J . a i -n 4 1 ft ' ft
FRIDAY MORNING, NOV. 24, 1876
Fl ELD, HOUSEHOLD AND WORKSHOP.
INDUSTRIAL NOTES.
I One thousand tons of grapes bare
been consumed in New York this yean
San Diego, California, expects to
oroduce six hundred tons of h.oDfT'thfs
r: . , '
reason. ; ,
There has been rtnened in London a
class lor teacmng laoies irawing anu
engraving on wood.
The wine crop of France this year is
unusually large, being a third larger
than the vine promised at the outset of
the season.
Talking of dress reform, the "Wor
cea'tr Corset Company produces forty
thousand dozens of sewed corsets a
year, y
m-. m " .1
In Cincinnati several mean proprie
tors of retail dry goods stores hare the
lady clerks searched before they leave
for the day.
Willistou, S. C, boasts of a stock of.
-otlon fifteeu feet hiirh, which resem
bles a three-vear'-old pear tree in size
and, form, .
JL A A I I IK VUII CJ V AJ j Vr V.UVU A lUtlf,
iust completed, as claimed, the feat 6t
V M -
ll-ollinv 1 1ff tmlnn in IV
lift Anr'SW.VI
tivc hours, at the Phoenix
Louisville;
Hill Park,
The structure that are to remain on
the centennial grounds are the main
building, macuincry hali.incnioriai nan,
horticultural hall, St. George's, build
ing, the German pavillion, the; Japa-
rifce building, and the Ohiofctatebmld
NATION AX, DCMOCHATIC PLAT
I ORM, ADOPTED AT ST.LMUIS,
JUNE 2H, 1810.
We. the delegates of the Democratic
party of the United States, in national
convention assembled, do hereby declare
the administration of the Federal Govern
went to be In urgent need of immediate
net's' of this Convention and of theDehio
v'ratic party in' each State, a zealous effort
and eo-oi K-ration to tlii.seml.aiul w herphv
apreal to our fellow-citizens oil every
former ix.litieal connection to undertake
with uA this first and most pressing patri-
- ..!., .1..!.. 4V. 11.. .... .. .1 .......
coiintrvl -
W e do here reallirm our faith in the ier-
nianeney of the Federal Union, our devo
tion to t lie .Constitution of the United
HSfjfs vltrV ite u muTirlircntu inuivitHinllv
accepted as a final eettltn ent of the con
troversies that engendered tne civil war,
and do here record our steadlast confidence
in the perpetuity of republican self-gov
ernnient ; in an absolute acquiescence in
the will of the majority, the vital principle
of the Republic"; in the supremacy of the
civil over the military authority; in the
total separation of Church and State, for
1 he sake alike of civil and religitfus free-
'Alom : in the enualitv of all citizens before
jutviaws of their own enactment in the
lU-.-aiy of individual conduct unvexed by
sumptuary laws ; in the faithful education
of the rilng generation, that they may
preserve, enjoy and transmit these best
conditions of human happiness and hope.
We behold the noblest products of a hun
dred years" of changeful history : but
wiiue upholding the bond of our Union
and great, charter of these our rights, it
behooves a free people to practice also that
eternal vigilance which is the price of
liberty.
THE XEKI) OF THE llOUK." "''
. Reform is necessary to rebuild and es
tabuVh in the hearts of the whole people
i lie u nion, eleven years ago happily res
cued from the danger of a corrupt central
ism, which, after inflicting upon ten States
'.lie rapacity of carpet-bag tyrannies, lias
honeycombed the offices of the Federal
utniuu;ui ltseii wiui incapacity, waste
and fraud, infected States and municipali
ties with the contagion of misrule, and
locked fast the property of an industrious
people In the paralysis of hard times. Re
, lorm is necessary to establish a sound cur
rency, restore the public credit, and main
tain the national honor.
ItiuiCAl. FIXAXCE DEXOUXCET).
We denounce the failure for all these
eleven years to make good the promise of
me legal tender notes, winch are a chang
ing .standard of value in the hands of the
poople,nd the non-payment of winch is
A disregard of the plighted faith pf j.the
We denounce the improvidence which,
in eleven years bf peace, has taken from
the people in Federal taxes thirteen times
the whole amount of the legal tender notes,
and squandered four times this sum in
useless excuse, without rccumulating any
reserve for their redemption.
We denounce -the financial imbecility of
that party which, during eleven years of
peace, has made no advance toward re
sumption; that instead,has obstructed re
sumption by w asting our resources and ex
hausting all our surplus income, and while
annually professing to intend a speedy re
sumption to specie payment, has annually
enacted fresh hindrances thereto. As such
a hindrance we denounce "the resumption
clause of the act of 1875, and we here de
mand its repeal. , I ;
liEMOCRATlC FINANCE DEMA.XDEJX
We demand a judicious system of prepa
ration by public economies, by official re
trenchments and by wise finance, which
snail enable! the nation to assure the whole
world of its perfect ability and perfect
readiness to meet any of its promises at
the eall of the creditor entitled to paymentV
, e believe such a system well devised, and
above all, entrusted to competent hands
lor execution, creating at no time an arti
ficial scarcity of currency, and at no time
alarming the public mind into the with
drawal of that vast machinery or credit by
whieli 93 ier cent, of aU business transac
tions are performed a system open, pub
lic andinspiring general confidence, would
Irom the day of adoption, brinsr healing on
its wings to all our harassed industry, and
mrt in motion the w heels of commerce,
manufactures and the mechanical arts; re
frtore employ met to labor and renew, in
all its national source, the prosperity of
the people. r .
BEFOKM IX TAXATION. ' .
Kefomv is necessary In the sum aud
mode of Federal taxation so . that capital
may be eet free from distrust and labor
lightly burdened. We denounce the pre
. sent tariff levied upon nearly five thousand
articles as a masterpiece of Injustice, ine
quality and false pretence. It yields a
hvlndling, not a yearly rising revenue. It
iuu impoverished many Industrie to sub
idiae a few; it prohibits imports that might
i 'rebate the products of American labor: ,
it las degraded American commerce from
tue first to ah interior rank upon the high
seas. lt has'cut down the sales of Ameri
can manufactures at home ' and abroad,
and depleted the return of American agri
culture or industry, followed by half our !
neorj! I ltctupeopWiTjttatsfoQre
- hk ir-Ma. nfl I Mir. it nronibtesiraad ana
tnrtn mn iinir. enriche dish laest offi-!
culs and banKrupts nonesi mercnanis. c
demand that all customhouse taxaticn
shall be only for revenue. r
BETBENCHMEXT IX ZXTZSBZi.
Kfnrm is neeearr In the scale of pub
lic expense. Federal. State and municipal
.out of .Federal Uxstion ,han swollen from
$C0,000X)0, irold, In .1850,!tO f 4o0,nw:oou,
currency, In 1870. Our azcrregate taxation
aafrn!fl8j00,QDQ,joid, in lbX),to
u rui rwt I.. iwTn in nni
decade less than f per head to more than
fl$ per head. Since the peace tne peopie
have paid xo tnclr tax-gatherers more wan
thrice the sum of the national debt, ana
more than twtee that sum for the Federal
Government alone. We demand a vigor
ous frugality m every department and
from every officer of the government.
WASTE OF THE PCBIJC LANDS.
Reform is necessary to put a stop to the i
profligate wastes of the public lands and
their diversion from settlers by ' the party
in powar which has squandered two hun
dred millions of acres upon railroads alone,
and out of more than thrice that acgrepate
has disposed of less than a dxth direc:ly
to tillers of the soil.
CHRISTIAN CITIZENS ANI HEATUEX CHI
, , NESE. .
Reform la necessary to correct the mis
takes of the Republican Congress and the
errors of our treaties, and our diplomatic
relations which have stripped our adopted
citizens of foreign birth and kindred race
recrbssing the Atlantic of the shield of
American citizenr-hip, and have exposed
our brethren of the Facilic coast to-the
Incursions of a race not sprung from the
same great parent stock, and, in fact, now
by law denied citizenship through natu
ralization, as being neither accustomed to
the habits of a progressive civilization, nor
exercised in liberty under equal laws. We
denounce the policy which thus discards
the liberty-loving German and tolerates
the revival of the Coolie trade in Mongo
Han women,' imported for immoral pur
poses, and Mongolian men ; hjVed to per
form servile labor contracts, and, demand
6uch modification" by Congress within a
constitutional limitation, as shall prevent
the further importation or immigration of
the Mongolian race. '
BEFOUM 18 THE CAMPAIGN ISSt'E.
Reform is necessary, and can never be
effected but by niakiug it the controlling
Issue of the election, lilting it above the
two false issues with which the office1
holding class and the party in power seek
to smother it. The false issue with which
they would tnkindle sectarian strife in
respect to the pubiie schools, of which the
establishment and support belong exclu
sively to the several States, and which the
Democratic party has cherished from their
foundation, and resolved to maintain with
out partizanry or preference for any class,
sect or creed, and without contributing
frcT I the Treasury to any the false issue
by which they seek to light anew the dying
embers of seciiojial hatred between kin
dred people, onee unnaturally estranged,
but now reunited in oneiiidivible Repub
lic and a common destiny. '
. REFOItM IN THE CIVIL. SEUVICE.
Reform is necessary in the civil service.
Experience proves that the efficient, eco
nomical conduct of the governmental bus
iness Is not possible if its civil service be
subject to change at every election be a
prize fought for at the ballot-lwx be a
brief reward of party zeal, instead of posts
of honor, assigned for proved comj)eteney
and heid for fidelity in t he public employ
ment. That the dispensing of patronage
should neither be a tax upon the time of
all oUr pubiie men, nor the instrument of
their ambition. , , Here again , professions
falsified in the performance, attest that the
party in power can work out no practical
pr salutary reform.
BEFORM AMONG THE HIGHEST l'UBUCJ
' SERVANTS,
Reform is nece.'ssiiry even more in the
. higher grades of public service President,
"Vice-President, Judges, Senators, Repre
sentatives, Cabinet officers. These officers,
and others in authority, are the people's
servants. .Their offices are not a private
perquisite; they are a pubiie trust. When'
the aunals of this Republic show the dis
grace aud censure of a Vice-President: a
late Speaker of the House of Representa-'
tives marketing his rulijigs as a presiding
officer; their friends irofithisr seeretlv bv
their votes as law-makers; live chairmen
of the leading committees of the late House
of Representatives- exposed in jobbery; a
late Secretary of the Treasury forcing
balances in the public accounts; a late
Attorney General misappropriating puolic
funds ; a Secretary of the Navy enriched
or enriching his friends by percentages
levied off the profits of contractors with
his . Department ; an ambassador to
England censured lor- a dishonorable
sp?culation -r the President's private secre
tary barely-escaping conviction upon trial
for guilty complicity in frauds uixm tlm
ltd venue; a Secretary of War impeached
. ior . iiiim crimes , , ana eoiitPssrHi . mida
meajiors the- demonstration is sfo com
plete that the first step in reform must be
by the people, or honest men from another
party. The disease of one nojitical organ
ization infests the hody politic and thereby
making no change of men or partv, we
can get no. change of measures and no
reforms. .
RApiCALS AX1 BADICALISJI MlsT BE
DRIVEN FROM TOWER.
All these abuses, wrongs and eiiine.
the product of the sixteen years ascehd
aucy of the Republican partv create a
necessity for reform, confessed bv Repub
licans themselves. t But their reformers
are voted down in convention and dis
placed from the Cabinet. The mass of
honest voters is powerless to resist the
eighty thousand office-holders its leaders
and guides. .
Reform can only be had bv a peaceful
civic revolution. Wo demand a change of
system ; a t hinge of admjnlst'rstion ; a
change of parties, that we may have a
ehangc of men. , ,
: -
, THE JfATF GOVJERXMEXT.
Xam'cs of p3iccj,
EXECI T1VE DEPARTMENT.
Governor Curtis II. Brogden.of Wavne
Lieutenant Governor R. M. Armfield
of Iredell. - " '
Secretary of State W
Wake.
II. Howerton, of
Treasurer D, A. Jenkins, of Gaston '
Auditor-John . Reilly, of Cumberland.
GrtSy r 1"tT L; HOTe f
.AdjuUnt GeueralWohn C. Gorman, of
Wake.
V f aPriutendent of ? Public -Instruction
John Pool, of Pasquotank.
-Governor's Private Secretary John B
,Neathery,f Wake. . . ;
'rUDICIABT 1EFAKTMEXT, .
t Justice Supreme Court Richmond
M. Pearson, of Yadkin.
. Associate J ustiees-Edwin G. Reade, of
Beaufort; W; B. Rodman, of BSSort;
pemas Settle, of Rockingham: P
Bynum, of Mecklenburg. . V:
i Clef, SuPme Court W. H. Ba-
lev. of Wake. , .r
Marshal d: A. Wicker j of Wake. r
Officers of the 31milcipality of Wii
- mington. s
Mayor W. P. Canaday,
Aldermen T. M. Gardner, J. J. Cassi-
t ?y, B. G. BatoJ, IL I eff L C. Tyer , ,
tliramIanldmHcrl.J Imej,
col., W. IL Brexl a, coT:
panics, coi. . t
"Clerk and Tretsuirr-7. C. Sttt
""Chief of Fire Lepartaieut-Roger T(xre,
Federal OScUls. "
Collector oCCoetbtastoieiih t. Abbott,
Deputy Collector R. W. Chadwkk. -Postmaster
E. R. Brink.
..i.ill: ft
sew iianTer County CoYernmeau
Clert of the Suoerif
Superio? (3$orf anI Judg
of Prolate James Ueaton.
Sheriff SALr Manning.
srare Nixon, col., Stacy VanAmxinge,. D.
C. Davis. ; : .
Register of DeedGeo.' W. Bordeaux,
col. ...
Treasurer J. A: ITewlett."
Coroner Ed Hewlett.
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' ! THE i GAZETTE; ,' !
.'106 W. Baltimore Bt.". Baltimore:
-----l-.-V i...'' ' '
' itlLLSBORO' RECORDER,
I,' ' EST ABLl SHED 1820. f ',' ;
'ft .,;- Ml."
THE OLDEST PAPER IN NORTH CAK
OL1NA . . ,r
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ASHEVILLE CITIZEN
A QUARTO, WEEKLY ; PAEB GOOD
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AsheeTN.'c.
' HE N Waf'KlW OF NUKT1
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uiington
Xoth Caroli xAjPKtMiTTiauA jr, cckly.
otak, tuuiy aiHi weekly (iemocTmur ).
CHkihTt jAyocATE, weekly, Metbodfat
Biblical Rxcouek. weeklv CBaotUt).
yrwr, diuV and weelJy'cilemoTratlc).'
v-t.iuAtj., weekly t imticraiic. "
I ' . .. ' v.' ,
ohtiiCarolisa (1f-iTf;vrLAK,r-klv
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Fkiexd or TEMPTKyA-CE, weekly.
North Carolina Farmer" weekly.
Er , weekly ( Radical ) . . , '
j . Charlotte : . .
Observer, daily and weekly (Deiuoeratk')
Democrat, weekly (pemocralic). '
Southern Home, weekly Ijuiratie
' ' ' JGreeujoro : - .
Pat,wot, wtstkty (Democratic).
New North 8tate, w eekly (Kadh al):
: Auhevllle : .
Citizen, weekly (Dem.)
Expositor, weekly (Dein.)
Pioneer, weekly (Radical.)
$!libury : .,. .'
Watchman, weekly (Dem.)
EX.1MINER, weekly (Dent.)
. 8alem :
Pre, weekly (Dem.) :
- ' ' . Winston :
Sentinel, weekly (Dem.) 1
Statcsvilfe: , .
LANi3!AKK,weekly (Dem,)
American, weekly, (Dem.)
Morgantoii ;
Ui. ik, weekly (Dem.') . ,.
Mt.Alry:
W.vrtaiMAN, eekly (Dem.)
'!Tor, weekly (Rad.) . :
: . - , -
. . . Hlckor : '
Press, u eekly. (Dem.)
IJncoiuloii :
Prourk-, weekly (Deiu.) .
' ' Shelby: '
B.xaK, weekly Dem.) ,.
Danliuryi
Reporter, Meekly (Dem.) ' '
Reidrillc:
Nhws, : weekly. (Dem.)
Times and Mercirv, weekly (Dem.)
: LexingtGn :
-Recur t, weekly (Dem'.)
j '"-. weekly, ((tad
yrahaui:. " -Glean
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.'. V ;HillDoru: : '? ;'' :
Recorder, weekly .(Dem).
" " ' " .Durham: ,
Tobacco Plant, weakly , (Dem) .
1-
llERALDy weekly' (Dem.)
. ii .
. - ; i : : ' ' Oxford:
ToRCULiettT, wbekly (Deii4,
..t
'. ::: ' Warrenton: -GizETTEj'
weekly (Dem).
Centennial, weekly, (Dem).
It
1 1
News, serai-weekly, (Dem).
: ' ' ; ' 'Tartofoir " '
SuLTiiERXEHi weekly (Dem).
i : RdckyiMount:
Mail, weekly (Dem). ri'
' Toieuot: .
Transcriit, seml-mouthl'y (Free ill Bajv
tut.) . '
AuVance, weekly (Dem;) ,-..., ri
Zjon f LxyvxuK fccmi-mouthly ( Primi
tive Baptist).
New
ni:
Nutshell 'daflr'l'hVinV.
i t
, N 7.
Newbernian, semi-weekly (Dem).
Time, weekly (Rad). ' 'f
. . Washington:
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Echo, weekly (Dem.)
t
AViiat NEXTseiuJ-wklyXDew)., . .
baircny:
Economist, weekly j(Dea)o .. t T..r ri r
North CARtfLisiA':,-wcvkly. (Kl). 4 '
: M Goldsbojfo:;,. , ., .j j .-,
MESENQER,&emweek4y weekly ( Dera) .
i : t, iMagnqUa; ' .? l-v..
ReOori,' weekly ;(Dem).'
.1 if, Lumbtrtunr.r;. .
Robehn ux, Weekly (Dem). I "
:7i'f i' i ; 'mmmjm.; . ;-.. "-
.. '('- tii jFayettCTilto:..
(iAifeTTE; weekly Deiny. ' "' ,;' ' :
-. UJs AWiKI, WeCKIy JLHOT.4-J
' RbelrfIJgham:,- :
I; :'f
... n
Smrit or.THX Socth: wetklj (Kad).
Ukrald, weekly. (Dca). i !r
J. Ansqniax, wetJJy.Dcni). n.
; t:- i I r . 1 ' 'tf '
t ? r
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jionrue. j ,
n't
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Register, weekJy.iett)2l ! ; ? t ? V
Scn, weekly (Dem).
cli. trots
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oct0-tr r
EUGENE Ii. HARRIS,
v 'n fAHTIST IN
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SASSAFRAS FORK, N: t
QEG8 LEAVE TO CALL TOUR
Mj auenuan to bbi Portrait in Craum
Persoo; wishing pood pictures of th-m
elres or deceased Xriends, can hare tl.-i
nicelv eiecuUd br seruKntr him ..v.....
i , r I'uwwc
erann to work from. . A Tnf,,,.i.
is necessary to inaure i good Ukeness. The
pnoca ociow inciuo Jta;re by mall, on
rouer... A neat frame of wslnut and jrilt
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"T" -"' ucunraie, aceuTstely, from a
photograph or other picture tie exact
likenj tf any una. . WeT guarantee tui
wuMfnx, LfCauex. 1
i.;'"1.1? ork, .nd Votider
lmtmtX fl LCentral Pro-
"We ft&rf . n.;it.i ..
'AW V-L wT . rT1 T iwwmii oi lion.
,vT. r vwuw lujnrecsi his renlut in
'ten Stents
i I ' ' iti si t 1 .1 til .! . .
rorn p. Veek'i VioUirif Horn'
- ; ' ir ) .. . . (, .... , , ,
. ... --TO
... f
!r r:fc -1 - t . . .....
,u ..THE :CAPE . VUAJUf
i" 1.
' ' -''.TO'COsn'TOUTAliD :''''
i-.Afi ' AND fiURcnnrp
For a Cheap DexaaxraUc Paper.
MIS CZLULXZO r.j.
Cheap and Reliabv
1 ,
,1. ?
y Mum ALWAYS
THE OAPE
FEAR,
A NEW .WIUUNliTti.N jol
Dcwtcd 10 the ms4rrUl,luWnii1
and iK.Iilksl Interest, of NurUi cn
tlna, U offered to the j!
. the cheap r&U of
10 CenU Teek, r 'M t
mtv t tr -f i. .... i
JL in a straightforward mmmTlLf jrl
dplesofapurc and msuly lrtDucW
Sute aud Country. In IU LamLle
111 upuoiu me usuncr unrurirj j -son,
carried .aloft Iv Jsrku and
proudly bornu by Tlldta. TU Cn K
will recojrulsc no (ll7rmk U-11 m
who fiffht the ttsttles afG.J j, it tea
huib-hsuded ltaliraliim latrrsrM 1
nl fiT tmtt sr n1 am.I
iU corrupt hold on the same. Br slxv-J
. . .... 1 1 ...1 . . - r . . I
try' Liberty and the JnsHmaUe Eda
the People are Democrats. To tin.
Cafe Fear will ever xk alia ibt t
of reason and affreUtm. In thrftVLl
Vxrz rzkU wni ever be fuoaj ct
The new ieriil jrlve rm ran
tgementto the sjCTlcultursl, 'tulzktu
tnauufacturlxur Interests of the Suk. 1
will unre Immhrration. But a LDe I f.
extend the hand of welcome to tie rrt
foreigner or other immhrrsnt. It ZH
to impress upon the iwjJe slrrsify Vt
thi necessitjr for revnomy, thrift. Utaa
fldcITty to home and State. NorA CW
tuans mast build up Sorxh t
' la pm-rmlnr eertsin iMtmlu Vuse
Features the Caie Teak U shiafft
coutemporarie. No AuKrksn cU2j r
paper places orpins! fiction htiftrT
fore its readers except In the Uu
satkmal Intelllcmce. ftorW t tW t
tit tirttH tf4il . nA unJl -! k
found occumin a hort spsce Is lu OS
Fear. The literary natter of U
will, howrrrr. alwsis be abur4k'.
V '
me dcwt.
Brevity and CocTmUncr, Antrrj
rmrUslitr mlin Icadinjf rUrsVfwM
or the InteUlciiice I-irtnimtufti'"t
Fear. Tlu-nra c.f Ihe dir. Ctt.t
and f ienem!. will be ie-fitrtl U tbf
esx. coDrUei and CKt sUrsrui e jr
slble. tullr lh Imtorlaut oe
printed cm the flrrt I'tilt
nomlnslksi we Include the Market
and River snd Msrine luU HSffnrf. J
matters srr too fmjunitly rn'4,
msll trpr tn a corner. The C
News wfll be ran fully eocnpilM
rvctea.
00
SUBCKIPTION RATE?-
ThebMU! eithrr the ri
year. The CAre Fear 01 I
st Ten CenU t-r rek. One frIZ
Twenty.Flve CenU for Three VivO
D.IIsrs and Firty CrnU f
by Carrier fa the CMy or Sotsj-
has been pfepaid. CoUectiotu fJfJJ
xrr eTCTj week, -
for a longer time than a week svaA
who does not rr for It ifucnpw-
b the word.
TERMS OK ADVKT1M5
Are fireu la anowrr p'1- ' Vpr. 1
taide espertsily reasoosblf, JTi
W th the times. Contracts caa t
prj UbersJ termj for sltrrtictf.
Address, ,
octL5tf