Newspapers / The Newbernian [18??-18??] (New … / June 9, 1874, edition 1 / Page 2
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DAILY NEWBERNIAN. Seth JJL Cakpesxes Editor. NEW BEENE, N. C . JUNE 9, 1874. a goddess; but she is a goddess only to those who are qualified to improve her faVors. Lib- i - . - - erty to a person who cannot properly use it, is a curse with fangs sharper than those of an under our notice which did justice to the South; -v f and, since the war, down-right injustice has been done us in every book put out jby North erners; while those histories written by South-; For Superintendent of Public Instruction : COL. STEPHEN D. POOL, of Cbaven. ST03I- a ster- iwildest - civil bights : ox xobtiiebs : . , : acrs. One of our exchanges quotes a very remarkable case of the failure of the Civil Rights absurdity in the Democratic State of Connecticut, ling old commonwealth which, in the tumult of Hadical abominations, has still been the nursery of such noble spirits as Seymour and Eatou, and has fostered upon a generous soil large-hearted State's Rights champions, who have not bowed the knee to Baal nbr sac rificed the primitive doctrines of the Republic "to fanatical biprotry and zeal. It seems that several freedmen from the South, professedly ' : . ' J : anxious for an education, were received into a white school in that State. Bat the demonstra- " , I' ted unpopularity of colored society at "West Point and Annapolis, only endured by the mili tary and naval cadets on account of an im pending court martial, "and the threatening attitude of Radical Congressmen, was repeated in a more emphatic and successful manner at this Connecticut academy. The colored stu dents, at the command of the Principal were put off at a separate table to eat. This did not .suit the triumphant proteges of Garrison and adder. We know that we are talking against have but little effect in doing i away with the the wind, but time will show that we are right evil caused by the others. Most of the so tv, L innirnn i viffrini-i fiffv roorc cauea ooutnern ocnooi dooks nave Deen wnuen f I Vtt Vi ntr mart urTirv ti1 a Tramin m fr oaiyia i vTcii &uv;nu kjvu.u-ioxi.LCi. v-uu uog ua i mo xj.Ai-u.c7 litipn emissaries to excite him against the whites, on the title page Professor Bledsoe wks offered, caused stringent legislation against his privi- shortly after the close of the war,a thousand dol- leges, and reduced him to a mere cypher in the lars by a New' York firm for the use o his name erners have been so decidedly partisan as to f Blood, which causes a red color toppear before the eye, but green always succeeds to red, un- felt no more. Here we find a green color again mentioned as the last impression ' on the mind, which perhaps may be . thus explained : The first effect of strangulation is aVetardation of community. Now he has been taken by the in considerate phiLmthrophy of the Northern Radicals, and thrown upon his own resources, without money, without property, without in- as the author of an arithmetic. Being asked to call at a certain hour and see the publishers, he did so, and was shown into a room hung with the portraits of Generals Lee, Jackson, Polk and other Confederates, while his own book, telligence and without education, and he is " Is Davis a Traitor ?" was conspicuous among PAPfpdtn hP Tintonlva nrndent voter.-hnt a other Southern books. Having very decidedly great populous- North will quake to the! very pectedly a day or two afterwards, on some other centre with the terrible rebound which follows business, he was shown into the satne room, 1 ' - .. ' . .' , , ... .3 , .1 i J.T. 1 r O i.1 every revolution. Ana we Know, tnat tnese xvu.u.u., m mc piauea ui ui oumueiu Northern Titans are as powerful in their hate friends, the portraits of Lincoln, Stajiton, Sum- to great unc as in their affection. And then the pale horse of desolation goes forth against the colored tipn, when we met him at dinner the ner and Butler! The joke was too good keep, ad the Professor told it, with g less tne eye be directed to some otne color. It is interesting to observe how, in the iLlst of the most violent struggle to which a humVi being can be subjected, the soul dissociate itself from the past and the present, and interprets impression in keeping with its desire, hich s6ems ever to be capable of conferring auew world of thought according to its kind. same day voters 'of this continent. It wilL be a day of Mr. Stephen's book has changed all this; it is a tempest and of wrong to the amazed freedman. calm, clear, concise, and statesman-like his And we predict, store it up in your memory, tor not only of the evenfcs which Hmediaftoris upon the gentleness and amiability of Iprectsueu. iue war auu uae war ltaeii, pui .iso o. the early colonial, days and the Statesindivid white men of the South will ,be his only friends, ually and collectively. It is-ih nothing offen his only protectors, as he wildly calls upon the si ve to the Northerrisympathizer; !it simply rocks and mountains to save him from political states tne. iactsjrutniuiiy, ana leaves tne deduc e arawn ,oy tne reaaer nimseit irom avengers tion to those facts This Sumner, and a row was' the consequence. is only the beginning of sorrows. Every ob STAXLY, DICKIXG & CO "Well, it is true; it was hard to believe-it is hard now to realize it. Butane vertheless, we servant traveller knows that the negroes 'at the arepntormed that it is afact beyond contradic- North, though few in number, are more ob- tion orj denial, that Edward R. Stanly, late facts, but the slmpl streperous, insolent and unmanageable than at In speaking - of the arrest of the members of the Maryland 'Legislature, which of Chief Justice Taney's decision in the case Of John Merryman, which was set at defiance by Mr. Seward, we have no comments on the statement of tliem, with President orthe Atlantic & N. C. R. R. , before the addition in, the case of the members of the snti, rrQT- i.i fi-.X m'viSify rm the. rpi.Is rf nffioA nofncnir Arc fmrr, legislature tnat, JNo criminal cnarge was A, , . ' "Z, ' , . J -L , Lu 1 i i ' i 3 - . ' yv 7 then or, afterwards brought against them." I , .1 . , In speaking of the treatment of prisoners of rationoi maepencienee, was written tor meirspe- aooo, au tue pay to wmcnne womanave war without commenting on the falsehoods cial accommodation, and that all men are really been entitled if he had served, his full term, told of the Confederates, he simply says, " In skin, This is the very worst salary grab that we have reference to the treatment of prisoners j on the value yet heard of. We .would have supposed that, if respective sides, about wmcn mucn was said at equal, without regard to 'the color" of their the improvement of their intellects or the principles, that they ; consider of their in the land: the And if the time eveT comes "ivil-, Rights iniquity hem- nothing else would have restrained the ruthless the time, two facts are worthy of note : one is, that the Confederates were ever anxious for a selves the peerof the most influential Yankees hands that perpetrated and aided in this great spee(iy exchange, which the Federals 'would not agree to; the other is, that of the 270,000 Fed eral prisoners taken, 22,57o died in Confederate hands; and of the 220,000 Confederates taken by the Federals, 26,436 died in their hands: the mortuary table thus exhibiting a large per cent, in favor of Confederate humanity." . The book that wrong the very helplessness and poverty of the .... . f i -i: in l i i j 7 isi pnnttit.nr ri itc viuLiiii wouia nave aiinsa ma . in rmmnpr. r,nnps. nd imposed ia all its monstrous deformity to their magnanimity and sense of right and upon the intelligence and liberty of the people, justice. VVe don't believe that our, Picking come-1 would have done such a thing, and we will be fully satisfied of it and give him duel praise, if I I'.--'- ' -j ' " ': he will have the manliness to march squarely up the uugaiuly old adage, that : " chickens home to roost," will be fulfilled to the very let ter among, the descendants of the original Quakers, Kuickerl:ockers and Puritan Pilgrims. New York, Philadelphia and Boston wiM be- . come the hottest places for criminal and civil prosecutions north of the Ever Faithful Isle. Malignant test suits will spring up in the courts like the walls of Thebes at the lyre of Ampiiion. The world-renowned palatial hotels will become bones of contensiou between the Civil Rights' ' . . : . f asj)irants and the lordlv proprietors of these r- - i homes of luxury. The schools, the public lodging houses and the cemeteries will become .fields of battle, strewn with the wricks 'of war. And it is not difficult to see, that, in this indis- criminate contest, the poor negro will end-with being worse off than ever before. ' In our humble judgment, there is 3-eta vial of wrath to be emptied upon the blind,' reckjess, abolition devotees of theNorth for their vicious to his duty, and require Mir. Stanly, by suit or otherwise, to restore to the needy., treasury of l the road, the money which he has ' thus : appro Yes, Dicking, do this; is one which though well suited to the school room, is also appropriate for the library, as it is invaluable both to the student and politician as a book of reference. M. B. C. priated to his own use 1 and when you die, we will have inscribed on your head-"board this epitaph : 1 I Here lies the : body ' of ' ., ' Richard Rex, A man of one virtue, which atoned for many things that in his life were not lovely. He was an honest man; he would neither wrong the Corporation over which he presided, for a brief period, a3 President, rnor suffer others to do so with impunity. V - LITERARY GOSSIP. philanthropy -towards the negro. . Ke has ever been the football of fortune between tha violent extremists of the country. In the days of servi tude, while, he was carefully -'fed and clothed, nursed like the children of the household in the pangs of sickness, and had religious ; priv-f lieges and personal blessings at least equal if not sujierior to what he now enjoys, he was com pelled to drain manv a bitter cup, -: which has ' since been pressed in bitterness to the lips of his old masters. God will be just, though every man be a liar. But say all the evil possible of his former condition, it was a jparadise com pared .with his jiresent terrible ihGeriilude, jhis' exposure to the sad consequences of sudden po litical change, and the innumerable evils; of sudden emancipation. Men talk of liberty as History, of the United States. !. BY ALEXANDER H. STHENS. K J. Hale & Son, Xew York, Publishers. ,' One of the greatest literary wants of the South for years has been good school books, written by persons who knew the South,; its his-, tory its geography, and' it3 ,prodrfcUons,and would do it justice in telling jthe ,storyof -the origin and progress of the United States. There are ho keener critics of facta than Children,' and noae, who will, sooner detect . a'ialse statement respecting matters with which'tnejr are familiar; one misstatement regarding ineis'tdr or geog raphy of their locality isaMoieu1Mke, WeirJ' belief in: all the rest of a" book.' MTe distinctly remember Ipsing all" faith ih Peter Parleyfor years. - oecause; . m oner ot: nis . books, he said Raleig was situated pn ''HAyerKMei1 worjcnei " -ro'- "e bls day the but prob- The romantic and melancholy story of the death of Lord George Gord6n, sixth Earl of Aberdeen, who was lost at sea three years ago while serving under an assumed name as mate on a American merchant ship, has just been repealled to mind by the announcement that his mother, the Countess of Aberdeen, has sent aj donation of $1,600 to the American Seamen's Srijciety at Boston, for the purchase of books for the use of sailors. During his wanderings ua,e young no Pieman Kept up a constant cores- nondence with his mother, and in some of his letters he spoke jvith admiration of the society tdjwhichshe.hanowsentnis gift in memory of him. fThe -New Orleans Bulletin -sougrtitulates Mr; hil wife. -Had he married some American girls the Bulletin has seen, 4 4 in less than two weeks he! would think himself hen-pecked by the American eagle.'; J - 1 AKXUAL STATEMENT OF Citizens Building and Loan Association! ! first annttal report of the business and condition of " Citizens Building and Loan Association of New Berne N. !c.," for the year ending May, 1874. - '.'.-,' - !- Toial amount of Loan on Real Estate $15,800 00 Cash in National Bank of New Berne . 501 91 Total Assets.... Wliole number of shares subscribed. . . ... . , 1 " " redeemed......... Ledving " " unredeemed....... Cash received on account of Dues. ... . . ... . ; .... Interest....... ' ' , " Fines il" '". . " . Initiation Fees. .Stock Premium .$16,301 91 700 79 . 621 .$ 8,390 00 . 382 00 . 81 20 74 00 53 30 ifTotal. amount .......... ... DISBURSEMENTS. To members who redeemed shares . . To fexpense account. .. . To cash on hand. . it - -' ' ? - , ' ' iTotal amount ...... J.. . . Arrears ' due by members ... J ..." . Neti Profits , .. . . $ 8,980 50 ' .....$ 8,120 00 358 59 501 91 i Amount of dues paid on each share of stock Totftl gain in each share . ... i . ..'.$ 8,980 50 39 00 ... 7,911 91 12 00 11 30 iPresent value of each share.;. $ , .23 30 If G. H. Robekts, Sec'y and Treas. j The Resuscitated. ; It has been asserted by very honest ably incompetent persons, that they have ex perieneed a consciousness of being put of the body. The cases of Cardan and Von Helmont have been mentioned ; but the clearest and most positive testimony tp the fact is thai given by Dr. Adam Clarke, the learned Wesleyan, who, when relating his recovery from' drowning, stated to Dr. Liettsom that,-jduring the period of his apparent unconsciousness, he felt a new kind of life. These are his words: "All my views and ideas seemed instantly- and entirely changed, and I had sensations of the J most per fect felicity that it is possible, independently of rapture, for the human mind to feel, j I had no pain from the moment I was submerged; a kind of green color 'became visible to me; ajnultitude of objects were seen, not one of which however,1 bore the least analogy to anything I had ? ever beheld, before. " "When preaching in aid of the Humane Society, at the City-Koad Chapel, in London, he said, 4 4 1 was submerged a suffi ciently long time, according to my apprehen sions, and the knowledge I now havei of phy- 8iolosrv, for.ine to have been so comnletelv dead . - . .. . . . . as nevermore to exist in this world, had; it not-, . PHItJP T. GEORGE, ! '' SAMUEL E GEORGE. P. T GEORGE & CO. : DEAIiEES IN . . . HAMS, SIDES, SHOULDERS, H 1 ' . . . - t-t-' ' .... li BEEF, PORK AND LARD. !-;'. ' " Manufacturers of . - , Refined Lard and Lard Oil. lUiuored to " . - ' ji 1T0. 94 L0MBAED ; STEEET,; , ' . . 3rd Door from South, Mayj2G-3ni, : . Tfl1f:T-A-a fTJ MILLS & WALKER ! - - ----- : Tobacco Manufacturers, l.' CEAVEIT ST., . HEW .BSEa."" VVTOULD RESPECTFULLY ASK THE ATTENTION fir of merchants to our stock of - manufactured to' baccd, which we are now offering at the . Lowest Market Price! We-have manufactured our stock with the knowledge v""6 w -" ucwromucB ox tu r astern (jaroiiiia trade, ancL therefore wef. narantt-e .saidafactioxu. been 'for that Providence vhich, as onc mbre breathed into me the breath; life:" - ' ' - , it were, of this !! REOPENr7: N.i C. Beneficial' South Front Stree Kreedmen's Savnv TT HIS ASSOCL4.TIOX IS DLSTBIi. HENRY L. Dealer in hat: thi i tqries o ,rer com who had been Imhg, and cut down on a teprieve, who, " being asked what were his sensations, statp'-parations were dreadful be ?s Ait that on being dropped he j Amsoif amid fields and rivers icJi gradually acquired a greenish .' Imagining that if he could reach a cer pbt he should be easv, he seemed to him- Schbol Books Blnk Books, Stationery and Fancy Articles, ;o struggle forcibly to attain it, and en he j MAGAZINES and LLLUSTEATED PAPEES
The Newbernian [18??-18??] (New Bern, N.C.)
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June 9, 1874, edition 1
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