Newspapers / The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, … / Jan. 18, 1872, edition 1 / Page 2
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'.j WILMlNtmJ: , IT. C., JANUARY: 1&. 1872. mm PUBLisnEDTilURSDAirs AND SUff- . , ..r- v : DAYS. ' -, 4 j - - IT IS TUB ONLY REPUBLICAN PA--- FEAR BEQIQN. " Per Year...;.... Six Months. Thrco Months.. flDclecODifesFivtf cents. .... 1 25 rJut8 furnished at reasonable rates. : RATES 07 ADVERTISING: Twotimei f 1 Ij and 11 succeeding insertions half price additionaL : r.-. v Half Column and Coluttm advertisement re ceiYcd on proper discount.- . ' - " Local adyertisements 25 cents a line. ,C ',: tions for the Jonrnalr " .. j" The ; Journal, in ita leader on Sandaylast lias tbc names ibif certainepubUcans incon ' nection itb amoants charged by Geo. W. BwcA :oa against Mr. S. Littltfield. :; ITovr we wisli to ask the Journal why, in x making xip-tbe" niount of $24tj7ia 39, the names and amounts of Gen. T. L. Clingman, $70OGatli9;;$t.O0OL. MclX TateTfl4,0p0f AJ. I Branch; $1,510 which Mr,, bwepspn ) testified were a part of the $141,713 39, were omitted by the Journall. Is it because they are democrati? Wby does not the Journal tell" that Mr. Rosenthal testified (page 231) fhat the $241,913 41 , was 7tbe only accaunt kept by b wepsonjagainstliittle field, when it is well known that they hat much- business together in New York, in Florida, and . as Presidents'of the W.; N. C- II- Whv are democratic editors fur- . nished with portions ot the report before it . ia all printed; and before any of the printed matter fs sent, to the Legislature? , - The Legislature. ' During'th'S campaign last August, in this State, wuen the question of calling a con vention of the people to amend the Consti tution was presented, the democratic oratftrs and the democratic press infonfied the peo ple that; the Constitution of the State re Quired tbelLegisIature to ; leTy a tax suffil cient to pyhelhteresPiipon thV public debt, sid that the memlJers'xjf.Uhe Legisla : ture hairing taken an oath f to support the Constitution ot the State, should they fail : to provide by law for the levy of such taxi l they (the members of the legislature) would . b guilty of perjury. They urged the call ol a convention, as they then said for j the purpose .of striking out that provision of the Constitution, so that their conscien ces might be relieved and.the interest on the : public debt remain unprovided for. How tamest these appeala were is fre& in the memory of the - pcoplejr the , facts con cerning the condition of the State, , her emf barrassment, her: resources,'' her debt, were all well known to tfiese ctHoientit&is legls la tors, speakers and editors' The call for a convention was defeated by a large., ma jority, a majority pf democrats are in the legislature, they have not levied a tax to : provide f or the payment ; of the a interest upon the Stato debt, nor do,they intend to do so, yet these; same men will come before the people for re-election t how will they purge themselves of this confession of purr jury T How can theyor any, of theoi face a . free constituency and say when we made j - the declaration in August list it was . in ! tended, only, as a political trick, we know that to levy the tax as required by the Con stitution as we then contended ; would . de feat any party in the State, and we did not desire the defeat . of the great, democratic party. When asked what did you do with the' conscience you-you had in August, they will answer, politicians .Jhave ndsC'onsciencl,; Will the people be satisfied with; such flimsy' excuses, such evasions, such vile atr tempts to im pose upon their credulity! The y answer is no. The Republican party on the ; contrary contended before the people for a fair and reasonable interpretation of that provision of the Constitution. . They said ! that the language 61 the Constitution; to wit : " The General Assembly j shall, by ap propriate legislation, and by adequate taxa , tion provide for the prompt ; and regular payment of the interest on the public debt' should be construed with reference to the . condition ot the people, ana tue resources of the State, the amount of property liable to taxation, the amount of the State debt, ! tbatJ all "these considerations should be passed upon and determined by the legis lature, ; before the conclusion could be reached that tho "legislature, by which a tax was to be levied for the payment of the interestbf the public debt was ajtpropriate. Republican candidates for the next Gen eral ..Assembly, tcan go ; before the people with clear consciences and honest hearts; they can say that the present condition of the State . does not justify a tax so .onerous as that will be which would raise a sum suf ficient to;piy the interest . upon the present State debt They will expose the tricks and deceptions ot the 'democratic orator and the v democratic press of. the, State; TheytwiU point to the record of the present legislature, and show tbat party prejudice'. party spite and malice, and 'all' kinds' of unch&rif ablehess ' have - distinguished this body.II They have : abolished every - office i beld by ajlepublicanwithltt !theirjpowe and those that they could a not abolish they have reduced Jthe salaries so lojirjhat ro" one 'can beTfoumi'to;fill thew? They haye wantonly assailed .all T the udes of;-the StUe, and undertook to impeach Judge Logan; but findingf that sotd& or their own members , would , noti. (in fact could hot in conscience) ;-3rotoT"ifori articles of impeach-j incnr, tney iook the Mdodge" that their i frtsdera frora partisanship iorbadq them. , :; V" -;r.,;v 'y "; ' iV' Tlllll Ill Willi II Mil I " I IIMIWr fTTW!.!!!!- IMMMMOMLIJ f ' ' - ;:' ' ' ll'inilll Mi Hmf- ' - m r- They had read 3ops Fables they ete like the fox and the -grapes--netcoma not reach j when he turned- away and said the grapes were sour. When some; membe)r suggested that to impeach ; Judge Logan would ponsume: thirty .or fbrry jdays, on member , said-that they would liave to re main in session .untilVlthe ! apportionment bill passed Congress, iwtd , they anight as well amuse themselves intryipg Judge Lo- gan as in any 'other way. Shame upon such legislators f sent'to Raleigh to provide ta spend-the people's moneY inenacting a, farce, and assignas a reasokthatjihey: had iiotWflg-elsetdaletCT epeechea made concemiS this' impeach ment Irial by the democratsdemonstrate Nthe subtle purpose which these men had in f Aacjust lasf, "when-they, urged a call for a convention: they aimed at tb? Supreme Court; hey; aimed -at the homestead law, Votera'of the Btat'e.'k asto reinstate a slave aristocracy, a slve oligarchy, which has beefriojumphanlly destroyed by the ie bellion. Men who could hardly get a license to practice law took occasion to vilify and abusev. ahd ilander; and r traduce J udge Larson,; who hj triend and' foe alike tbo pre-eminently the best Iawyerin the State, and who has not his anperiOr lnthe i,trifltcdv8teThey assail his opinions in a casVjyhero the eminent counsel who p appeared; forv the prisoners (we refer o the 7tabea8 corpus cUgs in which Kirk figured), were unable, after being re quested by Judge Pearson, to show one single authority ot o offtfr one single argu ment that militated against the opinion of the learned Chief Justice: They called upon the press and the . ku klux to howl against the Chief Justice and the Supreme Court; rthey denied the existence ot any such oieanizition as the Ku Klux Klan cr the Invisible Empire, till by the con viction of some ot the hellish gang it was proved in open court, and by the confession of others,"opcnly acknowledged; then and not till ; then, did any democratic press, any democratic speaker, ahy democratic lawyer admit the existence of these secret societies. When, , however: it became manifest that the .. secret was out, and the prosecutions were, to be', multinlied. then some dis tinguished lawyers ot the State (all demo crats) write to Judge Bond, admit the exist ence, and 4 promise upon certain conditions to disband these disgraceful societies. All this and more than this will the people be told at the next summer elections, and they will put' the stamp of condemnation upon such falsehood and deceit as has been practiced by. the so-called, democrats. ; The Republican, Party The Future 1 'We cannot impress too strongly upon the minds of our readers that selt-govcrnmont is , ho child's play. The inestimable privi- lego -which every citizen enjoys of passing ui8 judgment upon ail. government mcas ares, nod upon the TTeslticnt xravl nil others inuthoxi ty, . carries with it the duty of weighing well, carefully and dispassionately the questions presented. I Orderly- and ' well governed Repulics are so rare that they would be remanded to the regions of desirable possibilities, if the Re publics ot the United States and of Swit zerland were to fail. Thus the citizens of the -United States are not only responsible for good government to themselves and their : personal posterity, but to all the world," which views our institutions with doubting, but" admiring gaze.,. In view of this great responsibility we ought to care fully and impartially examine the charges which partisan rancor invents, and insist that they shall be supported by proper evi dence. The general principles ot public policy developed i n : the several messages of the I'resiaenc, ana suDsequentiy cmuoaieti' in tho laws,' have been so thoroughlv ,in accor dance with public opinion that even hostile Criticism has ; been abandoned, v Hitherto tho, fight has been as against Administra tion ' measures, and learned;, opposition pealcers and writers like Vallandigham; I ?d to. .e law ail5 5" spirit .of Chris ,n .nff. M An ,;;; tian civilization, if it had pursued a differ s were engaged in demonstrating that the Administration' policy of Lincoln was detrimental to; thef best interests of ithe negro, his political equality before the law. AlLotherkindred measures still "exist, and' crops ou,t everywhere despite, the talk about j"ncw departure," &c, but it ia subordi nated to the personal warfare wliich has recentlyjjcen inaugurated. yX7.?Xi'i 11" We are called upon ; to witness the as tounding spectacle,' which, if it were not enacted beforq our own eyes we could with , difficulty believe, of a t deliberate conspiracy of lying an Administration but" or bffice. " ' We cannot characterize this . ' shameless exhibition by any milder e. Not a parlicle of proof of actual orruptiOn is furbished.1 but on the contra- ryj every detected ""peculator has been promptly dismissed and frequently severely punished ; and yet Carl , Schurz and others from purely selfish fid f personal; reasonp are assuming thlt the Administration, the President, Cabinet and subordinates are so steeped in corruption and crime, that an indignant people1 fhould txpel the'm from fllce. . Thus they hope, to take advantage of the natural -propensity of men "to belieYe jevilof-mli'iiitier,' and by. constant reitera tion to. achieve their purpose to avenge their personal grievances -fc.': If -we call - upon them -for the specifica tions they only reply with greater yehem ence corruption, cprruptioaU H e ask ihem have, you ahy proof that Boulwell, the creiahasur Secret wofar or Francis Aw' Walker, the Indi w Cmissioner,- or any (Other- prdmi nent ofUcer .isrbtWilty 6f-aW'mal-practice fhe libel is repeated in general terms, aid told "if i?e enly had access to the Department rwords; wef tjou3 atalQ. This'system of warfare ia simply inam ous ; itjis the vilest and mestyet deyi&EEj Precisely as a Napoleon,' scrupled not to wade into power through seas of blood and over hecatombs of the: bodies of hia?fellow men ; so Carl Schurz & Co., hesitate Jiot to obtain place over the prostrate , reputaUons of their fellow-men; whose good character We insist j in the name of . patriotism and justice, that these charges should be accom- panied. not by braye ' assertions "but- y. proofs We -insist that It isltri the public conhdence, and a crime a the Republic itself to raise doubts about the character c of its chosen representative simply for the one purpose of driving them from office so that .tbe rhungry pack of wolves, that lollow the ship ot state precise ly as the Russian ' wolves follow a sleigh that .ventures within : its vast forest, should have access to the public crib.; -Mr. i: s Let us then not repeat like parrots these phrases of corruption aud of fraud, but in jusuce, no ices 10 ourselves , man to our public men, demand that some proof should be furnished before we acceputhem as true t i - iJ mi! v. i Good Advice. The Columbia C Phoenix save Our advice to tho people of York,' Union.' and Spartanburg is to go to work, to or- eanize their farms, and to prepare for this year's crops. .Let them toucn eartu, ana like Antseus of old, they will acquire new strength. '. According to the ancient , fable, Hercules conquerea antseus Dy liiiing mm up and preventing his feet touching mother earth. Let the farmers, of the up-country see to it that their Hercules does- not pre vent them from touching the soil of the good old State, or rather province.' Let us labor, v We hope that this ku klux business has reached its climax. It is time for the Government to hold its mailed hand. The Yorkville Inquire?' repeats this ad vice to its readers. It says: .We rieed peace. Peace we must have before we can have prosperity. It is the interest of every man, womanand child to live orderly and subject to the laws o the country. It is more"5 than simple inter est. It is the duty ot every citizen to obey the laws and live an orderly and uprigb life. This God. requires nay. commands' it. The Saviour of sinners paid tribute to the Roman government and taught, both by precept and example, that such was the duty .'.of .his disciples. By this act of our Saviour he neither sanctioned nor opposed the Roman government, i rom Hie con duct of the Saviour, in thi3 instance, every man can easily learu his duty. This is good advice.- Many of the South em people now see, doubtless, the evils that have been brought upon them by the ku klux organization. Many of the ku klux themselves, regret their conduct, and are most anxious to be let alone, and to lead better lives in tne iuture. rue pressure upoU. society in the boutu has been lilted There is now some political and civil free dom in that section for the friends of the Gov jrnmcnt. They are no longer so fre quently molested in their houses by armed bands; no longer so irequently . scourged and murdered on account of their politica opinions. Thousands who, twelve months ago. went to bed with their doors barred: fearing death would overtake them bedre morning, now sleep soundly with unbarred doors. There has been a great change in this respect. A man in the South may now declare openly that he is a Republican, and proudly avow his attachment to the Ration al Government without serious danger of bodily harm. This change has been wrought by the enforcement act passed by Congress in May last, by the vigorous manner in which it has'becn cnforCWi by the courts, and the aid which the President has given to the counts through the marshals and the Federal trobps. Every good citizen in the South, who desires the peace of society, and - who would see violence and disorder in that section come to an end, should feel grateful to the national authorities tor the agency they have had in restoring law and order. The PJuenix hopes 4,this ku klux business has reached its climax." If there had been; no ku klux there would have been no law to suppress them, Courts have been held to punish criminals, and troops have been employed in aid of the civil law, because courts and troops were indispensable. No matter lin what light this whole business may . be regarded, no blame can justly at tach to the government. As well blame the surgeon who extirpates the cancer. It would have been faithless to itself, to bun dreds of thousands of thousands of peaceable citizens. ent course. We trust the good advice given by these South Carolina papers will be heeded generally in the Southern States, afad that the Southern people, discounten ancing (disorder, and violence of all. kinds, will take a, "new departure" in the way of peace -and prosperity. Tho South has with in itselt all the elements of future greatness. It needs immigration and capital, concord and good will among its people, and enter prise andjndustry. -: With these, ;and with hopeful, hearts tor the future, , not thinking Moo muchiof the dead and profitless nast. the Southern people can not fail,; even during- the next decade, gVealiytfeimprove men conumon. nasn.; nronCMii History .'in , Advertisement. It has often been said that the histoty of a iiatiou t inny ue iuuou ? in us . newspapers. The important part that the advertisement " : : ; i - j ' m - - . . coiun-ns Dear in tne record may be seen in the following, published withinithirty years oi eacn oincr: ' - ' . from the subscribers, n. the 23d ofNovem- ler last, the negro boy Oscar Dunn, an ap prentice "to the plastering trade. He is of Griffe color, between twenty and twenty-one years pi .agej ana aoout live leet ten prj elevf dn inches high. All persons are cautioned not to harbor said boy under penalty of the iawf Wilson t cc ratterson, corner St John and Common "streets. Jfdw OrUans: P4cav DiED.In New Orleans. WedocsdAv-Nnv; 39; 1871 Oar'anpUptenantoynqri .iuc. .liou. uyuu y. xxeenan, oipogitistic fame, arrived in New York from Europe on Friday He has ' been praccingiit sand bags during , the voyage and is prepared, at shprtnbtice, to "put a head" on any .man who asserls . that ne. is connected swith-sthe nn enes. -.The 1 great plains. o Texas7 contain" one hundred and fiftytwD million acres. Here is a chance fbr' Greeley to obtain a hies little garden patch. ;: The Yanceys are still among us; ; The 'Southern .heart" J continues to be rired n by perverted facts and inflammatory ap peals, not merely, by Southern papersf but by the najtionial organs of the democracy; The object 'of- this is -two-told: first, to 1 j . T. . . I ... i .! i '...- break, the force on the Northern conserva tive mind of the ku klur atrocities,' perpe trated by boutnern democrats, and second to keep the Southern democrats in counte nance and in harness for the Presidential contest. The-democratic organ in this; city as- eumes t that ,"annAmerican Poland" is a fradicalr necessity." - It devotes a two column Reader to the work of misstating and perverting te facts in relation to the ku klux) atrocities, and , in. misrepresenting the action and purposes of i the government in the premises. There is no Poland in this country, andithereis nc necessity for it. There .was , a Greese or; a Mexico in 4be Southeii States until recently, in whih human liberty and life .were at the mercy of masked bandits of ; men who com milted crimes of all . kinds, in the interest of the- Democratic, party, from assault and battery j to murder. The fault of the Gov- ernmehy in vthe judgement of tire Demo. cratic" organ hp.ro . is, that it put down these bandits and restored comparative peace and order folhe South. And this, it seems, : i what the organ says has made a Poland i of the South! The Southern. peo- j)le are told, and that too by the organ cf the national democracy, issued hero under the shadow ot the Capitol, that they are injured) oppressed, outraged; that discrimi nations; tlegrading to them have been made against jthem by the Government; that they are the victims of a Russian despotism, and that their condition as a conquered people jis as intolerable and deplorable as that of Poland. Now, the Southern people themselves kuow that this is not so, yet such statements and such appeals, emana ting from a respectable source in Washing ton City, must haye an unhappy effect upon their minds and feelings. There can' be no substantial peace between; the two sections of the North and the South as long as such a course is pursued by the national demo cratic press. Why, it the 'South indeed is a Poland; if her people are deprived of their rights, and ground ; to the earth with the iron heel of poweiy what wonder if there should be disturbances, f violations cf law. an incipient rebellion among them? They are a brave people. Who supposes that, if they were in the condition the organ says they are, they would quietly submit to it? VYho thinks that, if it were so, the whole! North and the Whole of Europe would; not cry out against it? , No,- the South is as free as the Nwrth. There have been no unjust discriminations by the Gov ernment between the Southern and North ern people. They are taxed just as the Northern people are. They are represented in Coogress and in every department of the Government. Their lives and property are as jealously guarded by the j Government as the liVcs and property of the Northern peo ple. I The great body of the Northern people, seeing their impoverished condi tion, and .deploring, though ready to tor give, them for their desperate efforts to de stroy the Gbyernmentarer disposedio sym pathize with them", and to help ibeni in every way '-they can to improve their con dition. They would not have them ia the Union as their. inferiors. , .1 The Sonthefn people have no cause to complain 'that any section1 bi any power has inflicted wrong upon them; They owe their present condition to their own acts. They i staked everything they had on the rebellion, and lost. They have not yet sub milted in' good faith to the national. au thority. It they had done so iu 1865, and from that period to the present, and had labored with naif the zeal they exhibited for th Confederacy, to build upheir waste places' and to repair the injuries .which they inflicted on the country by a causeless rebellion, their condition? to-day would have been far better in all respects than it is likely to be ten years hence,, - . -(;. There is . no patriotic statesmanship there is no regard for the whole country in these inflammatory appealsto a section. No good, but only evil, can come of this new, attempt to "tire .the Southern heart." The condition of the. Southern people is unhappy enough without adding 1 to' it im aginary grievances. Rather let us look on the bright side of the picture. Let us en courage them to put behind them the narrow-minded demagogues who haye misled them and to take heart and hope for the better days that are surely in reserve for them, if they arc true to themselves and the country. The Government is not their en- my. ; it is only "a terror, to evil-doers" among them. It is the friend of all . law abiding citizens. And it is in all respects as much disposed to do-justice to the South as to the North, the East, or the West. Wmhinfton Chronicle. , Catacaxy's Recall Minister K r a m e r Heads an, Explanatory Letter at Co peuhasan..The It ussan Cabinet Vexed --Alexis Treated CooUy-.IIc will not Return to Washington. ' ! ; : New York; January 15. A Berlin ; letter stutesf that the Gerinap Governrnent has T re ceived a circular frmv dortsciiakdff relative to some incidents arising from the recall of Catacazy. This . circular is said .to have been necessary from the following circum stances American Minister Kramer, during a dinner at the house of jthe German Minis tert Copenhagen proposed reading a -letter from ,theAmerican Government explanatory Tof the' Catacazy affair, but the Russian Sliirister refused 1 to listen, and the Ger foan i Mihister said such a lettermust iibt. . be. readin his house. Subsequently. Mr,v Kramer went to each. Minister in Co penhagen and read the letter to them' indi vidually; they, of course, reporting it to their governments. -The. .Russian Cabinet feels. : vexed over the affair, and rumors are afloat" in' Berlin 'that a coolness between Russia" and the' United ' States has arisen theiefrom; LThe same letter states that ad vices irom fat. Petersburg represent that the tixrnlhk his visirVahd theEmDerot will f allowAIexis td fetufn to'AVashihgton. iff xiw.&' i atteii i r ihi-u&t ' xiiK ree.AfJ.S.race tor tne Jfresidensy may be considered one. pf the los$ races. . After the election - the 'latter Franklin" will know more - about "beats', than any other ' farm product. ?h: h 'U:vi-rnT cr. v nnce GVfchakoff r is yerymad; andia wonder He's been rcceivinir a Cartin l ltt tare. IfPSF-iydiConsider 'Alexis Slightedr bv President Grant nXt J NEW ADVERTISEMENT . '-CHAIiLENGE.'i : .-1 ;'' ' . " " j "kpi CHALLENGE THE CITY ON OUR YV , Immense Stock ot- .-'! o- .. " ' is;r', - . UOI2DSTIC AND ill PORTED ESPECIALLY OUB ! CHALLENGE, BLUE BEARD AUD I ; LA tllilFA DDAIIDC.) PURE HAVANA FIGAROS. - j A very choice and selected stock of 150 boxes ORANGE 50 boxes; LEMONS' COCOANTJTS, APPLES, RAISINS. TABLE RAISINS,' ; AT UNUSUALLY LOW PRICES. GEO. MYERS. 11 and 13 South PronllSt! jan 11 165 TURPEUTII1E AXES. VliTE JIAVE ! NOW ON HAND AD ARE tt receiving by every steamer, a large as- Bonmeui oi our ceieDraiea u JOHN DAWSON 53 TURPENTINE AXES, and all kinds of . HARDWARE and AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS., For sale at our usual low prices. ' ' DAWSON, TEEL & HENNTNG. ian 11 165 2 w NOT I C E! IHA.VE ON HAND A FULL LINE OF LA DIES DRESS GOODS, LATEST STYUES, SUCH AS COLLARS, T. CUFFS, l , : 1 CORSETS, I HANDKERCHIEFS, HOOP-SKIRTS and BUSTLES, j VICTORIA LAWNS, JACONET, SWISS, ! NAINSOOK and ! MULL MUSLINS, In striped, plaid and plain. , HIAR PLAITS, fi . FRENCH TWI8T3 and! PUFFS, IN IUITATION AND REAL ttAIR. NECK TIES AND HOWS, And a tine assortment of i LI Call and examine my st ock before purchasing elsewhere. . i ONE PRICE. TERMS CASH A. D. BROWN, Exchange Corner. 159-ly dee 31 CALL AND BUY A PAIR.OF THOSE CELEBRATED " KID GLOVES. For Christmas. ONLY. )1.00 A PAI Every pair warraitad. ' . " , A. D. BROWN j IB', Exchange. Corner, ". , Sole Agent. 159-ly dec 21 IF YOU 7AUT A HEAVY BOOT You WILL SAVE MONEY BY BUYING A pair oi " i - KANSOMi BOOTS 1 Which we jruarantee to be the BEST ItfiAVY "RHtlT in this mrb T x FIRST NATIONAL BAIVK OF WILMINGTON. 1 3 i I Wilmington. N. C., Jan. 3dj 1872. BOOKS OF SUBSCRIPTION TO INCREASE the Capital 8tock or thlff Ban.k to ($300,000) tnree hundred thousand dollars will be opened on the 15tk instant. - - ! - j t wi A. K. WALKER, Cashier. HQ7 - 1641 :u:W GENTLEMEN, ;-j - i GAN Ua?e their vkdzbsttaxdisq Improved by r ttln? tnemselvea with a pair of those Fine Oalf Hand-Sewed Boks, at : ' ' ' A L. PRICE'S-" Lire Boot and Shoe 8tore, f ,i: Front and Market Streets. SUPERIOR AND STANDARD 1 ;KNADE & STIEFP, Uakeri. ifxir.Urength, durabUity, richness and Volunt of tone, and beauty ot workmanship, they l- ' - cannot be excelled. j : i i Mala received at alffeieBi Fairs wlthcports Of the musical jadses together with the opin 10n Of the most; titetinfrnilhiv! " nloniot - wsicians, and the irreat number, of references have been sold present a weight of testimony In thtirlkvor that cannot be resisted, anasWnre the Tjarchaser of hla rerafvl mcat Warranted foVi? -r;SoldocIy at . uHEINSBEROER i, , ill IWAII) M11D GOODS MM . , . Live Book Store. v 'r- 165 sol; BEAR & BR03. cotton, 5 I ! V' - rt NO TtflSBWQ TO SUE ArCHANOS IN OUR ..... . - ; ? v. ' Retail Department, A - "J I WE WILL SELL FOR THE NEXT THIR TY DAYS, AT REDUCED PRICES, OUR i it si1 AIL STOCK Al No. 20 Market Street. Consisting in part of PRINTS, r ' ALPACCAS, : -'."'' BED TICKS, i . ' vi - : ' ; ) LINEN AND COTTON' i 'I ' " 10 4 SHEETINGS, V-', t CASSIMERS, i v JEANS, ' ! TWEEDS, i LINEN TABLE CLOTHS, SEVENTY-FIVE DOZEN GERMAN r LINEN TOWELS, '5 f. 100 DOZEN IRISH LINEN TOWELS, Twenty Pieces Black Silk, fi t IV o tions, . CALL AND EXAMINE. v "VV.e . Guarantee You " Save25per Cent. SOL. DEAR & CnOS., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS, rp. RET , 1 -'A;;X. ' r. 1 -' ' X 4 ..jM - - i . V . . . ' . - - .' . . ' r ,1 - . dec 1 1 50tf.
The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 18, 1872, edition 1
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