Newspapers / The Durham Recorder (Durham, … / Oct. 22, 1856, edition 1 / Page 1
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UNION, THE CONSTITUTION AND TUB LAWS-THE GU AttblAttB . Of'OtJft LIBERTY. Vol. XXXVI. HILLSBOROUGH, N. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 185G. No. 1C1. Wanted, (lENtLEMAN and f.ady. of Cla.eical attain. menu, to lake charge uf Red Mountain Female Academy, it iU next eceaion, lo commence about the 15th of January. All communications e.lJreeaed to the subecriber will Le promptly attended to. GKQ. W. JONES, Sec'y. Red Mountain, Angual 28, 1856. 64 8m To tha Farmers of Orange, Alamance, Chatham and Wuke. rpiIE undereigned have formed a copartnership for the purpnfe of buying WHEAT. They will al Wiyt give the highrat Norfolk and Peteraburg pricea, deducting freight and othei ipenaea. They will pay the eaah on delivery of the Wheat at the Railroad. To carry out more effectually their purpoee, one of lha firm will he at the warehouae of each of lb following bamed plaeea, every week, on the Java tpaciflcdi Morriaville, . on Friday, Durham's, ' oo Wedm-adey, IlilLboroujh, ' on Tueeilay, Mehane'e, on Wedueeday, Graham, , ou Thuiaday. By thia arrangement the farmere will receive at home what their wheat would net Ibeu in market, without the rik and trouble of tranaportalion. The undttaicned alao offer their eervicre aa COM MISSION MERCHANTS to buy Groceriee. Tbey have mad Sr-angemcnte by which tbey will be enabled In furiil.h their rulumrra with Groceriea at an advtnee nf only three percent, on wholesale pricee. Tbey have enmiaodiouv warehouse at Chapel Hill, for the conve Mlenre of the farmere of lb neighboring country, where enme una will ba in attendance at all limee. Ail com munication ahould be eddre.aed to ua at Chap.' Hill. K. MALLKTT, W. L. SAUMJERS. May 5. 8A 6m SALT! SALT!! O ftftfl 8 ckaof Liverpool Ground, daily eipected 500 Hack Liverpool and Martha!!' Flat. S.OOO Oii.hrla Alum, ' for aale by J. & J. L. HATHAWAY & CO. " Wilmington, July 10. 47 f DAN away fiwn the euWulief on the Sib of thia aa. X OTIC E . unit tbe auWriliM on ni.fiih, a txiund boy by the name Jacob (juai ken- . I.m.V He i 17 ne 18 veara o!.!, and vae hi nod L me . by the County Court of AUinance al June U-r.n, IS.'iO. I berel.y f revjarn all perona from harhoiing, employ ing m hading with ibe eaid Jacob Quackeiihu.il, under the lieunlty provided by the law in auih ctM. i:limi.v draxton. epter-er 19 67-3vp. 11 A CARD. AVING located la Hillaborough, respectfully of- (rra hie profraaio.ial aervice lo the riiutroa of lha towa and aurroonding rounley. Ha ran produce eatie aeuiry teetirnoniale of hia akill in the profc-aioo. OiflVe at the Union Motel. When rejueled, famU liee wi(l he walled oa al their reeideaca. Charge rea aonible. r T Dr. R. will ba in Chapel Hill Ike firat week in each month. February It. - J5 CARTERS SPANISH MIXTURE. The Great Purifier of the Blood ! THE BEST ALTERATIVE KNOWN!! Kola Purdet of Utrcury in il. An infallible remedy for Scrofula, king'a Evil,Khpuma tiam, Obstinate Cutaneou Eruption, Pimplea or Poe lulea on the Face, lllotchea, Boil, Ague and Fe ver, Chronic Sure Eyes, Ringworm or Tetter, Scald-head, Enlatgement and Pain of the Donee antl Jointa, Halt Rheum, Stub . born Ulcere, typhiliHo Dieordere, and all diaeaaea ariring from an iujudicioua uae nf Mercury, Imprudence in Life, or Impurity of Blood. Thia great alterative Medicine and Purifier of the Blood la now uaed by t!ionaaod of grateful patient from all parte of lha United Stale, who teaiify daily to the remarkable curea performed by lha grealeat of all medicine., "CARTER'S SPANISH MIXTURE." Neuralgia, Rheumaiiam, Scrofula, Erupliona on the Skin, Liver Diaeaee, Fever, Ulcere, Old Korea, Affection oftha Kidneye, Dieeasea of the Throat, Female Com plaint, Paine and Aching of lha Uonea and Jointa, are peedily put lo Sight by ueing thia inestimable lemedy. For a II diaeaaea of lha Blood nothing baa yet been found to compare with it. It rleanaea the eyilem of all impuritiea, acta gently and efficiently on the' Liver and Kidneye, alrengihena the Digestion, give tone In Ibe etomich, makea the Skin clear and healthy, and icatorea life lonatitulion, enreebled by uiaeaac or broken down by the eieeaaeeol'youlb.toitapriatino vigor and atrength. For the BieKieae or raxnta it ie (wculiarly applica ble, and wherever it haa become known ie regularly prescribed with tha happieat eflecta. It invigoratea the weak and debililated,and imparta elaeticity to the worn out frame, cleara the kin, and leavea the patient been and bealthyt a aingle bottle of thia inestimable remedy ie Worth all lha arxalled Har.aparilU. in e i intone e. 1 he large number of certificaiea winch we have re ceived from pereoiia from alt parte of the United (Stale, la the beat evuleiii-e that there la no humbug about it. St tfitf&s. " May your jich aoil, Exuberant, naturca'a better bleaainga pour O'er every land." ANCIENT WHEAT. A Part coricpomJciit of tlie.A. Y. Com tnercial My8 " Two year ago, a scientific gentleman, in mnkingarcheological research es, in :ome of the ancient tomb in llie South ol'France, found embetliled with some preaerv ctl bodies a species nf wheat not now in exis tence. It was a habit m the days of the tirst Gallic kings to place in the coffin of einbalin eil persons a certain quantity of wheat. Some of this wheat was sown, and the gentle man was astonished to see sprout fourth from sixteen to twenty stalks front a grain. As titer crew, the stalk became angular and much stronger and more vigorous than the common wheat. When the grain formed, it was found that there were on an average twenty more grains in a head than in the or dinary wheat. A considerable quantity of that ancient Gallic or Roman wheat was sown last fall on the government farm at Ranibnuil- Tbe Preaa, hotel keeper, maginlrele. physician, and ; rt,and great reportsare arrivingofitS proiluc public men, well known to the rommumty, all add their tivtness. The ordinary wheat of France irt, I teatimony lo the wonderful effecta of thia GKEiT I .... nnltf ,h- ...At;..n ..f thia ...ri-it wneat, titmioihiieu in vigor anu prtHiuciive nes by the centunes of rewolutti"n through whicli it has paed. This iliscovrry will take us back through fourteen centuries for our seed wheat, ami will put IVance sudden ly in possession of one-eighth more agricultu rgil wealth than she pos-essed before the dis covery. At least these are the expectations built upon it, and it i to be hoped that they w ill be realized." BI.UOU PURIFIER. Call on the Agent and get an Almanac, and read lire detaila of aaloniahing curea performed by CARTER'S Br AIBH MIA I L nr., (ii noer caaae wanaa iti- arraiaa tiaa aaa aiaxaLLt raiiaa.) Tbelnniieof an adveniaemenl will not admit iheir full insertion. VM. 8. BEERS & CO., Proprietors. Ko. 304, Broadway. Ktw Yurk, To whom all ordera mual be eJJrra.eJ. Foi aale by Drutgiaia and Country Merchanla in all parte of the Coiled Mtatre and lha Canadaa, and by lAing &. Cain, Jlill'lioriHieh; A. IHcAlpine, ten- eey ville; W. &. J. M Pavlor. Leelurt; T. J. Patrick, Greenabrmnigb; J. W. Field, Jameelown. July, 15. 47 13m E. J. I.ITTERLOII. W.P.ELLIOTr. LUTTERLOII & ELLIOTT, General Comniifsion and Forwarding MerchantfJ, WILMINGTON, N. C. Dealera in Lime, Calcined Tlaater, Cement, Land Platter, Plaatering Hair. eke. Vc. October S7. Electricity Appmkd is thf. Cure or Die r. ask. Dr. liobet t Reinak, of the Univerr.it r of Berlin, Prussia, has lately invented and f;ate, he is in there. I've dime out with my ittle ones to see the grave, but it's too late. 'I lie gate is bhut and we must come back to morrow. The poor woman was quite over com", and the children criedjtt beholding their mother's grief. . "'Will you take a 'seat and ride hotnet' said the gentleman. O thank you, thank you, sir, but I rottld not think of it.' He insisted, anil, taking one of the forlorn little creat'ires in his arms, he placed it in the carriage. The mother and remaining two children followed. 1 took a seat beside trie driver, and ordered him to drive ns the woman had directed. The little ones soon dried their tears, and amus ed us by their innocent prattle ; the youngest one often asking if we were going to take hint to his father. " A half hour's drive brought us in front of a 'pour little hovel, which the woman said would be home if Jemmy were there. " Assisting the party out, the gentleman cnntiurieu mem to tne tioor; then, drawing forth his card, he asked the woman's name. Krulget Murphy said she. W rittng it on the blank side, he handed it to her, with a bank bill, saying, ' when you need more send the card to me: ' then, biddinz her a kind good night, he took his seat, and we rode in silence to our respective lodgings. "That man was Millard Fillmore, then President of the United States." From the Journal of Commerce. SPEECH OF'EX-GOVERNUR FLOYD, or V1R0IMA, Delivered at Meeting of the New York Me.chant", Octobert10th,.I8jr3. . Ill compliancewith the invitation of an MnteuvnRc number nf the merchants of New Yrtt k, Ex-Gnv. Floyd of Virginia, delivered an address, yestenlay afternoon, on the great political questions of the day, from plat form in front of the Merchants' Exchange. A desire to hear a reply to the mis-statements ami sophistries embodied in the recent speech of Speaker Banks at the same place, was almost universal among the leading busi ness men of the city. Mingled with this was al-o a wish toshow to the world, by some Humble and insignificant as I am, a stranger in your midst, because I have received an in vitation to speak to you in this city, it has been thought a subject of sufficient worth to republish declarations and speeches whicli I have made in Virginia, a id, fellow-citizens, I am sorry to say that I have been considered too of sufficient importance to be misrepre sented in what I did say. W hat I said there said freely and without restraint, for I wear no mask. But, if I were myself pos sessed of the spirit of cowardice, which would banish me from my hearth-stone for ever, I w ould still have the spirit chow it in the Cincinnati Convention to uphold me in declaring my cntiinent everywhere. The Democracy there I found lo be a unit, one and indivisible. It found men from Massa chusetts agreeing with men from South Caro lina (cheers) and the phlegmatic Yankee and the Hotspur chevalier of the South, laying down like brothers in one faith and one be lief. ("Cries of" good, good." I am emliolden- red therefore to speak the faith of Democracy wherever 1 am. I speak it in Lynchburg, Virginia, and I speak it here. I have one word of explanation to offer of what 1 tlitl say in Lynchburg, when I carried on the canvass in Virginia, and when I vis ited every mountain peak I could reach, and every green valley where there were WHY citizens to whom 1 eoulil speak.- i lien I be lieved, fellow-citizens, that the danger to the Democracy was front the American party. That was my judgment then, and I singled out my advesary. I singled hint out not be cause I thous'it he was the weakest, but be cause I thought he was the sturdiest and most formidable. fApplause."! I did it in Lynch- remained within hearing distance compaC atid unmoved during this protracted eH'ort eeemed to be moved with a universal regret that the speech was not a longer one, and cried go on," "goon," we will stand here all night and hear you," tvc. Gov, Floyd bowed his thanks in return for litis gratifying compliment, but was reluctant-1 ly compelled to withdraw. After lie had retired, the following resolu tion was offered and unanimously adopted, amid die most vociferous applause: llcsolved. That the thanks ol this meeting be and are hereby tendered . to Gov. Floyd, for his very able and patriotic,spcech, and unanswerable arguments and facts adduced by him, to which every lover of the Union should respond with heartfelt enthusiasm. The Governor then came out into the street and entered his carriage, when he was greeted with other hearty demonstrations of enthusiasm. As the vehicle drove rapidly up Wall street, a portion of the crowd fol lowed for some distance, cheering as they went along. Altogether, the Governor has every reason to feel proud of the reception which he, as a gifted defender of the Consti tion and the Uuion, received at the bauds of the merchants of New York. CONSISTENT WHIGS CANNOT SUP- i ul MK. UUUliAN AN. O.ie would think, from the earnest manner in which the Democratic partv appeal to the Whigs for support, that the latter had been recipients of Democratic favors time out of mind, and that now, being in a position to re pay with interest those manifold courtesies, thev laid thpinaclvva nnpn In tlm rli.i... i :.. burg, where I thought the Democracy should gratitude by relusing to do so. No what ut "j.ioSiiiiiiiciiiuin..iii m. ij. " i nas me party winch thus entreats the Whi"9 not wish to retract our words in tliA sneech c.. it r . a., c. . . . . . . . . . v r winch I then made, liut I lint), upon con sideration, after one week's stay in New York, that the enemy of the Democracy is not the American partv. There are bonds to save it from discomfiture, ever done to entitle it to claim, with anr show of justice, the assistance it requires ? "lias it ever, while in possession of unlimited power, evinced, bv a single lilurl art i.ntni..i i - e . - , . j ... -v,, H Bvuiuviik vi irar i ..t l.n..-..nM ,K& llrtit.i.rqi. n.ul tli. . .1 . . . O " wiiv.cn i.i-.,...i..av, .. . t"v rowat u us political rivals r Has it ever cone American party, voices, -'That's true," and (into a contest with the Whigs in whicli it t Will lull 3011, lUI'OW t!llC1l9, Hilill I.IMRC bonds of the Union arc. 'J hey are the bonds lorebore to assail them with every epithet lht could be found in a vocabulary renl.-t T IS'I I J ' VJ ill me WMIIU. UI ai'Illtr . . a a . r- . . deceive demonstration, that the merchant:' V",,' .'..! "r,"l,!"n '6' l- l','? wor.u' "Passive of contempt and scorn .L ... . r . ... jiaa i aim t bi c mv uwistts in imv H1U IIiOt7K(rr T Mtccesfully applied, it is said, a newmethoil JA8.C. SMITH. MILE CASTIN. CLLIBDo - JAMES C. SMITH & CO. Factors and Commission Merchants, Ao. 2, Soutb Water Street. WILMINGTON, X. C. , Cj" Particular attention given lo the aale of FI.OL'R, end oiber Countiy Produce. OcleUerSJ. 10 ly of introducing constant galvanic currents into I the nerves and mo'clet of patients, whereby leases of palsy of every kind, apoplexy, j atrophy of the muscles and of the spinal J marrows, some of them from ten tn twenty i years' standing, have been entirely cured i within a few minutes. Within a peiiod of sit weeks, out of four hundred patients that ihad lost the use of their limbs and muscles, upwards uf two hundred have been entirely restored to health, whilst the remainder wrie rapidly improving under the treatment. We plate this paragraph before our read ers, that they may decide for themselves upon the probability of its tateinents. JOSEPH Ii. BLOSSOM, Commission & Forwarding Hsrchant, WILMINGTON, N. C, Will give bie pereonal attention to buaineae cnlruated la hie care, and ebippere ma J rely en having prompt retarna. Liberal advances medeoaeoneignmenteof all limle of Country Produce for sale in this market, or fur ebip men! to otber porta. Conaignmenle of FluUJ aoliriled. Mar. h, IfiSJ. S7t of New York are, as they ever have been, the unflinching menus or the Constitution and j the Union, and to give a practical cuntradic- j tion to the assertions of the Black Ifepubtican ' presses to the contrary. Long before the hour of speaking, the mer chants began to leave their wharves and littir counting-rooms and flock to the spot All the advantageous points (or seeing ami hear ingthe steps ami pillars of the Kxchange, the doors and windows of the buildings in the vicinity, the brick pile at the corner of William street, were promptly occupied. Quite a number of adventurous people de termined lo see the demonstration, if they coi.ld Dot har the speech, took their peril ous position on the neighboring roofs. As trie minutes rolled on, tlie crowU momentarily Thet Constitution and the L'nion voice, how about speaker resumed. " I think there, Jew, for that word.". Laughter. When it was proposed on one occasion, to the assembled chiefs of Greece, tit sat they should invite their itdvet'ary, Hector, who was dealing death and drsimctjoti in all their ranks, to an entertainment a'id feast, objection was made by tinue tunly atid resolute chief, on the ground that he was their enemy. The wisest inl most considerate among the chief of the Grecian lit. however, proposed the Union, which was agreed to, andth Or. on lha nll.on I i... lAppiause.l , it not traduced their leaders ; lilarli the foreign vote." I characters of hiffhminde.l. stigmatized their motives; charged upon Heu ry Ulay the guilt or sins venial, and sins of a grosser kind; hung him in lettered effigy, and suffered him to sink to hia final rest without making any attonement lor having fastened upon him the false accusation nf engaging in a political intrigue, involving the grave crTmo of " bargain and corruption i" And who was the prime instrument in bringing this malicious charge tobcar against him? James Buchanan. Who was it that approached hi'm nun me oner mat ne spurned I James Buc ruzireu and daring rhiif who li.nl objected loit in the j hanan. Who was it, when earnestly reques- " t v J ..,!... -j i itu vi iciusiaie nenry i iar in tne popular makiiiit this declaration: "Let htm come ; , regard by narrating truthfully the facts with- increased. until abou h.lf-paat tlree o'clock'. ,s "K" fTe' e w,u !f, " ' w , ' r !" kBI0.w,,?e.1MereJ evasively, and the vast anace ii front of the Kxchanire and..- "-;. ..!. r-' "uuie aense r jatnea uuc- .i; ' -..,i- . r - kt.b i. i '" to morrow, tne tlay oi war." i i-augn- ldlla. w ao v "".:V?. -H - - ter.1 That i the anawer.amv fr em S. YaxnEB IscEsriTV. We learn from the s. -L I ,.f lli. IQffl. nit .1.-1 - n kmm. L.iri a r.iamiucr ui n m.iv rairnuiii" vi cairn v auuai icr ui uiik a. ur- . - . r irican whale s''ip 5""' K' ;!jond Williain street, and easterly half waar H.i7il? nMaaVT' air kaaw aatianTt ttaaa lira tons, belonging to new i orfc, arrived from Hanover to Pearl street, was filled with ',"';" jat Queensjewn JJM .. . . isfter "e have ssved thVunoin. rnn"au. vnysge, w.i.cn -'"r,, ... r,,w. ..nr..... e siiouiu esiimate me numuer present, YUr citv is all on fires there is a imturC trip, she captured inree wn.es ,rom wnci. ,rom 7,000 to 10,000. It was at least til-1 ,. f' . . - . LONG Si CAIN nAVC jutt received, and oft, r for aale, a large vari ety of I'erfomery, Ac, of tbe beat qualiiy, among W hirll are tbe folio ing ; Cvl.iie, Toilet Vinegar, I.avenJir Water, Verbena, (eraneum and Hay Water, 1'ineEitracla, UaiinAHar- BaUemie Cau De Dolol,a riann, One Tooth Waah, f'hlorin Taotb Wa.h. Paate ( tba Teeth, E.u l.artrate.a very fiiiear-I.von'a Kaihari.in, ticle for the Hair, llillier'a P.icelaior Furni- l.ip Halve, tore Pnliah, Fancy topa, TriiK.li Poli.h, Khiving toeM, t'biloromea. Cold Cream, I'omade Divine, Egyptian Hair Dye, fancy l.etlei A. Note Paper, PorkH Inkatanda, Envelopee, Meal fei.a, l.eller and Foolacap Pr, Ink, Ilarkgammon Uoanla, Work Boiea, Writing I leas a, Cabaa, PortMoniee, Baakcle, Ac. f. Kotaaibrt tS. H Hi no A. Dais. GVeos M. Dm, js. BAIN k CO. SUCtTSHOHS TO BAIN, 1IATTOK ti CO. WIIOLCMALE GltOCERjJ COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Cmrnrr of Kintt and Water llrttli, roirrtvMorTii, va. rT XiKrial allenlinn raid lo aelling Tobareo, FUnl drain. Cotton, Ac, AIo,t Kecei.ing and Forward tug Uooda. Porlaroiulh, July 14. Lumber for Sale Atthc llaleigh Planing Milla. 200,000 feet dreosed Flooring. 100,000 Veatherboarding. 50,000 ' Ceilinz. 100,000 " " Thick Hoards. 'piHS lumWr iaof the very Leal lone, leaf jiine. brought to an earl thirkneM, and will be delivered on board the car. Ire of charge. Tboot wiabing la puirhaae ill, on application by latter or otberwiae, be forni.lied with a card of prices, and alt oeceeaary Information as to freighle, Ac. T. D. HOGG L CO. Raleigh, March S3, Sm u fl March It. -74 nearly right tons of oil have been obtained A new eystetn ha been introduced by which it would seem that this valuable animal is more surely, safely, and speedily destroy ed than by the old means; and the credit of introducing the present mode belongs to the captain of the W. F. Sa fiord. Instead of being harpooned as formerly, a course that was both dangerous to life and sncertiin in the reult, the fish are now shot i and aftci the hail enters the flesh it esptodesin the body, on much the same principle a a shell. The r fleet of the explosion is generally to shatter that portion of the flesh where it has entered, and it seldom tails to resell a viui part. Lap tain Roys, the master ol the whaler, is at pre sent in 'Birmingham, where he is having some suns of a peculiar construction made, which he expects will be highly effective in the cap ture of those fih. It is the intention ol Capt. Roys to apply for patents for invention to the ! -1' I. I . ..... L.I.Z. ia.i mi.! iti.iri ivoii uuKimiinii., . X. Y..V,rnt. . . s .i -i. it i. i r T i i 5 ' i i 5' Hre tsh. will pot it out? altlioush sli" latter coniiiriaed a lare assie-. ' :. , . . , ., c gate of liochanan and rdlmore men. IT, however, the number then present was 40,- ttuu, ascatiniateti Dy some ol the lilack lit publican papers to note Ii was it. when an anneal wa made to Governor Letcher to publish the con versation which took place in his presence, refused to permit him to remove the seal of secrecy from his lips? James Buchanan. And who, finallr, e ask, is it that is now the candidate of the Democratic party for those Presidential lll.nnra n birh llunrn I'l.. put it nut, and the fire companies will fight j f,ied of attaining- by reason of this stain of to spruce alterward. ! bargain and corruption restinz upon hira? W hat I have to say is this, and you will ; None other than James Buchatun, the very ii gc i sc iu mis story ot " oargam ruption." Conservatives of all parties reflect up- stop Let us unite to ers. the number at yesterday's rc.UHC. mp' 1 11 l.tre w f .,,n,t t50"'" 'na,n h" alleaatCO.OOO. It wasinstruc. ,n,' ,becaure.'r lhcre 18 "X.11"" 1 llate 1,1 co,r,n iiow man r well known faces of j aIk u,'uf. II. ' myseli. I have never j Let Co tin the leading men of New York, were to be J" f presc.i an opinio,, . n,. ..mi uie toiiawiiiz iac : seen in the midst of the vast throng. At the irttract. Hut I hv that such is tne change Lnder the hig administration of Millard Banks demonstration, it was a subject or re- i ,,f. I"-. ' H.lWI ' J4,rf t,!a' J ; Fillmore the N.irUi and South wotked har mark that most of the people who aathrred ! nessed since I came North-and t.iere is i moniously together to put an end to the sla- to hear him (except the Buchanan and Fill- 1,1,1 a man '." l,,e S',.ul.,, tliat Ml ,-n " : ,er' U,t'Vl. ni1 tUroagU the noble co.op v J. :.i..,.i!. .,ain.nM ... it,. nr crouml of suspicion as to my fidelity to ! eration of Clay and Cass. Webster and Foote. v ........ :.t....i! il nr.,iiii.i t.aiii- . I 1. Ii! I street and to this part of the town. Here the ' ini.t rauc paiiy, auo i sen ju oe.j ..s audience were evidentlv on their own ground, " Jctor ti, irpii.a. and am gmng to be and theireager countenances seemed to uj.tZ.lrt!' that .Lev ik. t.. ..Iminl.tr . a.ti,lff ! twt the caiid..!aie of the Mack Kcpublican . . ... .. . "is.ssi-tsr in iiiilif ts.a lsaataatl Ktf it! If Vllftf lilt i..t,-it. k- k-:..-...i;- ....... ii.,; I'arty can domain, had souirht to misrei.tesent itwir ill". hj llicn I will save my vote .teous and friend ... and their respective Col earues. the nuestion was satisfactorily adjusted, and when Pres ident Fillmore retired from office the Repub lic an ai (irate WIHIIII us OWU DOrCCTS, SI1U its relations with fmcign potentates were cour- tinier the Democratic views to the world. VRE now leceiving al their frog floie on tha ear ner Cat of lha Court Houae, s large and complete aaaorlmenl of Drug!, MctlicincK, Paints, Oil, a . ... n m UyC ClUII.I. ciC.f in.ri aim a,r takiiis- an rveiiin? drive in l,i.hlhe.havt,,lrcledf.iihfare.andwithlliaerUI; . iut.arU ( the citv of Washil.fiton. On irlM. . . . . " MILL Altl lILLMOftE. A friend, who was an eye-witness of the following incident, narrated it io the editors of the New Orleans Creole, a an illustration of ccnuine love for humanity. The principal sctor in the scene doubtless never expected that it would have been made the subject of a newapaper paragraph; but it is so charac ter im ice of true generofity and nobleness that it is here produced iu the words of the narrator t ' In the year 1851 I chanced to be one or a object of having only pure and genuine article. 'i'hey plei'ge tbem-elvea la tell only pure ard genuine Meilinnee, and promptly tit attend lo all ordrfe, sod St A LOT of Thiea Penny Nailat and on tanel of . s "'. .,. ,, . , . . A Ill HVIVO l l.t llllfnot Carm-SenO-Aleo! ""uM '"" CounUt hyanuna to atam.n just rf. i:ivi;d. rtt'M MK.lt M A M'l I.I.AM, i.f va'iime kinda. Foe aale by i. C.TL RREM IN E & SON. May SI. IS FOR HA L F. , IJKASI. flarch, fliboin Tootb Waah, lllark l.eaier Varni-h, llull'a Haraaparilta, Ceaen.- of Jeva Coftee, E- M. I.ane'e Vrrniilugr, tra Fine, Aval's Cherry Pectoral, Holland Gin, Aver'a Pilla. Ac. Ac. LONG & CAIN. June !J J.I .'.!. 3 Iheir aiock.Wlieving that Ibey ran make it Ibe ilintereat la purche their supplies neat bom. April loin, is.ia. JL'ST RFXKIVKl), 1.0. Part I.ea.l,J lb. Whit Zinc Taint lugile.HweetOil, l.l.la.Tannera' Oil, gila. Japan Varoiah, 14 lb. Pan fre, t rlos. pilenl Paint Drier, Dry While and Red Lead, It lb. French Ziscer Poicelain White, Ate. At. ' invi. I. IIIIIU Valuable Proicrty for Sale. rpil U auharriber oflcr Km aale the plantation on which he now rc.iilea. It i a deai.al Is ailuation, one mils from Hnuih Lowell Academy, a hcabhy aa any in Orange. The l.andia in S good ! of cultivation, well adopted lo Corn, Wheal and Tobacco. On the Land la a good (iranery and Tobacco Uarne, beide very other out houae nereaaary, with s large and eon vcnienl Dwelling, well arranged fur boardeie. It ba on it alao s valuable Apple D.rhard. Pernna wl'hing in purchase will do well lo call on tha fubacriber and virvrtli preniieea. i na tenn will be mad sceommoua. JAMES WOODS. , Ftbrusry So. tf iieariiis one of the cemeteries the aitrnlinn of one of oar parly was arrested by female, with three small children, scaled near the closed gate. She seemed deeply afflicted, and her miserable apparel and that of the lit tle ones told a tale of sufleiiiiir. v. huh was truly distressing. We had gone but a shmt distnce when the person whose attention had been arrested bj them oidered the dri ver to turn and drive t the place where they were seated. Descending from the carriage, he approached the woman and inquired the cauae of hrr sorrow. In a plain and simple at vie she told hcrstnrv thus! Two rears brfure her husband had left i .. .. vi ms nnme to mm a oetirr one in America, ne had worked very hard, and saved, money enough to send for his family, and had a small home prepared to receive them. I nai usy they had arrived, but, alas! not to meet the glad husband and father, for two days previ ous he had fallen from a staging where he was i for him, if the srouud should open and swal- administration of Franklin Fierce we liav a ffl.sa.lt. a Oov. Floyd's speech, which we present in I ;,w e-LrP'f.J rn.e , nr "J Pf home or abroad. full, was received at first with calm and j 1 ""8 '", ' "" y.g...M. , oan5erous sptr.i oi license nas Been engen- S" I ll.ail a.a F.m al.a.I a. ,k a- u a .1 uro.1 - ! It k a S ' al I I.. It I . . 1 . kk.I - l I 1 . .1. l .... earnest attention. As the orator kindled '"""f",' . """ - ... ..... uaunni iy , me siave- inrti in n:r iiiom .-. mi ji i.mi-, am tome uu. iiic.ui.i, so ncruiciicaiiy sealed uy consent aiidslandatmybiitk intliatcriMs-Cheers of the ablest statesman of the Union, has All I have to s-.v in conclusion-' is thia been re opened as a subject of discussion in That the pi't hi. h has'heretolore navigated the political arena ; and born of this slaver the ship ol slate, haa been Cif principle) of question, a great Northern party, 0tt7i il$ llemorrary, and the crew that is now on origin to Ucmoerafi, now threatens, not only board of hrr, are the true ar.d roiiatitutiou f to rend its progenitor , but to tread beneath loving IneiiiU and patriots ot the country, us left me federal Lotiatituiioii. lernfted, ause.l 1 here are lireaKers aiiea.i. ; i.npeniieni, tne iiemocracy call upon man should be at his post.' The minor "e lugs for n lief not I -r the purpose of with his theme, the sudieiicesraduullr warm ed up with him, and responded with the mst enthusiastic plaudit. Whenever the speaker touched upon the topics of the Con stitution and the Union, the applause as immense. Cheers arose, as if from one man. hats were waved, and it was some moments he fur o ll.c artf aker could resume his remarks. . - p A, one by one, he blew up the tacts ami ight of i.very figures of Mr. ISanks's speech, the deli; llie an.lii.tira manifftaleil Itaelf in la. an.l.r'w. ..fOMa.!" a. l... -. ,. T.lh.e !li tile US. and ft CIV OtlC who loVCS hi - "' ."...'"'.I . I.I- ".I I.i.,.l! I etpressinns oi approval, as Uov. nvtiir7 ""- " a ......., . proceeded, and the applause incressed, thel.WIw,'-'i'''.""";,,re u'HothcUtiavl , people In the outskirts or the throng pressed dear rnends, on e more. in, with the vain hope of getting near the As the orator concluded hi maxtrrly stand, and thousands, whul ere hopelessly speech, he was greried with a s;umaiieous prevented bv their distance, from hearing a ; ti ib ite of app'an', which continue I for oim word, "till lingered about the spot, and cu- timr, anirshowrd with hat a powerful mid tented theut aiders with litlttiltif in chccis'tellinrf cllect his eloiiuehl wonts hid fa int whenever everybmly ele cheered. The en- upon the at tu 'it" ce. Notwitlistaiiding tiie speech occupied two hours and a half j had pkcn lor m long a time, from s ii.ir and yet the entire area withia hearing di. 1 ter befot e fmir to a ijuai ter alter sis, or !- . lance, continued densely barked, and onlr'liours and a hlf. le ruhibiitd no iu of those dropped oiTwho were beyond ear-shot the audience manifested itself in ,Ui.ltcr'l''Tcnres ol p.ny t.;u m icngcr ";"7 "VC; l" sutes.oyre- iscoun- olios 'iu -Missouri i.ouiprotnise or in cm re t pat error by a more conservative : rule in future j but to'sustain the acts of an sdiniiiis'iatioii whirh Ins become the object : of pr.pul.ir c'entiitciatioii and i oti'eupt, and to re.inaunurate the reit id misrule under James Hurhnrin. No Whig, tliat i a Whig, i jti ever find it in hi ci.iicirnce to lend Dent ne racy a helping luind under such cir CUinsfanfes. Halt. I'atnuf. and knew that thrj would find the speech reported in the papers ol this morning. Tak ing it all in atl, this demonalration is one of the most significant features of lh csmpsijtn combining as it did, an array of intelli gence, wealth, ami patriotism, such as we have never before seen at a political meeting Tiik.M n rottTiis Crisis. The New Vork t'oin nercid savs " No.m ami South there exhaustion. Several times in lh nuie of is a deep-rooted conviction that '. Millard Fill his speech, his voice faltered, and it wa fear- more is th man for the present crisis in our ed that the grest disadvantages under which , national adairs that conviction is spreading he lalnred in attempting to make himself on every hand, and it onty remains forever heard by the monstrr meeting in the cold ritucn, who in his conscience believe Mr. mien sir, would cotnm l him to cease before 1 Fillmore to be the safest and best of the three ..' -r l:. : I... I .....L- '. ine coinp.eiion ui oin in.ii.ut-.i ict.ii.. ? ntil Hut the diflirutty tradualty disappeared as he went on t his voice crew clearer and more in this city. . he went on tins voice crew clearer ami more We hate not snace for the whole of tins sonorous towards thecloe, and ifte rnuncia- speech, but present Hie conclusion as fol-Jti-in of his concluding words was as distinct eamlid ites, to act up to his conviction, and his election will be accomplished. Supported by these, and by the numerous party titst has put him in elimination, and by tlie 'rccupcia ting Old line vv lugs everywhere, v.h, m all lowst sod audible as in the opening sentences. 'sobriety anu earnestness, shnuhj Jlr. rillmore lane , .:,. ti-i BLANKS for ualc at thi Office. ami aiiniuie a The rnthusta il vtuik, and r.v, said she, pointing lo the " A few more words ami I hive finished. slic ciowd id auditors, h had fail o r
The Durham Recorder (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 22, 1856, edition 1
1
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