Newspapers / The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, … / June 4, 1871, edition 1 / Page 1
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Single copies, Five cents. , Clnba farnifthed at reasonable rates. ..13 00 ...2 00 ... 1 25 ... 50 BATS OF ADVERTISIKOj . Per square one time, f r 00 ff it f f T O Less than one square, one' tfme," TO cents. Two times $1 50 and all succeeding insertions, half price additional. ; :' ,: 7 77 s,- Rates per month, $4 per square. : ' a " U 1 Half Column and Column adTertlsements: re ceived xn proper discount. ; -Local advertisements 35 cents a line. Address, ''v '..' ' CHA8. I. GRADY, - ' ' 7.. ; ' ''W'. Editors. ;T Wilmington, N. C. GITY. CLUB RATES I I f ' Our readers are informed tliat 4tclnb ratesM so often inquired about cannot be less than $2.00 per year. We have put , the paper dewn to the very lowest price, and clubs cf five or ten cannot) be formed at any price less than TWO DOLLARS for EACH PA- PER 1 1 '. ; : : . A relative beauty A pretty woman. Parental acres The old man's corns. A pretender to the crown A. chiyngn. J .... - " " Dress poods at cost at No. 15. 1 w .Mr. Bulcken gires notice of -Taxi' '7 -' f -7.-7 ; ;7 Township ' ,'17- Munson.& Co4 advertise coats "for nnth- in 1 n Equal to Rowan Punch" Nathan May er's punch in the bead.- : : &m Everything reduced at Anbalt's No! 15.s For Business Cards, call or POST PRINTING OFFICE ! send to the Judge Cantwell's reply to Mr. Moore will appear inTnuTBdTay's-issTrer -1 A quack doctor lias invented a medicine of such remarkable virtue that it will cure a ham. Bills of Lading at the POST PRINTING OFFICE.1 P. Heinsberger is ; still alone with his Lire Book Store, and offers cheap goods for cash. A call will be issued for a Southern La bor Convention to meet at Columbians. C;, October 18,1871. -j , -' -I . I Grenadine and Challf, 10 cents per yard at No. 15. On Tuesday Republicans must meet in the different Wards for the purpose ot electing delegates to the Convention. Mr. Love calls the attention of lovers of music to the fact that be hasa very fine as sortment of Violins and Banjos; also strings lor Guitars &c. New Arrival. Cheap business cards a the POST PRINTING OFFICE. C. D. Mjers & Co., have added largely to their stock of family supplier, and invite special attention to the amount of new goods on hand. - Collector Rumley will receive bids for supplying the Revenue Cutter. See the ad vertisement as sent the 'Post by the Secre tary of the Treasury. Geo. Myers probably has the largest se lected stock of Groceries in the city. Fam ilies will do well to examine the 'advertise ment in this days" Post. v ; ' ' Notice. Delinquent subscribers are not tified that unless they pay. .promptly, their papers will be stopped, and f when practica ble suits will be entered against those not offering properjexcuse. K 1 : I A.U kinds' of gt&tionerj at the POST PRINTING OFFICE. . s The indispenaable national policy is to uphold and cherish' that fcome industry to which we are compelled to look for hearly auJht meets the wants oi civilized life, r Charlotte is,Mwav aheadl 'of? Wilmington la manufacturing enterprises. Afancy soap i&ctory has been started. IWe wish more of our people used plain soap on their mangy uga and children. -' " It is denied by the p'arty '6f gentlemen ho bave been charged with abusing the keeper of the1 cemetery that any words - Pwsed of an insulting character toward the dead soldiers or the flag waving over them. Tne officers at the Fort will investigate the Wter aad report to propsr authorities. . erc-wfU:-ii2kiutie meetiBgiat Rocky Point' .ycsterdaj.:f Spetche -3 made Mr. Frazier. Sheriff Scbcnck itnd iXr Mabson, ior.the Repablicaos, mod a reply made try JTai. Hid'Jor the conserVatiTcs.: Large j stock of Envelopes' lor business men. Cards printed I a,nd enTelopes - iirr nished at $4 00 a THOUSAND ! !, rianks to the Hdn. 8amuel F1 Phillips tod Col.4 O. H. Blocker, far mbstaniicil en i7 fviT . - 4t.tol era! new clubs lormea lor taking. iiwi'orr 1 at R '71 . 4 . , . , f-ffl;tH!l. ?jlf)jj Messrs. Dudlev Etli8i?AfeeAUnir in k 6w stock at. the old stand ofO'& C-. Brad-1 iy and no doubt. a very fine business will be d6nc by tbe ? popular successors of the hdn tst (ild'firm of the Bradley Brothers. C. W. Yatcs.f tlieX fefiolofirapherT leaves io-mibrTttw toririfikdclphia to 'attend the National, photographic Exhibition, and til liA aliflAnf IVnm li w f av a fair lava! -fV auovu m rui . sjiivt vsj 111 s ivn uajr Uis gaTTeryVill be .closed during "hisab- sence. f r;'-r ' ' ' " ? - Married. Thursday night June lt at the Red ross CliurchrGeorge Lee--to;Ad-dieThompson. 0eprgen is the pressman of this office and. he now presses in his arms his adorable "Addie." ' . j All wishing ' vUmington, .Charlotteand Rutherford Railroad Receipts will do well to call at the POST PRINTING OFFICE. Servant looks into the breakfast room and save : "Please madam there's a beggar in the kitchen wants something to eat?" Mistress : "Give her the water in which the eggs were boiled, Bridget; it is quite nutii- tious.' Special attention is called to the fact that Messrs. Cs, D. Myers & Co., and Geo. Myers close htreafter at 6! p. m. The clerks and business men agree generally on this course duringtBeJwarm seasofa Sntl we nope DGr citizens will sustain them. The Post will be furnished to clubs oi ten and over at the rate of fifty cents for three months ! ! Let none say they are too poof to pay for their Post. Let Post Clubs be formed ali over the State to resist Con- If any of our numerous friends ask for further information jas to who were the 4outragc"rs" as" reported by -Weigher Shoe maker to the Editor of the Post, we request they would call on Post Master.Brink who has, the matter iu his hands for examination. A child while walking through an art gallery wiih her mother, was attracted by a statue of Minerva. "Who is that ?" said she. "My child, that is Minerva, the God dess of Wisdom." "Why didn't they make her husband too ?" ''Because she bad hone my child." "That was because Jhe was wise, wasn't it mamma?" was the- artless reply. . ) ' ." The Philadelphia Scientific Journal says that "Messrs. Geo. P. Rowell & Co., of New York, are so well and extensively known all over this continent, that to name them and explain ihe nature of their business would be superfluous,, No Newspaper Advertising Agency j isasver- displayed mote energy and skill in the transaction of this delicate and tacVrequiring business.' 1 - : ; C . "' f Convention or no Convention, we ieei as sured that the popular or people's party will be pufified und elevated by experience. The proper counsel will ' govern, and the policy pursued and recommended - by the editor of the Post vindicated, "e retcf confidently to our record and the approval ot men like Gen. Brringer, Col. Hargroves Judges Dick and Rodman, the last of whom has fiiyen us such counsel as only a states- man can give io an? acwv ueieuuc: wi iw- publican principles. EKCOURAGiNG.The Chairman of the State Committee writes us that "the spirits of our friends here (in Raleigh) in relation to a defeat of thK Convention, are good. The news is encouraging.'' He hopes the Cape Fear country will distinguish itself in k .oiWAnifrTi Letoverv Republican re- mmwhat the middle and western parts OI tne Dtare are hmj annac ,w mo m nea involved in the conflict ana iook anx- iously to us for assistance. Let every man do hisjduty let bur t best men take the field against the Convention. nhmiitrv ia furnish in ff us new agents for in'pl. force, food and Baany other important aids oyer fhose we poaessed.rts from which commerce was driven duruig (n. hnt months bv their terrible fevers are iA .11 the' vear ! with , impunity now. :;;Trtft2litI kepi , . - . ..V- jJJ;nB mismu ue tenantiess uy .uci4 ; .t fiilintr nnwitk populations under the nf a Ws Asrue Cure. Their af- flirting Chiltsanci Fever arc so effectually Idlv thiiremedy rtbat the disease no WeVtnrns emigration .aside or destroys 10 . - V ' ; i utMttiMl WIT m Influence. M..t8 WILMINGTON, N. C.i SUNDAY MORNING. JUNE 4, J87t. Here's Xnclfer t vine: Blind drunk with Scotch ale. While Beelzebub tying'. I : Huge knoU in his tail.1. 7 That's ;frm the' Ingoirlsby Legends," and doesn't it represent 7Tery accurately what theijfem Departure man is f doing lor the Democratic party ? Mu. Editor : There will be a Grand Bar becue at Abbottsburg, July 4tb, 1871, when a whole ox will , be roasted, and a johnny- oaked. What s'JiappV? time there will be -rf - .- , tr ' ' - iiu, ueei ana ureau, oesiaes, a great qaan- titi the beat loxoril. -will b. served up ind dinner free sX barg. I There' are sundry tears spoken of by pocts--gentle, pearly, scalding, briny, etc. but who ever yet heard ot inky tears A lovesick swain, perpetrating a "Sonnet to Eliza's Eyebrows," says : Ol'fjraplamejfrom some bright angel's j Dipped in the ; moistures of thy lustrous eye! . - 1 1 1 BUSINESS CARDS, $3 "DO a thousand, at the POST PRINTING OFFICE ! j The Journal of yesterday very properly declares the "New Departure" of the North ern democracy as a fraud and. a sham. .No Southern "conservative" can honorably or honestly endorse the "little game" of lead ers like Yalandigham. Thus the Journal rises to maintain its old Bourbon ideas : '.j The only option is between victory in the new departure and defeat in the old Yet we ftneBouth may be pardoned for hesi tationin approving or endorsing in the faintest' form, either the XIV. or XV. Amendments, or the manner in which they were imposed on us. All that we can be expected to say is that we submit to them. This we are willing to say and to do. We are not. prepared now any more than we nave ever been to admit that the action of the Soutli in the late war was criminal. We do not propose to do so now or in the future, and such we believe to be the feel ing qf the South. ? 7 ; Can this apparently possible conflict be tween the necessities of Northern Demo crats and the honor of Sautkern Democrats be reconciled ? We think it can, and by an alliance between the two wings of the party instead of a fusion. 7 Cheap Law Blanks. All kind of Superior Court and Justices Blanks. Registrars and Judges of Election. At a meeting of the Board of County Commissioners, held last evening, the fol lowing were appointed Registrars and Poll holders for the ensuing election, to be held on the 1st Thursday in August next: Wilmington First Ward S. T. Pott?, H. Hashagen, J. H. Brown. Second Ward J. W. Spaulding, E. J. Pennypacker, J. C. Lumsden. Thkd Ward J. E. Winanta, Chas. Bis singer, Jos. E. Sampson. Fourth Ward John G. Bulcken, J. H. Whifeman, John G. Bauman. Fifth Ward. Jas. Mitchell, Jas. Darby, Jas. Richardson. ' Federal Point. Sol. Reeves, Stephen Key?, Joseph Davis. Masonboto. John G. Wagner, H. M. Bishop, Sol. Smith. Harnett. David C. Davis, Delaware Nix en, Joseph Pickett. Grant. Geo. W. Pollock, Owen Colvin, -Kzekicl Chadwick. Cape Fear. H. E. Scott, Samuel Davis, Murphy Ward. Holden. Jas. S. Hioes, I. H. Brown, S. Satchwell. S. Lincoln Fletcher Bell-John Bell. W. J. Bivens. - - ' Caswell. Geo. W. Corbett, Henry Hull, W. A. Lamb. Franklin. A. V. Horrell, Wm. Robinson, D. M. Sikes. Columbia. C. M. Galloway, G. F. Walk er,R. R. Frazier. Union. J. E. Pigford, H. F. Murphy, D. Pigford. Holly. Cbsistopber Rowe, Geo. Page, John Rowe. The first named in each of the above Wards and Townships is designated as Registrar for such such Ward or Township. Without the transaction of further import- the Board adionrned until i w; v y - . ? V 5 rnaay. 4 J A' Brown's big dog had gone mad i " There was no misUke about it. He as rharcrinf? round the back yard with his - kennel in his teeth, shakmgjt as if it were a rat. When he .had broken it up into. match wood he ripped all the clothing off the clothes-line; Uttered Brown's shirU into inextricable rags, and mined Brown's mother-in-law's 1 beat dress. Brown stood top the W.h.hou in . condiUoo despairing, terror; endeavoring to ' soot&e the ferocious beast, r 1 . "Ob,; Joha7 Brown (John Brawn was Brown's dog's -'name) poor fellow come 'ea boy f etc." 7 7; ! John Brown "pursued his , ferocious career with nnswerring pertinacity; . He played hftTOC witK tllft Tiit wftsliintr niJirhiTiR ' and swallowed a - pair of newly darned socks, J 12's.v-i7'i-t n ..: i . '7 1 i Brown finding jtnoral suasion - altogether inadsquaTelto v the necessities ' ot the case, broke a brick off the . wash-house chimney, and, gathering up his drapery in his left hand, Ir made ready to heave it at John Brown.. . y : v . ; .. He "hove'' it, and in his mighty effort he overbalanced himself and tumbled into a pile of washtubs in the yard, j ohn Brown went for him. He siezed Brown's protruding leg in his teeth and shook it venomously. Brown yelled. . Who would not yell ? The boarders rallied with a fry ins-pan. a gridiron, tfie kitchen poker and the parlor tongs. John Brown fled in a condition of demoniac joy. Brown's mother-in-law's dress entangled around his neck. Brown -was lifted out of the desolation of the wash, tabs and carried into the house. They put im on a chair, but he was as limber a? wet rag, and slid off in a heap. Then they laid him out on the kitchen table and examined his wound. His ankle was deeply bitten, and a series of bleeding punc'urcs showed that John Brown had bittec all around his calf. What was to be done ? The boarders all turned to a young man with grcjn ; eye-glasses, long hair and a blue complexion, who read dime novels and chewed licorice and gum drops in a drugstore. He jwas the only physician in the house. He felt the patient's pulse, and with an oracular and learned air said de cisively,: 4 ; i "Two blue! pills and a seidiitz powder."' , Some one was dispatched tor the remedy on the spot, j i Whenever a nation is in peril or a great cause needs a champion, there always arises from among the masses of the peo ple some great- soul, hitherto slumbering in obscurity, who takes forthwith the leadership and leads on to victory or death, Visa HaiIv nvantfta ilr-A . ..Af 1 1 1 1 He was informed of the state of the case and the remedy which had been prescribed, He smiled the sarcastic smile "of a truly great man, and proceeded to stick the kilcheu poker in the hottest place in the fire "Lay him jou the floor." The boarders obeyed as all weaker na tures obey a strong one. They laid Brown on the floor. The milkman directed Brown's brother in-law, who weighed 250 pounds, to sit down ; on. Brown's head. Two more knelt on lm arms, and a fourth sat down oh his chest. The milkman brandished the poker. It was red hot; Then he commenced to touch - ! up Brown about the ankles. The meat sizzled and smoked, and there arose a smell which was as the savor of veal cutlet. Then Brown came to with a teartul veil, created ah earthquake beneath the superincumbent boarders and arose to his feet. He stared wildly around and rushed to the pump, where he commenced to pump frantically on his legs and; feet. Then the milkman laughed, left his milk-bill and went off to the waterworks i to make more milk. I JOHN BROWN. John Brown came flying out of Brown's back Yard with -Brown's mother-in law's dress banging about his ears and tripping him up at .every step. He tore off down Market street, and a stout party who saw him save him a character that .stuck to him until the end ot his days by out calling "mad dog"; "Mad dog" a small boy on the corner scaled a tree as he heard it, and joined vigorously in the cry as John Brown, in passing, made a wicked snap at his ascend ing legs. On flew j John Brown, gradually disen tangling himself from Brown's mother-in- fnff'ii dress, as he bumoed against door tprs. lamrj nosts and railings, m his wild X -j : M, m. career. "Mad dog" screamed a young lady, as she fainted into a good looking gentleman's arms, and j"mad dog" wheezed an old par ty in black as she was constrained to stand on her head in the gutter by the subversive force of a terrified and fugitive hod-carrier. t "Mad dog ?" said an elderly gentleman in s tone of indifferent inquiry as be surveyed Uis leg, from the calf of which a large piece of w nU.Sog : eh f and he look 1 , tar ed down the street after , Joha Brown, who could be iaintlj detected in, the tt distance hanging ojl to Q C. Mjera left pantaloon, John Brown cleared Market) street! as if he was a charge of a light 'Brigade or a remnant ot the Wilmington Battery, de ceased. He scampered into j a lawyer's office near the corner of Princess street, and went so furiously for an old gentleman whom he found there that h imhneri him with the alacrity and activity of early youth, and forced him to perch for safety on the summit of a bookcase. Receiving a forci ble application of Blackstone 7 on the left ear and a few volumes of Storyj on evidence about his ribs from the vivacious legal luminary on ihe top of the bookcase, he departed hastily for the Court House' build ing.' " ! Sheriff Schenck, . who was looking out the window, smoking his cigar, saw him coming, and throwing it away, he com- mi 1 f meneed to shin up the gas pipe towards the middle ot the ceiling in an extremely ac tive aM lively manner, Mr. Gardner look ing at him iu amazement. Tneir thoughts were diverted into other channels,- when John Brown came in with a large piece of policeman in his mouth. Tom Gardner topped .vivaciously on top ofTa desk. Mr. 1 ZM ik.l 4 - and Mr, Wood; who had just called in to gethis office coat and shoes which he had neglected to take away, retired to a corner, "armed with a heavy, ledger. John Brown I snapped and bit at him. but everv time he approached, Mr. Wood would whack him on the sconce . with the heavy volume and mauce mm to retire. Mr. uaraner was dancing in a condition of great agony on top ot his desk, and Sheriff Schenck was clinging, frantically to the gas pipe, when Major Mann, who had been hiding in the waste basket, made a rush for,; the door to get out. John Brown saw him and in two minutes had him firmly by the coat-tails. Major Mann ran, and JohnlBrown tugged and snarled, and shook, until human rai ment could stand it no longer, and away went Major Mann in a very short jacket, in one direction, and John Brown, victoriously waving his coat tails, in 'another. He had to carry a guanaco umbrella be- hind him all the way home to conceal the deficiency. : But John Brown's short and brilliant career was last drawing to an end.. - Six guardians of the peace, armed with clubs and revolvers, were in full chase after him. Off he went up Princess to Fifth and up Fifth to Dock, Serg't Kuhl was fast closing up on him while the ot tiers gradually form ed an extended line, all puffiog, - pantibg and spattered with, mud. On they splashed and pranced aod tumbled,-and at last Serg't Kuhl stopped, dropped on one knee, took aim and fired I nE MISSED JOHN BROWN ! But he hit somebody else. The editor of the Star was passing down the street meditating on sensations, and the ball struck him over the right eye and passed out at the backr ot his head, lodging with out any injury in the rear of a young lady's waterfall. He was startled out ot his reverie took off his hat and scratched his head with an appropriately vacant air, blew his nose in an absent way and gave the matter, which to 4efl the truth be did not fully nn derstand, nd further consideration. It was fortunate that the bullet struck where it did, otherwise the editor of the Star might hare sustained some serious injury. About an hour later, r a tuumphai pro cession mignc nave ? peen seeu wmuiug slowly down town, at its head Serg't Kuhl bearing John Brown's body homo. :"- W 1 ' its' f X NO. 113. Trrjs Beaott of Oli Pkople. Men and 1 women make their own beauiy or their own oglmess.. Lord Lyttea speaks of a man who was uglier than he had anr business to bei" -i and if he coald but read it. ever hnman being carries bis life in his face, and is go'ed ", looking or the reverse, at that life has been good or evil. On our features the chisrf nf I thousht and emotion ia tpmll . vnri- --w mmj M W VI V Beauty is not thejnprioDoIy.oi.blooming lijoung men: and oi white and nink maid ens. There is a .slow growing beauty which" only cornea to perfection in old ace. Grace !elonss t Period ot iK goodness improves the longer it exists. I have seen sweeter smiles upon a lin of seventv than upon a lip of seventeen. There is the beauty of youth , and there is also the beauty of holiness a beauty much more seldom mett and more frequently found in the afr-chair Jhe fire, with the grandchildren round its knees, than in th,e bait-roomer prome nade. 1 Husband and wife, who .have fought the world side by side, who Jiave made com mon stock of joy and-sorrow, and grown aged together,, are not unfrequeritly, eved curiously alike in personal appearance, and in pitch and tone of voice just as twin' pebbles on the beach, exposed to the same1 tidal influences, are each .. other's second' self. He has gained a feminine samethincr which brings his manhood into full relief. She has gained a masculine something which acts as a foil to her womanhood. Memories. It is one of the peculiarities of human nature that it din 23 to those persons and things to which by long asso ciation it has become familiar. 1 We would offer in apology for this cling ing, its universality j and would illustrate it by citing the widow, whose late departe . of forty years' association, made so great a void in her existence, that she missed him, as she had got kinder used to seeing him around." Or. like the father, who had fust ' rescued his little ones from his burning house, rejoicing over their escape but mourn ing for the old f urniture and other relics of the past, knit with so many fond recollec tions. We are not like "David, the Kinr? " a mourning a grieying," but, "still so gontly . - . 01 o'er us stealing," etc., soukejjojigina. i Jkr.. a - - . man s emotion s he murmurs "aweel, aweel the Laird's will be done," or oar old Irish man's feelings, when he resignedly suggestP, l "we must take what the Lord sends us;"; or a young person's" rather indignant denial of the Lord's agency in this matter by say ing, "the poor Lord can't do anything right." We are in full sympathy with any person that hath a "lone, lorn," creeping sensation.. Let us throw, dust upon our head. Old Daddy Time has already "rent" our garments, and sitting U3 down by the wayside, let the shadow pass. v 7 The storms of a quarter of a century with their drifting rains and pelting hail, will wrinkle And corrugate even the hard old face of Nature. As we turn both the right; and the left cheek we discover very elearly-defioed finger-marks, and the scan tiness of our once full suit of hair, with a queer kind of ripple of light in what yet remainetb, suggesteth that departures are new and old, and now and, then, and that the, abiding of any one is not for long, and that "such is life" is ample and sufficient for us to know. The end of the wise man is as the end of the fool, and this too is. vanity. Therefore, knowing the interest of the whole wide: world, full of life and ac tivity in itselt, we drop from our hand the old harp that has twanged to our touching! this many a day, and leave it still vibrating for Who comes next. ' ' . 7 Business Men secure some of those cir j culars and colored hand bills at the POST PRINTING OFFICE. j To Dyspepucsi We do notagree to cure you, hut from & care ful analysis ot Doolet's Yeas'T Powdkb, we con salely recommend it as producing nutri tious, light and healthy bread, biscuits, rolls, &c. which can be eaten with impunity and rel ished by the most sensitive invalid. These facts we can substantiate, from practical observa tions, and with the knowledge, that no injurious j suvstances whatever enter into the composition! of Dooley's Yeast Powder. Grocers everywhere" keep it. Doolkt & Bbotqeb, Manufactures, f 69 New Street, New lorK. Let all who want cheap and legal Blank call at the "POST PRINTING OFFICE." STATE Hon. Saml. F. Phillips' speech against Convention occupies the editorial pages of the Telegram. We will copy it next issue. ' ' '' K ' ' ' mmnrnm' ' " ' ' The Sentinel -of Raleigh, compliments Mayor Martin for sending back to Columbus county the crazy. colored man named Troy. A. J. Jones came before Judge 'Buxton at Fayetteville and has had his case removed from Cumberland county to Moore because he claimed hewold "not have a fair tnaV1 i The Washington -Eryrm declares U.,S. Marshal Carrow spoke at a democratic "con servative1? meeting and promised toon "to . be a good coraemUre,"
The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 4, 1871, edition 1
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