Newspapers / The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, … / Oct. 29, 1882, edition 1 / Page 1
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si v. - - U VOLUME XV. rT.MiyrcTOjsr post Entered at the Pgntoffice at Wilming- n v. W oewtii yiuea ju.uA.ucr. ilTS OF ADVERTISING. Eight (8) lines, Nonpar eil type, con stitute a square. . Fifty cents per line for the first in sertioa asd twenty-five cents per. line 1 , ie jcii additional insertion. . a !fadreriisementswill-be charged t the above! rates, except, on special aonirftcs. . .- , ,'' Ihe subscription price to The Wil- jiurGTo.jr BosT is $2 00' perxyear;-six months ?1 CO. , . . - 11 communications on bnsineaniust : be-; addressed to The Wilmington Post; v4ming.ton, ,N, C. v k ; KEGULAll REPUBLICAN New Hanover County Ticket, : For Clerk of the Superior Court, STAGS YVanAMRINGE. For Sheriff, , : V STEPHEN H: MANNINjfJ, Fpr Register of Jeeds, , ' JOSEPH E. SAMPSON, f or County Treasurer, : " OWEN BURNEY. For Cononer, ' r da vied Jacobs. For Surveyor, ttEJlUEL D. CHERRY. ' ' . LEGISLATIVE TICKET. J ; n. For Senator, i. ; " . ; IJENEY E. SCOTT, I . r For iioiise of Represenatives. : WILLIAM U. WADDELL, ,.: TEUt ACE E: GREENE. - For Constable Wilmington Towfcshipf '',.' ROBERT SWEAT. - Gov. Jarvis was the crreat champion of prohibition in North Carolina last year. IJu h how canvassing for Judge UennetU . 1a prombition dead.' : local county oQicera is to. defeat bour bon Democratic candidates for the Leg- Eemenber that if vote for any. bour boa Democratic candidate for the' Leg Mature is a vote to continue the pres put inioiiiiouH couritr covemment in Cdnntn. Xfd n (ia Ci .1,1 Jnviniv nf n v : in the Wilmington that;the South was fighting an army composed ofi Yankees but fightirjg three low degrated nations, the Irish. D.utch and the Neeroea.. : Senator Rapson, who refused to say how he stood on the prohibition quea- iy government, uo you near tuit, '. ' 1 t . A threat, any voter from voting, may be 1 l '.I It. If 1...L Biu uj bucu voier in me uircuit uouxii .Til TT . 1 ii i J . T 1 . 1 ui inn i nTFAa kivm nnn rrimnfaiipiri- in fay keavy damage?; ' , ? ' There ' H ' no; .law for throwing out ballots found, iu ,tho wrong bpx. Elec tion officen-Rro sworn to carefully de port biitn'siirj tuo proper boxes. If erchancs tins find iu.w&v into . box prepared f ir a difforenti class of offices, it must be counted. . ' Voters put vour.own-ballot in the ,1'V" "wiuci uu tiua u tfljrh thtainJ VrtfA a r.-.'tLl ;.VAt if ?yw ti.r, iUU H ffiiy JOU YOW D cf the ballot. , - - : ' r . IiAisirars must - require persons to ! present tkemselves for registration. It not lawful for a rfgistrar to enter on his boot the came of & man unless - wch voter be present in his, own per n,' llead section H of the election RfgUtrars should bear thU in aiad as cognizance will be taken of s in which the law ihaUfbo tiola- fcd. Tb4w kind'of fraud wiil be toler no loader. ' "a)' . p.'ZXBETHTOWS, N. C. Oct' 23, 'S2 Editor Tost: I beard Col. W.J. Cretn sr at tbi pTace when he spolko aeredaricg court week, that'ho'wanl ItQ see the good old days Ukr those 6tlS55,henThe taxi pajr elected Senatcriv ' .... .. ;-V .. ' I tend you this Information for the kceStof the rxor neoDle.the uechan and laboring men' who diald not TM IcrlSenatcr In 'J have hU way case Cou Green Geo. Wwar. . Aotire t'orricners, , hav it from a' most reliable axd snhj source that Senator SlaU. Ran- K tat know nolhio pretlous ii a4 dorlog the war. He It now aoUc . foreigoersV to tea. Xlesiexnbci THAT INIQUITOUS TARIFF. As:the qdeation of oublfc revennfl ia likely trjtbecome a prominent one be- fbtd the people, is may be well to in yeatigate all sides of the case which o materially affects the industry of all parts of the country." i " !; VVe presume no one doubts the poli cy of providing means U defray the necessary expenses of the government' -such as the army and the ravy,' for eign diplomacy, interest on the public debt and reductions of the same, fede ral judiciary, bar nd river improve ment, contributing io those suffering bylepidemics, short crops, &c. : ? ; The great question now is, how shall th great sum be raised? Usually . it has been provided, by taxing foreign imports, because that has been fouod to be the most convenient method.. Let those who consume the imports con. tribute pro rata rather than for the col lector to gofrom house to house tool lect the government taxes in money, v Now, the Dext great point is, shall we have a tariff taxing some thins lower and sope higher, and thus favor ing the hope producer. The -latter policy has been the practice most of the time since the formation of the gov ernment and has proved a potent aid to the various interests. - Take the manufacturing interests of our state we have the cotton, the wool, the iron, the hides, wood an! the labor to carry on the various manufacturing and mechanical pursuits. I maintain it is the duty of the government in levying ; imports to discriminate in fa vor 'of the various Industries of the people,. since no one is thereby injured. Suppose'a family co'nsumes'a barrel of sugar and that quantity of coffee an nually, and the duty on each is the same, but suppose the duty is all levied on the Bugar and the coffee comes in free of duty, the consumer : pays' the same amount of duty and the sugar grower has that amount of protection which enables him to carry on his busi ness successfully. v , : '.. Every factory in this state ' employs, say from 20 to 300 hands of all kinds who receive remunerative wages, and a market is furnished for the surround ing country preduc. , ' I -; Take the state of Louisiana: Does not" every one know that the culture of sugar and rice there, and that of rice ia Georgia and the Carolinas, as we II as peanuts in several stales, would be abandoned but for the fostering, care of the general government,' and the rich ' low. lands given over to the ser pents ' and alligators. Foreign ; rice pays a duty of 2 cents per lb., and is still largely imported from India and aoldlfree of duty at 2 J to 3 cents of fair quality. Any. observer may see that with a reduction of even ohe-half of the dut the foreign grower would floodthe markets Are the cultivators of that great and growing interest ready to give it up, because some other states flourish through the working of the protective tariff. . : Govt Vance in his great speech on the tariff, states that nearlj.all the du ties collected on foreign imports goes into the pockets of the manufacturers. Now if this in not fallacy, the growers of sugar and molasses in .Louisiana must be reaping a rich harvest, since the amounts f duty laid on thesis two items is some $43,000,000 for their pro tection last year.' 1 - .''vv.'. ; .'' h Much stress is laid on the oppression of the tariff upon the poor man, his implements of agriculture, cloth, shoes, tools, nails, && ' f . , : i Now, no plows are imported and no dnty paid, because they are made here in Wilmington cheaper atd better, than any foreign country. Nails are made id this country by .machinery and have been foe generations cheaper than any where, carpenters' tools, cutlery, cheap stocks, shoes, wood screws are made better and cheaper than that Jn Erg land. Crosscut and circular saws are made only In this country .suitable for lis trade. Nearly all these articles are exported to the Cape of Good Hope, Australia and other British provinces. No other nation makes topis so light and bandy. ' ' ; ' Why should PJ more duty en these items and many more, when he can buy them at home for less than the dutj? Gotten cloth Is exported largely to Chins South , America, 4c- Why pay 40 cents duty on kerosene when It is sold here at 12 cents. 4 - The dotj on salt is 4 cents per buaheU Oar Senator sngsesU an Internal dnty on cotton of five dollars per bale to equalUaradr WhM an UeaT Whj not then put it on corn and all bread stuffs that are consumed here, tha amiuat exceeds that of cotton T The Bessimer steel rails as a noraop olTh discoTery oX the art of chtnx Ins aiipl method may be coasted as the createt laren Hon of the are Of court lilintao I nopory, as all jreat inreationa are, or WILMINGTON, NORTH may be for a time if one chooses to pro- tecl;the right by patent. This right the friends of the tariff or the United States Congress could not prevent or control. . . ' If there ever was an ivenfion or dis covery tbat innuredjtb the benefit of all civilized conntriee, surely this is one Who ever expected toVsed steel rails laid for T50 per ton, thar will last for a generation or two? What a vtsav ing in transportation will result ? So much more is added to the value of all products that have to seek a market by raiL ; The v fact is, the south would not be benefitted by free trade.butowould be materially injured by it. yfe want eapi: tal and skill to promote manufactures and mechanic il industries and giver em ployment3 to idle men, 5 women and chil dren.both white and colord.who are not suited to field work' There are a vast number of white women and children who are willing to work, Lbut there is no employment for them i They are as industrious and as fully Competent to do a full task in light fabrications as any people in this country o 'Europe, and a deal more docile and content with ther wages, and, are not given to fomenting trouble through strikes, &c. Augusta, Ga., is Interested more about manufacturing than any city in the south, and is to-day on the most solid foundation and flourishinz basis. As a city.it has more money, and more available security than any city south of Rich momd according to Its popula tion. The wealth was mainly acquired by manufacturing, and then take1 into account the great number of poor peo ple it furnishes employment to; but this is only one of many industries that that has been; stimulated by a protec tive tariff their name is legion. The fine goods yield the largest pro fits and they receive the most aid from the revenue 'laws. NoW there . is no go4d reason why this class of goods maynot be produced, here as well ;-: as coarserfabrics. The productive inter ests of the country lias never, been half so great as it has .since fthe war under the protective revenue laws. a i i Compare' the progress ot the country with that of the Britishfprovinces; they have a fine'cerialjproducing country, the best fishing regions in the world, an intelligent and hardy population, and Ja good government; yet their working population seek employment in the states rather than in the colonies. If our laws are so oppressive to the poof, why do, the emigrants flock here by the hundreds of thousands, enter the factories, farm, the.'perilous outside fisheries, &c ? ; - . " : . Suppose we adopt a tariff for revenue onljr in accordance with the Democratic platform, a vast amount of labor and capital will become idle - or diverted to some other pursuits?. Where will they find employment more profitable? Do the growers of cotton and other pro ducts desire competition? ' Would they tolerate a transfer of the labor now engaged in producing sugar, rice, peanuts, &c, to the cotton field? Where else could they go?- Do the growers of cereals, ; provisions, : &c, desire " their consumers - to become producers and competitors.? ' " ,. ' The effect would vbe disasteroua in the extreme to the southern prodnoer. and that such would be the case is too obvious . to need farther comment necessary. A calm and dispassionate consideration of the tiewi hereinp're tented, cannot fail to produce convic tion on the minds of all who do, not aUWthelr judgment to be warped or smothered by .their prejudices or pre conceived opinions. - Ransom's Speeds , Argument failing, the. Democratic speakers have resorted to stirring up prejudice and Senator Ransom, the man who Toted for Grant's pension, cornea ; down into North Carolina and draws the color line so deep, so indeli bly, so Ticlonsly that colored men are now more than ever satisfied that there is no hope from his party for them. Hence it is their doty to bury all dif ferences and go to the polls determined to stand solidly and naflinching by their allies, the Liberals and by one united blow crush forever this spirit of tindicUrenees and low prejudice It Is their only hope the bourbons are go leg to make the fight on this line, and the white man who . ia wUUag to give ihe colored man justice and fair play, will be hounded down as an enemy to his race. Cat all this wiU pass away and the man who stands tree to his convictions cf right wUl .tee the day when this earn party wi'J be swlegiag rooed to his side. Let every nan who believe in tight and jus-Jce stand firm, and the. Tin of November will tee tla indorsed br a 23,C03 eajority. EUnd tma to jonr ticket, it la year lj kepew Dlrcoaa tenanco all aide lasts-eta n clplesIlvtfcrsTts. CAROLINA, SUNDAY OCT 29, 1882. To the Peanut and Itiee Grow- , eraorthe Thlra Congressional District of North Carolina. xou, withi the other voters ! of t5 district, elected me you representative in the last congress. ! Some of you Toted for me many of you refused to rote against me because yon wanted me elected. In the course of my two years service it became my duty to ex amine into the tariff question ! as af fecting your interest and. to see that you had the advantages to which yon were entitled under the protective system. The record will show that I stood - for the protective tariff land know that to : have done otherwise would have been to make war on you. This reference to he pat, together with the fact that r have been con stantly aiked for my views on the subject and the further fact that I have not the time to spare from my business to make speeches to you, is my excuse for addressirjg you this letter." ; r r The price of peanuts is largely de pendent on the tariff because of the fact that large quantities of them are produced in'Africa and other foreign regions. These countries produce them for export and compete with the nuts of other countries in the markets of the world.' They have advantages which enable them to produce peanuts cheaper than you can, among which are fertile soil, warmer climates,; and especially cheaper labor. They now bring their nuts into this country and after paying the tariff, : which you do not pay, compete" with you in' your home markets and keep dowathe-price. You have more to fear from this compe tition than any other peanut growers in America, because the foreign . nut is un like those of Tennessee orVirginia,but is just like yours. But for them you would have got two dollars a bushel for your last year'strop. But for the tariff you would have got just twenty-eight cents a bushel less" than you did get for every bushel you seld last year. , do not mean by this to say that the pro tected -producer always receives, and the . consumer always pays I just the amount of the duty more than would be received by the one and paid by the other, if there were no duty. This is not always true by any means; but it was true with regard to your, crop last year, and any.clear headed man who will stop to think about it can not h-3 seeing it. - ; n The tails' duty on 'peanuts is twenty eight cents a bushel, I did my best to raise it to fifty -six cents. This could not be done, because the tariff men in the Houso had barely votes enough to keep the duties as they were, and not near enough to raise the duty, on anytbjDg. The time is now coming when you will stand, a good chance to set it increased. - I think ; the Tariff Commission will report in favor of it. If so, then it will be done unless you and the 'other voters of the country eleci free traders and revsnue tariff men to Congress. Then it will not be done, but the present protective dnty will be abolished or so reduced as to be of no advantage to you, These rev enue tariff men try to make you be lieve that under their revenue tariff you would get what they call inciden tal protection. This Is all a sham. Bennett and Green both say that they are for no tariff at all, except such as will bring the ' most revenue. Green says that he is for "the lowest possible tariff Consistent wlih revenue." . Apply this to peanut-. Don't you see that if you put down the duty to ten cents, you invite the foreigner to increase his shipments, and where he now sends one bushel he would then send five or ten bushels. This increases the reve nue but it will ruin you. Bat remem ber If you go in for protection you are almost certain to to get a larger duty than you now hare -yon are certainly entitled to it, If you and the peanut makers of Virginia and Tennessee lived In Pennsylvania or New England you j would bavo two cents instead of one cent a pound on your peanuts. Why have you not got it? Because you belosg to a section which persists in adhering to the old pro slavery idea of a low protective Ur'ifl, and which keeps sending representatives to Washington to fight protection. The Yankees hare got rich by protecting their iadastries, It U possible that we hate not got sense enough to tee that we can do the saxnsihinc? .r ''-; J -'";' ; As Cd sough rice we are v reasonably well protected. . W now gei shoot sixty-fire cents a bashel on rough rice. Ytt the Chiaese, and otier naliona. send U here, pay the daty and sell U lo na. Take c4T the duty and yoa are ra latvL Tea can cake tie cslcaHtion: Take off the frr ght, the dcty and char gn f f r---x froathe oa dollar and a uricr a icxhel, which China gets here for her ri-, and yoa wd see thai her rasptr peej! saikt U fr aJbcai (orty c:U a bnahcl. Csajoa do it for "that? These revenue tariff men tell yot that you must or .go at something eUe. Mr. Green s trying to make believe that he can protect you while he Is op posing: all tb other protected iadus- tries of the country: He badly under rates" your intelligence. You know that the tariff u a great measure, af fecting; the v&t and varied industries of fifty miHiofs of people and that as a whole it stands or fall. Is any body fool enough ta believe that four or five lepresenutlveli representing rice and peanuts can pun . rougn shod over three hundred other representatives whose constituents do not produce but do consume b;th these articles. Mr. Green Wbsby does not Irnow but I a.uuw, sou euioea every otner ; man who has had experience in congress and is familiar jwith iu rules of proce dure that if h should be elected he will never bate a .chaace to vote on rice and pean.ts but he must vote on the whole tariff bill, for it or against it. Bat; he ssys hs is interested in .the tariff on wine nd that' for the sake cf s:nkn defrn protection he will votesgsinst wie How can you exr pect him to loo after your interests in this matter wh4n he will disregard his own ? If he isso anxious to sacrifice himself will ho ake care of you ? H I see by the ilpiingtpn Star of to day that he say he wants to stave off the reduction of the duty on your pro- ducys till all thefother protective duties have been put down. It surely ought to be a consolation to you to know that while the other refected industries are to be visited with sudden death you are to have . the privilege of dying by inches. But reuember that rice is a food crop and whenever the ' protective ham gives waythat link will he the first to break! Jpnrtng my . term in congress the revenue tariff men on the Ways and, Mearf Committee forced to a vote in that cvminittee a bill fir re ducing the. tariff! and i vt riuW was reduced to; thirt per cent, ad valorem. The present dutyff 3 about fifty per cent vatorem vve succeeded in prevent ing them from getting the bill up in the Heusej. Bu the protectionists of the northern state all agreed that if the tariff was tolbe reduced on them then their peoplas mnt have cheap foodV i - i v This is a question of dollars and cents. I In many cases itis a question of meat and, bread! Your peanut and rice lands are not reh adapted to other crops. These meriwho are threatening to take away this -protection from you are virtually trylg to confiscate your lands. As to the People vou emnlov. the superintendent; the assistants and the field laborers, Kley would confiscate their living. You pannot afford to, pay people to make; reannts and rice at fifty cents a bushel.; .' . They may ask y oa why it is, if what I say is so, that lnlSS0 and the early part of 1881 the pice of peanuts wss down below the coJ of production un der our protective tariff? If they do, then they are trifling with your com mon sense. The reason is that there was; an excess of home prod notion, the supply was bigger ithan the demand- Nobody pretends that the tariff pro tects you against home competition. It does protect you sgsinst the foreign supply that constantly sisnds up against you to trample doiro the prices and prevent you whenever there is a big de mand or a scarcity i the market from getting prices beyond the point at which-the foreigner is willing to sell. The moment it is ascertained that there; is about to be a tig demand and jast when: you begin to filare that you may get fancy prices, away 'goes the tele grams by cable acroe the sea ordering ship loads of foreign peanuts, and be fore you get yours . to; market the price is down.' ; ;:''- ,-.' . .' :-1 - ' - The purpose Whllh these revenue tariff men are showiag of raldisgon the protected goods cf the country is already depressiag th prices. Specn- laters' are timid abouVit. There is no other reason why ric sjiould not be worth as much now si it wss this time if . last year, ilaay cf ytja will remember just after the Hawsiaa treaty ; by which it was agreed thst their rice ight-cose here witUoat a dnty, the price vent down so Uf that your gooa river rice unld be boaht in WUmieg. t w at eighty and ninety cents a bashel. This treaty wss a grsa oatraxe cms yoa aad if year representatives would stand with the pfoUcUonlscf the exist ry. iXeonldbe modified. Iteperatee now to keep down ihe pricacf rica. I cite this to ahow yci thai the raids sea are aaaklcjr ea yoa Lave Ia other Kelsons sees vU fx tislr iaUrescs. X Desaocra. ta Ptanrylva- it l.lmU CoeTts calces aels soeni oertrcllxa, l ean set W a po!lAMsa saay TCtafca aSt tarty talst lJlaumUcaialUira!,tsay 4 - v.w sie copies 5 Ccnis be of more importance to him than his persoaal interests. But nowhere else tn, this country do business ; men vote agsiost their business Interests. I have no interests iu this question that Is, not common to you. But there is one thing that I . know, and you know, and that Is that every one of you wants theater iff on your products retained. Will you vote for men who will destroy it? V '." . . , , .; D. L. BusiELU Tn Way They Intend to Do It. The following conversation between two well known. Democrats occurred at the Purcell House on Tuesday night and was overheard by a gentleman, who gave it to ns: ? ; First Democrat I say, B, I see that the LiJberaJs are getting all the white working men in their party, how are we goiug to stop .this. ' ; B Well, we will say nothing now, but on election dsy we will put a crowd at each voting precinct and when they come to vote we will demand to see their ticket?, or that they vote the ticket we give them, and we .will have our boys stick to him snd see they do. so if they refuse to vote our ticket we will, give them to understand that we will use our! influence to have them discharged from their employments. This,ith holding up "negro rule" will frighten them into obedience. But they sre pretty stubborn. Oh, yes, but oresd and meat will cure that. Be;Trne (o Yourselves. Let every working white man be true to- himself apd his ; children In this election and vote for his interests. On one !d i tie sharr aristocracy, all the "blood' all the pridt, all the as sumed superiority, and all the old bourbon lust of power On the other is the party of liberalism, the sartr which; gave you the homestead. the mechanics' lien law and has fought forJ the free school system, the party which looks upon ; you as the equal of any man or set of men, and wants to Im prove your social status by giving your chiMren an opportunity to go to school ten monts instead of 64 day in the year f Pender County. Some of! the hightoned DemocraUo nominees of the county of Pender have been trying to purchase leading colored men in the county to support the Dem- cratto ticket. We will tmblish the nt mes of the colored men, and also the Democrats who have been engaged in this infamously disgraceful, business. We hsve I them, and will do them the favor to show them up in the proper light to the public, u ! . Poor White Trash. At Clinton we learn that Col. Green was informed ithat the - moat of the laboring men intended to vote against him forcongrers. He flew in a passioa and asid that "Poor white trash" ought not to 4e allowed to vote anvlway. What do the laboring men of this dis trict think of such a man representing them in . congrest? A msn who will ssy such a thing as the language uted sove, which Is an insult to every poor man in North Carolina? See commu nication in another colamn. j; Senator; Thomas l Clingman says that Senator Matthew W. Ransom got thirty thousand dollars of the people's money from tbeBwepSM stat. Asd ibis is honest Matt. Ransom. Senator Z. B. Vance was Swepson's attorney when he was President of the Westernf N, C. R. R. and st the time that it is charged gwepsoa, a Demo crat, stole $7,000,000 of the state bonds. And this is honest Zeb Vance. Ool Robert IL Cowan got 2,0CO, 000 of the special tax bends. How does his j relations and friends like the cKarge of bria'or Vance, that all the bonds wers stolen. We are requested by Cot Oeorge T. Watsom, iBdepeadeetRepabllcaa caa didate for Solicitor, -'to state that he will speak at pV1 '-tp, ,v; ' ' Beanfort, Carteret county, Monday, Oct 30,l gSe- ( ,, Wilmlegtoa, New llsaovcr county, Friday, Key. Si. Borg. rendercoanty, Satarday, Nor. 4 A. . j. . Seaatoc Matthew W. Itanaosi etade the saost yisdSctiye speech" ia this city m rndsy alTht eyes delivered la the state. Ai this ie the sasse Scsatcr who pretend, i hen he Is la theca ate aad sjm L-fuUkaa, ta t Terr uiwa.-:.! : ;;.;' ;- v : I .-v- ....... ' 't ; :. : Pat your lra3fiC la tSe Kx. FI4 iilfyt bka. ahs bsitss en tsliajc it cat af yay atal aad 7iug 4, tale 3Ls aaase tegv&Wr srlta tsra e tins eJtaasa&ci tf the b.ntiirsaid ;oit iJs ts tka pepr aariila. NUMBER 44. IX. A. Crmdlej. CoLTjjcrra county. Oct. 27, 1832. The friends of S. A. Bradley have brought him out n an Independent Democratic candidate for clerk ot the superior County. Mr. Brdley, i Lib eral and is anxious to see the i..e Liberal ticket elected. He ia In favor r the people ruling against th old WhitevUIe ring, i headed ' by Bon V. V: Bichardson. The people of the county believe - that some one else should have a say about the politicsf Columbus oatside of one or two fellows around ' Whiteville. We are heartily tired of Bossism, particu . larly V. V. Bichardson's bossism, with Toon as lieutenant, and the miserable editor of the IbUrprm as a - corporal. We hone all the libertr lovinv imahIs will vote for Wooten, Byrd and Bradley, and the bslane nf 1ft YJKbmI ttoVAt Couhtt L1BXJU.L Dxscoca-aT. Died. GBEEIT. At AbbotUSorf. N. O. oa 8st nwUxsJrht, the 2Ut Inst- JohaaM etMa, Jr 3 months. Th fDnrm4 took slsos onWontUy. th 23d last. USi K,Ij2S4'1.tcnhu-0,irn- "Of soeble tnsKUtjdomor Htsven." . NKW ADVERTISEMENTS. , OPERA ROUSE. Monday Eveiilns, October SOta. FIRST MIN81REL SHO W0P THB SA80N t - ; , ARMSTRONG BROTHERS. SI InstreU aad Braaa Baad. tO ' ARTISTS 20 Inelndlnf the principal fSTorita, lt Mlnts trslsy. An entrtsls meat rnUrwiy devoid ofYalg&rUr. Two and s, hail boura of solid inn. JNjpalar prices 75, a. sad 2S seats. Doors open st 7. Performaaee at 8 o'clock. Reserved seats vllhoat extra charge at 5t 1 10 "trt Pds -;,;. ' 1OST. . YELLOW BACK ACCOUNT BOOK Ol or about the I7tk last, with bills paid and to be collected. Book aad bills sre of no use to say one bat mysell I will pays reasonable reward for there recovery. octaa JOHNaKOBwooD. TO THE VOTERS OF THE 15 SENATO RIAL DISTRICT. a T THK 80LXCXTATXOH Of" A LABQE a nuniDer 01 mr menos. 1 barvhv hvi. nouace myself an INDKPKNDKNT nru. OCRATIC CANDIDATE to represent the liux Heaatortal IMstrict, eomprlatnc the counties of Columba aod Uobeeon. The soortnesa of the time aad say private bnslaesa wul prevent my making a taoro ash canvass of the District. I 111 md.... ver, to see as many of 70a as pos sible before the election. xour ooeaient servant, ruahraph wrvmrv Woodrtth. Columbus 00. Qaakton P. o N. f.i auk. iuus . . -' CAMXRON, jar, q, Jme aa. xssx- ! E DESJRK TO INFORM OUB friend. aad the traveling public generally, that we have opened a barber shop and eating sa loon at this place. Bhavlnc done neatly. and meals farnUbed at all hears. Oivess a trlaL itAQAKaa lone U ; ; i r )l Propletors Hit BABTJODJCSTOXeatJlea OeelovOs, mS years sea. Usssth eraedtiy Dsvt4 GUlespieef DpUa-waty. lie left csJ34toOsMtfewasrssl rraak. rat 04,1 4tJaaMeBsvsU. IsjttietoalMtaBevadltofetseeiUtff aeaa ut tm I MM t C4 Mi IM esus tfUvtas. an Say ti vein? tSMSFauy 9i A-cnrootxa. nOTICET ste eeaH4 as' ts pus ear erf enaesea4t MM - ' . ensB iioncn n rjLRXT. rtUOu mm mm w. t-rkmA. m nleu $?vzmr i wy, esiJaj tt se)se JselsWhs efeMsY 4Ref -Jhssjp jtggyVWsf ea I'tTfTuimn I "raT? It tat ss-f Hi fJ nissiaetS ail HMaMienH r 1 iu mtammt. eaM man ie an a mat Utmi ajefcaait etve lajitectjttaew laaeiaa imswm asn f art eas mm a 1 1 at laa aft esMNi Urn twtsM uei fce 3 A
The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 29, 1882, edition 1
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