Xm lww mn. t m " flkIVUMtittt'ri'A ' - rMNnMMrii KTm or worrm otaou, rf JuiM WtfwWMl I4tM t. fmnmm M tmmm itiw im arm, mmmm ml Jmum BMimmmt ati.' . r -fHtacs axlaw k I ;i - Z. C Strwa. MtuAkOttM Ciwnl"A. $t wejsTaw eVeisjsjBBjBjjtjeJL-- i 'I'lIB ciu t'liuj. mi urn. 1 i imwm Urmt mrm Cdinr Vul ae tS4 m f rimimummmtmtmM IM I' 1 imirs i mm n r t n t t ' Jr Ok. imx mm4 SU M-S Lkr r f m.mt wui mm MUXMAMtd I MM mmmmfmM m4 I ;Eyrc!uj llzzzz vcrttt: ts mrrxr civc taa i 5CLTro5rtsiv5Taxrrxa . mvrn ifmnXTf,- '; r. mot. , i Cl t t: 4 s f.rrr
The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 8, 1882, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75