4 uimui uramn LfU Irrrnmr Tfmnnl 3 Ii Whole JYo 1344. Tarborough; FMzccombc County, JT. V. Saturday Jflily 1 3 v 1 Sih : - IUIDJ lmiinmniimrinmi fit IfiSlmr Wmmr il TfOfmi HIM fim fffnimr - - ... ; Tte Tttrboro' Press , BY GEORGE HOWARD, -Is publish weekly at Two Dollars per year f aid in advance-or,Two Dollars and Fiftf Osnts at the expiration of the subscription year. jverljsements nol exceeding a square will be scrtcd at OxeDollau the first insertion, and 25 Cents (ox every succeeding one. Longer ones at lhat rate Per S(luare Court Orders and Judicial Advertisements 25 per cent, higher. """"TOS,ITICAIi, ;;'... rV.isIiviUi" Convention, The following gentlemen were mem bers of the Southern Convention, which assembled in Nashville, Tennessee, on the 3d of June, and adjourned on the 1 1 th. Virginia Willoughby Newton R H Clay brook Wm F Gordon W 0 Goode Thomas S Gholsdn and Beverly Tucker. South Carolina L ChevesR VV Barn well J H Hammond Samuel Otterson John A Bradley J W Whitner A C Young Muxey Gregg James Chestnutt Jr VV J Han a II F VV Alston F VV Pickens Dray ton Nance G A Trcnholm Wm DuBose J F Jamison and R Barnwell Rhett. Georgia Walter T Colquitt Chas J McDonald II L Bcnning M J Crawford Obcdiali G Gibson Jas VV Ramsey Obe diah Warner Simpson Fouche Gen Rbbt Bledsoe Andrew H H Da.vson and Dr J G iMcWhorter. Alabama Gov B Fitzpatrick John A Campbell John A Winston L P Walker Nicholas Davis Jas Abercrombie VV M Murphy S B Bethia B Boykin GW Guyon S Buford R Shorter Geo Goldth- waite J S Hunter Daniel Coleman Wm Cooper U Chapman Thomas A Walker G S Walden John Erwin and VV M Byrd. Mississippi Judge Wm L Sharkey C P Smith A M Clayton J VV Mathews T J Word J L Ncill J J Peters J J McRca and E C Wilkinson. Florida Col B M Pearson James Her nandez A J Foreman Q IH)uPont J F McClellan and E C t'abel. j Texas J P Henderson. I Arkansas J II Po well. We omit the names of one hundred del cgales from Tennessee We notice among the names General Gideon J Pillow Wm II Polk General Robert Armstrong Gov A V Brown A 0 P Nicholson V K Ste venson A J Donclson Andrew Jackson. The following resolutions were unani mously adopted by the Convention, on the 10th : 1 Resolved. That the territnrifis of the United States belone to the neoole of the! teveral Stales as their common Dronertv ! .i . . . " : v ' O--." . - i tuai cuizens 01 me several OtatCS navei'H"1 "IW " equal right to migrate, with their proper-j 8 Resolved That the performance of mat the citizens ot the several States havcir,Rnis are U1C 4 .C . . '.. iy, louiuao ieiriiories,an oeproieciea in the enjoyment of their property, so long as the territories remain under the charie n . O oi the government. 2. Resolved That Congress has timvpr in.r.vi.l..i r.., r .. : no United States, property lawfully belong- would be gradually re-occupied by jnhab injto the Spates of the Union, and any itants drawing to them, by ; their interests ct which may be passed by Congress to and feelings, institutions, based on the effect this result,is a plain violation of the principles of the constitution; to them Ponstituiion of the United States. ! would be naturally, applied governments 3. Resolved, That it is the duty of Con- imed on American ideas, and approved fircss to provide civil government for ter- byjhe constituents of that particular Mtories, as the suiril of American inslilu- section. v. . . r , a- . e Q Rewlved That a recoznition of this tions forbids the maintenance of military j. ixesoivea, 11 r . ui nrincinle would deprive the questions be- govcrnmcnt in lime of peace; and all laws principle wuum ucP L .f . . r I tween Texas and the United States of their heretofore existing in territories formerly nv.een 1 uxas aim ... . 1 i i i . ; PPiinnnl pharacter. and vvould leave them bejonirinc to foreicn powers which inter- sectional cnaraciei, fere with the full enjoyment of religious 'or a-ljustment, without d.sturbance from freedom, the freedom ofth press, trial .sectional prejudice and pass.ons, uptHV the by jury, and all other rights of person or considerations ofmagnammity. and just.c. property, as secured or recognized in the . 10. Resolved. That a recognifon .,: courts of the United States.fare necessari- this principle would infuse the prmciplev ly void; and so soon as such territories of conciliation in the discussion and a.i become American territoryit is the duty j'-stment of this question, and would au ef the federal government to make early ifora a 5uarantee of an early and satistacto- provisions, for the enactment of those laws, which may be expedient and necessary to secure to the inhabitants and emigrants to such territories the full benefit of the con stitution in assertion of their rights 4. Resolved, That to protect property existing in the several States of the Union, the people of the States have invested the federal government with the powers of war and negotiations, and of sustaining armies and navies, and prohibit to the State authorities the exercise of the same powers; they made no distinction in the protection of the property to bedefended, nor. was it allowed to the federal govern ment to determine what should be held as property; whatever the States hold as properly, the government is bound tore- cognize and defend as such. -Therefore, it is the sense of this Convention that all the acts of ihc federal government which tend to denattonalize'property of any de scription ' recognized in the constitution, in favor of the- propiietors, of other pro perty, are acts directly opposed" to the South. - 5. Resolved, That it is the duty of the federal; government to recognize, and firmly to maintain, the equal rights of the citizens of the several States in the terri tories of the United States, and to repu diate the power to make a discrimination between the proprietors of diilercnt spe cies of property in the federal legislation. The fulfilment of this duty by the federal government would greatly tend to restore peace. The laws of the States relative to the protection to be afforded are perfectly plain, and any attempts to weaken or de stroy the title of any citizen upon Amer ican territory, are plain and palpable vio lations o the fundamental law under which the government exists. G Resolved That the slaveholding States cannot, and will not, submit to ih enactment, by Congress, of an' law impo sing onerous conditions or restraints on individuals removing with their property into the territories of the United Stale, or to any law making discrimination of nitnfi-tr oml nlicc liolmoon At CCr ' r- t c-nrt Miivvn viuuiviii ot.u- tions of the Union because it is the delib-' erate opinion of 'his Convention that the tolerance of Congress has given to the na- f I mi Iho 1 nr npncci r n thil 1 1. I r rt I nil hm-il t might be empoyed incidentally to sub- . a . ' ' . ' vi.ui v.uftu.: ihv, uii,uiuHuiij in a State which is conlesseUly beyond their jurisdiction and control a main sue for their freedom. They have a sal cause of this discord which menaces the aricd agent to superintend these prosecu- existence of- the Union, and which has well nigh destroyed the efficient action of the government itself. 7. Resolved, That the. performance of this duty is required by the fundamental law of the Union; and the equality of the several States composing the Union ran- not be disturbed without disiuibing the CfmC rPltir A mniMCin I n ! I t II t 1 fill S T ll I 1 . ... , a i .i c 4 ptiuvijiu 1a vi.Muiuvf 111 aw unfailhful to the constttut.on; and disinion follows, the destroyers of these i . .1. ::i - Ua, .Mc nrlnnmlo we declare. i "t"' .. would enable Congress to remove tne embarrassments in vv .ii rrl hich the country is 1 I rT I . ft (nnCtniou r C nOW inVOlVCCl. I nu vacaiu luiiiiuuw i the United States, no longer regarded as nlaces of sectional rapacity and ambition, citizens of the slaveholding States, if pow- m0St of the anniversary meetings of those tended to them in 1he shaPe ? informa-Iceived from public unds for schools last ' er to enter territories with theii property societies are held. The agents of these " will make their tabler so much the year; public libraries,' social,, college, is not lawfully acquired. In these States associations pause for no obstacles andmore valuable as authentic and reliable .academies; public schools, Sunday-schools;, the warfare against this right is a war upon shrink lrom.no danger. They come south statistics the population, resources and No and vo,ume of ?acni pcnodals, in the constitution. The defenders of this at the peril of their lives: They visitus Droduclions of the country The ques- cludmg newspapers, name, class, how of right are. defending the constitution; and in the shape of traders, pedlars, preachers, P10"3 J iTn 1 ' CirCU,at,n; fM. those who deny or impugn its existence lawVers, dentists and doctor! Within T CmPrehend .ryth.ng tan- this season produced average crops; what- ry termination ; 1 1. Resolved. That in the event of a dominant majority refusing to recognize the constitutional rights we assert, or continuing to deny the obligations of a federal, government to. maintain them, then it is the recommendation of this con vention that the .territories should be treated as property, and divided between the sections of the Union,' so that the rights of both sections be adequately se cured in their respective shares; that we are aware this course is open to great ob jections, but we are ready to acquiesce in the adoption of the line of 36 30 North latitude, extending to the Pacific ocean an extreme concession upon consideration ot what is due to the stability of one of our institutions. " 12. Res lveds That it js the opinion of the Convention that controversy should be ended, either by the recognition of the constitutional rights of the Southern peo ple, or by an equitable pattition of the territories; that the spectacle of a confed eracy of Stales involved in quarrels over the events of a war in which .the Ameri can arms were crowned withglorV, is hu miliating; - that the incorporator of the Wilmot Proviso, in the offer of a settle ment a proposition which the States re gard as disparaging and dishonorable is dePTaflinflr to lllR nnnnlrir llip trmin?illrii of this controversy bv the diir.miion of! the confederacy would be a climax lo the j shame which attaches to the difficulty, and wmcn u is me paramount duty ol Con gress to avoid -13. Resolved That, this Convention will not consent that Congress shall ad . . ditmtment nf journ without making an a ' n J this controversy; and in the condition in which the Convention finds the question before Congress, it docs not feel at liberty 4 ! .k'i. IU HI!,, IliU.". Vnblmhins Hascaiv -1'hc New : York Tiibune publishes a detailed reportjr;' . 0f the anniversary meetinjs of a Kt.eatKr ?ry-impo-la!-1 ' v , slave-stealing association which styles it- If l. NT T IT T 7 ? I ft ftVu mo iuw i oris iaie vigilance v om" 1 mittce. Thev announce ihafdurinc the' past twelvemonths they have assisted 15l!Thc Cincinnati papers of F runaway slaves, besides sueing in south- j geverai cases of cholerain ' r.. il f 1 P . i. They have persons employed, whose duty . . . . . - ii is io ascertain wnai ?iaves ai e iieia uy - defective titles, and to instigate them to! tions. This constant intermedling with 0ir rights of property must cease. It can only be arrested by vigorous measures here at home. -The people of the South have no conception of the extensive ma- chinery at work against their int erest, or of the vast sums of money thus employed. They can only get an idea of it by read- r rr ilia Wr.F Vntilr nnl Tlnctnn i rri -ii r , , u?pci.iaiiy hi tiua acaauii ui tnu yuai wiicu .I;the last two years they have been tamper- ing vvithslaves in this parish, as. we per-; lie fcnmv. nnrl laVp iht ha vp len ! -j - -, i born here, and held by their present sona . ntt,,1(1M fnr thirt v vnars hn vp hpen nersna- : - - r; ded that they were entitled to their iree- dom. judicial proceeuincs in :ew ur-i leans within the last eighteen months, will prove what we say. Z.ouisia?ia Statesman. Outrage. We learn that while Deputy Sheriff Smith of Rockingham county, was taking a runaway slave home to his mas ter in Orange county, a few days ago, when near Cross Roads meeting house, in Alamance count-, the negro, (who was hand-cuffed and tied to the hind part of the Buggy ,)i managed to extricate himself from the vehicle and jumped but of it and ran; he was pursued and overhauled ere had proceeded far. It seems that Smith, while pursuing the boy pulled from his pocket a pistol and tried to shoot the boy ai he ran, but. the cap dropping off the rjjstol missed fire, and the negro perceiv 7s it turned upon his pursuer and grap . led him, handcuffed as he was. Smith downed him, but in the scuffle the negro's hand-cuffs broke and he managed to pull v a pistol from Smith's pocket and shot him in the leg; after this he disengaged him self, seized, a stick and knocked Smith (who stood upon his feet,) down, senseless; he then fastened a chain to the - deputy sheriffs neck, wrapped the other ehd around a tree and locked it bv means of a pad lock. The boy then got into the buggy and travelled homeward, but when a few miles below Hillsboro' .arid '.not far from home, he was again arrested as a runaway, and committed to Orange jail. Smith who had been left as a dead, man, resuscitated, and contrived to get loose from the chain; he then managed to crawl near enough to a house to be heard by loud halloaing which brought him assis tance. Wc understand that his wounds arc not considered dangerous. " - Milton Chronicle. . CrtrThe Bank of the State of North Carolina, has declared a dividend of A per cent, for the Principal Bank, on the 1st July and at the last six months to ba paid at the Branches on the 15th. Less the State tax of 1$ per cent. Attempted Insurrection. The at tempted insurrection at Point Pctrc, Gau daloupe, had been put down at the last accounts, and several of the ' ringleaders had been shot.! About two hundred hous- 63 had beCn. des,roycd b' ,hem in their allcPt 10 "re . Females in California! K San Fran cisco paper of the 15th ult. saysr "We Are pleased to notice by the arri val from sea on Saturday, the appearance somc ny or sixty of the fairer sex in r..ll Ll TM r 1 1 T a IUU ,uum' " are,,uniau qners- Bome "'-.a.m.uuiera irom jonn !Bu" "U"1. fid quite a, constellation ifiom merry France. One Frenchman r V i -i " r. ii brings twenty-all, they say, beautiful. ; Th ba' 7 oUcl by flotillw of young n inn & a lion. Cholera at the . West -At Nashville, Jm-nic the 24 lours endin the 24th ult r.r , , ''l of Friday announce that city. At odiU nh ihnr , on ,iUe r Zu:u . uiaiiiiii. ji tiiutu qe were Cholera. gJThe Great Tunnel on the Balti more and Ohio railroad, is one of the greatest works of civil engineering now going on in the world. It is a few miles f,orn Morgantown, west Virginia; and is through a mountain a mile and a quarter wide. 6. ' The Census Tor 1 83. The Census-Takers will soon com- mencc operations, and every facilny ex-1; "" "" "''. to many, but, they should remember mat ! i Kp information sought is valuable to the : o ;public, and the aggregate amount of intel- i' . , , . ngence gainea oi mings oi real impor- tanr nsales (or any tri, . . .fling personal inconvenience or annoy - ance. The following condensed statement of the information required, has been fur- nished by Col. Jo P. Pitt, Assistant Mar shal for this county :. The act of Congress under which the census of 1850 is taken, requires the Mar shal to-collect statistics on a great variety of subjects, and submits a. great rhanv questions, many of which will require consideration before they can be answer ed.' For the convenience of the people, the Marshal has given the questions to which answers are required that timt may be had for their consideration before he comes to see them. " To avoid difficulty fhequestions shouldr be answered in tht. order in which they stand. ; , ;; . .Schedule 1. . -7; Give the name pi every perspayho usual place of abode on the first day of J June, 1850, is jn your family; llieir age sex and colorf wheUier white, black-or mulatto; "thej- jprbfessiori', - occupationjir trade of each male persbn over 15 vearsof age; the value of the real estate you own; the place of birth of the several persons, harning the State, Territory or country; the number, of the persons married with in the year; the number- of persons that haye.lJeen io school in-the year; the num ber over 20 years old who cannot readv and write; and whether any of them are deaf and dumb, blind, insane, id iotie, 'pauV, per or convictrduring the year ending the first of June, 1850? - Schedule 2. 'D What number ; of slaves do you own; v their age, sex and color; the number. of fugitives; number manumitted; the num ber of persons deaf and dumb, blind, .in sane, or idiotic, during the year, ending the first of June, 1850? Schedule 3. How many acres of land do you own; ' how much" improved or unimproved (cleared or uncleared;) the .cash value of your farm; the value of . farming imple ments arid machinery, horses, mules antl asses; working oxen, milch cows, other cattle, sheep and swine;" the value of live stock, the value of animals slaughtered during. the past year; bushels of wheat; rye, Indian corn, oats; how many pounds of rice, tobacco, ginned cotton bales of 400 lbs. each, wool, beans and peas. buck-. . wheat, barley, Irish and sweet potatoes . value of your orchard product in dollars; gallons of wine; value of produce of ,mar- " ket garden; pounds of butter and cheese; tons of hay, pounds of fodder, cured grass,, &c, bushels of clover seed and other" grass seeds; pounds of hops; Hemp, tons of' ' dew rotted and -water- rotted; pounds of1 flax; silk cocoons; bushels of flax seed; ! nounds of manle stinar: cane suear h'ids. of , lQ0O d 5. ga,ons of molasses, pounds of honey and bee? wax; and the value of home-made manufactures during the year ending thefirst of June, 1850? Schedule 4. - i"uuutli? "'uuoujr, Manic business, manufacture or product, capital, In the products of industiy, name')f invesieu in real ana personal estate in tno business; quantities, kinds and value of u raw material used including fuel; kind of motive power, machinery, structure or resources; average number of hands, male, and female, and the average 0 monthly 4 cost of the labor of each (that is value;): quantities, kinds and value of annual pro- . duct year ending first ol June, 1850? ; Schedule" 5. Aggregate valuation of real and person- J al estate of town, county, orcity; aggre- gate amount of taxes assessed; State, coun ty, parish and town, road tax; No. of col leges, academies, free schools, other schools, school houses; amount of cioney ; raised bv tax for schools last year: raised 1 ,iio " -f- ; .ne average per year; puouepaupers, num- ber supported during the past year;num- heron iho first Hav nf Time mtive fwhite Der n "e nrsf 7061 of sun- or macK,, or loreign, anu me cuBl ui nup- nnrf;ncr lhpm. rriminnls convicted of crime u,n - ' endinir the '1st of June. 1 1850; in prison first of June, 1850 ;t -'o . . - . . ' native or foreign, wnite or - niacK; A . ,l,e cost "f labor average wages to farm hands npf mnnth. or hv ihe.vear ana j boarded q d a ,,al)orer ,wi,hout board, with board, average payment to carpen ters per day without board; to female do mestics with board; price of board for a laboring man pt-r week; No. of churches; No of persons each will well accommo date; value of churches? , Schedule 6. Name of every person who dirrj dur ing the year ending 1st of Jjne, 1850, whose usual place of abode-at 1 he time of his death was in ycur family; age sex, color, white, black or mulatto, fre or lave, married or widowed; place of birthA naming the State, Territory, cr country; Hie month in which the person died; pro fession, occupation or trade; disease or cause oi ueainr jxesyy" ., JO. V. PITT, Deputy Marshal t -it . - i. 1 4 urn