i i i -rm. m ar i aw m i s. ' . - i. .- " " ' : . . .. . . . 'r I 1 'M 1 ! 1 1 1 ' ' ! ! 1 i i iii i ii i i iii i i A i A --'.: ' . V .- . RALEIGH, NORTH-CAROLINA. WEtt! TODAY. FEBRUARY 24, Vol. XXIV. No. 8. 1858- r '4 Whole Number 1224, : i 1 s -a THE Jfrortlj-Caroluia WILLIAM W. HOLDBN, Editor and Fropriktoe. FRANK. I. WILSON, Associate Editor. TERMS OF THE WEEKLY Two Dollar per annum nvariablr n advance. TERMS OF THE SEMI-WEEKLY Four Dollars per snnw, invariably in advance. ' . , . ji!l papers are discontinued at the expiration of the time for which thej hate been paid. Terms of Advertising in the Semi-Weekly Standard. Our regular rates of advertising are as follows : One square, (14 lines or less) first insertion, $100 Each subsequent insertion, - - 25 Longer advertisements in proportion. Contracts will be made with advertisers, at the above reqular rates, for six or twelve months, and at the close of the contract 3S) per cent, will be deducted from the gross mount. ft.r irt for six months, or 15 for twelve months. Terms of Advertising in the Weekly Standard. One dollar per square for the tirst insertion, and 25 cts. for each subsequent iusertion. A'o deduction will bemad, on Weekly advertisement, no matter how long they may run. Only a limited number of advertisements will be admitted :..t.. th VVppklv. All advertisements, not otherwise direct- 'l lire inserted in the Semi-Weekly, aud charged accord : i. YVWn the number of insertions is not marked on ,u"i. .. : . . . .j the advertisement it is inserted uutu lorom. 1 Money sent us by mail is at our risk. RALEIGH, SATURDAY, FEB. 20, 1858. HOLDEN & WILSON, State Printers, AND ACTTHORIZSD PCBUSHBRS OF THB LAWS OF THR UNITED STATES. I FEEL TIIAT TDIS QUESTION OF TIIE PUBLIC LASDB IS AT THIS MOMENT A FAR MORE IMPORTANT ONE THAN THAT OF SLAVERY, AND A MUCH MORE PRACTICAL ONE. , Mr. McRafa Letter to Mr. Daney. f . w " Mr. McRae reminded the audience of the fact that when in 1840 clouds and darkness overshad owed the fortunes of the Democratic party, he was manfully fighting its battles and sharing without a murmur its fate, while a certain Editor, not a thou sand miles from Raleigh, was clad in coon-skins, having a string of gourds around his neck and swil ling hard cider in a log cabin." Register's Report of Mc Rue's Speech. So did Rives, and Tallmadge, and Van Buren, and Benton, and Blair fight the battles of Democracy and share its fate ; but they permitted their ambition and their selfishness to get the better of their judg ments, and, abandoning principle, they fell at once deeper than plummet ever sounded. The late Con sul of the United States at Paris, with Douglas and Wise, are on the same inclined plane on which the public men referred to went down to those im- measurable depths; and the late Consul has already sunk 60 far that no mortal hand can reach him to bring him up. The late Consul has been highly honored and well paid for his sacrifices (?) for the Democratic party. We believe he also shared the fortunes of John Ty ler, and was sent by that gentleman, when President, on a special errand to Mexico, for which he received some $2,500. He afterwards subordinated " distri bution " to the Consulship at Paris, and went abroad, leaving the lands to be squandered and plundered as aforetime, and received therefor some $20,000 in dry federal mone He returned and took up the 41 distribution " thread precisely where he had drop ped it ; and now, some of the Know Nothing distri butionists are afraid to run him for Governor, lest in the midst of the campaign he might be offered al office, might accept it, and thus leave xt-.CL.. another federal them without a candidate. Nothing would be left to them then but to fall back upon their principles,which, it must be confessed, would be a dangerous opera tion. They might fall on space, and so fall ad in finitum. Our former political associate does well to remind us of those "coon-skins" and to rattle those "gourds about our ears. He makes the matter infinitely worse than it was. We neither handled gourds nor wore coon-skins in 1840. We were engaged at that day in setting type for a living we bad no time, as Mr. McRae had, to devote to politics and speech-making; cotton clothes, by hard labor. and we wore plain woolen- and which we earned and paid for As to " log-cabins," our earliest recollections are associated with houses of that sort, for we were born in one of them; and doubtless we had a more sincere respect for their occupants in 1840, as we have now, than those old federalists who affected to be the poor man's friends, and some of whom so warmly applauded Mr. McRae in this City on Monday last. We have never sought federal office, nor would we have it if offered to us ; and to this extent, at least, we have the advantage of Mr. McRae. We repeat, Mr. McRae does well to twit us with 1810. The federalists and Know Nothings have been doing the same thing for fifteen years.' The gentleman repeats with fluency the lessons he has learned in the opposition school ; and if he is satis fied with his employment in this respect, we are 8ure we are. Our political record for the last fif teen years is without a blot: We have labored for nd sought the good of our party more than our own, we have thought more of principles and of the triumph of our cause than we have of self. No roan can say that we have ever even hesitated either s to prirciples or as to organization since we have been at the head of Jthis press. Can Mr. McRae say 3 much ? Mr. McRae was born and brought up in minority, and he adhered to it after it reached a toajority- only so long as it promoted and honored him ; we left a majority for a minority, and that too t a time when the success of the latter was regard d M next to impossible. We are willing any day nd at all times to compare political records with the gentleman. A Mr. McRae spoke here for two or three ioure, and made no allusion to the Kansas question here is he on this question? Is he with the Pres ident, or is he with Wise and Douglas? Can the Register answer for him ? That paper is cpmmitted in the strongest terms to the admission of Kansas with the Lecompton Constitution, yet its candidate for Governor is silent on the subject Does the Ed tor, following in the footsteps of Mr. McRae, pro pose to subordinate the great issue of the Constitu tional rights of the South to. the question of distribution? a 1 1 a Al 4? I will be inserted in either the Weekly or bemi-Weekly, for P i r.i. six months.or 10 for twelve months ; or in both pa- .Num. Leak's withdrawal from the Canvass . Mr. McRae called and Mr. Leak came. He came at once in due course of mail. He did not wait to be called a second time.' Mr. MeRae was disconcer ted and disappointed. He called in good .faith, yet he did not expect to be answered from that quarter and in that way. He had baited his hook and thrown it out, hoping to catch a fine fish, when lo a very or dinary mud turtle seized the hook and was popped to the surface. Mr. Leak took the field and appealed to his fellow- citizens to come to his relief, and Mr. McRae took the field and appealed to his fellow-citizens to come to his relief. Mr. Leak was " proscribed," " denoun ced," " villified " by the Democratic press, ; and so was Mr. McRae. They were both martyrs, chained to the stake and most cruelly roasted. Every body was invited to come up and behold their sorrows. Foremost among their persecutors was that man Holden," with a very long and a very sharp stick, stirring the flames and enjoying their agonyft was etaele to make the entire State feel badly, espe cially as these martyrs had been engaged in the very laudable work of procuring land warrants with which to pay the State debt, tunnel the mountains, educate the poor children, and render ever' body and every thing prosperous, intelligent, progressive, independ ent, and impressively salubrious. It was a great work, and Mr. Leak proposed to do it on " shares." Mr. McRae objected. He wanted all the " shares" to " distribute " in his own time and in his own way ; and he cold-shouldered Mr. Leak. He warned him to confine himself to the borders of South Carolina, while he enlightened the citizens of the interior and middle Counties by speeches " in his own defence." Mr. Leak, per consequence, got through sooner than he expected he would ; and so he has retired, wear. ing several laurel crowns and other emblems of martyrdom. Retiring, he wrote his will and pub lished it in the Faretteville Observer. Therein he says, with a simplicity as rare as it is delectable, that he counted on support and countenance from the fold of " Sam." and that it " would be both untrue and silly affectation to deny it." Disappointed in this re spect, he quits. He leaves the field, but not to Mr. lcRae, for he candidly says, " it is true that I havo likewise noticed, that some other of the opposition press have expressed a preference for another can didate, as being stronger and more likely to make inroads upon his own party than myself, as to the probability of this, I can of course have nothing to say." " Some of the opposition press " is intended for the Register, and "another candidate" is intended for Mr. McRae. He declines to say who is the strong est, Mr. McRae, or himself. Now, Mr. McRae is as modest a gentleman as Mr. Leak, and will also, de cline to determine this important question ; and so, after all, Mr. Leak may have to be called out again and the question submitted to a council of their friends. 1 4 Mr. Leak also pledges himself to support "any re spectable and well qualified gentleman in favor of distribution that may he brought forward, regardless of his hitherto, especially the " hitherto " political associations." Eureka ! we have found it 1 that includes Mr. McRae ; and so, after all, Mr. Leak may extend to that gentleman his powerful and influen tial support. Tell it at " Old Trap "let it be heard in Stanly, Guilford and Wilkes, that Mr. Leak retires, but that he will support " any respectable and well qualified gentleman " for Governor who is in favor of distribution. Mr. Leak concludes his "last will and testament" in these words : " The opposition press will oblige me by publishing this letter." What does the gen tleman mean by ' the opposition press ? " Does he mean the press opposed to the Democracy, or the pres3 opposed to him ? We confess we cannot teJV . - Attention, the Register ! ' We copy the following from the last Elizabeth City Sentinel, and invite to it the particular attention of the Editor of the Raleigh Register : " A Convention. Will not our friend of the Ral eigh Register suggest to the Executive Committee the importance of issuing a call for a convention, so that we ran fall upon some plan for the coming con test? If we are to have a convention it is time that we were looking about. Let us meet together and consult for the interest of our State, and nominate a good sound American Candidate. For if we are beaten at all, we will not be beaten as bad as if we were to support a Distribution Democrat, for then the 'Democrats would say, that they had not only beaten the American party, but had beaten both that party and the Distribution Democrats. For we do not believe that there are 10,000 American Whigs in the State that would to-day vote for a Distribution Democrat. Not 10 in this County would, and not that number in Camden and Perquimans put togeth er. The same feeling is so all through the first Con gressional District Let us have a Convention." The Sentinel is edited by William E. Mann, Esq.. member of the House of Commons from Pasquotank, and, we believe, a member of the " American " State Executive Committee. In addition to this, Mr. Mann is in better standing with his party than the Editor of the Register, for he has never proposed, as the Editor of the Register has done, to haul down his flag and support for Governor a deserter from the Democratic ranks. Mr. Mann's appeal, therefore, to the Editor of the Register is entitled to peculiar weight It must be listened to. Our neighbor could not close his ears against it if he would. - If Mr. McRae, in the absence of any " stronger " man than himself, should conclude to run for Gov ernor, he may at once turn for support and consola tion to Pasquotank County, for example, in which not ten even of the opposition would rally to his flag. That would indeed be encouraging. Mr. Mann says it is so, and Mr. Mann ought to know. Mr. McRae would cry aloud and "call upon the people to" come to his " relief" he would " show his wounds received in the cause of " distribution," and he would tell the people that he had been martyred, goaded, denounced, villified, and most cruelly scourged by the Democrat ic press; and the sympathizing response that would come up from the opposition ranks would be ten faint voices, and not one voice from the old Democracy. The truth is, the " Americans" of the First Con gressional District, who are thus spoken for by Mr. Mann, do not seem as eager to unite on Mr. McRae as he is to unite with them. The Editor of the Reg ister must redouble his exertions, or his cherished plan of disorganizing and disbanding his party1 will fail. ; Strawberries. The .editor of the . Charleston Courier was presented with a mess of fine ripe strawberries on Thursday last They were grown in the open air, near that city, and afford another proof of the mildness of the season, . , .. j.-. a Northern Democratic Sentiment. We give below some extracts from Democratic pa pers in the free States showing the feelirg in rela tion to Kansas and a determination to stand by the President. We might fill our columns with similar extracts, but we publish these as specimens of the feelings and determination of our Northern friends: It behooves all democrats to stand by the admin istration, to insist upon the immediate admission of Kansas, and to listen to no paltry expedients to In crease the number of the party. Our party cannot rise by embracing black republicanism, and individ uals who turn their eyes in that direction will find it so. , Let us sustain the President, and the Kansas troubles will be soon over. Rockland Maine) Dem ocrat. As a public journalist we have not sought to con ceal our position.. . We are with the President in his efforts to bring immediate peace and rest to Kansas and the country, and against any prolonged anarchy in that,, unhappy Territory and disquiet over the whole, nation. Let Kansas be admitted into the Union on an equality with other States, in conform ity with the democratic principle of " non-intervention in the affairs of. State or Territory," and quiet .will be restored to the country ; reject her applica tion, and we Khali have a reopening of the whole catalogue of Kansas turmoil, rebellion, and crime, with all its disturbing influences throughout the States of the Union. lYein Lisbon (Ohio) Patriot. A common sense and practical view of the ques tion commands admission now. . It will give peace to the nation. It will quiet Kansas. It will give harmony and union to the national democratic party, a id confirm its supremacy in the control of our na tional affairs. This settlement of the Kansas ques tion will not only have the approval of the party, but the country. It will be as popular with the people as is the Kansas-Nebraska act now. Indian apolis Sentinel. The Belfast (Maine) Free Press, in bold and patri otic terms, urges the democratic party to stand by the national democratic administration, and to ad here to its national organization. In this connexion it mentions a circumstance of no little significance in the past political history of the party in Maine r We recollect well, when we were invited over to a meeting of the State committee at Augusta in 1855, to hear denunciations of Franklin Pierce by the very same men who are now denouncing James Buchanan. We met those denunciations then as we mean to meet those against the administration now. One of the most conspicuous and bitter in that consultation was no other than the renegade. Lot M. Morrill, who now reclines in the arms of the republican party. Mr. Morrill found his proper level in the ranks of the black-republicans, and so will all others who choose to separate themselves from the administra tion, and thus initiate a movement to defeat the suc cess of its measures. ... TnE Recent Fracas at Washington. We copy from the Charleston Mercury the following account of the recent fight in the House of Representatives. Mr. Barksdale,of Mississippi, and others, intei fercd to separate the parties were struck, and dealt blows in return. Southern gentlemen, and especially Mr. Barksdale, have not had justice done them by the black Republican accounts of this difficulty. The Mercury says, a friend who was an eye witness, sends us an account of the affair, which we annex. From this, it appears that Grow, who is one of the most pestilent abolitionists in Congress, was not only out of his place, but but of order, for the rules of the House are imperative that a member must be at his seat when he addresses the Speaker of the House. The following is the statement : Washington Feb. 6, 1858. At about two o'clock A. M. Gen. Quitman offered a proposition to disentangle the proceedings in the House. Mr. Grow, who was on one of the aisles on the democratic side of the House, objecting a little tartly, Mr. Keitt said to him, " Go on the other side of the House, to which you belong, if you want to object" Mr. Grow answered, "I'll object where I please. Mr. Keitt then said, " Wait till I can comf roun a,Jd l"1? J0?-. went ro,,nd na ",d h,rm 'ou bo1 py, rnove to your side of the House, aiv Mr. Keitt itionist pup- d don't stay here." Mr. Grow 'said, "I'll stay as lone as I please." Mr. Keitt then choked him for an instant He then started off, when Mr. Grow said, " You can't come from your plantation and crack the whip over me." Mr. Keitt turned back and said, " I'll choke you again for that insolence," and he grasped his throat a second time. Gen. Davis, of Miss., then interfering, wrenched Mr. Keitt round to keep them apart, and pressing him against the corner of a table, Mr. Keitt partially fell. Mr. Grow, when Mr. Keitt was wrenched round to separate them, struck at Mr. Keitt, we think, but did not reach him. Mr. Barksdale, in interfering to separate them, was struck, and dealt a few heavy blows in return. The whole thing was sudden, and over in a moment There was not much excitement prevailing before, or afterwards. This is a succinct statement of the whole affair, which will, doubtless, be greatly exag gerated by black republican prints. The whole ihing was extemporaneous. jRoANOKE Literary Societt Lecture bt Rev. John E. Edwards. This distinguished divine, well known to many of our readers, lectured on the 11th in Weldon before the Roanoke Literary Society subject, "American Tourists in Europe.".' A cor respondent of the Petersburg Express says : "The time occupied in the delivery was about one hour and ten minutes, and the repeated applause during its delivery, told emphatically how it was be ing received and appreciated. I do not design giv ing you a synopsis of the lecture, but the criticisms on Michael Angelo were peculiarly strong, pointed and elegant, and according to my notion, equally just and appropriate. I could not but admire the boldness of the lecturer in thus attacking, and his masterly skill in demolishing the fancifully wrought ' 1'ublic Opinion that had been lone ago manufac tured by the artist's friends and handed down,' and adopted by succeeding generations as "a fixed fact" Italy and its sunset beauties also received justice. and were berelt of the gaudy . tints which imagina tion alone had imparted to them ; and in fact every- thing touched upon by the. lecturer was treated fair ly and. honestly, but not with that sickening sort of flattery and praise which travellers arc too apt to be stow, because somebody else "said so," or more properly speaking, because omnipotent " they" have made them Fairy lands." The lecture was well received and the highest en comiums passed upon it by alL A distinguished gentleman from Northampton went forward at th close of the lecture and thanked Mr. Edwards for the rich entertainment he had afforded him, and at a regular meeting of the Society to-night, the fol lowing resolution was adopted by acclamation : Resolved, That the thanks of the Roanoke Lite rary Society are due and hereby tendered to the Rev, John & Edwards for the very able, eloquent, interesting and instructive lecture , delivered this evening. ' . I hope it won't make him proud, but your towns man goes away from here covered with laurels." (Tic next Lecture will be delivered by Rev. Dr Deema.y . . ' The Cotton Trade. The Carolinian states that the banks at Columbia, S. C, are discounting freely for the purchase of cotton, The Exchange Bank alone advanced $31,000, :on Thursday, on cotton drafts. . For the Standard. LETTER FROM PINEBUR MOCCASIN. a ' MocCAsntviixE, N. C. Feb. 8, 1858. , . Mb. Pbinturs : Ned Da volt has. sum wholesum Fimptums of Democracy, but he can't gt over that Know Nuthin'hnbit of swarin'yit ; and any body that likes einuine, cmfatic swarin' would be delighted to hear Ned on Leak, McRay, Sime & Co., (Ned wiil call him Sime, tho I tell him it's Sim,) You see I'm sor ter nussin' Ned up, and I go over to bis offis every day or two to have a chat with, him and tnnoculate Democracy into him. ,1've jest cum back from his of fis how, and I want to tell you what he sea. " Uncle Pinebur," ses he, I'll be darned" M Stop, Ned." ses I, you must quit that Know Nuthin' habit of swarin' ? It's the first step toards your reformashun." " Well. Uncle Pinebur ' ses he, I won't swar no more ; I'll say raly, but Fll be darned" " There it is agin," ses L " That old Know Nuth in' habit has becum second nature to you. Say raly and go on." In this time Ned had got about half mad, and ses he, " Uncle Pinebur, you must let me swar a leetle this time, for I can't do iustice to the subject without it There's Leak and McRay goin' round like two imported animals, showin' themselves to the Ameri can party, paradin'at every court and muster ground, with that cussed old Yirginy Sime to grbom McRay, and Leak goin it loose, each clairoin' to have the best bone, uiussle a id bottom ; and darn their pic ters, the'll both git to the bottom afore long, and I don't care how soon. But what makes me the mad dest is to see that cussed old Yirginy editur pretend -in to be the central organ of the American party of the State, recomtnendin' a disorganizing trublesum Locofoco to bis party, jest , as if we didn't have no man of our own Gain to be our candidiL And there's McRay, claimin' to be a Dimicrat and adroca tin' principles jest the contrary to the Dimicratic party. I'll swar I don't b'lievc he's sincere. And H we take him up he II be beat to deth, as he ort to be ; and then if we git into power hell be expectin' the best place we have, and we can't throw aside our old war bosses to promote him, and then he'll kick up and play the devi! and give us more trubble than he does the Dimicratic party, by a darned sight Who ever beam tell of a Gineral's givin the com mand of his army to a deserter from the enemy ? Nobody likes a trater, tho the treason may be ac ceptable. If McRay was to git fully into our party he'd be jest like the buttin ram's head among the dumplins. Darn me if I'd be surprised if be jines Douglass next ; for when a ambishus man begins to try to disorganize his own party, there's no tellin where he'll stop ; and he's a disadvantage to any par ty he gits into." "Stop, Ned," ses I. "You have a wus opinion of McRay than I have. He's a Southern man, and it ain't right to suspishun any Southern man of be in inclined to Douglas and his Black Republican al lies." " I can't help it" ses Ned, " and I shan't try, for in his Dancy letter he ses the distribution qucshtun is of more importance than the slavery ishue ; and I don't b'lieve any good Southern man would have sed that The fact is," and Ned looked mity se rious " the leaders or would-be leaders of the Ame rican party in this State, has got down so low and dragged the party down with them, that a honest man with proper self-respect can't foller the leaders nor acknowledge his fellership with them. What sort of a infernal posishun is it for the American party to cum down from its high grounds of principle, to set aside all its own champions, and take up a renegade disorganizer of the furren party a man even reject ed and repudiated by his own party a sort of high bred or mofradite politishun ? Ill be cussed if I go with any sich party. Darn me " " Ned," ses I, " dont't swar no more. I see yonr posishun, and it s one that only sich fellers as Jo Smithers can stumick. Jest quit the whole concern, fight for the Dimocracy for 4 years as hard as you have fit agin them, bring forth fruits meet for re pentance, and we'll give you the right band of fel lership." Ned looded right strait into the fire, and ses he, " Uncle Pinebur, I'll study about it. I b'lieve the Dimicratic party is the only hope of the nashun, and I can t rejoice like Sime does at the signs of its dis solution, for it's plain to every body that if it goes down the Union goes with it ; and 1 tell you 1 II go for regular Dimicrats before I will for irregular ones, and I'll stand by Mr. Buchanan as long as he stands, as he now does, by the Constitution. The South must be united, and it can't unite except on the prin ciples of the Dimocratic party. I got right up and took Ned's hand, and told him he was in a good way, and that I wished all his parly would take the same view of things. He sed he did'nt see how any honest member of his party could take a different view, or how any American of proper self-re&pect could vote for a disorganizer of another party, beshe, "Men may be convinced of error and may honestly change from one party to another ; but they can't take up principles in opposishun to the'r party and still be members of that party. I always distrust disorganize rs. Nobody has any con fidence in them. Nine times out of ten they are sore headed offis seekers, mad and despertt, and goin on the high preshure rule or ruin sistcm. I thought Ned had about as much Democracy as he could digest for 3 or 4 days, and I left him. I think he's a hopeful case, and I'll bet he votes for the regular Dimicratic nominee for Governor this year. I shouldn t be surprised if I have to restrain him sum, for you know young converts is mity zeal ous. For instance, I think he was unjest to McRay in suspisbunin that he would side with Douglas. Yourn till deth, PINEBUR MOCCASIN. 'Oh that mine enemy would write a book I" is no doubt the constant exclamation of Mr. McRae. Nothing would please him more just now than to be " vindictively " and " malignantly " assailed by the Democratic press. He burns for more material for a controversy. But not just now. Mr. McRae. The people are too intelligent to be misled by your argu ments, and the Democratic masses are too much at tached to their organization to be swerved from it by any appeals which you may make. Every plungeyou make but sinks you the deeper in the " Serbonian bog.". You are destroying yourself politically, and not those whom you assaiL Confidence is a tender plant and of slow growth. Nip it once at the root, and it will sprout no more. Heiice the ' course of sprouts" through which disorganizes are invariably put; but not just now. The days will be longer in April and May, and we shall then have more time to devote to you in our editorial columns. Thk City or Raleigh and toe Extension or its Corporate Limits. The injunction which had been granted against the extension, and which is pending in the Supreme Court has by consent of the parties been dissolved, and stands over as an original bill. - So the City laws are to operate and the taxes to be collected, but to be returned should the decision of the Court be adverse to the City. As the esse stands on bill and answer it will most probably be decided at the nsxt term. . ; Terrible Steamboat Explosion. We learn from the Fayetteville Observer of Thursday last that the steamer Magnolia, Capt John M. Stedman, burst her boilers and sunk in deep water, near Whitehall, on the Cape Fear, on . Wednesday morning. The bodies of seven persons bad been found, including that of Capt Stedman. It was feared that some wo men and children were also lost- ' The Rev. Mr. Repiton, of Wilmington, who was a passenger, writes that some twelve or fifteen were lost Mr. R. himself mads 4 narrow scapa, - - Deaaacrmtie Heetiar ia Gallfori. Pursuant to previous notice a meetine of the Democrats of Guilford was held in Greensboroaeh on Tuesday the 16th instant ; when on motion of K. r. vieir, Jisq., Ansiem Keid, Eq., was called to the Chair, and William U. Reese was aoDointed Secretary. On motion, a committee consisting of R. P. Dick. E.q., James R. McLean, Esq., B. G. Graham, T. M. v uittington, and IS. M. Idol, was appointed to draft resolutions. . The committee reported the following resolutions. which were unanimously adopted : jsesoitea,- that the chairman or this meeting ap point forty delegates to rem-esent the Democracy of Guilford in the Democratic Sute Convention, to be neia in narioiie on the 14th or April next Resolved. That we hiehlv aoDrove of the nresent administration, and we will use our best efforts to sustain the President in his wise, just and patriotic policy. Hesolvtd. That we tender to Gov. Bra re sincere assurances of our high esteem for him as a man, and otr pride in him as our Governor. Resolved, That we are opposed to distribution. and to every other political humbug, whether old or new: and we will wannlv advocate Democratic principles, as experience has shown that they are for the best interests of the whole country. Resolved, That we will warmly sonDort any tried and true Democrat the Sute Convention may nomi nate lor uovernor: but we would most respectfully tecommend William W. Holden, Esq. He is an un wavering and working Democrat the constant friend of Common Schools and all the best interests of North-Carolina the man for the people and the times. Robert P. Dick, Esq.. addressed the meeting In support of all the above resolutions. John H. Boyd. Esq. of Rockingham, was then called on, and entertained the meeting for some time in a very handsome style, and showed himself able and ready to do good and efficient service for Dem ocracy. In accordance with the first resolution the Chair- man appointed the following delegates to the State convention : Robert P. Dick. J. R. McLean. B. G. Graham. M. D. Smith, Solomon D. Holden, Col. W. A. Dunn, T. M. Whittington. Col. II C. Dick. John Cobb. P. W. Parker, Dr. S. A. Powell. Thomas Graham. J. M. Bowman, Thomas Warren, N. It Tapp, C. Wheeler, B. M. Idol, William Coble, Jonathan Church, W. L. rtimtuan, K. Parsons, Jos. Ktrkpatriclc, W. Irwin, R. Hemphill, A. L. Gilmer, Dr. T. J. Patrick, A. P. Eckle, A. E. D. Tatum, Lewis Starbuck, Dr. J. K. Fenix, O it Webb, William Green, John StarreU, D. M. Payne. W. Welch. Thos. E. Moore. Albert Sullivan, J. B. Balsby, John Frazer, Jno. Leadford. On motion the Chairman and Secretary were ad ded to the list of delegates. Un motion the proceedings of this meeting were ordered to be sent to the North-Carolina Standard, the estern bentmel, and Greensborough Patriot, with the request that tbey publish the same. Un motion, the meeting adjourned. ANSLEM RE ID, Chairman. W. H. Reese, Secretary. . Gov. Wise's last Testament. A few days since the Douglas Democracy of Philadelphia made public demonstration of their hostility to President Bu chanan on the leading issue of his Administration. Mr. Jno. W. torney presided, and Mr. F. P. Stanton. the cashiered Secretary of Kansas, was the chief speaker ot the occasion. But the most remarkable circumstance of the display is a letter from the Gov ernor of this State, in which the positions of the President s Message are combatted with characteris tic vehemence, and the argument of the Tammany epistle is repeated with tedious amplification. inere was a time when any utterance from Henry A. Wise would have been received with respect by the Democracy of Virginia. None do him reverence now. Not a solitary member of the Legislature, not a dozen Democrats in the Commonwealth, we hon estly believe, sustain him in his extraordinary posi tion. No : the Virginia Democracy will not desert the patriots of the .North who hazard all in defence of the Constitution and the rights of the South. It is not in their hearts to betray. James Buchanan at moment when bis devotion to their interests exposes nun to the oepoy vengeance of Black Kcpublicanism. I hey will stand by the Administration. They will uphold the organization of the party. No example of defection, be it ever so conspicuous, can corrupt the .fidelity of the Virginia Democracy. Richmond South. Savaxsah, (Ga.,) February 5, 1858. Treachery is a sin to be damned; and the traitor must be cursed with every anathema in and out of the language. These are the sentiments of all par ties, high and low, in every part of the South. From Virginia downwards no man can escape the execrations of the people who, in any public capaci ty, dares to oppose tae admission of Kansas with the Lecompton constitution. Politically the oppo nent of the measure is as much a dead man as if be had been embalmed in the days of Thotmes III, in Egypt nd buried on the banks of the Nile. It is right and just that such should be the case. For a single isolated question, without complication, in which a principle only is in issue resulting in jus tice to the slave States, to be opposed by any south ern representative is treason to bis constituent-, false hood to his own conscience, and an outrage on his own respectability and reputation. That no people can tolerate, and we have now the authority and the weight of right, truth, justice, and good faith, ask ing the whole representation from the South to be united for once. God bless the President ! lie has stood up with all the elevation of a noble nature in a position made reputable by the purity of his previ ous character, and, like John the Baptist in the wil derness is warning the southern sinners to flee the wrath to come. Cor. of the Washington Union. Prom Washington. WAsniXGTOK, Feb. 17. The special committee of the House on Kansas affairs had a meeting to-night. A proposition to summon Walker, Stanton, Calhoun and 11 en demon was voted down, on the groond that the probable receipt of information from the Execu tive might supersede the necessity of taking oral testimony. The committee passed a resolution call ing on the State Department for the registry and census of Kansas, taken in pursuance of law. Sev eral propositions looking to a full investigation as indicated in the Htuse resolution, was voted down by a uniform and strict party vote vote 8 to 7. The cotomittee then adjourned until next Wednes day. A majority of the Senate committee on territories have prepared a bill simply for - the admission of Kansas under tbe Lecompton constitution, similar to those heretofore passed on like occasions. Commodore Thos. Ap Catesby Jones is danger ously ilL . Wake Cocntt Cocbt. Wake County Court is in session this week. - On Monday the following Justi ces were elected a Special Court : George E. Badger, Thos. O. Whitaker, William R. Poole, A. Turner, and Cannady Lowe. Jno. Scott, Eoq., was re-elected County Justice. 37" We omitted to publish in the list of-delegatef appointed by the Chairman of tho Wake meeting on Monday, the names of Col. Willis Whitaker, Augus tine Turner, Erastos Smith, Isaac- Rowland and R. Dobbin, . Mistakes will happen sometimes, - " IST" Attention b invited to the advertisement of Ur. Ljon Adams In this paper. u TRIBUTE OF RESPECT. r. - - ihALBcnc Halu JanJ: 1858. WrasAS. God ia tbe plentitoda of Hia infinite wiadoia 4 power, has aeeu Drnow to nmmm from kLu venerable and much ieiMd fellow wnmtm m bane, whom while be lived tbe Dialectic Societv lov4 to booor, and now that be is do more, u a tribute of respect to bis memory: therefore, - - lUmdved, That while we bow with bumble tabmisaioa to tbe will of an All-wise Creator and Rater of tbe Darren. . I . . . i a . ...... . - wmoi dqi maara me toas aao oope to imitate Um vir tttous example and cherish tbe memory of one of tbe foiw ders of tbe Society be ao leakrasly aerved. , ' Memifd, That the Dialectic SoeietT.lB die death ofJaa. JJebaae, baa kwt oae of its most worthy and bJtkfal aaeia bera. who watcbed over its infancy with pareatel ear, and was an ornament -nd honor to it io iU prosperity; a friend and benefactor to hia race. who. whit ..mrl.t onivJitL cal preferment, waa ever ready to obey tbe call of hia oooa- Jtesoum, Tbat we offer or heart-JeU condolence ts Me bereaved fkmitr. which baa anstaJmd n irrmutki. l .f o his relatives' and friends, who have lost a warm aedfiutb fol d riser, with whom w would mingle oar tears of affeo- , Toif That a copy of these reaolatums be sent to tbe family of tbe deceased, and one be filed ia tbe are hire f tbe Society, and also oablUhed ia tbe University Macmxine, tbe Raleieh Standard and Reriater. the RiwuwJ P.r- t and i'lag, and the Mi Hoe Chnmiele. J&JS. X. MUatEUEAri, ) J AS. 8. WATUNCTOX. VCommiUeS. : . BEXT05 WITHERS. , J. MARRIED, Ob Tuesday evening, tbe ISih inL tv wju. 1 Mr. Frank Sled man. bv Allen Adams. Esq.. Mr. Willie Avera to afiaa Winnie Turner, danrhir at larnini r. er. Esq, all of Wake eoanty. . IMPORTANT NOTICE I THE SUBSCRIBER TAKES THIS METHOD OF informing bis town and country fneods that be has m Store and IS cooatantlv rnriiil ..f flPfvrDiru HARDWARE, CUTtERY. IkOX. DRY GOODS, SHOES. T5UOTS, Ac, which be will sell to pa actual en -(torn era on time, or for cash for very amall profits contistior of the following articles : . -. . . Bacon, - Calicoes, Plows. i"1 Black and BrownSnades and Shovels. TUar, Meal, Corn, Cheese, MolasKcs, Tobacco, Sojrar, Coffee, Candies, Sosp, Starch. . Cottons, Rupeand Baerinr, Kersey Jeans. ' Grind Stones, . T Needles and Pins, Sums Ware, Portmoniea, Tabs end Backets, Pocket Knives, Sleet, (good article) Knives sod ForkaSole and Upper Combs, Leather. Hooks and Eyes, Boots and Shoes. O. D. Cspa, Uoree Shoes. Carpenter's Tools, Nails of every d4 Bullons and Thread, scripUoo, , Iron. Span Cotton, - Hif pUaiiirflW a-T-l.aa. ftjw, a. h 4. '( - -wa -w u.iwwH M uiruuua. . . I ret ore my heartfelt thanks for tbe very liberal patron, age heretofore extended to roe. and trust bjr si ricttr honest deatinjr to merit a continuance of the same, knowing that I can sell as low or lam er than anj- other bouse ia the City. Please jive tue a call before purcbaainr elaewbere. -. , LTXN ADAMS, . ' . Sooth-Side Market Square," ' P. S. All kinds of produce taken ia exchansfor Goods. Feb. 19. 18S8. 8 wSm. : NOTICE. - THE SUBSCRIBER HAYING QUALIFIED AT February Term. 1 ft.8. of the Court of I'iees and Quar ter Sessions for tbe County of Wake as Administrator of the estate of Berry D. S-mms. deceased, hereby en res no tice to all persons having claims, debts or demands araiaat said Berry D. Simms, to present them to bin for settlement, properly proven, within the time prescribed by law, other wise this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery ; and ail persona indebted to said deceased are requested to make' immediate payment. .-j Notice ia further riven, that on the :5th day or March next, at Dunnaville, I aball sell at public aoouou all the perishable estate of the said deceased, consisting of honae. bold furniture, a buggy end harness, double-barrelled shot gun, and 1 fine gold watch. A credit of oine months will be given, and purchasers will be required to give bond with approved security. , Notice is further given, that at tbe same time and place I wiil hire to tbe highest bidder a No-1 blacksmith ad stri ker for tbe balance of this year. . t J. O. JEFFREYS, AdtnY. February la, 1858. 15td. VST" Register copy. COSMOPOLITAN ART ASSOCIATION I Terms of Sabecription I .... EVERY SUBSCRIBER OF THREE DOLLARS is entitled to the large and costly S3 Steel Engraving, Manifest Eestiny; also, a copy of the beautifully illus trated Cosmopolitan Art Journal, one year; also, to a Cer tificate io tbe annual awards of premiums; also, to a Seas on Ticket to visit tbe Galleries of tbe Association, free. Thus it will be seen that for every three dollars paid, tbe subscriber cot only receives a splendid. Three Dollar En graviog, but also the beautifully illustrated Two Dollar Art Journal, one year, together with a certificate in tbe Anneal Award of Premintne by which a valuable work of Art in Painting or Sculpture may be received in addition, thus riving to every subscriber an equivalent to tbe value of fire dollars, and a certificate in tbe Award of Premiums, gratis. MONTHLY MAGAZINES. Tbe Association will still continue to furnish tbe follow, inr Msgaxines to alt who prefer them to tbe Engraving M Manifest Destiny," with Art Journal: Emerson's Mage sine. Harper's Magazine. Godey's Lsdj's Book, Graham's Magazine, Blackwood's Magazine, and British Quarterly Be views, Southern Litersry Messenger, Little's Panorama At lantic Magazine, together with a Certificate in the Annual Award of Premiums. Address 1 . THOMAS CARTER, . Honorary See'y, Raleigh. JT. C. ' " Iters. Tbe Engrav'flga " Saturday Night" and "Mani fest Destiny," can be seen at my resfdetiee.' February 1, 1858. 15 tMSO DRESS GOODS, LACES. WHITE GOO OS - AND CM BROIDERIES, RIBBONS, GLOVES, HOSIERY.. , i EDWIN G. CHEATHAM. FURXAir, D A T 1 8 fc CO., mroartBS axd joBBEas or - ' .' SILK GOODS, - ' -: 87 Chambers t 69 Reads Streets, 3v Tort. ' SAM'L FURMAlf, . JOHN G. DAY1S, -WM. G. NOBLE - JAS. McNULTY. -February 19, lSSS. 15 5tpd. SEATON GALES, ' . . ATTORNEY AT LAW,-r Raleigh; N. C. Feb. 19. 1858. ' ' . lS- SPRING TRADE, 1658. , ' - .-- HAMILTON GRAHAM, Importers aad Jobbers, v WILL EXHIBIT ON AND 4FTERTHE FIRST OF M irch a full and weli-er'. cted stock of FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOOD-, which will be disposed of at tbe lowest prices. Merc! -uts from the Sooth and West are invited to call and eiafiioeat the old stand of Psnl 4 Mcll waiae. No. so Hyeanv Street, Petersburg, Va. Fif" Strict attention given to i dera. . ... Ftbroary 1, 1&58. 15 ly. GARDEN SEEDS vCrop of 1857.) ' , WE ARE NOW IN RECEIPT OF A VERY LARGS supply of tbe most approved kinds of Gardes Seeds selected with care from reliable Seedsmen, which we war rant to be fresh and good ' . ',,!, A liberal discount to dealers in tbe aurroundiog country, WILLIAMS A HAYWOOD, . . Wholesale and Beta! Droggists. -Feb. 19, 1858. ! - IS St.' 1 WEGRO SALE. AS EXECUTOR ON THB ES TATE of Esther A vent, dee'd, 1 shall offer for sale a Avent's Ferrv, on the Cape Fear river, Chatham County, ba the Sd day of March next, eleven negroes, and among them some very likely yoong ones. There will beaenkdit ef six months, the pui chasers giving bond with errove4 eeority. ; - ; , R. S MARES, Executor. ...Feb. 19, 1858. . ; , fr-'wtd.- "TATOTICE. HAVING MADE ARRANGEMENTS TO lAI enter into tbe Mercantile Business at Saeaafraa Fork. in Rr&nrilk antv.4 now offer mi town tcudoKv in Hen derson, on tbe Rafeigh and Uaston Railroad, consisting of a well-improved lot of five or tee acre,' and two jra un proved Iota, with a tot of wood land ia half a amUe, awtw eieat to eapply wood fcT several yean. : r-a ' 1 1: . I wiB sell this property low and make tbe terms eaar., r I have practised medicine here for seven years, and earn recommend tbe location aa en excellent one fore pbyaiebm. There ia male aad female school to tbe village; aa Epic copal. Methodist, and Baptist Ohercbes, aW. x Peraops wwhingto puicbaee tbe property, will pl.neariy application. , A, aiuszw DeeeaVer 84, 1157. UlT-wtfc