1 I --3t-gg!g ,,-t- rrn, fgggggEgL- Tarborough, (Edgecombe County, N. C.) Saturday, Jninary G. 1839 o 4 li yir Tarborough Irvss, dy ugoiuje howakd, T ,blisheil weekly at 7Vo JWor mid Fif-; r nor ynar, f in advance or, 7W at the expiration of the subscription year, r r ini P riotl less than a year, Twenty-five Vail prr month. Subscribers are at liberty to r'.'.ontinue at anytime, on giving notice thereof !" navi"" arrears those residing at a distance arlt invariably pay in advance, or give a respon se rrfrrencc in this vicinity. Advertisements not exceeding a square will be r -ted at One Dollar the first insertion, and 25 '" b for every continuance. Longer advertise ments in like proportion. Court Orders and .Tu Sicid advertisements 25 percent, higher. A-i-voriisements must be marked the number of in c'rtions required, or they will be continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the Editor must be post ,1 or they may not be attended to. II Johnston, EGS leave to inform his customers and the public, that lie has Received hi Fall Supply of Of all i'11' mnvt Fashio-ia'de Articles, Suitable for Gentlemen's wtar. SUCH AS S-merfme Cloths, rasitneres& Vesting. J-aver ehlh anJ Lion skin, for ovet coul, Cjmblet for cloaks, Storks, Collars, Bosoms, and black silk Cravats Siispenders, of superior quality. He u I so has a ftw Tine black btavcr Hats, Of the latest lasnion. Gentlemen wish in; to purchase Goods in his line, will do well to call and examine before they pur chne, as he is detei mined to sell low lor Cash, or on a short credit to p inctual customers. 7bon Nov. 15'h, 1S3S. MUKCIIAtVr TAILOR, PESPKC TFULLY intorms his iriemL and the public generally, that he has received his Fall and Winter Ccnisiing of superfine blue and black Cloths, hivNihle green and brown do. Striped and corded Cassimeres of various colors, Plain black and filmed Vestings, '! black and figured Velvets, Pi iin and figured Valcnci is, do do Marseilles, Plain black and fancy Stocks, Umbrellas Ijoso.hs, Collars, Gloves, Snpenders, &c. All of which he will sell low for Cash, fron a short credit to punctual customers. He inMs by due attention to business. ;m 1 hi long experience therein, to" iv ''e sit isfyclion to those who may favor l.im wiili their orders. He aNo will keep constantly on hand an assortment of Heady made Clo'hing, 7Vhoro Nov. 5'h, 1S38. lt the cheap Cash Store. 3- JAMES WEDDELL, AS now on hand a large and general assortment of Groceries, Hard-scare, cutlery. Ltuna, Glass and Earthenware, Cot ton Hugging Rope, Twine, &-c $c hich he offers cheap for Cash, country Ppoduce, or on a short credit to punctual i:ipii. Nov. 2 lib, 1S38. State of North Carolina, martin court of equity. S(phia Griffin vs. Petition for Divorce and Js Grilling Alimony. jjJR. James Griffin: Sir, you are here by notified personally to be and p Pear before the Judge of our said Court at jhe Court House in Williamslon. on the Monday in Fcbruiry next, then and ere to answer the several allegations of petition of the said Sophia. And it ordered, that you be restrained and en ilned from transferring, assigning, or in - ny vvay withdrawing from ihi hands ol Kobason, admV of John Uobason cd any estate or effects to which you a ..en,il,etl hy virtue ol your marri iutVh ilhe said SoP,,ia unless yu enle tj . am! security in the sum of one 0TS3nd dHars to answer and abide such Pler and decree as may be had in the foresaid caue. Witness, C. n. IIassell, Clerk and w 0four.aid Court, ai office, the U 4oveoiber, 1838. p C. B. IIJISSELL, C M. E. lriccadv Sio 00. 45-3m ttale of North CarAma, KDOEL'OMBE COUNTY. Superior Court of Equity, SKPTKMBKU TKIi.M, Martha and Zilly Scarboroujsh vs. Qri SlfntiPn Wn..ln.. 5. 1 r .tt igin- al bill. Haurh s, exVs &e. i t ah j I' app.rjiit)g to ,,. satisfaction of the Court, that .John l. 8 ai borough, one ol the delenduits in this ease, is not a roMrui of ihi S'ate: ll is therefore or deri'il, that put)licati.m be m le for six weeks successive ly in the T u boron-;? Press, notifying said defend .nl that unless Ue Hppear at the next term of this C .uri, o be held on the second Monday in .Much next, at the Coin I House in I'm bo rough, and answer, plead, or demur, j idg went pro coufesso will be entered .'gainst bin. Wit nrss, Isaac Norklft, Clerk o' siiil (Joint, at ollirc, t!ie eeond Monday in September, I S:JS. NOK FLEET, CM E D?e. 5tli, Ifi'iS. I Price adv S5 00. Slate if North Carolina, KDGKCOMBE COUNTY. Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, NOV KM 13 KU TKUM, 1S3S. Slate i V. Bastardy. .Limes H. Lewis, ) WY nppoaring to the satisfieiion of the Court, that James K Jewis, the de leiithntt in this suit, is not a lesidcnt ot this State: It h therefore ordered, that publication bt? maile foi six weeks succes sively in the Tarborough lres, uotityin siid defendaitl that unless he appear at the next term of this Coor, to be held on thr fourth Monday in February next, at the Court House in Tarboiough, and answer, plead, or demur, judgment pro confess will be entered against him. Witness Josrpii Pell. Ch rk of said Court, at .lTiee. the fourth Monday in November, 1838. JOS BELL, C C Pricp adv S5 00. 1 G Slate of North Carolina, F.DGECOMBE COUNTY. Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, N0VEMI3EK TEllM, 1838. State "I Edivin Elliohnliitte,! and John Carter, Sr. J T appearing to the satisfaction of thr Court, that Edwin Ellis and John Hitter, defendants in this suit, are not iesients of this State : It is therefore ordered, that publieation be made for six weeks successively in the Tarborough Pies, notify ing said defendants that on less they appear at the next hrm of tin Court, to be held on the fourth Moudax in February next, at the Court Haihc in Tarborough, and answer, plead, or demur, judgment pro ronle:so will be entered against them. Viine. Joseph Ptll, Clerk of id Court, at offic, the louith Monday in No vcmber, 1S38. JOS BELL, C C. Price adv J&5 00. 6 btatc of North Car alb a, EDGECOMBE COUNTY. Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, NOVEMBEK TttUM, IS3S. James Norvell, Em s Taylor, Samuel Taylor, Ntncy O dom, Ehzilnth Notvill, David Norvill, ILzekial. Lan-rly and wile Cheiry Petition vs. I for sale Stephen Woolen & Epbraim cf slaves Wooten, ad m i s ot huos ojrf Norvill, dee'd, James Tay Iribltlion lor, Euos Njrvill,Eli John ston and wife Cnarity, Ex um Revel and wife Plcy, James E. Lewis and wile Penny, and Dorcas wife-of Josiah Kail, IT appearing to the satisfaction of th Court, that Stephen Wooten and Ephraim Woo'en, administrators of Eno Norvill, dee'd , James Taylor, Enos Nor vill, YX Johnston and wife Charity. Exum Revel and wife Patcy, James E. Lewis ami wife Penny, and Dorcas wih of Jos ah Kail, defendants in this suit, are not residents of this State : It is thue fore ordered, that publication be made f i six weeks successively in the Tart orough Press, notifying said defendants that un less they appear at the next teim of h Court, to he held on the louith' Monday in February next, at the Court House ii. Tarborough, and answer, plead, or demur, judgment pro confesso will be entered against them. Witness, Josepit Bell, Cleik of said Court, at ofiiee, the fourth Monday in November, 1838. JOS. BELL, C C Price adv 7 50. 1 6 From the Raleigh Standard. RESOLUTIONS. A meeting of the DEMOCRATIC RE PUBLICAN MEMBERS of. the Le gislature of North Carolina, was held at the Senate Chamber on Wednes day evening, 2d January, 1839. All the members being present (except three or four who had left the City) tie meet ing was organized by the appointment of Wkldon N. Edwards, Esq. Chairman, M. Hoke and M. A. Wilcox, Secre:a- The folio wing resolutions had been pro posed at a previous meeting as expressing the sentiments and feelings of the mem bers, and they were now taken up, amend ed, discussed and finally passed by an un animous vote: Besolved, That in concealing from the public any intention to revive their war in tavorofa National Bank, under the cover of an attack upon the Expunging Rcsolu- lions, and by withholding from the people all notice of their purpose sa to assail, by in direction, ihe fame and patriotism of An drew Jackson, late President of the Uni ted Stales; the 'whig or Federal parly" in the North Carolina Assembly have prac ticed an imposition upon the people, which Usifies their affected regard for the will of the people; and demands the indignant re buke of the honest men of all parties. W e say nothing of the shameless inconsis tency, the palpable absurdity, or the inde cent attack upon the doctrine of Instruc tions and the private rights of gentlemen contained in the resolutions. It is our de sign to present, in bold relief, and unob senred by any other considerations, this un precedented party treachery, as an outrage upon the rights of the people of the State. Tluy can detetmine for themselves with out comment from us. Did your members before the election give notice of any such movement by their parly? Where they did (if any where) let them stand excused"; but where they did not, candor and justice will pronounce a just judgment upon this political imposition. Resolved, That the people of the United States have been twice subjected to the cor rupting dominion of a Naiional Bank, ami the country has as often witnessed the most unprincipled efforts bv fraud and force to obtain a renewal of its charter. The histo ry of the last six years has been little more than a contest of the Dank and its adherents to deceive or to compel (he Government to grant a renewal of its powers. The quiet of the people has been disturbed the order of a good Government has been impeded the purity of the press has been corrupted the honor of legislative councils has been stained the authority of the Constitution and Laws has been set at defiance by the influence of the last National Bank. And public fears have been excited every where of late by the madness and corruption of this expiring monster; a portion of whose servile followers had become far embolden ed as to attempt to seize upon the Govern ment of one of the States, against the will and contrary to the votes of a majority of the Freemen of that Commonwealth. It is then a dictate of interest and an impulse of patriotism in the PEOPLE, now and forever, to resist the rc-estabJishmcnt of a National Bank. Resolved, That the late Bank of the United States proposed a renewal of its charier in time to bring lhat question into the Presidential election of 1832. By the votes of some who had become its debtors and others who were its pensioners and hired agerlts, increased, it is true, by some who were honestly its supporters, the char ter was passed by Congress. Hut Andrew Jackson, President of the United Stales, in the discharge of his Congressional duty, interposed his VETO, and thereby refer red it to the people to decide for them selves, whether they would any longer ac quiesce in the tyranny of its misrule for the sake of its doubtful benefits. The people sustained their President and re jected the Bank. That determination has been resisted ever since. Instead of pro ceeding to wind up its affairs, in compli ance with law, and according to the inten tions which had been avowed as the cause for seeking an early decision upon its fate; instead of reducing its business in submis sion to the determination of the people, the Bank organized and prosecuted a system directly the reverse of these professions, and contrary to its duty. It had resorted to a foreign market to borrow money, and by that means to strengthen itself for a contest against our Government It ex tended its loans, particularly amongst mem bers of Congress, so to multiply the num ber of its dependents. It retained and ap plied to other uses the Funds of the Gov ernment which had been put into its hands as an agent, to pay off a part of the Nationa 1 debt, and actually negociated with public creditors abroad to withhold the presenta tion of their demands, and that without the consent of our Government or its officers. It placed the vast wealth of the Institution! in the hands of one man, and permitted nim tousc what he chose for Electioneer ing purposes. It paid hirelings t) villify the people and their President, and to ca lumniate every prominent public man who had the honesty to resist its struggle for mastery over the nation. It exclude."! from a patticip itujn in their proceedings, the of political abolitionism is worthy of his Directors apooin'ed for the people to watch Utation as a President of the UNION. He over ihc public interest in the Bank, and merits the undivided :pplane of the whole maliciously pers-cutcdand denounced them South, as he has received the self saerifi lor disclosing some of the "secrets of the! cing succor of the Republicans and Demo prison house;" and finally when the House! era's of u.c North. of UcpreseMt wives sent a Committee to in- j Resolved, That the President of the Uni vestigatclhe rest, and to report upon Ihc j ted States lias honestly redeemed his pled couductof ihe Bank and its condition, it-iges to the Nation, and vindicated the con managers arrogantly set up a right to de-j tidenec of his Sourhcrn friends at his clec cide what the Committee might see, and Hon in IS36. He did not quail before Bank what they might not see; and thus in the powers, nor before the threats of Fcd-ra- iace ot Law, and contrary to an express icquiMuon in us charier, the liank was closed against any other sort of invcstiguA lion. In. all these Ihinps ih IbnL tVni,.rt partizans to defend and minions to applaud its cuursc. Right or . wrong it was to be upheld, and no little exertion was made to sustain it. But it is a source of still greater alarm for the cause of public liberty in any futures' niggle wilh this monstrous power, that as it did heretofore, so it may hercaf ier, secure the co-operation of o hers whose honesty, is not questioned, but whose no tions of Government arc ad werse to the in fluence of popular opinion, and others also, with whom, from any combination of cir cumstances, they are or may have been temporarily allied in party conflicts. With these crimes before us, and after such dangers are past, it were a libel upon the intelligence of the republican people ol Noith Carolina, to sayT that they- will evtr agree to the creation of another National Rank. Resolved, That ihc system of using State Banks ss agents and depositories of the General Government has been tiicd and failed, at a heavy loss to the nation of their money and credit, and it ought not to he again adopted. The revenues of Ihe Uni ted States are collected to defray the ex penses of Government, and they ought not to be loaned out by the Banks nor to the Banks. Resolved, That an entire separation of the General Government from ALL BANKS is necessary for the safety of the Constitu tion, and is in no way perilous to any of .he legitimate rights of the Banks; and the pretexts that such a system will "enlarge the powers or patronage of the Executive," or "place in his hands the purse and the sword," arc political calumnies; artifices contrived by a party who have no confi dence in public intelligence, and therefore Mibslitutc epithets for arguments and clam ors for facts a part' who dread no influ ence in cur Government so much :s the rightful control of the people. Resolved, That there is no safety to cur liberty and no security to business so long as the Government and the Banks are uni ted. In such a connexion the Government must be a Banker or the Banks will be ihe Government. Whenever the Government and Banks combine, for evil, they will be j fish plans of the Federal leaders in creat too strong for the people. W hen they uplit, iog this division, and in still continuing it tnc Government triumphs over the Banks 'the r opposition. We rrjoicc to believe the businesss of the country will be deran-t! atdivisions in the Republican family of ged and the pursuits of the community em-' North Carolina will now cease, and hence barrassed, to say nothing of the public mcr-j f rt h we rally (as many of us are already als. If on the othcrhand, the Banks prove rallied) around the common standard of stronger than the Government, then the I u Democratic and Slate Rights Repubti rights of the people will be sacrificed and I cans. " their Liberties overcome by a Bank Despo- Lt those Republicans (if any such there tism. - bc who choose to ho. slavrs of 1 hp. Rank in- Resolvcd, That either the Banks must be kept divorced from the Government mon - ey or they will ultimately divorce the peo - 2)le Irom their Government. Ii the people! agree tnat they rannot manage IhGir purse without Bank agency, the Banks will not be long in prcsumirg to take ontrol of the "sword" likewise. If the people have no capacity for taking care of their revenues and must now acquiesce in the necessity of giving it up to the Banks, the latter will relieve them in time from the care of their Government also. Thesystcm of an "In dependent Treasury" proposes to let the people keep their own money by the hands of their own responsible agents. That is all. It is therefore a question between the Banks on one side and the people on the other, which shall have the control of the public purse? The People or the Banks? In its consequences this is a question cf Liberty! Shall the money and Govern ment of the U. States be retained by the people, or shall they both be surrendered up to the absolute dominion of a Bank des potism? Upon this great question Martin Van Buren, President of the United Sta'es, has taken his stand on the side of the people, and he is eminently entitled to their confi dence and support. It is dishonoring the people of North Carolina to suppose that they have taken sides with the Bank? a giinst Constitutional liberty, and it wilfbe slandering them to say that they will not stand by the man who has so nobly stood by their rights. Ilesnlvd, 'I hit the people of North C.iro- Una will vote for no ma-i as Picsident, or as Vice Picsi-lent, wlioe purty shall make common cause wi:h theBnkand the aboli tionists, and the high ar.dtlevated ground which has been taken by Mr. Van Buren agjinst the encroachments of associated wealth, and the unprincipled impudence lism nor before the assaults of Abolition- ism, but leaiiesslv difud the treasonable alliance of all three of these faction. ispe- c-ally in his own Statr. Like a triu: patriot and an unterrified lover of the Union, he has properlyr looked forward to the period when he and his country will both be sus tained, against every factious combina i')n and selfish delusion, by the ''second sober thought" of that people whose servant he is. He was charged with a want of firmness and frankness, but he has now proved him s if, amidst the severest trials, an open Statesman, and a fearless pa'riot. He was charged by some with abolitionism, and others suspected his fidelity to the rights of the South, but he is now battling for tho.'C rights, because they nre the lights of the Const Hut ton; :;nd though many of his opponents, in our State, have since hon estly joined the banner of his cause, you see some of his bitterest accusers, them selves, fighting in the ranks of his aboli tion enemies. The alliance with aboli tion, which be spurned, even his Southern opponents arc too selfish to reject and too cowardly to embrace openly. The dictation of party leaders, whose chief aim it is to get into office and perpetu ate their power, by Ihe influence of the Bank, will persevere in their hostility to the man; but they overrate their own strength and ur.derva'ue the intelligence of our people, if they stippose that North Carolina will ever lend her aid to such a fearful combination, or unite in the pros tration of a President who has been faith ful to his trust, and unwavering in his ad herence to the Constitution and the Un ion. Resolved, That there were many true Republicans in North Carolina, who sepa- rated from the democratic ranks in 1S36, and voted against Mr. Van Buren, because they thought that Judge While was of the sime political party. They hive now dis covered the purpose for which Judge White's name was used. Others again have seen in the principles of Mr. Van Buren's ad minis: ration, more of the truc"Republican doctrines of 'OS" than they expected at the time of his election; and all hut those who are wilfully blind, have detected, by subse quent devclonements. what were the sel- terest, or allies of Federalism, follow where 1 f dc pride or any other ignoble feeling Wads their way. Let them (if they prefer ") denounce abolitionism m words and sus tain its existence by their votes. We call upon the honest Republicans of North Car olina to unite, forgetful of past foods. Our motto is ''principles, and the men who carry out and defend them. " Resolved, That this meeting respectfully warn their Democratic friends, th at the en emits of the administration and the devo ted advocates of a National Batik have no hope of a triumph over us in North Caroli na, except by fomenting strife in the re publican ranks, and by a concealment of the real object of the other party. They will profess hostility to a National Bank only to impose upon the people, for their exertions are united and untiring to bring into the Presidency any one who is in favor of the Bank; nobody who is against it. They pretend to perform a duly as Leg islators in declaring theiropinions upon all "great and important questions which have been or are now agitating the public mind;" but this greatest of all questions (3 National Bank) is cautiously omittcdt or else it is. only indirectly and covertly sanctioned by them. Thejfsee and know that the true issue is Independent , Treasury or a National Bank. The Bank party at times, when, flushed by temporary success, exhibit their schemes. Hence Mr. Clay's plan of a SO Million Bank! Bui so soon as the hostili ty of the people begins to show itself, "Whig" politicians affect to have abandon I si