Newspapers / The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, … / April 7, 1876, edition 1 / Page 2
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WILMINGTON POST. W. P. CANADA!, ) - i. j. j. CAssicrr. I Editors. WILMLNOTOX, y. V. r&XDAT. APRIL 7, 1876. - T OTICJC ' r wave wbtued VM aeviec K ,r- w I -- aa rt Aiead- ifteia aather- t, ri t.fc.trrifqgf; 4MTIIIWT. cape i. a Maewwry, or rrtuni. jr. C . will ai ease EMUra Xertb CmbUm, Fobt. lie to iiUtcrtMd fc jnakeeow Ir wu ud reeei pi tor hm7I T Fost. Colonel H. TrireU hae coweented .to fflTMtWrtlin Jfoeth Carolina In tee le ft rest oTTas wt. He U aatborledto Urtt ewheerlytleweaa d reeesrlaw meeys 4MrillaT. ..-;.',.. , i - - - - I i H " The lively Ivmocrxtie paper .pub & died at WelJon, 111 Rontf 'Xriri, poses tbe nomination by its' party", r Gown or, of tbe bribe tater.Vaafejr IV'e rentere to sy the ' Aew-i fit te xcessfal. Oar 60 cotemporary, UUtr kwto A tbe II Wr J voir, call oo iu friend Bvator Matt. Baimooi to explain his snoaey transactions with ex-Got. Bribe Taker Vaoce. Friend lluk AmJtt the Irssyoor friend Whiskey Matthew W. Saasoa says a boat i: the better for Hansom aud his friends. You do not oca to be pwted, or 70a aever would bare aasde well r unreasonable re cjest. They do not tee tbe "Lamb aud ibe J ion" lie down together, but hear us iT "joa rogue," you thief," "you 1 er,"yoa rlaodexer," while another geU Vp in the high. places of the Mod and cviea oat, " ou stole a million, to which the reply comes bad. "Yet, and jou sole aix tnillioo;n and still another nol- l"w out, "There goea the id low who itole a railroad and bought a Jadre.' " hey tee na poll each other noses, f ouge each others eyes, bespatter each eiher with fool epithets; and this is tbe happy Centennial family. bo lays the Aaberille Expositor. The cuUle fish" policy of the Democrats tr-tnaddy the waters to hide their own biUmj will not a rail thetu. Let the procession proceed. Whilo the expo anre ol rascality is the cry, we propose tasking the expos a re of Democratic nscality a striking feature of ibe Pot. 11LMJILLY UKXOCILaCY. When the Confederate Congress atetat Washington ia December last, !mot forty thousand of tbe haagry. Lay loa6n vagrants of the South, bet ter knewa as Lu klut Democrats, alio tclat. WaMiinrWu. The whole k lan Si gSpiBg ICJIOA wantou Od not care what kind, from chief derk r cf tho Cun federate I Iouet tu the office V"y, wss their cry, and Wilmington has ot been unrrprerrcnlcd cither. Tbe fititor of the ca render papvr acrue- the y, Jopie Kagelhard has been there, lathe has not been as yei tuoccawfal, vol ess it ie as t of bis brother Demo cratic editors says of bim. that be is tp there as a publie lobbyist, working fci see what he can' make by his in fieoce. Poor Joe, "How the mighty Lvire fallen." ! A.M. WADUKLL, M Ci Ibe gentleman whose name b at the lead of thin article was invited to de- t rtr the annul address at Wake Forest oUege laU June, lie accepted, and vi bile on his way from this city to fulfil his engagement slopped In Italeigb, and while there engaged in his futorite Sttthodef wailing avay a few tedious boors, Xleetiag a party of gentlemen, tiy resorted to a well-known rambling hell, and after fighting the tigtr foe a. rhile, Mr. WaddtU found himaeli tdaoa tl Ay dollars, and his blgh-tooed deanocralic friend angrily demanding t w payment of tho money fronhiju. A. Vrstander. a EccuLlican rnlJrn Vaalrona of relkrtnr Mr. Waddell - Ik embarrassment, took kin aside an4 ' THE Itodly oTered to pply him with the Uieir Ptmita rrienua or the uemo I fty dollars ths t he neJeJuacUl 0 the . P .r lh, uth nlhe wlflcreacw In thk affair of hoar. ! Air. nlHil,PcM belleted that they were nAlH gtfllT y.fl lkt ' vffrr,' Ihonel and Insincere In their pre ffaniaUg ta return Ut amoeat the and tieatcAl them Just as they xtmorala. Tho next moral- Mr. Jierrd. And now tho loyal Demo- Vnddell calkd o has 1 lUpublkan i kmd and explained .thai he . had W U hts aor " ai' cards LLV rrei teas nhrhL tf.f I !wVl retnxm U vnmiaron'at "lie tae lima Urrewlag the ftuthee sm ef J RyTw dollem with whkh te defray 1 expense to Wake Forest CoUere. I Cr here proceeded on his vayrfjotci cIiTered his literary nddresa and re-: I tmwed to tn Uwom of his fHends 'at TTflmiegtoev' and. recelred' their coar- rUlalh . Days lengthen! weeksaad weeks late month. W the - 1 atlemaa Lrxvi U re- dtV has timely frienj im lUmigh the I oo hamtred and Are dollars ef briow j d awoeey. Ow heiag rtmle.!e4 of Vis I eilijatiofthe prveumX thai hewWJ ! f eait the amowat wheta he west te T.aahre-toai la December. .Bet he I CXnt da it, and srsia hwiag re ejested U remit the amcvt, he lakra- wl kis creditor thai he," XTadJcll, wee airmewta; kgMlmaU O.JU e which! e was wt we te pay ere tie far-1 rot he iWl he cxpcclcdl U pey thk f . U of hvwor. "JLad Le lj4 &ctct jmU I tut debt rrew te Ihh day If Hr, I Y-'aJJcll drak this staUmeat, we are f - fa jrrexe4UMh!aaUau U by thaA STiSf the gta'Jcsaaa tVw whoa he h rrrzwl lit oay, aad Vj rriag Oe hve ef all the ranks whe were rrtatUaad whe are EJaat ef the t vU. f0 TIBED. WealTt peatjLbesj, uant hot :. ho r I fl acq b; 4 raboet the truant Lot ho fl boo by f prom besaada :Avi expend! re efAUery. to eJxanU dd ortifiiIar wot for a fellow who bad an axe to grind. The boy began toTarn the grind tone and thought it funr bl before be was allowed to quit be thought that be had rotten ihbre' than lie had bar-ainrd fur, And tba .vnatM tue mailer riih the Democraty'it this UacJ ' ' I II M 1 1 t jThe AsbeTilIe Erporitor, claiming to be theipoitoc pf.the views and aen liments of the Democracy of his. -section, has a long editorial on "tndis cree't 'Tarty 'licadersln which it sue ceedin lellfng-aooie Tery unpalatable tralhAtAitV party. JTn commenting on a Uwpau-n- firms wasftingion 1 me effect that "Th iJymocraic managera. in ew Jlampsiii.. Cflmpiauncd that damage', In thev canvaas," it , achnowi edgvs that that ' gentleman "bad done niucllo rjnrc the -Democraiic party" that ''it, is bad poficy in tbe southern leaders lo attempt the settlement of the, wrongs of the war," that "Northern Democracy itnrlf b not true to south ern Democracy; thai "they prate loud ly over, the 'rixhleof the States, but when the ruminating crisis arises, they abandon them," Ac It says that it was a "great error in Uaadall to offer hi amnesty," that by it the aonthen fire eaters had been defeated and Mr. Blaine advanced to be the leader of the oppo sition in the House and "highest ou the list of Tresidenlial aspirant." It says that amnesty "was not a practical issue at the time, for pardon had already been extended to everybody who de sired iu" It accuses the Northern Democrats with having "backed down before Blaine's impetuosity," and "left the defense to such men as Tootnbsand Hill, who have done already too much to arrest the work of restoration and reconstruction amcuj our people, north andrioutb." It "need a different class of men to lead public sentiment;" "states inansbip sbonld not ignore the actual state of affair, neither should it forget tbe tendencies of bnmau nature, btates manship i not BourbonUm, which never forgets and never forgives." It saya that the position of tbe south is "peculiar and perilous, and to relieve this state of affairs requires statesman ship of the higbetorder; no revenge ful, bigoted Bourbons; no ranting, crura roads demagogues who would deluge tha laud iu blood to place their names i "j - - 1 j. jouphaalic .croakers after a iraoailorf popularity, but iueu whoe reputation is without spot or blemish; bold, saga cious, patrioik: uieit who will do their duty regardless of couaeuucucce; cool headed, bonest-hcartcd. aagacioiu, pru dent men, whose effort, instead of act ing as a repelling power to drive the people asunder, will bind tbe nation to rethcr in commercial, fraternal and social relations and to r. cord; active; live, men who, forgetting the past, make the m,oat and best possible of the pres ent." . "It is an acknowledged (act that UU cd . tpak eloquently and vindicated the truth of history," but he spoke too aooa. , At. pmenl the rebel leaders are not willi ag toWlowths lead of 111 and enter the figLt again. They ex peeled to havo the , countenance and a . support ol. norther u .Uemocracy ux carrfingout their traitorous designs, bet, alas! they found, out that tho mam ef the Democratic, party at the north are asa little in the humor to counsel, aid and eait rebellion now as they were in I SOI. The apparent difference between the Kcoublican and the Democrat at the North act pis to be that the Dcmo craU ' were cajoled Uto belieriDg U toniy spoken and deceptive atorlea ef craU 61 lae north hart tound out that "lubrcaawrre right, and prefer to cunUnae the management of the afalri of the counUf lu the hands of lB r? t f,rtprentaUTe men' Hke Ben Iru 10 f lDto noU,ep WT- And thos it Is that they are "so tiredJ Bew Uill and his ilk are tired waiting ft the gane 4o ttat late their nei are wiiixteos te rash forward te Ua ad the mere moderate Lot aw daarerosM elemeat are tired. ef BenV ttataetmiag behavior, and want him le TfcMb rp" UI they, with ihcir facets Jtjmsw mf ieee aad chastity and ftjml wd feaaj loll their credelema trieode Ute e trthargy that will aUa thew: to he bowed hand and (bot while the cowntrr 4s cirew ever te iu aaW Set i the leyeJ peefde of the whole ewretry ere tiredref this thing, and they wUl,ceeiiawe ee show their dlpleaare atthetesjrse of the Deae- eowry.rrrw -as New Ilampahire hem already dowe. ' i'l Uw eeelnw tinU inve-l f nexr get sp'Ssmimi anicse with hesktaadUanajad cacUa-alM aheat a eock and ball story talea - ' a ryiacj IZahigh ka kiax sheet. As ? Cree est eexk) eeweatioaal teas, tre ttctmrwd U it ear article aheat Us petfrkwd Ilea. (?) X M, WaddeO. If that dusU settle iu stosaach well try eeswrhiax eLe. , i f JLTXKT uttleoks. - It is amusing to hear the commeoU comments ef different Democrats regardin mw Set at :U short comings of oar Nolle So Cape Fear Begiov the Jlon. W'addell. One friend suggests that it is bat a little matter of a private nature and ought not to be brought oat in a newspaper. Another says ' that it is nothing but what a7 gentlemen indulge io, and it is unkipd to make such a' fuss about it, it is but a little matter." Another tells ns that his friends don't like to hear AL spoken of in such an unkind way "we all know," they aay, "how it is ourselves, and it is aucn a little matter." They are all like Sarah; and we are reminded of the interview that occured between Mrs. Easy and the young woman who had been called in te supply nourishment for the new born midshipman that Captain Marryatt ao "Tray, young woman," said Mis. Easy, -what fa yoer name t" , t Tiarah, if you please, ma'am." 1 "How long have yoa been married V "Married, ma'am f" "Yes, married." "If you please, ma'am, I had a mis fortune, ma'am," replied the girl, cast-, ing down her eyes. "What, have yoa not been marriedT V No, ma'am, not yet." "Good heavens! Dr. Middle ton, what can you mean by bringing this person here?" exclaimed Mrs. Easy. "Note married woman and sbe haa a child I" "If yoa please, ma'am," interrupted the young woman, dropping a courtsey, "it was a very little one." "A rery little one !" Exclaimed Mrs. Easy. "Yes, ma'am, very small, indeed." Perhaps our Allie's friends will satis fy their mindc about the transactions that we hare shown him up in by de Hrecatingly alluding to them as "very little matters," but there are yet a great many Mrs. Easy's who view such things in a very different ligtit. I1Ki!YLVAKlA POLITIC. 8. The Kepublican State Convention of Tcuusylvania which was in session at Ilarrisburg last week laid down a plat form on which it would bo a good thing for all Kepublican to ttaud. Among other thine it claims that "in view of the recent events at Washington, to most emphatically endorse the Resolu tions of the Convention of 1870 which demand vd honest men in office men with brains enough to know dishonesty when they see it and courage enousrh to fight it wherever they find it." It con demns that branch of Congress and their abettors "for the preference shown to tho deadly principles, and for tbe subserviency shown to the defiant lead- s .- ('Ai.rlarrf nav domi nating them, for their removal from otBce of U ti ion Soldiers and appoint ment of rebel soldiers; for their persist ent efforts to force amnesty uon men too proud or unrepentant to jtsk for it, or too guilty to deserve it, all of which - exposes the Democratic party a with. out aaliooal instinct or an unsectional impulse, er an affirmative policy as un fit to be trusted by tbe country which when last under their control, they madly rushed into the vortex of civil war." y affe ne Kesolution, th spirit of which ects every human leing in the while county reads thus : J2efid, That the common safetv demands that our public schools shall not only be free to all, but shall be pre- serrcu iron, ait special or panuu coo- J- 1 troi. .vi auempu 10 uiviae me acnooi fund for any . purpose whatever, or to aivert any portion oi it info a cnannel I not nnder popular control, la to be I irowQcu hjjoo imj itiwn wimi uorrciu- i ins firmness. Tbe recent defeat in the I iemocraue agisiaiure oi juaryiana oi I a constitutional amendment to aecure I we common scnooi iuna , oi mat otate against diviaion, reveals at once a grave danger and its source, and. with other uke facts, makes plain the duty of Con gress to submit such an amendment to the Constitution of tbe United States as, wnen adopted, will effectually de fendxthe common school system from all enemies, open or covert. It will be a sad, sad day for the rising I generation if he 1 democratic party ever control this country again, especially as they are opposed to the common school system that is intended to secure edu cation to all. It was but m few Tears ago wheat the law of North Carolina ..... . . . . . . , " " I post, not only for negroes who were I found ia the MieMsiosi of even a bible. I but ale tor the owner ef the ne gro whe might give it to him or teach him. to read Its precious truths! Columbus. Georrts, boasts that thoegh destroyed br Shermaa's ham mers la 186 she has recovered, aad rune 3...0W spindles aad 1,000 . and snaaT tree) aad etaer liehaeeata. All these have bee built sfaee 19G. Columbus proudly dalme that she i eatitled to the positioa ef the Lowell ef the booth. A sahradhi I bagging factory is betas; stop? Are 7ef oar tJtates to be iavadod br the aad (hey be allowed te bring their as aad eat their thowtfnds af spindles metioa uadcr owr very noses, aad we sit really by ? What has becosBt of the chivalrie spirit of oar true Snath- eta blood to allow each things? . Aad are tepablkaaw, too We have a tee yet award the Umw satiwupcity awcrel as te the I precise aad actual hciU U whkh j ? laUrm the readers ef tha IsTthe caj act aU-Twde attslanl by Una, tfr WaddU whea we "fenclcd lis by exposiax his sqccadilleev bat ha vest HI coBXAVimrtoirr. i , . j-t alt" ; rr bly raspe" a t fc .a V . . ,uu;i uu l )cs m l turn E-Ui- !iU; 'on Sat Unti AK ill seiKwxn.iae report dciow, concerning corn. Y beHere it is the largest amount ever made. on. the aame amount of ground in North. Carolina - Wc knowj all IhEMtyirS tiiMt thrT irtallrTrrtTtlT rrliiHr; 7 T- aDdnwtnlpethVenieW he is a thorough basiacss man, in every sense of the JTbrd and; we. ens ; gladjte hear that irardaonTaon are being properly and: profitaJyi 'remunerated. We wish him a longhand pleasant life, to upplith f,com-! CerUficate'oW'Bell'o 0 Alien & Co., of New Berne,'Na.1 "I, J. L. Belly ef Kewport, about 25 miles -eastofr New IWiif, on the A. & N. a K. '.It; adrVlthin., ten miles of sne ocean, senas on tne uess corn report that we have had front-North Carolina. He says that inlhe,priflgYf.l$75,he planted a piece of land 61 yards square in cxrnthree-foiirtIi6 of ait' acre. ' He gathered one! hundred and eight bush els. , of shelled yCorn rfrom) the, three fourths acre, or at the jate of 4i bush els to the acre. . ' Ua less 'we ' receive a better - report,(iMr.n Bell will j uke the premium,' in.. At ;u!o k i ?' ti-il V ". ' '"T i '7'jit ' ' Newport, Carteret Co., N. Cn I - , ' March loth: 1876. J Geo. Aixex & Co.; New Berne, N. C: Yours of the 15th ' insL, is received, and in reply wilfc state-that I called on Mr. Bell as requested. f , ,, , He says the crop of corn referred to was grown ' on his river bottom land, and is substantially an represented by your informant. y v , Enclosed you wil receive certificates from.' Mr. Bell, aud Klade, the colored man who maae crop. I know person ally that the erbp referred to was Tery good, and that this river bottom .land is extraordinary land for corn. Very respectfully Yours. ' W. J. Doi-GHTV. Newport, N. C, March 15, 1870. J, Sandy lade, of the cpuuty of Car teret, certify that I rented for the year 1873 a pieceof land of Mr. J. L. Bell, which I cultivated. The said ' land is a part of his rive swamp field. It was ' new laud, never before cultivated, draiued and limber cutoff the .year before- 1 worked on the crop just eight days, clearing up, planting and vculiivatiug; and iu fact the eight dsyrt intdaded. all. the work I done on the pit except saving fodder and gathering the corn.' In the month of October' 1 gathered the ' corn, put it into two- piles, and Mr. iiell had his choice for rent. I thenrcarried miue home, shucked and measured it, and there were , 10 barrels and two tubs of corn, (he counts 5 bushels as a barrel.) Mr. Hell says that the size of the piece not measured it. ,. 4i. Neviobt, N. C, March 15, 187C. I, 3:1. Bell, of tbe town of Newjort, County of Carteret, certify that I rented to Saudy blade, a colored man, a small piece of my river bottom .land situated in the corporate limits' of the said town, it being also a part ot a field of about thirty acres of like er similar land in cultivation . s ti . ; There are actually sixty-one yards square in uie piece ol grouna by meas arement. ' It was the fi st year of culti vation (1874.) It was thoroughly drained, and timber cut off in 1874. 1 rented to blade as to other tenants, lor one-half the crop. ', When the crop of corn was garnered try Hiade ' it was put in two piles, ana 1 had' choice as is air custom v. I did not measure my part of informed me tha next tima I n him 1 mat there were I0J barrel". Which I be I . i - - iteve to be correct. J. U Bell. . I think there is no , doubt about tha correctness of the statement ot the yield of corn as I reported it to you., If tne statemeat or jir. Bell and made are tol aatiameltmrT. m can sand . von tha statement Of Uree other , men who helped to rather and haul the corn. Mr, J. L. Bell has about 70 acres of New port river bottom land,7 mostrr in the corporate limits of the town of Newport. lie has cleared about 30 acres of it, I think the piece referred to made me the best yield. .' I think it was planted the last or April. iot. lit mode was af ter the brush was buret off to make holm with a stick, in which the corn was , deposited. , Some . three . or four weeks afterwards it was chopped through with a hoe. About the but of June the weeds and stump sprouts were cut down and piled around the corn. Ne clow was used. , il. .... , Tbereare several tbjuusaad. acres of siwuiar , laau . cx&cnuins; , up Newport " . wvvu W auies wiuca, uui reccnuy, was cobsm- eredj almost, werthlesa. several others. V clcanlDg farms on these lands this year, and we hope to give you a better report next FalL Ude says he thinks he can da better ikU year. Me thinks his was most to thick -last year. .Jib rows were fiom 31 to four feet : hi lb from 15 to 18 inches apart, with from two to four stalks fa the bilL He is goiag to try tv thirty barrels to the tais year. .,:; tj .').., ' Yowrs very truly, , .1. ' - Jas;Kdovuhtt, Geo, Alien & Cx, are the most en tefprisleg aerchaats ia , JS'orth Caro- I haa; and deserve great, credit for the lag nfwrces ia the Old North Rate. We w'feth to say lOr the aWthtag KuJe city Newport, that at the cud of the war it was a .sserc wsy 'talioa, bat by the biiiiwem'cnergy aad h"h character ef its citiceaw, they have tocceeded la baihiiag apa haadsoswe aisd proS table ef the, rrcUiot Ltthj cities ia the Stats., It is titstted at the Utrrwcthn "ef the Atlantic and North Caroiiaa ,IUiIrad wuh ewrert Circr, hsch eaake trrihts be. aad ruewc wuest y, tttilaen is prczuhie, t Tea years t-i the westcra part af Caneret, areuad the vClage, the tiilacae had te bay fcr4Lhs ef thecera swed, aad amer they raise swore thaa cawagh te r jer l rreu , That will inJts Ul whe . S storv. and no b itaf I :oom 7 . if , Hon could, lie pro Jfucl bf tl iener f of ;Ucitiren-x6r; joducUv64iI the soil than the above. Tbank Ood we. are in our lather's saya Ben Jlilef Qeqrgivin reply tq Wawe, fin rep entipal srhowak stirring the entipathlea of' ai stirrins il the4 political curpoaes-J we are in our father's house, but how do the brethren treat cu? Joseph was sold by his brethren to the Egyptians, and " Caio slew hia brother." and in all ages of the world the. hand of brother has been arrayed againt brotheiC "Yes, our fathers' who built this house this great temple of Liberty; intepded their sons hsve v equal rights, privileges, and .immunities in , this house;' but how J have the children degenerated ! Yes? "descendants ef illuatrions sires," but not ftfaW: Qne section has aright to contend in the. forum ' and on- the battle field for an' opinion and for a principle entertained, while 4 another section has no such1 rights, and any re monstrance to oppression and ' power means ."rebel,';, "traitor." "cohtederj-, rate, Ac" ' .. , " ' At the very first. squall of apolitical demagogue, 'that there is a ka klnx,'a rebel, or a confederate in tbe land, all loyal yankeedom, both democrats and republicans, take up the cowardly mad dog cry, "down with the rebels." This, too, in the Centennial year! Miserable hypocracy sentimental gush. Behold! northern democrats even cower to this miserable pandering to the public pre judice! Argument and reason have lost their power, and low subterfuge and vile cunning arc the winning pewers. And yet they say come to Philadelphia, this centenuial year! Miserable insult aud degraded twaddle. We clip the above from the Asheville Expositor. It is a sweet specimen of cowardly ku klux literature. Because New Hampshire was not willing to take stock itiw Ben Hill, Gordon and Jeff. Davis, "all loyal yankeedom," arc ac cused of taking up h "mad dog" cry ! Wc want weak kneed Kepublicaus in the Mmth; we want milk and water Democrats at the north we want all lovers of the Uuion to read what the disappointed ku klux, :wssa.win Democ racy think of them. l'OOlt OLD JOl5 TV UN Kit. Our little yVy thus ii it kindly goes fur "The Coming Man :" Somebody is writing from ibis btale a series of letters to the New York Suh that tell anything else but the truth, aud that arc hardly calculated to bene fit the Democratic party. ' Oic of these letters was published last week, dated from Charlotte, and rlrred in aoy-J thing but complimentary terms to uov. Vance. In-Wednesday's isiie ot lh? ii ap ears another of the series, from Ral eigh, in which occurs the sentence: kj, iVnocrats. arc makiug an effort to break down the ltaieigu Oati- nei, the leading Democratic paper in North Carolina, for its persistent ex Kureof tl:e King's doings." Does Mr. Turner write these letters nimself, and if jx what are the news papers in the State going to do, about it ? Our-readers w ill remember the fable about the vain jackass that kicked the lion trkcH he teas dead. "What are they going to do about it ?" A special dispatch from Washington says: "There was a woman in the Bel knap case; a woman in the ttecor claim; a woman in the French arms affair; a woman in the safe burglary, and a woman in almost everything; every es peciallv brilliant achievement in Wash' ington rascality that has been disclosed. And now it is. reported that the House naval committee has run across a woman upon whose testimony depends the fate ot some one high in authority. Yes, and not only in Washington, but in Wilmington, too, and we could a tale unfold about certain transactions in which some of our most promi nent Democrats arc implicated, that would make people open their eye. Like charity, tbis-womaii business be gins at home- but then our Democrats are no more ia rlicul.tr as to cv.'or and style thaa to consequences. And tuck consequences ! "The $tate appropriation for publie schools to soutii uarotina for the conk ing year is f 2i,W0, It is apportioned to the counties on tbe beats of the school attendance The total attend" anoe during the past year was 110,41$. Eckmmjt. ' Evea tfowih Carolina comes to the front with all the contamely aad die grace that icnomuuv democracy out heap oon her, to the duparagoaeat vf many of bcr sister routes of the Soath( who ffrjoke in being nnder the "White Line" rule, and appropriate quartet of a million of dollars for tbe d ora tion of the UO.tlC children who at tend the public schools ia that btale. . . . Ihe llewKicrats of Brawwick cowaty have got the monument fever bad, aad pmfue commcmoraiing an aoctcat colored iad i vdaal a ho ploughed off frosa bis race and became a erra live.. Bat wo' they iaV ami w take aay money from tbctr own pockets to pay for the slab, and invite the faith- laJlncad of tne cubarvu mxu u cow- tribotc. . It, has brra o-r4ed to ww that a rttaraiag sense d tha ebCgaUoa dec from parreu te children ie the ft dtiag caast of the white DraMcrxUef Ihawwsck beceaeias iatcreated'la the cxectioa ef a slab to the aacsaory of a otlored mxa wbvo father was a whit The bleodr shirt U fan Ut moUmSt batfaohv tor iaaoceat hioed.ahedby paliUctl rioieavce aad brutal pVrjeJer, is aft ea aasasisjr sfeetaria, aast ach asdeedtata the earth lata up be&ire Ood ia sweamuoa efrrrry aad tawawaia ia us tthcl ctataa. corn is now selling for C and I , 00 the X. X, KobMns wee, f itting froia hhi home in thscth, anC In the House sitting, he opex I s uth. j lihad dreamed of th : Jksf -J bt . he'ed t!-4 glad spring;f hv caugh tuuu.wis in trying to abg. He remembered with sorrow, with grief and with pain, of the X. Xv borrewethat now seenia he cussed the sad day when and auch great trouble see. i ; Democratic brocbitis, rheumatics and chills,' with acute JaryBgitia, completed his sad s.IhiVhelV; hesitatcj linger, biayT blniterahd iigh? bloWJhis nose on his'Sngers,' keel oter and die.-: ' It n aUtad that since, the openiuir of the cotton, nulls at, Wesson Miss., the town has .doubled its ; population.' 11irenty-Ita '.hundred. 1 balea of cotton and 225,000 -pounds' of- wool have been purchased by the factory this season, Exehcmgc v.i., . ,.f; i'Aai Missisippi yo ! , Just to think tha the, sucj!ke should, inyade thf "teawd ; soil, that produced . a Jeff Payiaudthafj the ittle town of es aonahouliidpbl rpualiQnfend that. thocsandspl halea , of cotton and hundreds f ..thousands . of pounds of wool, ; should be-, manufactured there erery year, and the scamps who are do ing it Republicans f.-i, . s., i s The Democaata 'are rushing the in veatigation business' ' in " Washington. Twenty-seven committees are engaged, nijght and day, in the Vork of reforming the public service '' in the interests of economy, and spending enough money for witness fees, expenses and mileage to run a young republic One day last week subpoenas were issued for S3S persons. Thus does the KepublicRU poet do up New Hampshire r1 ' ' - i '' . wtia ,leuiot-TsiK vow That they'll kick us a row. And wparUwr'Uo srtankUt whole pUuet, Timid women and buys Ttosy mar with -their uol. But thef .ntak.e no Impression on Uranlte. MISCELLANEO UK THIS PAFEK IS OX FItK WITH ST'.. Wkero AdverUstaa Cowtraeti caa ee i jit i-;?' 'iTHI-.Htift. JOB PRINTING Id all Its hranebes. NKATLY UXKCUTKI' S. B HALL, COlfllERCIAL PRINTING 011.1. I1R4I. CAMUS, MOVTULY aTATatll EJVTS, :ilBi'Ms. I.KTTKR MCAIra, KFCEIPTU. AC. e lis ''---aneaai Knttrslr ft s 4 T .-'L"y Now Matarlal - fa ehs i Cf Oi Utnt aTin. TKUlttS MODEallATK. Is ar aa ae CABJurraa mxruorAjcao ' u 3 taat1esUea m- . ... . -: ... t treddias Caras, juj ;:. 'vjib MISCELLANEO VS. ' . ; USlTED MTATSi OK AMERICA 1 Kxhtkks DiSTicr or 'outh c. sou sa. I If JlEREASalllx l,M 'd la ii lUirlet Court of the UBiledfe.iiMf. toJ th Care r"r Uilrirl In the ki trm inZ trtct of North Carolina, on tli rh dVl Januarr, A. U. lS7S.br tUlgr l WUiuVT . Master of Ilia Her in libellanu anuust Uts schooner K.u... i Una, her Ucale, awarel and funiiiw.id' so.tTS.;,; 5?. i Nyoo beiss near th neutu ii hA., tJJ 1 OSk WHlW.KnM ir ln7T nprocedcd thither, In the Mid lug mj-A Folly liar, lie weul to herein k uuul and found Iter' UVbw ta.UUia(-r Km. Collins, John Mathews. muur, Wmb4 htJT New Vork to WllmlnKtoa. N. d, wuha Wj ro of enano. She was hard at round In tiZ braera.brcMdIda ns, wUh mhnmnxu?. of water on her wrlhr idao4 Wjt nr. feet on the lee aide- At the rrraet rr SlaUiewx. he took hi in ba boMi) J and procclHl 4o HtKithvlUe; and atW em ployed labor and lisbtrabereiareritt the schoooor with Iheiichtmle iow. JknJ! loailinc tho lighters Ihe tut i.i.Xi pull ing on tbe hawser, aue1 utd i,v J: the UuiteU SUtes Cutter. IMias. tu!ld tbe acbooner off. and towed her to W tlal?cia on the 18th January about 3 P.M. TltJ tbe llcbters one put Intn bock wind's loiiT and tbe others sailed for Wtimlnrtoi! where they arrived, two on the eoioror the IStb, and uteM tba noralnt n 'Z 1Mb Jan nary IsTS, and that they sr mtiuI o a reaaonable thar of aaid yn eanro Kr tbeaalee thareoC. Aad rsj lac prweeas ralnt said chip aad ear,va2 reasonable and proper salvage, aad l but iI said veaael, her taekle. spparal and f-rZ to opay auehatUvaae, wllii KJthrttKHid ixpenara; ; : ; ; i ! . . -Mow therefore, la pursuance oflUt merd.' ex thtB nnder tbe seal of the said Coari uv directed and delivered, I do bereby rlVe pnbUo.. notice , to u eons elalntlue the aald veavet bcr tatAia apparel and furniture, and carta, or l tuauiner lntcrea'.ed therein, that titer tl aad aipeaT toore the ald JDlntriri Coon la be held for the Cape Fear lXtUict la Uw Kastern District of North Carolina, t u Court ltouae la Wilmintton oa tstti Monday biter thelourtb Monday ts awh next, then and tliere to KilrrpoM urtr claims, and to make their alleeau.,.!. -f that be half. - i .-r-?-m tinted the IWh day of Felrury3t tit. Davis, frovtor for libel last i 4. B. HIU i U. M. tL. Kjitern DUtrtotafK,ia, Ity J, N. VaOKLKN. . 1 Deouty ;.a.M. ?T,; rb ii aids -... BEATTY I I A N O. Grand, Square and Upright From rc i; LrlvlUT, ftrm of Win H t cirb it A. lirov. Uaukera. Faj die, (Mile. "V receivitl tbe lluoo aiid tbiek Ua very line touml one out here. Wailed a fcliort tlluetoglve IImkooiI teat. IfviHiaUk a word iu favor ol it u will cbficrfully tlvs Jhiu s E nrowuj lis'i, lUlwardivllle, lit.' saya; ' ' '' " "The Ik'Nltj j'iauo rttilod eIvcs miuis aatiafwellon." v i. f-a Ageuta wanltMl; send .fmr eaUMufuei , A drew1.! ' liAMEl, 1IKA1T-V,' Wiif.li ington, "Ne w 'JvrBcy, U 8 A I'lons' s,,vu oiicisE Mew and bvauuriil iUwUskh. ' Acvurt vtal. .... el Addremi KHWA11U ItiTTH, Wakla toa.MJ ( July -m .. ; THE cm HOOK UTOKE Ai AI.W'A J tin Uk.jiuil aunt f StAiiduM und Mim1laneoe Work, aud all the )aUi iuhllcatiMtuf Ibe day. A eoinuietekUM of Itlaek JUok, U'rtt iuu IVper, tCttveloe. IniUal ISirr, tat, Mu-iiM(;e, Ac, c, wti a litice eiorh of Ma- - leal liiktrum nl-, ttnlurS'ltMUjab IftWJas Fluteit. KKm, Harm nirk, ,nardmiaa,ar. All ot the above aie xiiiil t iu trtntrtai by tXrLr.Y YATkN i Nu. 17 MarkrtMMi. apriiti : Wllmlnstoa.N.O. t I.LK'XM If yon Ub n lllir i tbe I- WATCHK?, ! M . CLUCKi?, .' " v: I, J,' ' ' . ItlMl, : - . - -. cuftj: it)!, cuiv, nuAtJKLirrH, S, rW, At way 1 if OARPEMER & MALLARD, feCUtioft) tv) . ,. J. r TOPHAM A CO. ' HORSE BLANKETS. T1IK Lirgeit and CBeiet Atieirst ; of Tfaaks in ibe Htj, bAUDU, UK ALL KI.NI 11 A ItX f, V II .1 . 1 V. aAiMU.sc nivNKKrH FKATIItKDtKrr.lt-. ' HUHMft HKI'IIIM. ; CVUMVOMr HADDLtatV iUnMa jtaf efallklad. . , . -, Cllllt Ou CA1 1. . iJ ..V'. dec 55-1 f umi V A,Tw ' 'Grind Siasrt and Utriit.' 'Hi r: !-.sjA' f. .1 .'. ' ! Kmm by IbbicWM -m-mi aVbaew ' UrthrmifcMtttierd till. Mat. r4lMruii!fr. ?tJ. aJUrw' , rl$ a Mf Uaatly naaean ,"Sv wt4y seywHU s4 SieSr. awe alaiaMtMa U m igm tss awyCTlue wimr.T trm SltihewMby. rW. -taM rw hwii; ti-rta' b 4fceJe, haB4 4ea ayaaejssjj ejaaeejawt m l tasass) fcaaaraj "j wcbJy Ut -j f-ewiniaa wal-firrV , I Set tar si er wmtu el - J H tut , ra. ar: Tb rVa4eae be fcaae te fwei alM4alry( bwtb la AaaM p .!, rriTn' i a x o. tiAviix rwunr. Walrr! W J I" I" A CIVIL ACD nECnACICiU ENGIiN'EK.RI'b tateutrt, tM. t. e U a art aw,w, AAMMeraMW. tM,it.tfce He, Jasper Uaaa ULrau ua that vrixszTc? tucz
The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 7, 1876, edition 1
2
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