Newspapers / Tri-Weekly Era (Raleigh, N.C.) / Nov. 8, 1872, edition 1 / Page 1
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r I . . ,. 1 i - - - -'-.. VM. M. BROWN, Maria F; yettvillo St, old Standard Building. ( 'ASH Ilf VARIABLY IN ADVANCE: Tilt: DAILY ERA wlU b AeliTero! anyrrhcre iu (be City si TirttkM Cart a week, payable to the Cutxuzft, waekly. HAQ&d at $7.00 a year; f3.50 for aix-'inoatlxs; $X0O(wtare mobUU; and SxrKrrr-rrrx ceqls ft Bffifcta ITU-WEEKLY EHJL 3 &3 a" year WEEKLY ERA $lJXt a jrear. TRI-WEEKLY countrv. . r- i ii i ,ijlii3uhci. xb iicv,vuau,ur . uc i iiiucv nxa ojxii- Hint iiiiTLrKTi Tiis Lii r - In the Contest which' hasjaullOT? labniifJI rnt.iroi guii-jj ynu-;will nlLTnE Era ha ihWSf' 113 4144 V4M4..Y. w 4W.tiimn II Oil 4' ' . ... . - " -. , , - L . - i-.1. . . - , W . m 4- IL. A.I If, in nnj: event, ro havW; ft? iiTOBln stepped the llpitts of JrottiWS'llf ffkuUi truthful journausrrjjtwe ore sorr a'VTl vT fnr it. and would ask In tW.15orir6rfTtthil Republ --, - . -. . ---r?' our signal triampaj IOlSO pcxxiu&I to bur all animosities and forget all unpleasant and unwarranted personal allusions. So Cause for Alarm. When the defeated, despairing and demented Greeley organs are heard puling and muling about " The Empire" being "established" by the election of Tuesday, they must not h understood to mean the ry"4 INVISIBLE EMPIRE "a which these same papers aided to establish and attempted to perpe tuate in North Carolina and the South a short time since. As to "The Empire" just dis covered : We have not seen it, but, these gentlemen, from their connec tion with, and agency in the late 44 Empire " perhaps possess the power of seeing the "Invisible." Will they rise to explain? Silver 3Iine in AVatanga. Aorth Carolina is rich in all the minerals silver as well as gold is abundant. The Catawba IJagle says Watauga has a silver mine which 44 the fa mous silver lodes of Nevada, Colo rado and Montana " do not equal, that while 44 their mineral deposit 44 may be more abundant, in res 44 pect to climate, water and acces 44 sibility three important things in 44 mining Watauga is far ahead. 44 In this county the climate is de- 44 lightful water power abundant 44 and is easily accessible from the 44 W. N. C. II. R." And The Eagle, speaking in the right strain, says: 44 Tired of political excitement 44 Jet us go to work and build up and 44 develop this great country of 44 ours." In a Fix. The election in this State on Tues day, in its results, places many of the 44 Conservative " members of the Legislature in an awkward pre dicament. That the Legislature is returned 44 Democratic" and 44 Conservative" through the "Gerrymander" of last Winter, and by the fraudulent ef forts of Filkins, Blumenburg and Wood, to say nothing of the means of proscription, violence and intim idation resorted to by our home leople in the August election, the result of Tuesday amply proves; and it completely establishes the fact that when left to exercise their own free will the people of North Carolina vote the Republican party into power. A majority of twenty thou sand for the Republicans of North Carolina on Tuesday last tells a tale that no member elect to the Legis lature can fail to heed, and many will feel that they occupy seats to which i ' j voice of the people has now proriaimed they are not enti tled ; for the election returns show that more than two-thirds of the counties give Republican majori ties ! And this they say is the establish ment of 44 The Empire !" Crimination and Recrimina tion Family Quarrel. Already are the mongrels "going for" each other. Tlie Tribune says for Mr. Gree ley : "Democrats would not 'eat 44 crow' when they could get from 44 five to twenty dollars for not eat 44 ing it." The Washington Patriot organ of the "Democratic" and "Conserva tive" ring in Congress says: "Mr. 44 Brown (meaning Gratz) did not 44 add a vote to the ticket, but de 44 tracted from its strength and re 44 pelled support by his visit to New 44 England;" where, they do say, he took a little too much, a little too often. The Patriot grows-loftily indig nant in its gloomy retiospection in this grave language: "Two Presidential elections have been literally thrown away by the 44 selfish and offensive Intrusion of a 44 factious influence, which in both c If 'I I ' U'l I " I !" I 11 II II . I I II . I I : 11 . --.-! I tf . I I . A .. I I : : l ? I I . V, I 1 y-. V-W . -.-I . L .1 rr- .1 - i I 1 1? I II I i, .1 I u . il.ll 1 II I I I. II if II I I A I . . I I , A .11 . .' ..... tS Wii& b f - i Mff H . H . .... v. i. .u I . . i u M I mm mm . - mm ' mm a m . i m m i - : i i i t I ( i . I - - - '-' - ' ... ' ! . . 1 ' : : : ''-I 4- i - u: r l!.- . , ,tf2Pper and Warren and McQuigg of Wilming ton The Patriot says : "A grain of comfort is found in " the fact that these architects of ruin 11 are now condemned to exile and " insignificance." Manly and Patriotic Senti- meiits. We are glad to note the utterance of patriotic sentiments by some of the opposition papers in their arti cles on the result of Tuesday, and it affords us no little pleasure to trans fer to our columns this language from The Durham Tobacco Plant : 44 If General Grant has been re 44 elected, and will re-enter upon 44 the duties of his office with the 44 government for the good of our 44 people, :: we of the 44 South will be the last to oppose 44 in any way his administration. 44 And we are ready to join The 44 Era and lose sight of political 44 divisions when the government 44 is administered for the good of the 44 people." ' A leading gentleman of Concord, one of the first merchants of the place, a large farmer of Cabarrus, and, we believe, a manufacturer, writes us a letter for publication which will be found in another col umn. This gentleman, is, as he says, an old Line Democrat in all res pects just what he pretends to be and the sentiments and expressions coming from him ought to be the sentiments and expressions of the whole Southern people, whether they be Democrats, Conservatives, Liberals, or Republicans. He says, the morning after thp election: 44 Believing that General 44 Grant is now re-elected it is the tion of the laws." TJiia IB thA trim KPntimPnt of a patriot-one that considers himself a constituent part of the chosen ad ministration and who means to do his duty and have his influence in the affairs of the country, as every Southern man should determine to have his part and influence in the government of the country. In the great work of reform, peace and reconciliation, the proper ad ministration of public justice and the exercise of clemency and mercy, the breaking down of sectional feel ing and the complete restoration of the South, President Grant, and the Republican party, proposes to go as far as any one could gOj and he in vites, and the Republican party in vites, specially, the co-operation of the South and the Democratic party, thus 44 making one common coun- ' I the prosperity and peace of the whole country." With this Cabarrus county DemT ocrat we cordially 44 clasp hands,'? and, thanking him for his commu nication, invite more of the same sort from the patriotic Democrats of the State. Grceleyana. and Jarvis. Grant gains over 500 in Pitt coun ty thar's tchar Captain Jarvis, a Greeley Elector for the State at large "lives and moves and has his being." We are pleased to learn that the Captain has transferred his fire from the mountains of the West to the low-grounds of the East. Johnston county gives Grant up wards of GOO mnioritv a tmin of enn Tvtv Trn rcw 7VV 441 A. VU, LiltJ VJliVVlVJ I " Elector for the State at large, is said to be a denizen of this county. Is it so ? We ask for information. Chowan votes for Grant by 300 majori ty-a Radical gain of 134. This ! T w A - J 41 cases had tonjy-been owt(ul for HsJOcitk'rfimiiner wherfetdt! duty of every citizen to uphold gndwlUto'tta rtS' SSth " his hands in the just administra- 0f the " Neche Trieste," or " Night ?5 f,,i "1, m HiX-iiOV. vance anu jx-opeaKer suiuiaww w u wai wi B esnecial attention to the counties Jarvis spoke in Charlotte on Mon- fire in the night, and at aa n oniy Iredell Alexander and Wilkes, , a heap of smoking coals marked whorn;n t.wn Spnators. whpn nf day in oeimii ui iur. vrrciy. kjlx n fc where thia great historic ""J nTtoYllDre Tuesday Grant carried the Charlotte landmark 'stood. Private letters lFa box; making a gain ofmorethana received from the city of Mexico the state constitution one of each hundred votes. Long live Vance p tail ,j ! nitiM rtr iM?wr liaeu:J2.P?!9P TT?. ?"h iraiWfiWUduty of tyverj' citizen to uphold ,,,TiDt6ivPeatdti:' tgwnpusiy:istretciiea f Grajathas bands la theliist administ Ika twined snlpndidlv . AnZcireynn nK the laws : and .alBa believine: the battle to the strong." Cumberland county gpes for Grant by 350 majority a gain of nearly 400 for the Rads. Good for the Hon. T. C. Fuller, a Greelev Elector ; he resides at Fayetteville. Chatham county has gone for Grant by 300 majority a ' gain of 400 for the Republicans. Hurrah for Maj. H. A.' London, a Greeley Elector ; Chatham is his home. Guilford county has rolled up a majority of 450 for Grant a gain of 470 for the Republicans. Guilford contains the domicil of the eloquent D. Frank Caldwell, a Greeley Elector. Richmond county has increased her majority very handsomelyifor the Republicans. Col. Walter Leake Steele, a Greeley Elector, lives in Richmond. Iredell county gives a gain of over 700 for Grant. F. Brevard McDow ell, the Greeley Elector for the 7th District, flaps his icings and crows on yiis his native dung-hill. Wake county foots up nearly 1300 ma fori tv for Grant a ffain of more Thp 7?n7- . . ht 1 , f . I I eigh JSews has been forging its thun- uer-uoiia;auu mis is nie neiu 01 uie A 'A. A a- J.llllgiJUUlJ' U AAA A QOl J AA CAA Jf labors. The Tree of Cortez An act of Infamous Vandalism. From the San Francisco Bulletin. One of the great historic treees of the world has just disappeared through an act of vandalism, the mouye ior wnicii his uuery im- of Grief" when the Aztecs, mfuna- tea at tbe iell aeSlgnS OI tne fepan- SnWntett v?fllSr of SftlmV representative filibuster of all time, assailed his lorce with an mdiscri bable fury, cut it to pieces, and almost succeeded in cutting off the few survivors in their escape from the City of Mexico by tearing up the causeway which led across the shallow waters of the lake to the mainland, in the direction of Cha pultepec. The Spaniards, hemmed in on all sides, and lighting hand to hand with the energy of desperation, forced their way along the cause way, step by step, and, by throwing the bodies of the dead into the gaps of the causeway, succeeded at last in dragging their artillery over them and reaching the solid land. Cortez, wounded, disheartened and exhausted, halted under a great cvress tree, near where the Garita de San Cosmo, within the walls of - a . -a . a 1 I the city, was subsequently locatea, and there rallied the remnant ot his forces for the retreat toward Tlazcala. where he found the allies, who subsequently enabled him to reduce the city to capitulation. This tree was held in great rever ence by the Mexicans, both of Span ish and Indian descent, and a church was erected by it in com memoration of the event which oc curred there. The 4 4 Tree of Cortez" stood green and flourishing, though large sec tions of its gigantic trunk were de cayed, until last month, when some vandal hiied the cavity witn rags uiai me greaiest luuijjuauuu awakened there by the dastard- was lv outrasre. and the Government and the historic Society had offered rewards for the discovery of the perpetrator of iti Boston has been tearing down an old church. It was a Revolutiona ry land-mark, and bore the dint of British cannon balls, and with such reluctance do the old bricks part from each other that the process hks been going on a year or more, and is not completed yet. -.. Cleaveland enjoyed a sensation the other day in the marriage of a 1 1 i A mi I nnnnln nffioaf mntaa Thooorflmnmr X hvrftS LhriiS maSfl m fiiM'tablv hin. py" as though ' their vows were made audible. e - . f x- i A woman who tells fortunes from a teacup need not be a sauceress. I r.AOci r i tCk tn rncfAtroi n ironr crnn CkT r - . I j A 1 !i.L 1 11 4. 41. I bt&ov. -8, -18T2. Old Democrat TJieErai Ilowspace in give you briefly long Democrat as action of our Presi- that Gen. Grant is now TO-electedt and that it is the his ration of that tion. Now, the way is open for him to make himself a name that will live forever "with the people of the South), by recommending, on the assembling of Congress to open all prison doors to those ho are held even under the semblance of politi cal crimes, restore them to their families and neighbors, thereby dis arming hi3 opponents of all weap ons, and to say to the offenders : go home and learn to obey the whole some laws of our country. down this sectional feeling, restore to rightful owners the money press ed from the people, known as the unconstitutional cotton tax, issuing them, in lieu of money, government bonds, thereby making the people interested in the permanence of the currency and the stability of the Government ; then all sectional feeling will be broken down, mak ing one common country with a common interest for the prosperity and peace of the whole country. Cabarrus. Concord, Nov. 6, 1872. Grant aiidOreeley in the West. To the Editor of The Era : Sir: Now that the election is over, it is worth while to consider what permanent good has resulted to the Republican party in this sec- tion in consequence of tho Demo- cratic endorsement of Mr. Greeley, in the first place the : large num- ber of Democrats, who refused to go to the polls yesterday assures us of I tllU iilVJClV 4C44.4Vl44iCXV44 V4 U1C partyfoand itvg refUsal to be longer Trio rrmcT. n pm nra 1 7n ti rn rr rnn fcllV XV.CV V . U11JI VI W.A guided by the present leaders Again, the rank and file are just now perceiving, and this chiefly as the result of the late term of the Federal Court at this place, that ku kluxism is practical treason. The midnight gown, the red homes, the mufned horse's tread, and the strange barbaric lingo in which the klan delighted, have under Judge jjick's cooi siinie auu lur. ijusfc. a frown lost much of their romance, The hitherto frightened Fifteenth ji.menametio now uareiuiiy uepuaita t t j -1 1 .1 i.,, and sings 44shoo fly " If our Reb friends klux statesmen and relaited again, 0lK.f frK fha fan thmicanth timo he PPular sto7 2f sociai the klan would nave taKen nope and voted the ticket 44frem a toiz- zard." Alas for the folly of selling out and not getting your money ! The cheap trick of chinanigan play- ed at Baltimore has been readily only in the abstract. Mrs. Loftus perceived by our home folks and was a handsome woman, a fair rep profound disgust is the consequence, resentative of the highest style of This added to the infamy of the late English beauty, and in Baron Stei legislative gerrymander has every- ner's leisure hours, and they were where excited indignation among many, he composed some sonnets the common people, that they addressed to the beauty he so much should be treated as the chattel admired, partly for amusement, property of the politicians. Speaking of the gerrymander let me beg you to insert the following resolutions introduced, as I am in- formed, by Gen. J. Q. A. Bryan at a mass meeting of the Republicans of Wilkes, at Rock Creek, on Sat- urdav. the 2d inst., over two hun- dred voters being present : M at 'O IS L lLt A IlUv L11V 111KV111V iu W I Jlexolved, That the infamous ger- ryman(jering of the State by the iast Legislature deserves the hearty contempt of all good citizens irres- Eecti ve of party, and that any mem- er of the newly elected Legislature, who shall endorse the same by .vot- ing for a Democrat for United States Senator, wnen tne people oi rNortn Carolina have declared by a majori- through the brain. LoftU3i return ty of three thousand on the Congres- ed with his seconds to Brussels, and sional vote, that they " will have informed his wife of the result i)t none such," need not at any time hereafter expect the votes of the loyal men of Wilkes county. 2nd. That as a flagrant instance of the aforesaid outrage on the rep resentation of the people, we call 01 nolitical nartv P We have it that the resolutions were passed with a hip, hip, hur rah the crowd present swearing vengeance in votes on any man, who would disobey them, and then offer for office within their gift. At Elkville, Wilkesboro and Rock Creek, Messrs. Argo and Pearson spoke to large crowds. By a contradiction in time Boone and. Jefferson appointments were passed over due apology being made. "Look out for good news from Wilkes and Alexander. . 3Iaj. J. H.- Foote, ever alive to 'the interests of the party 'had the LlltJ IXlLdCOllO V4. V11C IHttVJi- 4IUU VUV( iA-v' " ? , t . Id voters of .the yadbn Kiver country ouc io near ATgo iuoauay marnr. afl np naipn c, nnwn an i ins nhrht ashe passed : down to this place, i The effect of the speech: madehy 'TomIs represented as fine, And by the Way,' let me; say one No. T4: thing (tf my. own personal khowl- finding her ke.ysi; ojienol I:cr writ edge, there has been' no better ing desk and discovered xome phcN speaker on ouride in the West in tographs. As he' was cxamming a long time ihan ThomasiM.TArsro. them hediscsovtredonetbat was an- Tiie llepublieau party.ovyes, him,a,j ueui ui iuuiiks wnicn uiey ciuinoi soon repay. His gallant canv'ass against Gov. Graham on tfceCbn- vention question a year ago in Or- ange his.desertion of the Democra- cy , when lie was one of its leaders in his count v, and lastly, his noble eiiort last woeK Tor righf and truth here in the West, all set himippaa good and glo wing .colors. The Messrs. Argo and Pearson's: an- pointments and the success attend- They did good work and the klan feel the truth of the saying. One ' .1 t -l . mi piece ui news anu x uui none. ' ine Greeley campaign was wound up 1 4. S1.A I i.1 J C last iiigiit uy uiu njuruur oi an uu- offending colored man named Jas. McElwee, by one Kale a black- smith, residing here. They were both at the bar drink- and without even a provoca : the . Au head, inflicting a mortal wound I1AA V lilV II V. (mm. A 1111 VUkl AA revoir. lours, James. States viile, Nov. Gth, 1872. - An English Sensation. Aristocratic Marriage Platonic- Love Duel Separat ion Incest and a Law Suit, A most extraordinary case has re- cently been heard in the Court of Penzance. The Hon. Henrv Lof- tus, nephew of the Marquis 01 Ely, has had his domestic circumstances revealed to the world. In 1851, Henry Loftus held a commission as Lieutenant in Her Majesty's Guards. and was allowed by his uncle, the Marquis, 800 per annum. He was very handsome, about six feet high, with large blue eyes, black eye- brows, and was an exceedingly well built man. At a ball given at Lady morarnn'a nn iwnTio :i en iioinr. 1 J- k- kV 1 . V ft. . . ftlftLftAftk ed with a INIiss Adeline Montgom- ery, whose lather naa been chief at tache to the British Embassy in Paris. After a few months' ac quaintance, they were married, and Mr. Loftus sold his commission and went to reside in Brussels, his in- come being too small to enable him to live in England in the style to which he had been accustomed pri- or to his marriage. auuui lourteeii muiinis auer ins. marriage his wife gave birth to a beautiful child, who was christened I i r i . rn i l. l xuuieiiue xvxouiguiiiery. -Liiey iiau a handsome house on the Rue Mad eline, and mixed in the first circles ed with a Baron Steiner, a young on,l linnHaomQ Tolrrion 117 V A Txrma i?ve sonnets and wa,s the .same time, an accomplished musician. Mr. Loftus occasionally visited Par- is, and sometimes made short visits to London. Baron Steiner was a great admirer of female beauty, but and partly to gratify the vanity of Mrs. Loftus. In August, 18G9, Mr. Loftus, after a short excursion to Paris, returned unexpectedly to .Brussels, and he found the Baron Steiner in the drawing-room with his wife. The Baron half intoxicated, showed Lof- tus the last sonnet he had addressed to his wile, it was an impassioned iVS AiAij it avi v w4r Mam m. u.m M-mm VV sonnet, and Loftus tore it to pieces, and kicked Steiner out of the house, The Baron challenged Loftus to mortal com bat. ljoitus - accepted seconds were obtained, and in the suburbs of Matiiies, situated . a few miles fromBrussels, they met; They useu pisiois, oieiuer .was aiiot the duel. She burst into: a flood of tears. In a defiant tone she said to her husband, "It is better we part." A deed of separation was drawn up, and Loftus returned to London. ?Jrs. Loftus . remained in Brussels, and her daughter Emeline Was her especial care. As the mother grew in years she became incapable of controlling her passions. On two occasions she hurled at her daugh ter a carving knife, which fortu nately missed her. When Emeline Loftus arrived at the age of eigh teen years she left her home, and, proceeding by train to Ostend, took the steamer, for Dover, and three hours subsequently, was alooein the great city of London . Here she ob tained a situation as governess. In September, 1870, he was. walking ifi Regent's Park, London, where, she made the acquaintance of a gen tleman forty-lour years of age, ; as she was seated on one of the iron seats in the park. It was an eventful dayr.for: her. She was absolutely tired Of the sit uation . she had taken. ' It : was , a very handsome' man; that; accosted her, though not a young one; ;"He proposed marriage. But before the ceremony hacL.beeiLperIbrmed she was installed as his mistress in Lloane street; Londori. ''During the time that she bed - room by '- f.; Tiiev representations made oy j Henry HotfghwtfX vi-3v The jLtueuxgencer or this place, eon- j Shortly alter ner-jrecovery it was vey aT:totaiFFfalse-imtHi wonifiaedher vj fferrd sickness,; her -loverl mon vote in.Ahghsf: v 'ut 31f;ta One eqsar W'lnierfl,.v. KXttllJl f i One aqaare, two Inaertiona,...:.......... 1 CO ' One equare, three Insertions, ........ X CO One square, Blx insertions, j; t One square, one month...... .....r " 8f rl One square, three months, ............... 18 y One square, six months, ;v4 f ' f A iPor lareer adTcrtisementa.rv: I iu do maaev f F v ; An Inch lenrthrisethe tc!r I j Rates for, the 7eckli iates for, the WecUynd TU-',: heretofore wtaWished., . . i,. ' as mistakably-the photontaph of his r. piaw3 wiie. xxu rusneu into iie ueu-room with his photograph in his hand, and ' frantically inquired "whor it represented. The " girt Wavery 'low at the timeVsaid it Wa3 the'pI' tore of her mother; With wfrqfn she J had quarrelled. l4TheBivI artf y6ar!, Tatherj' he exclaimed. ieIiAg ijithertO-disguised' hts nltWw heYTilviug wltlrherli immediately ; sought XorAnd'vLonl x j Penzance, ' betn'g1 acquainted "with" I having obtained a- -lateti 'accession to his fortune, provided handsOme-U l . l i i t- a l iy ior nis uaugnier xui - ine piiui was not yet. 'He "resolved 'to have ' A Ml 1 1. an interview wim nis wne, wno I was still in Brussels, and to whom. through his bankers, he regularly forwarded the amount agreed Ott in the deed of separation. Bv.lthoi death of the Marauis of Ely and his . . 15,000 a year, but f his "wife';wa4 living in Brussels on what she con- ? s'auwuuiuw i'TfT' 7 sidered a miserable .allowancQlDf 400 a year. ' On his arrivalin Brussels he stay- . , edatthe Hotel Bellevue, and ad;' dressed a letter to his wife, who was living in the Rue de Waterloo ask-i" ing her consent to aninterview. ,It; was impossible that shy couI object to grant an interview with her hus-1 band; although they had been Bepd-3 rated for so many years- ?. Ha told i her the sequel of his life afterhe had seperated .from her. Mr. " "Loftus . t patience as it was tOld to her tip her v. husband. As Loftus was leaving, haying: . , , stated that this unfortunate daugh ter was well provided for. and ' drawing in strong language a pl ture of his misery, his: wife asked., r him if he would live again with her as her husband. Mr. Loftus told , her it was impossible under the cir : cumstances. There ' was no 'possi- r bility of bridging over the chasm i nnn rnoir mieorv rnov mner. nrr ri carry to the grave. Mrs. Loftus did I MlftftV. Jk.VA WtOV4 VlllyJ ...WVL VWW.. not believe this' and as : Mr.'Loftus' . had no evidence against his wife Jn"' reference, to any improper intrigues. with the -Baron ; Steiner.- she com-. . nionMw. a cnif nffcii'ncf fho TTnn TVTr -..ftVAVWV. -M WMAV MWC..ftJftV W..V M-M. V . I. right; and underthe peculiar cir-" cumstances of the case, seeing that J Mrs. Loftus had committed - no i crime of which the. .divorce court., couiu laiie cognizance xaron xen- zance had no alternative ' but t6' re-'' ' instate Mrsi Loftus in herr original I x . . a i ngnia. ,': ! .; , J ..I; . w NORTH. CAROIilKA. In i" Rockingham;? 't .-J Returns from eight precincts give i Grant 23 majority. Reports from i the other pTecincts give the county." for Greeley by 47 majority. - ' ' ' Craven, ' ' il Official : Grant. 2;789 i ; Greelev.' ' i 951. Republican gain 253. 9 ' T ----- 3Iecklenburg, Greeley's majority 3. Republican gain 247. : Halifax, v- f-i Littleton Grant 442 ; Greeley , . 237. Jlepublican gain. ' , Alamance. 73 majority for ,GranL, Jlepubll- can gain of 330. f c; ;;i' Over 500 majori ty.for Granttrr . 7 ldgccombe, iu 2,200 majority forjGrant.: ' - Franklin, Sm i ni --v 300 maiOritv for,Orftrit: .'. in UI liMdJ 150 majority for Greeleyi1 '4 unt h.fm iiillkiiii -'V'ii' -ii 500 Majority for Grant: Republican gafnpf 440. TT 1 1 i in'! Slight lpublicanains.nl 500 majority for Grant ,-f .-rzrrr I ! -' Carteret, ,, ";u 143 mejority.for Greeley, i 600 majority for Grant. xf ' ? w.i Greeley's majority 125: 3 iilaa . - Guilford,15 - ; 450 majority for Grahti" hj n . Alexandpr TlpnnrtPfl Tnnhlfirt ' rr0li - i .f J:-., iij )oa fist v A 4i lreaell, lOO.maioritv for Greelev! WmajprityGreey. :-, ccil r- :i't:hT'iCaldwelV j-.. m Jiigtvyote.nl ' eflui Uif-li .if. ir'.tb JJonconlhe iohr ';h:'l Greeley gain on ilerrlmoir!8.totGrr .iltim" ;mU Tonfcs;q oilih? ru J500 majority for Qtdh&lrt Ijotirnl X ' J J T 1. 1 "
Tri-Weekly Era (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Nov. 8, 1872, edition 1
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