Newspapers / North Carolina Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Feb. 16, 1856, edition 1 / Page 1
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mCVOTEI TO N0UTC4R0UXA.INjrERST,EICAt IXTEIiNAL IMiJKOVIICNT, AND I10A1E M KCKETl?. lTIIESE AKEOMBINEO-THE jaSaiTY OF. THE WaTK ASHEBQROUGH, N. C. SATURDAY, FEB. 16,il85(jJ NUMBER 1; I . I S. Ii- -fl - m i h ;.iv:"' i WEEKLY BY E. 15. DItAKE, Editor, TEKMS: $2 A VEAIi, IN ADVANCK; -.50 after 3 monllis, zud $3 00 after twelve - i months from date of sub:ription. , , RATE OF ''ADVERTISING. A . f ' One dollar', per square (ixten lines) for thtf titkt week, arul twenty- fie ceat$ or very freak tliereaflsr. . Iedy;ti6ijs made Ui favor of bunding advertisements us foUaw 'lcxTits, $ 3 j0 C MOSTUa. l.YEAR 5150 S8.00 10 00 14,00 i5ao 2ofd. 25.00 35.0CJ -CooriOrJers chared 30 per cqnthigh- Oiie'tquarej Two square, 7 CO Threei((co ) 10 00 Half cQlunirii 18.00 er than the bovo r'e.-. comiommiv STOCKTON On the evening of the ICtli instm't the Ameri can party hiM mretinj in Tfcnlon, New Jer y, l' vyUcli lUy ir.rittd tho veteran Comrao dori? Ht,x k' rr.. 'i he Cornr odora is unable to utti'ii l, Lut M-ri'-U aJtttpr in which ho expresses' c n!ir; concurrence in tha. American party, . which have l);u!fcr s. many years the approyd ., of hia l;pa l an. I he art. Ha reciipitnl-ites the -A., riericm principles, tinl irges upon t'jecare taken '. y our foicfii'.her tt keep ojt jnstitutionS'Cjear ';i1 foreimi inlTjenccs, anl then pocs on as follows: 'I'm crl'iy engineers of political speculation ?c nu d.tuger, amfnevei will hco any, which il.it not lhrenten to arrest thfir profitable control of pirtic-i. ThoJ doctnna tfiat " Americans a- lone shall nil; America," Jjir;c J tj restore the . . " . ' ' covrrntiifMit it wain tlie-dav of Vahins- ' ton, to, the limilx of " Americana nSone," ia stig- mauled Ly the organized cabal of politicians who viebl Ok) machtrierj far manufacturing the in- cumteriU f oll'ce, troin that of the Presidency ' KjtvnwanJF na pesnb'nt heresyand those who , hold -.-.Iq this ancent American doctrine are de- ,nounred'as traitors ! The progress of events i rnpidy bringing the country to the condition when but two parties will contend with each otli- r Ibe one the American', the other the Foreign t4.ity. I he American party will seek the. rector. flticb nierican p opie. The foreign party will seek to the foreign element, pander to its in- get Mr. K. out of the Jdemms. that he got' him-1 self into by his too free diclosurerat the "Great Feaetv but are as dumb as the pigs, chickens and turkeyc, whose saJj, fate Jt vrts to aufll-r. Meed and die, to furnwh the wedding dinner 4n the occasion of the nuptials of John Kerr an J thj Loco Foco party of Ncrlh Caroljga, whose wct f political chastity it was once his voca tion to expose and denounce. These Journals are doubtless prudent and recogniz? the valae of the homely adage, " the least sard the sooneet men Jed," for we think it would puzz'o their combined nils t eir. how lin err could, withotlt a grtcs dcrcU'ction of 'duty to hia constit uents, bis "jcouDtry and fcimself.ad out that Northern VVhigs in Congress were false on the Slavery Question, and then go home and run for Congress as a Whig, je, and z better Whig, too, than almost anybody else. Now1, what did he mean by running as a Whig 1 CerfYinty a a member pf the Whig party, and not only of the Whig party of his own District, but cf the United Statea,;jjJ this, too,: after having 'ascer taiued that the Northern- VVbigs the most nu merous portion of the Whig party of the Union, and without whom no great end could be attain ed, wereuntrustworthy on the Slavery issuer Mr. Kerr's great cause of complcf against his old fricn Js was that they had left the whig party and become Know Nothings, whilehe preferred to stay WfciVkr,qwing .all the while, too, that the great bulk the Northern portion of the party ,'judging from Vheir Representatives iu Con-, gress, were, niggerly speaking, not worth an ex hausted chaw of llico" Tobacco. But we ask, why was this 'rawful disclosure" about Northern Whigs withheld until the 4Feast of. fat things" ot "Henderson on the Raleigh and jfiaston Jaail Road "? It was a revelation which deeply af fected n.ot only Mr, Kerr hi'nself, and his fiends and neighbors, but every slaveholder in the country, j And why was it not announced the moment the discovery was made ? Ve defy the Democratic presses to. pull ,Mr.( rIrr out'.cf.,hU difficulty without stripping him stark naked, as fir as political apparel is concerned. If they can get him out without such a disastrous result, we advise them to. quit the types and seek employ mention Railroads for the purpose of prizing En gines and trains out f snow drifts and mud holes. There is " money" in this suggestion as . sure as fate Tet'ers. Intel liircncer. thing they can gef." This was the language a 'man than whom none knew better the e vils that Popery brought intj the worlJ. its wicked ness and crimes. V He had opposed its brgotrvl ajjd withhia legions humbled thr great EeclesU astical despot ; hut the serpent was only scotched to crawl forth agiin and Lite the heels of the peo-j pie and infuse the venom of its virus into the vitals and heart's blood of unsuspecting rnilioasi of human victims 1 ' ' ' 4To thejrpread of this power in the Uuited States the American party stands opposed. The; dogmas tbat cp&e!d It claim thit the had of the church (the Popo of Rome,) is paramount to ell governments end their laws and, that its disciples owe allegiance only to him ; whose rule should 611 the whole eartbl-allegiance tc the great enemy fall the moral principles implanted in the bos om of man to knowledge and education, wher ever it may exist in any part of the rjlobe. Alle giannce to him who would pluck from the moral hemisphere the bright sun that illumines the nind of human intelligence, and envelope the universe of man . a gain in impenetrable dark less as it was when the iron heel of anti-Christ rampledin the earth the necks ;f an entire world. Union-loving Atnencans,anl woulil troubiy". none:, but Abolitionists or Disunionists, political power-seeking demagogues. -Southern men will rp?rceive, tben, that their frientls at the North look to thera for (oratipri in the advocacy of a capitation tax. JQpro-slavciy men of the South iviiQ:-A Usjiq AYith the ahti-im- mlgrSfct neh of - tho No r th; there i being no joalousy or heartburnings between the men of the Union on the question of slavery, while a union of interests regarding the stoppage cf immigration should lead them to operato in harmony. All the mechanics and working men of the North will g3 with such a combination en mousse, because the working classes at the North ne- fAthers, and though the.act rtferrt-d tn has teraporanlv dirainishtd . tie mora! weight of tHs demand, ii repeal will go Lt to gireerj voire lis iormer power, i The Cxveinorr, therefore, recoroizjenJs that fo ratVch of the Act jreferrtd to at cocfiis'wV.h the Cosstihittoa cf theTJ nited Slates and all lawslniade ia-pur-Mjccce ttereot; he repealed. t " " S j T JM Hit Past and PrticriMondUhh of - the Jiesrc. The N. York Otserrer.'io tfcf triurse of aci article im "Stavpry sar S This power and its pernicious iuflaerices do the ceSSailly abllOl tlie Companionship .American ptriy eppose having any thing to do j coairjntitioii of imt)T)rted cllCan in the affairs of this govarnment ; "as usurping, . . mi i i When the ancestors cf! those nearos? were torn from their honies in ,-lirica, by. the slavt-trau'ers in OM ) England and New England, and piacecl under the in fluence of Cristianity at the South; they were 2rccng tbs most degraded and nis erable of the human specie?, slaves ol cruel masters, the victims! of bloody su- ' l i- t ! pcrsu;u:n;s oeuevcrs ta jwitcncralt and worshippers cfhe devil. And Nhat!nov is the condition oftheir descendants? Several )f afs go ibore than 200,000 of them i ere ineobers dangerous to liberty and under no circumstances allowable to a foot hold in a land of freedom to the principle of which it has ever been inimical in all countries and in every age. i See in the "Argus" of ti.e 10th. "What Americans want and what Americans are oppos ed to"- and read carefully. ' RANDOLPH. i Eighth of January. j It is a curious fact aud one that we think en tirely worthy of notice, that those papers' which ere bitterest in their denunciations of tho .Aicer- LiSS&Jr1. have. been nioctl noisy and vociferous in their jubilations over t'4e anniversary of the battle of New Orleans. Why this should be so we cannot really divine; for on the'Stli of Jan uary ISlo General Jackson was doing exactly . , mingtori Journal conspicuvus. not only f TOPER .VaTOLUCTS OPINION OF IT bultats(j& a"Very'-jr,3Tur-,discoery propitiate.. !ent ambition and aspiring predominance, con tend for tho continuance., and extension of its rnvilegVs, cringe with servility to its dictates, end ofiVr new bribes for its friendship. The M:npte .f ict tiiatth? - next electton of a President of the United States may turn upon tho assertion orlbe renunciation by the American people of the'doctrine that Americans alone should rule America," should) be sufficient to astonish and aUrn ui. If the doctrine :r to be renounced, it wdl be owing to the overpowering force of the foreign element in our population.' Tho mighty '' p:-tve,r.bf4hat element hps been gauged by the Huluto politicians who are allied to it. 'I hey hvtj measured its length and breodth,"its,height . nnd depth, n.J they are willing to stake their Jestinieson its omnipotence. It was the Praeto. lian' 'guarls, composed of foreign merccnanec, who put up for sale the imperial purple at Rome, i And it is the foreign missionaries among us who I1 now offer rb the politicians who hold the reins pf party sway, the next Presidency, as the price cf favors to be conferred on the:n, and privileges. jcrpetuated hereafter. I. here is no country, there never has been any county, where such an issue, if sijuSTclyj fairly au.l dit:nctly presented to the people, cou! 1 be decided any other than One way, and lhat in favor of the country iSrn." I" Wit! the people' of the United States repudiate c penti'iient of this sort ? They will do no uch thin;. Already hey have arisen spontaneously and rushed to the staul.ud - inscribed with the ; srorda, Americans hall rule America."' It is vain for.p'o'it'.cians to attoinpt to arest the 'pro gress cf the American party by efl'jrts to compel it to adopts vportiocsof the creeds which distin guish other partiesi It will not thus be indaced to end.iogerthe cause in which it is engaged. Tht:i!ty of liio p9;Ye 3 c supreme lw, anJ vliil ; tint nsfjty is eViJingered, everything else i of.sjbordinale iiitcrsit. "Place none, hut A ricitcans on guard," was the orjvr of Washing , -r ton at a; crisis' of immin,nt danger. With assurances of high regard, I am yoar friend a;iJ abedieUt servant, ; K. F. STOCKTON. ; r The Jlib. John Rerr. A writer, under the signature of Old Gran ' ville," gives a pretty shirp dressing to Mr. John , Kerr for hl late lJecdrsonac performances at ; iha rnctnorablc feast. Ilelerring to Mr. Km'a 1 disappointment at the commenceaientof hia' Con A; grrssioual career in not getttng the aid and com , ; fort cn "the slavery quesli ;n , f.-oair Northern Vv'hig, which he had been led to expect, tho writer ays an arUflo in this paper had anticipa ted what ha p:g!it have said on this head. We ' rtRr again to this natter io call attention to the ''''y while' Mr. Kerr's newly acquired friends, t!ie;-C'''ocratic Jia rnaliji of North Carolina, " LayKso bedaubed him praise that you can barely J . fee white of liis eyes, not one of them, tho' V thefe. attention has been called .to it, has made .the sJ.h!ssit attempt, as fir as, we have teen, to laborers. Thesa may be counted as sure allies of any party whose efforts shall be exercised Tor the suppression of immigration. I Only let it be known that the South .will join hands with the laboring class es of uie 2ortb3 for the enactment, of a wholesome and em'cient check- I ing of the swarms of cheap; labor ers pouring into the American. la bor market of the North, and the whole host cf American working men, throughout the ; Union, will .wheel into the ranks of the Na tional American part'. Immigration , in the eyes of the manifested in outward Uv but''shou. be a rrgulallnkj pricriplr of the ruind. It not only does no oiKt Vixuktlh nine. It knows i.o limu. AVhrret er9 over tin. j, forrowibg earth, we meet a human btinj:. Charity embraces bltn in h-r frietuJiv . arn$ and calls him. !b-o;htr ,r JiiujI. ports the weak anJ fotloro pilgmn, jiH h- marches on moLrufully to bis grae. It minuters to the muid diseised, ud supplies the demand ol porrrty anjl wan. Ht is the principU vtich Pft- fr.'u; 1',. J. .. . -V - ' . " Mlichis onceasincfy exercistd Dy lhti Almiqlity towards all his creatures; f." the Bible assiiies us. ami our own obser vation corroborates' thestateieot, tbat : Ood's mercy .is ..ever all his -uorL. Let as cnljitatH this jjcodllkp Mrttie, au.l" instead of anger and revenue, atiive i. manifest love and charity ti one anoth er; '.Memphis iJxgt what wo arc doing on the 19th of January i853. i !i u n i i i v. . f. It3 v ., -, ; , laboring millions, -is the greatest dCiendirjc the altars and the firesides ot the A- h ., , , . . to evil to wiiicii tney arc exposed, and though some of them, at the ;unrtiu'ifihpnhl u t, rntnil with -ilj. mericau jeople against the designs of foreigners. .Dut amongst these clamerous patriots the Wil- br tho wnicn This benighted Religion which through so many.ages has enslaved millions of human be ings, and If ft its. foot prints on the gore of count less numbers of devoted victims in every land where the bloody banner of tae Pope by the min ions of hispower has been unfurled, appears rampant to establish itself in the laud of Wash ington, and those who died trom its sanguinary cruelty in the old, to find an asylum in the new world. But the means used to circumvent this end here ara very ''different from what are en forced there where the r.ommands of tho l'ope are above the civil laws, and surpported by eccle siastical and military tyrannical rule power is supreme without legard hi 6'jbjecte, whofee enlightenment in the nineteenth century than it was centuries ago, when the grossest ignorance prevailed, and the most horrid crimes were pardoned by a purchase of an assumed power to , for give cins ! Jsor have these monstrous assump tions ceased from being practiced even at this day by wicked Priests, who, in accordance with their religion which inculcates the meanest avarice after the things of thin world, stops short of no thing that will secure to them and their church a large share of "filthy lucre," in order to serve the devil. Hilt in the United States the popish policy to .propegate itself dilT-rs from the right, to command Which it exercises in the old world, and proceeds with extreme caution and subtlety and .therefore ismore dangerous to our country and government, which it would e'i2e on and control if it could : hoping for a time when this country shall filf an easy prey to its influence and power. Hence we see it very meek and submissive when charged wiih its well known' I obliquities oppressions crimes, murders, sed uctions, horrid tortures of quivering victims that were burnt at the stake because they would not acknowledge the infallibility cf fcnraan monater who wickedly assumed to be the vice-gerent of God. and do him homage.! A''e see it in the stealthy but rapid strides of iirporn5ihunure.ds of thousands of Catholic subjects into the coun try, annually, and the pains-taking ofmating natives converts to that religion. Ve see it. in all tho appliances ta snbstitute ignorance for wis dom, and keep the human mind 'in dark ignor ance. We see it as it was a thousand years ago, hovering over the world, on ita laden wings to en slave men and rob them of their liberties and their substance in the name of heaven, desolating by hypocrisy,, deceit and all manner of wickedness, under a pretended holy religion, that emanated fromthe Evil one. It was this knowledge of it that had penetrated the mind of the moct acute an J remarkable man of his age, Napoleon Bonapart, when ineon versation with Las Casses at the island of SL Helena, he said: "How is it pcsiblo that convic tion can find its way to our hearts when we have the absurd language, and witness the acts of ini quity, ci the createatcaonbef cs'Xhose whose busi ness it is to teach us. I am surrounded with priests who preach incessantly that their religion is not I of this world and yet they lay bands upon every ! other issue, and make ajdi-imnunra- Pmvtrrp- vi frr nri. rpsorved fnr i finm nf i ! - - . o j., , . . such uncommon astuteness. That discovery ll0il tllC One great, 0 ClSliaUOU lHg that General Jackson, great and hercic as he un- ' question of the daV JTllC paiipCl'S j doubtedly was, wasj!Ot entitled to the whole of j j cJienp laborers iVoill EllfOpO tha credit of that remarkable day. The" noble i i' , i i' n Ji , r ;t u . -i .u ! are now Kiioc.Kiiir tuuuiy at tuu volunteers, farmers and hunters, men from tho " , i cj cn south-west and' the 'north-west, who rallied a- doQrS of . tllO boiltheiTl btatOS round Andrew Jackson at the call oftheir coun- they need the places of tllC slaVCS, try, and with tried rifles drove back the flower of j !.m( l011o- to SUppLlllt them, 111 tliO the English Infantry,'' were-entitled to a t.ortion I ! , '- c xiin . .. . , , , - Ct. A Mnioro temperate regions ot the ot the praise ! Who but a genius of the first or- i ; t . " der would have made such a discovery as .this 1 'jjSoutll. lUCir KipS and demands But it is not provided by Providence that pnc I for admission will become louder rptestant evangelical cburchps in the sJavehohiing Slated About 10,000 mercan negroes, trained; chijtiJ)' at tL Sniith. tr;inst l.in?p:' in Litinri- n.-nu rtTT nearly 300,000 natives of Africa, and through their schools and j churches are spreading the light and lave of the gnspel in that land of darkness and heathenism, i,It iy.lniethat nicre than nine 'terths oflhe negroes at the Squthlire sltll slaVe! but ii slaver- under Christian masters in America, the saraeeii! wilhVUvery wil der heathen 'grants in Africa? Degraded asf they are, these slaves may still be com pared witb.ths'socs of the; pilgrims ia N. England, or evu; with th mass ot labor- ers in some bf the . enlivened countries iu Europe. .Can 3,000,000 or 1, 000,00 J negroe, bond or free, tejfuwd Jn any part of the world, who can compare lor good condition, physicnl, ictellectual and moral, with the 3,000,OQO slaves at the feouth?- .Has Cnstiataty, aided bruJUbtL i j , r u -:, : rwTi rt 4 iieTI-rrufynjiiTi-.T vation of the c00,00i) emancipated ne groes in the iU'est Indies, 3ritih philan thropists thernsehes being the judges ol what'it has elected jhe"re,?asit h2J dom duTiug the same peril) J lot ih cfeva!ion? ot our 3,000,00j American From the Greensboro' Times. A Mother's Smile Mnkes a Happy Home. Who does: net know te' worth of a genlto mother ! Wha caotit look back upon .happy days spent by her side, aod imagine that he gain frels the sweet ki and forf.l embrace !. gse hiro vhen prailin cbdd ! Who caVin. t recollect a inothrr's a; probating suvlr, lor' tl.j performance of an act of kiiJn, and rr h. t extrnJe l band held out to welcxne hr Jjrlm boy acr su'c.ajniu ! It there i on, Le has never known Uu hj, . pme. ; he has inie I int f thr trui pl. ures ol life ; he is uot as graceful aud rrlWJ tu maunijs. rur.ii loving auJ kiuJ ia dinpoi'in ; ;and hU diciue h spleen . one continued cm ot gl.xtru and disccuragetm nt. And why u thi' The Ur of his h:uc has fj'.letj, and he has n mother to cheer and instruct him. ' All wljo once hsd a good mother, had a hsp py hme. Xl'.hough the father m iy be aevrre, and plfuty may not abound, yet the pUyful rh'i dren regard it -not wlhile by their uiothor, bak. ing in the senshine c: hr smiles. ' Th rule. There his mind, however great, shall discover every thing; ! iU1 J m0re imperative as North and d to the wilicftbe;e isone thing which iyeems even the ' ; L nc moro Hooded With nt is little better J Wilmington Journal he. not been able to find r..;nfrwnvu TUSnnfl, ! chahity: AYbat a beautiful system of morality dos the New Testaiueiitj contain, and how imperfectly' is', it understood, cud still mote itnperlecily practised, by even those who claim the natnejof Christians. The great. law by whielf it, binds society 11 I.! ... ..1- TUCJ,,4l 1 !o ilia Ijip r n-rllf '..r- out: that is that there were resuiin" in .ew WL'ua-iocaiu uuiu. ..j-uvwuu. , j. T--v Orleans on the 8th of January 1 3 1 . a gre ny citizens of foreign birth who did not ra round Andrew Jackson in the memorable EIC VI IUa( UJT M V V U, t till' UVt blUtftA U3fc . v a he told, they threw so . mauy impediments in the j inl? llie fGUiiiry noui x-imopL.: contracted and inadequate the detinitioi.! way of the commanding General, and their con- II" Up guards, and at them? should I Charity, instead of being.iimited to alms duct was altogether so very equivocal, that" An- ;jC the cry let the abolitionist a- giving, tnayj permeate every thought and drew Jackson" d?emed it prudent to place the j i t,v wnn1l ilio nut inin action cf bur lives, 8nJ color the COm- City under martial law. lie was like oursclf : I' - . . . ... ., , c WlLll UlU iiULi-iuiiiiiiiiaiiuuirsio atmu- ;;is being hem-Uiei.in and gradually wuoprptess m-.ive ny it, know even, f'jr crowded unon bv the enoniious in- f V1 ,,,m strusr-' r, nil i i it, in most e2se,ioine giving o; aiuis.atiu t r .r c i he re hrl nl niivsieal &iit!frimv. It.iu .... i - -1 - 1-- the North, and the work is done. Gov. Gardnrys JILxsage.-r -The thief he had not much confidence in the patriotism of those who turn their backs on the country of their .birth and' become clamorous in their criticicris the natives whom they find in their adopted lij-imA A r ffKid t at a f rt nrViK Tr . Ana tKss .iorai -iii hv. .h Mn,o. tn r..mmUnite t, PQm.t of interest in the Message ot Gov its readers. .It may ed.fy these r.oisey patriots Gardner, of Massachusetts, relates to the about Long' Creek a;d Pui! Tail who are so "Personal Liberty Bill. " : He says: anxious to fee native Americans eztermioatedi Tre passage of) this Act is deeply to and have the reins of government committed to be dep!oreil, because " it asserts to, l?ok the hands of foreign criminals and fugitives from after the maintenance cf rightsnotcloaily justice for offences agaiost the governments tha i j anti constitilUonallj ours,' which COUISe brought them up N. C Argus. From the Montgomery Alabama) Mail. A FEW PLAIN THOUGHTS, PLAINLY '. ' TOLD. i it . 0c ! plexion oi ail our conuuc:. Let us see now much i tins, virtus .is neglected. I.Whtn a neighbor's name becomes the, subject of conversation, and his conduct the j topic clj remark, is it Charity, think you, which.1 prompts you would be Christian, to repeat the rumer of detraction, to indulge in the sneer ol ridicule or the raalltious icnendo which sabs a reputation mre ljrally than the most circumstantial accusafiou? What is it lhat so often kindles strife, and lights the fires of revenge, and utterly destroys of action, in my Inaugural Address, I streuuouslv urged the last Legislature to i those "small, sweet chari?ie" ih-at t- . - . . I . . a - li t I der ieji icasure, aim r.Qce aosenre makes the world a rbeerl?s and arid desert? Is it that Charity that "sufieretb aroid because it weakens the .moral effecftfth'e iutlaence of our State, be cause it sets an example which, if follow The representative preponder- ed by other members of the conledracy, ance of the free States i3 owing to foreign immigration- the hasty mardifaCrtue of ." citizens" out of tJie crude anu raw loreign material thus increasing the elective1 pow der , of te Nor that a rapid and dan gerous irete. This is one reason ! why Southern men should adopt the LNattonal American creed, a cardinal! principle which is the im position I of - a capitation tax .ujcn the heads of immigrants deported to this country. Such a capitation orcen war will most. certainlv destroy our only bond of onion, and. because it tentis to an armed. conflict between tbc State and tbe National Governments. Either the law must remain a dead letter on our statute becky unenforced when the hour of trial cornts, th-is reducing Massachusetts to the humiliating position of enacting a law she. has not the courage to enforce, or else, it the attempt is made, it ruust be supported by the whole military array of the State in.direcl and immediate con flict with tbe army of the United; States. There is no alternative but submission, tax, long advocated by the " Old Guard" Native Americans, would shut off the increasing representa tive! power of the North ; which shutting off would not grieve the While Massachusetts will be loyal to her constitutional obligations, she de mands tbat all. fcer. .constitutional rights shall be n spected. She asks tbe fulf.hrent cf national compacts, the1 faitblul per formance of the sacrtd ?greem?Ets the long and is kind," and that 'thinkelh no evil," or rather, is it not an emauation of that unhallowed dif position which is the cflfpring cl "hatred, of selfishness, atul guih? The slanderer is almost in variably guilty cf the cr?ferie -be would fix upon others. Conscious cf h.is bare ness and degradation, be is anxious to drap; all others down to hi ojn level, and exult ini their degradation, in order that he himself may eicapetle.ccxidem- nalion of society. j t'Charty thinktth no evil.' Ah, wlat an ruen our wonu uuw uc, mcic. thi all prevailiug law cf, li.'e,if, in stead cf raasackine every r.co!c and cranny to collect food for gossip and re-rrimina'ion- we should Fprea J the man tle of Charity over cur neighbor's faults, ar.d over looking his errors shoold de light to expatiate upon bis ccrits and his virtue pnly! Charity U cot only It was.cclJ.auJ Jreary evroiae th su.w had fallen derpJark clou 1 cer. J Ih face of tbe bevnjL 1 '"vCoitu a (;oJ I 3 galer'cd ground the cheerful firrsiJ. fu an obscure part of t!w vilLge there baj 10. ided a large nl tr,u'y happy fa nily ; but uo.v as 1 entered the d welting, I iw four small ch l. Jren seated over a, few dying embers, nearly starved aud half t'rezru. AtonithrJ and lavil dered, J cyd twkin.upo t the heart rcttdin scene. What cuiiJ jve caud Ji sudd.d change ! .They looked yj sad said: - We Laye uo oiamiua now !" And tlwir eyea vpi sad t";.- ae they :ok l3i aorrwful aentcuor. Thii wa ruoUh. ' he aod ta!e was revc!al. Some day bifux., ,.;hj mother U l ci her children to her bed side and siren lUeai her Ut ttilbful advij;'and while otfViin,; up a tjye( for those he lov.d, her rInt cian d t the nu in whom he Uu:d. ; Thr Jtht-r, Uvir. tresed, had sought torgetfalurvs,' as men oAcu . do in the bottle. Tis true, ths father's loss . waa feat, hut ti.9 .vphaus greater. II ca 1 consols himself with the thought fUi of iu- other companiou but where cau the childim get another oother 1 v liut let us ook iuV.sJbappf hone, and a .w ill behold a.sccf.erintirely dulert nt. Te 6. ia brightly flowing in the grate ; lb I.tll ra. naties are sweetly aiogiog ; the Jifff-rrnt peu ' sleeping while the dignified lo!d father si's reading in tbe corner. The raulier, never lire.! of imparting. trwvrjrdge to!tyr bjyely chiUreu. gather tboa around her. ,'J't.ey are for(tful ( all else, bein; abo?WcI in a n wihrr'a loe arl spsK booi.d by her angelic stnile. 'lLt ihry a'l gather to jour onttteir ch:IJh rf Ui ympa'.hisiog uothcr, ami learofraui L-r f love, meekness su! frgiveoea. s 2ite arc to gret ur loo vt ia to rer t.il. sunny djs of chudiou ; or U forrl the km. I tie of a gentte mother. The teamed nd tli ' ignorant, tbe prmc awd ths pssat all f5ltb- same 'amotions on couleroplauog the pleaar of a happy home and a mother's ui!e. .Tlten Ut!l who have a &ober. be kind Let. We know not her value until we Lat acstatacd her loaa. And let us n,t Un(tl ti I kind to tho who have ao mother, aru! iryt.1 male themfecthat they are not a!n anJ at.-: caved lor, tut that sympathising frWoda anl loving hearts will mioglc their Usr with tho of the orphan, and share U tbrir reultip!iJ sor row. 1V iLetn.ihe .'preaectia all gr'C ihV fu. tare an cnsulved mystery. whilalW past lfs Lack recollections of a dcvouJ maibrwhictt though hallowed by naoy pIaaot ihohu, yet caate thesoul to sink. a&U the foLateal g!io ccrof ho;i giveap Uiieapair, ' ,Uct why shoold ths orphan b sal 1 Ttt mother, alth-oqjb deaJ, yet she livcth. alt!u; UQseeo, yi aa covers aroanu, so I ! her chuJ. Meaner wouU tbe eorjyerof fil Lis eoo'iCftt and tdegmt hia ool! dJa( t'a that a moroer will eeaa to lav her rh'A J. . rLORTqr. Orstfs Bower, Ja.t, 'iS. . t rvV. 1" "A v i, 1 1 ! i 7. v
North Carolina Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 16, 1856, edition 1
1
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