Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Jan. 12, 1863, edition 1 / Page 2
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l''.kiW. Should I i'.-iU , Forrest continue suive.v-ful in tl.u-reiirot the Federal army, &9 at Jlolly Spring necessity will soon compel'sb. evacuation of North - Mississippi by Grant's armyT and! hM taWM will only end when he reaches supplies at 'Memphis, p.-'r-- '"-;:;V- ,' The Federals are laying waste soma of the , plantations on the Tazoo river, t Our sbarp ! shooters on tflfe river bank, in the West are doing good service.. They secrete them', selves in the woods and amuse themselves br-iilliag th Federals, and the Federals4n iHorn shell the woods. without any damage to a&r . We are decidedly the winners in this jjtuie sure. 7""!' Jeff Thompson, the- famous partizan fighter-has Uirnedrim airain. lie. reported tp "w-sr.wu 'jwr a-mm r.n VanlcM nlunder and sent him. a larce lot of .shoes for his soUiers." TTS 'WTuat the head of three thousand men, nd said to tne uener ai i I want to be let alone and have no er- ADDITIONAL PARTICULARS IN THE RECENT YANKEE RAID IN TEN NESSEK ; The Lynchburg papers have-some addi 66ssi psitteulartthri nessee by the Yankees. The FirymiiwiVacr onntsays: The raid in East Tennessee appears to have been a, more. important Jalfiur yae4-Hfrseemahat4t,wag malft hycar; aJry force of the enemy said to be two or " three thousand strong, who came from Ken ' tucky through Pound Gap. ' iTbey burnt the railroad bridge over the Hoi -ton at Zollicof for, not faj- beyond Bristol Thef burnt the i, wagon bi idge over the same ; river. A con siderable portion of the track was also torn sp, and the telegraph broken dwn. ." Xbe plition.then started) west, and no ..rIbt succede4-in-dga good deal of nth ' er mischief. The bridge over the Hoiston was quite Jong one, and is the same that was destroyed last summer , We believe that about three months were occupied in its "recoostroctioo. The interruptton which will thus be caused in the transportation of freight will be a very senoas matter. This is ttte main route tor Government transportation astf wast ami south, as well as for the public. Fatesoers bythe W estern train 2ay evening brought sorue additional partic- Ailari'"' After buraicg the brtflge at Zolticof . fer, the party passed , on ts the Watauga and i burnt the bridge across the- river. Thedis- tance betweea these two paints fapinemiles, nd there is no engines between, them. The wagon road is, we learn, .very bad one, so f. "'that lfule can be done in that way towaals " transporting freight. After burning the bridge at Wataoga, the party act out on their re treat Tbey camped the night before risitkig JZoUioofler at BlouutviUjuul the number wai 4 . estimated at from 1,000 to 15,f300! They . stretched out along the road distance of ' - three miles. They are said to have been led 31 or guided ba man named Otey Ward, who fornwrly resided in Scott county. Virginia, bat removed to Kentucky before the war be gan. - A body of 1,000 soldiers left Bristol Tuesday night to endeavor to intercept the villains on their retreat We learned fiom a gentleman justt from Tennessee, that there were but five compa nies of the Yankee cavalry, supposed to be not more thaa 250 aen, who-made the raid oil the bridge at ZolliooflVr. They werecom - rn&nded by Major Russell, came from Eastern Xentuck, and bad been five days and nighu , in the saddle. After they had surprised our ; men, nambering about .one hundred, and ac . omplisled their work, . they threw thern , ' selves down and. slept soundly from slieer' exhaustioo. Horses as well as men are re- presentee to have been,, completely worn down. Tbey were guided by an East Ten- j nessee tory. rT ISi adds-- , , , : This is one of the boldest and mostaiteeess- ' ful raids the enemy has ever made" cm us, arfll ? the damage done is very great. Itissineu- .. 3 ' this kind.. Such an oversight is ioexcoMble. We seem to profit but little by experivm. . ' A lesson was taught the authorities last spring on this same subiect which ooirht to have ''iiirjr'-tti9tar7'--ba- been heeded, - flow, all the same terrible de Jays, iocooveBieoce and exiMfnae "ar ' to W .eooouniereo STerigam. wnansTbirtiai pt specimeii of Oeoerakhifl. Humihr;y Mar r liisTl, aboet?. Are his capacities evea below the ability to keep back-Yankee cavalry rai.)' If so, woakl it not b well iur him to retire from ervoe which does not tn to proeper specially in his keeping. - ;v. The Abingdon llrywia says: ' TJseiftTar as lar"1Swebv7Krif. wem are, tnat tne federal force, confining of ' three regiments, comprising some fiiteen hun dred men, prucbally from Ohio aad Penn tylvania, under the command of Gen. James CarTnejade;froni Carter cbonty,Ten nessee. . They entered this State, by a bridle tray in Black Mountain, hfgb point m th Cumberland, range, leading- from Letcher jlCoitrt Ifoose,- Kentucky, ifeMhe upper end of Lee county, Virgisia. Abis pass Mid to ltwelveTiiilcslhrorJ&ftAnilj heaHv oi.- site the Big Stone Oap,f 3 Lee county. - It is a IJIV. - HIS : . aurpnsinK' that so eTTToteecooTdtT ' through so- difficult way, --ana that, loo,1! without tidings of it preceding them. As soon as the nesrs reached General itar , " ahallat this plaoe lie immediateJy dispatched au uie troops ne bad in pursuit of the devils, t - and acoompadied tbem an persua A volun teer company was also raised here iaa tew il" minutes, wbo. proceeded to Tennessee on Tuesday night, under the command of Lieu fmant Warre M, Hopknwjho' happened to be here from the BappahaooockoQ sKort furioagh.- - 7 - X dlnatch from Gen. Marsh all, Wednes day eight at bine o'dock, rijthM jthFed , erals were near Blunti ville, and be expected We Live j :.uic u.ivifts i.vua i'-.i-tol w late as the 1st insuut On that wy the fir ing cannon was distinctly heard in the direc tion of Moccasin "Gap, a point in Rusk-ll county, Virginia, towards which the ,Yan- kees retreated after their raid upon the Vir guua and Tennessee railroad. - uenersl Mar shall, with three thousand men, infantry, cav alry and artillery, was known to be in pur suit of the enenvr, and jtfwas thought would overtake them in the vicinity of Moccasin. The Yankee force, both men and horsen, were irtHdrribly jaded condition, and would, it was thought, prove an easy prey to Creneral Marshall s fresh troops. The damage to the bridges on the railroad is not near so serious as was at first suppos ed. Their destruction was so far fro ra tho- .Hxi..'. - -sjfc-.. V reconstruction. A getlemawWwAviftCBioa wieoihe Yankees visited that place, after tlieic put formances on the railroadsays they ivere ve ry civil in their intercourse with the people and interfered with no private property ex cept horses, which they took when-ver they could nna tnem, leaving uieir own oroKen down beasts in exchange, , They wvre well! Suppiieu Wlia couuienfii vunicuenttc uiura, with which they offered to pay for every thing they wanted, and manifested a great 'deaiiLlabuyirleJieac..8QBjeai of the unso phisticated citisens of Union were. imposed upon with the bogus currency. -""r The result -of- General" Marshall's move ments .will certainly be authentically hern d fmm in th next dar 01 twa At liist ac- -eotints an uticonnrmed mmouT liad readied Bristol that the- enemy had. betl oveifliken and severely handled near Moccasin Gap. . liichmond miner. The most slartlinir political enme. the most stupid political blunder, yet knowu in Ameri can hitory, hs now ' been cousutiuuaied. Tlie promised proclamation of Abraham Lin- coln to deense the abolition of negro slavery, in afr-the -fetate of, -tin late- Umou-not-yct subjugated by the armn of the United States, is laid before the reader this morning. It is difficult to decide whether wickedness er folly predominates in this extraordinary document When it in ryiiembered that the man who signs his -name beneath it has sworn, by the most solemn of human- oathe, to maintain, enforce, and obey that Consti tution which guarantees the present relation pf niasterjnand slave, in the mvt express terms; that he has been educat like every otter American, to a full sense-t its obliga tion on evury citizeu uf the country; that vast powers bve been entrusted to his hands, for the express purpose of delendiug every letter ftt that Constitution r when WFTeniem ber thwe tiling and here see a President of tlie United-States flying in the face of that oath,, proclaiming the anuiliiktion of that Constitution, and uitig the forces confided to biro, for its destructionthe exiggwaletl enormity of such a perjury is calculated to shock the" most hardened Tlie prettoce that slavery is aWlisbed as an act of justice to tiie negro, will provoke a smile if the hypocriti cal falsehood did not excite di.gtrt In Ma ryland, Missouri, Teniiessee and Kentucky, and those portions of Virginia and Louisiana now Ti possession of his armies the, institu tion of slavery is k-ft in its full force. Vet these are the portions of the late Union in which this viofntor of human and divine law possesses the power the actual, practical power of destroying the relation between master and slave. If sympathy Jr the slave and justice to the negro were the k-aM of his motivas: he -would, take epecul care awl paiia that his prokmatioh. should be .fully njttwfd to tlwie fe.4ricts . where i be has .the means of executing it provi4ttM. But In: direct, it only to thae portions of tlie South ern Confederacy still n.hitbited by free citirens, where hi armies nave never been, and where his pruclamatiuii can take etfect only in the bloody .-eues of foreign conquest or serwle insurrection. To produce this last named eDect--servile insurrection is the real, sole purpose of this proclamation. No glazing words, no whin ing exhortation of Tfoil order to the slavi-s, conceal or disguise this horrid intention. -No Wilt brgrven to it either in Enrr.ne or America. Tlmt it will fail lo. aceompfii ; ihis vilsr end, and be vid and entirely witliout elft.'ct in tlie houtii- ern Contederacy, unfe! our armies sliould In- ' not oidy beaten, but ce-4tnvsl, ure tru'lis ttiKimmT itfe uur headers. . Jao fnr. frwrn beuuj a., cam . . ., .. . . i : ? . uy,, uwpr j"m . a L?aaiJriro..p.l,.ving la lheSt,. the cause. It expoe$ the "trne character tf the enemy, beyotnl the jiowribility of iijsconcej tioti and, contempt of Eurttjie, and fill every -mind of.tbe North tl; still ivtains tin traces of humamty, witli aiua-Jiiont, intlienation, and horror. Its effect oh the. Jde of the South will be most salutary. It'hii( tlie ! do hi retreat aud repeotiwe" on aud timid. . Ttone who would turn back 111 their path, if there are any. have now 110 longer that miserable chance. Kven submis sion. now canuot procure rnctry. The di.-eil is done, and the Souttierh peopt tiave only to choose 'between victory ami death. Fl4c4"aid-Titliiitt We invite the parucoUr attenlioo "four Mrli-nlr all L.m ..r L . . . .V . . . 't swicw tmn a apeech T r"e"r"' "ir,zismiure 01 ueor . . . I J I . I f l . - M . ria, by in tlou. union Sieiheusa brother of Vice' President Stephens cl?rl)e;siiws not on fy the- uncoastitulionslily of the cooscriptiou law, but tbe fact that its passage waa not really necessary to the defence of the eonntry. , -Mr. Stephen said : ' ' I be; to refreh; the roemuri-of gentletoea as to Ih history of another government, and ask them tf that goreraweut deecrveStouluwpt - allude to. t govsrameat which , has passed away xt she old United Slates rovernment. bat that other govermueal which perisited la giving birth to the Uaited Bute government th government of , tbe old Confcdesationv 8irt that was jfioMoldgovrant What t,,,l to ,. M . J can, but tl f. j ,,v- r t ' .' t v . ' . world over. It'wKg lhs t, vcn ci.t tUt achieved our l.lerut. It was tUa r jvcrtimeut wlioaa CoiumanJer-ia-Chief was ashiiiwtou 11 was in government that successfully reust - j ed thu mua powerful government upon the fsc of the earth. It was lha government from whoa?, bands w have received all the bless ing we have enjoyed, and fur which we art are fighting to-day. It was a govern meat whoa memorie'a are dear 10 our hearts. Who will riae op and say that government deeerves the contempt of mankind I and yet, Sir, that government had do compulsory power over the Statee. That government had not the very power, the want of which geutlemeu now af- tirru subjects any government to lee contempt of mankind. Their power over the Mates was advisory only, and not compulsory. The eon Id mM n ouktrvoDS rwwh Jfl aura, mjl meut was hdeqaat tr I W.uwViili,C 'AXty? . J t. 1 . A ' iL- . eataowet Inateaieted upon the earth. Can oar peoufc eloea their errs to the grand leaeon which is to be gathered from the history of that government T We are warned by (entlemea, and by iome of oor public journal, againat the danrer I rum tbe uie (overtime ma. 8ir, I bave uo. uch appreheasHHi. Let gentlemen who 4 tnm ua eeie bf Sute righta lake etifliJort frum the history of the old Con federation. There! so danger from that quar ter.' Centralisation, eoiMoGdalidn, central nor pition, i the roek pob wbkh we ba split, and it i 'tfut "'rtxA wliieh w have to dfead ia the fuinre. We jadge the fotereby the pest; and juding oar fdMirr by the American past, I proclaim that the danger which we bav to apprehend -- 4 aot. from . the Staiei, bnt but'fruti centra)' aaurpation, which ba already resulted , ia . lbs -destroctioa of lb e, okt ynited States goverament, nd iaoar so cession, and in our repudiation of it on accoant of that oaurpation. ti 'V. Troup ha beea quoted as aaihority for ibis sutement, that our government would deecv.in of contempt if it lacked the pow er of cofcripMi. ; Governor Troup was com paratively a yoaiig man when the ottrd thai wenlimeut. jt wit "years afterwards thai he, a tiuveraur- of (Jeoripa. became. diljf;uih. ed as the ehonpioo of Stale rights. If ue quote Ins word, sir, aa aaihority nm onr sid, I pomt you t his subsequent deed ae aathiniy on my di If yoo quote his laafuage whicli was utlored ia-a lisated party conteu.Jid. J der the. indignation wr-ich he frh a (at sat the New England Slates for their bias light Feder alism, I point yoa to what be did as Georgia's chxttipion when her rights were assailed Jv lbs Federl govrrmnent. When Governor Tronp utterrd thai srntimenl be was under a stromr. bia, prising onl ofa particnlar emeigeicy and put of a "dnire t rnmprl tlie New Euglaod Htates to prrfiwm what he thought waaibeir duty. He did. in that healed contest, eipree the idea thst sovereign Sutes might be coerced. la my judneut it was a g rrt errrr,:andii wm an error fieraro repented of, and natUy alou ed for. " - - - 1 And thi leads m Jo remark npon another view in waich the eousenption prt-seula itself to my miiim The rrnee of conscription i the rishi to Uke away the Mghtiag men of the Maira sgaJBSt tb will of both the ci'.iiem and the States. It i the right, make what yon will of it, to coerce sovereign Stste. hi the right which Mr. Iiutlw . .ia. now claiming over as, and which ws are isatsling with mk UumI. and which,-1 tract', w shall never e lo re sist until the preteusiun is abandoned. 1 do J r I it, sir, net wits the iuleuliuu to ofleud anybody and 1 do not believe, tlierefore, that I shall of fend suybody ; bui I declare, conscription, as it j presents itself to my mind, is, in it essence j snd iti amstiluii-'B, the very embodiment of fineolnisiii, which our gallant, armies are to day resisting fl a p-weria the Central heat! to coerce wivereisu Staler. . . - A few word aoir as lo the history of con-. smfMK.wj end I Have duoe. Its justtnsalin has been placed upon the plea of necemty.J Str.tMoath und nut derived fruni niere ruinot end is a feeble pfea- There never was any neeessi ly for it. and there is nttne now. This plea of necessity genernily prcteit, and, naderbnnsi happy eoHSHtulKtil, 11 t always untrue. Our ConftilniioB waa made for war ss well as for pea:e, and the powers conferred Ly it upon te difi"tS;ent departmeul of the CtMirVderate Gov rrument are adequate lo all the aeceseilie of wsr, without any enlargement of them by doubtful coostruciwn, fir by usorpatiop. The particular necessity which has been alleged for conscription wa a necsesity. to seise and hold in service the I w vie -months' men whoa term was about to eipire. But, air. thi is a pretest. It is within my knowledge that, aa long ago at last fall, several months before the expiration of the term of the I wt-lve -months men, General Toombs (then a member of the Confederate Cougresa) intrtidocfd a bill lo replenish the ar . mv and supply the place of thoae twelve- be tnit awl. ' II is bill wss im conf.trnuiy wi'.h the old reeognited erm. nnutfmal mndu 4 frqaisttiiMs npon I be States appoint- itiriil ofv officers, where theCunslhttiioi places it ; aud i have beard it said by those who beard on 1 hat occasion that, in support of that bill, he made the greatest speech of hi life. . But it wss lost, and.il was hrenuse ths Pr-aident said he did ik1 want troops at that lima. Tha Sob- jel f replenishing the army was Ihea allowed ewU the eve of the espiraiioa of the ni thneouecripiiou was sprung upon the- tnuntry, and rushed through longres uader lh" cry of necessity. Now, air, I (air. iu the irat plaee, if there was any necessity for il al the, lime when it was adopt ed, lhat necessity waa created for the occasion. Their. stiemidn had been called, in a remarka ble rtiann-r, In th replooishinf of the army. in a 'mstituii-'innl wy, and f hey (ha,d r fused 1.1 make me provision ft It, HtWttrtltl. tsuVsj cers was the imtk n the cocoaaat. u(. sir. I so further and. sv .that, with all their attempts tit create a necssily for con. script iim,-opy"oid'Tmt ree it f -and that at the very time it wss passed there wa not tbe tightest necrBaity for it. The twelve-month' mn, whose lime" waa about lo expire, could A have been r-tained ia lbs service under the old eons! it nt lonal mode of making requisitions up on the States just as well a by, eonecriptida ; and I defy any man to deny it II will not be denied in the debate: This, air.-ia another rwe of the points is my argument which I predict will m K be touched. Congress, ia making it requisition apon the Slates, had only to share the rcSniniou6 ai 14 specify ths "twetvs month men as the troop which they dee red, and the States, by thW eovereirn power, could bavs furnished, each for herself, hertwelve months men, who were then ia lbs beid, just a b eoald famish any of her cUixeaa, who were thea-at home.la wepoae to a requtaitioii. :.ut l.; "!-rv ' " , ' 1 " I. , I iwn r..!.spriiilinn laws. IUs buy nail ii.tr- ed to ur.rB iha itlea of lucissily ill faVor of the second one 7 When that one wa passed, we had ihstemenred from series of victories. We hud no troops whose teruie were aboul to amir. It was a almple queation aa to the mode of getting saw recruiiefrom borne for our armies already in the field. Where was the necessity in that instance, for disregarding the rights of the eitisea, and the rights or the States, by r pealing conscription npoo us T , Again, sir, tbsoldcpnsUlutional mode of ma king requisition spon the States tendered by Mr. VaSeeji of Alabama . His pmpesition wra voted downdeiibenUty- voted down npoit the plee of "toeieity, and hen. oo man had the hardihood lo SlUura neeeaaltv. 1 laH J Sir. and J Pvto "f Georila, that I 4i?,rfWJpa-tor dattt to itne rwha tjfefi sity, from no eoitvicliow-f await y. Ml frow premeditation and oeiioeration,: .11 nas oeen a matlarof choifi wllhoergovernmeat, and ihey intend to adhere to it to the end unless yoa drive tbehf from it, bv riahif hi thsTwsjestyf wfre people, aud calling them back to the landmarks of the Constitution, mis, sir, w in great rea son why 1 ak and beseech an espreesioa from the Legislature" of the sovereign Htate of Geor gia, apon thii greai violation which has beeS perpetrated npon the right of he citiiens and of her aovereipjnlT. The object to be accoea- pushed by seoh an eipreaaittaof opinitia on yonr part Is r pteves osius; nwa mm a prec ' dent for voor sobeeqneot oppression, snd to irr- dace your rnlers lo recede from, the esisling aggression npon yonr right.' .. ..! .i.l, J,rom the QharioUe allrtiii. TIE CONSCRIPT XAW A N D TH B COTTON FACTORIES. Vr. Editor .-A recent military order at been issued by Go. Vanee, virinalty sui presa- ing lbs further manufacture of cotton aud woul-j Wu goids in lastm louniy, n.i, and wnit-n in. no dosM be esiended Ur other loramiee. A it will eipose a large aurrber of eitixena lo se raus .evils and pnamy to umcn personal ; at ind uB&rug aT this loctement rsr.n,-rt srenis to eall for some special "public aoltee. The public are al tins rri'is, bs much interest ed aa any privarV individual in lb effects, of this order- It is on this areunt, aa well as lo IvfrveTeen ahdffiiyMpsin in respect lo the. wiole sobjeel, thai" I ak pace in yotir paper, a one of the unererf, from what 1 consider an unauthorised suppress ive oirasure, to be tieard over nty on name. 1 have every confidence in Ikr.fairaesa and ens ifjustire of nurpenple whrathey clear ly understand the question, submitted, sad 10 iheir judtfiiieat, when thus inftiriued, I am al ways deposed lo yield. As 1 shsll coniineat ou ibis nrder 1 copy it entire lsJU.w: . " Kin Itits i)Tat, N. .,' i Adju'am t.eiinals Omce, -j ' Ualeigh, Dec. 23. 1(562. ) (VtLoKKLt Isfurnialion bus beau received by bis ExcelleBcy. the Goermr, that hw: Factories iu Gastoji ('ousty, kswa ( Slows dc Co., Lineberger to, and 1 . R.Tate, aie selling .lheyr gaud al a price much beyond what I .1 . . . it o1.. .ri:i it IS Bliowra nyiniw ti inrrn, namstj pereeulofi if e cost." In rtpnnderamw of thur you are Instructed to arrest mmd le camp If wUiiA . 1 liaK Mmm J tklrf ahjI forty; vtjar of age, wbether owners or not. . . R,6.:tfuffrr- r. -. (Signed) JU.C WINDER, A. A. (i. , Cot. M. II. Hand, Stwvilli tiaiUin Co.', 1 '1.1 shtiuld like toknnw what ' inforthalion'' the GtwertHir - had - androirr whrmt uviavdt It certainly shootd have bees fnm s credible sonree and delivered undVe the ssnrtit.es of an hearsay. Ycl, npon these uhui, the (ravers- or gives us im li;ul. Thai bie iHforinaal was noi strictly ccursie.i inauilest, for there ia nosnch firm known to me as " Stows A Co." Had be called ou the firm of J At E. B. rtlnwe, they, and I am sure Messrs. Tuls and Line berger dc Co. would-have given alt prnper and entirely accuraie informal if their business, aud tbey would thushav hd tha opportunity and right, denr lo wery frveinin, of being heard before being condemned. Is thisvGuv. Vance has eei-.BiiiJjr erred. 9. There is no " price allowed, by law" lo cotton, and wtajlen faeuiries. The ElempOW Law, wow before me, declares that " their n perintendents and miilsfera may be exempted by tbe Seererlory e rter" on eerlain condi tions and net by the Go,vrmtr of sny Stats. and Governor Vwt s'tontd crlaiuly have in fonued himself, on eonplent uvidenee. lhat the Gaston Count far t trie were Bel so I tetupl bRir he issued his hn prist edict aguias them. . Thi is certainty rtor No. 2. ' 2. Ag;iin, it t h Steretury uf H'er and not the Governor, whu. jn express lenn. is mtde ths sole judge of any vmlaiiun tf thi romp, lion Jaw, for the law r: "And it is further provided. That if Ih pro prietors r.f any', snclj mttnufaeiofinir rstabush menu shsll be shows, uponevidonee e aaa miltrd le and juJgrd the Srerelatf f H'er, lo have eiuirtied or ia asy manner evaded the true intent and -spirit f the trf-Wng provtsn, lb exemplitta thrrnn granted ahull no longer be extended lo tbe upeiiniendenla and opra liven of said establifhtiienis." Jkc. From this it is dear that Gov. Vanee has su tboriiy in the r.vmie aid hue ssemed lo himself pAweraii" doe not rightfully piHwess, and haf eommiuejaii officii,! osarpntion sgafnst wh'eh I have a rirht iinir and dn prmrst. a arbitrary -wteaauo opprrsslye. leave to suggest, in this eoniHfeiM.n, that I nty Vanee who shewed such intense devotion lo tale Rights and to the right of Ihe ritixens srtn-fHaee himself wtitrret ewwnVt with thr Confederate Uoverniiienl in the eass of Oreeee, accuted of eonspirticy nod treeson, (the iriost hsnioo crimes known to the law) eme to have forgot too what was due lo other cititrns of the State, above suspicion and reproach, and ha actually hmlitrtd to, lead on the war against them, to their injury of ths mete rial interest of ths whole State over which be presitles, and to the benefit of noeaunsur etas, beyond the slendAr addition to the srmy of a mere kandfof of Ken who, from -their previoa tabfts aid trsini ny will robaWy make-very indifferent soldier, bat who are invalaabl to tha eouniry as experienced manufacturers aad this hss beea done, too, I wil add, ia ad vance of asyi general enrollment of eonript ib uaatoo oxjqiy--a laet wnicn might tempt as to Indnlgej ih sei-MCHin that tuXevsr: . t i . l, tli I ". l' ' H to I t ;. ; by If w, ia to p !.e i ... ; . .. i.i -t , L i thereby mfiicl on Ih coiiimunity at tl.n tijIle of its utrnont need, the lost per tiwntti.vf njt lets than aevsfiTT-rtvit TiiouaiNir taibi ,f (). -naburir and Sheeting, Twrrr-riv Tiioi ir" " pound of notion yarn and the whole ami. mil of woolen soodi manufactured by Mf.T, U.Tate'a ' large Factory, and to throw ont of employ, v meut not leas than firs AanrfVed hand, moatly ' female, without sy other mean of fflpport, - -with a large namber of children and aged wo men dependent upon them. ' . " The order will involve the loas In ins Facto ry of J.df IS. D. 8towe of only two operative ; a carder and a spiniier- whose places Hi imDoeaible to mniiJv one of whom is ia deli. ' eats health and mar be rejected by the or. I do not impeach" tbf Governor1 motives: with them I bavs nothing to do. It is his ael '. alonn that Tfeview and if I am right la my " piaioa that his sealin the puhlic esnea ba '. misled hia judgment and betrayed him late aa ' err 'evolving these grave conseqneiiees.H re ! ' mains to be srea whether he will retrace h'm steps and repair the injury bs has uojne. ; There are ether views of this sub set which- ; I ehonld he glad o present bat lime aid spaee . forbids m to do so sow, further thaa to, re feark thai in the clamor against maaafaetavsraw , for selling tbelr foods at price. Bsed by th 4 eemmos) laws of tradoT peple'firer iiiat sJI" marks I able rnode are sold at Brieve Ctsd by .. the same law, y ' . t ' .iASPKS 8TOWE. -- StowrsviHe N. C, Jan. f If?63. - l,,,,,, ; -. vV;,. b :: p-? - - - . - - . , SALISBURY. Jf . C.i We ha ve in reserve several valuable arti des for or next paper, wlhcn eouKJ not IX-, t in thfc- imoog IrrMv IAiW - Card, giving an accdont of bir vwt to SaHa bury to execute a writ of Ae&sn wry as . e. subject of great interest to' every body. ' ' is $mo8 W--This-diwase hs ajwure4 hi several parti vf mr Uwn,'and lre aulhorUicS' have been ewh-avoring to do something to arrest; ln prvfrriit, f herfr is a Wgrrtf-rr- . spousibility ujon them, and they areeipeei ed'to bear it wot thyhe lion Weiice cotnmuniiy. . ' ' ' ' Mr. Nathan Harrison. n the) eonntry, and oie ot two negrors-in lo.wn, have diedoTthe dbase siorv? sr laM. ; . i...,.'.' .. Ai 12 pevsons oit of 4 families on Sandy fSoleigtibrirhond.- There are two cases at tbe'Vay-side Hospital wtiiis4own.:-r fjET Lincoln's rrodamation fieeing the negroes, has been WueiL It ia liktJy to fiul in giving the mtifactionlis fHenJYaiopa teI. He pmclaims freedowi Jbr al) llss ne groes in that part of the South now ' ra resist ance to hi authority, and excepts those parts hhW Umi restraint of Federal bsyonctt. The wicked tnlesif nf regard erritory Rot coder his amtnJ apparent eis comes of abtitioB pliilanibrupy h pose sre f ions where Ite bad the power to give it practical iHtutration ? The fact ie, old Abelf arrest nave. He want cotton, sugar and rice, and be knows be can't get these with out negro labor. Thereforsj, he declines to free lite negroes in his power, and simpiy in tends to make.them W ecjton and raise sugar and rice as the have always done.""" Tie (7s(4 Csuaf y Faffsrw t, .bav : g4 i -to a difficulty with Governor Vane by charging more than ievtsiy -n nrj' pet tent i ' gntats tbjt-(is manofarturinf , Bud the Givr- nor has ordered the Cobei ia that Couaty I" arrest sueh of the .w sers and iptrlre a com under lbs Conscript Act, end send lues Into ihe anrry. - jasper itrs, Es.r frwpi lrof Hieef these Fastovie, ha wriiua a v 1 ry plain, puintrd aud maulj Inter vhlcb show the; Goveriiorto a- divsauge. . Prb"S if. the Governor were to-writu h would make ihe case lowk diflVrcat VYg b p and believe Tbe Utjvero.tr will do aswearty right s ey m eaai ; No en duubts Tine eotTeinrs ss.bs' nvaive, aud but few question the wi4 J hB Bctlons. He wifl rrtarnty ndeavr4 per. form bis official ddtirs fesrlrudy, and I as prompt ly a h can. ' ;'-- MOVEM ENT JDF THE EN EM T,.' XTrnmrr1? enrreut oa yretsrdsy "iHaV GehTe-.Suoner aad his divisiou had h-K Aqiiis ereefc on trsnsprts for the VMl'it t It was bum reported m Petersburg, ts a eotnmsod of tieneral Negtey. had)f ft Yt&firi Monrtte on the' 1st instsat for seme Pflh"a port. '.'''- '' " 4-r-Ftm iftdiwiima deemed hmiklth'-fi. my ie preparing to make a grand, demeasira liort upo GoMsboro' or Wltmlugton, sad h, is little doe, l that tbn met eliri.f armswiN eome to our ears from Ihsl -eu"rtM Southwest ih hiwiile armies ere proewMy bnin loo much exaustsd to h aaythiag fur a kaf time lo eomev Aici. Ermmin. -f i' .50,000 - murr tubes WILL BE SOLD AT AUCTION THE SOth of January 1863, at-, CARTER' NURSERYi Raleigh, N.C. , , "r- , These Trees are tb best vr raised fat Cenfe.dersey, true to name and dsacripiioav J .J f -J. -I
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 12, 1863, edition 1
2
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