V V ' ' ft xtZ ' -V-;- . 1 ! iftif (y i - i i' 4 i i - ill in ' i ii ' ! 1 ' , if: . . . C 0N? Tl TU;T 1 N: AN D g AiE: OrARDlANS- OP OUR LIBERTY. " Vol. HILLSBOROUGH; N. C.y SEPTEMBER 2, 1863. No. 2210. 111 9 '; From tha Raleigh 8unda'rd. ' ' ' ' . NORTH OAUOLiX.C POLITICS. We copy under this head to-day, a very able and interesting F.ditorial from the Kayetteville Obttrvtr, to which wt invite tiv attention of ur readers. The Obttrvtr if correct, in laying that the real originator of part feeling are those who, administered the State govern ment in 1 86t when our people determined to resist Mr.. Lincoln's proclamation. But we go farther and say , that tli was only a part of the party programme that Ird tu . r J 5 - I...!.' -I.ll III! - . I . I 7 Toe sniuivovn ui mr v iiii, anii wiucn nai Irons ft inauguration at Mao turnery to the present moment. When oar people t pirated from the federal Union and Bait ed themselves with the ' government at Montgomery," thrf did to in the belief that tneu anauea m opinions wuum mence-j forth he political equals, and that the form wf government adopted would be so ad ministered aa to preserve the right of the sovereign Stafea, and protect the free ex predion ol thought andopinion." In thia il.ry hate teen grievously disappointed. The administration of Confederate affairs l.a been atrictly partitas. No man who did not regard the election of Mr. Lincoln s good tauc lor ditanlving the Upion haa ern adroittrd t the Cabinet coanrils of the Preident. Pmacriplion ( och men, (h in the field anil council, hat been Uie urdrr of the day; and not only thia, hat when tfcry hae complained of'sach treat ment. and endeavotcd to Correct the errors and blunders of the admintatratlon, ther hale ben aaaailrd in venomooa ter-os.and iltieatened with a hideous mat k vhich would disgrace tliem and their childen. Hot ern this could have been bore for the sake of the conatrr, if the rights of the Stitrt and the Itbrrtv of the citizen had beeo rrtpected. Vhrn Nrth Carolina eced'd the States were regarded as the Matters d the Msteni.and tii government the servant of the Statra to eircute their i!l. Ihw it it now? t'nd'r the opera tion of laws not warranted by the Consti pation the war has craved to be voluntary in its character, and the (ernors of the Stat'S hate becocne mere rpgiter of the will of Congreas and the Ktecutive. The conscription and the tithing law leave Both in t the Slates, bat the central govern ment takes our fighting men with onr hand, and lb? tenth of our substance with the ether. If the first was reall? nrcensrv the States themselves could have enforced and each State could have kept iti quo a of men in the field in brigadra, duly of ficrred; and if provisiona were needed, aod could not be purchaved, the States could have furnished them by svstem of utrchaaes of thrtr own, and taken met. change for them the currency of the go vernment. Seizures f peranns and pro perty have become as common as they are m t'rance and Komi. Pervontl liberty havbeen made depmdfnt on the mere wid of army nfiicers appointed by the Presi dent, "llundrrds have been arreated for "pinion's sake, Immured in duncmns, ile- lord trials before the civil tribunal, and irleaied only when the militarr power hoe to do it. Our Court, when they tue intrrp'ad to protect theve unfortu tiatea and to uphd the law, have bcefi litegarded in uianf int4ncps, and their i-iivgrity reflected on in gro tr'rm he thr "ar Department at Richmond.' The Con-tt-Ucate currency, which is the tife-bloud d the tTitnn, arid the emanation of plight d pihiic faith, hit been some client I'V'lntr.l a a matter of eonvenitnee ; and a puition of it m one in!ancr lias been iluaMbt aCaVmet officer, on the same (round, m optn violation el a law of ton j,rM. Osr patient, uncomplaining, heroic Id.tra hivt been placed in tht an of ev fry battlt and in the rear if almeat tvery tetreatj and ha xhty have fought with n ardor and a ttsidiieis wkitfb- would have itfltcttd credit en the old guard of Dana parte itself, just praise hat been denied them by journals tuppsitd teipcak fir tht Jdrrw -suatioe, and their fathers and bro- ' na V lom ,rt Conservativtt, have cen held up at disloyal aod uifrieadly to the cauae.- brigadiers and Major Generala from other States have bren Dlared over Lthemin many instance, and when auch offi cers nave bero appoiutrd from our State they have been almost invariaMy of the same politics with the administration. Proscription has thus been practiced over the very bonea, and blood el our people, superadded to all this has been the ap pointment of surgeons, enrolling efficert and the like from other States over our re giments and over our people at heme, un til tno crowning outrage wa reached by the appointment of MaJ. Bradford, of Vir ginia, to collect the tithes. This led to the first public meeting held in this State; and bat for this and other meetings, and the earneat remonstrances of Gov. Vance, M.j. Bradford would ttitl beTithiegman for this State. ' Sorb are'some of the ciuaet thai have roused Uye people of this State to a sense of their rights, and led to the meetings so much deprecated by the Observer. Out there are other causes, growing out of the 4rnzan policy referred to. ami out of the inefficiency which mast aiwavs character ize a party administration tn'the tniditof a great revolution like the present. The ami of the whole country, u U true, have been dedicated to this struggle, but only half iu mind, if n much aa that, has been called into reaaisition. The counsels of eery great stttesmsn and good man who did not believe that Mr. Lincnln'a election was sufficient cause for inaugurating civil war, hae bren as e flVctu a Ur excluded from, the ear of the President fn bis prac tical administration of the government, as if thee had bren exiles ia foreign land. The idea thai secession would be peacea ble is the great misUke that underlies the whole movement The President was rged at Montgomery to purchase' the stock of cotton then 4111 band as a means of procuring ahips, munitions of war, and other necessary supplies, and also a a ba i for our paper currency ; and also to rail for and accept fe hundred thousand vlunters. U dfclinell to d it, aud pis Congress ordered ffltm thousand tand of arms, and borrowed fatten millions of dol lars! Seeing his mistake? but nt admit ting it by calling statesmen who had thus advised him to his aid, he adhered to his party policy, and ran tit the other extreme of a general conscription of seven hundred thousand men, without due regard to the firoductive interests, on which a auecess ul prolongation of the war muit mainly depend. Under the lead of pet General, whose incompetency is nuw known to all, the great valley of the Mississippi has been lost to us our own aeaceast has been lust ; and hut for the genius of two or three of our General in Virginia, and the sublime courage of our veteran troops, the Con federate capital itelf would Jiave pied from our hand. Meanwhile the people have bf,en deceived by the promise thst cotyn would bring peace; that France or Kngluul, or both, would interpoie ; that tHe Northern people themelvre woolJ divide and arrest the wf ; that invtsiona of the at a I . -1 - enemy territory wouid o turn rest mem that they would .Yurce their government tu negotiate; that Providence, seeing our c.ooeto be jut, and our enemies altogether Aiiktfd, would speedily lead u t with lli strong right hand nfo the light of in dependence. None of tiiese !vpe hae been real. zed. U i the other hsnd, our ar mies are nut materially increasing, while our enemies re recruiting from twenty millions of their own i. people, from thou sands of emigrants from purope.'and what is infinitely worse, from our slave popula tion. Nn one, it seems to us, who will look dispassionately at tht facts, wilt deny that the foregoing is true. Tht Obttrvtr traces the mischief" of division and ill-feeling in thit State to the Ellis administration; we ascend to tht main stream, aod shew that thit mischief," aod many, il est ill our misfortunes, originated in the policy inaugurated at Montgomery, and which has been continued. to thit day. Humble at we are, and feeble, as ia our judgment in public affairs, we would venture to sug gest tome remedy for this condition of things, arid some plan , for the future ; but we could not hope tha! any thing we might say would have aoy influence with the ad ministration at Richmond. . Toe Obttrvtr reminds us that wjten this Stale ttcsded (for they would pass Mr. Craige'a tecet$ion ordinance,) from tl old government, that act waa " final." So was to all human appearances,' and to we hope it may be. Y e hope the State acted finally,". and we still think she acted V wisely." When two evila are before os, and there is no escape, trot wisdom it shown in choosing the lesser evil. Qur State d'rd that. Her people did not desire to secede. They were willing to try the adminiatrationof Abraham Lincoln, and to rely meanwhile on the great body of the American-people to rescue the government from sectional conflicts, 0 restore to it a national administration, and thus perpetu ate it, if possible, for all time. They felt that, having with them both branches of the Cangress and the Supreme "Court, Presi dent Lincoln could not seriously injure tneir property in slaves, nor deprive them of their rights in the territories, even if he would. They intended, if he attempted aogh a thing, to resist him in the Union, a iced as they would have been by one mil lion of national men in his own section. If, daring his. trial, he had driven our peo ple with their slaves from the common ter ritories, or attempted in any way by on overt act to impair our right to. our slaves in the States, they would have succeeded, with the help of their Northern allies, not only in checking hire, but in punishing him blanch maladministration and corruption in office." But the precipitate and wicked action of the cotton state on the one hsnd, and the cruel and wicked policy of President Lincoln on the other, left as 00 alternative. We were obliged to fight our full brother of the South or our half bro ther of the North. We chose to do the latter, jnd we acted " wisely." Jf wc bad not done so, we should have been trampled by both armies we should have had civil war among ourselves the North would have deopised us for our want of manhood, and the South would hate rrguded us as false t our own instincts and our own blod. We repeat, nor State was cot a free agent she was obliged to pursue, the course she did. Thoughtful and sagacious men, while they trod unshrinkingly the path of doty', saw before them the fires of civil war, but beyond these fires all was darkness and uncertainty. Acting" final lv" as ihey hoped, they put everything nn the arbitrament of arms. Te result is partialis- before us. The abolitionists or the North and the original secessionists of the South, acting and reacting on each other, have in all probability "proved themselves the most skilful architects of ru'n that any age has produced." Slavery ha stifle red more injury during the lat t veara than would probably have be fallen it in the long sweep of fifty years under the old government. The peculiar champions of the institution have placed iti we lear, on the high road to extinction. And just here, e beg leave to say to the Obttrvtr, in th source of one ol the most serious apprehensions of our people. The sodden euiacipatiiin of our slaves in our midt would be t'ie greatest blow which cuM be inflicted on Southern society. It would ruin thiS generation beyond redemp tion, and its tflects would be felt for ages to come. Nor would thit ruin be partial. It would include the non-slaveholder as well at the slaveholder, and finally the slave himself. Subjugation, f it should be in reserve for qs, would be emancipa tion. Hence our people, while they are for continuing the struggle, and while they are still anxious if possible to make geed their final" separation, are nevertheless deposed to pry into the future, te. tee If, in the hit rttort, tomtthing better than tubjugation csanot be obtained, - If the Went should stare thein ia the fact; it it diet net new, but at it may, they would have peace vader' certain circumstance! ; yet if tht worst should come, and "they cos Id itt no honorable tiodt of escaping it, they would all die together with their slaves and their little ones, fiirhtin with & desperation which , the world hat never wuuesseu. , V w ... The Observer it disbosei to twit na on our declaration in Msy, 1881, that thia O . x a a a 1 .7 . oiaie.nati pieuged to the cause her " latt man and last dollar." Let ua a if ski. pledge has not been redeemed. Thit Stato has sent 95,000' men to the field. Tbis comprises all her fighting papulation, (of ' course we did not mean to include the old men ana yearling boys,) save those between 40 and 45. now beinr 'eonscrinttd. and about 10,000 able-bodied original ttcet sionisis, wno refuse to redeem the pledge which they authorized as to make in May, 1861.' So much for the last msn." Our debt, County and State, it equal in amount to one-tenth of what the whole State would bring in market, in silver and gold. The "last dollar" in. specie, or ia convertible paper, has long since ditappeared. The State could no doubt borrow Confederate money at a premium of two for one that is, ahe could sell one of her one hundred dollar bonds Tor two hundred dollars; bat ten dollars in rnlrl aill hnrcbu. .!.... - - inib.i, vmw una. . dred dollars in Confederate money; and it ll -L t I. ... T louowi -mar. sne couia test her Donas for onlv ten cents in the dollar in ante!. s much for the " last dollar." We reeret to have to make these statements, but we are obliged to do te in self-defence. The Obttrvtr, very . ingeniously, and very jus'tly in one sense, says that aegetia tions tor peace can be -instituted pnlv through the Confederate gevernment. Bat we must look at things at they are, and not at we would havebcm-U Mr. Lincoln -should ao far recognize Mr. Davit aa to open negotiationi with him, he would sur render the whole question of the war. To treat with the Confederate government for peace is to recognize that government. Will Mr. Lincoln do that? No. Will he ever do it f Not unless the Northern Go. vrrnors and Legislatures shall rise on anJ Command him to do it. Is that probable? Not in the present ttatut of things, ffe msy irorry tiie Northern people to such n point, or we raitht so interest foreign now. ers as to induce them to tike steps which would lead to inch a result; but ire these things probable ? Not just now not,' we a a . . tear, ior some lime to come, wnat thenf Shall we again invade the Northern States, ' and to distress them by fire and tword aa to compel them to sue for peace ? ' Can we do that f Are we able to do it ? We fear not. What then?,. If the. Federal govern- ment will not hear the Confederate govern ment, it mav hear the sovereign Stitea. . The people of theStates, North and South. ' 1., ... oy mutual co-operation, may 001 am an cr miilice. If that can be dene, the tear imill be at an end. Is it not worth the trial ? If the two armies thould once rest to listen to the voice of negotiation, our word far it hostilities would , not be resumed. The whole question would pass.nd pass fine ly into the-hands of the statesmen of the two sections.4 " Grim-visiged war would smooth hit wrinkled front" the arbitra ment of the sjivord would give place to the voice of discussion and negotiation rea-' son would be substituted for nasaion -and revenge, and the exasperations ot the two . -.1 1 k - o - : and a calm aoevar of (he entire situation. past, present, and future, would, leave the mind of the country in a condition to de vise tome mean tor rettar.ng peace on terma honorable to all. Nor will these movements by the States dtprest or dis course one aaldie'rs in the field. On tbo contrary, they will fight and endure with . 1 J r .i .i .l 1 .. . rcntwea cncenuiness wneu invy Know mat thair tr'imnA at homa am omltf in ma that may premise to crown them with the 1 f - l..J t rewara 01 an mcir iwus jun ana noner- ahl nor Hut it ia csid that inm. f Ilia cotton States are 'already greatly distress ed, and that ney mav toon indicate a wish for negotiationi. Batjthey are already; lubjogattd, and at tht mercy of the enr- my. Mississippi aad Louisiana are pros trate, suIUa and silent. They have cell ed, m far as their people at bote are can ccrned, both to fitt and talk for peace. ; ' t If, : , e l -1 -r;r