v tM 1 8? .lir HI. i t 'I' 1M- f.if ! 4 in ill'.. m. .muuirmjjii mm N tooOlafVtetla Of Ibla'sfcoa cm UD bis 4r?jrUW , ...... .V ,. ttl T. t r . . i ; TrrUKSDAY;.-t:::::::::MAY 22;1862. f ! PftatrBCt-Tlit .battles in the-lmiisulewaleh mj be now considered as joined, anAhe moat import Unt events that have transpired since the settlement ef . AnieHeft -i i. ' j .:. t . . V' i If ,we r successful, and retain Richmond, there will be foreign intervention and peace, wlfboat the possibility- Of-.diw f w4aetr-f'M Oka: month of Jnbe lf,wr defeated and lose,. Richmond, the . Confederacy is launched on vide, troubled and un-eeruinseaofaccidepts,:- 5 : v't. x ' Foreign Governments tea delay action now only on the ground of a great Federal success. Seward is at the entt of Ma promises. 1 If the United States falls to Uke the. Capital of this country oa the present trial, and immediately, the game is up. Already it Is de TclTeid In Xew York that the Southern Confederacy has been recognized by France. The news nuy not be true, but it i the snadaw of the coming event the event that stands at the door. Riehmdnd Examintt. jWith the Examiner, wc believe, if our arms are successful in the Peninsula and at Corinth, that we shall have peace in a few months, at far thest. Upon this issue, in the Peninsula, de- pends ihe fate oflRichmond, 4he capital of the country. Should we fall, and ' Richmond fall, then, indeed, shall we be launched upon a sea p( troubles, which may , end only "with External- 1 nation. ' When , we JrememWr7Nahville, and" New. Orleans, and Portsmouth, and Norfolk, to say nothing "of lesser places, and" Roanoke and Newberu, and"call to 'mind the' rrporti of their impregnability and the certainty with which we all looked forward t a. their security, and recollect, . that, one after another his fallen, until all are in the possession of the enemy we fear and tremble for the fate -of RichmondWelave beeaji?!- .tWifV it is easTrfethbBthcrej is LuteiV wij to obtain ttq boon, f.'jy, for.it -Sjr'e t;. for it, and stillkt tbtain t tjlTigl I )4 h. Wirfyh in its ietfy.W-cut$ along wUhdut it, and as we must fight, let us fight with all our hearts, souls, minds and strength but let us fight ia the strength, of. the God of t . - ' .-aJsI tr. iJi h'vl oauies. XjK us put our irusi io mm auu ugnt the fight of faith. We believe that victory to xmr arms fn the two great battles soon to be) fought, 'depends as mien upon those who if ay aLhomeY as upon thofewhogotjar: We know that eliect- tial, femnt praye will obtain the rictory against all odds." We know that's people who "put ticif trust' in Qod shall nerer be tcmfonnded." It is V good miiic put your trust in God,' and keep jour powder dry; Then, while our eoldiers and generals are fighting, let Christians ptaj. Is not our beautiful land equal to Sodom or Gomorrah? Is freedom worth hating! Is it worth fighting for?" Then, surely, it is worth praying fori Let our soldiers pray Vi " ; ' r1- "Pray on the field of battle: : '""'T'? God works with those who pray J. Hts mighty arm can nerte ns," t" . And make us win the day !'. Tho pick-axe and the spade are McCIellin's faTorUe weapons he baa more faith io them than the sworiLJIe may put off-Lhe eTil day hi a time but it will surely orertake him. If -Johnson don't outgeneral him, Geueial TeU JowjJckt. will. ' Already his approach is hev ten deceived io relation to the strength 'and de fensibleness of p!accs,jhat our confidence has re ceived, a shockwhicn nothingless thin the safety or Richmond will enable ni to overcome. 4 Per haps, ere tbis ' article tis pot in type, the great battle will be fougf and won? Certain it is, we bd'eTd "that" our forces near Richmond,-will fiiU'.bacV no -niorc. They have reached their 6taodin ground and in the f pace they now occupy, a few wiles frpln the capital, f will be fought the , fiercest, ;bloouicct and most decislre battle ;of ancietit or ulodcrollwesr It will decide - the fate, ot the Xurth and the -South--Defcafi'd-.L0tLiDC-i"t-UJins but aided by certain on erring signs and premonitions. The fly which slways heralds hi approach, bps made its appearance, io large numbers, in and around Richmond. Good-bye, Gen. George Mc Clel'and.x It is written on the wall, "Thou art weighed in the balance and found wanting." So mote it be. r Amen. - . k 5 7 : QQT. Q RAIIAM.T . , ' " we'f ndjft t! last SUnda'x), tlH QtfSyptyfa declines the tse of hllwalM' candidate f--GoteVnor. Tbla declension Vill te V aTer orf " Ibj?. We ask Ahe" attention f V Riders to thi arcle jp first (ago ieaded "Oner and out duty." Resd it caxefotry. ... -"aie ran. who stands bacJt (rouj ftht fat in tbett jperilous times, because be is toWillioc to'serVo bis coun try as a orivate soldier, who loves bis esse more regret to many of the people of North Carolina t- than liberty,, Kis luxuries more'thsn.khi hofcor, My name bating been i menticced in seteral Io' seasons of great calamity, the ancient pagans tnnos electloBt tnj Tecommended by . wcro a consumed to appeaso tho anger of their pDblio meeting Teeeo Uy held In the Counly, of godaby baoanjacrifiyesj "d iQhey bi gM Wake, I esteem it proper pnbKcly t tonounce upon the principle of wleetiBgUM whmonl tliafl moitd r .. .. r. r j:v.'.rM:,:i. f of that office. : The ressorrs for this conclusion iosignifieaoeo. rendered tbem alike oflenatto to v: v . t m. f.mtu ..t r? - . . . . , arm ost out of the situation of my family aed pn heave, and useless U earth, they would always ?gt6 hm bwn frwJ t393oe4 o all with ' bate selected these drones, loafers, big beads and wbora I bate communicated in conversation - or exquisites, A Cbristior nat'on caonof offer them by coTrespondenoe, and need not bo repeated, in sacrifiee, but pablie eontempt should wkip thenT I offer my onfeigned thanks to those-kind I friend -r- l. vi j -i .i.-. and tbe conductors of publie journals, who have - frothc.r hrkiag boles, a.d compel the. U Jplewed to fender me thiaastirr.ee oftheir v sb?-e tbe common danger. , The pommuoHy that CDnfidence aod my cordial co operation ia whst- w;ll cherish such men without rebake, briars oer mtj tend to the eafety, independence and down wrath upon it. They most be forcett to be good government of too country nsefu1, to avert tbe jodgments of God from the patrons of cowardice and tueaoness. , &The man who is now intent upon money, who turns public necessity and danger iato means of speculation, would, if very shame did not rebuke him, and he were allowed to follow the natural bent of bis heart, go open tbe field of battle af- W. A GRAHAM May 9, 1863. , ' s SPIRIt AND POUCT67 BURK31DB. " Nothing that a Yankee can ssy or do gltef Its any cause fof astonishment. . From the begining we saw the end snd were r repared for the teortt. ' Tbis mat seem unreasonable snd even arrogant; ter an ongagemeot and strip the lifeless bodies of fc , (nm xmaQ2 0f the war, we hate uniform- his brave toootryinen of the fewepoils they.ear tj declared our conticutni, that, In the Ustresortr rie d into the fight. Such , men, unfit for aoy- to eflwl lbo lubJgation of the South, tbe negroes thiuj generous or noble themselves, Jue toe h vena, can onlv suek the blood of tbe l'oa.llt . . . . ... .. . AnsoN TnooPtR9. You are ordered to be io this place) on the 28th inst., prepared to march to tbe defence of your eountry. Se Orders. To Sunday School Children. Them isV nnd will continue to be, for a long time," perhaps, in onr eonntry, a pent' scarcity of beoks especially Spuday School booksr: TheHbeaniifal 8ons which Sunday School children delight to aing, and which are contained in books which cannot now be ha-, and few of wbieH are found among n, will, we fear, soon be lejond theirtach. Ta meet and eop- I ply tbii want, in part, we cjlll pabliib, in tbe J.yut, ervery week, a hymn. Weomeso tbis week with tL beautiful one, " I cujlit J p lore tty Mother.'I oujht to be a reproach to any man, that be is giowing rich, while bis country is blecdieg at every pore." , t For taeArgns. if practicabU, wonld be armed against their mss. ters and incited to deeds of cruelty and guilt which wonld make demons blush. Of c this deteraios. tioo oajtha ipart of our barbarous invaders we have now proof positive from lips which do 'not lie: It aa follows : ; ' After the surrender of TortJJaeosy twocom i ' We coatemplate poblisb'Cj a Sue Jay School. Ilymo Book, of our own election. U cobfun nboat one bun- i ureJ taz3. wbici we wUI cllit a pile that will gim. iiubjugation or xteiuiiuaaon ; fur in tbat event, ply runerate os for expense nd labor, without pro we need not look alaad for Lid. of Europe will help toe xorth to ennd us into tho dustf ' The moit -we can do, n ill' be to carry on a guerilla warfare', until the men are extcrnji nated. aud the women alone remain to deTend .jtoaWitealasatoat the .hra'fttif im -ut, thjeit.he'art-1 iess invaders. Victorious ! the fate of the Xorih is sealed. HeVdoom js certain Wctghed down ty an almost iVcalculabfodebt her citizens taxed iteyood' endurance --uer credit goneher cities filled with widows and with orphans trailing and lana'eptation in" hef streets oaths, curses, maledictions an infuriate mob, with pas sions set on lire of hell murder, rapine, blood, Yncest political and -moral death-IictoHoas-i Liberty is rescued trom tbe grasp of tbe tyrant we are free. Our independence acknowledged by the world, the Confederate States, 'become 'tho land of the fjree and the home of the b.-ave." . 'ilere, only, will freedom be found. . "11 ere, "only, will .God'f people be at liberty to worfbip. him : ."under their own vine and fig tree, none daring make .them ashamed or afiai J ; Civil, reii gioas,fcociaJ liberty, w far as Aoieriea is concerned, ivill be. coofioed to the Confederate .States, and The rat'ons j flt Parties interested In such a work, are invited w ku a ijcii viufir, ew lumii w c Hi. mew LOW many to print, and whether it will be worth oar while to enter upon tbe Lbor. - We think we can make a se lection casual to, and perhaps superior to any mere Sunday School Hymn Eook In me. We have had ffiay 'yers.xpeiiepcejn:ihi; Jl5.tJ!P.toi.otSoflj!ix Eehoofs, and thiak we know what will please, interest, instruct and benefit children. Besides, we have a de- tire ie be naeful . ,; ;,; , . : , t JTo serte the present sge, r- Our cal'iog to fulfill ' fj may it aH.our powers engafeV " v - v To do onr Master's will.' ' there, th outstretched arm of pur fathers' God, 5,nphol4iog and defending us, will dwell the hap piest, riohest, most contented people in the world. . I But, thetattle Js yet to be fought and woo. copying and retreating advabeiog and falling ' -. back, until Wfrcan fall back oo further our troops c U Outragreoe a. On Sunday, the Hth Gen. Butler took foraible pot- : exposed to all withers sleeping on the ground, iwithoat -teats or coteriog a a single bliinket riiting on aeaoty ,fare-New Orleans Norfolk, PoWsmoathy, fallen -Richmond in danger the AnAmv in frrtlhir tnAftrt H.S11M iirviit ion , Extermination'' whai ecewary to compJete irretersible tictory but faith in Gad ! t ' - ,VlfioryTiclory , s necessary- fom rjiery cx-H Jrtfce s pcopw. . cannot jivt in me pois-; . frofd'atmoshere generated by a Jyrabt's rcath. TO-r r"!sT""i-i IanquUhpioeyawaysnao7 session tf the office of the Consulate of the Nether lands, in New Orleans, searched the person of the Consul, and took from him the key 6f his vault, where $800,000 bad been transferred by the Citizen's Bank of Louisiana, to the credit of the Metsrs. Dopes, of Amsterdam, to pay the Interest on? thr State bonds: He alio took possession ot the offices of the French nd Spanish Consuls, and jplaced guard over them. The French Coosol weot on board the French war steamer, JttUm, and bad not returned at this-date. Jle has also Issued an inflammWry proclamation, designed to lucerne the poor against tbe rich, by proaUfng to distribute among the poor one thooiand barrels of Lf ef and sngir, stolen front the citizens., Tbe poor it ia said, will soon be starring. " The enemy has de atroyed the track of the New Orleans, Jackson, and Great Northern Railroad. If "aflybodywanta to purchase a good .two horse wagon, let him go to Jno. HuscoeV ; ' OUR KEXT GOVERNOR. . Hon. Wm. A. Graham declmes the candidacy for Governor. Who" will the people of Anson nominate and support f ' w;,;.i'f ''' ' - : ; rr --r ,; SSeoadverusementof Corn for gale.-None need be-afraid to purchase of Jo, for his muter told him twBei the eorn for sale. .i YSAifrTkp Wilmington' J oujoap says that tho salt marsh to which we alluded a week azo. la-Rladfrr, has been purchased by a company, who -I only address yow a few lines to briogyourat- tent'oo to a letter in tbe Charleston Courier from I missioned officers bad It Interview, accidental we Dr. Buekman to J. B. Gibba & Ca I am sure suppose, with Gen. Burnside, who expressed the that yeujcannotjjo the u determination of his government Ut snbjogste the trodden and bleeding eountry a greater service, Sooth. He wss asked how this was to be brougb'F so I hope you will give it a conspicuous place in about ; to which he replied that if nothing else your spirited paper.- I wish it could be writtea would do, he would art fAe nyrrvs. One of the in berning characters, not only over J. B. G'bba officers, astonished at the enormity of such con- & Co's. doors, but over the doos of every such tetn plated barbarity, on the part of a civilised, concern in our land, and unfortunately, our coun people,' inquired of tbe General if he understood try is awfully cursed with such shaving abomina- him to say be wonld arm the negroes against the whites I? subrogate the Sooth, The General re plied io the affiuiativt, bis determination to arm the negroes if nothing else would do. Snrely General, interposed tho ofRcer ; you would not exterminate our women and children in that way Yes. reoltcd thcGeneral. e rohaticallv. if even . -. - .i t i j . - . -. (W be litccssaryto sabuiiaion, it will be done. We do not deem it oecersary to give the . names of the officers who held this dialogue with Ocn.-Bnrnide, but one im I jDapuin and jhe other ranked as Major, and their veracity is above suspicion. We did not get the conversation from them, but we received it from i source whicVV places its accuracy beyond a doubt. - We bare tried to state the facts itifcttim as they were told tions. . . ' . If every man who looks upon tbe efforts rosk ing by our own )eople to aid Yankecdoro io sub jugatiug a few people, would speak out their en timcnts," without fear or favor, I believe that a different state of aflalrs would aoou blt'7a'our distracted country," for already such Shy locks are dreading thtr daylight on their evil deeds. If I bad time, Fwouldlike very much to make one rude effortin yourpaper-in behalf of-this beautiful sunny land of ours; but I am fully sat isfied that we run a greut risk of losing the good will of some men by telling them the truth. I jwonldLiak..'fof..th8Sako otthobolt cansc in which we sre engaged, who will abandon bis aecorsed love of gain, by which his country's cause has to , aod we feel assnred we hate added nothing V been made to trail in, tbe dust, until the hopes of to their force. ' What then f Is anybody astonished f Is many have been dcetroyed? None can deny that this is a very dark period in our retolution, and that every one's faith and trust should be in tbe great God of Ileaveo 'for deliverance. , Certain things are necessary to be done to enable us to any deed too brotsl or too barbarous for a Yankee soldier to perpetrate I Is not this the moat hell ish purpose iter avowed by the lips of civilised man t But it brings no astonishment to onr auiad ; believe that tho good Ird-willioUrpose-innriJior.WQold .we waste psper In recording it; rere - behalf: 1st. Will the owners of cotton and wool factories repent of their sins, and put the neces saries which they produce, at former prices, or lower, to suit the. times, if they possibly can? - 2d. Will the proprietors of Tsn ysrds Uke into it not to steel every heart, and nerve etery arm to deeds of the direst tenges nee against h foe whose atowed brutality of purpose no words can describe. ' . p ' , ' Men of the South, you slumber on-a volcano. consideration that,' if : for the love of gain, they Seven hundred thousand tbeives, robbers, mur- hWp Lincoln to subjugate our country that self derera and avov-ed enemies of our wives aod chit- interest would dictate a different policy for if we are subjugated all is lost. 3d. Will the members of the Confederate Con gress who so recently voted to themselves f2,7C0 pr annum; for services there,-together with twice at much mileage as ii requisite, acknowledge to dren are on their way to despoil you of tor prop erty, yoor: honor, your lives, sad your liberty, Will yon slumber till your armed slave applies -the knife to your own throat and the dagger to the hearts of your wi ten -. -sod children ? Arm , for the fight : for, under. God the dsy of teBgesnes draweth ntgh. Bel your bouses in order, naaia their eonaiitoeour. with their feces veiled in the joar property ss secure ss yon can, ana be fesdy ' to receive your vanuai jo, at um uagger s poioi. Tour sous -ste brave, your cense just, tour God ' . . J .i; . . f ' r. . . r . rigniepus, yonrejiveranceceriajn.otafevoMr; nal. dust, that. they had nothing in view but. tbeir owninterest, hut that as soon ss so opportunity offers, they will, tf far ss they can, atone for the great; wrong they had done them and leduoolhl pay to $8 per day at most. 4. Will etery one repent and. turn to the Lord, for then our course will be speedily triamb- antjuid God will heal our land, , ANSON. 1- s FSjOII GZIt. JACMOST COMMAND -7 Tbe Riohmond Dispatch of Tuesday, ia itan saramsry of news', says J, . : Jt': . ' ' ; T --:" vTbcnews frooj . Stonewall'' Jsckaon,l,if It be correct, is glorious. It wss rumored In Staunton .the County.Courtof Mecklenburg has sppoioted Z?IlTZi!!l tM tO Dot . miAi " j a Salt Commiwioner and instnrcted htm 600,000 pounds of salt to he distributed smoeg the 7 ""'" "j- S - p T?r 't.-etL. ........ j. - . . oanio stricken, inetert dinction. . rortionr of F.oyu.. ,uny,. W.0 ewirges. rAUfMlmAA,A9.ptn county,' and these were being hotlr pnrrued and ta) notemcot. rfheiwhiOaorsin i i J I .1 ( 1 I ;i I I 'C II M it c t s H ;J a a a t O