Newspapers / The Cape Fear (Wilmington, … / Nov. 30, 1876, edition 1 / Page 2
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CAPE FEAR. WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOV 9, 1876 NATIOXAL, i)EMOCKATIC PLAT, FORM, ADOPTED AT ST.1XUI?; 1810. We, the delegates 'of the Democratic party of the United SUte, in national convention assembled, do hereby declare the administration of the Federal Govern ment to be In urgent need of Immediate reform ; doliereby enjoin upon the nomi nee of tlua' Convention and of:the Demo cratic party in each State, a zealous effort and co-operation, to this end, and do hereby appeal to our fellow -citizens of every former jjolltlcal connection to .undertake with tw this flrft and , mofct pressing patri otic duty for the Democracy of the whole eountrv. .:.","'..' We do here rcafllrm .our faith iu the ir manency of the pAleral Union, our devo tion to the Constitution of the United State, with its. amendments, universally accepted at a final settln entof the con troversies that engendered tae civil war, and do here record on rteadfat confidence in the perpetuity of republican elf-gov ernmtnt; in an "absolute "acquiescence in the will of the majority, the vital principle of the Republic ; in the eypremaey of the civil over the militarv authority ; iu the total separation of Church and State,' for the sake alike of civil and religious, free dom ; in the pquality o! all citizens before just laws of their own enactment ; in the liberty of individual conduct unvexed by sumptuary Jaws ; in the faithful education of the rhdug generation, that they may preserve, enjoy and transmit these ljcst conditions of human happiness and hope. We behold the noblest products of a hun idred year of chanceful history: but while upholding the bond of our Union and great charter of thee our rights, it behooves a free people to practice also that eternal vigilance which, is the price, ol liberty. T DEMOCRATIC KIXANCE DDIASDED. Wc demand a judicious system of prepa ration by public economies, by official re trenchraenls and by wihj finance, which shall enable the nation to assure the whole world of its perfect ability and perfect readiness to meet any of its promises at the call of the creditor entitled to payment. We believe such a system well devised, and above all, entrusted to comjetcnt hands for execution,' creating at no time an arti ficial warcity of currency, and at no time alarming the public mind into the with drawal of that vat-t machinery of credit by which i5 per cent, of all business transac tions are -crformcd a system open, jpub lic and inspiring general Coniidcm-c, would, from the day of adoption, bring healing on its wiugs to all our harassed industry, and set in motion the wheel of commerce, '.'manufacturer and the mechanical arts; re storei'mployniet. to labor and renew, in all its national Source, the jroepcrity oi the Koplc. ; KUOKM IX TAXATIOX. Reform .is .necessary in .the sum and mode of Federal taxation so that capital may be set; free from distrust and labor lightly burdened. We denounce the pre sent taritt reyicd ujMiii nearly five thousand articles as a materpirce of injustice, m.e quality .and . false pretence. ' It yields a dwindling,' not a yearly rioing revenue.' It has hnpoV erf shed many industries to sub sidize a feV; it prohibits imports that might purchase the products of American labor; U has degraded American commerce, from the -lirnt to iu interior rank upon the high seas. It 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 people. It costs the people live times moie than it produces to the treasury, obstructs the processes of production, and wastes the' fruits of labor. ; It promotes fraud and foster smuggling, enriches dishonest offi cials and bankrupts honest merchants. We demand that all customhouse taxation shall be only for revenue. KETUENCIl'MrXT IX EXPENSE. Reform id necessary In the scale of pub lic expense, Federal, State and municipal out of Federal taxation has swollen from M,(0,WO, gold, hi m to 8150.000,000, currency, In 1870. Our aggregate taxation was from $184,000,000., goUL in I SCO, to $rd(),000,(KX), currency, in 1870, or in one decade less than $ per head to more than ?1S per head. Since the peace the people have paid to their tax-gatherers more than thrice the sura of the national debt, and more than twice, that sum for the Federal government alone. We demand a vigor ous frugality in every department and from every ofllcer of the government. - WASTE OF THE VfULIO LANDS. Reform is 'necessary to put a stop to the 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 uion railroads alone. and out of more than thrice that aggregate nas disposed ol less than a sixth directly to tillers of the soil. CHRISTIAN CITIZENS ANI HEATIIEN CHI '-' t ' -'.;' XESE. ,. ' Reform is necessary to correet the mis takes of thciRepublican Congress and t he errors of our treaties, and our diplomatic relations which have stripped our adopted citizens of foreign birth and kindred race rccrossing the Atlantic of the shield ol American citizenship, and have ejrposed our bn-thrcn; of the .Pacific coast to the incursions of a race, not sprang 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 dOving German and tolerates, the revival of the Coolie trade fn Mongo Ran women imported for immoral pur poses, and Mongolian men hired to per form servile labor contracts, and demand such modification by Congress within a constitutional limitation, as shall prevent the further importation or immigration of the Mongolian race. . , ' KEFOltM IS THE QAMPAIOX ISSyE. Reform Ja hecce$arj and c$fc')er' bjv effected but by making it the controlling issue of the election, lifting it above the two false issues with which the office holding class: and the party in power seek to smother it; The, false issus with which they would 'enkindle sectarian' strife in respect to the public 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 maintaiu with out partizanry or .preference for any class, ect or creed, and without contributing from the Treasury to any the false issue by which they seek to light anew the dying embers of sectional hatred between kin dred people, once unnaturally estranged, but now reunited In one indivisible Repub lic and a common destiny. REFORM IX THE CIVIL SERVICE. Reform is necessary in the civil service. Experience prove that the efficient, eco nomical conduct the governmental bus iness is not possible if its civil service be subject to change at every election Le a prize fought loY at the ballot-box be a brief reward of party zeal, instead Of posts of houor, assigned for proved competency and held for fidelity in the public ernp.ot tnent. That the dispensing of patronage should neither be a tax upon the time of all our public men nor the instrument of tneir ambition. Here again profession falsified la the performance, attest that tfie party in power ean wows ou. no pracucat or aalutary rerorni. i v , ttrremv 'i AMOXfl THE HIGHEST Reform Is necessary even more in the hirihei irrailes of nubile service- President; Vice-President, Judges, Senators, Repre sentatives, Cabinet officers. These officers, and others in authority, are the people's servant. Their offices are not a private Uft: tf .ev are a nubile trust. Ueii the annal-j of this Republic show, the d is m-ace and censure of a Vice-President; a late Speaker of the House of Representa tives marketing els rulings as a preMumg j officer; their friends profiting secretly by their votes as la-makers: five chairmen of the leading" committees of the late House of Representative? ex'ioo.-d in jobbery; a late Secretary of the Treasury forcing balances in the public accounts; a late. Attorney General misapprdpriating public 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 for a dishonorable speculation ; the President's private secre tary ;barcly escaping, conviction upon trial for -guilty" complicity in frauds upon the revenue ;' a Secretary of War impeached for high crimes, and confessed misde meanors the demonstration is so com plete that the first step in reform must be by the people, or honest men from another partv. the disease of one political organ ization infests the body politic and thereby making no "change of men or t party, we can get no change of measures and no reforms. ' Rr)tCAlJb-A.M RADICALISM ' lir!T BE ,.' .DRIVEX FROM POWER. Ml these abuses, wrongs and crimes- the -product of the sixteen years ascend ancy of the Republican party create a neewsltv for reform, confessed by Repub licans themselves. But their reformers arc voted down in convention and dis placed from the Cabinet. The mass of honest voters is powerless to resist the eihtv thousaud office-holders its leaders and guides. f Reform can only be had by a jeaceful, civic revolution. We demand a change of evstem: a hmgeof administration; a changeof parties, that we may have a change ol men. THE STATB.GOVEKXMHVr. Names of. Officers. execttive department (iovenior Curtis H. Brogden, of Wanie Lieutenant Governor R. M. Armfield, ofln-dell. Secretary of State :W. H. Howertoii, of Wake. Treasurer J). A. Jenkins, of (iaston. Auditor John Reilly, of CJumberland Attorney General T. L. Hargrove, of Granville. - Aijutiint. General John CyGorman, of Wake. SirtKMintendout of Public-Instruction-John Pool, of Pasquotank. Governor's Private Secretary John B Ncathery, of Wake. . JITjICIART department. Cli iff J. iticc Supreme Court Richiuoud M. Pearson, of ladkin. Associate J'ustiees Edwin (J ltead'v. of Beaufort; W. B. Rodman, of Beaufort; Thomas Settle, of Rockiugham; W. P. Bvnum, of Mecklenburg. ClVrk of Supreme Court W. U. Bug-i ley. ot Wake. . Mai!uil D .A. Wicker, of Wake, f . I OJtitcrs of the Municipality ol Wii- ; mington. Mayor W. P. Canada v. Aldermen T. M. Gardner, J. J. Casti deyjB. G.-Bates, J. H. Neff, R. C. Myers, Hiram Ilankins', col., Duucau Holmes, eol.j W. if. liiewiugton, col., W. H. Banks, col.'.- . Clerk and Treasurer T. C. Servoss. Chief 'f Fire Department Roger Moore. 1 ' fl'eder.il Ofuciais. Collector of Cus'toms Joseph C. Abbott. Deputy Collector !1. W. Chadwiek. Pbstmast;-r F.. R. Brink. ejvv Hanover County (ioverniueul. Clerk of the Superior Court and Judge of probate James Ilea ton. . Sheriff S. II. Manning. Commissioners J. G. .Wagner, Dela ware Nixo::, col.-, Stacy VanAmringe, D. ('. D:iis. idgister of 'Dcwls (u. W . liordcMiix, eol.; - Treascrer E. J. Hewlett. Cnro;:or Ed. Hewlett. ; MISCELLAXEOVS. TltE 'SEWS ASD COUIUE1 A Iiic Newspaper. The .'News andCoiuier is publis'ned at ' . 1 . t-'JLUiLEHTOX, S. V. and has three editions Daily, Tri-w eekly : and Wccklv. '-T'EKM.-OE.TUE XEV.S. AND COURIER. DaiS.y Edihon, by iuail, o.tc ;ta,; 10; ;TriWeekl- Edition, pbli?d on Tiusdayg, -Thurfdnyx ami .Saturday, one yean. &; six i,nuth, o0, payable iri tidrn fee. WKt.KXv EoiTIox, p.Misted o 117(7,,- t.jZys.:,nc gear, Mx month, 1 rio, 1 p!i&U' in adeante. . RIQRDAN, DAWSON & CO., Prop're, ' ' FJ Broad street, Charleston, S. C. nov S-tf THE BIBLICAL RECORDER : V PUBLISHED BV KinVAKD BROUGI1TOX & CO. ; ' RALEIGH, N. C REV. C. T. BAILEY, Editr. REV, J. 1). HUFHAM, Associate Editor. BEV. W, T. WALTERS, D. D., Agricul tural Editor. 5 OR GA S OF SOR TH CA R 0 LI SA BAPTISTS. In its Forty-First Year. Every Bapthl Should Tate Jt. As an Advertising Medium Unsurpassed Only 2 10 per Tear. 1 Address , -I.'BIBLICAL RECORDER4 Raleign,v.C. TT MTSCELLAXEOTJSr 1 i THE BALTIMORE SUtt Publishedjdarij-(except Sandy), at fcft Sun Iron Building, Southeast jCorner of Ba'.timore and South streets; by A. 8. A'BELi & Co. " ' Prices for Jfaflinj : Single cipy. three cents ; one month, fixtj; cent; two monwst ' one collar: -taree months, one dollar arid ' fifty" cents tlx .-... . j mouth-, tlirie dollars ; 1 yearilsix dlars. Pctage prepaid at the office by the pnb- lishers. ' 1 "; . . . ! No iaper . , . bent longer than paid for. THE WEEKLY XUS. One dollar aud a half a year and $1 for six months, with Great -inducements to uov 7-t f CLUBS. ' ' TO POSTMASTERS A- SEWS DEALERS. THE NEW YORK HERALD. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. The Hail v Edition of the Herald Is conceded to be the "Greatest News paper of the age," both in point of cir culation and popularity. PaUisbod Every Day in the Year. POSTAUK FREE. $10 pays for one year, Sundays in cluded. , $8 pavs for one Year, without Sun days, j $.) pavs for six uioius, Sundays in cluded. , . $4 pays for six .months, without Suu- davs. s'v ; 2- pavs for one year for uhy peci fied day of the week. $1 pavs for six months for any spe cihed dav ot the week. $1 pays for one month, Sundays in cluded. WE PUBLISH NO SEMI Ott TRI WEEKLY EDITION". THE WEEKLY UEltAED, POSTAGE fkek. ' One copy, one year. $2. Two copies $3. Four copies, $5. Any larger number at $1.25 per copy: "We will receive from Postmasters and Newsdealers yearly subscriptions for single copies of our Weekly a t 1:25, NEWSDEALERS SUPPLIED, rOSTAOK KItKK. Daily Edition, Two and a half cents per copy, except Sunday. Sunday Edition, Four cents per cop'. Weekly Edition, Three cents per copy. The Baltimore Gazette FULL OF FRESH SEWS! rpHE GAZETTE IS PUBLISHED eveky J morning (Sundays; excepted). Mail subseriptions, postage free, , , ," . $6 per Annum, In Advance, ; The WEEKLY GAZETTE is published every Saturday. Mail subscription, postage pai'L y ( 'SI per Annum, iu Advance. N subgeription to the Weekly received for less than a year. Address, THE GAZETTE. 100 Vv. Baltimore st.. Baltimore. . H1LLSB0R0 RECORDER, established 1820:: THi: OLDEST PAPER IN NORTH CAR- OLINA. , . rpilE RECORDER, APART FROM ITS J political merits, oirers superior Induce ments to the merchants of Wilminptou as a medium of ' advertising. It has 1 larrre and incrensiug circulation: in the counties of Orange, Alamance, Person and Caswel anp especially in those 6cetlons of Orange and Alamance- mpt closet v connected by the iutcrests of trade with1 XVilniington. Manufacturers will also profit by the growing spirit of agricultural improve ment, and the tendency, to the adoption of labor-saving machinery, to reach the eyes and ears of a large and intelligent class of readers through the medium of the Re corder. Address J. D. CAMERON, nov 4 Ed. & Prop'r, Hilleboro; N. C. TN EVERY COUNTY IN NORTH CAR X olina. Active men can find profitabl employment in canvHudng for 8ubecrl- bers to - i - . .' - THE OBSERVER. Price of the Daily j,er safium 6 ud Price ofthe Weekly per annum r. go Very Rberal commissions allowed. Aadrcs Col. W. L, Saundehs' yilnuugton, N. C, untU November 10. Alt?r that date, " - THE OBSERVER, oct -tf Raleigh, N.C.! ASHE VILLE CITIZ ES A QUARTO WEEKLY PAPER GOOD ADVERTISING MEDIUM. THE CITIZEN IS A FAST FRIEND OF Vulmington. and has devoted much time and space to encuraging the growth "f bu,mc relations between thfcape tear and mountain regions. Send for rateV. -JiSLiiL r.Aaherjy.j;; W. A. Davis i' ' vT '- Editors and Prop't,, Burili' THE OXFORD TORCH-LIGHT, Circulation over 2.000 Cbpiea". J PrSf" Per Annum- Advance The Democratic Organ of GranrlUc. ! v LiJi' CAROLINA: Nobth CaUolixa Psesbttekiax, eekly. Cjlpe FjCABrtlaily (DeiuocraUc). Star, daily aud weekly (Democratic). . -, Ralcfeh: Cithitia.n .iuvtn.ATE, weekly, Mcthodt "Biblical Recosdek, weekly (Baptist). News, daily and weekly (Ucmocratk). Sextixel, weekly (Demorratie. ort:; Cakolixa (ixuTEMri.A, weekly (Temperance). ' Fuiexu or TnMPEirAxt'K, weekly. North Cakolixa Fakmek, weekly. Era, wetily (Radical). Charlotte : f OhsEJiver, daily aud weekly ( Democratic ) Democrat, weekly (Democratic). Soituekx Home, weekly (Democratic). . - ; (JreenK-ro : Patjhot, weekly ( Democrat le). New North State, weekly (Radical). Ashcville: Citizex, weekly (Dem;) Expositor, weekly (Deni.) Pioxeer, weekly (Radical.) Salisbury : Watciim ax, weekly (Dcm.) Examiner, weekly (Dcm.) Salem : Pkess, weekly (Dem.)! Wisifton: Sentinel, weekly (Dcm.) Statesville: La numakIv, weekly (Dem.) American, weekly (Dem.) Morgauton ; Blade, weekly (Dem.) Mt. Alp : Watcum i x, weekly (Dem.) Vimtok. weekly (Rad.) Hickory : Pkkss, weekly (Dem.) Liucoiutuii : Pkoukes, -weekly (Dem.) . Shelby: Bann3K. weekly (Dcm.) Danburv : Repoktett, weekly (Dcm.) Reidsville : . News, weekly (Dem.) Times ANp Meki iky, weekly (Dem.) Lcxingtdn : Recoud, V eekly (Dem.) ,.weeklj', (Rad Graham: GLE.VNEM.'wcikly (Dcm), , . HUlsboro: Rei:okdk, weekly (Dcm). Durham: Tobacco Plant, weekly (Dem). 'Herald, weekly (Dem.) Oxford: Tok'.-iimiit; weekly (Dem). . Warrenton: Gazette, weekly (Dcm). Cextesnial, wt-ckiy (D:m). Weldoii: . New , wmi-weelly (Dem). . ' Tarboro: Sor rnEKN-Eit, weekly (Dem). Rocky Mount: Mail, weekly (Dem). Toienol : Tkansckii-t, seral-monthiy(Frcewlll Bap . tit,) wuJoTu Advance, weekly (Dcm.) Zions LNDM:AHK,eini-monthly (Priud '". t:vcBaitU). " New ben i : Nutsuell, daily (Dcm). Nbwbekniak, semi-weekly (Dcm). Times, weekly (Rad). TYashlngton : Echo1, weekly (Dem.) What Next,, semi-weekly (Dcm). Elizabeth City:' Econuh 1st, weekly (Dem). Nortu Cakoli.niax, weekly (Rad). Goldsboro: MEssENOES,semi-wcekryfe weekly (Dcm). Maguolia: Recokd, weekly (Dem). Lumbertoty; Robesonion, weekly (Drm)i Fayette vllle: Gazette, weekly (Dem). Wiir Awake, weekly (Dem). ' . ' Rockingham: CockiEK, weekly (Dem.). Spirit or the South, weekly (Rad). Wadesboro: Herald, weekly (Dem), Polkton: AxoxiAK weekly (Dcm). . . , J, Monroe: . Enqvtkek, weekly (Den?,) Concord: ' Register, weekly (Dem)i ; . Scxjwoekjj (Dcm). xrsczr. laxfo us THE SOT I,, LEADING CHEAP NEWSPAPER IN THE WOULD! HKKillT, FKLMl. A U LE! 2-t?"llie New Vvik Jt i 5i per Aiuiuiu, i- theClicaptand Bc-t Dally Newpapvr in the United States ! Jdi-""Th DV?Ar Sum price j-1 -iJ per I annum. M(taceiid a :ineiap r ftTtht COUNTRY 1 And for tho-' who h.nc n h-iMip' dailv reading. Ad '.: THE SUN, NEW YORK. ct LVtf THE I'HILADELI'IIIA HUES A FJRST-CLASS ISDEPESD EST MORS ISC SEWS- . PAPER. A wlJlI'- THAT CAPITAL AND EN- terpri!v can accvtnpIUli will lc frcih i:i- ! ployed to maintain the h:h " repiit.itio:i univcrally accordi.nl to it, of lx-.'m; th- : ablest and Kr-t p:iH-r ever )4thlh.il in j Philadelphia. It cnit:i! all the laU-rt j uews, including t fie A.oc!at-l Pn ?T.!t grams. SjK'cial Tclegram-o au.lCorn-op.Hid-cmc from nil p-.iint .f i:;ter;.-t. full sud accurate Local Hcpon, m: I Fi'aric. IMi torial DLcu.iout or all Currtid Tp-. I: i.o a Ilrbt--LiH Live Ncw;.-r in ci ry r epect, fully dpia! to iln: !t publicised anywhere. The daily circulation ftht- 7i.vx ctvdn that of all I'm- P!:ila.lefphf.i Moniirtr papcru combined, villi ope exception. "Decidedly thebet newpaprrv rpuK lishcd lnl'hiladtJphla.-o-A'. Y. T,.Ut. "The ablest and lxt pajn-r iu PfdlaJcl dtlphia." X. Y. San. "The bctt jiajKr iu iViiiiiitnij. Spriutjjitbl Itrptibiicnii. Tehms, iui ludinu i.-i.i'4e. :! j r, or 50 cent a mmilfi. A.ldrc, THE TIMK. 7i:iChtt:iuiM.. VUIU'U- ocfJO-tf :pui. EUGENE L. HARRIS, ARTIST IN Crayon Portraits, SASSA ERAS FORK, S. t BEGS LEAVE TO CALL YoCR attention to hiti Portrait In Cr..on. Pcnoij! 111111 gio.l pk-tutt-5 of t :'!. aelve or dccriMd frfctid. can li-vo th"ii nicely pxeeu'ted by m j.-img Llm a ph u, graph to woik fniu. A koo I photoTi;l. is ncce.Kary to inrure a good l!kftic. Th( prices below include iKstae y u:ull, i. roller. A neat frame of walnut and :ril wUI be furnihcd to thoc who dctirc it at $1 Matt OU ,' "RICES : Size 14x17 inches Life Size (biut) 10 O TESTIMONIALS: "Mr. Harris 1 ! the ran: gilt o being able to dtlineate, accurately, from t. photograph or other pict ire the -ac likened of anv one. W p-iarantee ?afV faction." Oxford Leader. J We have kh-d U work, and roiio!,'-r it excellent. Try them." I Central Pro testant.1 "We have hctn aeap'tl ir trait of Hoc. A. W. Vtnable, by Mr. L Harri, tl.-t rcJlccta additional lu.t re 011 hU gci.iu Ir. that department." Torchlight. octLif 0 TEN CENTS Paya lor a Week's SubcripUvn To TUB CAli: l-EAP, NOW IS THE TIME TO COME FORWARD AND SUBSCRIBE For a .Cheap Democratic Parer. MISCELLAXi:ovs. Cheap and Reliaolo! IlHIMUATir ALW.WS THE CAPE PEAR,' A NEW U'h.;iNfiON -t;; iwi i-tl.ik-ul iu". -rft .'t N"."!ii t Iiu.-i.f :l r-l to ill ji?.-t- i the cheap rate f ID Cent a Ucck. r It. 'I HE CAPE ri.Ai: WILL ADViK'Air. in a o!rai;riitrT.;ird mjuuer ti it;i rtph-o .f a !u:e avd PiauJy Dt DiT:i.- hi tat and '.un'.rr. In it' hutnM- x.i ii ill tip!i.M the !i.!ir.j r ;:furJvd by .?-1.t. on, cnrrieil aloft -hv Ja kHi a:il l-h pp)i: lly In.nie Ly ni l-n. Tlir Capi I riu will rit.('n!.t i;o i:'.;fiTiire 1'turMi v5io slht th ba'.lo if t'i h" ! :iirh-h::n hsl R lio.i;i.4ii lutrfiiclil in la;-fotif xiura:il Vug to i.nfnu ti-'.rnn(! l:oJ 1 on t?se r 3 ii". It r wha'rt rr :.i'n ea!Il, th" !fc-fi-i I r f lh; t,'..uu. r. V Liln-riv an 1 th- Inali. r.a. R;U th- P.ttj.Je an IL i iora. To llir-tiu'; "ape Kr.w; wiiJ vt p.-.ik iih ti irn-.io..:i aul sti -r'.Utn. In lhrirL.htlf tAPK Feau illt-er 1- f.juaJ rvz- K-lSll. lI'fUH tit to the .i-ri lllt'irjl, liuiihl alii :!-.nur;i tuihirr intrrrt rf lw i . it i:i urrplpunlw.lm,. i:t whSV vil tt:d the ban ! .f inlmu? iJ .jur-h "ir-iiu r or other Initi.lrrr.t, it viil o Ii.ipre ujvm: tu- jxui :, alna lr I it V." ijtt ro it.v f..r c"'ii.:.y,l!;riii.laN.riiiJ 1 l'llty l'i lii.nia:: 1 ?.i . Ni.itli ..r-o-nbu muit i.uild up N tth CrKpi. In ii nttii - j j-itjia i riaiuivt, tla Cai i; I lu is Ua-1 i t U oiitcjiijviraritJ.. No Anterl.'! t:aJ! !- r pUr, n utizIvjI flciLn i.;aaunr If fore iu reader tikcvj.t ii th .rra of v a ! loual Iat Ui r.nrc. ;orl- fi.rlhe fu--ide, U.t!i ( Hil an I roni' Me, r found (c?-ujiyinr a i-icit aw iu tVl'p; Feui. T;.si::i.nry u.Atu-r of the -tr will, Lorry, r r. m Lv M-irili.td't( the no". , . - . . . Rteo . ar. C.rr 1,: . . nl li.ipartlj! t wiJii' Ti hr.'-t rl u l the Iiit- ;.L-( ii 1 -v: :. u; .ft!.cCu t 4j- '11 y, H.tc a K l If-' V.el , it : . i;d, -. i .. ! -1. ! 1.. ruj.!! l!r I I !l ti. 1.;-:,. 1 ? :tf m . 'a c pr, ;.. aa 1 .ia!t o;asJ :,o . Cm J r i. d- 1. .. f,.. '., 1 -T I .li.ri;: P: f i'" ur.. m h '!! t' 1 f.e.' .r.I'v r.'i"l i-a -(itii.' C"ou.rri-1 N'. ns a ran:..;:. , .j 1 r. re : I ' ULCRIPTlON RATES. l.i-t -i io (itli.-r . t;ie tl 'xr. ih-Cii'E h.iu tit;l u n;n t. -i it Ti;i Ci-uti h r rk. Ot.e U,'.',r ul fwet.ir.l t'.n'o f r'ilir.1- M u.t!i. T .i!r- t iily C i.t- f4.r Mr Mai'h ii. 1 1 1..- i.i:.r. .r O.ij Y(r. Ixlp.irtd e. Carri- r iu the City or Ju1jri. N ,,f cut by nail tilde the lif rt'Jv ta t--cti prcpal-L Coll cvt Jor; tumU 1) -r-i- r vt ry ck, aul t ia; r deli ered or a longir time than a wcrk to arj te vho doin wA ;y t;T it prosi;!.. 'Vh 1 lie orL I TERMS OF ADVERnSINC Am giteu La aiot. r Th ' ra.Ie t-;.VaIly r-a uat-I-, ifi Vee;txi w ?h the tiroe. Contra can rTt-d oa liberal terra f r a-!r rti-r. Add row, -T1IH CAIT. I'M ii!. ozl$S WujiiicToy, N. C
The Cape Fear (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 30, 1876, edition 1
2
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