If ; hA3wk1Z . ' TAUBOKOUGH SATURDAY, JULY 5, I SSI. FOR CONGRESS. J. R. J. DANIEL, of Halifax. Comet ion. Since the publication of our last paper, we learn that a Committee was appointed by the Edgecombe Agricultural Society, at its January meeting, to ascertain the crop of cotton of Edgecombe county, in the year 1850. VVe are informed by a member of the Committee, that although reports have not been made from every part of the county, yet sufficient informa tion has been received, to justify the Com mittee in saying, that the crop of 1S50 will exceed 5000 bales. The crop of this year is remarkably good, and in quantity planted will exceed the last from one- third to one-half. , " The census of,lST30, (3300 bales) refers tn tho oron of 1S49. There was also a ... ty pographical error in the names of the I'Jessrs. Howell, which should have been the Messrs. Ilarrell. tween China and California, aiid at each departure of ships for the Celestial Em pire, its children here send off to their friends, beyond the Pacific, gieat numbers of California papers. It may be seen from this how intercourse is increasing and knowledge extending. The day of fen cing the world and information out of China, has forever passed away. The glitter of our gold has passed the gates of the cousin ol the sun and moon, and the diciples of Confucius are coming and have come to qualify his philosophy with the wisdom of Washington and the utility of Franklin. Gradually their wooden shoes give way to the manufactures of Lynn, and kindle a fire for barbecuing a rat dinner. The long queu eventually passes away before thctonsorial scissors, and stuffs a saddle or is woven into a laria. The yard wide nankeen unmentionable are found unsuil ed to our windy climate and dearer fash ions, and are succeeded by a much bene fit. Mats and other American garment succeed, and soon the chief distinction consists in the copper color, the narrow angular eyes, the peculiar gibberish, and beardless faces. When these national costumes shall have passed away, national prejudices, whether of politics, morals oi religion, are certainly on their road to amalgamation. The China Boys will yet vote at the same polls, study at the same school, and bow at the same Altars asjaur own countrymen. Homicide. On Sunday week last, a - free negro named Portis and a slave belonging to Ir. Denj. Dicken of this county, had a fight after gambling, when Poriis was killed by the slave, who absconded and has not yet been taken. Arrest oj Crooks. Adam Crooks, the notorious abolition lecturer from Ohio, was arrested in Montgomery county, N. C , on Sunday June 15th, and lodged in the county jail at Troy, to await his trial, the next term of the Court, for an offence against the laws of the Stale. It is hop ed that the Court will deal with this in cendiary and foreign fanatic, as the out rage of his acts demand and the public safely and welfare require. Prom a late Calif or nid paper. The China Boys. Quite a number of the Celestials have arrived among us of late, enticed hither by the golden romance which has filled the world. -Scarcely a ship arrives here that does not bring an Elopement from California. The Panama Herald relates the following case of elopement: A lady at San Francisco, on the morning of the sailing of the Ten nessee, was quietly seated reading over the list of passengers who had engaged pas sage for Panama, when to her astonish ed sight there appeared the name of her husband in the list! Could she believe her own eves? She knew that her bus band's trunks were packed and that he had tnlormed her "he was obliged to 2,0 to Sacramento on business which would detain him a few days" Startled and convinced by the truth thus manifested to her, she concluded to open his trunks. where she found eight thousand dollars id hard cash. This she divided taking S3,000 and leaving 5,000, the "lion's. share,' which was exceedingly gencrou on her part. In due time the affectionate husband bade her good bye, telling hei he would be back in three or four days, and little suspecting that she was not on ly cognizant ot his villainy, but that out of his means she had provided amply for crime, and said he richly .deserved death for he had been a.viliian all his life. He had twenty wives living .and had killed sixteen men, and all he was sorry for was, that he was not permitted to live long c nough to kill four more. He and the ne gro Jack were both hung to one tree, and buried in one grave. Repentance and re morse were strangers to him. He said his father and brother were both hung. lie refused to make any further confession, as he would implicate many heads of fam ilies who passed as respectable, and would thereby leave many widows and orphans, lie met death without a shudder; was as cool as a cucumber. He repented of nothing he had done, and said he would, (if turned loose,) be as bad as ever, if not wonte. The only request he had to make, was not to be put to torture. He said he wished to be hung and decently buried." The End of a Runaway Match. Runaway matches do not usually produce those happy consequences the parties gen erally expect. The very opposite is al most always the case, notwithstanding the nonsense upon the subject written by many editors. Every parent wishes to sec his daughter properly mated, and when objection is made, it is generally from some good cause to be found in the conduct, habits or principles of the per sons objected to. The following instance which we take from a Cincinnati paper, is full of warning: Less than a year ago, a young lady, whose name we need not mention, mar ried a young gentleman living in Vicks l)urg, named Harrington, and she did so decidedly against the will of her parents, peal of all constitutional: provisions an legislative enactments which enjoin or tolerate a diflereVce in fthe; privileges o the individual, inconsequence of a differ ence in sex; That . all, avocations : and pur suits, which in thirn and conducive to ,tbe "welfare . ofman should be open to woman, if her- capaci ty qualify her for ..their jranous duties, and her attractions impel her to enter them, and that we will not withhold the means of honest industry, from those fe males who have lost their reputation for n1nciiir fihin IS itnrtxri firV . gjPTlie Spiritual, Rappers at New York are progressing as rapidly as Ohio Locos. They have' issued a paper enti tled "Disclosures from the Interior, and Superior Care for Mortals," and it claims "that the circle of Apostles and Prophets are its conductors from the Interior, hold ing control of its columns, and permitting no article to find place therein unless o riginated, dictated or admitted by them, they acting under the direction of the Lord Supreme;" and contains articles said to be. dictated by St. Paul and St. John.' That will do to humbug ib. at!that time, the Bniish .nv.T . .. uiu iiuu uieir eranarrcs f.llo.i . . ' with con.! Horrid monopoly 07? cessaries of life. Three mi while there was (bod enough nn,i .1 H locked up in the storehouses of thiPV To add to the horror wWi which now called to regard the last drcaiC nage (that of last year) we arc Car" acquainted, by the returns of the house, with the lacV that as XXJ. exported from the loner partsofl) was gal, as would have fed the who perished, lor a whole yeat1M 1. 1 - au t;il: Prop, orlnrimic onli.cloim... r . , 0 , ..... ty nglanj, , slaves cannot brpmi. England!" 1:1 says the flunke'y poet of British abomjn tions. It seems that the boast is event" er of British India than of the horrJt and. ' me,sI' -Eggs. 30,000 dozen eggs haVe been collected this season, at Ravenna, and sent to the Eastern markets, Mr. Bisscll,egg merchant, of Warren, has collected up to June 1, 500,000 eggs, making 472 'bar rels and weighing 49 Ions. Each 1000 dozen weigh a ton.;. (jpThe quantity of brandy imported into this countrv in 1S50 amounted to four millions of gallons four times the quan tity imported in 1S45. The quantity of iv!iiP4 vvn nmr fivn million's nf fTflllonS. u ho refused to let the wedding take placej , . , , , . . : . , . , . , ,., . 1 r being double the quantity imported m ......... ...o j1845 Ths fact t3ken in connection mediately for home, where thev spent C 1 r . r 1 -i 11 ti with the increase of home made liquors, J ? . . . . i is not verv flattering to the latly having all confidence in her husband, never troubled herself about his business; she knew that he provided well, and that was enough for her to know. About four List of Letters Remaining in the Post Office at Tarboro' th of July 1851, which if not taken ootbeL? 1 1st of Oct. next, will h .t J 1,10 ; Post Office as dead lettersi i Andrews Wallace 2 Harriss 11 p Barnes James 2 Hedgepeth Ric!13rd Battle J L a Johnson EJibeih , Bell K P LaneLR Ara Burroughs Elizabeth Lane Af E AJ5S BurhanceS.Dr ; Lancaster Robtt Braswell A Lewald George 2 Batts .1 F Lawrence Themas Best William ' McDowell M Mn Uarneiu uieliard is not very flattering to cause. ib. temperance herself. He left, went on boird the Ten nessee, came to this city and is now on his way to New York, whilst his deserted wife is rejoicing to think that she has so1 since, says the easily got rid of such a . contemptible : courl was sitting .? Great Game of Chess. The Cin cinnati Nonnanel says: Mr. Lowenthall. months afier they arrived, their house, lhe cc,cbrated Hungarian chess player, was visited early one morning by two po-j ,efl ll5s homc ;n , his city, a few days since, lice officers, for the purpose of arresting; or Lo,Jlion ic goes tc attend the grand .Mr. II for forirerv. In Court thei ..1 ..1 :.. .1.... I...... Iff city some time next month, and at which ; nearly all the great chess players in the world will attend. The game is to be played for a purse of 5000, (about $25, 000,) which has been made up for the oc casion by a few English gentlemen. The plan is, for thirty-two of the best players to begin sixteen games simultaneous! v, and at the close of which the sixteen beaten j players retire from Ihe contest. Eight " games will then be played at the close of Most c7 must n.sr Scene. A lew weeks iVlih ihorp will -nt I'pm :i 1 M -n! f 111 hlirore J "-'fa-"- case was made plain agiinst him and he was sent to ihe Penitentiary. The misfortune had such an effect upon lie young wife that she never left the room alive but died of ricT in two months after. Yesterday was seen as cending the landing, a hearse, containing a coffin; and a carriage following it, in which were a lady and gentleman, the father and mother. wretch, as his conduct proves him to be. Sndfen Death. Mr. Holliday, an , eminent member of the bar at Milwaukee, increase to this worthy integer of our Wisconsin, fell suddenly dead in the court population. And we hear by China pi-jroom at that place, on the 16th ult., while pers and privnte advices from that empire, ! engaged as counsel, in the trial of a case, that the feeling is spreading all through . He was on the point of objecting f o a qucs the seaboard, and as a consequence nearly tion put to a witness, (as we learn from all the vessels that are up for this coun-j the Sentinel,) when he suddenly stopped, try are so for the prospect of passengers, pressed his hand against his heart, and A few Chinamen have returned, taking said to the judge: Will your honor send home with them some thousands of dol-j for my carriage. I am too unwell to Jars in California gold, and have thus giv-; proceed.?, Several members of the bar en an impetus to the feeling of emigration immediately gathered round him, laved from their fartherland, which is not likely t his face with water, put spirits to his lips, to abate for some years to come. and led him to an open window in the Through iheir Chief here, and their A- j vestibule.- For an instant he seemed to gent, Mr. Woodward, they have got pos-! rally, but it was the last flicker of the ex session of a large tract ofland on the Mo piring lamp. A deathly palor settled np quelmnc, which they have commenced j on his feature; his eyes became glassed; cultivating; and arc fast settling it. They and faintly gasping oat, "It's all dark' arc among the most industrious, quiet, pa- j don't leave me," he sank quietly into the ueni pcopie among us. remaps ine cm-j arms of death. zeiisof.no nation excent the Germans. , 1 ' arc more quiet and valuable. They seem Summary Execution of a Wretch. to live under our laws as.if born and bred! Our readers will remember the accounts under them, and already havecommenced j which we published some weeks since of an expression of their preference by ap-'a murder committed in Washington coun lilying for citizenship, by filing their in-j ty, Ala., by aman named John il Hardin. IheN. O. Picayune, while who have not been beaten. These play ig at Paris, iti Lamar coun- four more games, after which the four re ly, lexas, and while the tavern of Mr. maining players pair off for two other Tucker was filled with lawyers, litigants, games, and then the trial game is had be- ; witnesses, &c, a robbery was committed lwcen the two remaining players. The .... . a 1 j upon the premises, attended with most lu- man wno comes off victorious in the game, dicrous circumstances. Mr. Tucker and receives the purse, and is crowned the his numerous guests retired to' their beds king player of the world. Mr. Lowen at the usual hour, and after a night of thall has gone to try for the crown and profound and undisturbed slumber awoke, purse, every mothers son of them, coat less and . pantaloonlcss some daring thief had en- Famine in India. A British writer, tered their sleeping apartments, and had recently remarking on the horrors which abstracted and carried off' every rag of some times attend Christian rule in Pagan clothing belonging to every soul in the -lands, sketches the following graphic but house. The Dunham Advertiser inti- fearful picture: mates that when the fact was known, and "Turn 3oUr eyes backward upon the the thing understood, a scries ot tableaux scenes of the past year. Go with me in vivants, of the most ludicrously interest- to the northwest provinces of the Bengal ing nature, were offered by the garment- presidency, and I will show you the less lodgers, the sufferers themselves bleached skeletons of five hundred lhous- laughiug long and heartily at the ridicu-land human beings who perished of h un ions figures each other cut while shying ger in the space of a few, short months, and dodging about in, search of their miss-; Yes, died of hunger, in what has been just ing clothing. If was not long however,! ly called the granary of the World. The before the missing garments were found air, for miles, was poisoned with the ef stacked in the public square, whither the! flu via emitted from the petrifying bodies burglar had carried them; and now came of the dead. The rivers were choked tentions in our courts. What will be the extent Oft he ni b vem en I now going on in China and here, is not easily forseen. We sh3ll undoubtedly have a very large addi tion to ourlpopulaiion-iand it may not be many .years .before the Halls of Congress are graced by; the presence of a long queuedJNlandarin sitting, voting, and speaking, beside a Don from Santa Fe, and Kunaker from Hawaii. t While writ ing the above,a letter from a Chinese in China, to a China Doy in this country, has been shown us by Mr. Gregory, and t will be forwarded by his Express toils destination at the Indian Gulch, where its Celestial reciment U any letters paVs toand "frtfbe- m. and a negro whom he had stolen, with other property, from a gentleman in Flor ida. From the correspondence of the Mobile Tribune, we obtain the seqnel of the tragic affair. It seems that Hardin was arrested in Shelby coiinty, Ala. The writer says: "He was carriad from Shelby county to Henry county, Ala. A delegation was sent from Milton, Santa Rosa county, Fla , to get him from the authorities in Alabama, and bring him to Milton, which was done. ; Yesterday he was executed in Milton by the people, without a trial. The negro who assisted him, belonged to Joseph Forsyth, was also' hung at the same'timc yesterday,. Friday, :May. 3blh at half past 12 o'clock. He confessed the Dradley W D Dryant Fred D Dennett M Rev Dennett Elizabeth Doyelt William Dilbery James Dryant H W Mrs Dryant II E Mrs Dryant Susan Mrs Dryant Dat Daker Moses Datls E L Miss Dryant Robert Cobb Amariah Cooper Dlount Eld Sugg Dr Coker John Staten V D Crumwell Elisba Cnoils Susan JNIra Carney J Mrs Delphine Virgile Downing Henry ICthcrcge Henry Edwards Mieage Former J D Fountain John Gardner M JYIrs Grimes T Mrs Harrison H Miffholl ..w.. MCUCCJ Mercer W p Manning W t) Meddallc J I Mayo Mr Mayo Henjamin Nobles A M Philpot J V Porter Crisy Rives John G Dr Rhuc Jason M Simmons William Schraden T Staten Levvt Savage Minigc 81 Speight J F Rev Sessums P Tyler John Thompson No,ih h " Titus Lunsford WillifordE Weale Joseph Whitehead C C Mrr Wiggins Wright Williams Col Williams Lewt Hoa -Wilson John B Whitehush James S. E. MOORE, P. M the serious feature of the busines every with the corpses thrown into their chan- pocket had been rummaged, every red ? nels. Mothers casfheir little ones be- cent taken, all were empty. Several em igrants had lost all their money, and the lawyers attending the court were reduced to a par with the clients who had the day before lined their pockets for them. Some four hundred and odd dollars was the net profit of that particular night's work to the enterprising projector, who got en tirely off undetected. 1 - v Reforms asked by the Woman s Rights Convention. The Woman's Rights Convention at Akron, passed res olutions 'That it is self evident that Wo man is possessed of a perfect equality with the subject of criminal injustice and gross tyranny otvthe part of r man; that we de mand the immediate modi Cc.it ion and re neath the rolling waves, because they would not sec them draw their last gasp, and feel them stiffen in their arms. Jack als and vultures approach and fasten upon the bodies of men before life was extinct. Madness, disease and despair stalked a broad, and no human power present to ar rest their progress. : "And this occurred in British India, in the reign of Victoria the First. Nor was this event extraordinary or unforeseen. Far from it. Eighteen hundred and thirr ty five witnessed a famine in the northern provinces. Eighteen hundred and twen ty two saw one in the Deccan, They have continued to increase in frequency man, in her legal, political, pecuniary,' ed-f ucational and social rights; that Woriian island extent under our sway, for more-than half a century. T Under the administration of Lord Clivc, a . famine in - the Dengal provinces swept, off three mil!ions!-and, Male Academy. THE ntes of Tuition, established by the Doard of Trustees at their meeting for the Male Academy are as follows: Spelling, Reading, Writing, Arithmetic and Geography, per session, 10,00 English Grammar, History, Al- ' , gebra, Geometry and Natural Phi losophy, 12,50 Ancient Languages, M6j01 IL T. Clarke, Secy ofDfT' June 9th, 1851. 100 Dags Rio Coffee 50 " Laguayra do Just received and for sale bv V. U. Willard. Washington N. C, 16th June 1S5K 2J0Db!s New York and Baltimore Flour fresh ground, just received and W sale by W. H. Wil- Washington N. C, 16th June 1S51. " . .... - , 50 Dbls and hlf bbls butler, soda sugar crackers fresh baked, for sale by V; II. Willard Washington, N. C. 16 June 1S51. 85 Dales Cotton . Yarn, nianiikc! by the DIount's Creek Factory, Fycl v' villeN. C, for sale by W. H.AVillard. Washington N. C , 16th June -o "- 50 Dbls P R and N 0 sugar 5 Ilhds " sugJ for sale hv vvr-i vr n 1 ati June 1S51- clMIIIIl IUII tl. ---- V. H. WilbrJ. Fish! Fishlt Fislil-