Newspapers / The Era (Raleigh, N.C.) / Nov. 14, 1872, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Era (Raleigh, 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
VM. :i. BROWN, - Manager. nte of Subscription t t ..... YOne year, in advance, 67 00 1 Six months, in advance, 3 i0 Three months, in advance, 1! 00 t.i.U'eeklt-1 year, in advan o, $3 00 TkI 6 months, 2 00 3 months, 1 00 1 month, GO ur kklt One year, in advance. 1 00 Six months, in advance, oO Unto of AdvcrlKtitg-: One square, one time, '"-I . ' .: f two time, three times,. A square is the width and 1 inch deep. Contract Advertisement taken '., at proportionately low rates. OL. 2. RALEIGH, N. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER; 14. 1872. Xo. 22. . Professional Cards, not exceeding one square, will be published one year for , 112. . ! .. . I . , y Tf t I Isl lA : L Onesqnare.onotime 1 ei(r - 1 :, ,- . ,". ... ; ;i ' , " t , . ; . ' and 1 inch deep. . . I v WEEKLY ERA." T1IL'KSIAY, NOV. 14, 1372. "o.vk of the Liberal Congressional rinks in Massachusetts lias Sus pndetl. Liabilities 4,000 votes. ' The "Silent Sufferers" to-day .are bilged" Liberals who attempt ed t' lead off from the Republican w Wk are pained to infer from The IkiU'j News that Grant's election will probably be contested, on ac count of informality at the polls in the Western Ward of this city. Xoutii Carolina is responsible f.r the great I1U uuHUfuiug the Itepublican party victory t throughout the country. We are Had to see this universally ackn owl- itluitl throughout the United btates. IlllFOKM AND EECONCI LI ATION will come easy to the Republican party nw that such Radicals as Wannonth, Schurz, Tipton, Sum ner and the balance of the Senatorial (vfolnnd pretended Greeley refor mers who have so shamefully: de ceived the country and misled the iJemocrats, have left the Republi can party. Where arc the Frauds? In August last Wood and Blum enburg did their 44 work well" and the Republican majority was only some two thousand. In November IJIumenburg is absent and Wood run off to Canada; leaving North Carolina to Grant by more than 2) 000 majority ! The victorious can afford to feel magnanimous. The triumphant re-i-Icctkn of President Grant is an occasion for great rejoicing, as it is a proper occasion for the exercise of magnanimity towards our beaten adversaries. Let all proper con gratulation and rejoicing follow the victory. No noisy demonstration can add to the great glory of the signal triumph we have achieved. They who talk of Personal Gov ernment had better look to the ex ample of the jtersonal influence of those Republican leaders who, in the dNguise of Liberal Republicans, at tempted to lead off the Republican vote of the country. There is little to he feared from personal govern ment in a country where icrsonal injfuencc is so impotent as this clec- tion has shown it to be. Ixthk Contest which 'hasjust closed. The Era has sought to d( it-! full duty to the Republican party, North Carolina and the whole country. If, in any event, we have over stepped the limits of courteous and truthful journalism, we are sorry fir it, and would ask, in this hour of J rur signal triumph, to be permitted to bury all animosities and forgef all unpleasant and unwarranted; Kr)nal allusions. The I" lag. of our Country. The Star Spangled Banner a Souther:, product floats in the breeze triumphantly to-day from the Atlaniicto the Pacific and from the Saint Lawrence to the Itio Grande, illustrating the peace and I)werof a united country, and sig nalizing the closing of "the bloody chasm." As the Greeley organs haul, it down we take occasion to run up to fur mast-head the flag of our coun try. In a Fix. The election in this State on Tues- ffoy, in its results, places many of the 44 Conservative" members of the Legislature in an awkward pre dicament. That the Legislature is returned "Democratic" and 44 Conservative" trough the "Gerrymander" of.last Winter, and by the fraudulent ef- 1 ,0rts of Filkins. " Blumenbun? and I ood, to sav nothing of the means proscription, violence and intim 'iition resorted to by our (home KopJe in the August election, the result of Tuesday amply proves; and it completely establishes the fctt 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 jhat no member elect to the Legis lature can fail to heed, and manv ill feel that they occupy seats to uhich the voice of the people has ."Liberal Republicans" not omit now proclaimed they are not enti- ting Helper and Hanes, Goodloe of , ior the election returns show more than two-thirds of the -ountles give Republican ties! majori- And this they say is the establish ment of 44 The Empire !" 1 Offlclal Returns of Election. tlic State Ihe ofheial returns of the August election are not all in yet. The at tention of county authorities ! is, called to the matter arid the fines the law imposes for neglect of duty 11 is nit; uuiy 01 an county an 1 -1 1 . . . . : . murines 10 nave me returns ail in for the Speaker of the House on the organization of the Legislature that the work of contesting the clec tion may not be delayed when the General Assembly meets. Xo 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 be understood to mean the rar" invisible empire"- which these same papers aided; to establish and attempted to perper tuate in North Carolina and the South a short time since. j As to "The Empire" justdisr covered : We have not seen it, but, these gentlemen, from their connec tion with, and agency in the late "Empire" perhaps possess the power of seeing the "Invisible." Will they rise to explain? Silver Mine iu Watausra. 2sorth Carolina is rich in all the minerals silver as well as gold is abundarit. j The Catau bd Ikigle says Watauga has a silver mine which 44 the fa mous silver lodes of Nevada, Colo rado and Montana " do not equal,' that while " their mineral deposit "may be more abundant, in res "pect to climate, water and acces ' 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. R. II." And 77ie Eagle, speaking in the right strain, says : 44 Tired of political excitement 44 let us go to work and build up and 44 develop this crreat country of ours. iegro Itulc. The American people have al ways made themselves ridiculous and disparaged the white race, when they have talked about "we gro rule" as if four millions of un educated black people with no re sources of their own, no immigra tion to swell their numbers, and no n0j)C but the niutual good will and assistance of their white people, could ever expect, attempt, or desire to rule thirty six millions of the white race, educated, rich and pow erful, with the populations of the world annually swelling their num bers, augmenting their wealth and increasing their strength. j We trust we have now heard the last of Negro Rule from the op ponents of the Republican party and the malcontents of the opposi tion. j When the returns show the re election of Grant without cpuntin a single Southern State or reckon ing a sohtarv necrro vote in all the country it is time to stop whining about "Xcgro Rule." Crimination and Itecrimma- tion Family Quarrel. j Already arc the mongrels cm 1 n rr for" each other. The Tribune says for Mr. Gree ley: "Democrats would not 4eat "crow when they could get from 44 five to twenty dollars for hot eat "ingit." ' j The Washington lyatriot organ of the "Democratic" and "Conserva tive' ring in Congress says: "Mr. 44 Broavn (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. j The Patriot grows loftily indig nant in its gloomy retiospection in thi privr lansmaire: i 44 Two Presidential elections have 44 been literally thrown away by the 14 selfish and offensive intrusion of a 44 factious iufluence, which in both 4 cases has only been powerful for 44 mischief. It never had, or de 44 served to have, any hold on the 44 popular confidence, and yet, .by 44 intrigue and the arts of scheming 44 politicians, it contrived to operate 44 effectively in the sphere of nomi nations, to which our disasters 44 are due." I And addressing itself to Sumner, Schurz. Trumbull. Tipton. Fenton, Filkins and the balance of the AVarren and McQuigg of Wilming ton The Patriot says: 44 A grain of comfort is found in 44 the fact that these architects of ruin 44 are now condemned to exile and Negro Rule.' J The Census Reports of 1870 make the irttte voting population of the Southern States ; i mi T A - -t ; 1,829,72: 4 Aiiesame aveporis nuiKt the colored votinsr popu- hition of the Southern States (v..jr-; : !', , a.- - (4 White tfirtjority, , : Wanlinsr - on! v 3.G2tf 83:, 99G,.T74 Of TA pHLLION-IBa of tchite in excess of colored voters! If; we take West Virginia, which State is not in cluded in our tabU, we have the Southern States, in 1870, giving a white rqajorch of more than a mil' Hon of rotes! j fj Yet ve hear people talkingsabqut 'negro rule" as if eight hundred thousand recently emancipated ne groes could control one million eight hundred thousand white, life longfreemen. (Gentlemen of the South disparage themselves when they talk of ne gro rule in the bouihern btates. They either utter what is not true, orthey proclaim their everlasting shame and disgrace. I JBut the cry of "negro rule" is not raised to proclaim the truth. It is the result of prejudice and political hatred of the colored man ; and through falsehood and enmity the 1 hope has been indulged of inducing the Northern people to turn against the colored people and withdraw the privileges which they extended asan immediate result of the war. Mf. Doolittle, and a few other gen tlemen, of the late "Liberal Repub lican party" at the North, have been induced to declare that "the Reconstruction laws shall be re- -yiewed, and the privileges of negro suffrage modified, restricted, and, f necessary, taken away altogether." It Was n the hope of making this sentiment universal at the North hht people at the South have pro claimed they were '-'hopelessly and ruinously under negro rule" that thj?,' mis-management and extrava gance of their State governments was due to this fatal negro rule ahil the last card of hope they had to play wa3 the late 44 Jack o' Clubs" Horace Greeley which they have played so disastrously to them selves, but so fortunately for the country. ! We hope to hear no more of this nccrro rule " now. Recognizing the faithfulness of the negroes of the South during the war, and their unexampled conduct since their emancipation and investment with suffrage, we appeal to every South ern man to do them tardy justice. We grant that they are ignorant ; but have the Southern people en deavored to enlighten them ? They are-poor ; but who has for two hun dred years jrathered the fruits of their labor? If the tone of their morals is no't the highest, how long haVe the marriage altar and the school house been institutions airjong them ? yor two hundred years the ne- erroes have been the toilers of the Sooth, and dieh their masters were engaged in a war to determine their Immediate freedom, ' or perpetual slavery, tlifcyvweie as loyal to the cause -th the white people 01 me SjOutli-T-thtf -cause of their enslave meiit as f'fty race of men were ever true to anV- cause any section or any country;' They have never been uufaithfufrjr wanting, Ttlid ingrati tude is notiimong their faults. The boon of freedom they accepted as a heaven-sent blessing, and they are demonstrating to the world that the- are hot unworthy of the name -of free-men. -They quietly accepted what was tendered them, with nomianifesta- tiori of unkindness toward their for mer masters cni in no assertions of rights and privileges from which their color ought to I exclude them. Thev have manifested no desire to ruleithc white people of the South. Invested with the privileges of com plete citizenship they have only asked to. be allowed to assist to have their part in the government of their section, and of the country which they inhabit by reason of no immigration of their own ; and the hope of their lives is to find all their old Jmasters in thorough political accord with them; that they may support and cast their votes for the men w ith w hom they were born, who reared them and know them, and toward whom they cherish no unkindness, and no resentment. We have outlived and got over, somehow, or . other, the divisions and quarrels of the past few years, and j now that these questions of races and rights have settled them selves, we appeal to the boutnern people to view the matter before them in the light of a new reason; and accepting the voice of the peo ple of this Nation as the voice of the God of Nations, form new lines, new associations, new issues, and, adopt new policies on the basis of domestic peace, pouuem irauquimj and Southern happiness and pros Grecleyana. j Ex-Gov. Vance and Ex-Speaker j Jarvis spoke in Charlotte on Mon t day in behalf of Mr. Greeley. On Tuesday Grant carried the Charlotte box ; making a gain of more than a hundred votes. Long live Vance and Jarvis. Grant gains overoM in Pitt coun ty thar's ichar 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 IoW'grounds of the East. Johnston county gives Granup- wards of GOO majority -a gain of 800. Mr. Pou, the other Greeley 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 SOO majority a Radical gain of 134. This is Octavius Coke's quarter where he "hoeil his corn and digged hii ra ters," "laus Deo," that wTe had an Uctavius lor a ureeiey Elector in the 1st District. Greene county: herein lies the "home stretch" of Col. Swift Gal loway, the Greeley Elector for the 2nd District, and too "Swift" lies gloriously stretched, gaimed splendidly in my "Swift," you can Grant has Greene. Oh now realize that "the race is not to the Swift nor the battle to the strong." Cumberland county goes for Grant by 350 majority a gain f nearly 400 for the Rads. Good for the Hon. T. C. Fuller, a Greeley Elector ; he resides at Fayetteville. Chatham county ha3 gone for Grant by 300 majority a 400 for the Republicans, for Maj. H. A. London, a gain of Hurrah 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 handsomely for 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 this his native dung-hill. Wake county foots up nearly 1300 majority for Grant a gain of more than 700. Here is where The Hal- eigh News has been forging its thunder-bolts; and this is the field of the Mr. T. B. Kingsbury's missionary labors. The Wilmington Journal is somewhat reasonable in its article on the result of Tuesday's work. The Journal says : We shall accept the situation just as wo believe the Northern people intend that we shall. Complying with all laws, however harsh and unprofitable, re joicing in every material advancement, we shall nevertheless protest in the lu- ture, as we have in the past, against ev ery usurpation and encroachment upon the rights of the people, whether they come from the edict of a President, from the vengeance of Congress, or from the corruptions of a judge. Our immediate people have political work enough before them to retorm their own State government, and re-establish their State credit. Let us ad dress ourselves to that work with the affection of sons and the entausiasm, at least, which comes from seif-interest. In the re-establishment of our own State credit and all needful re- forms in the State government we are heart anu soui wiui me uesi, and in such great work we should be p-Liri to cordially co-operate with o " 1 The Journal and all patriotic papers and people of the opposition. Meeting ot the General sembly. As- The Legislature of North Carolina meets on Monday, November 18th. It is confidently believed that, by Tuesday the 19th, the contested election will be disposed of. The N. Y. Manufacturing Co., 21 Courtlandt street, N. Y., have es tablished an 44 Emporium of Novel ties" and utilities for every-day use. Agents, male and female, wanted everywhere. See their ad vertisement in another column. We congratulate the 44 Demo crats" and 44 Conservatives" on the prospect of turning out the Repub licans elect and putting In gentle men of their State ticket, for the next four years. The Greeley and Brown Club of i and Patriotic Senti- ;;; - incuts. We are srlad to note the utterance of patriotic sentiments byjsome of the opposition papers in their arti cles on the recult of Tuesday, and It affords us no little pit asure to trans fer, to our columns this language from The Durham 'Tobacco Plant : 44 If General Grant has been re flected, and will re-enter upon " the duties of his office with the "determination to administer the 44 government for the good of our " people, we of the 44 South, will 4 the last to oppose 44 in any wa'y'Tns administration. nd we arc ready to join The 44 Era and lose sight of political 44 divisions when th gov eminent 44 is administered for ihe good of the " people." A leading gent'eman of poneord one of the fust merchants of the place, a large fanner of Cabarrus and, we believe, a manufacturer, writes us a letter for publication which will be found in another col i umn. This gentleman, is, as he says an oiu Lane uemoerat 111 an res pects just what lie pretends to be ana the sentiments ana 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 the election : 44 Believing that General 44 Grant is now re-elected it is the 44 duty of every citizen tof uphold 44 his hands in the just administra " tion of the laws." This, is the true sentiment of a patriot one that considers himself a constituent part of the cho.sen 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 creat work oi reiorm, peace and reconciliation, the proper ad ministration ; public justice and the exercise of clemency and mercy, the breaking down of sectional feel- iS d the complete restoration of the South, President Uranti and the Republican party, proposes! to go as far as any one could go, and he in- vites, and the Republican party m- vites, specially," the co-operation of the'South and the Democratic party, thus 44 making one common coun- lly V11U CV VsVS 1 m. IlliVlt AWft.V'AV.tJU AW. 44 the prosperity and peace of the 44 whole country." With this Cabarrus county Dem ocrat we cordially 44 clasp j hands," and, thanking him for his commu nication, invite more of the same sqrt from the patriotic Democrats of the State. 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 motive for which it is utterly im possible to discover. Every student of history will remember the story of the;" Neche Trieste," or "Night of Grief," wThen the Aztecs, iinluna- ted at the lei I designs ot the span iards under Hernando Cortez, the representative filibuster of all time, assailed his lorce with an indiscri- 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 fighting 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 exnausieu, naiieu unuer n great cyress tree, near where tne uarita . f A de San Cosmo, within the walls of the city, was subsequently located, and there rallied the reninant ot his forces for the retreat toward Tlazcala, where he found the allies, who! subsequently enabled him to reduce the city to capitulation. Thrs tree was held in great rever ence by the Mexicans, both of Span ish j and Indian descent,! and a church was erected by itiin com memoration of the event which oc curred there. The 44 Tree of Cortez " stood green and! flourishing, though large sec tions of its gigantic trunk were de cayed, until last month, when some vandal filled the cavity with rags saturated with coal oil, set them on fire-in the night, and at dawn only a heap of smoking coals j marked the! spot where this great historic landmark stood. Private letters received from the city of Mexico say that the greatest indignation was awakened there by the dastard ly outrage, aud the Government and the historic Society had offered rewards for the discovery of the perpetrator of it. ! A sum in, or out of proportion If a ten year old boy rides a three wheel velocipede seven miles in two hours, (fact, know the boy,) how far will seven men ride in ten years on a two-wheeler, and if so, IMahJy i On to Richmond.' Ilortivf Gnv-lry has made another "on to lth-hfsiond." He has again encountered " ihe rebellious trai- .uiu punirtiinii, ub meir nanus, another 44 Bull Run" defeat. No wreath of victory achieved in any battle- of the late avuj- sets more proudly or more becomingly on the brow of the Southern Soldier than his refusal yesterday to cast his vote for Horace Greeley. No condition of our country required it ; no cir cumstance or want of peace and re conciliation demanded it; as aproof of l heir good faith and disposition toward the government, no friend of the government asked or desired any such sacrifice of their manhood. The result shows that many, very many, of the men who so gallantly followed Lee, as j cheerfully and gallantly recorded their votes yes terday for G it ant. : We are glad to know that this is so. We hail it as a good omen for the country and the harbinger of lasting peace and unexampled prosperity for the South. There are quite a number how ever the great body of the vete rans of the Confederate Array who declined to vote in the election yes terday ; while the motives of those who did vote for Greeley are neither misunderstood nor misconstrued. It would have been a gallant action gracefully performed, for the Con federate Army to have marched in solid column to the polls yesterday for Grant. But this could not be reasonably expected just now, and under the circumstances, but that they will, as one man, give all pro per support to the new administra tion of President Grant, we have not a doubt ; for, the men who fol lowed Lee can be trusted by Grant as implicitly as their old Comman der relied on them: and President Grant will retire from the head bf the government four1 years hence carrying as much of their affection and confidence as silently went out to General Lee at Appomattox. d lem good-bye and retired from the sight of his sorrow- stricken veterans and brave follow ers. We invite the old soldiers of the South to re-form under the flag of our common country and the ban ner of the Republican party, and choose a new leader in the person of U. S. Grant, in the support of wrhom they will sacrifice nothing of heir glorious manhood, nor mis place their trusting confidence. communicated. The American Statesman and Patriot. Now that the din of battle with ballots is over, and the political con- est of the past few months is end ed, it is meet and proper that men of all parties should, without pre judice, camly survey the situation, and benefit by the result. The mass of the American people on Tuesday last gave a verdict that cannot be misconstrued or perverted. That verdict is before the eyes and in the hearts of all who love good govern ment, and it is a terrible shock to the authors of a party who sought the overthrow of an administration in which nearly all the States of this republic had unbounded confi dence. Surely Gen. Grant cannot but feel that he has the plaudits of the. whole country, the people hav ing said: "Well done good and faithful servant." No administration since the for mation of our government has had such a thorough and complete en- (lorcnmpnt ''niwlfrf nr tli (Incur. tion of supposed friends, and the calumny, slander and vituperation of avowed enemies. It may be said of General Grant as it was said of another: "First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of hi countrymen." He has shown mag nanimity, liberality and justice to fallen foes on occasions prior to the present ; and he will not exhibit less in his future administration of this great government. Then let all who love their country give him their undivided supportln uphold ing and preserving that for which Ihs risked his life to' maintain and perpetuate to unborn millions. T he people who lived before us thought that George Washing ton deserved to control the destinies of the nation for eight years, which he had been instrumental in found ing and perpetuating. ' So the American people on luesuay last re-asserted the same thing in re electing Ulysses S. Grant, who pre served what Washington had be queathed. Truly, no man couiu nave more appropriately been selected the ru ler of the government one hundred years from its foundation. General Grant will be the President of the United States in 187G, not of thir teen States, but of three times thir teen. I hope to see that memorable Zay,and trust that every American, be ho high or low, will leei lree anu equal, and entitled to all the rights and immunities of an American citizen, as made, known - in the De claration of Independence of 177G. That all may unite in saying: 44 Grant the deliverer; Grant the benefactor; Grant the preserver of his country ; Peace on earth ana good will among men." X. 1j. 15. NORTH CAJROLINAl 1 Clcavcland, Thought to have given a small majority for Grant. 1 Hertford. ' Returns from two townships show 55 gain for Grant. 1 j ; j , Perquimans, IV) majority for Graiit. WoodvUi-? -f-Grant 253 ; Greeh-y, 77 ; O'Conor U. ' . i Edgecombe, Tarboro-(i;ant '570; Gneley IS I ; O'Conor 2. ! I -Nash, t . T Four townships gi;e Grant 210 majority. ( Washinjxtou, Lee's Mills Grant 202; G ret-ley 111. 37 gain. Kockiiiliam, 4G majority for Grant. Gain 1;. J5ertio, Between 700 and 800 for Grant. Chatham About 200 majority for Grant. Rutherford, GOO to 700 majority for Grant. " Stokes, j 1. . . -3 majority for Grant. - : ritt 500 majority for Grdnt. Vadkiu. 250 majority for Grant. Gaston, i About ISO for Greeley. i i Granvile, 979 majority for Grant. Chowan, 300 majority for Grant. Union, Strong for Greeley. Cumberland. Grant's majority 401. Mceklcnl mrg, Greeley's majority 3. Republican gain 247. Halifax, Littleton Grant; H2; Greeley 237. Republican gain. Alamance, ' 73 majority for Grant.' Republi can gain of 330. Lenoir, Over 500 majority for Grant. Franklin, 300 majority for Grant. Orange, 150 majority for Greeley. 1 I to wan, Republican gain of 1 10. Lincoln, Slight Republican gains. j Forsythe, 500 majority for Grant. Carteret, 143 mejority for Greeley. Wayne, G00 majority for Grant. ; Cabarrus, Greeley's majority 125. - j Guilford, 450 majority for G ra n t. Alexander, Reported Republican. Iredell, .100 majority for Greeley. j McDowell, 140 majority for Greeley. Caldwell, Ligt vote. Iluncoiiibe, G reel ey ga fn s on Me r r i m on V Jones, 300 majority for Grant. Henderson. 1 ' V vote Greeley eains 13 over the Merri- mon vote In August. Speaking of Western North Tennesseei The .cheese-making in Carolina and Eat Cincinnati (.hrunu r- Cfcas: Amonjr iother evidences of pro gress at the South may be noticed the increasing interest manifested in cheese-making, particularly in Eastern Tennessee and Western North Carolina. There are four cheese factories in Western North Carolina, which will this year turn out about 100,000 pound.-) of chec?e no great things lor the Northern dairy districts, but of much impor tance in that country. This cheese sells for fifteen cents a pound het, and that made at Elk Mountain has been pronounced equal in quality to the best Herkimer county pro duct. Dairying and wool growing are well adapted to many portions of the Southern fctates, and ap to be growing in favor. ear The unmarried Editor of The Hickory Tavern Carrie threatens to publish Matrimonial Probabilities in his paperj in which are to be ar ranged tables under the classes 44 very soon ""slow" 44 getting warmer "! 44 getting colder 7 "dead." jWe would like to know under which head the matrimonial prospects of the said editor will be classed Boston has leen tearing down an bid 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 has been going on a year or more, and is not completed yet. j The British barque I'erseverance from England reached. Wilmington Tuesday, with a cargo or iron for the W. C. & A. K. It, " insignificance." perity. this city has adjourned sine die. why not?
The Era (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 14, 1872, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75