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y i ifiura .WILMINGTON, N. C, FRIDAV, JULY 14 1876. XUE WILJllSIGTOS JOVKNAL. ratly and Weeklf. Terin of subscription Ca.au in Advance. The Daily Journal, is mailed to sub scribers at Six dolt:a.bs per annum; TlfBKR JJCiLLAES AND TWKSTY-FIVK cests for six montbs; Osk dollar and bevknty-fivk CKPTS for three montbs. The Weekly Joitrnai. is mailed to subscribers at One dollar asd a half per annum; One dollar for six montbs; Fifty KNrsfor three montlis. ADVERTISING HATES' . Advertisements will be inserted in the Daily Joubnai. as follows: For one inch one insertion bkventt-fivk cents; two Insertions one dollar; three insertions ONE DOLLAR AND TWENTY-FIVE CENTS; one week'TWO dollars; one month six DOLLARS AND A jHALFJ three moPtliS FIF TEEN dollars; six months twenty-five DOLLARS. TO CGRHESrONDENTS. Desiring to make the Journal the mouthpiece of the people, the. Editor cor dially invites correspondence from all por tions of the State. For President : Samuel J. Tilden, OF NEW YORK. For Vice-President: Thomas A. Hendricks. OF INDIANA. For Governor : Zebulon B. Vance, OF MECKLENBURG. For Lieutenant-Governor : Thomas J. Jarvis, OF PITT. I'or Secretary of State: JOSEPH A. EN'JtELIIARD, Of New Hanover. For 'Attorney. General: THOMAS S. KENAN, Of Wilson. For Treasurer: j.IM. worth, Of Randolph. For Antlitor: SAMUEL Ii. JLOYE, Of Haywood. For Supt. of Public Instruction: J. C. SCARBOROUGH, ,Of Johnston. Presidential Electors for'5the State at Large DAS I KL O. FOWLE, of Wake. .J. M. LKACH, ot Davidson. District Electors- 2diIietrictlwlIN F.WOOTKM.of Lenoir 3,1 ' ,IN. I. STANFORD, of Duplin 4th " F. H. HUSBBE, of Wake, r.th " K. O. KOBBINS, of Davidson, cth " . r. WAKINO, of Mecklenburg 7th " W.B. OLF.NN.of YaUkin.; O K CONCHUSS. i'firiRD district: f ALFRED M. WADDELIi, Of New Hanover. fourth district: JOSEPH J. DAVIS, Of Franklin. fifth district : ALFRED H. SCALES, Of Rockingham. srxTir district: W ALTER uL. STEELE, Of Richmond. SEVENTH DISTRICT: ' WILLIAM M. ROBBINS, KOf Iredell Pli;i,TlS(i THE STATE EXECU TIVE CO?l M IT'l'E E. Rooms Central Executive Com., ) Dem. Conservative Party, Raleigh, July 8, 1876. ) The District Executive Committee men, who, with the Central Execu tive Committee, composo the State Executive Committee, are requested to meet in this city Friday, 14th in Btant, to consult in regard to matters of importance to the party. They will pleasetegard this aa an official notifi cation. Wm. R. Cox, Chm'n. S. A. Ashe, Secretary. PABTV OUUANIZATIUN. At a meeting of the Central Execu tive Committee of the Democratic party it was Resolved 1. That the Chairman of each County Executive Committee be requested to report to the Secretary of this Committee the name and post- office address of each member of the game. 2. That each member of the several Congressional Committees be re quested to report his name and ad dress in like manner; and also to take notice that he is ex -officio a member of the State Executive Committee. 3. That this committee urgently calls on the Conservative people of North Carolina who favor reform in State nd National affairs to form without delay Tilden and Vance clubs in their respective to'wnships or neigh borhoods; and the officers of all such clubs are requested to report their names to the secretary of this commit- t00 4. That the Democratic papers throughout the State be requested to publish the above resolutions. W. R. COX, Ch'rm'n, 5. A. Asbb, Secretary. Absenteeism seems to be epidemic in the Grant family of late. The old man took several chances ai it and won every time notably the other day when he was absent from Phila delphia on Centennial day. And then, too, Fred was absent from his com mand when the gallant Custer fell. But then you see Fbkd was at home playing with his new baby. So that when Custer and the others got killed Fred only got promotion. Custer's massacre' or something else has caused Fred to be a first Lieutenant. But what does a youth care for promotion from one lieutenancy to another when he is already enjoying by brevet the rank and pay of Lieutenant Colonel ! And such is soldiering when a man happens to be President Grant's son! Economy aud the people's rale is -what North Carolina needs to make her. prosperous once more. We can not get these unless the proposed -amendments shall be ratified. Let na go to wprk, then, in earnest. (Ldiumii E . t . . . jmtnmi WHAT DO THIS AnENDHlEKTU j PROPOSE I The Canby Constitution, though it must have ever been a symbol of their subjugation and humiliation, might have been submitted to by the people of North Carolina, had it not been in itself, snob a fruitful source of so many intolerable evils; in a word if the office holders had not possessed all "the power and the people none. The evihj growing out of it, however, were so great and so many from its very be ginning, that the people have unceas ingly clamored for their removal. Bnt it was not until 1873 that any relief was had. Much more was still needed, however, for the machinery of our government was still complicated,- still cumbersome and still ex pensive, and it officers were "Still clothed with powers that were excess ive, exhorbitant, hurtful, oppressive and corrupting. The executive and judicial officers were still masters and the people and their Legislature were still servants and still helpless. Sala ries and offices were still multiplied beyond all control to the gross op pression of our people. To restore to the people their right ful rnle, to secure an economical ex penditure of their hard-earned money, to strip the officeholders of their op pressive power,- further changes had to be made in the Constitution. To bring them, about, a Convention, called in accordance with the Consti tution, assembled in Raleigh in 1875 and proposed various amendments which, if ratified, will make the peo ple once more masters and not ser vants in North Carolina. All the changes, that may be necessary,, are now, by the proposed amendments, put within easy reach. They all seek to restore power to the people, and to secure a careful, economical expendi ture of their money. The day that we have looked for so eagerly during all these long, weary years of reconstruction, is at last nigh at hand. If the people wish, they can once more get their own government into their own hands, for the amend ments simply propose to restore them to power. The question now is whether the people of North Carolina can be trusted with the government of North Carolina. We think they can. If the amendments be ratified, it is plain, so plain that he who runs may read, that the people will be rulers and the office holders will be servants, and thit the cast iron Canby Constitution can no longer crush us to the earth. For eight long years the withering, blight ing curse of the venomous viperous brood of carpet baggers and scalla- wags who controlled the Convention of 1868 has rested upon the State, but it can now. no longer remain there without our consent. What say the people ? SLall these amendments be ratified, shall the people rule? That is the issue bofore us and upon its decision hangs the fate of North Carolina. In this fight the people of North Carolina fight not for mere partizan success, but for their very lives, their liberties and their property, and not only for them selves but for generations yet unborn. In our judgment if the, amendments shall ba ratified, the strifes and con tentions that have so long afflicted us in North Carolina will oome to an end and a new and better era of peace and good government will dawn .upon us We believe this because the great V fundamental principle underlying 'all the amendments is the restoration of power to the people and an economical expenditure of their money and be cause we believe the people can be trusted. Eight years of the rule of Radical office-holders have served only to strengthen our old love for the rule of the people. To be prosperous in North Carolina, power must be taken from the few and given to the many, must be taken from the office-holders and restored to the people. The people and not their rulers must be supreme. And this the amendments provide for. CUSTER. The story of Custer and his command may not be passed by in silenoe, nor may their just tribute be withheld from men who fell as they fell. A gallant chieftain who had hith erto met with no defeat was stripped of his command and sent into the fight as a subordinate, to execute a part, to carry out a detail. when he should have matured the plan and directed the whole. The result is known. General Terry, the man who superseded Custer, came upon the tragic scene enly in time to learn from their mu tilated, naked and ghastly dead bodies, the terrible fate of his late subordinate and his entire command. There they lay, the chivalrous gallant Custer, him to whom during four years Southern bullets and Southern sabres brought neither fear nor hurt; his two brothers and his nephew, his sister's son; there, too, lay the brother of his wife; there, too, lay the bodies of near two hundred officers and men of his devoted command, the gallant Seventh Cavalry. It was a terrible story that was told by those mute lips. Each gaping wound too had its story to tell. It was a story of bravery that will be repeated again and again, as long as the world shall last, for Custer and his braves are now immortal. We care not now that the man won his first laurels fight ing the armies of the South. We re member not now that for four years he warred against us in bloody battle. We remember no longer in bitterness for him.the blpody fields that come back to us strewn with the dead bodies of friends and kinsmen, dear comrades all, though many of them fell before Custer and his command; for in the contemplation of the sublime courage and superb heroism of the fatal ground even jet covered with gore, every feel ing disappears save one of reverent admiration. Custer fought and fell under the Federal flag, but the best and bravest of those who for four years fought against it, may proudly greet not merely as foemen worthy of their steel, bat as brethren worthy of their love, men who have thus- glori ously illustrated the courage and man hood of a common race and a common country. But if we ax6 Lost in admiration for the noble dead, what shall we say of the ignoble living ? Scarce was the dead Custer buried out of sight before the living Terry began to plot how he might make wreck of his'good name and fair fame; seeking to bury in one grave the body of the man and the reputa tion of the soldier. The uncivilized savage sought only his enemy's life, fox Cvsteb's body was. w raatilated, but the oivilized Tkrby seeks his dead comrade's honor as well, and tries to put upon him blame, that if deserved, must blast his reputation forever as a soldier. Bat'can the living Txrby thus s ive himelf by ,he sacrifice of the dead Cu3TKb! We think not. . There has been a fatal blander but who com mitted it? Ou what dingle point has Terry's plan been successful ? True so far as appears, he imputes blame only to the gallaut young General who lies dead among the hills of Montana Bat it is a vain task. ' The age, the race and the country that could pro duce Cctsteb and his gallaut band oan not but write their names high upon their most honored monument i while casting into contemptuous oblivion and with merited execrations, the'name of Terry. What has Crook done, what has GiBBax done, ' what has Terry himself done ? Can Terry boast any- thiugsave that he still breathes the breath of life? And yet the dead Cus- ter must bear the blame ! But so it will not be, unless indeed all the man hood of the age died wit j tha gallant Custer and his gallant band. The story of this great slaughter is unknown, save that there was no sur render there and that death and death alone, the death of the last man of our race stopped, the fight. If blame be longed to any of the glorious dead, common decency oaght to have prompted the inglorious living to bury in a soldier's grave the soldier's error rather than the soldier's reputa tion. THE CAMPAIGN PBOKHESilESi VANOE TO HE IN II.1LEIUU! Governor Vancb is not disappoint ing the just expectations of the party. It was thonght, and as the sequel proves, it was rightly thought that if Vance was nominated for Governor, he would make the most thorough and energetic canvass over witnessed in this State. He has been in the Pm-d not yet thirty days and the election is near four months off, and he has al ready made four speeches in as many different places. At Raleigh, at Char lotte, at Concoid and at Albemarle in Stanly county, his well known voice has been heard in defence of the principles of the party whose acknowl edged leader he is. There is no such word as fail in Vance's dictionary, and he believes in regular, constant, bard work. From now until November be will be earn est, active, zealous and patient in the great work of organizing victory. He is now just getting into har ness good. He said before the nomi ination that he would "work any where," and he was put "in the lead" and the way he is settling down for a steady four montbs pull shows that he was hitoaed exactly right in the Democratic team. We are glad to learn as we do from the Raleigh papers that Governor Vancb will make a formal opening of the campaign in that place on next Friday, the 14th, by an address to the Tildbn and Vance Club. Everybody is cordially invited to attend. All the nominees on our State ticket are ex pected to be present and a rousing good time is promised. Weareglad to see too, that the sugges tion tnat the candidates on our State ticket meet in Raleigh at an early day and agree upon a programme for the campaign is to he carried out. The call for the meeting of the State Exec utive Committee, published in another column, is also a step in the right di rection . The Committee and the gen tlemen named on our State ticket, coming as they do from all sections of the State, will Le able to arrange the general outlines of the plan of campaign speedily and . intel ligently. Systematic and organized effort is what wa want and what we must have if we would elect our ticket. The field of operations is a large one, for there are ninety-four counties in . the State and there ought at least to be one speech from some member of the State ticket made in eaoh county in the Sttite if we would bring out a full vote and upon bringing out a full vote depends the result. The time has now come when we must get to work. TUB VNITEUIIfY. A private letter from President Bat tle of the University states that Professor Redd has " just purchased several thousand dollars worth of very fine apparatus for instruction inchem try and physics just imported from Europe. In . consequence of this, he 8ays'the boys will be ready to analyse soils for our peopleby the fall." After seeing the session, which opens ou Friday next, ; fairly started and in good working order, it is Mr. Battle's purpose to deliver addresses in middle and western North Carolina, showing what the University can and will do for the edaoatioual interests of the State. Latr in the year, daring the fall some time, Mr. Battlb will deliver a special address in this city illustrative of the great events in her history and the actors therein and showing their intimate connection with the history of the University. Bi;iLUIl; AND LOAN ASSOCIA TION AND THE SUPREME COURT. We learn from the Raleigh News that the Supreme Court of the State has decided in Building and Loan Association case that the Association is entitled to receive the money ad vanced with six per cent, interest thereon, giving to the borrower or redeemed shareholder credit for' all sums he has paid either as- interest, dues, fines or otherwise. A GOOD NOMINATION! Milton Chronicle. J The Conservative Convention of Person county nominated Montford McGehee, Esq.; for the House of Rep resentatives. Old Person will have able representatives in the next. Legis lators in the persons of Messrs. Mc Gehee and Cunningham, in the event they are elected. Men so well fit to represent an intelligent constituency, should have no opposition. Let old Person give them a unanimous vote. From the Piedmont Press. Mr. Linney of Alexander tells us of an old man in Wilkes county who has been a Radical ever since the war. He asked the old gentleman the other day how he would vote this year, and the reply was; "Well, Pre. been voting with the Radicals a good while bnt wil have to leave them now, for I got in the habit of voting for Vance before the wax and now we need him again. 2eb in my man," rilE PEOPLE AJAI1" THE OFFICE-HO I.DKU. The Convention, that was called to propose amendments to the Constitu tion rat and adjourned after a session of thirty working days. Numbered among the things of the past, it is now for evermore powerless both for good and for evil. Its work is done and the fruit of its labors oiay be summed lip ia the brief but comprehensive decla ration that at a;omparatively small cost it has put it in the power of the people of North Carolina henceforth to gov ern themselves. If the people desire to .regain the power to shape and fashion their gov ernment according to tueir own will and pleasure, all they have to da is to go to the polls in November next and vote in favor of the ratification of the amendments. Aud this with all it im plies, that is to say, the people's rul and an economical expenditure of their money .comes of the Convention of 1875. ' The apprehensions of friends favor able to constitutional reform, but fear ful less the movement that led to the Convention might be a hazardous po litical experiment and the slanders of enemies hostile to any change that promised to free the people from the burden of the cast-iron Canby Consti tution, have alike proved groundless. The question now is, not whether the Convention ought to have been trusted to change the Constitution, but whether the people of North Carolina can be trusted with the government of North Carolina It was the purpose of the Canby Constitution to take from the people the power to govern themselves. It is the purpose of the proposed amend ments to restore to them that power, and in the amplest manner, it was the purpose, we repeat, of the Con vention that framed the Constitution to fasten upon the people at North Carolina a government that lor years to come they would be unable to change, and bo has said one of the most influential as well as one of the most unworthy members of that Con vention. How suocessfuliy that pur pose was carried out is shown by the fact that to-day after eight years of persistent effort, we have still to undo their infamous work, have still before us the task of freeing the people from the power of the officeholders. But we are now, thanks to the Con vention, no longer helpless. If the Canby Constitution remains unchanged it will be because the people of North Carolir.a deolare at the polls' that they desire it to remain unchanged. If it be not changed now no man in North Carolina may say that its provisions do not represent the will and the wish of the people in North Carolina. Which is the better for our State, the cast-iron Cauby Constitution and the rule of officeholders, or the amend ments and the rule of the people ' Let the people speak out. The power to do so at the ballot box is placed in their hands by the proposed amend ments. xney must speaK out now or hereafter hold their peace. THE IIEKAEO 4NO THE HAITI UII RIOT. And now we shall have no end of advice and lecturing from outside parties arguing from a purely political standpoint about the Hamburg "out rage." It has. come to be quite the usual and entirely the correct thing for both friend and foe to belabor the white people when ever a collision oc curs between thrm and the negroes, and not unfreqnently this sort of talk is strong just in the degree to which the quarter from which it comes is free from danger from negro violence. Of course such affairs as the Hamburg riot wili do us very great harm aud if often repeated will cause our defeat in the coining n ational election. But while he iecognise this as true. We are quite well assured that white men iu South Carolina recognise the fact as well as we, and for this reason if for no other would not wantonly and causelessly put in jeopardy tire high hopes for a better and a purer government that they in common with us all look for ward to as the result of the present campaign. As was to have been expected, the New York Herald did n."t stop to take breath before it commenced to abuse us and to. lalk for Hayes. It happens now to see an argument for Hayes wherever it happens to cast its eyes. Let us keep cool and not lose our heads. If one Hamburg riot can lose us our oauso it was lost before. We commend to the great New York luminary the comments of the Balti more Sun upon its couise. It says: This is the second time within a short period that the Herald has gone off at half cock against the "Southern white men," without waiting, till it heard the full particulars. If it were disposed to bo fair and just, the fact that the tim has now arrived when there is a demand in republican inter ests for the manufacture of Southern outrages should induce it to be cau tious. The Southern people are aware that this election is a critical' season for them, and the reason a 1 bio pie sumption is that an intelligent instinct of self-preservation would induce them even if inclined to " outrages," to ob serve strict abstinence during this presidential eleotion. SENSIBLE TALK, The Monroe Enquirer has a happy way of saying the right thing at the right time. We commend what it said to its readers in its last issue to the readers of the Journal. It said: "Let every man in the State from this time till the election in November labor for the success of our State tick et. No effort should bu omitted to elect it by a rousing majority. We have a wily and unscrupulous foe to deal with; and the host of the revenue swindlers and bung-starters will be active in'attempting to coerce many in to supporting the Radical nominees by threats of prosecutions in the Fed eral courts. Every man has some in fluence in his neiohborhood and let him work and not wait for his neigh bor to begin. Organization and ac tivity are all that is necessary fo re deem this State aud place it in the hands of men who administer the gov ernment in the true spirit of reform and economy." If the amendments Bhall be ratified a regular session of the Legislature cannot cost more than $11,000 for pay for its members. Heretofore the ave rage cost of regular sessions since 1868 has been ever $101,000 for each session. Is $60,000 in the cost of a single session of the Legislature worth saving these hard times ? If so let tha amendments be ratified. The re cords show what we say is true. nit. KiiNGSHUK v.s ix' un All- I OUES. A correspondent of the Raleigh Neu8, writik g from Oxford, describes the (wleliratiou iu that place ou the dUi iuaf.. as unprei edrt ltt'd before or ; inw the war. Speaking of Mi. Kingsbury effort, it StlJR. The i veut of the dv. however, wan the address of T. B. Kingsbury, Emi., the choHcn orator of the occasion. Mr. Kmasbur.-: ketchjd the history of Granville e muty and many of its distinguished citizens from the fi st Htsltlemeut. llo spoke for two hours and forty-nvo minutes, though ho did not veutnre to repeat all Jus maim- script which would have -consumed four hours ;u its delivery, ihe ad dress added greatly to tiie reputation of its author aa a gentleman of ability and skill in the handling of historical data. It was a production showing great rsarch iu garnering up impor tant facts relative to a past age, and presenting them in terse and felicitous Euglieh. To charnctoriza tha address as au able one does not do it full jus tice. It was so well conceived, so judiciously arranged, and so full of in struction that it was the theme of much commendation, particularly among tue more intelligent portion ot the immense audience. Occasionally, too, interspersed with passages of wit aud eloquence that drew forth hearty and spontaneous applause. The summary if not contemptuous ejectment of Governor Jewell from the Federal Cabinet is one of the first fruits of the St. Louis Convention, Had not President Cirant aud his po litical advisers felt assured that all hope of carrying Connecticut was gone the favorite son of the Radical party in that State would never have been treated witu such indignity. It will be remembered that a week had not passed since Governor Jewell had formally declare 1 his pnrpose to re main in the Cabinet until after the 4th of March when the new administration will take charge. Now, if it were not for Tilden Con necticut would not in Radical sight seem such assure! Democratic ground. If any man Inn doubted the wisdom of the nomination made at St. Louis, let him ponder the action of President Grant and the causes tint led thereto. Nor is the appoiutment of Mr. Tyner any less significant than the ejection of Mr. Jewell. Mr. Tyner owes his promotion to the fact that he is a citi zen of Indiana, the supposition being, as Mr. Jewell testified before the Com mittee, it would strengthen the Radi cals in that State to have an Indiana man in the Cabinet, while it could possibly do no good to have a Connec ticut man there. The fight then is to be in Indiana, and when we remember that there 'are in that State 24,000 native born North Carolinians, we feel very hepefnl of the result. But it will be a heavy fight. A rofWIKtr;I TO RKAInriM.E T.l X PAVKKi, The Oxford Torchlight fays : "The County Commissioners have mnJe three orders to W. n. Wood, Esq., amounting to $141 20 for ser vices rendered as first guard of the chain gang to the 4th of July, 1876. They employed him for SI per day, and he commenced work abont the 10th of May. If one hundred and forty-one working days have passed since that time, we've sutely been in a Rip Van Winkle plumber. Will these fellows ttiese County Commissioners tell in how it is they paid Mr. Wood 8141 20, wheu he had not worked s x ty days. We want to know exnetlv how it is- Every Democrat wants to kuow." All that the amendments seek to ac complish is to restore to the people their rightful power, and to enforce an honest, economical expenditure of their money. Reform is what they seek. Let them be ratified. For the Journal. Tl alter in KicltuioiKl Cuunl). Laurin burgh; 'N. C, July 10, 1876. Mr. ditor: A week ago I wrote you about an unusual heavy rain, to day I have to tell you it is very dry now, and the heat is almost sulfonating The thermometer at four o'clock sta wis one huudred, and it .certainly was higher at about three o'clock and this in the shade. Wo irave not had any ruin since 1 wroto you, and the pros pects at preseut for it looks gloomy. The Fourth of July passed off as quietly here as any other day unob served by the white people. A few of the colored people gathered together and had a dinner, and a dance to gether with a speach, but not of a politieul nature. I am entirely with out news (hat will interest you or your readers at this tim so I will have to tell you of a bold and daring theft, which has been under investigation for three weeks at this place and RocK inghani together. The thief is a radi cal of very durk complexion, a school teacher and a delegate to the radical couviintion next Wednesday. Of course you could have bet what party the thief belouged to, but I wanted to mention it. 'I no facts in the case are these as near as I can sum them up. The watchman and Capt. W. J. Calais of this place having missed some lumber several .times, took a stroll off about one or two hundred yards and found a house framed, nearly all out of railroad lum ber. The house belongs to Hnrk Steel, a colored man. Capt. Calais being foreman of th6 wood department obtained a warrant for Steel, and he was arrested. He put the trial off from Saturday until Monday. When Mon day dame he want to the magistrate and eked him to put ttie trial off until three o'clock the sam'f day; at three o'clock he did not appear. Two weeks went by before ne came in, direct from Rockingham, with fresh papers moving his trial to that place. Capt. Calais and the negro went up to the trial Thursday last, where the officers at Rockingham kept the Captain two days and nights, and then postponed the trial until August. You see it is good to be a Radical. Wheu I steal timber from the railroad lo build a house I shall join the Radical party, and have my trial at Rockingham. No bond lias been heard of iu thu matter yet. The crime is as plain as daylight; anybody can see it for themselves. How long will these things last ? I think the election of Tilden and Vance will answer that question. The adop tion of the amendments, too, would tell a great deal in twelve months, as there would be so many convicted of stealing, the officers of the law could not get material enough to keep them in office after a while. That noble-hearted, energetic wheel horse in elections, Mr. A. F. Bizzell, invited me down on his farm last week and showed me all over it, but as 1 cannot do him justic.el will merely aay that his crop is fine, and he has a large one. If seasons continue good he will not send off much money next year for corn and bacon. Very truly yonrB, Subscriber. Make up your clubs for the .i otjnat, and send them in. The subscription price puts the Journal in the reach of all. Remember the valuable Wheel er and Wilson Sewing Machine given for the largest number of subscribers A WAR OF KACF.S. A I'HchiU ll;ttlle iu Hamburg. From the Augusta Chronicle & Sentinel, July 9th. The readers of the Chronicle & Sen tinel doub'cRB perused in its columns yej-terday the following item: "On the Jj'.mrth, wuue two young men weic riding through Hamburg on their wiy Lome, they were detained ou the ntreets by the colored military company which was parading. When they dean ed to pass, some ot tne sol diers tliieatened to keep them all night. Yesterday Ihty applied to Prince Rivers to have the matter in vestigated, as to whether the military had the right to obf-trut the highway. Daring the examination of the first witness, the ciptuin. Doc Adams, be came so indolent as to comp-l the trial justice to anest him for contempt of o mrt, aul continue the case until 4 o'ciock this afternoon. The two young men referred to were Messrs. Thomas B itler and Henry Gettsen. Mr. Robert Butler, father of Thomas Butler, employed Gtneral M. C. Butler to prosecute Adams. General Butler reached Hamburg yes terday afternoon and proceeded to the office of Prii ce Rivers, trial justice, where the trial of Doc Adams was to tike place. The General asked Rivtrs whether he intended to try Adams iu his military capacity as mnjor general or in his civil capacity as trial justice. Rivers replied that he could uot tell until he had examined into the case. About 4 o'clock, the hour designated for the trial, Doc Adams failed to put in an appearance. After waiting some time, General Butler told Rivers that he must proceed. The constable then went to tha door and called Adams, who, however, failed to answer. . It was then ascertained that Adams, with his company, was up the street in a defiant attitude. General Butler thereupon informed Uivers that this sort of thing had gone on long enough, audit was about time that it was put a stop to. The negroes must give up their arms at once, and he would give tho names of twenty of the best citizens in Edgefield as beouiitj that they would be turned over to Governor Chamberlain. Rivers tin n asked if Gcueral Butler, in case the arms were given up, would see that the town was protected during the night. Tiie G.'ueral answered in the ffirmative. Rivers assured him that he would go immediately to Adams and persuade him to give up the arms. He accordingly went to that worthy and talked with him for some time. Upon his return he told General But ler that the mayor, Gardner, and the ollieeiB of the compauy would confer with him at the council chamber. General Butler accordingly went thither and had a conference with the negro leaders, lie told them hat the arms must be given up, there was no necessity for them in that place aud t':iey had no business with them. Aa for the Adams case Mr. Butler would be satisfied if Adams wor.id make AN APOLOGY. Tui conference accomplished noth ing. The n-groes still hesitated about giving up the arms. In the meantime, however, a number of white citizens of iSouth Carolina had assembled in the town nud matters began to 1-jok squal ly. Geneial Butler rode over to An guwta and told several young men that lie might need their services in Ham burg during the afternoon. He then returned to '.he town. Just after cross ing the bridge he Mas met by Priuce Rivers who said h3 wonld make one more effort to induce 4he negroes to give up their guns, and, if they would not yield they rou-t take tho conse quences. Aecordiiig'y he conferred with the officers nf the company, anil shortly returned to General Butler with the announcement that the ne groes said they would not give up their guns; they intended to fight. In the meantime the news of the trouble had spread iu Augusta and caused much exoite-ment. A large number of young tueu hastily procured arms and ammunition and hastened to the res. one. Many others waited at tho foot of the biidgo anxiously awr.iting the result. By seven o'clock there? was a large crowd at that point. Upon learning tho result of Rivorsj efforts, General .Butler determined-to accomplish by force that which could not be done by peaceable demands. The negroes had entrenched them selves in a large brick structure, known as Sibley's building, on a cor ner, aud defied the whites. The latter surro iuded the house and at half-past seven o'clock opened fire upon it. This was returned by the negroes and a constant fuillade was kept up for over two hours. About 8 o'clock a young man named T. Mackcy Merriwether, who was standing near the front of the Charlotte, Columbia and xVugusta rail road bridge, was f. truck in the head by a minnie ball fired from one of the windows of the Sibley buildiug, and - ALMOST INSTANTLY KILLED. His body was placed on a littar and brought to the city by a number of young men. Mr. Joseph Merriwether, father of the unfortunate young man, also accompanied the body to the city. The deceased was iu the twenty-third year of his ago. His father lives iu Edgefield county, about fiiteeu miles from Augusta. Soon after tho death cf Merriwether several meu were sent over to August:; for a piece of artillery. This was procured aud, carried to Hamburg as soon as possible. The piece was stationed on the river bank, a short distanco-from tho house where the negroes had taken up their posi tion and a fire opened with canister. Four rounds were fired. Little dam age was done to the building, but the dre had the effect of completely silenc ing the negroes. During the evening eight negroes wero captured, two of them members of the company. A negro named Gilbert Muller, who works in Augusta, said that he knew nothing about the origin of the diffi culty. All he knew was that when he got homo from his work that afternoon his captain ordered, him to get his gua and "fall in" with the company. He obeyed orders and was with the com pany in the house while the firing was taking place. He declared, however, he did uot fire a single shot. Each member of the company had two rounds of ammunition. They hal all gone into the cellar of the building when the cannon commenced firing and he supposed they were there now. For his part he considered it best to give himself up and he therefore did so. About half-past eight or nine o'clock a party of five escape i from the build ing and rau across an open field. They were fired upon by the white men and two .:f them retnrned the fire, but without effect. About ton o'cIock a nero jumped over the fence in rear of the hnae and attempted to escipe, but he was instantly tired upon aud fell dead. RIDPLED BY BULLETS. It was then ascertained that it was Jim Cook, the marshal of the town, who had been one of the chief pro moters of the difficulty. His head was almost shot to pieces. Soon after this another negro, named John Thomas, first lieutenant of theoompany, was caught while at tempting to escape. After he was nr rested he was shot in the back by some unknown party and seriously, perhaps mortally, wounded. This action was condemned in the severest terms by every one, and especially by General Butler. At eleven o'clock a general search search was made for the other mem bers ef the company, but none conkl bo found. With the exception of one or two old women, who stood about, trembling with terror, the town was apparently deserted by the negroes, and soon after eleven o'clock the trouble was evidently over. The force of white men in Hamburg during the evening nnmbered several hundred, a portion of whom were from South Carolina and a portion from Augusta, They were armed with revolver, sl ot I guns a-i riflfs. and were under the leadership of General Butler. At tight o'clock a force of - CtTY POLICK Arrived with police guns,wa matched to t he South Carolina end of the city bridge, and drawn np in lino across the structure, in order to protect the latter, as it was understood that threi-.ti in regard to it had been made by the negroes. There was no demon stration iu that directiou however. 3wnt after the firing begnn kerosene oil was poured ou a small wooden structure next to the Sibley building, and the torch applied to it. Iu forma tion of the fact was conveyed to tj n- eral Butler, who immediately rodn to the spot and ordered the fi- exMi; guistied, ptreinpton'y forbidding any such attempt in the future The coudnct of the -colored citizens of Augusta was udmirab'.c during the evening. They remained pert ctly qiiiet, and very few even went anys where near the river. When the negroes first fired from the windows of the Sibley building, they bet up a loud yell. The fire uud the yeli were both answertd at oi-c--by the whites. A number of the lattr were stationed on the river bank uud kept up a rapid fire at the building. " LATEST. About 12' o'clock a general search was made throughout the town, aud resulted n the fiadiug of fifteen more negroes, making twenty-nine in all. A negro who attempted to escape was shot in several places and badly wounded. The negro lieutenant, John Thomas, who as stated above, was shot iu the back, was expected to die from the wound. A young man named Morgan was accidentally shot in the leg by one f his comrades, while pursuing a fleeing negro. He was firing at the negro, together witn others ut the time. His wound, while painful, is not considerr ed dangerous. hhe negroes who were last captured were discoverd hid away in cellars and under floors. The prisoners were kept under guard lost night and will be turned over to tho civil authorities of South Carolina to-day. It is said that the ammunition in th possession of the negroes was fur nished to them bv a white man named Schiller who came over to Augusta and purchased it yesterday morning. At one o'clock the Augusta boys re turned home and left the South Caro-" linians in possession of the town. ANOTHER ACCOUNT PRINCE RIVERS, THOUGH CHIEF OF THE STATE MILITIA AND TRIAL JUSTICE BESIDES, CANNOT ENFORCE HIS ORDERS MODERATION BY THE VICTORS. Augusta, July 9. The magistrate ordered thecorcpany to deliver up their arms, as under the state of feeling which then possessed them, it was possible that trouble might arise. This they peremptorily refused to do, and furthermore threat ened to assassiuate Rivtis at night for having given it as his legal opiuou that they wero liable to a tine for obstruct ing the public higuwry. Ihe -colored co npauy, numbering about titty men, then repaired to un old brick house iu the town a. id fortified tiemsi-lves and dthed JKivers and his posse, li'vers at once summoned a uurul-er of per sous' bi assist him iu upkoldmg 'he law uud vindicating its nifientv. Tnis occurred at a little before sundown. Some two hundred men. mostly from .Edgefield, surrounded the build ing and demanded a surreuder, which was refused, when a general firing was opened on both sides. The firing from the entrenched negroes on the besieg ers was kept up pretty lively for a h:ilf hour or so, withiu plam view of the hundreds on this tide, who had as sembled. Two young men were firing from be hind au abutn'.ent of the L. C. and A. railroad bridge, then two negroes slipped through the tall weeds on the edge of the river and coming up un perceived iu the rear of them, shot and killed a Mr. Merriweather, son of Dr. Me. riweather of Edgefield, strik ing him behind the ear, and killing him iustantly. The young man who whs with Merriweather turned and fired at the negro and killing one dead, the other threw down his gun and made an effort to escape, but was pur sued aud captured by the young man, and brought in as a prisoner at this junctare. After the three discharges from the cannon a lull of an hour occurred, wheu it is reported" four negroes rush ed from the belea gured house, and af ter firing attempted to escape. A vol ley was poured into them, killing one outright. The other three escaped. At 10 o clock they were firing from the cellar of the buildiiig, and tue besieg ing party were actiug very cautiously and c.lmly. At one o'cIock r sharp rattle of musketry was heard. The arms heJd by the company have been ordered returned to the Governor, and they are held oontrary to law. The negroes positively refused to give them up when ordered to do so by Rivers, who is also chief of the State militia, in addition to his position as trial justice. Rivers has fled to this .jity for safety. At half-past eleven o clock this morn ing the firing had ceased, and most if not all the rioters under arrest. Most of their arms were captured with them. About thirty prisoners are under guard, some with arms in their hands, while others secreted or destroyed them. Thus far everything has been conducted iu as orderly a manner as it could possibly h ive been done under tho circumstances, and the capturing parties has been very forbearing in treatment of the murderous crew. DISARMING THE MOB SHERIFF JOrjJAN TO THE SCENE OF BATTLE. Special to the Journal of Commerce. Aiken, July 9. The people of Augusta and Edge field last night took possession of Hamburg, and made the negroes de liver up the arms with which they had been threatening tho community; Shoriff Jordan hs gone down. Independence. Custer's I. a. st rhare. A dispatch from the battlefield says: I write from the soeneof Custer's mag nificent but terribly fatal charge from a plateau on which but a few hour's since I saw at a glace the heroic sol diers of the 7th cavalry lying where tney fell at the hands of a savage foe all tjead. Near the top of a little knoll, iu the centre of the plateau, lay Cus ter himself, and it touched my heart to see that the savages, in a kind of hu man recognition of heroic clay, had respected the corpse of the roan they knew so well. Other bodies were mu tilated. Custer's was untouched a tribute of respect from such au enemy more real than a title of nobility. He lay as if asleep; his face calm and a smile on bis lips. Ntar him were eleven dead officers. Captain Miles Keogh was on hia right and his brother. Captain Thorn a Custer, on bis left. Almost at Custer's feet lay a fair and beautiful boy of nineteen. This was young Reed, Custer's nephew. He was visiting the General at the time he was ordered on this expedition and insisted upon coining with him. In tho field, a lit tle way oft, lay Boston Custer, another of the General's brothers. Within a few feet of eaoh other the three brothers had fallen, and on the skir mish line was the body of Lieutenant Calhoun, the husband of Caster's sis ter. Mrs. Calhoun lost here a hus band, three brothers and a nephew. Kellogg, the special co-respondent of the New York Herald, was found on the skirmish line near to Calhoun, They formed a Democratic club of a hundred members in Goldsbore on last Friday to be called the Gildsboro Til den and Vance Club, From the Kaleigh Sentinel. Another Judicial Outrage. Yesterday at the instanceof the hun gry harpie win hve for the pct two months been seeking the city offices, Judge Watts issn d an order for the arrest of the m-iyor and aldeimen of the city of Ra!eich. This is a jn li;-i;il ontrnge nnnaralM ed in the lii:t.oiy of North Carolina. I' is u soles-8 to consider now the qns tiou whether the aldermen or thi'Com miasioners are legally the officer of Raleigh. That question is- bf fore th Supreme Court ami neither Judge Watts uor ourselves have anything o do with it. Tl-e f;ict.s cl the eae are brwflv ni ollow?: Hera week or mure since Judge Watts issued an order oommaud lut' the Mayot nnd Boird of A'dermsr of the c;ty of Raleigh to d-liver np their offices into the hands of one Jno. C. Gorman, claiming to be Mayor, and c.er'ain othr person's claiming to be commissioners pf the city. From this ord"r an appeal was taken to the Su preme Court md perfected, as is re quired by law. This, as the veriett tyro in legal lore nm-t know, worked what is technically called a super sedeas, and therefore Mayor Manly and the Board of Aldermen verv properly refused to vacate the offices. Watts then issued au order that Mayor Manly aud the Aldermen anpear before him and show cause why they should uot be at tached for contempt of court. This they did, by stating on oath the fct !-:t forth above, notwithstanding whicU Wats, by an act of judicial usurpation and corruption unheard of iu a free country, ordered them to be arrested for a contempt of court This is the culmina'.iou of the dis graceful career of corruption which this man Watts has run since lobb Me has more than onoL: been charged with selling las judicial opinion, and with out dignity, principle or knowledge of law, he exhibits the melancholy picture of a judge nlike devoid of persoual virtue and ofhcial integrity. Ex Lieutenant Governor Gustav Koeruer, a prominent Germau citizen of Illinois, has issued an address to Liberal Republicans, in which he ad vocates Governor Tildeu's election, asserting that "Tildrn s name alone in the words of the Fifth Avenue Con ference is a 'pledge of l eform, and he has 'earned not only the confidence ot honest men, but the fear and hatred of thieves.' VEGTIIME Purifies the Blood, Renovates anu Invigorates the Whole System. Its 11 ed leal Properties are ALTERATIVE, TONIC, SOL VENT and DIURETIC. TOETrsE H maile ewlusively tram the juices of carefully.selectt'd harks, roofi and herbs, and so 8tr,jugly concentrate.! that it nil I etti.ictually eradicate trom the system every Taint ot scrotum scrofulous 11 u uior, I uniors, Cancer, aucerou Humor, Krysipe'as, Salt Klieum, Syphilitic Dis eases, :;.uker, raintness at the st limou. and all diseases that arise Irom impure Mood Seiatica IntViinniHtorv and Chronic Kheumatism. Neural gia, l.oui anil t-pinal Complaints, can only be ettectually cured through the mood. 1 o I ' leers and Ki nptive diseases of the Skin Pustules, Pimple?, lilouhes, lioils, Telter, Scald head and Uiinrworm. V euktine has never faile to effect a permanent cure. For f .Hiis iu tiie Back. Kidney Complaints, Uropsv. renia'e weakness, i.eucirrhoea, arisin from internal ul eratiou and uterine diseases an (.ieueial lel)iliiv, VKOifTi N ii acts directly upon tue canoes o! these roinpiaini. it mviorat and strengthen? the whole system, ac( iion the secretive organs, alhivs iiiflaiiiitiut ton, cures ulce ration and regulates the bowel. For " atarrli, Jtyspepsia, IJaVi'u! Costiveness, lal:'iiauoii ot ihe Heart, Headache, fi Nervousness une (.literal Prostration of the Nervous System, thi medicine has ever iriveu such 1 iierfed sati-factioi! as the Vkoktink. It puritl the lilood, cleanses allot the or-rans and possesse a Controllinsi Mwer over the nervous system. The remark.iole cures effected hy vkuktin have induced many physicians and arotiiecarie whom we know to prescrioe and use it in the own iainilies. In fact, Veoktine is the liest remedy yet dis covered tor tiie aliove diseases, and is the only re liable BlOOd Purifier jet placed before thepuhlic. PREPARED BY H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. What is Vkoktink? It is a coniound ex tracted from balks, roots and herbs. It is Na ture's Remedy. It is perfectly harmless from any bad effect 11JMU1 tho system, tt rs nourishing anil rtreiisrtivMiiiig. It acts directly upon the blood. It uuiets the nervous s. stein, it gives you good sweet sleep at niirht. It is a jrreat panacea for our aged fathers ana mothers; tor it frives them strenjrth, quiets their nerves, and sives them Na t lire's sweet sleep, as has 1 aeu proved by many an aned person, ft is the urear tsiood dinner. It is a soothins remedy for our children It has relieved aud cured thousands. It is very pleasant to take: e-Jvrv child likes it. It relieves and cures all diseases originating from impure blood. Try the V kohti:;e. ne it a fair trial tor your com plaints; then you will say to your friend, neighbor and acquaintance, " l ry it: it has cured me. eoKTiNE, tor tne complaints lor which it is recommended, is having a larc sale throughout the United States than any other one medicine. Why? Vegetinc will cure these complaints. VALUABLE INFORMATION. ItosTox, Dec. IV, 18611. fieiitlemen-My only object in giving you this testimonial is to spr ad valuable information. Having been badly afflicted with Salt Klieum, and the wlfol; i-urfa.'e of mv skiu heins covered with pimples and eruptions, many of which caused me great pain and annoyance, and knowing it to lie a niood disease, I rook manv of the advertised blood preparations, among which was any quantity of oarspaniia, ithout obtaining any beucht until 1 commenced taking Ihe V Kuans', aid lief ore I hid completed the first lutile I saw Ibnt I had got the right medicine. Consequently, I followed ou with it until I had taken seven liottlcs. wheu 1 was pronounced a well man. and niv skin is smooth aud entirely free fium pimples and erup- uons. nave never en joyeu so good Health bc- lore, aud 1 attriini.e it all to the us) of VEciK tine. To lieuelit those arhicted with Kheuma tism, I will make mention alto of the Vm;s tick's wei'derful power of cnrlig me of this acute complaint, ot wuieU 1 have sutiered so iu teuselv J. 11. TUCKEK, Pa.s. Ag't Mi. h. O. It. till Washington Street, ilostou. 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We intend consumer i-hall he a chance Ij try our Paints WITHOUT RUWNIW ANY RISK. Green & Flanner, AGENTS, Wilmington. June 3-d2taw-weeklv 2m - SEVEN INCHES LONC. m P. 2 o a SB ... 2 3 i t pSS a z! 2 april 16 86-d""" P AT UMTS .,a I IM A UJ.1 M. U J ' -.ub.e boa respoudenre InTl'ed In the K.nglu-b anai lAniinAcrM. with In ventrtrfl. have had' their cases rejected iu lu " ftttt fiu then." oi ner attorneys. , n rejcciru . Dak reasonable, and no charge is uiude 1 " are success!' al . . Mtlt .ketch and " criptlon tf. yourt tion. We will make an ni,,t;"7BI,l Patent Oftiee, and If we think 11 J pjojets1 your case. Our fee in ordinary 'Jf.i win Beiiu vou uBpen auu i. aan. your case. Our t" ADVICE? t'raior wrmcu all .matter relat insr to Patents,! at- Mlt l,W. &C Jl References Hon M D lge! eWu ionerof Patents, Cleveland. Ohio, " J ley, iSsq. 8ecretaiy ot the National -"JJ, Lonirille, Ky.; Hon .las J' i Justice U S Court of Olaiins. " ''" " f,huiIM aVdeud stamp lor our -Oul-elor on Patents,'" a bookof Bo page. a go AddresV-I.OUl! HPM j... citor of Patenrs. Washington. P- -- The Salisbury Examine E3TABI.HHED IN .&., thorough . . sod 1 always Democ atic. Frinteu vcwj Weekly at fi and S5. J. J. STEW"" Editors and Propria Saliabaiy, - . . a f j 84 I Ml UHuiv i una n