Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / Sept. 10, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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EALEIGH, IT. O. WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 10, 1884. .WHAT REPUBLICANISM V1V HERE. was left nearly as before. To reorganize the State the Convention ordered an elec tion for Governor and for the Legislature. The election was held ; the new Governor was installed, and the Legislature met and transacted its business. Whatever had been demanded to put the State in proper relation to the General Government had now been dope. After four years of war, after the painful agita tions of a period when there was no gov ernment in existence, our people, having done everything that was required of them, now hoped for rest. But the boon -of "domestic tranquility " was never to be spirit of constitutional liberty, excited ' alarm in the breast of the leaders of that Such sentiments it was believed, No party, in any. country, ever left more enduring traces of wrong than the Repub lican party durmg its brief ascendancy in Xorth Carolina. And yet in each succeed ing election it comes forward with unblush ing effrontery to demand of the people i il ... .. InKaranf in tVif cr TP fit LllliL lilt; lilfttl L1U&13 munvu i , -li-i rrl - fe . , . i enjoved under Republican rule. The one offices of the State, trusts involving the I J - -- r . , . a m of that party was by all the agencies supreme interests of liberty and property, t u- v c i. , H , , . , . t o of terrorism to subjugate the South to its should be reposed in it again. It presumes J . 1 . support. The preceding canvass for the upon either an utter indifference on the ! 1 r 1 8 . 1 , , , iL -t i Legislature, the debates of its session, the part of the people to those interests, or it " ' ' reckons on the effect of time in effacing ! . . ' J the memory of its misdeeds. The possi hilitv of the former, no true North Caro lininn !!! JiovKfir fnr n ninmpiit its re- Prt. . . , ,. and justly believed, would, if unrepressed, hance on the latter may not be altogether ,J . , , , , . , .. r . . ,, ! result in the speed v overthrow of its ascen vain. Every election for State officers. . . T. , i- , . , , , v r .,i-a. dancv, and in the defeat of Republican and to a less degree for the General As- ; ' sembly, brings to the polls a large number 1 aims' " of young men who can have no personal This state of the public mind at the knowledge of the acts.and doings of the I South was thought to be due to what was Republican party when it controlled the ' alleged to be the mild policy pursued by State; They have heard of them in a gen- : the President and his cabinet in the reor- eral way, but one which leaves but a slight j ganization of this State. The Republican conception of the designs of that party j Congress, now thoroughly exasperated when in power, and of the methods pur- j against the Southern people since it had sued for their accomplishment. It is nec- ; been found that they could not be made elssary.that the history of those days of subservient to Republican aims,.summari- shamc and disgrace should be retraced i ly condemned the whole proceeding and from time to time, embracing such facts 1 thrust it aside with contempt. Between and circumstances as space admits of, in the two factions into which the party had order that the young mea of the State may j now split, there was no common arbiter vote with some knowledge of the record ! to which appeal might be made; for both of the Republican party, The Republican j had ignored the Constitution which afford- party is to-day made upjof identically the ! ed the only standard of decision. The same elements that it was ihen. The same conflict could only be determined by the machinery that was employed then can be ! respective strength of the two factions, employed now. The same ruin that came : nd in the contest the President and his upon the State then will overtake it now j supporters went to the wall. No obstruc- should the Republican partv again get 1 tion now existed to the execution of radi- Supreme Court fared comparatively well. The majority-of the Judges, in learning and ability, were not unworthy of their position, Our charitable institutions were fortunate; both were well managed, one of them with exceptional talent and skill. In all other respects the condition of the State' was deplorable. The State offices were filled by men, of some of whom it would be charity to say only that they had not one qualification for office. The incumbent of one of them was charged, upon btrong evidence, with peculation. The incumbent of another was known to live in an atmos phere of infamy. Men were elevated to the Circuit Bench who might fearlessly challenge investigation as possessing every disqualification. Some were acquainted only with the mere rudiments of their profession ; some added to this ignorance a yet grosser ignorance of their own lan guage; some were destitute of character. Iu a great part of our State the Superior Court fell into contempt. Some of our ern imitators of the fashion set at the North. That there is idlen&R and a great deal of it in the South, no One, mho uses his eyes will deny. 4 That there in-more of ft here than at the North, no One familiar with the two sections can truly say. - The New Yorker who comes from bis bustling streets to pass a few days in a quiet South ern town thinks that its people have noth ing to do and do it very thoroughly. If he came to stay he would soon find that his work was harder here and with fewer breathing spells than he knew at home. It is all a difference of ways. North and South the most of us are workers in one way or another, and it is lack of sense, or worse, to charge with idleness every man whose manner of work is not as our own. The amount of agricultural labor alone done in the South would show the folly of the reproach so often urged against it. Take the one item of cotton: The aggre gate crops of the ten years just before the war were 34,995,440 bales; for the last ten CAMPAIGN NOTES. SENATOR VANCE1N THE FIELD. The Great Apatl f Taiir Reform illfcft Preacher of Democratic: Doctrta Bpealta to Large Crowds. W. II. H. Cowles, Major S. M. Finger and J Senator Vance were the speakers. , y fcPTAtS KITCHIX 1 , spoke first and made one of the strongest speeches of ! the seasori. On-the - negror question he spoke grandly and carried Ms audience with him. . He won many plaud its on revenue reform, and enlightened the THE SCANDAL CAMPAIGN. Mr. Blaine' Responsibility for It. Correspondence of the R almgh KEGistEa. I September 4. Alter only a few days ! people also on the educational bilLr rest in his quiet home among the moun tains, Senator Vance again takes the " stump " in behalf of the cause for which he has spent the best part of his life. He is the same great patriot ; the same match less orator; the frame broad-minded, un eorrupted statesman. He speaks with all the vigor that he possessed in the cam paign of '76, while his ideas have grown stronger and' more mature with riper years. Senator Vance made his opening speech AT OLD FORT COLOSEL COWLES made a forcible and eloquent speech for about a half hour. He cautioned the peo ple against trusting any party that seeks centralization and that seeks only to per petuate itself iu power. He arraigned Blaine as a corrupt statesman, unworthy of the support of the American people. As he was just closing, the audience called on him to tell them about York, and he did tell them in a masterly manner. Com ing from York's county, he knows the old demagogue. He paints the ugliest picture of York that any man has made and still he does not paint it to the life. He can't make it bad enough to match the original. Cowles is a great campaigner, a great statesman, and will carrv the Eighth Con gressional District by an overwhelming railroads were placed under the control of : years, more than 53,000,000 bales. In ad men, the most of whom in their manage- J dition to this immense production, a larger ment displayed . perfidy and corruption j area of land is cultivated for food crops ' without bound, ut our senators it is sui- than ever before. Manifestly the people ficient to say that one of them a native j are not idle, and equally manifest is it that of the State avowed upon the floor of i they are not lawless. Labor does not pro the Senate that though he had acted with ; duce results like these in lawless lands, the "rebels', his purpose all the while i I I T . II .1 I ,. was to embarrass the cause in which were I Dl TLKK lens lnc PeoP,e ln embarked the fortunes and the lives of the people of his State. Our Congressional Representatives were, with scarcely an ex ception, mean in intellect and in attain ments; some without principle. The Rep resentative from Wake District, like Mr. Blaine, bartered his votes for money ; re signed his seat ; and when last heard of lived in opulence in one of the Western States upon his ill-gotten gains. The whole Congressional delegation actively cooperated with the bitterest enemies of the South in traducing and maligning our one hundred Massachusetts Republicans. the confidence of the American people. Vance reaches the acme of his great ness oh the question of taxation, direct and indirect. He denounces , TIIE INTERNAL REVENUE control of North Carolina. speeches at the North, which he has been making for some weeks past, his notion why nil that is made, all that is produced in this country, will not pay at present prices the cost of production. "Why is it?"' he asked the Pennsylvania Grangers at j their great meeting. "Oh, they say, I over-nroduotion : that is the rpauin Vnw ! t i , ' I as a most abominable svstem and declares I have another reason, underconsumption, ; that it ought to be ab-olished Oh, you say, what is the difference be- j of the joke is, as he thinks, that the He- tween them? A very wide and vital dif- I publicans also in this State say they are ference. Over-production is when there is ! for tne abo,ition of the internal revenue. more of anything produced than all the I JtSf "J" most Kculous light. people. The office of Justice of the Peace ! world co"ld consume if they could get it. : Ilesolred 1. That we. the Renuhlirn,, was filled bv negroes and scallawag who ! l-'nder-consuniption is when there is more ! party of North Carolina, are a nuisance, were in nine cases out of ten alike ignor- i Pred than thQe that want it and j . 'lred a Tat we to be abol- ant of the law and the language in which : CMt f ' k consume. Now. then, in my j 18 m ;J Tha( on Monday; and notwithstanding the peo ple of McDowell had been called together only two davs before to "hear Captain . Thomas D. Johnston, candidate for Con gress, yet they turned out again in full force to hear words of wisdom from one who has labored hard and studied faith- majority fully in the State and in the councils of , major fisgkk the nation. Everybody who has ever made a brief, though choice and effective heard Vance knows that his speeches are ! speech. He drew a comparison between wholly unreportable. But I have been j the present condition of the Republican able to jot down a few of the leading : party, and that when they ruled the State points and they deserve the largest circula- ' in 'G8 and '69. The infamous record they tion that the press even can give them. In made is known, and they have so degener the beginning of his speech he read a ( ated, he thinks, that they are now not most pungent and potent denunciation of ! worthy of confidence from the citizens of the Republican party and its leader, not I North Carolina, from Demqprats, but from a committee of senator vance . - - -HM,RtSv The Schools anl College r v Una and thel? WoYknh r. (Professor II. E. Shepherd ln IiMlu(1 T'u.no. II... V vori.i, lllLl., s,, summer of 1884 has been 'I" New York Herald. Acoi'sta, Me., 8epi 4, 1884. Governor Cleveland was nominated at Chicago on Tultr 10 Tli nWfcrpA fnfta etf rhn Marin TTolntn raw worn imeri there flcrainat li!m in the history of education i. v ' '.' by John Kelly and others, and were al- I flnm-. Four or five normal iiwii,,,, " luded to in many of the newspaper des- j been in active operation, ,u l iV, , ai patches from Chicago. They had, there- ! largclj; attended by aspiring te; . .. '" ' fore, unquestionably been made known to j a" actions of the State. Inallof th,s, Mr. Blaine and the Republican managers utes 7eal. energy and faithful,,, T' at the date of the nomination. ' b-'11 conspicuously exhibited. . m i,v On Julv 12, Colonel Zimro A. Smith, j those in attendance upon .their m '' ' for years" Secretarv of the Republican j have displayed the qualities tnflt iv.'1':'' State Committee "of Maine, when Mr. ! SUI8h the ldeal teacher, for Blaine was its chairman, but now editor ; they learn and gladly teach." ju, . mer's work has . . ' .. .. ..." , ' i t r),,..: u- . .. " -"n ana was in close consultation wnn Mr. ! - imuugimur tne wh,, Blaine during most of that day. He is j The normal institutes have hn,,,.. known to be one of Mr. Blaine's i c" from various sections most intimate and trusted friends. I They have produced symjeuhv , He returned tn Boston Julv 13. renehinw ! isolation, and Created !i nrnf,.';.'.. there late that afternoon. The first de- i Mea of scholarly improvement !'n'' tailed publication of the alleged facts was : l)?en devised, literary clubs mj r :"' made in a, poverty-stricken and obscure i circles have been formed, hiwI the ,,'r i ' Buffalo newspaper on July 20. The pub- 1 s,on ?f teaching stands to-:l jn 'y1'; lication was not copied into any promi- Carolina upon a higher plane than ', "cui ui rcspeumuie newspaper in me r.asi. i' ,Jg lln mstorv. uoviously trie proof was too flimsy, the uow huoiu twenry ttionnighh auinonty too odvious, tne animus too lautu scuoois at- roniim nt eicariy ucuubu. cue on JUiy 3U tne nOS- ""guti uit oi.ue, sucii ton ' Journal, noted heretofore as the most Newbern, Wilmington, ( hail I'His-. St:it K ''"lei, '"litr- nirn-,., iTi- :,. iiaiii itt,. f... drttieorlTDtn'n nntii.iii,i.. I.. X' T1 1 1 VIHP Wlleon W 1 ti l t . . T l ? t .... . , 1 r i- .. ' in aamitting to its columns anything of a u'1, eie. jiany 01 tin -e win scandalous character, published two col- . favorably in the . v -". u.0v uiisv 'iiiu in:' iii-jiti n " " ' 1 ' ' i m : r . , . lines respecting all the disgusting details tlu" Northern and Eastern St.,t, -r as they first appeared in the Buffalo news- compensation of the teacher !,, t!, r ., quality ,,f i'l. ,1- il 11 . . Thcv brim? charts against and ronvw "'e tuc c osing speecn ana ne rose to me their own ?arty, declarTng it unworthy of ! bt. ot b1,9 efat Pwf VfDC thlnk . , 1 y. .. o . "J there is nn Hnnlif limit rviir nlnitmn fK, I there is no doubt about our electing the national ticket this year. He says all political signs point to that event. He says the prospect is better now than when we elected Tilden in '76. W. H. O. POLITICAL, NOTES. Hon. Samuel J. Randall has been re nominated for Congress his twelfth term of continuous service. Mr. Blaine has been trying his hand off ine oenatorship was of paper. MALICIOUSLY FALSE. Most of these details have since been proved in the published testimony of an investigating committee of independent Republicans (all well-known and highly respected citizens of Buffalo) to be abso lutely and maliciously false. The Boston Journar publication was admitted in the article to be based upon the investigation in lormer times, a significant indie,,;, , professional advancement. I'romi ' , among the great private institutions i yvmu 10 1UUIWUS iJin,rll'll nuii-ij i isiteu ;i lew UHVs , memorable school was foum K : i - ., . . mm uiis leinailieu in tile liaiHIs (.f t,e . ; family from its establishment ,!, present time. In beautv .,f .it,,,,' , ; completeness of equipment. i,nl n llc, "i K:c: Mr. Conkling. of a correspondent sent from Rnn tn i Jl 18 n.,urp;.s,e, Buffalo. In his report he says that he a he 0w" of LZZlTnT1'1' ' rived in Buffalo, a day's journey from ' vidtmlnfluenc "' i:i Boston, on July 19. This was six davs t!"0 . after Colonel Smith', tn t k: :1 . Vul.vurM OI -rtli ( . vu - Abusa tl Will LXio IU" terview with Mr. Blaine and prior to any just beginning its autumnal When the civil war broke out the opin ion at the North became general that the power conferred by the Constitution upon the Federal Government was unequal to the exigencies'then existing and the fur ther strain which the war would involve. tj,v.i:,.., 1 ... rr, r t w i i it was written. The coarse manners the ; Part of tne co,mtr.v. where we want vour The genius of Jacobinism never devised ' . j .v . - i u . ,i ., brut:d ignorance the ",oss nartinlitv the food. there are men that are starving for, a bolder scheme, or one fraught With ' P8"'""1' 1,10 , , , , , ? r i .... innil. find lr never rns rhpanni- tho. , uiiuuisiiuitt veuaiuv, oi inese matristrates 1 ...i. m.n. more wrong, ruin and torture to those were to be subjected to it. It involved courts excited' general amazement and Iu vom Part 6f the eo"ntry there are men the overthrow of everything in the State ! torror- Ri&hts wore abandoned which had lo lie nroecuteil in in-:i riluinalf Except the Supreme Court, men fled from that was venerable, whether by it or by lapse ot time, either in our govern- i ft wns fletprminefl therefore tn cet ihn ment, its institutions, or in its societv Tt : aimed indeed at blotting out all distinc- 111,11 tionsof society and race. As ft prelimir ;EAT kstabi.ishmk.nts of manufacture nan ep tne reconstruction Acts were re.mire -real numbers of nnr tn ,1 th.. ill-clad 1 " 1 and women that will be cold this winter for want of clothing and shoes and all the to abolish us but us. The method of collecting internal rev enue is unlike all other methods. In all other taxation you are supposed to be an honest man and are allowed to ' give in " your property to an officer and be sworn u n wjiuoiu any suspicion. If von want fered in return for two or three speeches. blirt 7 , P.rlor to aJ outlook is most auspicious. Mr. Conkling will have nothing to do with ft JLZ ?a m 1 ' readers know little. ! 1 or lor Blaine, and thinks he will have the ! stat nT t 'r.'l V"'?,u i haP.el Hill, the tenatorsnip of bis own strength. nn Tl7,; 0A Bn J,r a"' AtQ;0 i cC on July 20. On the afternoon of the same Maine elected Governor, Congressmen j day the Buffalo evening newspaper printed and Legislature on Monday. The State the infamous storv in m,i, ,V 1 t,x. . . J . 1 11V Olill 11 ost crrna PinnK1iAun 4-1 1 !'.""."- aFrlcul'v u tne , ion, witfi ttie same details, as thev after- :Snir 188h p,;ohibi, Tard ed in the jssa tion Constitutional amendment is adonted the stir hari q,,.h n .:n, Constitution' aside until the restoration of peace. Upon this principle the Federal Government acted from the beginning to the courts rather than resorted to them to rights. the end of the strife. In its prosecution of passed. In pursuance of their provisions. the war every principle of civil liberty was the State lines were obliterated, and the violated: the Secretary of State made it a States themselves grouped into '-.Military matter of boast that the liberty of every Departments," duly numbered. Every of citizen within the States of the then Union fice was vacated. In au age preeminent was at his mercy. If any man raised a ! fr the sentiment of law. the whole ma voice of protest against the government he L.chinery for the preservation of the peace . w tuiiiiuiiicii loouc oi ine many uasimies uu, u, cjimuui-c; not a ptace. four vears has chantred all that with which the Northern States abounded: omcer remained within the limits of the ! comforts that we make Kast. There is no to distil a little whisky, it is taken for overproduction." The old man i might v graut?l that you are a scoundrel and an nigh right ; but ca.l i, overproduction or : lZ"1"1 W nr 4 unaer-consumptiou. or what you will, bellies will be pinched and hacks will lie until there is a change from the Senator Vance makes the IKK.VTEST SPEKCH ON THK TARIKK innnfnnrln ' dv a larec maioritv. Mr. R mp pft hAmo i . . - " cu.ctjt ju tue xastern Mates were for one day to avoid voting on it. concerned. The Journal is the onlv daily The State election in Vermont last week ! newspaper in Boston which supports Mr w as of course in favor of the Republicans, i Blaine. With the Portland Press it is the The majority was 21,600, a decrease of' only prominent newspaper in New Eng 3,000. The vote was licht on both sides : land which snnnorta Mr TUni BLAINE S COMPLICITY. were in turope and were not here, and in the natural course could not have been here until the lands were taken up and cultivated and there was an excess of peo ple unable to get land and wanting em ployment. Republican rule for twentv- and has made the noor folk nlentv Hrere Tt huc ii me press ucaiurreu, it was silenced. At a"r- -l went-rni ui me neau oi an army i forced the the end of the war all power was concen- r took jiossession of the "Department," trated in Congress. The coordinate r once the State of North Carolina. A mil branches bent unresistingly to its sw.ay.J itary despotism, statk and stern, was es The successor of President Lixcolx ven-V tablished here. tured to act upon what he and his Cabinet ' In seeming conformity to precedent in deemed a mandate of duty under the Con-: every age it has been remarked how the "'uu"' "u was "npeacnea, and only approaches of despotism are veiled under j 26 to jijfl.50 per ton at the North Pro narrowly escaped deposition. The Supreme ; the forms of free institutions-a ' second ' tection has protected them to a lower price Court did not accede to a certain con- Convention was called. It was evident I than thev can be bought at abroad The o.v.u " me v uusutuiion' given )) that tor-ttie purposes in view, a change Congress; its voice was stifled by being must be made in the svstem of .suffrage. H overlaid by new Judges. The Congress free expression were given to the sentiment itself was completely under the control of of our people the Constitution to be formed the radical clement, the principal article ! would differ but little, if anv. from that of in (he creed of. which was a fierce, indis- ; 1865. which had len soreeentiv ,w,i work for small wages. Those poor folk legislation that caused this state of things, disputes ever made in North Carolina. No one ' counted as Republican. The shrinkage on the Republican side, if it Ohio. Pennsvlvania. n,lmnvnth,rst.(0 : . Ab. s.u'd: "s editor is Mr. Blaine's eonti- n, n ui:' ; aential fnend and associate in "Veu- Fn. and from the party that has done the law making. land political affairs. seat of the- 1',,;,,.. :. in spue oi us remoteness froi,i thc,rr,.'. centres of life there are few tnure :inr, tivc places. In addition to it. :',.r. beauty if. has some fragrant meiiH.n' ,". some tender association for almost ,.r' North Carolinian. In the olden tin,, was the seat of social culture. :,s the seminary which trained most f i(, who achieved the loftiest professional :,r"; political eminence "whereof th,. sj,, bears record." Here were educated W. . ident Polk; such statesmen, jurist-, ,, educationists as Dobbin, Mang'um. Van,. Bingham, Ruflin, Battle, Pearson. i;r, ham, and a goodly companv i.f "r.th-r-who "wore the white flower of U;m, less lite, and "bore without ,1.,. time at which manufacturing should become the business of the countrv. and has forced along with the business the needful supply of poor. Naturally, for the time, business and people have come to grief. Steel rails have been selling latelv at Hkpi blk ax Mil. Calkixs. who is run ning for Governor of Indiana, by w ay of boast, of taunt to the Democrats, tells '. them that when the Republican party came j into power it found au empty treasury and now it has four hundred million dollars in the treasury. Four hundred millions of the people's money Rocked up! The fact goes far to explain the terrible troubles III.-. I I 1 I I I III lift f Ml I inI thn r.s: m T . . ... I w--"-- '11U11.J, mm 1. n III I I I I I I 1.1 I ; - oofl.. f f . " . " J lyy-rm. iut llllLldLUl SLfllS 111)11 Wirn Mr klomo 1 1 rvpond C it uKwl" "J rernuc.rfiorm. lnc doctrine Satiirdav nicrht tn7QlQ u ;,lrt ' 1 A i ; iv.aiuL '" wvuu uays oc- '""Vl nnmr m niiicman. Mmri of protection he thinks ought to be labeled 0 C eveland an d Sendrick, Mr KoTll J?T. i-estigation, so 'far as revival of the University in , s;.", af, . the doctrine of theft. It is illegal. It is made an earnest sneec) Vn bi ; iv . I e.Jmrn admits. begun. It is no- long reign of chaos it has entered ,,,, illogical. It is a system of robberv. He Smmande I a Mr" Blaine managing the , new phase of intellectual ac tivitv. ' Tl. eioses the fallacies of the argument used I th tT the indorsement S Uer8.t8Dd I detflls of his canvas from his home here inspiriting life of modern sc ience jia, in support of protection. A high tariff i -uo hal f hc r?ed .Z JrT J" : 1 AU6t U is notorious that he is and breathed into it. A ma, ked a.tetien , diminishes revenue bv cutting off imports election da ApT h"nklnK ; has always been particularly intolerant of its progress is the formation of the K!i-h At present we pay millions to the manu'- had T snokeu 1 1 foS ornmanders ; any independent action on the part of his Mitchell Scientific Societv. who,- facturersand little to the government. He was Led eU b7 h I P .ltlCal ?eat.s or ociates. The Jour- creditable productions have receive,! ,h shows the assertion that high tariff pro- the rank and I fiMe w-o..i I not ? i V publication could have had but one cordial approbation of discriminatin, tects American labor to be the grind ' Talanv rieS tll " 'f ' f61"' ?"d tbt Political' It was a most judges, having been most favorahlv n,tio,,' historic, . daring innovation upon previous methods. in the editorial columns of the ,',. Th .II MBOIC LI K criminate and fanatical hate of the South. ! There were iormidabl result has been to close three-fifths of the iron furnaces in the country, to spread bankruptcy throughout the trade, to throw vast numbers of laborers out of emplov ment. Cotton goods have been selling at retail of the centuries Th. mo.,. ...,.. ... ,, afflicting-. the country. Replying to Mr. his goods in a protected market; the la- V.ALKIXS, Governor Hendricks well said 00re.r se'ls his muscle in a free-trade filed interrogatories to Mr Rlaine fnMra that a fortunate condition of the countrv ? J , , e c"mes into competition with ng the principal allegations, and requiring does not consist in having a treasurv over- man win T.Yv Evf"Ibod. kuows that , his response to them under oath. It arf- people the untold millions of money that ' bng the best price. This is the natural withdrawn, and that the defer h 1 u may oe niu awav tn the vaults of the i A , ,". jjiuicai econoniv are sume lull uuu s jaws as which il loin- in.' m, II- .. ,'it. i 1VU3 1111. 1 UUM. "" luuianapons Satinet has hied an1 ano- was conspicuously intended to have spirit -of original research answer in the Blaine libel suit, admitting , potent bearing upon the camnaio-n It Johns Hookins Universin 1,: publication of the libel and setting up the certainly seems preposterous that Colonel to stimulate and develop" than anv . delence of truth in justification, and also Smith would take such A merit - ' ... . " uilJin.uui. 1 J- - ' 'V- lJi(llllil I nucai step without counsel or advice, and his just preceding conference with Mr. Blaine would have given him the opportu nity to seek both. It may be said with regret as concerning the chosen representative of ,mnt novt,-' I-esnonsiliHiti- f.i ; .1 i tlit ti- Tl; . .i i - ' - ' i. wi it uun uuure uiniuc 9 uieiuous in past cam lC flltheil ties in thu !l nvei' tlii ...nr... ... u i . 'v ' ' v wuliii ni price How such a party should have grown up ; way of change if the Constitution had ' prices'of the foreign article , any force. Citizenship and suffrage be U Ml 1 ' Vl i flTnHn ! 1 , , i"- iuuumo jmssiuus engenaerea nv anv civil convnlsioms may be understood. How such a party should expect to" gain a suf ficient number of adherents to divide our people, when the conditions of allegiance were hostility to their own blood and race, none who felt the power of ties like these could imagine. But it was shown in the sequel that they had not reckoned in Vain. " With such a party in power, there was reason that the South should fear the ut- below the Of course .the cotton mills have b( n nut nn lmrt iongea exclusively to the States-; Congress ! time or no time at all. Protection has having no power except to pass uniform protected them out of business, and thou naturali.ationlaws. But the Constitution ' sands of factory operatives are- without had ceased to be an impediment to Repub- ! employment. Even in Virginia, Xorth ..w.u.,UJ, a,... nere, as oemre, it was dis- ! Carolina and Georgia i . i i. . , . r" itgaiueu. us pians could be carried out I forced to ci been by disfranchisement of a large portion of the white race and the enfranchisement of the negroes. This was accordingly done. The Convention when assembled repre sented everything but the genii hi; , i ..a i ,1 niOKt nmilieat; f ,..!. , ' T'""11" - .-rl.. ...... nudl hus impiicu in traditions of orth Carolina. ....r ma- nn Ticus: .Nor was the ap- prenension wittioiit ground. Republican- '. the State, it wa ism aid not indeed shed the blood of Dur people after they had laid down their arms; the spirit of the aw fnrhnrlo fVi.ot m .- fm, " i'.wv4 LUni.. mills have ose. In the Hocking Valley, in Ohio, ten thousand miners, driven from work by the low price of labor under the beneficent Republican policy o glibly- described by Blaink in his letter of acceptance, stand A few dele- in opiiosition to the law. driven to d..c.-.r. gates excepted,; who were loyal sons of ation bv starvation Thev fi,i .'iL composed ,f men who filled bv cheap imported h,br- ,i ;., were aliens to our blood, bitterly hostile their frenr.v resort to violence "Ten to us as a people, and of unknown or sus- ; thousand starving miners" means proba melons nnteeeHonto , .i i , , I i i. .i . . . It is long since, in anv Christen n.,n,r c..o .... . . . ... V ' v , "l starving , , . " , iags, no in intelligence am char- blood was shed for political offences; i acter ranked with the lowest order i our They d,d not cdnfiscate real estate: that social scale: of negroe who in kn ll pie , Asides some lingering regard for mestic animals. Under the leaders in that the Conatitution which prohibited such a j body the work was thorough Th ('on nre may W had ,t. influence. But stitution of 1T76. lImlpr ;hirh w, he. things excepted, the Republican j lived so long and happih, was utterlv 1 oi TT h"-t the people imolished: there was not left one tone Vt tl- l - futlon would have suited our people ouite ... N'J tl V Sr Ve ; as well if it had been made o order . j, 'iiiiijieiH would have gone on ntmvr nf tl r.-...i: . . uuietlv. and thn M11B( t,.. . . 1 . . . " "ue as io make it the . . . i,W'n saved . I Tn( ! Qll'l: oi.- mi'il . L - . me treasury. V hat right has the govern- ' tion Thf ' "nt Z , r- , lu l"uvt 11 m H judicial inquiry. paigns in Maine have been such as to ac- influence will become a deter ment to $400, 000. (KM) of the people's i famous in that it . ..T1 , . n" V Mr- B,a,ne was nominated, friends : cora oxattlJ with the employment of such m the higher education of th money that it has no occasion to use in the ! the article of goods used I v th poor L t 1 , conccd 11 thc Western States : mn " thc Boston Jon,r publication short the educational futun administration of United States affairs, i than on that used by the rid S .5" i I " J VsfiW7- defC8t a" C " ith What would 1M. tr ould discriminate in favor of The no, "m C 1 " " ,n V' that a maine estimate ok w.a.nk. """l..Ji"ft"' " T tr,l.e' ' . man, if at all. Under R,nnhi;. , L : : , '"1 " access is prooaoie. yet The estimate in which bis k. , V"1P'lMleu- DUl wDat has e.iucei so that the money would come is reversed. Vance ..- .7. l'" V?mocra,s are very hopeful and the, acter is held here t b;u C..V". ,. achieved in the face of fo back into your pocket and into the chan- show him that it is proper to put a heavier i . 1 .a.,arme and cient'v indicated in the statements of Sen- SC ma.kes us san?ui.ne as . nels of trade? Don'l vou know that it dut-v on the coarse gJnids in which the f ,5n,T f.. i v - c '"gan, utlcr's ator Morrill's widow, telegraphed vou t o iscimisness o imperl , poorian wran his iwl. iht fusl?' P an has diminished the Blaine vesterdav. ami wh,Vb the desire for something bet " C,U3,8CL. -orn by the richthen he ,l S Si StaTe bv JtT ? ; -tion of the kuowleo : f" thorou The State CronitK of this city will ySZ tt" Z f of h IiT ' commence the issue of a daily edition on .hXfc" ote the uadica,. ticket. tion while Wisconsin Democrats speak the mlSunSea llxV") i To those who love tranaui! Monday next. The Reoistek wishes its . Z ,h "-VRtera of protection there confidently of their ability to carrv the has ever Sven "hcToutrv Tf attracthe can be ima neighbor the best of aood fortune a "7"!" f" hum,?g since God ate for Cleveland. ' ernor ChtmurTJ'Z- Chapel Hill. From the ad.jo, C . v 1 t.illi II III-" 1 1 1 ' ' I tin nnrl I. -i t ; . t . - x yj i null- -v it . . . -. - - v. x llivill hopes to have for many years to come as much pleasure from its daily visits as it has had once a week during the year that is gone. STATK POLITICAL ITEMS. verv good store-account if he coul wnai ne was navino- for thn ,. nKi In the farmer's i fathers" of the Republican party, a Sena- ''c man and as a prival cl see, side by side, tor from Maine for many years. He died . iven to the countrv in te citizen would be 0 II sensibly felt in Xorth Carolina, and iiuu,. time it cannot fail to produce salutarv ! suits. Thc faculty of the University ; n in -ent constituted are imbued with what Mark Pattison so felicitously termed the scitfiitihc habit. In a few vears th. ii mining nnwi : e iatc. In of Noni, lope ;r.'l mains tn i already l u- i , rmidahlr eK to the lev. ectiuti. mill ter than k- lily arnii-- ineasir,-e tin it v nn iii -r- gined thai. ournmeii! ei beginiiiiiL' versitv session the place is per opinion of Mr. Blaine as a pub- j Df the Uni aaeti oy a ctreamv and delicious nnetui even more senttiinrr 1 m. terms than thrc0 r.r u. ,r. 1 "e surrouuet .-ov ui oeiiaior jiornu. tiov- irk.tfn.n. i..:i "yu-- " l?u -ve,l,s g. "is widow was liwju, iH. would err, hnmn o , snrnrisBfl i f.. .1 i... . . I r- l i . " T" once and begin to mouhl bul Bu : leVte'rlen ,lAt ' Tr.T. " "v- V n ,,..f..i . .v '"". -uaine. He has i mi Hive ii"ri mi i i iii rno your reporter despairs per- miis. men, women and children. Are the workers in iron, the mill opera tives, the del ve rs in mines, alone in their misery ; Nay. Kvery where in the nianu- inctunng districts wage's borer discharged. And now where is the " farmer's home market" which was to have been built un I K. T. Boykin. Ksq., is Sampson's Dem ocratic nominee for the Senate. H. G. Ewart is the Jtepublican nominee for Congress in the Ninth District. Dr. V. M. Hountree is tlie Democratic nominee for Senator in Greene and Le noir. J. K. Lewellin is SurrvV " nn,.,.i;. any adequate re,A,rt of the grearech there bv t cha ' TJ, .T" M Rlsiir Tr1 . , o o- 'a'uc a utiuaus, unnccessnrv J manner in cnaracter. sh renberi that t i to a hi that ...u ' j- on this subject, or the masterh winch the dist nmnehni . j ,, i j , , jr- iini.ui- -- ---- mau w uo uisseminates a it. If hrcould Se tt t "Dd,,e8 ' P e- shocked to receive such a com- vandal to serve his own purposes is false out the Se cou tr .a"J7ch trough- I n.un.cation. thought every citizen of to every instinct of decenc v. The man heard I such "a howTf ?refoTih-U,dr-be w husband t i who disseminates scandalous" lies to serve never heard before natln 1 T W mourning for him, but, . as i his own purposes is infamous. r neard befon. much as I mourn his death, I thank my uoverxok p, otfd, InK , ox the c oi.on u.nk Father in heaven that He called him home . . AIsTED s IOKA- question Vance did not speak lo,,(, , Dcfo,e the party he loved so well and did ' "V",i "e1 sa-v?.ln the fir A'J nominee fortheHou.se: Stephen Vennble ! wi-ta iint aml decision. He is frlendlv ; S m.uoh for had so disgraced itself "That Mr. Blaine is'directlv nre reduced, la- for Sheriff. John S. Brown, of McDowell, and W H. Bower, of Caldwell, are the Democratic nominees for the Senate in the 36th District to the race. He says he has done more to nlomi.n.at1e so kicked and for him by taxing him 42 per cent, on the ! Hodges for Sheriff; Arthur Mavo'for Ker . . 1 i . . 1 ct1 r iLijMuriiMi irr ivh At. 1.:, . i 4 - ... nun ti .j w ere exiorted and exchanged his products The loitKio.N-noRN- population of Bhode Island is rather more than one-fourth of the whole. They are not allowed to vte s of a verv consider able .,a,e tueui ana improve their condition than any Governor the State has ever had this North Carolinians know to be true' He has inaugurated an Asylum for their unfortunate and schools to educate them ct he says he will never submit to their rule over him and his children The Be publicans, despite (he decision of their th o i oui",u" --un, nave torced the ouestion The Republicans of the Kighth District-! "Pn us and we are compelled to Ll'r, ?t I. L. Greene, of Wa- i 0,,t. The white man is hetw t,o., the highest office with American people, as I k uau" Knew .lames li. lilaine to be. If he were ! f v o 1 1 n n- . i 1 ,1 ..... , . . '"uiuii.iisupuurtjtir. uiaine ior rnp vnm u mt. ., ...... : COrrllllt n. mnn f.r . - "UMa.vu.i iiuuiltdliUU ---X-- - aifainsL I t ' eve ni.1 , Kl. il. -r... in the crift nf th.. ' r i , " " uul" -"e jioston f l , : ! J":1''1 ftnd Buff-lo Telegraph, no intelli- ... T . ' Ill'll I 1 11 I C( , 11 an I , . I . .- - '.. .11. . 1 1 nigs would have been me; congenial to the spirit of Wordsworth 'Far from the busy haunts of men." tin charm of tranquil leisure is here realize.! in perfection. At length, however, tin spell is beginning to be broken, and th. "solemn stillness" is rudelv interrupted U hideous cries of "fresh, fresh," as detneh ments of new collegians arrive from day to day. This, cordial greeting i- in tended to make the fledglings feel' at e;w and at home. I am informed bv some "I the older students that it accomplishes it purpose very effectually. II. K. reasonable rln.iK- What could be more incredible than that Beaufort Democrats have nominated W. II. Patrick for the TT t . . or any such man. even at the bidding of ! v i . CK flould be made "P011 his partv." oicming of ; prcsldenUal candidate without consulta- ..nn aim tne consent o the opposing th- candidate or his resnonsiblo ., ; that of the East, says the The infamous course of the Boston I't bh hU'TOr-CS1Td0nCe' n Which WM Allowed bv all the Ltub- ith the electricity of excite- lican organs in Maine except the X (idvernor Cleveland's, friena' The political atmosphere of the Nor esi, uniiKe that of the East . New York Ti is surcharged I ment and enthusiasm. amount of property. The; death of Scarborough forCoroner: A. V WtA Senator Asthonv recalls the fact that as for "rveyor. vi Tl il- i "Ulll- III II J 4 hfiTrnp f- K n 4- llltTIll Zlllll fnm lOIUcm 'I't,.-. I . t lri : (' F' K-on. I negro. He has done everyVhig to'bu ' tbi. great reg . not ort? 7 2 I a(VT,U . ...v.i... r.uiiur. UP tne Civilization .f flilo i . ciinfiiln.,. ti , : ' ' . .-. . Th- Democratic candidates in Jones re ' -ote the welfare of the ra.and 1. 1 the general rw'th" ,"1 ! retaliatory P. M. Penrsall WtU Tt,. . t to rule The sn,... l , i... .... b'" i; i, :n !.. . " iv. r . i- oscue for Kcffister- .7 ne was consu teii am I r Ointrn Mm. ..n...... : .1 ... . ' vears of anarrliv mLmh. ,m tat'- 't multi- in p, n '-" "uner- plied offices and salaries to such an extent : ng. But Republicanism held that the that the bare support of th. 7 ' XttD government itself was tainted with treason, i was an l.tZ jL t demanded, therefore, that it should be I -It five. ' ,2 2' U ' I ,.u . : ' ""fs "-"1 circuit, tnus trans- i to the ground, and built up ferring his private feelings ami personal ! i 11 lduons 10 Ul,; judgment seat. It changed 1 sj stem, governments our no...,! ..,i ... -. ., ' originate with the people- the f i " , I 7 ' 1 maae the nalntenance ! doctrine bein,r tht ! ' fl" ! .f criminal a charge upon rlie public: ! i.m t,, -..gnty aoxies : the penitentiarv-a mere ,.,;, torn dow-n :mew. According to on drafted and first agreed fo by the Repub lican caucus, the fifteenth amendment provided that the right of citizens of the United States to vote should not be denied or abridged on account of race, nativitv COlOr Or Previous rnnrl.'t;. r :i i ! Tn f'howon EV1 le. a """""" 'i .sei viiuae. . n n . m it uit is tne nemo- Thc amendment was about to be reported SrtlC cndidate for the House; I. C "inn... i r v fluanpt-itiiuth". f .1... 11 nu.l t -. . i 'vmnn nun ii ine wora "iimiu, jr.. ior t H. A . Scott is the nominee of the Cam den Democrats for the House- N G Grandy for Sheriff; A. E. Bell for Regis ter; J. G. Hughes for Treasurer; W E McCoy for Coroner; J. K. Abbott for,Sur-vcyor. .., . , , -j- io iiiuug io i . ..... ..... imuuH mm iv iscon uo uiMiuuig tor tile colored v ..-... sin. and nronr .-nrl,,,. n , , . Aein - 1- "j me -iveouuucan I surrender to them the white man's rights 1 majorities in Iowa and Michigan It is ' , in that case somebody would have a fn. not difficult to find i - new. but br Executive in 4 I. , rni ' ,lms sovignty is exercised through delegates selected by the people A Convention thus implies free, uU - ncted choice as to its members; absolute diction as to the time when it shall be held ; and power without limitation. The Hepubhean party resolved to di.s&rd all old ); '1'ies anu build up thc State a oj tne jKiwer of the people the authority of the Federal F Accordingly, the neonh. t , , 1 i--" i-iaie were ordered to send delegates to the C apitol on a day appointed.. This ,nndate left , no option; for the State was then in posses- no"ch FfL'ral tr0P8 th'rewas no choice butbetween the existing military government and the civil government o established. The Convention Lt Jd s SeSK1?n. Fortunatplv thenj wn( 2l LUl?M!8,iiU ht -age. :- , , "rles were in the nu aoie men. nil u. ii.iu. Ls yere wist liJti with great judgment nera As to the iM-wnnrl at the ticket, both State and national, the Senator shows everything to be favorable to Democratic triumph He knows Blaine to be a man guilty of the basest crimes. He is un worthy the confidence of the people And lork, -'Old York," is corrupt and ignor ant. He is the most ignorant man who was ever candidate for Governor He ivuows do more about the tariff than a lioor i 7' uiscnminating men who think that the chances are in favor of the Democrats and Greenbackers carrying Iowa bv -t handsome majority. As the sporting men say, '-money talks:" Vou dan get even bets that the Democrats will carrv Wis consin The betting in the pool "rooms rules about $73 to $100 that the Democrats will have a majority on the State and Electoral tickets in Wisconsin. A per fectly reliable a-entl c, j ..u ill 1 UlULCI -which was then fixed upon us. costs more to maintain it than the entire reve nues of the-. State amounted to within the memory of men yet living. Jt destroyed moral distinction in regard to citizen ship: the convicted felon and the most nativity" was retained ,'t .i,i ..k ! for Survevor . ".. .. , Knows aoout predestination and the doe- i an a life-Ions Republican tUI , 1 raveness and B. W. Steed forthV h" ' I man or aXZZ r"-" lLU 8la.tes- 'XtrZ l " i 12 ' PP to $250,000 y and solely s "Bond Like Dli Knndr)," jNew York World. August Heitner keeps a barber shop i. Jackson avenue. Long Island City. months ago he hired for an assistant' Out tlieb Schmidt, who was not a professional barber but was given employment on u count of his wife and children, w ho v. r destitute. As Gottlieb advanced Heitn-r also advanced his wages, and on Saturday night paid him $7 for his week's work. Gottlieb became drunk and did not appeal Sunday. He went to the shoo on Mon.la . attack upon Mr. Blaine's private chorn; i and informed the boss that he did not in Governor Cleveland replied to the suo-o-es-i ' tend to work any more. I vos gou tion, indignantly, "No." Such wasthe home' P? Shermanv! I dond like dis km. conduct of James (4. Blaine; such was the dry' anJ'how." conduct of Grover Cleveland. AVhat a "Well, all right." said Heitner. - l.m contrast!" " how are you going to (iermanv? You hiv ... - -. no money?" DUarM, "aw. J gottc , . , dis evenings. The town i-sitnot ' "c nation. 1 vas offer her mit Hop Wine hil s U hedthv and L !l M1"Ton f 1 thc hiundryman, nexd door for dirtv d-l of he richelt airulMirr0,"ed bj, e I larS' but he finc her. und wol.: State Wadesboro i 7 ? nly ifn me twenty-five. ' She vos v.r. titing point fo vZ ? f u (hTih- morn moniRh rtot. Vhen I dond Slare " n , ealv dK ""i T" me dirt-v tollers for her pv de auction ,-u lmJtl !..t- Tt s 1 t3k- her to New Yorrick und sol- 1, r. ht fA .i.:. "-".t 'V J.ooo'ng trade Schmidt, later in the dav. tacked up th. r"1""1 "ranch ot its legit- : following- notice - V ' ' ten me some monish p; I vill sole my vife niit pah zens as a pre-reonisit,. ..,.:.. , 1 i-ana u. w. Steed for the TTn.w. ! man i uu mnKe k Artu t,... ex. x-- ' Rhode Island, if not a Democratic State, j for Regr oV BulT t least a very doubtful one. The obnox- ! Surveyor; Dr. LeCis for Coroner iju worn was nromntlv ernowi q..- Tho IVmnnrni;n : L ' '"-M, HUM OCll- i nniutl IIUIJ1I nPS 111 f'tH-U. tlhiniol,.,.., HTfr I VTiiavm. 1 1 i 'P l i-i UJ1 ?.i m - . .. V'u-en were invested with e.mal a,Rl "ssociates refused i p " "wick lor the House; John i l'eia' - riKh, to suffrage. These specifications ! ! h" W foreign-blrn citizens in IsLr- I T ZhmttS for i anJwT'S3' kc at Hickorv must suffir. for the only object here is to ! lhodv to -te, no matter how vir- I Rum ""for Bo-B Jn ZJl otd at Va'ch iT 'xlubit the spirit r.f th.t , i tuous and worth v and t'nt.ii; ' Snrvnl. ,B- 8a,ter for .5?J.,at Wch Pce-aliout a thou- . ' ...-i.uiii. iii ana "5"', uniess ; . v . avus ior Uoroner. ni ue inrmer and fifteen hundred t ! the animus of its framers. The Const i- ! P?S.S"Sf,od of pr,ai" ount of property The people of Macon wish Gov Robin 1 th ,att'r' tution was. submitted to those who were W'h"' nt the Knuw ,im. precipitating into fn to present them in the next Legisla- ' at moohesvii.i.k : Site:1. u: r rn h- mem ; ;r.o,h-f -st tion f : EhTv ir8 sitCj ;n(1 the uoo. . ... Apru, 180S. Hud not mind, r; a U:nsp m of ignorant needs the services in the Assemhi 'ue a aemonstration worthy of the education, patriotism, everything that civ ?tors' tota,'y ""Prepared for the respon- ! of sense, experience and patrio 1 tiT fiTrZL T" ?'hich Ground Ihzation cherishes, been put under the ban ' "hich they were inve'ed. I h-very ffw dHC a n Nort CMrolina, it would have been re, ;. Sum, S.... ..... . . spe af tSt Z 1 'Sill eral Scales, he has known from bovhood elected. and the State never had a better and no- i. in war the bravest of soldiers "tiuuui statesman Dler man and a UK GOVERNOR'S APPETITE. Sw-Hln outity Provldlns Ration. (.Railroad Celobratiou Meeting. i 7frWr. That John Woody and' Samuel Massey be requested to catch at least 400 mountain trout lor gratification of G lmate trnrlo it, , , 10 jiiusecutea we are not at present prepared to say. The Bank of i New Hanover furnishes ample banking j funds to carry on the large business of the , town. As a cotton market it is second to "oneof p'lual size in the State and the , staple shipped from this point commands better prices in the large markets of thc t!l han that raised in any other section of the South. The receipts of cotton will "r-oS""' i-,uuo pates annually, and al- .oi. Thos. J, .Tjirvis. S,ioJ Now"1 "( I.ITOpool liio- the auction room to be ' " 3 j t i Work of Art. Agai n an election u..a . . ,, ' ..v ... i, i nuincn i tie rstate i. in-!, ... .i. ... . ,. main ; ,, "c ''" reghn The ordinances werese ! Z 2 ' ' "-S! necmitios-of tho cin,,: i . .. ." u was, a complete - "iuiiui(iii ri'vnnuiAii l The Constitution tion to the State. were elected. The ..in, involving measureless desrada. In the general w me iew ur eans r,..-7 v . - - ' n . -i hv rriiii c II Lin annual review of Southern nm.. ....i,. I "a.rmony nominated a verv strnnir tii,. - I -"o--" ""o" John fiofi: .. - rS. "" our Northern htkm - . .. i v . , .Jt ...f; I HO Sunn 1 . IT r , ueroert and J .. - . ;ortn i iirnhniuim i ..:.. i , . . r ; "-' "icii xjtmntv ( ------ 'i'g' or ueaa ann the Convention nn t. j ... . J . , ..j: i , -"., auu tne . ' entire : l, v '"""ki ana ennc to make candidate for has been the ..nn-SM mnr :.. : Jiemrt. uerbert K ViS. t i i -"iviui in ii... .inmn.frr. iThnrloo Tir r. T ... . a .rriinu oaroecne via r.,:j,i .. -e.ftv. ui ;r.. ,u. uusuec, ,). JJ. Allen, anrl T i -,. , anu tne orsed it. TO-DAY AT SHELBY great occasion of the week. IXew York Sun. TI.... . 1 n .ie siiimg on tne ijrrand I nion at Saratoga. 4iAre you fond of works of art Browne?" she asked. Very," he replied, gazing at her with undisguised admiration. porch Of the Mr. in regard to Southern idleness ern lawlessness. Of the the Senate ."mIc. Charles M.' Busbee ,.Ks ,i ..y, i Walter Mrtt fr h ii "ii Sna J- I PeoP' . I for si,-rirVrr .""be- owell the number of six th,...,! A Tot Who WUhetl to Kh.re hU Joy. people of Cleveland turned out Tn to" ... ...... ll And m I l Sheriff ; M. W. Py tlrU ttt0 mb" thousand. There wL ! t " ' a.nt iionore : -k the . they ought to temper tWort ! lJ Coroner; phBlaWe STZZ unds brougbtu Tulhe bi i awuiwi ; i in v vv u a ti. ik i i . unparalleled. Capt. W. H. Kitchin. Col" it " h Ma ' has Docs mamma Inow The CandldHte. Who ish dot Uakes me py der hand. lad speaks so awful nice und bland. I nd urges me join his band? Dot candidate. Ven'r1"1 dr6at ,ne ven ehve.Ml. I?".1 dr comer of der treed e hahbeu jut a while to meed? Dot candidate. Vho Uh dot siujrin' awful Kav. Just like a lark all of der dav, Mlt airy wiugs would fly awav? Dot candidate. Who ish dot covers ub his head , t nd wishes he va only dead' Der odder man haf win, you bed Dot candidate. av. tacked up written in (ierni.-m. ii; the barber shop : "I, Gottlieb Schmidt, will sell at publi( auction. Tuesday afternoon, at 1 o'clock mine vife, Katrina Schmidt. She vc- I urn years url age, und make py ine a vife. I vood gife a clear title to a . customer." Mr. Heitner tore down the notice .hk' went to Mrs. Schmidt's to inform her "I what her husband intended doing. H' found his late assistant heating hi- wi!' accompany hum c sold. Heitner im terfered and advised Mr Schmidt t". have him arrested. Schmidt then left th' house, saying: ' Veil, den I fix yon. 1 gone und k!l mineself!" He has not since been seen. A Day t Coner Inland. He had been at Coney Island all and was struggling to get his boots ntf. 'I never (hie) go down to the Island-" he said to his wife, "and look (hif i " over the broad expense of sea. "the"' being (hie) filled with wonder." "Filled with what?" she asked. "Wonder." "Wonder! That's a brand of whNky I never heard of.M
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1884, edition 1
2
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