' Tberv wm In tt Citj one SosU, lnfiunoni f.r bia Insolence ad villainy, who tbooxht th perfection of Liberty m licrntloarae of Speech. Plctarch. THURSDAY, APRIL, 3, 1873. Note Crowded Oat. Letters from Lockville and Pitts lx)ro in Chatham, a communication of some colored men from Lumber ton In Robeson, touching the color ed correspondent1? lately cultivating the Democratic papers in Raleigh and Wilmington, and other matter prepared for this issue of the Era .are crowded out, but will appear next week. Personal and Political. A Press Convention is called at Goldsboro for 14th May. Charles Mallett, of Wilmington, fell In a fit on Thursday of last week. IL W. Conner, of Mecklenburg; lately died suddenly in Baltimore, Duffy of the Greensboro Patriot has been "Joiner" New Orleans for his paper. Judge Clark is openly charged in the DaDers with drunkenness on MM the Bench. Miss Laura Alexander of this State Is winning fame in the Dra matic world. Lewis a colored Pilot was drown ed at Beaufort last week, by the up setting of a boat. Municipal elections for the towns and cities of the State occur first Monday in May. J. J. Shuford. of Catawba, after a long and honorable life is dead at the age of eighty. Hickman and Broughton, the Good Templar invaders were in Wilmington Friday last. Manuel Cline, near Newton, is drinking 130 gallons of whiskey per week, says the Piedmont Press. Daniel F. Savage of Wilmington, Engineer on the W. A W. R. R., died suddenly in that citv last week . is. I'eierson, a clever young Printer of this State died in Abbe ' viile.S. C, 22d March, of spinal meningitis. : The Wilmington Journal having been indicted for printing Judge Bond "a scoundrel" is devoting much abuse to that official. Geo. W. Booker, of Rockingham, charged with killing Hampton Jef fries last October has been released. Grand Jury failed of a true bill. The public will be glad to learn that E. R. Stanly, Esq., the efficient president, has so far recovered his health as to resume the manage ment of the A. & N. C. R. R. ine managing Editor, Jordan Stone, of the Raleigh JTetcs, having comiuded to take a trip South, some sensation ist started a duel be tween himself and Hon. Josiah lurnerof the St-nliml. The fooler fooled. j -any jniormation of the where- abouts of Alexander Forsy the, from Scotland, who it is supposed settled euner in North or South Carolina . about forty years ago, will be gladly received by his son, John Forsythe, lireensDoro, a. C. mi J. no ureensboro Patriot (Demo cratic) is out in support of Grant ior a mini term. The Democrats have ik-siu tl mid done many im poible and foolish things, and they . A . muj utsire io run urant for a third term the Republicans will not. j.ne ec jsorth Slate savg the Democrats under the lead of Hen dricks of Indiana are going to at tempt to galvanize into life under some new political name and party organization entirely distinct from the Democratic-Conservative party. instead or complimenting the South by inviting General Gordon to preside over the Senate, tlie Democratic papers manifest a spirit or the lowliest meanness in claim ing that the Vice-President simply honored the Senate by inviting Sen ator Gordon to the chair. The list of Special Claims-Commissioners employed to take testi mony in the Southern States, has been revised, and the list for North Carolina now stands : John Minor, of Fayetteville; Joseph Dixon, of Hookerton, Elmore W. Woods, of Chapel Hill; K. R. Pendleton, of Aoodville; W. B. Glenn, of Red Plains ; J. N. Snelson, of Asheville; Thos. J. Dula, of Wilkesboro; Samuel W. Davidson, of Murphy; Geo. M. McDowell, of Marshal, and C. C. Wither?, of Dallas. IL C. Radger, Esq. This gentleman, a Representative from Wake county at the last Bit ting of the General Assembly, has received from the President the ap pointment of United States District Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, and consequently a vacancy occurs in the County rep resentation in the House from Wake. It will be hard to fill the place of Mr. Badger. He made an, able and a working member, and was recog nized as the legal leader of the House on the Republican side, be ing an able lawyer, one of the ablest of hl3 age In the State. The speech of Mr. Badger on the removal of the disabilities of Gov ernor Holden is remembered by all who heard it as the ablest speech of the General Assembly, and as a lecal anrument unsurpassed and O r unanswerable. As soon as room can be made In the Era this great speech will be given .to the public; and Republicans throughout the State will do well to preserve it, for it is a most admirable campaign document for 1874. The enlarge ment of the Era will give the op portunity for the publication of this speech, and it shall be given to the rrr.florsof the Era in the issue for Thursday, 17th April. The Era. Now is the time for the friends of the Era and the Republican party to bestir themselves in behalf of the paper. Advices from New York and Forestville say that the material and paper ordered for the enlarge ment of the Era has been shipped and will arrive in time for the issue of April 10th to appear enlarged. Every subscriber to the -Era could easily procure another, and if all Into whose hands the paper falls would send one subscriber each, the Era would have a circulation of sixteen thousand in the State. Already It has the largest circula tion of any political paper in North Carolina, and is more strictly on a cash basis than any publication ever attempted in the State. With the exception of a half dozen papers mailed to friends and relatives of employes in the office, and some fifty exchanges, not a single paper leaves the office unpaid for in advance. No other paper in the State can say as much ; nor can any pretend to a better cash foundation than the Era. tt is paying alnvo its expenses, and daily on the increase. Give the Wwk ' a L'ood start now. and a Dailr will issue in the Fall to do - - TJ ' credit to the State and the Repubh w can party. Friends, send in the subfCribers and deduct your twenty-five per cent, commissions. Captain T. M. Argo. This distinguished young gentle man, now a resident of Raleigh,' is on a visit to his father-in-law Rev. Dr. Hubbard, formerly a Professor at Chapel Hill, but for the past five years a resident of Manlieus, near Svractise, New York, where he has a school and a pastoral charge. Captain Argo was a Southern sol dier in the late war, but is one of those who has not found it inconsis tent with duty to the South in war to be a Republican in time of peace, There is no mistake about it, a high order of merit belongs to those sol diers of the South who faithfully performed the military duty requir ed of them in the late unhappy con flict between the States, but it has been a most unfortunate mistake for our section to suppose that duty to the memories of the past requires that we shall keep the South in perpetual arms against the North and the General Government. It is true that one cannot be a Demo crat without going constantly armed and equipped according to law, but the Democratic party since the war has been a mistake and a curse to the South and the Southern people. Mr. Argo is one of those soldiers of the South who finds it his duty to bo as true, in word and in deed, to the present Government as his con duct in time of war shows him to have been to that other Govern ment, which, born of revolution, passed away amid the smoke and din of battle. A close and intimate association between Mr. Argo and the Editor of this paper, extending over many months, enables the writer to speak of the gentleman as he knows him, and it is not too much to say that Mr. Argo is worthy in the highest degree, a gentleman in every sense, and a studious, rising young law year of distinguished talents and elevated position in his profession. An Outrage. Under the head of Immigration to Buncombe County." the Pied mont Press relates the following outrage and extortion perpetrated and practiced by the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad to Goldsboro, the Central to Salisbury, and the Western North .Carolina to Old Fort Four families, thirty-six in number, migrated frbm Brunswick county, N. C, to Buncombe, last week. Enormous compared with emigrant rates rail road charges wcrp imposed upon them ; paying from Wilmington, to Old Fort, the terminus of the W. N. C. Railroad, TWO HUNDRED AND SEVENTY- t EIGHT DOLLARS econd class fare. And this does not include charges on household effects' and other property shipped as freight. We understand these people made every effort in Wil mington to secure a car but failed. We don't suppose these people have been specially victimized by the railroad companies, for they liave only paid reg ular rates, and it is this that we com plain of. Tourist? and pleasure seekers ride over .this road at half rates ; foreign emigrants areoffered reasonable induce ments, but our own people, in whose interest a great many people were once fools enough jto believe railroads were built, are shpwn no favors. Indeed it f perates as Au effectual barrier to im migration to I Westp; n X. C. We have rea -n to believe tuati number of Eas tern families! would migrate to this sec tion, but for he high railroad tariffs. attention of our railroad lhis fact and ask that We call Ihej authorities Emigrant latcs be established over their respect! ve lines through the State. We haven't iime to tpursue the subject further at thj time, i j w Gen. Gordon Presiding over the Senate. The fact tfiat Vice-President Wilson called General Gordon, of Georgia, to the Chair, on Tuesday, to preside over the Senate ifor a few moments, was made the occasion of a telegraphic item by the preps reporter at Washington City, the dispatch adding: " This is the first time ex-Confederate has been called to preside over the Senate.' t This was perhaps intended as a com pliment to a new, member. We were not, however, aware before that there was any special honor for the Presiding Officer of either Ilouse of Congress to call any member to the Chair, and wo fail to recognize any distinguished mark of favor to the South in that Gen. Gordon occupied,-for a short time the seat latelv! made ' vacant by Schuyler Colfax, and which is now the post of llenry Wilson. - j The idea Jof an ex-Confederate General presiding tven temporarily over the Senate of the United States may strike some minds at the North as an evidence of an advanced state of reconstruction ; but if there has been any honor confer red In this case, it is the Senate of the United States that . has been honored, in having in the Chair as Presiding Officer a gentleman oi tno accompnsnmems, worth, gallantry, integrity and high character of J. B. Gordon, i Iu cabins Geni Gordon to preside over the Senate for a short while, Vice- President (Wilson may have intended to compliment the South, and to show that he is willing; to treat with decent respect a true representative from our section, but such a spirit of courtesy is due to each member of that body, re gardless of his locality. Upon the floor, each Senator is a peer with the rest, and entitled to! impartial consideration and courtesy at the hands of the President of the Senate. During -the short time Gen. Gordon presided on Tuesday, there was cer tainly an honest man and gentleman in the Chair, and tfifc Senate of the United States deserves to be congratulated that the place ! was so f ably- and honorably filled for the time being. Raleigh Xews. The Era is ashamed to say that the above is the production of a Confederate soldier and a North Carolinian. It is an insult to the gallant Gordon, and a libel upon the people of 'North Carolina, that no truly good and brave. man can afford to be guilty of, without seri ous damage to his ood sense, his reputation and His iionor. The cry of this same Editor and his Klan' last Summer, was "Let's clasp hands across the bloody chasm"-f-"let the North and the South be United in fact in senti- ment and feeling, as well as in name, i : .Mr. iee-President Wilson, i if to practically illustrate the com plete restoration of the South, which both the sentiment and incident oi the late campaign so unmistakably demanded to dignify and acknowl edge her representation in the Na tional Legislature called Senator Gordon, of Georgia, to the chair. Massachusetts shaking hands with and welcoming Georgia! Statesmen, patriots, Republicans, men of good ,hearts, good feeling and good sense, from the St. Law rence river to the Gulf of Mexico, from, the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, hailed the act with an uni versal acclamation of pride, patrio tism and. pleasure ; only the wicked- soreheads, malicious-malcontentSj mischief-maker and canting-hyjio- crites object. Men j of large heads and large hearts statesmen and patriot Radicals, Democrats or Ku Klux, so they be honorable ana manly men, rejoice that the South is re- storeu ;to tne place oi her power and pride in the government of the country. They see Mr. Vice-Presi dent Stephens of the late Coneder ate States in the present Congress of the United States ; our own Ran som a Senator from North Carolina; and the gallant, soldierly Gordon, in the$ehate from the Empire State ,it. rNJ.ii - i p 1 1 j of the South ; all of them the peers of any.! No Northern soldier of the late . war, - or Republican in the present division of publics objects to this. It is practical restoration. It was fori ihis that the Union forces fought pi defence of the Union; and Vice-President Wilson illus trated, the other day the fact, that, the Union has been restored, and the rights and dignity of the South acknowledged . ' and vindicated through her complete reconstruc tion. n In thecfcame of a united country, all truejmen thank him ; especially do we oft the South,' who are true to the best Interest of the South, thank fMr. Wilson; and General John Ij-j Gordon, the brave true so!dier,and honorable man that he is, does; hot fail to appreciate the graceful mark of honorable distinc tion thus conferred upon him in recognition of his section of the common country. But nothing .differing from the above extract could be reasonably expected; of one who so recently proclaimed his;i devotion to tho creed of the Ku Klux, and declared his affinity to u murderous Klan in veil remembered appeals for an Amnesty and Pardoning Act at the hands of the Legislature, which should stimulate into activity and that renewed career of murder, out rage and crime, of which the Dem ocratic party stands charged and convicted through its allies of rob bers, cut-throats, highway-men and midnight-assassins. This Raleigh Xews is an organ of the Democratic party, the tribune of its sentiment in North Carolina, and the very glass of its Southern chivalry. It is the herald of wel come to immigration, capital, and Northern energy and enterprise; the exponent of Southern civiliza tion, the fashion-plate of Southern Society, and its Political Editor the advocate and preacher of North Carolina resources. It is thus that he proposes to invite the igenuity of the New Englander, the capital of the New Yorker, and the solid in dustry of the sturdy Pennsylvania farmer. " Come among us and we " will JBIIONOR YOU-a by " tolerating your presence " as the "Senate of the TTnited States has "been honored in having in the " chair as Presiding officer a gentle "man of the accomplishments, " worth, gallantry, integrity and " high character of John B. Gor "don," is the language in which this Southern Editor proposes to invite the capital, labor and energy necessary to utilize our undeveloped wealth, and place North Carolina abreast with her sisters of the North, East and West in prosperity and intelligence! Deliberately insult and taunt a people, and thus make sport of the kindly sentiment and conduct of those from whom we hope and expect the benefits of material restoration and salvation through the cultivation of pleasant relations and brotherly feeling. And this is the sort of work the Demo cratic Press of North Carolina and the South is engaged in in behalf of a land of desolated homes, wasted wealth and buried resources. Difference, See ?" Don't You Georgia, which gave G0,000 Dem ocratic majority, pays G8 cents and 7 mills per head toward educating her youth ; which gave other way, same object, that ? while Massachusetts, as many majority the gives $20 toward the Is there anything in communicated. Durham. The town of Durham, in Orange county, of all the towns in the State, is the most enterprising, and pros perous, and bids fairest to outstrip all of its fellows in material growth. In I860 it 'was incorporated, having not a hundred inhabitants. Now it has over eight hundred. In 1SG9 it had only two stores, and two to bacco factories. Now it has twenty stores, one drug store, one confec tion and baker's store, and two large tobacco warehouses, one steam saw mill, one manufactory of smutting machines, one newspaper, hotel, academy, seminary and eighteen to bacco factories. Resides there is soon to be established there a factory for making shoe blacking, admitted to be superior to any yet manufac tured. The cause oi this rapid growtn is, in the .main, its tobacco trade; though, of course, much is due to the enterprise of itscitizens. Among them, Mr. W. T. Blackwell, the maker of the Durham Smoking Tobacco, is the acknowledged su perior in enterprise, thrift, and business capacity. Hn came to Durham iu 1869, and invested all his fortune, which at that time amounted to only $1,500 in a tobacco factory. Then he worked only two hands besides himself: now he works 131 hands, and all the opera tions of his large smoking and plug factories are carried on by steam. His property in 1872 was valued for taxation atjrffy thousand dollars, and is now, at . a safe estimate, worth eighty thousand. In 1872 he manufactured 1,100,000 pounds of tobacco, and still had orders un filled. He now manufactures at least one-half of the immense amount annually shipped from uurnam ana is yearly increasing his business. Orders are received by him from China, and Europe, and hundreds of dealers throughout tne u mteu estates, lie pays more tax than any man in Orange county. So much has this shrewd, energetic and deservedly successful man ac- pnmnli'shPfl in thf shnrf. ctv.mo rf four years. Messrs. Carr and Day,. who are interested with Mr. Black well are also men of much business energy and tact. All Durham seem to have caught energy from Mr. Blackwell, and now the spirit of enterprise and thrift pervades all classes and con ditions of this stirring, expanding community. The traveller of a dozen years ago, who remembers Durham as simply a way station on the T. C. R. R., where a small amount of freight for Chapel Hill was discharged, where the students . got on and off, and where bullies It'U met around a little shanty in which whiskey was sold to boast and fight. would not suspect that the present pretty town, with its neat brown and white houses, spreading off in i all directions in beautiful contrast ' with the green of the pines and ce dars, enlivened by the hum and clatter of machinery, the noise of the hammer and the bustle of the busy people, was that nce unat tractive place. . "We predict for the town a perma nent growth "and prosperity. It is now" a tobacco, market at which over 3,000,000 pounds areanuually sold at prices larger than can be realized either at Richmond or Danville. Besides the local dealers, hundreds of buyers go there from Richmond, Petersburg, Danville, Hillsboro, Reidsville, Newbern and other points, and large amounts are purchased on order, for parties in New ork City, Rochester, Balti more jand several cities South. How much better for North Carolina if tfterewere more Durhams in the State ! We believe -her people have the good wishes of all who desire to see commendable effort reward ed, among whom is one who pre fers to sign himself, - Viator. Speech of I. B. Abbott, i OF CRAVEN", 1 Delivered in the tfbrth Carolina House of Heprcseniatives, on the Ku Klux Amnesty Bill. Mr. Speaker: It is generally supposed, in view of the limited ed ucation of the colored members on this floor, that they are incompe tent to discuss questions of such importance as this, but, sir, I be lieve the educated men of this Leg islature have deceived themselves and are about to mislead others. We find that it is not left, alone, to those of the greatest learning, and to talents which fall to the share of so small a number, to direct public judgement and measure our conduct here. We are thankiui, JU r. apeaK er. that a divine Providence has taken good care of our happiness, and criven us, in the simplicity of. common sense, a rule of practical discretion by whien we are in no danger of being misled. Mr. Speaker, I have taken the floor, sir, for the purpose of moving a reconsideration of the vote just taken. 1 changed my vote for that purpose. My reasons for so doing, are, that we, on this side of the House, have been gagged by the call for the previous question, and 1 now move to reconsider that vote We desire to express our views upon this outrageous bill. I, sir, represent a constituency that de mands of me the offer of their pro test against this bill. I am in op position to it in every -way and manner, all through. The mostob jectional features of the bill have been stricken out by the amend ment offered by the gentleman from Anson, but there remain pro visions in the bill that are obnox ious to every true lover of liberty. I offered two amendments which I had hoped would have been adopt ed. But the wisdom of the house saw proper to defeat them. There was another amendment offered by my colleague (Mr. Dudley) striking out the Union League, which was also defeated. Now, sir, I will state here in my place, that I was a member, and an officer in the Union League, and I am not afraid, nor ashamed to say so. The League has committed no crime or outrage as an organization. I admit that some of the individual' members of the League have been guilty of thft and other crimes, but, sir, this is io be cnargeu neither to the Union League, nor the Republican party. L Mr. Speaker, offered my amend ments providing that the provis ions of that act shall not apply to the first regiment of North Carolina State troops, and one of t hem was for the purpose of excluding in toto companies "A." and "11. " of the said Regiment. My object for this isi, that 1 was a member and an oMlcer of company "II" in that Regiment, and we ask no pardon at the hands of this Legislature. It will be remembered that, when the Shoffner bill was under considera tion in the Legislature of 1868-'G9, it was then denied that there was any such thing as a Klan of Ku Klux. The bill I have reference to is better known by the name of "an act to better protect life and proper ty?' The gentleman from Craven, Mr. Seymour, mastering the bill, then occupied the seat now occupied by the gentleman from Washing ton, and the gentleman from Hyde who disgraced that very highly notable corn country upon this floor, became so excited, on Ku Kiuxism, that he sprang from his seat and shook his list in Mr. Sey mour's face, and denied the exis tence of any such organization in this State. Mr. Malone, the Demo cratic carpet-bag member from Tennessee, struggled to defeat the bill. Mr. Durham said there was no necessity for such a law and that the people would rise up in the next election and call a Convention to do away with all such unneces sary laws; and they did rise in the August election oi 180. He knew that the Klan was then or would be strong enough... by that time to defeat the Republican party in this State. What did they do when that Legislature met here? About the first thing they did, was to pre- prefer , articles of impeachment against Governor Holden for en deavoring to put down the infamous and lawless Klan of murderers which this bill proposes to pardon impeached and thrown out of his fhce, to the disgrace of the State, by the influence and power of this monstrous association, simply be cause he called out troops and ar rested one Mr. Turner and others. Whether or not it was right I will not now pretend to argue, or whether he arrested Mr. Turner too soon or detained him too long, I will not now say, but my simple opm- ... mm ion is that H it naa ueeu eignt months earlier it would have been a great deal better for Li. A. Shot- well, -who was seutencea to tne Albany Penitentiary for Ku KIux- ing. . . " But," says the gentleman lrom Orawre. "a few men came down L. . ...1 ' .. . .' II L.n ..o. and had tvki the reins in their hands, and bt.idiiitr .them with the aid of iiecf .(.-. d people, they ruin- tsi our CKiue. I only thank God that tliey did come. JJut he goes further and savs. " we ask nothing: I from the Republican side of this 1 15 House. Let us come tip," Bays he, " and take the responsibility." I know that he needs no help from this side now ; but when those con stitutional amendments were under consideration, help, was needed and besought from this side of the House ; and on one of those amend ments our assistance was needed so very much, that when a Represen tative on the Democratic side of the House called the previous question, my fried, Mr. Williamson, told him if he did not withdraw it, that he and all his side of the House would vote against it ; the call was put and not sustained by his party. AU I have to say about that, is, I was surprised that the 'wealth and in telligence of North Carolina could be thus influenced by a negro Rep resentative upon this floor. I hope, sir, that this bill will be reconsidered and recommitted, so that , we may know what we are voting for. ' In 1867-8 the party now in power in this Legislature found themselves in a hopeless minority ; and instead of then submitting to their condi tion until they could honestly gain strength, they went to work and organized an association 1 of mid night assassins, who had no sympa thy for humanity, and who went forth, night after night, whipping, shooting, and killing poor, defence less men, women and children, be cause their sympathy wras with the Republican party. They did it, sir, for the purpose of gaining political power in this and other Southern States. This is the class this bill proposes to pardon and let go scot free. I do not believe it is right, that, when a man or set of men comes to my house and takes me out and cowhide me to their fiendish satisfaction, that they should be pardoned for such offense by this Legislature. I believe they should be punished by the law of the land. When these men went into that conspiracy, against the peace and dignity of the State, they knew, that, sooner or later, the law would overtake them ; but at the same time they knew their organization was powerful enough to get control of the Legislature, and that they could receive pardon for their sins against the criminal law of the State. The people of this State will not endorse your actions in this matter. Every Democratic paper and speak er in the State before the August election was holding up Holden's war on innocent people, but they did not tell us anything about their own Ku1 Klux war which caused and preceded Governor Holden's movement. I suppose the reason they did not say anything about it was because they agreed with Mr. Congressman Waddell, who said he was only sorry that, while the Ku Klux were at it, they did not kill every carpet-bagger in North Car olina. Mr. Speaker, it is such characters this bill proposes to relieve as have caused the finger of scorn to be pointed at North Carolina. It is such men as these Ku Klux leaders that have caused the bloody hand of murder and the black disgrace of treason to blot her fame; and by them and tor them only, her laws have been permitted to slumber when they should have justly awakened to punish. I am a friend to law and order. I am opposed to the bill and the Klan it proposes to relieve. I am opposed to them because they are men who do not believe in that im mortal declaration of independence which declares that all men are created free and equal. I am op posed to them on such principles as nothing can either alter or corrupt. By the anxiety I feel within myself for the equal rights ol all the hu man race; by the disgust which 1 experience when I observe men di rected by prejudice and governed by hatred on account of the color of another man's skin, I am opposed to it. Mr. Speaker, in conclusion I only desire to say to my Democratic friends on the other side that I en tertain no feeling of hostility towards them. I will also add that I am not the personal enemy of the members of that party; quite the contrary'. There is no Representa tive on this floor who more heartily wishes them. all individual good, personal peace, happiness and pros perity than myseir, but, sir, lam the avowed, open and intrepid ene my now, and always, of what is known as the Conservative-Ku Kiux-Democratic party in this State, and I hope sir, the bill will be reconsidered and recommitted, or defeated, even in its present shape. ' Goldsboro and all About It. EY T. C. E. The first train of cars ran into Golds boro about the year 1S38 or '39. There were no houses in the place at that time. Shortly afterward they commenced building. Old man Dick Gregory, and StcpL.cn D. Phillips, both still living there, were the first citizens that settled it. Thi population of the place at pres sent is near about three tho'usand souls. Of these fully one third are blacks. Dr. A. C. Davis is the Mayor appointed In the stead of J. B. Wbitaker who couldn't hold the place on account of being Mail Agent at the time. There will be an other election in May. The prominent dry goods stores of this place are as fol lows : Alex. Keating, C. G. Perkins, A. B. Ilollowell, John II. Powell. II. Weil & Brother, J. D. Winslow, A. Strause tt Sons, Z. Einstein & Bro., D. Mnrphey fe Co., W. Keating. These stores combining dry goods and gro ceries and clothing. The hardware stores, Wesley Farmer fc Co., and Bor den tfc Kornegay. The principal confec tioner, W. II. Freeman. The clothing stores are: S. II. Montor, S. M. Cohen, R. M. Cohen, Lewis Levi, and Charles Sboultz. . The commission merchants are B. M. Privett, A. Day, and Gregory, Galloway & Cc. Two drug stores, Alil ler & Kirby, and Dr. J. ,M. Hunter. There are also two Cancer Infirmaries in the town. There are more smaller stores, and quite a number of liquor shojs. Three hotels among them cur old friends Granger and Morris". COTTON AND TURPENTINE. Cotton and turpentine are the staples. People don't think of corn. Both these staples are at low figures at present. No cotton buyers in market. Goldsboro eeiH'rallv hips about 15 to 20 thousand .b&ra'a .-c'son. Very little low midland keu it is worth 15 cent. Good in u.iiii country hams sold in wagons to-day at cents. The down country people are I much dispirited at the fall of turpentine. Four families constituting nearly 20 in number came up the road from Bruns wick county yesterday, flying from tur pentine, and going to Buncombe coun ty to "make corn." SUPERIOR COURT. They have had quite a sige of court in Goldsboro. Just through with a special term of two weeks by Judge Tourgee, ; when Judge Clark held his regular session two week longer and just adjourned business to-day. There were 132 cases on ; the criminal docket and 144 cases on the civil. David Jones, white, was sentenced to the penitentiary a lifetime for burning M iss Betsy Wiso's house and all her. thing. David was granted an appeal,, Hubbard Edmund son, white, was sentenced two years to the penitentiary, lor shooting a negro, but "II ab' having giveh the negro three hundred dollars to "make friends" with him, 'sart'nly, boss, sah," said the ne negro. and he and 'Hub" shook hands, and Judge Clark remitted the sentence. ' AMONG THE DEAD. Travellers in strange, places always love to visit the depots ' they get on at." Sol strtlletj out to tne Cemetery, the great jdepbt where i the dead , take the. train for that country " over the river." I find' down in this section a shudder ing revulsion against being put under the ground. Not far from Goldsboro is .now a coffin resting in an old field on two stumps, and has been there for several years. I -find, in this cemetery vaults built and the eoflins placed in them. Over one little fresh made grave was a coop built with just room enough to poke one's head through and look, and there sat a pitcher full of flowers by the little grave's side. What is there between death and flowers? As a flower we fade and die, and then our relations neglect their business unless they keep the flowers blooming over us. One fresh made grave of a growii person, sat by and curiously wondered. At the head iof the grave sat a pitcher half full of water, and on the breast of the grave, was stuck a china toy, representing a young fellow with a gown on, and his face, ibis mouth and eyes, were as joljy as a lager beer dutchman. I gave it up. But why not that as well'as anything else? " It is better to laujch than be sighing."' I . 1 j THE MESSENQER. I visited friend Bonitz of the Mcsnen- ger, and l found him, as ever, at busy work in his office. lie has moved his sanctum from the printing offlre, up street, and when completed, it w ill be the tastiest little boudoir for a pen and inkhorn'man in the State. Bonitz is expecting the arrival from Lynchburg, Va.; of an assistant editor, a Mr. DaWitt, who has been been an attache of the Lynchburg Republican. THE NEWS. This is the Republican paper of ( Jolds- boro, but I saw neither "uncle John" nor old " Blucher." The former I sup pose was absent on "claims" and old "Bluche" lightweight that he is, was running his route on tiie Atlantic Rail road. The yews pught to be more lib erally encouraged by its party friends in that section of tho State. March 21st, 1873. Home Industries. Our farmers are buying1 too much commercial fertilizers. , Three bales to the acre is the best Johnston county cotton lands did last season. The Steam Cotton gin of Captain Lewis? at Princeton turned out 350 bales of cotton last gining season. A new and splendid locomotive has been added to the Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad. E. A. Cox. of Johnston, has in vented a sowing-cart for the distri bution of fertilizers unci cotton seed in the drill. j The old Rockfish Factory will be in operation soon, and Fayetteville i3 to become one of the leading manufacturing towns of the South. At the Convention of Saw-mill owners and Lumbermen at Savan nah, O.j G. Parsley of Wilmington was chosen permanent President of the Association. Adjourned to May, 6, 1873. when the organization will; be perfected. The Pelc-rsbiirg Index says: " There considerable trade in this article, which is manufactured in wiimingiuu, s.j., ior tne paper mm in Jf reaericksburg. seventy five bales passed through this city ior the latter place." A through prorata freight tariff on actual distances from Wilming ton to Huntington has been agreed upon on the Chesapeake & Ohio, Richmond and Petersburg, and Weldon and Wilmington Railroads, This will insure a through: tariff irom w umingion io Cincinnati ma TITM a Mtm Richmond. Beaver Creek Cotton Factorv. near Fayetteville has just started its machinery of 61 Loqms, 2,700 Cards which will turn out 80,000 yards of sneetmg per month, and consume 850 bales of cotton a year. With this and the old Beaver Creek Fac tory the Company will produce doilhlp. tho flhnvn nnnntlf r of fohi-in I ! W e are indebted to Capt. C. B. Denson, proprietor of Kelvyn Gar dens, located at Pittsboro. in Chat ham county, for copies of his several catalogues of flower seeds, parlor aim winuow pianis, Dulbs, roots, shrubs, trees, evergreens, &c, for wnicn vve return our thanks. The Heivyn uardens are the most ex tensive in the south. oays ine unariotte Observer, of tne iytn inst : A quantity of ore irom ine ivings Mountain Gold Mine was assayed at the TTniti States Branch Mint in this citv .,1, mi u i . T '- jrcniciuaj,. aucruiu oncK weigned 1 ounces, ana was valued at $4, 191 00. It was forwarded last nfeht cApiwis io .rniiaaeipnia for coinage.; The vein from which it was taken is yielding abundant. Jn riciay, 2lst March, $39,000 iuw xirst xuongage J3onds ol the Western N. C. Railroad Company were sold by the Treasurer of the m. v Atanroaa and brought 11 cents in the dollar. On Saturday $26,000 1 JLwnus were sold at public auction in Charlotte nnd S?uei?nJ? vf ctn Pol isiaturft hdri fho iTinrf?: road much. - ! News. George Wm. Curtin ; Improves toalil The insurrection iu Guatemala i" been sutfpre.ssed.j "'u l,aM Senate id ji.urntd nine di,- w. . . Ex-Henrtor Dixon, of Ibutr. r,! r. . dead ; ed 58. , ; '"V ' IS o aim's urooKs as worst ,i- Uis,,,,,. is chronic dysentary. John Th xiipsob Mas n, s,-i r , State or Maryland, is dead. ' ' rt TheOxfoid racje was won hv tliec bridge crew by three length at aiienipt hi revolution iji Arts pa, Peru, has been suppressed:. Philadelphia has aire id v Kuls-ri' i nearly .00,000 for tho Ccnteni-il.' John S. Wilson, a distinguish, ., p' byterian divi-ie of Atlanta, h d.-ad. Thobaik Lark, from .San Uu'...., , Eusnedos, U lost with all on 1 ,.iIY '"' fL .W.I. Tweed's resignation "as Senator i , .1. V... V I, i. .... . . ""lit !" lui-l. A mob at Chillieotho hun a n who had raped a respcet il,I(. Ns woman. , 1 Tho Liberal ltopuhlicanft of Cm .1 ... T ml I . 1,1 nun eimuiw iiuiiiisun, 1 'rlUOci a! i didate for M3-or. . iii- Thori ew Peace Corn mission, -is i. ' t i .... i. i i ... i . " aintt'u hi iiju iuv new aim st'i k talk witii cajnain Jack. RejxTirt.1 are current that tli. San Salvador was destroyed earthquake on the 4th instaiit. a i,. hv' Tho President informed a Soutln ai. lina delegation that ho would i!o!i.,t, make a Southern tour a year hener A bill has passed the lVnnvyJv.u, , ueiMmiuiu "piropriaiing .N.Mhi.iih the (.entemal fclehratioii and the Governor." ' t s J Tlkflfl 111141 W I I M lit . mH,.. .... 1 A 1 !j . . jsiaiui, uuh! eacn oiiu r. tvKrrin ' i io aeaiu irom starvation. probably die ! ' The Postmaster-General tilings great railroads will appeal to Kw UWl UiUUI.V U.liU MUllUiaW K; cars meanwhile. 1" Thei award of $2t;s,KK to Fui niiriii f, r foreinr tho fleets way to New Oi ,.;', s has been oniirnied." Tho pnermi.e t resisted the claim. Wnt. L. Lan; ids mother and ;sloll, confes ki! i.'u: a little mil near I'., dise, Colo county, Illinois ; was insti- , . ed thereto by his wife. Tho Oxford crew rowed fn m ;.:i t,, y strokes per minute, and the "raiitaU' from 38 to 42 strokes. Time of the i;i was 20 minutes 3o seconds. The I seizure of considerable t.,1 mm i u u m in u i several ii. . i : 1 1 ,. : . . . . i . . , . , H it siniM ih j-ei'oneu i rum u.ie iiorclcis ( Virginia and North Carolina. A bill has passed both Houses i; . Kentucky Legislature providing , i iv . hoiruppathic professors in the m ,li department of tho State Univnsin. A "prophet " after the style i ! i:i . ham oting has been urnsied in(; ,f. gia, tried and found guilty of vi.l:m, tt of the Civil and sot-ial laws of the . i ' . In Portland, Maine, the A! aw l.tin met and lormed an asoeiation t 'k ecute their claims to the estate oi . v. in Scotland, worth some fiO.oiMout ,. lars. I I Cap Mac-bell's hot so, "Dc-truwiu won the grand steeplechase mar l.i. : pool. !Tho favorite horse- horse, "I n ,!, man, "j broke his neck atone f c,. jumps! Seven hundred awards unuh- v Southern Claims Commission, Ika'o passed from 'third Auditor to m .-m , Comptroller. One hundred , and tl.iuv still remain. The I court at Paris has1 eonvii tul inose that are selling Menu his an. I l.l 1'a.io raihoad bonds OI SWlll. ll II. is General I it- Among the sentenced niont for livo years. Mr. Bangs, of tho IW olice hepj.t rncnt, has assuruneo that the r:;i.! i..l combination to withdraw the postsw ei.r-. unless the government, aei id s t t i i - ir terms, will back down. GenJ Gordon visited the pni.l. who promised that where it w ai iu- it corruption had been used to'v-mr.: nominations to federal olliee in m--rv i:. either by the uso of money or hv ..r-f ries. sticli nominations would he . Un drawn. High winds prevailed through' t;t tl. country Friday and Saturday last, d ii g mucii uamaxe. jii iev ioik miNiiiu- day heavy wind and ruin-stonns. nil outdoor business susixinh'd. aiai h-i vessel' going to sea. Tho northern bound train on the Nil- don & Wilmington road tmtraeked mar Kocky! Mount. P..C. and two e..a ii were thrown down an emhaiikniiir. Several hurt but none fatally.' llcni i n der of tho train made usual cohuh-m i . A blunder has occurred regard inir il.o Raleigh Collection District. Harm confirmed on tho last dav of the s . .a of the Senate, but tho President ha i en viously, by u message, withdrawn ii.-' nomination, thus Yonug retains tie olliee. ' Oakes Ames intends to kfej. '.: gressman Keilogg's Credit .Mol.ili.r bonds ;until it is decided to whom th v belong;. Ames also says that the h'-oki of the Company will not be given hi t United States Attorney .General, hut l.e may have access to them. The abolition of slavery in Port" hi meets with the approval of the p-.pf.' A few pro-slavery leaders only ohj.-f to it. iEven slave owners consider il provisions of tho law more lavoraWt i their interests than they had reason i cxpoct The press generally a'htain ;i- yet from comment on the passage -( tin bill, i ' 1 SPECIAL, XOTICKS. A CAKI. A Clergyman, while residing in S"i:'.i America as missionary,, discovered a safe and simplo remedy for the Cure 4. f Nervous Weakness, Early Decay, Dis ease of the Urinary and Seminal Oi!. -', and the whole train of disorders brought on by baneful and vicious hahits. (in at; numbers have been cured by tlih noM' remedy. Prompted by a d.siic benefit, tho afflicted and .unfortunate, I will send the rocipo fr preparing"'' using this medicine, in a sea! il.-d en ( I- ope, to any one who needs it, J 'rrr "i charge.' Address. JOSEPH T, IXMAX, Station D, Piblo House, ' mar, 13--w3m New-York Cit.h TO; THE SUFFEICIXfi. The Rev. William II. Norton, wl.i residing In Brazil as a Missionary, covered. In that land of medicine--:l remedy , for Coxsusirxiox, Sct.oh i--. Soke Throat, Coughs, Colds, Asth ma, and Nervous Weakness. Thi remedy has cured myself after all other medicines had faHed. Wishing to benefit the suffering, I send the recipe for preparing and usin this remedy to all who de:,iro it FliKK OF CHARGE. . Please! send an envelope, with your name and address on it. Address, Rev, WILLIAM II. NORTON', C70 IlKOADWAV, mar 13. 3S w3m New Vonic Ci r I