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VOL. 1.
RALEIGH, N. C., WEDNESDAY. APRIL 17, 1807.
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-siliMrt1sl nwto.frn., anJbtaVi"
rr . . L r. .
II
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THESENTINEL.
WM. K. PELL, Pboi'hibtoiu
I From the N. V. Tunc, Republican.)
, Ti.fW'l 7 OA - 77 A' KXriih'Mlsrs
AM THEIIi TllliEATH,
'I In- Stevens plan of conliscatinn -has an
,n,lrr in the Raleigh N. O.) Utamlanl, a
mutual controlled by Ex-dovernor Hidden
mid ri-lli-rlins the view of those wlio would
manipulate reconstruction iu the intercut of
;,n extreme party. Iu the first place the
S,i,.,l,inl promulgates tlie idea of coutisca
iinn assconlingoney by no means iinproh
but wliich may, perchance, lie averted
,v an iniineillale compliance wild I he con
d'uuuis prescribed by t ongri-s.
"We feel sure that the lands of the jjtat
body ol 'he Southern ieople are in no dan-p-r
yf( nf cnntlHtliin. They wouljl have
U-cn iu no danger 'n any event if thr-Nlales
had accepted promptly the Howard A men. I
nl and returned to the Union, lint the
iii.l ol 'the instigators d loaders of the'
r, tu ltoti have beeu iu dauber iruui the. first.
Kni nt tieiil nave not iiiiiiiiiisiieii mm
ilanK'-r. We-cannot predict what will It:
done willi the proierly nt these lenders.
Tli.'V "'' v- it yet if thev will, but we
-.Mess, Iroiii our knowledge ol their proud,
.IiiMniiii ami defiant disposition, lliat He
run have hut lntle liojaj lliul they will."
In the next plaie, tin- Standard init
ii .ii the equity of aci rtain ainounl of con.
h ation, wliettier the purpot of its preii
nni threat lwiHiJilui.ur not :
Mr. Btevena ha aolemnly deilan d that
Ui- Mill devote ui reinainiuj atrt-nitli to the
Kink "I rimtlaratioii. Ilia inrlm ni t in Con
i;r.-w i well Vnown. The great laxly nl
in.- Northern people and many of our own
li.)l fI that rt wrmltl bar u i ut uro
and iriiug injuatite to free the iaves and
Iin- them 110 lunda; and to -ay the leaM. it
would I better that the laifre llii "f
hunl held hy Southern rel l be ut up into
km. ill lann lr the or w Intel and the ri.l
i.re I ienple. Itevolutions never io ba k
ward, and Ihia revolution has not yet run
itii enurse."
The etliit ot writing of tins rharaeler
eunnot hut Ije misclitevoii". It intrudui eii
te w ilemetit d uneertainty into liie South,
nitenilim its industrial parnlyaia, anil heih
ii -utlii ililrut winch an ady deli r enpita'l-i-i-
troin euilmrkiui; in iu enlerpri-Kn. It
lew-that, in the opinion id - I n m in- wlm
l i'tim a peculiar right to nianaije atl.or-. and
it i'ciibar influenee over 'oni;MHxiiuinl ar
lioii. a HMeeptii iiteaf ure.of eolili- al i n ih in
IW'll rilltl nils. mi. I shield be plCNs4i llniu
tin- country.
Tlie Strftiif-trd mm wtfea"the'eaw. however
when it ileilales that "llie irent laidy of the
N'-rt ln-rn M-opleM favor tin meie-urr, an I
tint the llillllelice id Mr. Sti V ell. Ill ( 'until ex
1 a Kiiaraotee of ita u't'inat ad ption.
I lie jM-nmnal iiirtiienee ot Mr. hteveto we
Inw- mi inclilnttloii to deplc iate. but the
i-t tun MUsioo? have uliiind-oit i i-roveil
f'rit tint inllio in e. Inroe as it is. iIim h not
tuiiilc him to carry Miiuts at vuiianet' with
the i;i 111 nil aeirttnient of the puny. We
Ii ouid U- soiry to Iom; him troin the polil!-
;el arena, and are content he hall "dexote
hi- remaining atrengthlo the work of e.iw
h-i ation." Iieeanm-the failure of his efforts
in that regard doe not admit of doubt,
fhe nawpliiiu a&'urtUid to liii Contiai-atiou
lull 14 evhlencw lf tbia. It met im n c
111 the Uollet and wuk pontpoiied iinlelimteiy
its author, 1m- niie ail ttrtnit to pn it
would have onicklv ended in ita rrjiTlion.
H iihall their radicalism, the majority men.- I
U r are not prep.ired to nuutain a acheiue
that ih repugnant to the moral acnc and the
linmaiiUy td'tlui . North, TIlCY know that
tli.-jjrcni bKly the Northern M-opTe" f
not only have no diKire to acie the laid o j
Hie planter and diviile them among the I
fieedinen, titif wrrlrf ffww r' -tlnwrn treh a
I'loji-ct us barbitrona, nnjtmtiiil eminently 1
impolitic
The current opinion at the North llovvs in
ifirection wulelv ill Hcn-nt from
w bi-h the fxtrrmtiiMof North Carolitia I awe
their ealculathma. .Their, nauuuinx . i .
iiiuoiiiirl a their axiom. Hivotutioim do
sonietiine 'go backwards," or rather, their
violence aoiuettrhe prolncai u reai-tion
Inch undoes their work and periiintii ntlv
ie utrali( their influence. The more hciisi
h'eof the Radical journal, reeogniing the
iiuminence of react ion as a consequence of
too v iolent proceeding, arc earnest in their
c'linlcinnation ol Ihe very measure on
w.iich the 1 1 olden taction build their hopes.
The Chicago TrSwue, thau which the Had:
eal have few nfiler or more influciif inl or
tn, rnndettm eontiscatiou, ancf repudiates
it in U'half of the party. WhertMr. Hte-
n introilnecd hi hill, the 1rUune de
nounced it a a libel mi the Northern eople,
who want no tncaauru ol vengeance, and
will tolerate none of robbery. The same
I unial ilenoiiniii the recent propoeitionsof
Mr. Smnjier. and in tfTeet declares flint no
I'Miy eirtflii live fters'v'n? flicm ita sane.
tloll.
I he truth is, that the r.s klcssiiess with
viim h the ultra rail nils have pn-heil their
I'l' ieela has al vriiieil the mole llmii-litlul ol
ill' Ki'nibticau journalists, who see thai the
iisieudancy of the party ia imperilled by
poipoBtttifn nrni meui4s a-t variitiice w ilh
the calm jiidgtiienl of Ihe Northern -people.
I he li feat ill ffonni-encut has enabled tli.-m
to realii- the danger and has elicited pro
tests and waruing wliich I hey who inpin
la be li.iidfrs of tlie iiiily cHtinot pi udi ntlv
disregard. The I'lnladelpbia Norili Aiuei-i
'in. ihe Providence Journal, tie Spring
field Republican, Ihe llostoii Advi rtii r,
'ind other journal ol similar positron ami
ll.iraeler, have I mpltasi.cd Ihe lesson of
I'onue, heut, and urged the. ncctassity ol
gn-aier moderation and loluntioii as esseii.
lid to the future unity and stict'Cas ol lh.
suite, ita uorat tueiuii's, they dcclnre, itic
'he men who in iu name urge di niams, and
indulge tltrets onil make demonstration-,
which neither the roiiutrv nor llie majority
nl ihe party will sustain. In these uttet-
i.rtrc-s ucThillk .may he lisuiM-d the be
1,'inimig ol a movement which w ill purs;e
the Hepublican orguiii.atioii of ita intl.oii
uiable elements, anil rede 111 it fioui the dis
grace and dcli-at which enfn uie raliia
guidance iiuipnHtiotialify' entails. T'oc ad'
viMaite of iniitlscatiiiit, aiipeiii'IniieitL onl
eoicitc hvih lues have hit hello t Mil 'lsii,:tU
influence utterly ilisprojoi li-maU; to llmr
tiuinvaieiil streiioil, Tlu-ir prcteiisious,
pushed to tlie verge id indecency, have mis
led many a to their powi r, mid possibly the
lialoigh btaiulortf may be of the number.
The real fllg ut tii people ia ibat .oo
more should la' done as ngninat the South
than 1 needed in the rntcreal of tm I'nion;
tlit there Uou J ) uo vimlietive penalties,
no harsh proacriplion ; ami the lU-piiblicnn
party, potent though it be, cannot afford to
ignore tliolact. .'.
DOVKSTfC sf.AVE THADK.
(Irunting ol iWdom to the negroe ha
not put in ciKlTtig (0 the slave trade, w fiicli
ia now, and haa for a length of time been,
flourishing iu North Carolina and border
Htatea; with thin difference from former
day: no one hen- ia benefitted, but a great
public injury is inflicted. Men come, here
from Miacitolppl. Alabama, Texaa, Ac., and
engage all the able ImhIiciI men that will go
with them, to develop the agriculture ot
that region, and Iravu liehind, to be sup
ported at the public expenae. the aged of
i4 wcunen and children, moat of
wicrnS wifl la-inne h liiirdt ti to the eople
of the State, and but few of any practical
utility, until the children grow up, when
they in turn will Im- carried off, a the former
were, tiil' repeated e ich uiccccdiiijr year aa
the cropot yining neroea attain manhood
the women not tieing wanted. Thus ia
North Carolina raining ncgroca to supply the
planterti of the r-outh, not only without any
remuneration, but at heavy cost, formerly,
w lien a slave was sold to aSouthern planter,
the price wiut left ill the State ill dnllara
She now raises tin III to give awav! It re
iiirc no mathematician to tell what this
w rif lend to in tlie war of hss, it aome plan
cannot la- devised to stop the evil While
people emigrate in biunltis, and leuve 110
progeny Im a public burden ; the able
bodied inahs ot tl.c colored population
alone euiioriite, and leave lahilld the aged,
liclpU f, and women and children, but few
of w horn me ablctosujiport themsi-lveH, and
the majority la-come n public burden. An
other item, not less important, ia the loss of
a laroe portion ot the able laidied lalajr of
the State.
It is shrewdly susHsrted. and no doubt
truthfully, that many of the black pVople
induced to leave the Slate, are taken to
Cuba and Hrail and sold. Tina in much
easier done, thiol to t;o to Africa for slavea,
and NmiI hern ineii, trav-)ing in Cuba, have
nctnnllv w-n and conversed with hhtck men
there sold as -Uies, whom they Itad known
111 the South fhe ;iui: w hii Ii a likely
colored li);ill will I'rtcli in Cuba, ia said to
In- about ifwiti in gold. The safest plan for
men ot color, who were formerly slave, ia
to remain in the State, acttcpt ol such wage
as their lalair is worth to our farmers, fa
industrious, solar urn! honest, and not run
the risk, for the promise of better wages, of
bcino aouin sold into slavery, to a Spanish
master. If tlo v iscupc thi, tlie kin that
they can rxjm i t- lend work, and an eaily
trrave in the Uios nn.l jiraines ol the South,
awav Iroin their tamiliea and the homes
they have behind them in wfial was once
the old North State. Sl.il utile Amfri;n,.
i in: 7.7(.. j a n nn: .sa .v.i te.
I he I
casloli-.
i s ileiit 111. iv. on extraordinary in
iiliveue both I louses, or either ol
tlietii." The S nail , ns a branch of the
cM cntivc Miwer, haslMM'u oiten convened in
speci'il session lor the purpose of acting upon
nominations or treaties to be cvuimunica
ted to them, 'fhe President uiay, at hi
pleasure, call the S'liutc at any time, and to
meet linn at any il tec. President J:urkson,
lor in-t;mci', could h-iv e umnioiicd the Sen
ate to im et ui the "llerinilae."
'fin- s. n.ite, when called by priM-liunatiou,
is railed "for grave and weighty reasons."
hen the btisin, ssol the N-nate ia dihMMseil
of, it is usual lor tin' body to adopt a reso
lution appointing a committee to wait on
tin- Pm-si.Ii ni .-ui.,1 iulorin him that they are
rea-!v to a I j 1 1 1 n . unless he ha some further
communication to mnke.
l in- ei:i;.. in its in M-ul si'ssion, w as
).. mil cuiicl. and tor peciai purposes.
T'hoss' pui'posi s Icive not laa-n accompluiicd.
The I'ii si. Ii ut lus si nt in nvminaiion to
lill tin- vacancies in iitimernus important
olltecs and the Si-nale has, in most instan
i-i-s. ii ji , ted I lii 111 tut lie-re party ground.
T he l'n rd,i,- ii,..4 wndf puruuk llie Si'U
ate to leave such "i;i;ive and weighty" mat
lers iiiiliulsbed. lb- cannot cease to dis
i.Urgi; tia-Mu duUca InxaiLsit they refuse to
j pcrtoiiu tliciis. lb--liould coiitniue to nom
I inate siiiinbu- im u for the vai-ant otlice.
! I he S mile iiciv H jra t thelll unless llley
ol uie iii-iue iiiiiii,ii jiitiif , itim iiis
I s pi o-i i oy i ui ii ii i a uies is nun mm nn i ate
to the Senate the rcjitiori or confirmation
of all ollTccrs. Sittn'i1 itei.icer.
in W ednesday cveniug lasl, we listened
to a speech delivered by Nathan Martin,
the political chief of the colored people ill
this county, to ipiite a large numlier of hi
brethren assembled in the Alrican Church
of this town.
The sM'ki-r commenced by informing hi
audience that when he started to Italeigh
to altend the Ilolilcn Convention held there,
he had li idea what he was going for; hut
thnl he vcv Hoon liiund oiit, after lie reach
cd there. The Convention, he said, agreed
upon a plan for organizing n great Repub
lican Parly, w hirh would secure the negro
ipial rights, iiiul restore the State to the
I'uion. lie told hi hearer that they were
not capable ol holding nllhv, but ihey
should have to give all tl fhVes, for the
present, tu friendly anil capable w hile nicn,
i' We sii-pii t hi tin-thrcn of tire Convention
part ii-iihn Iv iinprissed this tact on liis
uiinili. lb' siiidthi-v initst tind out tlie last
man :iml vol' lot him. but be sure tluit he
is .i , , v n I in ii,, r 'n Is tioul.l not rule the
coiintrv
t b- e ,i e Ills itriitet s Milne V el V ood Ull -
vice. A mono olhir Ihiuus, he told them to
ntierlv discard all idea of social cipiality,
and all all nines lie j ., 1 1 1 ill to the white
lii.lli lie s:ml lh.il sis icty would always
"irove itsi It." and that the black man must
i-iiMstMUVe hn nun soi-.u-ty lie ilctionnced
aneilt:. lln.it Ion III sev ere Ii I Ins.
Pen he i ii k led In- .nidience most, when
he spoke ol i olilisi ntlotl lie told then!
that there W a-eel latlll V 11 plan oll foot III
o,ivc each ol tin in toitv acl of land, mid
ii hundred dollais. The while man might
tell tin in it w.i not so, but everybody who
read the Sl-ti.iliil knew it was sic He said
he via- noi c. rtfaiiT fie plan Would ever be
carried tut i v ciition, lint it Wr.tdd do them
'some ooi.d ju-l to think al t.
Nullum l i I not s,'.-ni to have much atlec
tii.n lor hisNiiiihiM'i brethren. He said lie
wanted all iiien'to la-either white or btnek
' im nionon Is." Nathan is a very black
m ill llllll-t II, and evidently believes ill birds
ol a teithei lbs kin-; inociliiT. We heard
one o his miiiiijtii i ien. is inalie sonic rather
lui'olllilllll' libit ', lematks llboiil linn a1- we
pnsed Olit.
N.illi in s slioli'poilit i-i ohli..e:ition, vv ith
reference to vv hich he has no doubt been
posted bv the Kditor of the Si.ni.l,ir,f.
II', Aw Sl.it,:
- Jovertioivelep' Bi;lilf. of Connecticut,
is receiv ing preseita Inini his friends. A
ladvhas sent him a hickory cane from Mount
:Vrnon w ith a charter oalc-hfa J ; and a cler
gy man ha given him a quill from the wing
ot an eagle, asking him to write his inau
gural with it.
a - - - -
From the New York Time.
XUE fiQUl'UAXD EEi'OfrsTKIj'jox.
The Richmond Enquirer put to u the
following questions :
"We wish to ask the New York Timtt
question : Arc the Southern people Imini,
ao far as their own action and agency , are
appealed to, fo support the Constitution i
We have been required to take an oath to
support it must we keep that oath ? If
the answer lie in tile aflirmntive, how can
we become a )trty to the Cougreasiouul leg
islation in reference to the Southern States?
We can submit to J'orrrtin ri.diirr while
Congress dtm but can we take part and
give acceptance and concurrence without
perjury f
"We will suggest further if the. tioverii
melit i in a state of revolution, such a the
Times describe; and if this revolulion re
ceive the sanction of the people to such a
degree a to command respect, as the 'liiu
ccina to argue ; teouUl ti not 1. .Ui-t i.t tu
&ui-tul th mitli to mif.'it tin- t '.tiiMtit.iti..,.
until tlu jvb iciuUi f ll would save a 'icat
deal of jierjiiry in high places- as sin h
things are uimIcisUmmI iu the lanighlcd
S ii."
We will answer these iiiestions as well us
w e can
1. We do not sisc thst the Southern
States " trt'mf ,i utt to " the h-gislal inn id
Congress liy act ceptiug it as law ami oiniv
ing its requirements. Congress ha p.is-cd
a law providing tor elections, conventions .
and other ateps iu the reorganization of
government in the Southern Stales. That
law may or may not I' constitutional, but
the Southern people are not responsible tor :
it. They were not " parties to it " in any
dens.;. They did not vole tor it; ita valid
ity thai not depend on their accepting or
assenting to it. It will go into clhs t, and
the Southern State governments will I or
ganincd under its provision, whether they ,
accept or reject it. All thev do is to " sub !
mil to eirce." They take the law a- ih, v '
1 find It, a It ta made 'or thetn bi tbos'
who, f ir the time, have the powi-r I" ucike
it.
We cannot see that their taking uu o ath
to supjMirt the ( onstitution ha anv thing
whatever to do with tins question. T hat 1
oath doe not forbid their olxyiog an uncon-
stitutional law though it unght forbid
their mtilino one. They find a certain law
in force thev are in no wise respousihle tor
II ttiey had nothing to do with making 1
it - they are merely the parties upon whom
it i to take effect. They avail thcmsclvis ,
ol power which it puts in their hands, lot j
their own protection against others whom it ,
clothe with the same power. It requires
very sharp optica to detect iu this any I hing
like " perjury.
2. Perhaps it would I ".h-ceut" to "sus
pend the oalb to support the Constitution
until the job is ended," but what of that ;
Doc the Eiuuirtr exect to get it iisxnd
cd ? Or will its opinion that it nmjlit to lie
susjxnded, in the least change the consi
q uence of it refusal to act under the Ian ;
The question may la.- sluup as a taunt, but
it Iirs little practical inpoiiauce.
We should la? glad if the En.uin r and
all other Southern journals could act upon
tlie fact that this whole matter of recon
ruction ha liecome one for fir.irti.il -iren,
not for argument or speculation. In our
judgment, Ihe great, pressing, necessity of
the Southern States is to get back into the
I'liion, not theoretically, but actually ;
not to demonstrate that they an there ac
cording to Ihe Constitution, but to get
there in such a way that they can la" recog
ntmt, can send Senator and Kcreen!
tive into ongre, can have a voice and
vote in making laws and electing lrcsi
dent i and shaping the action of the Nation
al Government. The sooner they can do
this the better for themselves. Until they 1
do ft they are mete mkpvlt of a- power ui (.
txtrti, wholly separate and alien tolhim. I
They have no share in making the laws j
which force compel tbeiu to obey. They i
are utterly powerless, and must so remain
until, hy some mean or other, they can re j
Kiiine their actual representation in Con
gres. ;
'fhe law ol the last session provide a w ay !
of doing this. It may or mat not lie cwnitr- t
tulional but that i iril th.ir affair. Tin y !
did not make it, nor help to make it, nor 1
give any assent or consent to its la-iie, made, j
Hut it will bring them again into tin actual j
possession and exereise of their share of i
Hbtical power in the ualionui government
and it w ill thus give them precisely w hat j
they lack, and what they have before :
they can do anything whatever to Inrlp (
themselves, or to protect their own right ,
and interests as pari ami pan-el id' the
American Vnion..
If the Enquirer and otlu is among their I
adviser deem it wiiw to stand afoot ami
discuss the constitution:, lily of the law, ,
very well. They have tin- light to do it.
ll they prefer standin"; upon scruple and I
retineuieiits of law or ol logic, very well. - !
They can do mo. Rut thut is all they call ,
do. They cannot affect the practical a tinn
of the government, upon this or any other ;
matter, ia tlie slightest degree ouv. way or j
the other.
This diM-s not Rcchi to us either sensible
or w ise, because it is not practical and can j
not possibly advance the interests or secure
the rights ol the Southern States. Crant
th.it the law is the result of a revolution iu
the practical administration of the Nrittcm.-i!
liovi-rmncnt. as we think if is. still it is
an iK-fiid revolution; it comes from a gov i
eminent in possession and exercise of sm r- '
eign power, - a government which nmki s :
laws, anil has the jmwerat command In en
Ibrce them. It strikes Us as w ise and right I
to obey thus' laws at all events until they j
can be changed, -and to use the power they
confer, if w ith no other motive, in order to
get the power to help change them.
This is our reply to the iierics of tin En- j
qnrri:
A Washington letter to the Hutilsv ille ,
I A la. Aihoc.itt recenlly asserted that liny
Patten, of that Slate, had promised, under
certain circumstances, to secure the vote of
Alabama for the Radical candidate for Pre?
idcut at tho rutxtelcciion ; but in reply to a
dispatch from Mobile addressed lntlia rnnn
Paiton, at Montgomery, and asking il the
report was true, Ids private Secretary tele
graphed : "(!overnor Patton i absciiC Not ,
one word of truth in then-port to winch yon
refer."
A Democrat, at Worcester, Mass,, who
won $.1,000 on the Connecticut election, -
gave the workmen in his employ, 400 iu
nmnlHir, a holiday, paying them full price
for their time, and gave vent to his joy by
firing -Mnt nf h'nnrlred ftp-
The Savannah AVirs U Informed that
Mrs. Harriot Beecbcr Stow UMJeiighted with
the climate of Florida, and has purchased a
place on 8t. John's river, where she intends
to reside.
VliiMAllCK AXD'-X:trv:uM.
Thti Sew York, Ttihum.. after .briefly re
hearaing the more prominent event in the
boltl and darxliug policy o! Count Misinarck,
ays nothing in his brilliant career has so
surprised the world as his recent note to
Iui Napoleou. To call upon the Kmperor
ol France, in peremptory language, for an
explanation of his armaments, and tor their
immediate cessation, and to nolily him that
lie will l held resM)iisible lor all the con
sequences, is, says the ''rioine, an unre
served challenge to France tor the leadership
in the publics of Continental Kurojie. Thus
far Napoleon ha iu every great Kurojiean
complication assumed the air of laving the
In in 1 1 in i head of the Kuropean State sys
tem, and the arbiter of all European con
flicts. I Ii di i mod il his business to inter
lire in the Crimean war in behalf of Turkey,
and, iu jN.y.1, in bchaU of Italy. He culled
a Ktiropraii tongn-ss on the Sehlmwig lol
stein question, luci pled from Austria the
ci-ssion of Vcnetin in order to transfer it to
Italy, aie I in-i.li ili.il the establishment ot
Ihe main Ir.iutier. 'I'hotio, not Uived or
c-U'i'-tncd b-, ottic,- iiionari hs. he mwde hiin-
si If b ared. His pnrlisiins of late huve hail
some ifiifini'iy in erplaintng hi tarlnre in
Menm rout on tlieiu-rmnn iioestiim. Will
lli'-y be .tt'lt- t" i oi i iM-t anv explanation it
Vip'.l i coiitoiuis to the humiliating or-
ihrsot i;ism-,t, k ' Napoleon ins publicly
ilcelii!, .! tlie i. i --ion ot l.ovi mbiirg to In-ileb-ji'
n-ilily lioi-MI', 1 ! Kr.im i- he h:i-e"Vt-oxi.eil
Jrom lie- hutch ti ivi-rnineiit llu
promise to s. ! it : . ,. refused to n lease
Holland from 'tiii- jironiise vrfrerr she' desired
to take il b ii k . In- has beoiin to .,rm i H or
der to enforce Id tlelleamt Now Prilssia
r-i'iiii.- 1. 1 in not oli'v to ali.-nidoli all cXM-c-,
latious ol .tiiui-X'i'iiMi. but to give an enpla
iialion o( ,is iirmameiits, and lo ci-ase them
immedialib Will it be possible for the
KmMTor in comply wiili tliese order, rli
recttv "f indirw".. h itliotti stiflrnng in reti
nrnrion more th-in he has snrfered bv any
previous :u i oi lijs tfiivi-i ninent '.
.ii'-'bon, .oid w hh hi in Fiance, must
hate iiiiihr tie- I'ntssiaii now. lint will
the hinpcioi dare lo tak. up the gauntlet
lie kiiows-thai 1'rusi.ia is fully prepared for
war. :iiul tli.it r ranee is not ; that the coin
biiied iiiiniisol North mid South Ocruianv
which as soon n vvai is dn hired are under
the chief command of the King of Prussia,
numUr about l,:',ti(i,00O men, and that
Fiance ha- to oppose tliiiu no piore than
T.'iii.linil m, n. Nor is this all. France is
without allie. I'-lgiiim has refused the
oth-reil albaiie, . Ilolland wishes to be ex
iis.il li-in n, and Swileibtnd has not re
plied. Kn-ljud cannot la" cxpecled to
abandon In r i bsiin.ne neutrality. Itaiy will
not iniiich against Prussia, to whom she
owes ellKe, t.il the sake of the self-consti
luted iiiotector ol Roine. Austria has not
fore,. t ten l.oiobaidy. and Kiisnia still smarts
under the rcmeinbran:c ol Sebastopol. Il
is ipiite different with Prussia. Her rela
tions with Russia (re known to lie intimate,
and even leading paveiN o Vienna have re
cently uiyerl the conclusion of an offensive
and defensive alliance la-tween Austria and
Prussia. T he publication of the sis-ret trea
ties with Havana. WnrtemlaTg. and linden,
as , .is si-nilii-iint hint of tlie statesmen
mid ollii uil urgans ol Purlin, Petersburg,
and Vienna, naturally give rise lo the sur
mise that secret treaties between the three
Cabinet may have ftecn concluded many
months ngo. It would, therefore, seem a
though tin) Kmperor of France found him
sell in a more einbanassi'd -situation than
he has ever lacn in l-etonc i-ince the estab
lishment ot the Fmiiire. W e simll know ill
a few rfavi Hi wliit nmimer he
will try to
extriciite hiiiis' II -liirh. tt'lii
HIE I.J.IJI. I.EAtjLE JUEOliT
I V' IHfl.ttsritE
Wc have fail Ti eeidlv n a i ved inforinutfolS
that the I'nton I ,. .ii-in "T I Ii I - i I :on held a
mectin"M.iior to n'.i 'Ttli March, for tlis
jiuiposPrr." i...:,iiitiiij; a Del.'galeXfn repre
sent I be l. ii:'. ii ill the R ilci-h ('omcllUon.
i w as sii'oi stisl. we h aul, lhl.l Mr. Ilol
ilcn would no ...nl, l represent theiii failh
liltly il" appi.iimvt. ti tfn ir Repre-n-ntativ'e
Dclco;;itf, iiut Ihe league ileli riuioid that
Ihey colli. I not rcposefstnfiileiiee in hiin.tor,
when 1 lie quest inn was put. only tiro voted
fer Mr. Ilolden So that it ks ius Ihe col
ored iHe-n n! I.iueoln Couuty are much more
intelligent than some uiav have siipmscd
they were; ev idciu-cd by their prompt re
jection of the name of tlie gentleman pro
posed. Rut, wcllillsl not clove ibis brief notice
without no nlioniiio (u. fad, as slated tous,
that the chairman of the un ting delivered
a soiiinl and appropriate u will as touch
hg aiblres, to liie l,eague, w hich, il In' has
no objection ami w ill pluee iu our hand lor
publication, ive w ill iii-ert in tin- t.urie
free of charge.
If, as it ha- been represented I i ll,. the
Speaker i Mr II i really cutcrlaui- the views
he expressed, he is a reliable man and de
serves the "well i lone" of' 1 he entire enmum
nily. Wcliiqve iiis iiiiliu-ni-e will havT a
foipfiy u4lW l 4lpou . Ihe wlv .fl'M-uehised
c la - - l.u.r.h, (..in. in.'
i k.i i s ' in: r v i.'i i
Tin N hali i..i the Pulled. Slal' s , . . i , t iii
ucs tn i i linh .Maiylail'l lloiu In c i,i;;!itlul
place ill Hi it body. Tin- Colislif mi. il.,-
I'lliteil Slali s epiis-ly th ,-t. ncs thai no
Stale, viilli.nit ,.s i . .-i-.,;, shail il.
pliycili.t ll- i. ' sllll";. eo- in Ihe Nn. ill.
.Maly lullil II I- h.1'1 I'll! "In Nell. it. il siuevi tlie
1th ol Maii li. a'Hl, I lor iw-ik- v.. ol
hcl .sou-, il-.lln null llu in. ij. sly oi Kii
Sralc. has bci ii -, ,1,1(1 .i,lnil.i..n to tin
sent to iv hii h In is n. i it d 1 1 , , I b i- ,1,,- i ,
the State that w hal' Vei o'-jeclious in a I i
brotloht ag ainst its n presentation snoltlil
li ilclcd on il 'III jM ll . I"l lite I 't msl i I lit lull
is violated -t- une Ii ly di lav as l y al.soliite
lib.sil Maty Ian. I 'l--i - ,n. -I uive In r im,.
srnt lo tliiM nitntvnrmciit of "eqiml suf
tl'HUe." Ilel i llle:is are 10111011.1.111 at the
affront pot upon tlieui by the iiuuiH'd--.il
charges a'.'ainsl a man she ha tlecnn'il
wortlivol rscnatniinl honors, mul as hm
a'idirifr.eirirens tliev-lntve-tbe right to in
sist that they shall not In? practically
denied iheir riul.t to equal re pn scntaiimi
with the other States ul .this I'nion. - A-'.
Ki ,mo vi.,ii;oi iImick.- Tun niciuliets
cl llle'clty police were ivilmvci-l llolli li-e
force on yesterday, in ola-dience to an order
issued from Headquarters District No. -,
requiring that action on the part of the local
authorities of this city. The parties re
uuivyX were Sergt, Aldritch and Private
Cowan, lately concerned in the Swctny-Ma
larky stabbing aflnir, and It is but justice
tot the tmrtie to stale thitt this ; action was
taken without any Irial of the case I a fore
even a military tribunal. Wilmington Hit
fxitch, Xitk
, - ' - - ... V . ....
EECO5STR0CTIOK.
I.KTTKK MO V lti. JOh. A.
V A M K L L T U UEX. 1. USd
btUEET.
Nsw Oklkans, April b.
IIkikkrai. : I have recciveil your note ri'
lative to the condition on w hich the boiilu
ern IStates have been placed by the enact iiient
of the military bills, and have considered
ol the propriety ol tlie expression ol some
opinion on the subjirt. My opinion as to j
the projM'r course to ln'adoptHd by tin- citi .
tens ot the Southern Stales coincide with j
yours. j .
I lie military bills have become op, ral iv e, I
as laws, in ten fetates. The Presiileut. al'tir 1
exhausting his constitutional means ol op ;
position, is now pcrlorining Ins i xicutne
duty to eutorce their lailhful t-xecutiou.
Ten States are now submissive lo a lorui of j
government unknown to the Constitution ;
of tlie 1'nitcd State. The judiciary power
of the I'nion is depeudeiit for its org .mia
lion and distribution upon Congress. It is
iiute lair to conclude that no arrangement '
of the judicial aiwer would la- suifcred to j
remain that seriously incommoded the en
forcement of these measures Nor am I able j
to perceive that the judicial power, nitder :
its present organ i.at ion, is aih-ipiaic to af
ford sidislautinl relief in the existing einer i
i hi i. even if tin- opinions of lb.- courts .
wile asl.tvorable as might be ilt-m-.l
I regard il n an inexorable fuel Hi tt lliere
is iii, loiistitutioiuil opHiition thit cm !
made to the military bills lli.it will have
any olher oa-ralioii titan lo nicn -is. ihe ex
isting anarchy.
Those military bills afford to tlie people of
the State, with large exceptions, the im me
ot restoring the supremacy ot livil milu
and to terminate the domination o military
rule. I may grant that the conditions are !
harsh anil rigorous , 1 hat they violate the I
fundamental law of the lniief Stales, and f
that they promise lor the fuiutc much iiiM'
ciirity and instability Rut 1 hear admissions '
do not change the asp t of the rjuost inn as j
now presented, nor do they lessen the obli
gations of the people to take the measures
oen to them that will liest promote com j
mon weal.
It the aucient and honorable" thnsi '
who have an interest in the permanent wel
fare of these Southern Slab' those who
are mindful of their honor and would ad
vance their proseril Valid happiness'- ihose
whom the inspired prophet denominates as
" the head," shall abdicate their functions :
and retire from public concerns in a mood i
of sullen discontent, what w ill be the conse- !
q uence f The eonsi'quence will be that
"the prophet that teacheth lies," "the
ilemagogue that causeth the (icaiple to err,"
whom tlie same prophet I am qtioflng fitly
denominate a " the tail,", w ill usurp then ,
functions and will proceed to frame a gov- 1
ernnient to work mischief and to institute
misrule and confusion. My counsel therefore
is, that the citizens ol the Slate, on w hom I
tlu? burden and calamities of tuis time must
fall, those I have first lcscrill, shall ever j
cise every right, exercise every faculty, and
employ every power that thee military bills j
allow of, Willi undaunted courage, un-
wearied in duty, and undisturbed tranquil j
ily of soul, to terminate the existing condi
tion of disorder. I may concede that we
have frankly given what the wise and good
iM'lieve is all that justice and reason require.
I may grunt thut suspicion and jealousy have
lieen Indulged without measure, and that
the concession now exacted, ii yiebbfl, will
not ullay tins' ' dispositions, and that a
fresh train of evils-may Im lire cou sequence.
Rut a full consideration of this Kssibility
does not affect my opinion.
The Southern States have passed through
an ordeal ol file without dishonor or dis
credit among those whose opinion is valu
able. .... . . .
Large, masse ol our populalioit have
shown a magnanimity, a heroism, a capa
bility tor clf sacrifliv under tlie ilcmnnds of
duty that must at some time or another be
recognized ami rewarded. ,
A submission to untoward events in the
proper spirit does not imply a surrender, of
these great qualities. Our people uecd not
surrender as those without hope.
We shall not oe committed against sick
ing for amelioration in our institutions,
nor lrora asserting aright that all dispara-
ing conditions to union be removeil.
We may abide our time with confidence
"that God will protect us if we be virtuous ,
and wise. I
Your friend,
John A. ('ami'io-.i i I
(icneral James Lougstreet.
Accordino to the new lihtsof Uii'licab
ism. New Jersey needs reconstruction. It I
is to be regretted that Conoress is not in
session, in order thai Mr. Sumner ami Ins .
allies could ci c one of the original thirteen
a republican torm of goveniinenut. I he
Itikilical mcnilicrsof the legishiliirc who vo ,
led against striking out the word white ure
rebels against Congressional aiilhoriiv '
flow imfortrmnte tlts-l-t-fie Jodu-tiwi'-i' I'mmi- ,
inittec is not insission toarrai-.m iln-st bold
I fis'llsilllts airiliust llletlecrce i-i l niiT I all
1 ells This is lint trcasiin.whi.h in..s lie
I mi t llnl by simply l'' llilillur mil ol the party
llie mi ll who have t It' ainl.-ii ll to think lot
j I iiciiiscivcs, but the punishment nu-ri Xior
, irailors. Rut, tin n, il these truiior- -l.oul.l
. tollovv iii Ihe iv ike of Iheir trii mis Inmi
, v onAos 1 iclil, an.lon rthlovv the siipr, m.,i v
! ol' the Radicals in thai Stale el-... vvli. t
lo become ot' " tin i olinll v . " vv hit It. in li.nl
ieal parlance nn Us the political pn lertiieip
! ol thosi who III, h-ilium Ihe I ill -1 llnl lull
; :n a dead lelter' Xotiomlt Ihtitli.enr. , .
lltlM l.AMATlox - i K TlIK tioVDHNoH nl'
M ississlITI. - (ioveiuor Humphreys, ,,l Mis I
! fiissippi, has issucil a proclamalii n di fining
llu relations of the State with the niilit.m
, s;4iv'eninieut o the Fourth district, and tie-
el iring that the civ il authority exists in lull
j forci- until it is modified or almlishcd un-h-r
' ihe powi rs given by the reconstruction I in
I He calls upon the people to pay their Sl-ilc
I taxes, nn. I to nliey the civil ;flieers
l.i ading conservatives in Washington, ac
t -rilme; lo tlie corrctqiouilciil ol me ,.,- '
itirli, ale mole loan ever hopeful wiifiiu llie
pn--l day or I n o of a decided react ion in 1 he
pn 1 1 it- il all's ir ol the North, .tlu; cause ,lnr
ibul fucluig being coutiiiiieil in accounts .ri.- .
c.-i ved I rom public men ut the Noilh and
West expn-ssive of a great change in Ihe '
feelings of ihe people, which has lieen !
brought about by the policy nt Congress in !
ita unlimited &daxkxtaoul.Eieii.MitiU4,
Such lively music was rendered fry nq or- j
the other evening, that an old muu actually
got in the aisle and commenced to dance a
breakdown. ilomt Journal. I
l.(it)EI. (i A I THE HUHIIIT HWE.
Here is u letter from a wife in Massachu
setts to her husband in California. She
don't intend going through the world with
the blues :
" My dear Husband As it is now some
linn- since you left for California, I suppose
mil would lie ghul to hear how we are get
tint' alonjr in your absence. I am happy to
say we arc enjoying very good health on the
whole. Just ul present two of the boys
haw -ot thu .small pox ; Amanda Jane ha
srot I he ty phus h-vee; Samuel got hooked
by a cow the other day, anil little Peter has
lUst chopped oft three of hi linger with a
h.iii In i. It a mercy he didn't chop them
all oil W ilh these trilling exception, wc
aii all well and getting along nicely.
on needn't Ih- al nil anxious about u.
I almost liiroot t my that Sarah Matilda
i loped last week w ith a tiu pedlar. Poor
tiiri ! Shi 's lieen w ailing for a chance and
I'm irimi she's married at last. She needn't
have taken the trouble to elope though, for
I'm sure I was glad enough to have her go.
he vva- a t'real eater, and I find baked
U nits ilim t oo off near so fast as they did.
The way the girl would dip into pork
ami beans via- a caution to the rest of file
family T he cow took it into her head lo
run aw av . w hii h was very fortunate, I am
-un. lor lie bam caught tire hist night and
u i- i oil-nun .1 I via- in hopes that the
house would oo too, lor it's inconvenient;
but the wind was the wrong way, so it dill
not. receiv e much injury. Some boys broke
into tin- orchard the other day ami stripped
all lie b nif tfn s am very glad of it, for
if they Ii i In t I presume tin; children would
have uiade lllcm-clvcs ill."
Ihe Atlanta EnditH' Jl.nu tells the follow
ii. limine the first year ol the war quite
a passion prevailed for a military style of
dress tor cm:. ben a well a grown persons,
and any number of little boys might have
been seen promenading tin-fashionable thur
ouolifaie in uniform. Among those who
rejoiced in a suit of gray wa tittle Charley
.who boarded with hi mother at a
lashionable hotel in L . Charley, be
sides lieing a very pretty child, was exceed
inolv spriolitly aud talkative, and, conset
pieTitl v. attracted a great deal of notice from
the boanleis. O.ic evening, having escaped
his uiiiminu' vigilance, he made straight
lor tlie office, where quite a number of gen
tlemen wers scnil .led, discussing the war
and -other momentous questions; one of
theiii, n great lover of tun, took the little
fellow up and commenced plying him with
questions, to hear his sharp answers. Fi
nally, he said : "Charley, you are a very little
boy to wear this uniform; I think I will
take it from you , you are entirely too small
to lie a soldier." The child opened wide his
clear blue eyes, looked earnestly at young
0, , ud replieil ; "Well, Mr. G , if
I is too little to wear it, you's too big not
to wear it ;" alter wliich Charley ran off,
leaving ( - considerably embarrassed by
the merriment excited among the crowd ot
bystanders, who agreed with Charley that
all such able-bodied young men should wear
a "suit of gray."
TlIK Al'I'HorillATION FOR THIC DviHTI-
ti -tk or tub SoiTn The Washington cor
respondent of the New York Tribune says:
The Secretary ol W'ar has ordered the
Paymaster tonerul to disburse the amount
ol f.'iOO.DOO, which w as appropriated by the
joint ii solution n Congress, approved
March ::o, I'!?, under such rule as might
be prc-ci ibcil. T he Paymaster General tins
therefore issued a circular regulating the
disbursement for expenses incurred under
the reconstruction act, and made the follow
ing detail and assignment:
District I, Headquarters, Richmond, Vs.,
T. II. Stanton, paymaster; District II, Co
lumbia, S. i.:, .1. W; Nichols, paymaster; III,
Atlanta, (la , K. I Judd, paymaster; IV,
Vicksburg, Miss., P. P. O. Hall, paymaster;
V, Now Mean, La., Nicholas Vedder, pay-
lll.lslei.
Coconicn RviiiiKK Nkahi.v Ki.eitedMav
or. A "pecial election for Mayor took place
this alU.ruooD. The candidates were the
present incumbent, Hon. John Abbot, Re
publican, Charles II. Proctor, a respectable
colored barlier, lor a citizens' rclorm ticket,
and Dr. IJoodwin, the tenierance nominee.
Return have lieen receiver! from all the
wards but Fisherville, wliich gave Ablmtt
Hoi, Proctor 345. (VKidwin 07, and scatter
in is At ; n'diK-ic it was reported that
1'iocioi- had Ihe lead, wliich cuujed consid
cruble exciu meat. 1'he Abbott men imnic
iliai, I v i allied, and the election ol their can
di. I tie was made sure. Proctor vote came
m nn!v from the Democrats. dnin, X.
II , iiMnt.-tilH tlir (.. Journal.
I.ki.vi. Ai'UO:. An old lawyer was giv
ing aiviieto hi. sou, w ho was entering
the pi K tice of his father' profession.
" Son," said t In counsellor, "if you have
-. where ihe law i clearly on your side,
lui ihe justice seems to be against you, urge
uvoii the jury the vast importance of sus-tiiiiims-tiie-law!-
If, on t'he-otlier band, you
an- in doubt about the law, but if your
chi nt's ease is founded on justice insist on
llu- necessity ol doing justice, though the
Ii- iv ell, fill1 !
" 1 lit , ' a - k- Uie ni, "how shall I man Age
a case- vv lull loth law and justice arc dead
against uie :"
lu thai c.ise, n. y son, talk arcunil it, talk
ll!oi,,id It."
A 1 1 l.-br.ited French preacher, in a sermon
upon t he tint v of w ives, saiil . "I see iu
tios t ohgii Miitioii. a wuiiiun who ha laa-n
KUilfv ol disolM-tlic ncc to her husband, ani
in onl.T to point her out, I will fling
nn breviary al her head." lie lifted hit
book, and every female head ducked.
A op lias liciai invented in Paris, called
the pi", ill.- top. it is set spinning by means
of a thread and ueedle. As soon a ft is
l-iiily in motion, a half dozen smalt tops
mire out of it - how '. that is the inventor's
seeiet and begin tu spin around it like the
- iiellites around Jupiter, and after some
time the top re -alvsorbs thein.
The Christian life is not on engagement
hi contract Is-tweeu a master and his ser
vant. It it he union ot two hearts that of
the Saviour and the saved by the enduring
ties of the most intimate bye.
Massai himctts is the most dcuscly populat
ed oi any State of the I'nion, averaging one
hundred and fifty-seven persons to a square
mile. Rhode Island comes next, averaging
one hundred and thirty-three persons to a
square mile,
A gentleman was waked in the nigjat, and
told that (lis wife was dead, lfe tuxnetl of cr,
rtrew the coveHicl closer, pulled ilowtt his
night cap, and muttered as be went to sleep
again, "Ah! how grieved I shall be Ut the
morning!" fjj'
COURT ACTIBH8XKX9T1.
STATE Of NORTH (
JoHHsTO CotffJITT.
Off COCTTT. f
Coi st or Plkas AXD Ql AITXa
BnuoKS, Icb.,
, Trn 1ND7.
Perry Godwin, I
r. Original AtlaehmnU.
B. M. Barlow. - J. .'
IT appsarina; to Um satisfactina of the Ooant,
that K. M. Harlow, Um defendant ia this oaiue,
is ahsstit bevonrl the limits i tliis Itute, so that
theotdmary prerast at law eaaasrt b asrnd apoat
him, il is tlMtrnnsfi, un motMav, onasrad bf Use
Court, Ui at advartisenirnt be maito once a wk
for six suooewuTs weeks in Um Waeklj tswfiasf,
notifvtng the saiil defendaut is! the nlifif of ihia
attachment, and that trains hs appears at she
next Term of this Court, and answer or replevy.
the sam will be taken pre eonftuo, and Ui pro
perty atUclMd will be eondnasaiid ta satisfy aha
plaintiff a claims,
wihim. I Y wioaarv n-i jmuSmJ .
office tn Hailthnsld, Uie (h. Moadasof Iwbraasy ,
A. V., 1867.
P. T. MARKET, cWk.
mar l-ltaVww
STATE OF N0RTII CAROLINA,
Waex Cucktt, ( J
C.h:rtok Ii.ka and Qiiabtbb BBMtoaa,
FM.Tkitv 1tWT."', " '
Italeigh Si Oaston
Railroad Co ,
rt.
Attornment.
The National Ki press and
1 ransportation Co.,
IT snpeariiift to thu MtufsetioD of the Cooft,
that the defendant, Tlie National Express ana
Transportation Co., is anon-resident of Um fttate:
therefore it is ordered by the Court, that puhbea
tiou tie made in the oVnriaW. a newspaper pub
lished in the ettv of Raleuin, for six tueessalve
weeks, notifying; the defendant to be and appear
at the a. it term of the Coiart of Pleas and Quar
ter Session, to be betd for said County, at tha
Court House in the city of fUleurh, then and there
to answer, plead or demur, or Judgment will be
taken pro oonesso,
Witness, J. i. FKRRELL, Clerk ef our said
Court, t office in Baleuh, the third Mondav in
Feb., 1W. .
J. J. FEIIRELL, C. C. C.
mar 'il-wOw
STATE OP NORTH CAROLINA,
Wai Coohtt. j
Cot rt or lixu ad QvAaraa Huaioss, fas. ,
Tixm, 1867.
Robert F. Jones, 1
e.
The National Express and
Attorlmmt.
1 ransportation Co., . j
IT sppesring to tn aatisfaetioa of the Oourt,
that the defendant, Uie National Express aod
Transportation Co., ia a dob resident oftBe Btate:
thereliir it ia ordered, that pablieattoav -be Baade
in the Hnitutri, a newspaper published in the city
of Kalcigh, IVr six sneeuasrrs weeks notityuut tha
defendant to be aud appear at the aext term of
our Court of lleas ana Quarter Ueaaioaa, to ba
held for the County of Wske, at the Court Hows
in Italeigh, then and there to answer, plead or
demur, or judgment pro eonrsso will be taken aa
to them. . - s . ' .
Witnesa, J. J. FEB R ELL. Clerk of oar said
(Vmrl, t otllee iu Kalcigh, the third Mondav in
Feb., 1NS7. J. J. FERRtLL, a C. 0.
mar 'in-w6w
STATE OF N0RTIT CAROLINA, )
Wake Oobbtt. t
ComiTor Pleas ai gcAsria Rraaiuaa, Feb..
Tea at 1807.
George Uines, to use ot
Robert Andrews.
AUnchntnt.
The National Express and
7 ansportation Co.
IT appearing to the satisfaction of the Osvrt
that the defendant, The National Express ami
Transportation Co., u S non-reaideni of the State:
therefore it is ordered that publication bt marie,
iu the .SeaMnsi, a aswspauu pwbuabsd ia tas-sitj .
of KaleiKh, for six successive weeks, notifyinf the
dofendsnt to be end appear at the next teim of .
our Court of Pleas and tfuarter Hsssintis, to be
held for the County ot Wake, at the Court Hones
in Baleigb, on the third Monday in May nasi,
then and there to answer, plead or demur. xr Jndc-
mant will Iw. l-V-n '
Wttaeaa, i. I, FaRKKU.
Court, at office iu Italeigh, 1
Feb. 18B7.
aHitkU. desk
eigh, the third Monday
J. . FERRELL, tl, C. as
" mararMrdw - vt.'AM.S-ne,
BTATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, I
. WabbCocittt..
CouaT or I'isa Ain Qtiurn Hession, Twr.,
Tmmu, 1867. "' ''""""
James A. Moore,
To use of Rob't Andrews,
- hi- Attoektnmt.
The National Express and
Transoortatinn fin
ITsppearingto Uie satisfacUon of Um Court,
that the defendant the National Express and
Transportation Co., is a noa-eesident oft be Mate:
Therefore it is ordered tint pubheatiea bs aaade
in the Senliiui, a newsiiaper published in the city
of lUlelRhvlor sii weeks snnesssively, nottfyiag
the defeudant to bsl sad appear st the next tens .
of our Court of Plea and Quarter flnasiisai to be
held for the county of Wake, at the CmrlHiMM
in Raleigh, on the third Monday in May next,
then and there to answer, plead, or demur, or
Jiiiiiient will be Uken pro nro. -
Witness, J. J, FEKRELL, Clerk of our said'
Court at office in Kaleigh, UM third Mondas af
Feb , A, D. 1867. . "
J. J. FERBELL, C 0. 0. .
mr-ww '
STATE OFirORTlt eimtMLl
WABBT COtTBTT. '
Cocbt or lYavs Aim QoABntk ftnaroira. Fa.,
Ttu, 1W7.
George A. Lack, 1
n . J JUtodwtenL
Chatlss Terri. J
TT appeaiine to the aaUafaetioa of ths Court
tlial the uYfeunW, Cbaa. Terns, iaanon-reaident
of rtie St.le : It avUwTefore ordered bv Um Conn
that puliucatMO be made in tlie Raleirh SfUnri
a uewspupe published in the City of Raleigh, for
six weeks sneeeasively, notifying the dufendaiit to
b and app .a tba neat lerat of the Cowrt c.
Pleaa and Vruarter Keesioas. to be held lor euid
Conntv, st the Court House in Raleigh, on the
shard Monday ia May next, then aud there to so
sWer, plead, nr deaiur, or jmlgineut will ba taken
W-o eoseaso as to liiru.
Witness. J. J. ii-.KRKLL, Vintk of our said
Court , st office in ltaU ieh, oa the third Mondav
of Feb. 1867. - - '
J 1. 1'ERliEm CCC,
insr lli-lHiUOw
STATE OF NORTH CAROLIXA, r
Wabb Cocbtt.
Cockt or Pixa amd Qcabteb SaastoK, Faa.,
. , 'l'WBW, 17. - -. '
C. C. Lewis, -
rs.
Tlie National Express '
Attachment.
and 1 ransportation ( o. I
1 T npiHuriug to the satisfaction of the Court
that ilie derctul&nt, Tlve National Kxpress' yd
'ltansiKjrtaiion tn., is a non-resident of tna State:
'1 hen lore it iborilert-d that puhlieatiiai be hisde
in the Srntinrl, s newstvspcr published tn sho
city of Raleih,fnrix suocessive weeks, notifying
the defendant to be suit appear at the next term
of our Cwu4 ut Itjusa and tjusxter fiossiisis, to ha
held mr the Comity of Wake, al the Court House
m liak-ieh. on thrhhird Monday in May next, then
j. sod Uierii.to awsw.wiv plead vhsmar,--ot- tojsg-.
nieiii win inr mhoii ei . crjnrrswi
Witness, J. J. FERKFXl, Clerk of our said
Court, at office in Raleigh, tbe third Mood . in
Feb. IHS7. J. 1. FKBREXL, C. C. C.
msrSO-wfiw
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