T i -th eldest itStj n4 V fha only lathe Slate. iy acting, $- k IIP i ' ' - " T" T 7 1 t " ' ii . ii ii . ii i pi i. - i m ipi 1 1 , i i M ri i i ii , f ance at tii-C3Y farrtvPieds'sC tie GiSun4 pocket mow1" Monday, . - year ; Fora Dollaks oKvEaTT-FrVB cents per uuonth for shorter periods. Served by Car riers in the dty at Skvkkty-fivk cents Der month, or Two Dollars and Twenty-five cents per quarter. xne weekly jouiiNAX, (Friday) a thirty-six colcunn paper, Two Dollaes per year ; three copies Five Dollars and A half ; four copies, Skykx Dollabs ; fire copies, Eight Dollabs and a half ; ten copies, Fifteen Dollabs; twenty copif a, Twenty-five Dollabs. Subscriptions in all cases payable in advance, and no paper continued after the expiration of the time paid for. Remittances should be made by I'ost office Money Order or Express. If this can not be done, protection against losses by mail may be secured by forwarding a draft payable to the order of the proprietors of the Journal, or by sending the money La a registered letter. Advertising Rates (per inch of twelve eolici lines of advertising type,) One inch, one insertion, Ost Dollar; two inser ions, One Dollab and a half ; three insertions, Two Dollabs ; four insertions, Two Dollars and a half ; five inser tions, Three Dollars; six insertions, -HREE Dollars and a half; twelve sertions. Five Dollars and a half ; tie month, Eight Dollabs ; two months Fifiezn Dollars; three months, Twenty-two Dollars. Contracts for longer periods and longer pace made upon liberal terms. Address, Engelhard & Saunders, Wilmington, N. C. RALEIGH SETISEL-ESSIIS. JKIXOSBlTIftY ASMt SPELxTIAN. We are pleased to learn that Mo81"8 Theodore B. Kingsbury and J onu Spelinan have once moreboc'me mem bers of the editorial staff the Ral eigh Sentinel. Those gentlemen are too well known in North Carolina as ef ficient workers in the "Press Gang" for the public need any assurance from us as fc their character and quali fications. We cordially welcome both of our old friends back to editorial harness. Our only wonder is that two nch good fellows could have kept out bo long. (iEXEHAL CL1SK.1IAPI S LETTER. We call the attention of our readers to the very interesting letter of Gen eral Clingman to the editors of the Asheville Expositor, to be found on our second page this morning. The proof of the existence of a people in North Carolina superior to the Indian race in arts and intelligence, if not prior in point of time is indisputable. Who they were, where they came from, and how and when they disappeared, v ill doubtless ever be unsolved ques tions; but for all that, any thing relat ing to these ancient Carolinians as we may call them, for want of a better name, will be interesting. ; " - - . -r still V ' , ", small, compared I .. . ious Terms in this County, a moot of the cases belong to the class of small, petty misdemeanors. Indeed, we are pleased to record the fact that the people of this County are a law-and-order-abiding people, and there is less violation now of the criminal law in the County than at any previous Term since the war, as careful and unprejudiced observers inform U3. Why is there such an unusual and extraordinary number of our fellow citizens taken from their productive industries, at this season of planting, to wait upon tlio Court and Grand Jury for this week and perhaps much of the next ? Is it neces sary to subserve the real ends of law and justice ? We think not. We would be now, as in tiie past, the last to advocate violation of the criminr l law with impunity. No one will go further than ourselves, to enforce obe dience to law and to secure the punish ment of criminals. But, in the name of justice, in behalf of the farming and other material interests of our down-trodden and impoverished peo ple now suffering unnumbered woes we protest against dragging such un precedented large numbers of our pro ducers from their busy toils, especiJ at this season, to hang arou" our Court House, awaiting examination as witnesses by the Grand "Pon .petty cases instigate.'" "7 mauce or rivtr nr rownw U? may SUOSCTVO the interests of SoMitors, ii mey uuve a CTeater rega or their fees than they have for me good of the public, to per- mit ais class oi petty, inning cases to oe brought into Court, but it will be far from promoting the interest of the tax-payers. Nor will it tend vo subserve the ends of public justice. Justice, is, administered, and Grand Juries ure in stituted, not for the benefit of the So licitor so much as for the public good. Something, too, is due to ihe dignity of the Court. Let the Grand Jury then, as doubtless, they will, set the seal of their condemnation upon this unnecessary hardship inflicted upon our pcojile, by dragging them from their homes at the busiest scaon of the year, to testify in cases beneath the dignity of the Court and of the Jury. We trust they will protest against this most grievous nuisance in such a man ner as will ever prevent it from being used as a precedent hereafter. It may suit the views of those who live from the Courts r.nd tho misfor tunes of our people, to niter different sentiments, but as the friends of the people, as well as the friends of law and order, we are constrained to tay that the act complained of is a griev ance so 1 -ardeusome in its operation, especially upon our fanners and labor ers, that it is our duty to' call public attention to it. . 1 fta hours, i Mr; -;.", j " accordingly imprisoned for renty-four hours. When the time for his liberation ar rived he was greeted by an immense crowd of citizens, who conducted him to his home with every demonstrations respect and regard. The New Orleans Picayune, in commenting upon th8 case, says : Our readers will perceive in the case of Mr. Booth what those in this ' city, who refuse to pay the license tax, may expect to be appued to them. A Kel logg judge orders hija to close his place of business, and, if he does not obey, he is to be imprisoned and fined and to be again imprisoned and fined indefinitely until he does obey. L nder old tyrannies, it was supposed enough if the tyrant himself oppressed his victim ; but here is a system by which the victim is made the instru ment of his own oppression. He is to be his own executioner. Even under Christophe, the tyrant only seized and appropriated the property of his vy tim. "Rut herp. tlio viVtim ia nr.-1ri tO carry out his own destruction VS. dos ing up himself his place o' business, unless he will pay withe" process of law such tribute money & 1110 usurp ing despotism think proper to exact. And if he fails t.Pa7 closo P, then he is arrested antl imprisoned for contempt o'cou.rt! No one-3an mistake now the expedi ent iovoltecting the Kellogg taxes. Ief val to pay, will be followed by an or&r of court to rrrest his avocation in life : and unless he submits without question of law, arbitrary imprison ment is the offered destiny. We pre sume some similar tyrannical proceed ing, if this scheme for collecting the taxes or license is permitted to prevail, will be applied to all other taxes. What course shall the people of this city and of Louisiana pursue ? Under the foulest of all despotisms, and the most arbitrary of all tyrannies that a free people were ever called upon to submit to, it appears to us that the matter has passed beyond the counsels of the press. It is for the people to determine and they alone how to protect their property and vin dicate their liberties. We never doubt ed but that, in some shape or other, the desiotism that has usurped au thority over ns would attempt to en force submission by foree. It is for the people to answer it. f tBiorebythefle same percent Yankee, " Hitwety J and once more.' we believe, : carried to IS VOIITII C AltO LIN A RAILROAD CHANGE OF GVAGE. We learn by special telegram from Raleigh on yesterday, that His Honor, Judge Albcrtson, continued the in junction restraining the Richmond and Danville Railroad Company from changing the guage of the North Car olina road from Greensboro' to Char lotte. A bond of fifty thousand dol lars was required from the State, it being the party in whose favor the injunction was issued. It seems that His Honor gave no opinion in refer ence to the validity of the lease, and none as to the right of the Company to makf a change in the guage extending over the whole of the North Carolina Road. His opinion touches only the right of the Richmond and Danville Road to make the particular change pro posed, to wit : To change the guage from Greensboro' to Charlotte to the wide guage, and to leave the guage from Greensboro' to Goldsboro' as it now is. The plain effect of this change practically to make ef what has here- road, by compell- bulk at Greensboro'. We are not advised what further pro ceedings will be had in the premises. would two tofore ing a be roads been break one in XIIK IXIVEHSITV. Wo publish in another column a letter from Judge James Grant, of Davenport, Iowa, to the Tarboro' J 'nquirer, in response to an article in that paper calling upon the Alumni of the University to do something in its behalf. Judge Grant is a native of North Carolina, and a graduate of the University, and though a resident of another State, still feels a great inter est in the fortunes of his Alma Mater. We sincerely trust that some material aid to the University, as well as pleas ure to the Alumni, may come about from their proposed meeting, in June next. Wc do not know the precise plan by which it is proposed to bring i.bout the restoration of the University, though Judge Grant's letter indicates u wish to see the control of the affairs transferred entirely to the Alumni. kj nuer me constitution ot our fitato as it now stands this cannot be done, nor can it be done under the Constitution as it will stand if the proposed amendments shall be adopted in August next. If the amend ments shall be ratified by the people, the University will be controlled by trustees to be elected from time to time by tho Legislature. As the amendment in relation to the Univer sity received the assentjof the Repre sentatives of both parties in the Leg islature, we presume there will be no objection made to it at the polls, and iio difficulty, in effecting a reorgan ization upon a basis that will prove satisfactory to all right minded men, no matter to what party they may belong. PJI1I.AUELPI1IA-I1AU:C li.iSTO II,EISIIIATEI. The Philadelphia A;e announces that Mr. Dana, of the Incv.' York ,s'r,n, has refused to deliver an duress in Philadelphia in the interest of the Centennial Celebration, "on the ground of his peculiar e::perifnce in tlv.it eirv." The Age justifies this course ou the part of Mr. Dana, and says : While passing through it in tho cars to Washington, he was waylaid smd arrested on a charge of libel for a pub lication made in New York. Relieving that he stood as much eii ince of f;iir play as a shipwrecked mariner in the Cannibal Islands, he forfeited the bail exacted of him .': it of Jicc thou sand dollars ! We blush to own it; but the proceedings in the Mara trial, and in the case of Mr. Taylor, of the Press, compel us to admit th;;t in this our native city, whose honor we would glady defend, Mr. Dapa eould have had no chance for justice. For a friendless stranger to have attempted to unveil the secrets of the "Ring" in the Court of Quarter Sessions, would have been alike hopeless and foolhardy. In that, its stronghold, "the Ring" like the Modocs in their "lava beds" successfully defy the indignation of all decent men. And though wo espect to see them driven out by public opinion and the law, we confess that now they can plunder a solitary traveler with entire imjranity. Mr. Dana paid them five thousand dollars tribute money for passing through tieir territory, and thus saved his scalp, ami h.3 v. isely refrained from putting it again in peril by accepting the invitation of the ladies of the Centennial to address their meeting on Saturday. In l'iiila delphia, the "Ring" have r.ow got the sword of the law in tiieir clutch, and find it a handier weapon than the re volver and the black-jack which they used on John C. Nolen and Detective Rrooks. This is the condition of our city, which no' man who prizes its honor ought to deny or palliate; for it is the truth that can alone bring about that revolution which shall re deem Philadelphia from ijie rule of the foul crew who plunder alike our own people and "the stranger that is with in our gates." "Riug:' rule was over thrown in New York and it will yet meet the same fate in Philadelphia. We will yet suoke out our Modocs ; but we cannot wonder j.hat quiet peo ple fear them, and that travel:, shun the region they infest. By their fruits shall ye know them. Tried by this test what is Radicalism ? Let the Credit Mobilier frauds, the In dian massacres, tlusMpdoc tragedy and the bloody conflict in Louisiana answer! EDWARD CASfWEIX, HE A POET J This being Term time of New Hano ver Court and the Grand Jury being in session, it might be imprudent to charge a gentleman with so grave an oiTenee as that of being a poet without giving the reasons for our belief. We propose, therefore, this morning, to glance briefly at the salient points in the life of the gentleman whose name heads this article. Our argument will be somewhat similar to that by which the ohl negro satisfied himself that his dog was a good 'possum dog. Said he : " Old Massa made every ting for some good, I hab trictl dat dorg for every ting in the world 'cept 'possums, and he aint wuf a cent, you know den, boss, he's bound to be good for "possum." Let U3 see whether a like process of exclusion will show that Mr. Cant well has or has not a genius for poesy. Mr. Cantwell went to Mexico and fought the Greasers but, according to the latest dispatches, the Greasers have continued to indulge in their favorite recreation of robbing and murder, ax parently in blissful ignorance of his ex istence. Failure No. 1. He became a lawyer. Failure No. 2. He became an author, having writ ten a OooK caiic-ti t-aniwen s justice, that had the honor, for a time, to sup- p'y the place of one written by the dis tinguished "Judge " Olds, the distin guished son-in-law of the distinguished Holden. Everybody, doubtless, has a pretty clear idea of what sort of a thing Cantwell's Justice must have been. -Failure No. 3. He edited a newspaper, but the con cern got top heavy and became failure No. i, probably because of the short ness of the subscription list and the length of the editorials. The great war of Secession ap proached; and Mr. Cantwell, snuffing the battle from afar, before even a breath of the. first gale that brought to our ears the clash of resounding urms, mounted a red cockade ; a glorious, luscious, refulgent, blood-red cockade. How well we remember the solain awe with which we beheld the magnifi cence of that resplendent rcd cockade. Alas ! Alas ! He wears it no longer. Wo presume that even deny that his cockade failure No. 5. But -Mr. Cantwell Whs act a man to keep out of the fray. He went into the army, and in due time was put in uommand of the Provost Guard, or in other position that gave him prison It may - seem strange mat, having once had him, they should lake htm again. Yet so it was. : Pos- they "did not recognise him. Piflallv. however, our hero returned home and ; delivered a lecture upon the life of one Ben Franklin, in wh'-h he made a brilliant dash in the old centaur style upon the "solid men of Boston." No money in that. Failure No. 8. Our hero then turned his attention from the "solid men of Boston, " to the colored men of North Carolina, and was nominated for Solicitor in the Raleigh District. But time was short and the story goes that Hawk Ros1"8' a distinguished character ffW carried the droppings of Cop''1-sation3 over heard at hotels slreet corners to Governor zroMen, secreted some ticket m3 thereby caused his defeat. He tl'n came to Wilmington and took a prer seat in his saddle upon the oack of his colored brother. But his course here is so well known to our readers that it is useless to refer to it in detail. After tins briet glance into the his tory of our hero, we appeal to an in dulgent public, or if need be to an im partial Grand Jury, to say whether admitting the validity of the argument "by exclusion," we are not justified in thinking that our ex-Chief Judicial, &.c. , has missed his true vocation, and that some day, long after Cantwell's Justice and Cantwell's Libels shall have been forgotten, "Cantwell's Canti cles" will be household words in every colored man's cabin in the land Long live Poet Cantwell ' From1h Arivllle Erpoaltor. Trom the Magnolia Advertiser. ". ; : -' ':"y ' - ; EIRE E. "'" The persistent efforts of Solicitor Cantwell have at length been, success ful in getting an indictment through against the editors of the Wilmington JornixAL. It is not given as a matter of ncW:i but for the purpose ox" nMkinj? ntofr'3Ifime, I can now, before nallv oaanffiS within the last eentnrv fl i Formally the doctrine obtained Mxssss. ; w Asheville, April P Cabteb & , V repiy 10 your Gentlemen VeferCnce to the mica . de- From the Enquirer. Xbe Universitr of ZVortla Carolina. Messrs. Editors : Your editorial of 22d March ha3 been sent to me. The survivors of the graduating class of June 1831, composed of four teen persons, had a meeting at Mem phis on the 5th of March, after a sepa ration of over forty years ; five of the nine, known survivors, were present. Mr. James M. Williamson, who proposed the meeting, conceived the laudable idea of reviving the University. His plan was not ma tured, but is to be discussed and agreed upon at another meeting of the class at my house in Davenport, Iowa, on the 10th of June next. T this meeting I invite all the Alumni of Chapel Hill. Tho project of revival is entirelv Mr. Williamson's, and, if successful, the credit shall be his. His opinion is that the Legislature of North Carolina should entrust the government of the University, the appointment of its professors, and financial affairs to the whole body of the Alumni as trustees, and that tbiy should educate their sons there. The subject of endowment by its members was discussed but nothing more. My own opinion, probably originating yi tho practical plans "of my adopted State, is that the Legislature should make an annual appropriation for the support of the College, until endow ment by the State or the Alumni shall dispense with its necessity. One thing I do know, that if the buildincs now at Ch ipel Hill were in my State, nu merous as our schools and Colleges are, they would not be without occu pants many months. There is not a religious denomina tion in Iowa tbat, with mch opportu nities, as are now going to decay at Chapel Hal, would not have a first class institution of learning nnder full headway in twelve months. Ye, who are voluntary exiles, claim no right to censure for the past or dic tate for the fnture. We have grateful memories for the past of North Caro lina and good will and hope for the future. The nuiet which now reicus at unapei deat.i. ! A the truth of any hbeV'a?e.rous statement; rather & imir 7. greater ihe truth fe &re,ater ie h,bel; This riila -aS drawn from England where it f7 remains unshaken, and h.er th evidence of the truth of any jjoeius f.peech or publication is inad missible. But in this country of free press and free institutions, after exhaustive and laborious discussion, it seems to be definitely settled that the jury has a right to determine the fact as to the words charged as libelous. The Con stitutions of several States make spe cial provisions in favor of giving the truth in evidence in public prosecu tions for libel; and where this is not the case, the tide of public opinion is strong not only in favor of breaking down all previous opposition against publications, but also for removing all impediments to a free discussion of the truth. The Legislature of Pennsyl vania enacted that no person should be indicted for a publication on the official conduct of men in public trust. It is certainly a prerogative of the press to discuss and freely criticise the conduct of men in official station, and where their conduct both public and private is flagitious, it is its duty to hold them up to reprobation. All that is necessary for the editors of the Joubnai. to do in this extraordinary case, is to place some of the good citi zens of Baltimore on the witness stand, and the Solicitor will not handle the fee usual on conviction. Hill is the dark shadow of Your ob't serv't, JamesGrant, Davenport, Iowa. he will episode riot was some Vienna is building six new theatres, j amuse visitors to the exposition. The first Protestant Easter service ever held on the shore of Cuba took h'lace in the Episcopal Church at lllavana recently. The Spotswood Hotel lot and three djoining lot, in Richmond, Virginia, atve been sold at auction, for the lggrcgate amount rt $38,794, to Lionel Carrington, the proprietor of IhcTachaDge, AFFAIRS IX EOiaslAXA. Mr. .EJward Booth, who is also a Senator and tn active supporter of the McEnery government, Li a wholesale dealer, corner of Gravier and Magazine streets in New Orleans. An act of the Legislature of Louisiana forbids any one to carry oa any trade or occupa tion without paying license tax. Mr. Booth refused to pay taxes to the Kellogg government, and suit was accordingly brought against him in the name of the State and an injunc tion was also issued restraining him from carrying on his business until the license tax was paid. The injunc tion was served on Mr. Booth in person, but he refused to obey and still carried on his business. The Attorney-General, after the ser vice of this injunction upon Mr. Booth, filed a rule for contempt, alleging that he had violated, and was still violating, aaid injunction by carrying on his business. Upon the presentation of this rule theCourt ordered that de fsnclanfr.Edward ooth, show cause on Friday, the 18th, why he should not be punished for a contempt by fine and imprisonment. On the 18th, the cause having been heard, the motion to discharge the rule some charge of tho city of Norfolk, tho exact nature of which we cannot state with certainty. If we mistake not, however, ho was wont, in those halcyon days of war, to describe him self as the "Military Governor of Norfolk" the only instance, so far as we know, which a Confederate officer was ever designated as a "Military Governor" on Confederate soil. Alas ! Alas ! for the dreams of ambition and the hopes of glory. Our friends, the enemy, concluded they needed Norfolk for their own use, and one fine day tok possession of it ; not, however, until the Military Governor had " vamosed the ranehe. iailure No. 6. He next joined a " creetnr company" regiment, JoJ became a Lieutenant Colonel of cavalry, ene. oi your gay and dashing fcllows one ti $cur festive youths a perfect centaur. Alas ! Alas ! The paths of glory lead geuc:il3y to jail or the grave, orsomeother ' iemnii;n.4i5agreeable" place, and ere long our hero found him self in prison at Johnson's Island, where lie remained more than a twelve month, wo think, on eieedingly short commons and ia close quarters. We i i presume tne cavalry episoae may safely be set down as failuro No, 7- After his return from prison our hero no longer shot Yankees at the front, but having been assigned to duty on a Military Com t, shot an oc casional Confederate, in tho xzux. While thus engaged, the spirit moved lum one bright SAbbath day in April to leave fair Petersburg's bustling streets and seek a rural retreat. On that' eventful occasion several "solitary horsemen might have been seen slowly wending their way" toward the lovely Liils of Appomattox. Alas ! Alas ! Our unf oKuiiiie ijero, who was one of this numerous baud of solitary h.cirsp men, never reached his destination, but was taken in out of the wet once The Eibcrty of the I'reww. The notorious Cantwell, the Solicitor of the fourth Judicial District of the State, by persistent offorts in the vari ous counties of his district, finally got a grand jury in Duplin, to rind a true bill of indictment against the editors of the Wilmington Journal, for alleged libel upon Judgre Bond. He was moved to do this, evidently, by personal spite and malice, as the Jotknal had for some time, been engaged in showing up Cantwell's true character ; his in capacity, ignorance and abuse of office. The .Tockxal, in criticising thecourse of Judge Bond, performed but a duty, inseparable from true journalism a fearless attack upon malfeasance and corruption in public offices, no matter t!i result. We learn that our esteemed eouutv- man and distinguished lawyer, Edward ! personal vengeanco and Comgland, Esq., has volunteered to defend the editors of the Joitbxal in this prosecution, which partakes so strongly of a persecution. Ilnficld Times. i From the Raleigh News. Freedom of the Press When several ineffectual efforts were made by Solicitor Cantwell last Fall, to indict the Journal for libel, at New Hanover Superior Court, the Raleigh News sounded the tocsin of alarm, and denounced the effort to cripple and muzzle the influence of the press in strong, unmeasured terms. Not because tho editors of the Wil mington J ocbnal are personal friends not becauso the Jocenal itself is a Conservative newspaper not because Cantwell is a Radical Solicitor, nor because Russell is a Radical Judge, but with a sincere purpose to vindicate the freedom of press, to uphold one of the chief palladiums of Republican liberty, to preserve and protect the rights, privileges and immunities of the Fourth Estate from the sacreligious hands that would strike down its power, its usefulness and its indepen dence, we have protested from the first against this persecution conceived, as we believe it to be, in the bitterness of party spirit, and carried on with the malignancy and unscmpulousucss of political hatred and venom. The editors of the Wilmington Journal are gentlemen of character and of the highest respectability. They are known throughout the State as men of high honor and integrity. We do not believe this prosecution will detract one iota from their well-earned reputations. But it is not in the light of any injury that may result to them personally and pecuniarily from the issue of this trial for libel, that should so much influence the press of North Carolina to denonnce this outrage on the freedom of the press which has been perpetrated by a Radical So licitor, aided and abetted by the official power and personal influence of a Radical Judge. If it be the purpose of these two partisan officials to cripple or impair the influence of the Jot.'rxal, or to damage it in its business, they will fail most signally. The very means by which they would injure it will tend to build it up to advance its prosperity, by adding to its subscription lists and enlisting the sympathy and efforts of its friends in its behalf. If it be the purpose of these two partisan officials to break down the Journal because it is a Conservative newspaper, and because it has the boldneM and independence to speak out plainly and fearlessly, and to give forth no uncertain sound in criticising the conduct of corrupt and unworthy officials, then the effort will be equally futile and abortive. If it be the purpose of these two partisan officials to crush tho spirit of a free press, the effort will prove a sillv and unprofitable undertaking, and will recoil upon the heads of the weak and short-sighted individuals who have the vanity to imagine their puny arms can 6trike down one of the strongest bulwarks of civil liberty one of the proudest monuments of true Republican Government. I he voice of a free press cannot be drowned by judicial tyranny or intimi dation. The spirit of party hat, malice and viudictiveness cannot extincruish it. Neither political fury and madness, nor spite, nor the Xhe Law of Eibel. In our last issue we took occasion to speak of an indictment for libel found against the editors of the Wilmington Journal in Bladen county Sujerior Court. Though a Grand Jury may have found it to be a "true bill," we feel confident that -when the matter is brought to trial our cotemporary will be triumphantly vindicated and sus- of the public press is to mould and lead public opinion, as well as to con vey instruction and general intelli gence. It is called the bulwark of our liberties, ana, unless tms is a mean ingless title, the legitimate newspapers should have the fullest protection' of our organic, statutory and common law, just as it is bound to secure the love and respect of the people who are enlightened by it. The press strengthens the arm of the law, and cares only for the common weal, and so every protection should be afforded, and no attempt to belittle its influence should be tolerated. Our present libel law is not comprehensive enough by any meami, and we" think it ought to be modified and materially amplified. It should bo general in its provisions and bearing and ought to be the very soul of equity itself. It shenkj be a good defense in libel suits to show the Uuu eristenre of malice, absence of mercenary motives, and the truth of the statement published. Nor should decent criticism of public men and measures be deemed libelous. The press should never be muzzled in that w:ay, ana ii ip the duty of every honest and law-abiding cuueii sus tain every legitimate newspaper in its acts of exposing to the public gaze the I corruption of persons in official station. lue ieopu3 (Xffi easily ,u.icerii me honest editors who are Working on the tide of truth, justice aiid wisdom. Goldsboro Mt,aSQnfjcr, An Iowa minister, convicted of stea! ing Bibles, amuses himself in jail by butting his head against the wall and beathig himself with a club. The decision of the United States Supremo Court has revealed tho faoi, that except the Chief Justice, no mem bejf of that bench is inclined to favor the woman' right movement. The New York Sun says that iht. fa mous Watkins Glen, near the head of Lake Seneca, Ko'S' York, which less than three years ago was paralysed for 825,000, has just been sold to a Philadsh-mia firm for S100.000. Ten years agb the property could been purchased for 3,Q0Oi . raaiieii nana oi military power, can destroy its influence or trample down its spirit. Assaulted it will return to plague its assailants. Crushed it will rise again. Silenced for a brief period it will, in the end, reassert its power and majesty. It will spring forth into life again, with new vigor and courage unawed by threats unintimidated by violence unharmed by abuse unhurt by malice. So long as wo have freedom of thought and of speech, wo feel there is some hope for the preservation of the people s liberties. But without a pure, fearless, incorruptible, unpur chasable public press, Republican Governments cannot long flourish or exist. They will become a prey to corrupt rulers and tyrants and will perish miserably at the hands of their own citizens. Special to the Richmond Enquirer. LOSTREET AT CETXVSBI RO. How he General bile. r-ot the flattie What I'cndlcton Said at TIo- Mobile, At-a., April 22. In his lec ture delivered in this city for the Lee Memorial Fund, General Pendleton solemnly arraigned General James Longstreet, that tireless fighter and proven hard-hitter, and to his delay he attributed the lost opportunity at Get tysburg. The lecturer said that, to his per sonal knowledge, derived from General Lee's own lips, Longstreet had, the night before the battle, received from General Lee in person, orders to ad vance at the dawn of the next merit ing. That he (General Pendletcn,) had made a reconnoisanee in person. ami declared to General Lee the per fect practicability of immediate as sault npon the then unprepared enpmy. How be had waited ' imjSatiently until twelve o'clock. How' liohgstxeet at that hour rode up to lus side, and 6at upon Lirf hQrse useless and inactive until four otelopd p. rn. Then when the head of his column dij go in, the prodigies of valor his men performed were f utile against the now massed and concentrated enemy, and still Robert E. Lee (General Pendleton said) re fused to lay the blame upon the shoul ders of the man who had fought so often ft4 gfl WP' for him. nve The polonaises will remain in favor as an article of feminine wear during the serine;, A city editor of a journal offered to send his girl the paper regularly, but she replied in swept innocence, that her "ma did'nt allow her to wear 'em. The poor girl only knew one use for a pap.r. qnmesk of State and ons for leaving town, only present vou a brief state ment. The old Cherokee Indians, living in some of the western counties, used to speak of a tradition coming down in their tribe, that long ago companies of white men came on mules from the south, worked during the summer, and carried off a white metal with them. The remains of some old works in Cherokee county seem to give counte nance to this report, and, atxtne place at least, presents the appearance of hav ing been excavated by persons skilled in mining. The fact that they were abandoned before much work was done would rather imply that they were mere tests, which had proved unsuc cessful. There are, however, in other locali ties, numerous remains of old excava tions, some of which are much more extensive, and which fere done in a different formation. In the year 1867, and in the early part of 1868 I exam ined several of these localities in the counties of Cleaveland and Rutherford and Burke, on the east side of the Blue Ridge, andinMitchelhYanceyandBun combe. In most instances the work had been slight, showing that it had been done as a mere experiment, which had not proven satisfactory. In several lo calities, however, it was very manifest that the operators had met with such success as to cause them to extend their working greatly. In every case I examined, the outcrop of the veins was so similar as to leave nodoubfebut that the parties had found at certain localite. fonie mineral of value to them, ami bat wherever they observed like indications they had made tests. Again, from the fact that they never worked in hard ground that is, where the work required blasting it was ev ident that they were not provided with the means of blasting. At every one of the places I exam ined mica was abundant in veins com posed chiefly of felspar and quartz, the former generally predominating. The mica left among the debris was generally in small flakes, except at Mr. Garrett Ray's, on the waters of Bo lin's Creek, where a number of large sheets had been left. This last men tioned fact seemed to indicate that the mica itself had not been the object of the exploration. The most extensive of all the exca vations was that on the land of Mr. Wm. Silvers, in Mitchell county, near tne roaa irom JJurnsville to Bakers ville. From the appearances there it would seem that a large number of miners had been at work for years at that place. In the excavations, ex tending for about 400 yards, they had at intervals left bars 'across as if to prevent the earth at the sides from falling in making thus a succession of openings fifty or sixty feet in extent, separated by narrow ridges of earth. Timber which I examined, that had grown on the earth thrown out, had been growing as long a3 three hundred years. Near one of tho workings, not far from this place, I also saw a slab of stone that had evidentlv been marked by blows of. a metallic tool, and which had, from the appearances alKut it, been most probably intended to mark the localitv. As tho manner in which the work had been done at Mr. Silvers' resem bled that sometimes practiced by the Mexicans, it seemed possible that a party of Spaniards about the time when Cortes was in Mexico, and De Soto was in Florida, might have rambled up into this region and, by employing the Indians as laborers, in the course of a few years have caused such explorations to be made. On examining the material about tho place, I found fragments that had been thrown out verv like in their appear ance some of the best Mexican silver ores. Several Western miners, to whom the specimens were shown in New York, prior to any assay, express ed great confidence that they would go to two or three hundred 'dollars in silver per ton. An assay, however, seemed to show only three dollars per ton. 1 caused it to be repeated, and had the same reply. This would seem to in dicate that these were bits discarded be cause too poor, but that the work had perhaps been prosecuted for silver. I caused therefore a shaft to be sunTc. and two tunnels to be carried entirely below the old excavations, and become satisfied that there was no workable silver ore to be found there. Large mica of good quality was abundant. It seemed certain that this work had all been don; for mica. But the ques tion more difficult to answer presented itseii, by wnom could tins work have been execnted ? The Norsemen were on our coast as far back as six or seven centuries ago ; they might have pene trated into the interior, and by em ploying the natives have caused these w orks to be executed, and carried tho mica away to be used as window lights for their huts, as the inhabitants of the Arctic regions are said some times to do. But on the other hand I have been informed that mica has been found with other old Indian orna ments and implements in certain caves in Tennessee, and perhaps elsewhere. It does not therefore soera improbable that a former race of Indians possi bly the "Moundbuilders," who used copper tools made these excavations for the purpose of procuring the mica. xnese veins are iounawim the gneiss and mica slate strata, which constitute the greater portion of the rocks of this region. The elements of their compo sition are identical with those of these strata, and even of clay slate. The difference is wholly in the structure of the veins, and not in their elements. In the veins the felspar, which mually predominates, exists tolerably pure, the quartz in lumps or large masses, and the mica in chrvstals of various sizes, sometimes weighing several nundred pounds. Aear the surface the felspar, converted bv at mospheric action into kaolin, presents chalky looking belts, with quartz lying in lumps oi ainerenc sizes, and more or less mica scattered around. As almost all the rocky strata of this and the adjoining counties consist in part of mica, persons must expect to find it everywhere. For commercial purposes, it is to be sought therefore where it exists in plates of some size, is sufficiently transparent, and is free from such contortions and flaws as rrovent its beinnr plit into tbiu sheets. Xhoucrh the sizes of the chrvstals will vary in different part of the vein, they are likely to be largo at the surface as deeper down. That found at the sur face, however, is usaally injured by exposure to weather, which in time de composes it, and is also disfigured by ine ciay carnea into its seams. Un less within a few feet of the surface some mica of fair size is found, there would not seem to be encouragement to expend much labor in explorations. Besides the valuable mines now being operated on' in " the counties of Michell and Yancey, I have seen from two localities "in ib southern part of this county (Buncombe) mica pf fine size and good quality. Such is also found in the ponntis of Haywood, Jackson and Macon to the west, and as far east as Lincoln and Catawba. There seems to be no doubt but there is a tract of country of more man one nundred and htty miles in extent capable of producing good mica. in quantities sufficient to supply a very large demand, biiould that demand continue, these mines might be. worked profitably to the depth of a thousand feet or more, and for centuries to come. No other mineral of much commer cial value has yet been found in the mica veins, but it is to be hoped that at some point or other the beryls found may occur in the form of emeralds. I one or two transparent white flftmryjF j oavnral small annama- riprvl dna several small aquama- ..,. "Bomtj of which I had cut. This last mineral, though used as a gem, is in fact worth little more than the cost of cutting it. As however the emerald owes its fine green color to the presence of less than one per cent, of the oxyd of chromium, and as chrome ore is widely dispersed through out this section, we may hope that at some point emeralds may be found. I need scarcely remind you, that the emerald ranks next in value to the rubv and the diamond. ours. vc.. Clingman. 'Very respectfun.c From the Southern Cultivator. iieep nnsix;. niata for Mf grimier. A correspondent, writing from Spring Hill, in Tennessee, says : My experience in sheep-husbandry is recent, extending only over five or six years. Tho suggestions I propose to offer, therefore, are intended chiefly for beginners. WHAT BREED TO SELECT. The intelligent farmer will compre hend that this depends upon locality, soil, &c, quite as much as the question whether to plant cotton, wheat or po tatoes. The three classes of sheep are acknowledged by all fair-minded breeders to have three distinctive ex cellences and defects a failure to con sider which may entail much loss at the outset. It may be well to reca pitulate some of these : 1. Tho Merinos are small, hardy, active sheep, yielding good weights of fine wool, and thriving better in large flocks than the English breeds. They are not so prolific as the latter and are apt to be careless mothers. They arrive slowly at maturity, but make good mutton when grown." 2. The South-down is below either the Cotswold or IMerino, in weight of wool. As a mutton sheep, he is un equalled as is much more hardy than the Cotswold and more prolific than the Merino. Flock of several hundred do well together. They mature early and the lambs are much sought after by butchers. 3. Tho Cotswold may lie taken as the representative of tho Long Wool tye the Leicester being nearly, or quite, identical the Lincolns as yet little known. They are large, quiet sheep with heavy fleeces of long, loose wool, which do not protect the body from rain and cold quite so well as the shorter and closer "fleeces of the two preceding breeds. In thi3 latitude, they seem only moderately prolific and the lambs "are rather tender. From their size, they require rich pastures. The same cause, however, makes them excel t he other breeds in yield per head. If the beginner is on a Railroad or within reach of a city, he will find early lambs very profitable. Other wise, he will turn his attention chiefly to wool. In either case, it would be injudi cious to buy a pure-blood flock to" be gin with. Let him select good, large native ii.wes, well covered with wool. Above all, they must bo young. An old sheep is dear at anv price. Then foreverv forty Ewes, let him buy a thorough-bred ram of the breed he prefers. If he gets several, it is better they should be of at least two different strains of blood, so as to cross each with the other's progeny. In buying rams, do not take inferior animals because they are to be crossed with scrubs and nevrr use a grade ram or a cross-bred one. A grade ram may be verv handsome, but his lambs are as likely to breed back to the na tive as to the thorough bred type. In using a cross-bred mm, you "sacrifice that "prepotency" of blood which en ables the thorough-bred to stamp almost all its characteristics on the first cross from a Mongrel. In buying rams, choose yearlings or two-year olds. Ram lambs should not be used for breeding. There is but one safe mode of buvincr namelv. ao- ply to a reliable breeder, tell him what you want and leave the selection to him. Not all noted breeders are re liable, by-tbe-bye. As for "ram -peddlers" avoid them and their "thorough bred" sheep. Begin with a small flock, well select ed, and take good care of them. Fifty choice native Ewes well fed, will give more wool and raise lambs of more value, than double the number of average animals badlv eared for. Valuable Fertilizer. In the eeeond books of Kings, fUh chapter and 25th verse, is a remarka ble record : "And thre was a great famine in Samaria, and behold they beseiged it until an ass' head was sold for four score pieces of silver, and the fourth part of a cab of doves' dung Tor five pieces i silver. It has been a question what peculiar properties that last mentioned materi al possessed to have been so highly prized at that remote period in historv. Through the extended valley of tne Nile, as far as the first cataract are an immense number of rough, shabby towers, principally made of naud and dura etaiks around the villages. They are usually of two stories, the upper one being wholly of earthen pots, piled one above another, horizontally, with their open end turned outward. In the interstices sticks project and the rude structure is a collossal dove-cote, the sticks being resting places for the birds. Thousands of birds are thus housed not for their flesh, feathers or eggs, but exclusively for their drop pings. Frequent scraping of the pots furnishes the best qualitv. and under the roosts the next best. Fellah wo men are the principal managers. The manure is gathered in small bags and carried to the river, where there is al ways a ready market with passing boat- j men. no precious is it as a manure, a very little being sufficient, no one-could think of raising rich, luscious melons STATENEWS. The Goldsboro' Messenger talks about snow last Friday night. The Humphrey House, in Golds boro', was opened last Saturday. James McCosh, D. D., LL. D., President of Princeton College, is in Raleigh. Mr. Edwin Fuller's new novel will soon be out. It is now in the publish er's hands. The Baptist Sabbath School of Ral eigh will pic-nic it at Haywood, Chat ham county, on May Day. It is now authoritatively stated that W. D. Haywood, Esq., will be an in dependent candidate for Mayor of Raleigh. Henry J. Taiutor, Private Secre tary of Gov. Jewell, of Connecticut, has been appointed Commissioner of Deeds for this State, resident at Hart ford. Hon. Thonias S. Ashe, member of Congress from the Sixth District, has given his cadetship in the West Point Military Academy to William R. Hill, son of Gen. D. H. Hill, of Charlotte. Dr. H. J. Menninger, late Secretary of State, has entered the drug busi ness and is located on the corner of Thirty-Sixth street and Fifth Avenue, New York City. From the 1st of September, '72, to the 1st of March, '73, there were 11,935 bales of cotton shipped South from Charlotte over the C. C. & A. R. R. The shipment over the N. C. R. R. for the same period was heavier. Tho Goldsboro' Messenger says : We learn that a man named Noah Bundy, residing near Farmville, in this State, attempted to commit sui cide by hanging himself a few days ago, but was cut down by some of his neighbors and restored to conscious ness. Domestic troubles are said to have been his excuse. The Charlotte Observer says : W. P. Anthony, of Cleaveland county, arrived in Charlotte last evening. He was convicted about sixteen months ago of conspiracy, and sentenced to eight years in the Albany penitentiary where he has been confined since his convietion until Thursday last, when he was pardoned by the President and released. The Goldsboro' Messenger says: The religious revival at the Methodist church, under the ministration of Rev. J. E. Mann, is still in progress and 2G persons connected themselves with the church yesterday. Almost an equal number are still penitents. It is the most powerful awakening that has occurred in the church for many years. The Raleigh News says : On Friday, at a meeting of the Board of Direc tors of the North Carolina Railroad, at Company Shops, Hon. W. A. Smith resigned his position as President of the road, giving as his reason for so doing pressing private affairs. A i meeting of tho Board of Directors j will be held on the 14th proximo, at j Salisbury, to elect his successor. i The Statesville Intelligencer says: We learned recently that a company of capitalists from Baltimore have lately purchased the Ore Knob Cop per Mine, which is near the dividing line between Ashe and Alleghany coun ties, and that they have commenced operations on a " large scale. They Propose to employ some two hundred hands at the business of digging out and smelting the rich copper ore which is to be found there. Thirty-five are already at work. The Southern Home savs: The j fruit reports from different portions of inis section oi tne btate are very con flicting. We believe, however, that the damage is not so great as once believed to le. The most successful peach raiser in Mecklenburg, Mr. J. S. P. Caldwell, of Pineville, reports the Tillotson and York killed; "the Hale's Early and Chinese Cling uninjured. He thinks that he will have a pretty fair crop. " j The Raleigh Sentinel savs : It is thought that the vote in regard to the county's subscription of $100,000 to the proposeel railroad from Clarksville to Oxford, will result in an- over whelming majority in favor of the project. We learn that the colored people are very generally "in favor of it, and as they out-vote the whites, and the measure is popular with hundLreds of the latter, it may be readily be lieved that the appropriation will be made. If the road is built to Oxford, it is only a question of time as to its extension to some point on the North ! Carolina Railroad, or to Raleigh. ' The Raleigh Sentinel says: The fol- i lowing Ministers and Laymen have I been appointed by the Board of Mis- sions to attend the Southern Baptist I Convention that meets in Mobile, Ala. , ! FROM RALEIGH JUDGE ALBERTSON Dl f CONTINUE it. Ot .50.r 1:1.,-. RTECIAk TO THE -'Of I-. ,L ; Baleigit, N. C, April l T; ' j. or, JudgeAlbertM.il, vnwi.wu s'-i Danville Railroad Coniftav to a change of trnflcre on' tl... IT, -enisi he: ri, Carolina Railroad between ( T nt. 1 t i , . - anu inanoite, nut requires ,i ortn (via t i, c!j.i- i j?ju,sws uum inn oiaie to Itiiio, sa d Company for damages t..lT " be sustained on or ln-fore tC"j " ' May. If the bond is not given lv"Vi"i time the injunction is to be dis"'. f Neither the validity f i '" '" . ,7 v. till J i-1 I. Tin TioTit fn rift antra i.ta m " Ul)t e"ae overtL, partial change was held to be unlawful Both parties have given notice of appeal to the Supreme Court a" GOTHAM. THE TRAIN LUNACY GATION. INVEST!. FEMALES REQUESTED TIRE. TO KE- ONE OF THE STRONG-MINDFT REFUSES TO LEAVE. SHE SAYS THAT THE.EVJnPv WOULD NOT HURT HER MORALS. RECORDER HACKETT ENED. THREAT. INJUNCTION PRAYED FOR. T? Tf "C CI T rV 4 'V-v'n-v.-r COUNTERFEITER. NewYokk, April 23 Noon. Durin-r the Train lunacy investigation, Judge Dally requested the females present to retire, as the evidence about to he given was unfit for them to hear. Mrs Brooker, sister of Victoria Woodhull refused to leave, saying that the evi dence would not hurt her morals. Judge Dally ordered the officers to clear the Court, and both male aitd female auditors were obliged to dis part. The Bull's Head Bank 1 las reopened. Of the million dollars due the depoail tors, three-quarters of a million have been paid. The President of the Union Pacific Railroad says its financial condition requires the abrogation of the free- pass system. At a meeting last night, W. A. Gar sey, of the Bricklayer' Union, rained a storm by saying, although he be longed to a Union he did not believe in the principle, and the 60,000 men who walked the street in idleness last Winter, owed it to the Unions. New Yobx, April 23 Nicht Re corder Hackett produced in the Court of General Sessions this morning, a letter he had received through the mail threatening him with death iu case he again sentences prisoners to long terms of imprisonment, for what, in the judgment of the senders of the letter, are light crimes. The letter states that a body of men have leagued together and are bound by oath to be avenged on the Recorder by killing him or some member of his "family in case he does not heed this warning. C. Cadle, Jr. , Receiver of the First National Bank of Selma, Ala., has brought suit in the United States Cir cuit Court to enjoin Benford A. Tracy and others, from continuing suit to ob tain possession of $16,12831 which had been deposited by the Bank of Selma in the Ocean National Bank of this citv. and which had been attached bv Tracy. The suit of Cadle was based on tne lact that the Uank of Selma owed the United States Government $250,000 for which judgment had been recovered, thus giving the United States a lien on the money in t he Ocean Bank, which Cadle prayed might be paid over to him to partly satisfy the judgment obtained by the Government. Judge Blatchford to-day granted an in junction, but the question as to how much money shall be paid to Cadle is reserved for argument. Eli Brown, said to be one of the most dangerons counterfeiters in the Northwest, was arrested at the Fifth Avenue Hotel to-day. An advance of 10 cents per ton on the whole line of coal is announced. TIIE WAR TS TIIE WEST. MORE FIGHTING WITH MODOCS. THE on tne Pta ot Alay, viz: W. M. Wingate, J. H. Mills, A. F. Redd, R. G. Lewis, A. D. Blackwood, C. Durham, Wm. Hooper, S. W. Wes cott, B. Oliver, W. M. Kennedv, J. C. Hiden, H. Lennon, W. G. Hill, W. McDaniel, Wm Burnt, S. G. Mason, John Kerr, J. . Richardson. J. B. ! THE COUNTRY IN A FERMENT. THE ROADS UNSAFE. Lava Beds, Scxdat, April 20th. A pack train, with 21 men, was at tacked to-day. The escort coming from Mason's camp to protect the Boone, Wade Hill, Wm. Turner, J. B. j triu "was attacked at the head of Long ; ave. a ne men sheltered themselves i behind the rocks. One person was killed and one wounded. The train I was fired into upon entering the lava beds and again when it returned. The Modocs crept within eight hundred rods and fired at the pickets and sent a volley through the camp. Major soldier, stationed at this place. whUe : A.uoma;? 8enI a sneii among them wnen in a state of intoxication, had fallen I "T dispersed. liere were elevee upon the track between the depot and ! J"aiana " the attacking party. The water tank and gone to sleep; when ! ft. HP"f? Indians will start to the train started out, he was run over tmn; l.he Modocs, but they are ecat bv the enenne and rpvpiviI r rH n terpl small parties. fearfullv mutilated. One foot out ! The roads are not safe to Yreka. off, a thigh torn to pieces, a hand and 1 arm oroiten ana nis iicaa niasnea by a Justice, D. B. Nelson. John Mitchell T. J. Knapp, C. T. Bailey, P.. H. Marsh, T. J. Horner, G. W. Purifov. and J. B. Marsh. The Charlotte Observer says : A fatal accident occurred last evening as the Southern bound Express train left the depot at 8:30 o'clock. A Federal ' if it could not be had. In all the es sential properties of a powerful fertili zer, it rivals Peruvian guano. That is why it is so much sought. A thousand years before the Christian era its repu tation all over the land of Canaan was quite as high as in Egypt. There is much ammonia in it, perhaps the ef fect of climate in those hot regions. Seeds fed with doves' dung and water, there germinate, bud and blossom al most like the rod of Aaron. Probably, therefore, in the dreadful sufferings for food in tho siege, the reason why a quart of this manure brought five J pieces of silver (SI 32) was because with it vegetables could be quickly grown to meet the urgent demands of ! a starving multitude. j Promising coal discoveries have been made in Iron county , Utah. A single saw-mill at Muskegon, Michigan, cut 21,124,959 feet of lum ber last season. A I V. ..T.J 1 BiiKKti uu uemg uixcu ly 1118 I teacher how he should flog him, re- j plied, "if you please, sir, I should like i to have it Upon tho Italian system of i penmansnip, ineneayy strotes upward, and the down ones light," An Indiana lawyer lately defended a man for keeping his saloon open after 10 o'clock at night. He made the plea that it was 10 o'clock until it was 11, and won his case. The latest fashionable kink is poo- corn parties, It is claimed that they not only keep young men from another kind of corned parties, but are very suggestive of a question they ought to pop. brake rod. As soon as the accident j was discovered, the engineer stopped J the train and got off, and the man was j taken up. He was put on a stretcher j and carried at once to the barracks. The last information we could obtain ' showed liim to be still alive, but there is no hope of his recovery, and he is doubtless dead ere this. The name of the unfortunate victicm of this sad occurrence is Mike Roach. He is a young man, perhaps 23 or 21 years of age. The Charlotte Democrat says: We are very anxious to get a copy of the Democrat of the latter part of May, 1857, containg a full account of the able Address of the Rev. Dr. Hawks on the occasion, as it is the only form in which that celebrated historical and useful Address was ever printed. Our file of Democrats containing that paper was burnt. We would be highly gratified and very thankful if some friend could furnish us the paper mentioned. Some of our oldest sub scribers will please look oxer their old papers. ' Speaking of that occasion recalls: to The conntrv is in a ferment. Searfaced Charlie was not killed. It is thought that small parties of the Modocs will raid around the coun try to secure good horses, while a sufficient force will remain in the lava beds to keep the troops employed. The cavalry has returned, but failed I to find the trail. Col. Perry traveled ! eighty miles, making a circuit round ! the lava beds. HEADQUAIITERS. THE TIEDMONT RAILROAD. A clergyman of Worcester, Mass,, recently had an old coffin, w hich had evidently done service underground, and a shroud left in front of his resi dence, accompanied by a note recog nizing his labors in behalf of temper ance in terms of doubtful compliments. Massachusetts always was a notorious State for Ku-EJux operations. our memory some pleasant reminis cences. The Address was delivered on the 20th of May, 1857, and on the morning of the 21st we published it in full together with a full account of the prucetMuugs iuu uay. as wa8 CIOUC in thi3way: E.. J. Hale, Esq. ? then editor of ' the Fayetteville Observer, (now of New York,) was here on a visit, and he volunteered his services to help do the work. The editor of the Democrat and Mr. Hale worked all night, and he (Mr. H.) being one of the fastest compositors in the State. (as well as the best editor of a news. ) paper. the work was oromntlv dnno ' By such energy und industry as that displayed by our good friend Edward J. Hale, is the only way any printer ever was or ever can be successful ; nnd had it not been for Sherman's orders to burn Mr. Hale's property in Fayetteville, in 18G5, he would now have been one of the richest men in the State instead of having to work in New York dealing in books, stationery, tc. But such is often the fate of the very best men like Mr. Hale. PROCEEDINGS AGALNST IT BY THE GOVERNMENT FOR MALLY ABANDONED. Washington, April 23 Noon. Le gal proceedings have for some time been pending in the courts against -the Piedmont Railroad from Greensboro' to Danville, on a mortgage. Applica tion was made to the Attorney-General to seize the road under the act of 1861, on the pround that it was confiscated to this government, having been con structed and used' m" the interests' of the .rebellion. The Attorney-General luw just decided that the President's proclamation of pardon of 1868 ope rated so as to restore to the eorjKjra tors or stockholders, all their rights, and therefore tho right of the govern ment to seize the rorvd is barred. The, District-Attorney has been directed to discontinue the proceedings and to foreclose the mortgage given to tho Confederate goyernment, oil the ground that the contract is a nullity. All pre ceedings against the road were drop ped. The interests at issue were "bout a million and a half of dollara. GREAT BRITAIN. INCREASE OF CABLE TOLLS. London, April 23 Noon. Cable tells are to be increased to 1 50 (gold) per word, commencing May 1st. ihe cause is from the failure of the French cable. The weather is favorable to crops. Tree planting in Kansas amounts to an epidemic.