-V- fr Tin: sKNTjN ' MJI. i;. rt.l.L. i' ' .:': ' ? I. i-. ;:l m:vi tai,i; Tuesday Ihiiitii, -pt. -i, ti. - Fo TH fo.SKTnni.iN OF TUB I'MTn-B iJi ATIS, A9ITB, akuths I'siotfAS IT W'.VjJ Jill fl8THf8 AKK'IMIKSIt Ittit civi:u.voii- ol RANDOLPH.. .' 14A CihveuUou oT LoviTlTnlou JSeiTU b held ia Raleigh, on Thursday, ths 20th of September. " ; , , . Such ia the announcement, by the tititninrd, of the fnGeraMe, wind br.(kn, '- spavined" and lwJfi6 Radical OnDrcBim proposed o meet in this ifity Uie present month. It ! thedetth- struggle of the IIoIdcnit.es end nialcoutents, n expiring tffrt to throw their last card in North Carolina, "They expect o accomplish notb in this Statu. Their endorsement of ihe How ard amcniJuicrit, and their fcsilineas to embrace negro saflrage, lisve pretty well made dead locks of the whole fraternity, and seeing that their ea h hopeless here, as a last resort tliry will throw themselves into the arm ir rattier at the feet of the Jl.nlictd Congress, and take . wha.t they can get The real object 1 the meeting ia to induce the Congress to abolish the civil government of the Piute, end throw it bark under Provisional and military ru!o.: Thi design . is clearly act iiMth in the following resolution, recently adop td at a Radical niccttrig held in Guilford (Vino ty, where tin; principal- spokesman and leader was ait Ohio alMilitiifiii-l.;. Head the resolution : 13. That the loyal citizens of this Slate unite to petition to Congress m its re ntscmbliiig to pa an act to enable the loyal citizens to form a Ueptilitiean t,'ovcrnioent to nut ore the State to a condition to I hi received into the Union, and deliver it entirely and forever from tlu misrule of traitors. : '."..'...' . The misrule of traitors." Who are the rsi ytorst Who are the then seeking toUubvert and overturn the gorernuieut f ' Who ara the nan who oppo Inioa and fraternity, and good feeling! Who am the yncmiea of the Cnnrititn tion as it isl ' Are they not tlie Sumner-Stu- . Tens party? Are they not the lloldenites, the "red strings," "! thoe who still cling to the "strait sect V Who aro thcjI Are they the real Union men of this State ' Are the true and alwaj t nion men f the Stat co operat ing with mm I N-lt t all Wljt A lfl'cdJDoekT ery and Itoht. T. Di. k, aud Thomas Settle ad Nathaniel Boydeo, and Lewis Thompson and . - John Poo, u4 hosts of (tthttrs whom Mr. Ysft den claims to, t nnmlntakahly Union men, be found in (tur.lt company iV predict not one ofjttjsin will le Cftulit in sneh a -rd, -II we mistake not, none f them will ullow such a Couvention toUy tlowu a platform tor them.- That Convention might nominate Alfred Dm k ery, or Robt P. Iick, or Thomas Settle, or John Pool, or any other tuna ia the State, ot respcctitble talent and social' 6sition, whom Mr, would endorxto, fiv unmifitakahly Union limn, in opposittoto Jov. Worth, and they wouhl jjmrn such a nomination. Hut let that body briuq forwant its martyr to (lie caue. No matter who le is, a defeat awaits him befote the people n North Carolina, more ,si;;nal am) overwhelming than ever lell tn the lot of a mor tal. . '.' &r, Boecher'i Letter. ' We are no admirer nl Afft Henry Ward Heech er, religiously or politically, but we do admire his intellect, his nhrewdnew nd Jiis hnety,-- His letter, which we lay Iw fiire our readers, to;: day, exhibit those strong points in his charac ter forcibly."' There is more common (tense and "'' far reaching statesmanship in that letter, than we have seen in all tlie speeches and - newspa pers of the Radicals lor a twelvemonth. An ultra abolitionist liim.- lt', nnd in the main c ' operating wit It the Radical parly, bis pereep- -. tions of resttlU are too ch ar ?iot to convince, him that the political designs of the lladh'ala will most certainly defeat the roeoii'i list ion of the States, destroy the Union mid i-iilt In the an nihilation of the negro face. ' V He, therefore, n-ganh the eitily ul full re, toration and reconeilintion -tif the Southern Stats( and the admission of .their truly loyal Senators and Representatives "petdil v, as the greatest question now lcfore the people of the United State, and the carrying out of Presi dent Johnson's jxslicy as the only mean of ef fecting twat restoration, and preerving and giving encouragcmnt and hope tt tlm Africsn race. ' ; ' He j)eaks as s aage, when he iuggt-!s. that the keeping down nd hampefingof the Booth era, States injures the entire Southern popula- tioa, and none more so than the colored portion of it. The Southern people must be h ft unfet tered by military power, rreedmcn's Bureaus . and harsh legisktinu, and Northern philantho-' - py and Northern capital must do what stand ing armies never can do, in. inspiring mutual confidence and hope and invigorating arid re cuperating the country. . Such a tttite of things would rejuvenate the land, w ould spur the whole population to personul effort for the in dividual benefit of each and the good of the whole: A conflict for m ;ro suffrage and negro rcjitality rsa never br ef!;-c!i') other tharT by a fut and awlticd conviction that, by thoir ledtts try, ten!j:r''(i!'d, uumtity end-rtilrrV-thTV i deserve it. , As oe.y shall merit consideration, it, ! ! rr.ii.e to them in dt jee and kind,d.y the f:ce Biiil an-nerous conccs.ions 'of the white race. Any ctlit-r' scheme of neg;o promotion and advancement Iwtrays the . Jvrance and tinlite (A thm- ti-1o would' destroy the Union and the jmh i nuu ;.t m 'OlX art iinpoifeilile theory.. -. ' , ':; . r - ' I t . Tun WtmisoTOS JiAtrmtl comes to us i. n', -cal)ly improved in ftjiiearaiKe. Our cotcmpu rary tb crv!-s gn-at sumsss, and we ars pleased to bersld every indication of it. The Atwbern E&dicalt Tli following reaolutinn was adopted at the f luwin.if iii.Xewbcrn, which wii noticed yestcr- rl ij It j.rft sl!y nets Cirlh the yreaont prin- iplt-s tt those it tto miupwml iU meeting : ItiiuUt'l, That the delegittce who would a t.jni the )MMnuxi Conveution should be citi?'J9 ho are now knmitlalUtUy loyal to the National Government meta who nincertly an1 honestly tcire the restoration of the Govern ment of the Bt.ittf of. orth Carolina ia harrno nv with that of the S'utioual Government who I, eiTt blunder tn Bye mh dig .I!epJtd)e4-ABtLl. T"riuniieI AweiTiai cili.eMS, under the Consti- j tution of the t niteu Hutesas it h, or as it may be amended in the (u saner prescribed thereut ; oh' kunw siut rovere b eee ag--the ttayH- the Union ; and who expect but one destiny that of the whole American people ; men w ith nntional mi.rf and national tuatii, who, after the manner of Wbinf;too "Keep atcadily in view the (JmttUvtion efotir Union, as, the great cat interest of ererr true American, and regard, the-eontinuance of the Union as a primary ob ject of jatriotlc desire." . x : The above will likely le tlie nttidt platform of the lUdical Convention, proposed to meet in this City on the l?th. inst. It is very carefully worded and is calculated to deceive the unwa ry, . Jt conceals aiiroitly the real animm and purpose of the North Carolina Radicals,, That jneetin carefultj refrained ! from: endorsing either Presideot Johnson's policy r thjrf Kadi cal platform. It says not word about either, and specially avoids any allusion to the How FJ amendment. -' The resolution altove was drawn up with Yankee shrewdness, imitating the editorials of the SUtTulitrd and Time$, oih of which papers profess to fie friends of President Johnson's policy,, bn.t whose selection, n.t'enjitaitduni ed itoriulu and tenir.U-try "tiinuiKtklily" their ffillttfioa with the Haulicals. '" There is notliTng in the above reaolutimi. pr'H-rly (ontred, that a sound Johnson man would not edore. We have ncvef favored, nor hitnOov. Worth at any time fiivrr,'d,the apy po'nilmeut to oltlee of any man, who is not "new vnmiiiabriily Unjul." We claim no one to be a National Union niaii,undir the . tiled of President Johnion, who la not "no unmiitakabiy loyal," -"men who sincerely and honestly desire the restoration i , the government of the State of Jiorth Carolina In harmony with the National government, under the Constitution as it is." Thst is the trae Johnson and Worth platform. Nor will we object to amendments to the Con stitution of the United Plates, made in due form and lu ucenrdance with that instrument ; I, e. if we did not approve them, we would sub mit to them or leave the toun try. But, since tue acquiescence of the Southern States in the ruinous surrender of the right! of property in slaves, by the amendment of the Constitution aboli.hiug alavery, and the repudiation- of - the States' ww debt, and the humiliation of our lH'o))e, we should opptxteall further amend-mi-nts and all further humiliation. , ' ' lpecUlly ere we oppovd to the Howard mendmcnt, and to hit other amendments pro- - 4?Tosed by Ctmgreee in which all the States are not represented, all further amendments as con ditions of reconciliation betwee the Southern and Northern fitntes, all amendments distur bing the rtmrted rights of the States' and con centrating power in the Congress, all amend ments operating asr pott fttrUi laws, or as biHt of attainder, tt'tifrtMchiting any of our eople or ignoring the constitutional power of the president to ' pardon political cflenders, all intendment proposing ;fo Interfere .with' the right of suffrage in the States or in any wise promoting negro suffrage., We are opposed Ut the "teat oath," out and out, and shall not cease to advocate its repeal. We are for the perpet ual Union of the Slates and a Union based up nil equal laws, equal rights and equal Immuni ties for the Southern people, under tlie Consti-; tion of J787, trt'iA the nmcndmenf 'alxilishlng sjavery, A different Union,' such an one as Northern and Southern Radicals propose, w loathe as we do all atjitiiuion whh the demon of ultra abolttionisia and the Prince ot Dark newi. The are our views, and we believe they a.-e the view of Oov. Worth and Johnson men (enerslly. . . v '. s Thr Radical sympathizers in the South ars uott ns yet, so utterly shameless, that tbey do not pretend, at leaat, to be actuateit by regard lor the interests of their own people," Taking counsel of their Aprs, they assume the success of the Radical programme, as embodied in the llovyard aoienlinent, and advise its acceptance "lest It worse thing befal us." In point of oet, there is n extreme of degradation that they would not gladly see inflicted upon their fellow, citizens, in revenge for the just disrepute in which they are held, but which they have brought upon themselve by their course of ma lignity, vindictivenes and annatnral afllllation With our enemies. x . . ' ', x Even if there were a eertatnty that the Radi cal were destined It succeed in theif course of diilrsnchiiHMnent nd proscrjtion, . (which la very far from being the case,) bow ignoble the spirit which would tr, Zooms the debasement of- our people, and which turns the back ' upon those who are struggling to avert it front nsl The fact that these Radical sympathiser da this,, is conclusive, of the falsity of their profuse ions, and that, tit their heart, they bate their neighbors, because they l.ave shown their dis gust an aversion at their duplicity, trcachery and cowartlice. , ' is manifynt to every observer. Aeciionai party "deKf CT'lOule a'd in violation of every principle of natural right and republican, liberty. They "propose to dis franchise the many, and subject them to the domination of a amalf junta-of so culled loyal men In every State ; those only beiug considered. loyal who sgreju to every thing the sectional dic f "atorship demands.. How ,teuifting prize is here offered to swbuen ks are lost to every hope of honor and prefernifent t 'the hands of their own people, and ew therefore cut loose from every tieof ssiyiation, and kindred, and neighborly Viudnc-s, andaotasth tools of n.iu-rrsideut despotism f ' 111 Mulatto Canvectioa ia Philadelphia. The telegraph furnishes w4h aunie ae count of the doings, on ytterdaf, iw the city of Philadelphia, of the fitnatkal mob of' t 1 jlenperadoe k nown, indifferently, i4lMfitoail(, 'the Mulatto" Auil the tean white" tioo. Cslled 'under the mpplcesK of aueh creatures as Brownlow and Hamilton, btli of whom atiufcl in the noatrilsofiilldereni t' their resjeetivefttBti, and who are no more the exponents of popular feeling in either. thSBTwiy a Convention bl "Uvuthem uiyaum.. .never was there more ridiculous; mlsrWmcr;,iTheT iiiaf at Snu'ttcm jlelegU 'cfinpiwetl.with tltose eett thither from tbeorth, i Inhnrteift- nmlly smalt. It has bee not irntpHy angge ted that it will become neeeeksary tt Ml them, in ordjr thst they may , not get lot j the crowd and aa fail .of idintieayutt. ,1,'liis, however, is unimportnnt, as tlie tilrrtulufit Spirits who flock tncre froin New Engldnd w4U--h'just'' as much the representatives of public sentiment in the. South as any of the delegates from ibis section. Banks and Butler and Stevens are fully as qualified to sjekJor thc tiumwl JoJ'irt men of the South in lhat couclave hi either Hsmilton, Il'rownlow or .Botts ; and, so far North Carolina is concerned, the bloet-iioae, puritttn from the elssic bnnks of Pitaiiitniiod ily Bay is equallj authorized, W'ith nay mini ,w ho umy attend from this State, to rf-tlect or speak its sentiments. This convocation it by fur a more tnn-ioimlilc one than that which assembled in Hurt ford do ring the war of 18I2, with not the hundredth , part of the respectability in its composition. - It is culled Cir the purjKMe f nprting the Conittitution, subverting the true 'priiiciph-tt ol the goveruiuent, forcing negro suflragi- and epiality upon the country, and tmiNwing the yoke of a galling despotism iipou the necks of pteople, who are not half so responsible for the war m the artthiteels tif rtiin whocompoKC the Convention. The animus under which it con venea is to te gathered from the apecch of' Browtilow, at Radical meeting in f'hiladel pbia oa Haturday uijMit las', an alwtjiM't if which was given ia imr tolegrhif columns on yesterday, and in which he uttered sentiments atrocious and diabolical enough to put Belial Jiimself to blush. fBucb are the surroundings and character of this traitorous concern. WshafJ watch, with ' the same tort ol curiosity that we would in spect some monstrosity-, or dcforrliiiy of nature, for the name of the Southern men who, ,my participate in its deliberations and, sanotioa its action, -if those deliWatioas and that action be according to the beginning inaugurated by Btownlow. And, jmlging from the ueagre-de. tails jJ the proceeding of yesterday, which, have come to hand, there is every reason to be lieve thai th programme will be fully carried oat. The Insults offered to the President of the nation, the enthusiastic welcome of Fred,. Dou glas, nd other incidents, stautp the character of the Couvention. x The sense of the whole country will lie shocked and disgusted.1 Thesecrraturei will soon ink irredeemably ' ' " - i In tb world's n.(sril, wrt4'lM,l and lur, 'ear unnumled uatlaws." . - - ' " "The "radicals'," as they are called, are the very peotile who suppressed the relelllj,:Wii( Sta'Xrl - ' " ' ' ' V ' Butter, for instance, the valiant hero, who al ways acted upon the principle, during the war, that I- -t: ' - 1 " ' :"" V: " ' ; ; "He who tyhtt and rrnis tiiliaif,' I ,'' i Will Uve to tt;ht Mother day, ' , and who now accordingly proposes to 'march" again.- Bank, for instance, who supplied the Cnnfclerai armies thcAth dipyhf campaigns with commissary supplies to that ex tent that they were never compelled to. draw upon tlieir own resources, nnd who- earned the" soubriquet ot ."Stonewall Jackson's conimitraa ry.M. pope, for instance, who ' performed ach prodigies on paper, d w rewarded hy being sent tu keep, a few hundred Indian- squaws Sin onler on remote lrontier, i,,.:; ,. .'a'iii ru.- The real fighting Genera of the wr, with Grant and Sherman at their bead, and the men who furnished the "sinew of war" such as Stewart, Astor, and others, all warmly endorse tb President' policy. , Those tkn .did the least fighting and the loudest' talking, are the men wbosympathiz with the Radicals athe North.! Th same thing may he said of th South.' Th men who urged, their lellow-citi-lens to f-i-if-h-t," and who pledged the "last dollar and the last man' for Southern indepen dencj, are those who would now degrade and ruin the people whom hey betrayed. 1 ' - 1 Tub Standard pretend that the Address of th Nstional Union Convention embodies "pret ty good radical doctrine, If this is so, can any one tell why th entire Radical press of the country, North and South, including the Stan dard, denounce it in such unmeasured term! ."Will that paper attempt an explanation of this glaring inconsistency t" V i -ift jYj,-j h . ' - . . is ' :'. . "Their is no material difference between the plan of th President and the plan of Congress. Statitl'trd. , 'i The unblushing effrontery which would make uch anx assertion is equal to any thing. ; . ' If there b nirdiuerenc between the plan of tltePrtauhsnt and. lhat of Contrs- how-vwtll Mr, Holden lustify himself in turning his tack jklifRsiLKha- hai honored htm bvi totorcf, Republic r ongratcful and San SuUadur U no cxecp'tion. " '".."'''-'" rt K:,. We learn that a radical meeting in a neigh boring county (not Rutherford) was so thinly attended that its friends let it wilt. A tall raw Ikmed man, ia a, vry juicV condition, was fold ing to the door. He cslled out -'bpy are ye gwine'to gin it up." "Yes, "was the r-sponse. "Well, halut I p better adjourn ye," "Yes," Where uion he commenced singim , , . , "And let thUfuhli body fail, " ; And Jet it tiroop and and die, My soul hU quit this mournful vale And soar to world on liigli.". -Atfterilto . ; , - . : -,. - : - - i Letter of Eer. Henry Ward Bewher. 1 The "Eiecutive "Committee of the National Convention of the Soldiers and &iilors,jto meet in Ckvelntid, Ohio, on the I7tlt. infit., addressed a letter to Mr. Ikwher,reriuting hi attendance! kt the Couvcoti'oti1 t act (.Itftpluin. , Kf. Beecher declines, but aenda the following ; p tri)tic and encourasrins hotter ; . ' CUAKI.KK O. UALfMt;. BBKVBriinUJ.-OK.; W, MAJ.-KK.; OOHlHtJi CttAOKIi, ' MA J. . J.ik Oewti.esi!: -I Invitation 'wliicti you have, made, me to act as aim jed to yu'u for'the .Chaplain to the Convention of rVdlorssu l Hot jiern aliout to convene at Cleveland. I cannot attend it, but I heartily wish if, ami all other Con vent iori; "pt. hat fpitfty v'(, siieotss," whose Abject rs the restnratbm of all the States lute in the reWlion to their Federal relations. Our theory ol government has no place for a State except in the Union. It bt justly taken for granted that Jhe duties and responsibilities of a State Tn federal relation tend to jts politi cl health, and to that of the whole iniion. Even Torri lories are hastily brought in, often betore the prescrilied condittons arc 'fulfilled, at if it were dangerous to leave a community ontside ot the great body politic Had the loyal Senators anil Representatives of Tennessee been admitted at once on the as sembling of Congress, and, in modi-rate micces- aion, Arkansas, Ueorgm, Al.-tfmma, JSortli Caro tins, and Virginia, the public mind of the South would have fieeh fur ruore healthy than it is, and those States which lingered on probation In the last would have been under a more sulu tsry, intluelice to' giKid cDiwbict Jhan it' a doaen armies watched over thetn. ' . Every month ythat we delay this healthful step complicates the case. The excluded popu lation, enough unsettled ln-fore, grow more ir ritable ;f the army becomes' Indispensable to local oVcrnm wit, n) supersedes it ; the gov ernment utiWiington is called to interfere ia one and another diHicilUyraod4)i-i ill lie done Innjitly, and sometimes with great injustice; for liir government, wisely adapted toils own propor luiietivita, m utterly devoid of those ha bits and uueipiipped with the instruments which Dt accntrallrfl government to exercise author! ty in remote States over , local aflairs. Every attempt to tierfortn such duties has resulted in mistakes which have excited the nation. Hut whatever imprudence there may be in the rnvth od, the real criticism should lie against the re qtlisition of snch duties of the general govern tiient. The-Federal government is unfit to evercttie minor police ami cal government, and will in cvitalily blunder when it attempts it. To kmi a half score of States under Federal authority, but without national ties and responsibilities; to oblige the central authority to govern half the territory of the Union fby Fd rU civ il otiicen sod by the army, is a policy not only unconge nial t our ideas and principles, but preeminent Ty dangerous to the spirit of our giveromenLL However human the ends souyht and the mo tives, it is, in fact, a course of instruction, pre paring our government to be despotic, and fa niili arising ihe people tu a alrtttko authority which can ' never Ik' other than (bui'irus tV I sm aware that goodnien are withheld fimu advocating the prompt and successive admission of the exiled States by the fear, i hielly, of its eltrJUtpitujinrtic, and )on -the freed men. it is said, illaF lr 'sdmilted t' CJongresi, the Southern senators ami, representative, will coa lesce with -Northern. Denvocr.its, and Mile the country. Is this nation, then, to renmTndiH meihleted to Serve the ends of parties Have we learned wisdom by the , history of the last ten years, in which just this couHie of sacri licing the nation to the exignncies of parties plunged us into reMlion and war , Even admit that tlie power would pass into the hands pf a party-made up of Southern men, and tlie nit uerto tf8!ionoreI and mlshTI "'De- mocracy of the North, that power could not be utied just a they pleaaed. The war ha elmnged, not ahmh institutitwis, but ideas. The whole country has advanced. Public sentiment is exalted far beyond what it has luc.n at any former perifHl, . A new parly would, like a riv er, ho obliged to seek out its channels, in the aljeadj existing slopes and forms of the conti nent.; " . : n . Wo have euleivil a new era of lilwl The stjh) of thonght is freer and more noble. The young men of our times are regenerated. The great army has been a school, and hundreds of thousands of men are gone home to preach a truer and nobler view of human rights, All tlie industrial Interests of society , are moving with increasing wisdom toward intelligence and liberty. Everywhere, in churches, in literature, in natural science, in physical industries, in so eial question, as well as in politics, tlie nation feel that the winter is over, and a new spring hangs in tlie borixon, and works through all the element. -'In this happily changed ami advanced-Condition of filing, no party oi' the re trogade can maintain itself. Everything march es, and parties must march. I hem? With wonder and shame and fcc,o'rn, the (ear of a few, that the South, once more in adjustment with the Fi'deral government, will rule this nation I The North is rich, never so rich jjhe Booth is poor, never before so poor. The population of the North ia nearly double that of the South.- The industry ol the North, in diversity, in forwardness and productiveness, in all the machinery and education required for manufacturing, is half a century in advance of the South, ' Churches in the North crown every hill, and schools swarm in every neighliorhood ; while the South ha but scattered lights, at long distances, like lighthouses twinkling along the edg of a continent ot darkness. In the presence ot kiR'h a contrast how mean and cra ven i the fear that the South will rule the pol icy o tho'tmid'l iThat it will hav an influence, that it will contribute, in time, moat importatit infiuenors or rertraints, we are glad to- IjcHevev But, if it rises at once" to Hhe control of the government, it will be because- theNorth. de moralir.ed by prosperiy, nd besotted by gro eling interests, refuses to discharge its share of punucai uiy. ia aucu a case, tn tymtti not only will control the government, but it ought tOtiOitl . .-'V'' -.'; --'.'.-. 8. It is feared, with more reason, that the re toration of the South to her full independence will be detrimental to the freedmen. The soon- te dumisa trom out minds the We that the freed men can be classified, and separated from the white population, and nursed and defended by themar Ivas-thw better ft :f-"ToTt fi'2m" and us, Thetregro is part and parcel of South era society. He cannot be prosperous while it is unprospcred. Its evils will rebound npon him. Its happiness and rcinvigoration cannot be If pt from bia participation. The restoration of the South tojamjieahle relations'with tliXNortb.tbe re-orgaoizHtioo of Us industry, the relnspiration of its enterprise and thrift, will all redojmd to the frecdiwm'g Iienctlt. Nothing ia so danger ous to the freedmen aa an unsettled state of soci ety in the South. On him comes all the spite, and anarer; and caprice, and revenge, ife will be made the scspeoat of lawless and heartless . 1 u . , .meqi t nicss we turn iiie government into' a 1 vast iniUtary machine, there cannot be annKs j enough to protect the freedmen while Southern I society remains iasurrcctionary. If Southern society is calwed, settled, and occupied and soothed will new hope and prosperous indus tries, Bo arUiies will I needed. Kiot will til side, la'wleas hunger on will 1 lriven otT or better governed, and a way will b grail mil iy opened up t the f'raHliuen, throngh eilucstion and industry, to full citizenship, with all its honors snddtitics. . N tlVili.atioii isa'gniwth. None can ecape that flirty years iu; the wilderness who travel from the Egypt .of ignorance to the promised lwid of civilization. The. freeilinen 'must take IheTTnTafPh. I bave fllll ffiith in the resultii, If they Imvo the sfhuiijJit to umlep'o tlm Imr.l. 11 .,11, ft, m ( i.ll 11 iiiirii-7 f" "."" .' SI suip a uuii rwj (tincivmzea eoilo. ums un dergone in their upward progress, thev will in dpe time late their place among ns. Tiiat' place cannot J4iHghtj nor le,Heatbil; notpiuneif ,by sleight of hand. ' ft will con'ie KFaoUrtety. virtue, .indnstry and frugality,. As the. nutiiin cannot aMrmi tmtfH he tmth is priHiperiviti.", so-, 011 the other extreme, a healthy cojiihlion of civil society in the South' is" inilisM isalile to the wc'll'ah-oftht; TriviliMeri' - ; 1 Rclii.iu tii admit loyal renntoiit unit Rcpru sentativc lioin the South to t'oii!re will not help the frecdiiM-n. It viilljiot secure lor tin m the vote." "It will not ,rot, t them U wilt m,f secure uny ainendment iif our ( 'onstilution, however just and wine It will mdv im-reae tlie dangers mi'l com In ill' ihe iliilU-lillicH. Whether e rejtaijl !ji'- whole nai section o! it r.i-liiw ia it, the iii..t iti, , ir any ileuiiutd ot 1 our time is, entire reunion. .. . Once united, we can, hv m-liot ils." 'dSundieN, free press .and idcH-astttg live sH-ch, attack b J!a:1.' v" M T B0""- made is not Ailed up. It grow .deeper and stretches wider! Out of it rise (Iread spectres and threatening sounds. ' Let that gulf le closed, and bnry in it slavery, sectional snmosi tv, and nil strifes and hatreds ! . ' It is titi that the brave men, who, on sea and land, faced denlh to save tho nation, should now, by their voice utid Jlote, consummate what their swords rendered poswibhv For the sake of the freedmnn, for the s.ikc ot the .South and its millions of our fellow-countrymen, for our own s;ik, Snd for the great causriof frmhim and clvltir.ation, 1 urge the immediate reunion of all' th parts which re bellion and war have shuttered. , I am truly yours, . ' IIlCSBY WakU BKr-CHKK. Wlttt "Trtto Union Hen Think of the Mulattp Conyentiom -t I he following letter from the Him. Robert Ridg'.Mi v, to a gentleman of Richmond, fully ex plains itself. Mr. Ridgway's name was placed upon the list of delegates to the Philadelphia "Mulatto" Convention, without his knowledge or consent : Amherst, Aug, 80, 18G0. Mv Pkar Sir : JTours of the S7th is just to hand, and Contains - the first intimation I had had that the scamps at Alexandria, without the slightest communication with, or authority from me, had taken the outrageous liberty of using my name in connection with their appoint ment of delegates to the .Mulatto Cunveniinn," afPhiladelphia; well knowing, a the did, that I had not a particle of svmpathv with them or the .l.ieoliin rabble to whicit? they belong. I have no language with which to characterize this infamous proceeding On: their part. v' You hnveauthoritv from me. however, to tell them. privately, imd publicly, that I SonsidtW tlienra set of unprincipled political rairabonds and vil liaus ; and if 1 deemed them worthy of notice, I should be tempted to go to Alexandria with the deliberate purpose oi caning them across the Potomac I cordially despise Northern Radi cals, Imt my acorn and contempt for a Virginia r.ailica.1 hatli no liounils. You will ' perceive from 1 the above that vou have my full 'authority" to stamp the whole thing, so far as I am concerned, as a villainous outrage iimn me nnd deliberate fraud njioa the public, -,,'-,.( v ' i Thanking you. fur yonr friendly favor, ( am, in nastc, ymira, arc, . a UIDQWAY In OroenubornnKh, on Thurailav hutt, Capt. JAMES HUlAN, Jr., mm ut Mj. James Sl.n, of lliat lseo alwut ii years of ae. Capt. Hloou whh a Kahaiit yoiinf? man, much Ih-IiiVciI by his couiradua uiarnis mio 11 is aeqnaintan'.genraiiy. lis wiis a yuuuc man of proinwe. and thus early bars the lioiws of larfiit and triemis been blighted. iN'KW ADVERTISEMENTS- 1 ADMIAISTKATOR'S KALE. , 'ItHC underahrn4il,havinir duh'Onalifliil a sdniinNj r 1 winttnr 01 r.. 11. nuici, utiua., ui sell at tbn eillifi of H. E. liinea, ia Eilenton, on Mumlay Kill, dsv nnictoMir prox., a eH-seler-ted I-AW UUJUlii', (unsisiiiiK 01 neany viirw nnnarea volume, conniria ing tlie north Carolina Law and Luiiily repurla, Durnfiiril net Ksst's remarta, Veaev'S Clianfttnr ko. sirta, the Ijiw Library, (6 vola.,) and otlmrs too niiiueroiiH 10 nietuiou. ... t : A lata a few desk, tables. Ae. :u A raUlofue can b lixd, by applying to th oiiiler- fcic-neii. .. 1. , ,. ., , TEKMS : 6 inos., with stairoved seenrity. ' ; . Vi SL liADHAM, Adin'r. FiJ'iiton, Sept. -2tat s I .Ofl SALE. White Corn and Salt." I'ULUAM. JONES i CO. Sepl 4-tf !.! v :Wt . LOST BOOKS. TlKltsoNS eentieeted with the TJ. H. Arm v.' In t1. X Kprinff of tixKT, errid off niv Law and Miaccllane- 011a ijorrT. 1 Dnnrstana aoiae or trie books are in 1 lie poMseaaioo of citizens between Kaleieh and Beau fort, TiieT aro marked with my name on the back or n? K-ai. reron navtng uiesa tnoka -am reqnmte to return Uiero to tn. Any-information will he thankfully reoeived. They may be han.k-d to the von-ioeuira uo uh nau twauia. - -A- V "'V- T. DOimtn. - floldotMn', Sept i-lw -'. e,. A ... 1 MAKE AXD COLT STOLE T' STOLEN from the subscriber, on the Bight of the 2id. nit., a M AKK ami colt. isaid Animal ia blind m tlia left ere, hxa a small knot below the kBee on Ui right fore-leir, mngh shod on the hind feet old shoe on the fore-feet, snnposed to be 1J yar old soniewuat flea-bitten, and in tldu order. . - ,-. . , X . , The oil is moase color, s tbrht spot on the riirlit dank, andsntaU soar jurt above tfa kuof On the left loro-icr. AjBiahle reward win be ivea jr the rwwerj of J ,iin-w ihiiuiiuk. - - nEXDERSON FUtLER, : :r: RiTf atiox m a.tei. ; , : t lADY, of the Ic'wt sm.srior qna'ificauons aa a A b si-lier of Music, desires a aitu-ui'Mi. A poaiiioa in some laryp ai-hrad prclVrred, but ahe wmild aeeejit a cilnattoa ui prirat f-imilr. Htio is a graduate of one of tlie first acbixil in the State, and can Ihe bl xefereai-eiv A l'lrew tlie K l.torscf uie : .1 ,Sept 8-lw, . , c , '; KSiTINEU .. ... . orn 1:. - . r C" honif f,a- a g,Kl MUCBAMt? to minks and repair XV aireona anil 1 ir'. Aw a Jil.Ai h"i!l ! If f r nuian and repairing fium im.l. . T li-e'Mao hae faiiiuiea pivlerred Apph- to 11 robjc. nvxrs, TlMwpiS-S" JIST EITOVLDIT. m. jiosijixiiAmrs, . lu addit'n U) bis Uryc awl wi 11 ai leetcd au' ; '.txi)itrtiiKiis,. ' . . ' j 1 'aiiif ros, 4'IoiIin, (.riits ready wade j lot liinn, At-., Ac, A TI X V. LOT O V IaiLi .jhuI .iiWto' Inntimid amr oirtrtnuuej H.VTHivfthelatJMtfstlstvtw. - r ' f .-,-",..... , , ', , RIEBOirs, riOWEES, LACIS, &0. rL'IKil.MISSntt'ANDV-HILDRKN'S'SHOE , In 4rttl Vnrlfiy. . , , ! j t - ' V euwuue anil nil, anil uxanune luy to.k Mi?' par- elivmni; eWwhere. - . " ( , t ' .'.'..' f '"'. ' II. ItOSC.N'BAl'if,' '" ls IS faretrvillai.luItdoortoK f, pM. rmls liug Btore,' ' , -tt. -lw ' IMVEIISITY OF 9tARlL4I. .'SCHOOL OF MEDICINE. rilHK FIFITNINTHI fiEWrtON..Or TVk WIKKil, A of Mmlknne In ihe I'uiversltr of Jlantaml will nimrueiu-con tlonduv, tin 16th. frftXtotn.-r.'lsiM 1.0 wilt eml on the lt. of ilarih, mi. ' 1 NATHAN It. SMITH, JI. J). . ; . frocntor of Hurgtry. W. E. A. AIKIN, M. V., I.L. D.. ' Proevur tf Chrmutry and 'haruuiey. OEfiROE W. MILTENBEROER, M. 1).," Prtfetr of (btetrirt and of JMteanet of HV ' mm and VhHUrtn. ' ' " -RICHARD McSHERRY, M. I)., Proftuor of Principle and Practice of Medicht ' CIIRISTOPnEU JOHNSTON, M. I); Profettiof of Genenl, Dtteriptirt and Suryiail . - Anatomy. .::.. e ... f's SAMUEL C. CHEW, M. VI, Profeuar ef Materia Metfiea and Tlttravntici FRANK DONA3LP30!, M. I) , Profnovr 4f Phytiology, Uygieht and Central t , - Pathology. .'' JAMES H. BUTLER, M-. XX, V DemauUratat ..ofSAntniy md AJjtint'to thf ..... Profetmr of Anatomy. ALAN Pi SMITH, 51. 1). 1 , Adjunct to the VvjVr of Hurgerg. I PERD. E.CHATARD, Jit . M.I).. , Mjunet to the Profttior of Ohntctric. -:w.nnm'VANinniiER.M, v., - Adjunct to tho Prafettoit of Pructico, . ' ' .. - J. II. STRAIT! I, M. I)., Adiituol fo the Profe$tr. of Materut Holier. ' . M. J. DkROSSKT, M. !., ' Adjunct to tho Profrnor of Vhtmutry. WJI. T. HOWARD, M. 1) ' - Adjuvrt to the Ifafetsnr of Phytiokyy. aniKS, for the full crtnrae, lffi.m ; Matriculation M.011 ; fi IWtwal Anatmnv lin.fio. UNlVWUtm JtJWTAfcTliis exfenaiv otab lwlnneiit, ecaniuonly kii,,u as the Mtiinttrr ioii mr, i attaclu-d to the Medical CoIIk, and la used aa s sehiail of Vtinient Inntruethnt in Meilieiiw and ' Surnery -.. Ikiiiit IheAmniettV -Bimpiua for the 1W of Baltimore, XliMMmeji pei-nliar tn tlie 'JVopiea, and other diBUM regions, niay lie tuamtanilv olimirvi-d iu ' It warda, aa well as all hiiligeiuHia liin aw-a in lli -ciTil warda. Idnnl.-a thia Ilospitaiyttl.Te are aereral other lrK Hoajiitola, IJiaiwiiHarlca, lnrniit and Or phan Anjluma, now aceenatbteTTo Htndenta, where CltHieal Inetruitiim ia Riven by Adjiincta to the va rious JWeaaors, and other eminent I'livsirians and biiiKeiaia. . "j,... ., . . further innirniat inn i'aflonled hv the Clrenlam, whu h may be had from amr membivr of ths Vaeullj. ': t , U, W. illLTENBURtiEll, M. 1). Sept. 3-:H , , . lH-aa of IU IVultv. , Foil MALE. VT WBtdJ.pneea, a large mipply of fine KOAltt, JiiMt reeeivi'd, i me FreiiLh boapH,-Koa, Verbena aad Orange, llniwo AViiulwir. , Otvceriiie ami all kmilo toilet aiw. Lailiitb-ew itosp, bv tlic trnv. - PLLLIAM, JONES&CO." ' Sept 1-tf -' l, A ; ion fSALE. A ..Large stork nfl&ip anil ItapeiiiK, extra licavv. A - txwlera and Famiers would tin well to call and ae our Block, Sept t-tl ' ITLLIAM, JQXES A Co. WATSQN'SPUOTWRAPH GALLERY, PKIC1S LOWEE THA3T EVXR. TIIE ART IMPKOViNG! OREAT KEDITCTIOS IN THE PfilCEM OF AVr.KiV TVJ'KS, Ferrentypi. and the Urirr iz rbotoKi'sph. POKCELAIN pictures made with all tlia beamvi aa Iwt rauitmir. - ' " .. ' PHOTOOUAI'HSpf every ni and at vie, plain or colored. . . Call and lumhie (ecimens, and yon will 1 eiaiviu eed that Uiere is a new. going beroud Haleigk tn get ', work Ui niv hn. VAng. 27-tf J. Wv WATSON. STATE Of IVOUTIK UtOMM. x $400 KEWAKI). A PUOCLAMATION. By His Excellency, JONATHAN WOiTH, f - 60VERN0R OF NORTH CAROLINA. Wirrm.A. It has bein reWpw-ntnl tun tlint JOSEl'H Bt'tSO, late of tlie Coumv tif Wake' in aael tale, stasHla ehsrs-ed with Hn mtirder of 1 m W. L: J'ort, late of said county and iStalo, and tiiat the aaid &Ut ia S fugitive from illl.ll- Ale) ha rmflineli l)t'- JtffiitlwJiBHMitiilh J4to4 -- ow, s-Hxarroaa, in liter that the said Snest niay be aTcied and broarht totriat for the said altered ' jnarder, I .lOMATS&lf tSoRTH. CriVeni',T Of Kaid'Mal, do ii-nnp tls. mT proi-lflnati'in, eit. ntiir tue reamil of FUIK HLMiRLK la il.I.AliX fir hi appTchenaion' , and aV-liverv to the Sheriff of naid Conutv 'ui Wake. Id witnirtia tliereot, lim tw:irii'-v. Jua- I thaji Worth, Irovernor of paid btatc, haa ,. hereto et hm hand and run-H ii the oreal s . ?-t-l of the .-irate to t. aHlved. IKme. at tlie fit of iialr i,;h, tiiid the 25th. diivW Ancrn A. li. lwi. I'.ythecmv.nriur: JONATHAN tfl.TH. , V M. H. li-.oi Kf, Private S.- reiary, ( - ; rr r.irii.is'. , . Jiv-rpR Siriu ia rri-rt-eMiM to h atnxit Vil ream of . L-i 6 1. i t, ti nr 7 iiii:b.'t- hii-'h d ok hair oie evra, ijnil faei ftili tipa nowe uichned to turn wv-rtorid a'yfpwxioin tiaa ratir a tlown h m fi.inverrtaui.in rtiiawa 01U bia woriia lotiff and lfad-t-.' . wn No. S hOe, and ir-ueraily black vkMuta. ' Aug, O il . . . . '. , , " ?lrfty . w 7