Newspapers / The Era (Raleigh, N.C.) / Oct. 5, 1876, edition 1 / Page 1
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V in A. u.i.ws wkkkm ni.wh TilKi'llN THAI. Ollfl AN it: iwitrv. M. 1UVV. .Manager. ftUHfti.ti uvt uv tin siY s V CC"-' i Won t-u:rd ! Mrt mm ATI'S OF rtlTIWCIUPTlON t tmotltu, I w Cutract JrerUrmnU Uken at f roportionately low rate. VOL. VI. 10. RALEIGH. N. C., THURSDAY, OCT ! .... Mt.UltllS 1 Y.i tit ,ii V Jf i J THE PAU?ER5 0F'nN COUNTY. ON I.! i 1 1 it fr. NLOIT, ;-! OAVITH il'.V . up 1 .llOM. in ltl True Tr.KNTOS. JoNEH iCoUSTY, ' L -w -iril. IS suing know" " - h Domocnitic l'.".!;.rpnin the county of all irrcd. of the I""'!'' " ' ., :, t the i.rc-sent ' U t i ... Hi-t Vf.U Will II Mr.:Vr s atcnifntof t.lt? io;iu . nPI :. ,t..,M in tho county tV war to let out j urn a ,,.,.. l( v of 1 '."l'l':,,R' . .ot. an.l lift- i ...lit i r.iii n ioi.- . hitve enouraKti inn it. 1 . "IHuno,lit.uy-nubicyon stuu-IS WlS ovvrruWd h Cot .VsiomTH ln.cki.cl up y the Do iir vr.iw, on the jrr.mml that it w-u M oe Utvinsto the tax-pay-t rs I further stale Iroui gou'l uu i ,,'rity that twenty yag-. there as awhuepu,, let oil n, ,;o to be tak.-n care o a :r uic li .ant. 1 furllu-r .-late thai ..uvernuu nt ha -ver i Channel tlje As w c ... i I who! time of hi residence in said county. JAMES McUANIEL. hworn to and ubspribed before m thli 2Cth day of September, JAMK9 II. C. BRYAN, o. u. c State of North Cauolixa, Jones County. ) Personally appeared before me, James II. C. Bryan, Clerk or the Superior Court In and for the county of Jones, K. M. Jermanf Who being uuiy sworn, uejwsea anu nay, That he is ono;oi uie Lra- luissionen oi uonea teouiuy, iuai h. nresent at a meeting of the nnmmiioners of Jones couuty in were let out io me iuw utuuet. because there was no money to fit on the poor house, which only con sists of two houses and has noiur- niture or bedding, x na wui eoiureu man in thtf county of Jones has ever kept a white pauper at any imo. That he wa3 present on the ,uv when the white paupers were in cut in April, 1S7C, ana now i ...:.,.ir, Atticpwund other Demo "Go the nally pnt Morrison In the bapffaffo I From tb whlofi4mi llcrabiican.3 car, acd told hi in to lock hlmclf cnTrTf A TT TV A in and (av there until he told him U X 11 LiKUl-ll iV crats urging colored men to I .u ...i.itA nan nerd. - Baing, -i i i.a that is risrht, for 'ti e county ire settlnar 1 Sw ,r. Via aa M.lcribtKl before ,U tl.i-s 27ih l-y of September, A. U- 1ST'!iAMK5H.C. BUY AN, Clerk Superior Court. to como out. Morrison went to Aususta frotn there. Butler was very drunk. Most of the men 1 saw there .were from Columbia county, Oa. -They said they had KILLED -XVEItY XKiOKR THAT TIIKY HAD KKKX, and I think they hud. I saw two lying by the side of the railroad, and one with his head shot almost entirely off. and the other bhot in several places.1 ;" ' This gentleman Is, I bwlleve, thoroughly reliable, and tells only what he saw. Columbia, S. C, Sept. 21. 1876. r . au.-.wmi- wiuTrri tiaver pre vailed here for several d tys, of a bloody encounter belween the whites and the blacks, are found to be only too true, at least far as shedding blood Is concerned. The Democratic newspapers agree in their statements that at least PKKHONS HAVE 1JEEN KILLED, FORTY TESTIMONY OF E'n NESS ! ' ;; WIT- THE DAILY SCLXWOFOlTn.UiC OPKN TURK ATS OP ni HELLION arATJi Colored Cltizensllnnted nod Sljot Federal Anthoritleo Openly Defied Horrible Condi tion of Affairs VIr- tnal Insurrection of the KoTfrn ment X fit ord firmest uu' Li-1 it lv a . lr-v his own . jiiom-y hun- ' i inn an i h.s ii.'vir Oven , -m, thai te aiuas Urs spent tne t.te tint !' i . i Will? ti iai.le rocs ii irt s nii r-ii ru 1 . . 1 1... win:- nau HI "V " . . . . .. ... . , 1 1 . , - 1 1 i ii ... hi.f o j l.e vv lute verai I - - x i i-C f' i)it for wiiiie aria tn:U'k. I St ti: of North Carolina, B Jones County. ) Personally appeared I before me Tm II C. Bryan, Clerk of the Superior Court in and for the court ?v of Jones, John S. Andrews who btin cl ?ly sworn, deposes and says c:,u uijr ot r v. fthe town of , ! " ! . :.. r.i iio t wit fifty years, and 'moreUianfouryears before was the custom ii in 1 i.r paUi-'-r-- 1 irt-e ami have m .. ' . , , tl..t Iil(liiei-S ..... ..... ir ulurtVS III. vv n. Mb V A W .7 - let out paupers to various pnvaie ' it z'us, and that he was Sheriff of . ....nntv of Jones from 1S0 to sf u 1 that said custom .was con- Vi i...;.,,r tho tprm OI nisoniwi tniueu uuVb;v- :ropunty That anil sini ja Z'uu- " i. ..wlr llit Ilill Jelice . . uii -kv, whu-h w-i hirnisletl ?, v u - lv..,.K-r.tt4. ltcf rence Slum !eto the .worn aliidavits an- Very.rtspiciuii.: J A CO 11 1 S t) IT. S fATF. 1 rr Jainis of North Caiiomna. Jones County. ) apiitand before me ltrvan. Clerk of the in ana riially 1 i . C : , . i '..nr for the coun rney I ..... w I wJ '? 'VT. l r.n.itv Couinussioncr . ,V o m y f J w during the yus l.&4- !r Ii1..! iV t ho w:vs ur-ed o who mciv..,l IK.- pay for her , irul on white paupers and nty was t!ie cou run mem w"" - ran to too mucii jlsv- ' ' JOSEPH X BLTtNEY. ninrk. . ...i wni.viribed before l!71hl:y.V -Tr ilie thi; J AS. 11. C. e has never known a white pauper ir,.nt in the house of an coi .irinff tho whole time oreu pcirw . i(1 PvUntV- f his reameiiu w.rVVa irwiK S. ANDHhi Sworn to and subscribed nefore j this 2Gth day pi oep-. J AS. 1. C. xv, . me and, as usu.d in such enc ounters, the colored men are the greatest sufferers. Up to this time, there is rio definite information of the death of a single white person, although the sheriff of Aiken reports three killed, or rather says three " are reported killed." There has been no encounter at all so fai as we have been able to l?arn, but rather a WHOLESALE MURDER OF COLORED MEN wherever they could be found, in the cotton-fields at work or travel ing along the highway they were deliberately shutdown in cold bloou, brutally mangled alter they were dead, and left to lie in the hot sun with no one to remove or unci them. There has been no nosme gathering of the blacks, unless you can can a mreuu i ten of them a "hostile garnering. Nor have they fired upon any one except, perhaps, in self defense. 1 believe at least .tt irnvnurn NEGROES HAVE Ei iiuiii'""" - BEEN KILLED s c. in, lav iriorninir last in me suae kui".7 . . t : i.iii; whkvI. ii.u 1 uo not believe a single whit man l as Seen harmed. If you w I carefu Jly read the account published in the Au"nsta (Oa.) Co titut tonal, and copied into our papers yesterday Z7?.. ,fnnnp seethe absurdity as the falsity of the whole : - - - . w, ii,l.1i nn J li:W I m Vrt la fli I UmIJ''lC- ,ul,n' . . Wgrj hy TJ-tt-&r since, a constant tCrApZp2Z- and blunders, mtly theKUus , JjSgfad weak epe i n commuSfi U abor "voP Lv -nd whenever. i tgzLivi undehikbra a Ua i" tV rslrTnir. anu General II. G. WorthingWn, ex- ffitip of Charleston, S. C, arrived in the city on Tuesday. The General is known as one of the most con servative Republicans in South Carolina, and has persistently de clined to accept office under the government of that State. He has never been couuected with any of the political combinations said to exist in South Carolina, and it, therefore, cannot be alleged by his worst enemy that he has ever made a dollar dishonestly there. His vnira hii ever been uplifted in be half of peace and order, and he has never failed to rebuke intemperate utterances, regardless of persons by whom they were made. With a view of obtaining his opinions up on the disgraceful state of affairs which now distract South Carolina, NfUinnal llenublican reporter call ed upon him at his parlors at the Imnerial hotel wnen ine wuowiug coloquy ensued : ... Jlepubiican. we uesiru iu uc in formed, General, of the condition of affairs prevailing in your oiaLe, their causes, &c. Worthington. It is with un feigned regret that I tell you that the utmost state of riot prevails bio 1 several cl chaoiconflned t In Alien count raadan attack of col(red men, ana shot bows over forty of them. Thi Ge,r-zians -soon made their appearance uu the ground, and had it notbeen for the arrival of a co n pany f soldiers from a neighboring villas hundreds of Republicans would doubtless have been killed. The Klau3 inthat part of the State are uider thecomraand of one But ler, who was slid to ie one of the iPAllncr snirits in th Hamburg massacre and at present the Demo cratic nominee for the SvAte Senate Aiken eounty. I,v urens county the Klaus nro-fuiijr organ ized and nightly go about on the plantations whipping colored men and forcing them to join Demo cratic clubs. In Colonel Wallace's district the Klans are as powerful as they were in 1870 and -iMii and unless the strong arm of the Government is at once mpre ef fectually interposed tint gentlenan will not only . hl1lTlief oroi his election to CongresTTbut hun dreds of negroes and white Repub nnawiil hft assassinated. In tne city of Columbia, Hampton's home, the rebels are defiant and scoff at of the Government. hesitancy indeclar- O. A . " ing that they are BEADY TO AGAIN JOIN ARMS with the'Government, and declare that Attorney General TaiVs order is re volStionary and void, and will not bo respected 6y thein. In short, the , pres ent U no mean conspiracy in Jouh Carolina. The same men wuu y forces of tbe union upon hwhj fought battles during me iat now in arms, and it is the sheerest non sense to suppose that undnlled aud disarmed Republicans cau' ""7" them. Nothing Out uie preu . its canvass, lneiasv i,rMhA)lv the worst in fecH upon the party prqects, was hers in New York in the nomina tion for Governor. The nomina tion of Mr. Seymour in the face of his positive refusal was, under the circumstances, as sublima a piet-e of stupidity as was ever perpetrated by crown men. a convwmu i v Diue nouuu uumvcjo u ---. tural fair would have been wier. Tho seebnd convention cam 3 to gether in a. eooUiUOB oi Hopples- ii-ss and helplessness, for waich. there was neither succor nor relief, and if it did not make matters worse it"" certainly did nothing to improve them. The vital point in the line wa3 abandoned when the State of New York was given up, as it virtually has been, by the r.aNr,nawhn under took to manage it.ca twn conventions and botched i . ni h . A fatal faci 1 i ty for iu.a . . ., " i. putting its foot in it is uie giuit trouble with the Democracy. The desire for office and for power which seems to be its only actu ating motive does not furnish base enough for the managers to work together upon. They are constant ly at cross purposes, ana .consiamiy upsetting their otn plans. The party is as good as ueieateu in uie rresidriuiiai race imwuj , feated more by its own blundenngs than anything else. Perhaps the best means to prevent uici'j irom ever carrying a. j.,i-vuv...... uhiH.n thr .mi rest ana most-euica- iniw to cri ve it one branch oi v-avv., T . , ,1 c I-v ; nitrrPriri in tllA miUUlOVOl il A i clenrial term. All that the people .vrwv,i ia f, app it. on pxiiiDuion, anu rrnlina especially te present deplorable .state of CaroVlVluC!.: Carolina Republicans, who hav - V ' Tl..,.iilMPHIl. I rrotii tho Washington x4'"- J SOUTH CAROLINA RIOTS, The Real Facts in the Case. SIMPLY A WHOLESALE SLAUGHTER IILACKS SHOT WHILE AT WOIIK Tnl.cn from Hc Train itntl Killed Slaughtered by the Roadside !St organization of Colored Tien. . rr.... riinwincr letters have been . . c .-tM- rittpr.son. oi receiveu oy ocuai"1 South Carolina, from a gentleman Tprfcctlv reliable ! State of v .i.Tii f vnMLA. .Iomi-s County. ) . .Kine-irf-d before me, James II. C. lr j county, ejTior f C " ct lhe Board Uaac l. , - . . x r z l a k a a x ' a v. . M III I A.r..,v. wt.,1 being dulyvvorn . .. .1 . l iiat no de- been n.-v , O Columbia, S. C, sept. -o, o.. Fearful reports of the disturbances ?mny "LV. Una who went down the tfin ftom Augusta Georgia V . . !.,. r. pp nie this m "iiik. Sporu on.y what w , vnu. carried to KUenton Aiken, Governor, telegram, as well The writer, says the negroes in ambush fired a volley upon the wnites, " tu mhftpa re- fliiiiajare: nut wnen nc turned tne hre, severa. - uiur wounded. The sheriff pi ft"'1-" v . ... 1 In thO In his OlUCiai re-juit vy or rather in nis omcmi iavs he saw no armed bands of negroe anywhere but uw in urntp 1 oanas. see me wm - Tri 1Y1V Others conttrm mis - iud-ment it is a simpie amuSui Juuou,e" ;K.,t int fipfttion or aefenll. Both'BukVr Barnwell Tlnllanfl OI i-ltVCll, " livl"- , . Ll C1.V r,ho it General assbuju, w - ..,v roj jhrth in rpoorted kinea. lytw S dav at Ellenton, and in pres- ? of men. He had but Pmrned from the convention Lre, where he was a member bu the Democratic pf13 , "Tj .nprson his person impli acvv.. i " i DISORDER AND all over South 1...M....;f.1l iii t ,iiii rs.uii aiiv. s.w, ... v . counties on the sea coast wnieii hitherto have been noted" for their peacefulness. The trouble appears J,, Hip fixed determination of the iMMilrs to wrest tho State by force of arms from the lie nili1ii,.n.'to the end that the old rKi iM.lers mav a2ain revel in i 11- n.rc'n imimind once more subsist f.r.n thH ill-rtuuited lahor of the f,Limpn. O-itensiblv they cry "rpfnrm '' hut in reality it is the same old cant of the "outs" against ha "infl." I Will veniure i not before in fifty years Secao V administered as they nave ueen in the past two years, w ltnin uiai ime taxation has ooen gruaujr u- minished. and the old ulcer upon he State, the notorious BANK OF THE STATE, ..... f 1 1 A. .uiU waa nrnrina IV lOUUaeu IO VV lllv-. - " vw v..B . . . , annr.lv the wants of the old aristoc ""IT v - iera and a dcclara- ( (h t th p;lrty needs to fcffeyt it ill.Prf"n,' lLe own ruin is tile opportunity thia fall. It is painiui io strons force of seld ' . . i rn r ill t-4 i . j tionol martial law win y '"I own ruin is tile OpportU massacre ot thousana oi h f nd nartial exercise of power; e en- murder and gVJn a cpnspiracy against hp whites". AH bQsh. You, of tnis is oiny IV a, k 1 1 V. r .....rk ,n ?aid boani lor iy i iiv.t he u:s never isruvu Ti.rv shot to nwn.. im, hjs, 'ptejno'v.i proceeded as iia. t-o,iiuctor - Court. WpZirti c f hp Wl r.r.iirp. know that story trumped up. ,.n r.FFECT AT THE NORTH rrhrn nHver.was a time when the Ai,wr r stnte were more noro o r elnan now. quieter - ua Qf troable A"":r:r from - Marion. StUmianoow, nere. uk.u .fhM have 'i :k iuiiuib Kr-lieGrncr toiia'i ii non themselves bO.v- " X' .. - . . ; . . .., uiiin v tor Riiemuinu iu caci- UUU oi r J , r.ri.f- o-iven them bv a victorious t OvaM continue on UUUHtljr. - " 1...4. T utill nnt f ,rQn tenor ol mv way. out a surprised to see . A GENERAL UPRISING IN CHAULto- TON J. . ..in.tro il f flirlllPi.t. in a lew u-ays or wwo rnKi-rnnP. iiaturaiiv lUrUUlBUl. Aijv. wt,-, --- - :i , are being eg?ed on uy a scurruuus nrpss. aud in my opinion aje . . . i i .. .1 m nr.iv i : . . . a i i ii t i unii i ,i 1 1 (i L' i ; iiv ii I llC l"Uuvl v...v- trt- thpv were when they fared upon Sumpter in 1861. (f Prom jQh NW Trk TribuM-l eeaeTby its own Blunders. The Democratic party of the coun irv has illustrated nothing so suc- '.f.,u nrinir thp nast twelve .v,nntha n it oanacitv lor blunder s' onri a rvprvprse instinct for frit '"b " i . . ::,v great uppoiiiinin13. The Indiana Canvass. making things hot They are making things noi iu Indiana, and the liveliest canvass is now in progress that ha3 ever been prosecuted in any one State There is no disputing the impor tance of the Indiana election in Oc tober. Upon it hangs all the hones of the Democracy. If they & are beaten in that State, it is a col lapse of their Presidential bubbles ReDublicans are anxious to carry the State, because in such anven ft wili render the canvass elsewhere a one sided affair, so far as they arc concerned. Victory a prime utrt-ssuj racy, and a Hepublicns 'i.L.Irrwl,lDnt nfthA ITni. ' t tul States and an honored son of Indhiia and of tho rsation, anu inanyVr ol this aud neighbor ing States. This list, wo think, fmiv sustains the assertion that no such force of speakers was ever be fore collected in any State, and it is hardly necessary to say tnatuuring the next two ?veeks they will make things hot. V ' FriCastitution. Hon. V..' Smith. Mr. Editok: Tho following little In ci lent may not bo without into rot t to the many iriends of this gentleman, and give those not personally aqaaintevi with him some insight into tho private chai acter of him, whom wo expect soon to make Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina. IJ33 in the Fall of LS70, a poor Confoilerato officer, who had lost his all by tho war, louud himself unable to provide food lad elothing for his wife aud childrer. le had served alxjut fouryean In tho irmy ofJen. Lee, and alter tho surren- ier unitou mmsoii wuu me i-ejiiu'riic )artv. and gave his active ami ontliu:- istif!fsunt)ort to its nouiimtv in hi iistress ho applied to his old friend -id comrados told them hi fondi!' and iMTira,i their Rssistitu-o ;t:Hi mr work anything tht would enable him to support his family. They all ox- pressed groat sympainy nr mm, ana promised they would d Uieir utmost to procuro him a hilualion. Day alli-r . dav he called on them to do H.methin, J .r. . i . : i .... but to no purjio.se, umw i lai in up;ur ho went home ono evening and tola his poor, wife that he saw no hope for them, that his friends could not aid him. Sim thought a moment aud then asked linn if holiad tried Major W. A. Smith, then President oi tho North Carolina Kal' road. Ho replied that ho had' not, for lhe reason that ho had always opposed him politically ; that ho had u claun oi him whatever, and that if his political friends, upon whom ho thought ho hail some claims, would do nothing for hiu , how could ho expect anything from Major Smith ? Sho replied that sho had always heard Major Smith spoken of ns a very kind and charitable gentleman, ever ready to help tho poor, and sho be lieved that he would help them. Willi but little hopo of evor hearing from ;t agaip, the husband wrote to tho Major that night, told him his condition, an.l "by return mail received a very kind and nattering loiter, assigning, him to duty at once, expressing the greater svmpathy for him and his family, and what is more, containing substantial ci idcn:c of sympathy, of which no men tion was made in the letter, and for which he had always refused to be rt- ' imbursed. . a, , ' Xhatuightthopoor moiuersiopiBwcui-. ljk lyr oa50 -joWIC, mr in a I'-w- tlau . it of farmer AWHV For twenty years it has done nolh ;Vi whatever to entitle it to public sum".! v . . . . i , " i- racv, has been equitably cioseu anu coufi(ience. Two or tnree uiuto s. -f.nlc! no i ii nvpr tn claimants and u,.10 hoon trusted with a taste .i "Vovnr hpfnre have all n.ar in some of the States, not be s ho sfato hppn more nros- r..,.,c anvth h? it" had done, dui. A CV. and leadership, in Indiana is to the Democ sppondarv matter to The. Indianapolis state journal, oi mo uiu .., makes the following comments: The list of Republican apppoint t iT i l ,ti lliii . I Uln 'w. fithor vem. hj.wuin v"vv.. umw thenfortuuo has oftener frowned than smiled on tho family, but in Bunshiuo and storm, tho mother holds fast to tho Ma'or's letter ; teacnes uer.in.uu uuot uj read it; tells them never to forget him, and when they pray, to pray for Major VV A. Smith, ineir incuu, ihoiuvi n friendfather's friend, when uoonoelso would bo a frieiKl. Tho wholo family 1 I In 113b KJM. AVV. I' t- X K K I ments for the reining two weeks arjyra t'V of the canvass in this State is with- PVaor of NorUi Carolina, out a parallel, no such array oi T.Mitor. vou must notsupposo this simply because its opponents headstrong under bad . t snMkPN pvpr havinsr oeiore ueeu . - -. t,.rr. :v.;n tho concregatea in any wm same period. During the next ft.rtnicrht. there will be aoout six hundred speecnes mauemuieomic, succ S They turned to and upset it ger of being talked to aeain, w an bf such Lha vior as drove away nave only to say they hkc it. 1 ey support wnicu seem to cravo jjuuiicai at The have and discussion, and all ( Uiuusi.vv."'--" - nf L. in MvinL' that thv never fheirowr only by the follies of w larger or m K nnbwienlf llepublicans meetiog. The list hive always brought them into posted snows uie i irhfTrever they have gained array of taient: it, and they themselves have es in "Senator O. V Morton, one of the most iwerful TV'Konally I I . ... . i.-i. . rf i uc i iiiiifLa . . . ,..v-ii man appearcu,---- K5lcnton, prohaniy not iciiv 77 ,r h.nir. l saw O. x . vv- ':;th Rovrral white men A. . V ..IT 4 ft I ;r..inrh this City yesieru. way Sbuth : , CoLUMniA, S. C Sept. 22, '76, (iovtrnor u. xi. . Blot in Aiken epMSy t"e 1',.'Vncs ?port ne- iurparucu. Private Secretary. mi.iTMBiA, S. C, Sept. a, Governor D.IL Chatnfierwn, ...... . . f r iae wi- p. l-..y ""l'.'"" sworn, eacli not thint he felt Uwt n - mp8. the whites have returned r;t a At M0S&. , the pam- fs qf SUp,or- white men. Jed about Private Secretary out to various partly cluWever they all got UP an'into u ueld, " led. Thatnot-oiom. . . thirty or lony tjlIkiaL, w t that every . r . .ihirl II 1I1UL1 IM "" I I -w1 Lr I riTT. U A - T I Tin r 1 k Jkl Zl. 71 h id chftrgO Oi r on i i .i Innes Sworn (J. L. l"1- ,.T,- . ...rtitKrribed before tree. unueru Un then led together. J JJy yards off and Coker about . thirty a xr. - nt written letter and oxuuuu . " d . in favor of justice anu Dy vauw. V - ..rit. i v.r.oi.rn cnOlltPN 111 I llli fOUUUV , mStanthaeen this process that Gen! lien. Harrison, our gallant and fr alm of popular candidate for Governor; PrSv?d?n - When- k.jor J. VV. Gordon, our quvt ever he Henublican party became ndidate for Attorney aeneral rLkles. and headstrong through its Hon. James G Blaine a bold and fmmterrtiptecl possession of power, eloquent speaker; CjI. ilobert G. "I hav Wersoll, of Illinois, one of e liberally rewarded, and as a class the people are remarkably free from iki- anrt nresent a hanh.V contrast to the over-taxed ano imu mi-vw masses in the neighboring State of And vet, not withstand ing all tneir inateriu. y :f , au oy Vnn which IV to crave uolitical information the old reoei leauera the nweuu - -i - and anour speakers a kk y T ITIII I 1 .!-.- t-n WTT1 VII' I I V ft Illy f wwv I ill 111 U. Atk j lUiuunv - . . . . , - , . ... the better to enaoie ueiu to the ear" of the Northern people and present an excuse for all the glaring outrages which they are now practicing up-n deA useless and inoffensive Republicans, KmuMwn. Is it true thai ihe rebels m Charleston are in arms, and thatomeers oi me -crovi.i.i..-are daily subjected to insult ? Worthington. The facts are that Charleston is at present A MILITARY CAMP. On everv side you meet arm. d sol diery, who halt pedestrians upon the streets, heaping the bitterest in vectives upon Republicans. Their ulan appears to he to drive Repub licans to the wall and force them to , . i .r,.: whan har assume me ueieuaiyc, ""y will then commence a wholesale slaughter of such as refuse to Join theif political party. In other tiipv havo resolyed to carry fatA fov Tilden and Hampton, and many boast that the streets of Charleston snau , BE MADE WlT4t UOJQ t hA Aicrht tho us er tney ' Th.vr and Republican roum "' e?en hiVe artillery placed in conapi. even . . tKo w and cious loca me -v... , fUfne stru near the Charleston hotol Lnd no od. couM 8? in or out without tenfver rUiuU.t me" away an isolated case, r ar lrom it. in ins neighborhood tuero are many bucii. Many a poor man, rumen uy uju ii, is now prosperous avd dolrirf well, Who could never have risen again uut lor a smith. Manv ahoart to-mxtit is triad that would have been bowed with irrief but for him. Many a bright eyed boy and girl trip their happy way to school, who would havo been iu Itf- noranco and rags out ior . v. oimui. Such a man is an uonor 10 our raco such a heart is an honor to humanity. North Carolina can honor herself f.9n in honoring him. I hco an ore enthusiastic meai H made by eastern Iemocrats to of speakers now tbe gallant West to como to hor aid and j In. If thov ara i i nnv III--' niiini 1 11 4 V 14 I 111 ui iiv A v - the.lJ U1Z; ; i merit 3 and impassioned ora- iu i. th.tf ... i i really uuder nero ruieu iuvy wain men - - - reuder it in no ay more effectual thau' bv voting with us tor w m. omuu. Ulu Joiinsion '""j 4.v..., will go lor him by tho largeat majority! she has given lor years. Tho ioor aro not often ungrateful, and tha poor who? know him aro for him. Men of tho j i lountains, wo learn you have rccoi ved -our countryman with open arms. Your i kind hospitality could not havo hoc tiy ...,..vii.,i tr. oiwi more worthy. Ho U i.r iiuuu ,vv-- .ti.n .lav fniitor lSOOtn. oi .tii-ullv tlio chaininou oi laoor ,,r AllYmX and it musi ue anu i...w ois vi ic "V ' . ""i""" '. :,.. i u..,l will nvr at oeieai, aim to ltarn riifnrnii who unites grace and the poor man's friend, and win uuvirj rwithnu .ofiAno,n; .-J ViCttons are won iuatt.. a.aociato. VV. -."f. nnmu; .; anil earnest manner ; . . est con his sKong .11 Ml atfcU as UIB JJCUivyiwv.v 1 ffi JS IlonfS.hurz, the eloquent Ger- Two vears ago, wherv ihe leader- l2ia oiA(ort whose keenanuirenc SJ Jnch& men as Bugler and aht Wade never strikes w thoat cut olV . t K .artr ntl inn 111 Vlll Wv. J llv...v.w v tho Aiiiiiiuisiiai tuu brou-ht disaster to the Repubhean Dirty', and introduced the Demo crats to what seemerbeohlya fotetaitebf larger anre exten- United finn . nnn a. u'juUi sonatnr from Illinois, .Tvlnrr vni haS led K YVIHcr "o . x.. ,r to victory iu lAi" publicans Illinois and v,ntet: lion. U, J. O-Iesby, aiso oi a ver v effective nt of public opinion seeiuXvTm nning iH-f.vor pf the Uemocra- ?3jyai i.ti ncr liae. vac w-r . m.... mon allot IIILU i uy --- . 1 thoi.S,ra , saw aUthii while .mlng ci, urty. and every wo7" , in; it'" - . m- t wii uiiiei i . ...4nM mv nun iu ucu in the cars, i c" tensor u in the cars men DEAD BY THE SIDE Ol THE inrrv. hv him in .trofTPfi union r.An. the. petsecu - RIT. men oi lf.v I nr. "OX? TOR. TO MA X , . TEN QBVW" Tm Of 1863 ? Auit vounf men of Char ia.T nithet is too obsconeor 1WIOI1. " . . tow for them to apply to me me to 5Py,V an! all the arms in iastany -Tl"r rr 7.7 m. While being that tbe ViViH "G:h dav of Sept., lbTb. brATK oi junes County. i inriru uir. i v ivrsonaliy cferk of tho U.rciy 014. wi tlie train. I thinK v- cnangea man James. i. r- . fln(i for me r?. mpmber 01 iu cuumj 'Utt-nrn. aepysw-"- r.,Mpr I tnimtj i r I that nom 1 .r .v-hri tiiniruuijr , -oiut-i in -r itiArJ wniie f:ont tnoi 01 uie " " . "... ...ja rnrn a"- v.inthpr 01 ju. v. 1 buikw-" t r .ft a mrAT m w - ... .... u.i blown almost en- Darinir the summer 01 one wh hmv4v",:i rrtan named A.iitl lUchmond, ana cu n im mi 11 t.x tt' . 1 v m 1 11 r: w a- 1 . vrvp. The glitter uacK u - itlpntiai auccess- 1,1 nnfl ior uie 7 a mfifflUer Wi . Intr nODtJ 01 1"' 7 . a . --m " " ,rT..w.i I no was Tvuanrort... a. !. t,airi nut to nra.auu James. " Pral Assembly; , w - wnw-r pnd he was a ,1 In 1 Duuwi - - ... . whiie on O ...... Knrr) saysinuti." - d nas re- n.i. eouniy ; 1 . rtf Trnton i"5 , men . rl within oneo -; h4t the company to Morri- ho was oncea mecuu- that hour Riihsen He went up lor T1" "before the war n drHWlng his forrcverai J":",jlftm to let OUl MV? " I! nont . hiiu H,vavswas me flY:.:n citizens. " P0D5. "Tl 'J..w l.aupe.8 to various pm;tt - i3ts ,n womu ?fb liU. . t . . ..11 rii-tiuui I rnr 1 a &ia nistol. was il once, auu the.conciuc- .i.atilorriwn fihOUlU UOI rtf the United Tne uwV-W Hnnted a States, a. v. vi. r-- -Vt0 . nior resolution estaonsuiuti . -w f k mmDOsed of sons of Tfi-Kllowrof theaes from 15 in they od it. Christendom could not Mveme. Vhive nerer been aCCUod, mir INSTANTANEOUS A!?AV4flA 4 nnwAtiiin. Are not um iii. order of Chartotou society ? Worthingion. xiu,.o, w "j lonQ the oldest famihe8i iu the Pitv men.wniiwti ...... , &c. Tney are uw .;..... - frTM W nil 111 UOUWUlvrn Picman would HOt dare to arrest Sne-bfthera should he shoot down a Topen-day; they regard Lm3m aaprivileged characters. andT -therefore " they have oeen ?brivileed" to Rhoot down in cold Con" rts has changed all that. Had the presidential election been held before the Democrats of the present rvimTvHtencv audi- insincerity, v- j,?ri no UOUOV Uiro u.- ihu f4tiitvof blunderi ' . - . . k w n air tWn fjllotfiugi inera ' Sri moment of triumph it 1 now wen, as it seems to us, thiir last chance of carrying the country has disappeared. made A LANDSLIDE. Tt is reported oa gooi authority.j that Joe Djtvis, candidate of thej Vance wing of the Democratic parly j for Congress from this district, has desertedhls master. It L said that in asieecli in Johnston county a chnri timesinceHhosaIdthathew8S ancoand did not in- 01 to." and Uiat he was- not car a leading member of the congres- rying the amendments. , . , Sonal defegation from Iowa ; Gov- JDaVis has the reputation Of be Ing, prnor Ilamman and Senator Cragin, M siy as a fox and we have no doubt emor iidrnuiau auu o " .hvptwI that Vance .1' hnnnrttti and eioquenri tiwy mat tie u mxt' ' . C"".JT-iL.l old Granite State; Hon. lvageno adeadlc ?Iale and Hon. William P. Fryerof llttle if irtinp- both members of umgress 1 Vance. load. Davis, however, is tnit any better tnan nw noes -Ufa true Vanco has com- ,1 ff hinn d 111 11 1 v rrA.vji v w 1 m 1 1 1111 iAjm anu luwt- r-- f thft ma3t riYhnan hehad a nor rs o.ytss, ut vmu, v- 1 uu . . nor r.rthoriic: Gener- tf .nnv 1m said that V laiar-;r.rt,nVin the way of ai r icu. n .-v' tiiiMnw on. 1 ...Kti TiAvUhas had a Jin"" 1 rr'i, nr nrwiiirv to oaumerato W. A. . . liiai 7. . Mlm.l Marshall Jeweii,oi wuucvuv Thn if known to Indiana ItepuWi- ins -by his effective efforts -in ior- ramnaUTDS. vict wv " 1 . acts, but It is better chance. anco overdid meanness, chance to do 25me little good for the pcoplo of this district dui iaueu w mao ofiU During . the entire tirhqlie was In Congress he sat ke a drone and only exiUDiieu wuuikuhm eu- and r-d2nee. . 1 .r.ni i i veteran ivuiuojivw, 1 mau . 0."" , . r - 11 ' vania, a . , fhi t wa wn cart truthfullv aav .u ,int iif thhua- fr several' 'years o-a. v "u7MUiWh. .imm iuo usaw-un w. . 1 t x,inani Mci'nerdju. that tnn nuuuiu ut o.v - - . . th nt,tiet. io t House: . xiuu. j -r 1 v- .,w;f uaa hqi nn. openy caned a f V.norrrKjvi rlrirfnrv n j rr rnn iih iiuu. viinnxi'MLiiiic iu vummvw . vam. .m. I I , . . fc' M ... - . . T . rt av.. I I T ' I : V I . . W. b.. Vrf J . ' . . . ,A W-V . . . " irrnrt nnrelieved Dy a wi wrwrr.":"i roIiUc act. The blundering of '- r- :..r AimiKiiirn neau fox-IIko r- vr,.. Vnrt' ai. I i.i rrtr lYivls has attemDtod tj i ;mp1v known here as a I uu the position; As a didapperlie ready Widely, 0t v a.IS" ..Jif-nv muala. Them i S5h tie outhrtk i.. t" Pg SSSrfirS ffiSW,' Sly one thing that he po -.s ofaseriea of wild and inex awrra. ifn. A. . jtod on aad that is -Susabie pernai.at abo d and aUQcations and this he exhibits, character 01 meir iuuv h- -- pHamnion of BepuDiicanism when no tries w uuiup vuuco ov- S?nnMdate for nomination, and was able cbampwa o , followed by the selection o eu-,iroiu , - , r- - UM- . v tt vvm to 2i:
The Era (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 5, 1876, edition 1
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