SEPT. 4, 18G6. 1 C???,Vn sriADOWS BEFORE." fffiO UUSCAlo wv-w-j . - . of men and things, are apt to get a -3 . i Vhtinto the future to en- .- ,JlC3 o f determine, with some de- of certainty, what will be, the type Ltof coming events, , at least, in the sl orld; and we hardly think a Wd, close thinker and examiner, scans critically the Tarying shades :'JconJplicated movements of Northern t&nent on the political topics of the ff viH fail to get a glimpse into the i',ricter of the next Congress. orthern senumenua uemy mvwiB t'ftfid. weighed and measured, and ere iB approaching elections, that sentiment ' 3 be thoroughly matured and prepared ' the'emergencies of the occasion, Ua extremists in both sections will be disappointed, by the election, of U.-nblicaris ho will maintain, intact, e Republican organization, and still eet, folly- the demands of the Nf-rthern opleon ths subject of 'reconstruction. t The New York Post is published by -en'who do not suffer themselves to be- one so blinded by party prejudice and passion as to lose sight of the throbbings i great popular heart, and that paT per indulges in the following language: . The Congressional Nomination. j We bear from the West that the Bepublican 1 Conventions are nominating, for JLost part, candidates who favor the inune mission to Congress of members from all imitates, subject to the constitutional decision if each House. We hope that the Bepublican inminatins? conventions in this and other Eastern tes will do the same. : . .1 TJoue time we thought this of but little im portance, because we believed that the present Cobcw. as soon as it reassembled in December, ould dismiss the Joint Committee on Becon liroction, and admit to their stoU all claimants vbo could take the established oaths. We have found reason to believe since then, however, that tha vindictive obstinate men who have gained the Hetmblican majority in Coh- mss are follj determined to carry out their de csbi at all hazards, and, that they will refuse to idrnit the SUtes. They Have ruiea so aespoucuiijr ia Uus Congress that they may have the influence to rule that body during the remainaer 01 ii rr rt the Southern States, lately in rebellion, ;rf.nrA imd therefore tne nuesuon, utiuw jhill be represented in Congress is forced upon On that question we believe the majority of the KnrthAm TKVonle ' do - not hold With JM6SSTS. RtiT.n And Snmner. They are tired of a method cf reconstruction" which appears endless, and wbicn after eight months has reconstructed noth ing. They want something done, and they are conscious that Congress has nos done, out oniy obstructed everything. They believe that con- tress has supreme authority in the matter onaer h9 Constitution; and ""they wouia, we tjelieve, kiTe supported Congress, had it last 'December, is soon as it met, condemned the whole recon struction acts of the President, and proceeded to irwrolar and constitutional reorganization of I frremment in the bonthern States provided 1 ta bad been speedy. ' But it is now too late let Congress chose to do nothing of the kind, i liu, as Governor Morton and other recognized i'pablican leaders declare, accepted the Presi- it'i acts of reconstruction; it does not mean, m these centlemen tell. us, and as the action of Cssgtess ptOTes, to disturb what the President f-bs done. It only means to do something more; asithat something is so arranged that it yirtual- I IT mita off th rpvnsstrnetion. And fintinnpj thA present disorganized state of the country inden fcitely. ".. . . -I . Wow, we shall not argue the right of Congress to do ta:s ; we only say that it is not good policy; ul it injures the country ; that it keeps open lad inflames old wounds ; that it perpetuates a miscaieyous stnft; that it strengthens prejudi ces and hatreds on both sides : that it affords treat opportuaites for wicked and ambitious men to raise falsa issues in our politics ; and finally, that it continues the country in what is actually a siacs or war and revolution, a condition in vaieh whether the Executive observe the laws or sot, whether itj respects the Constitution or it m matter to oe aeciaea oy its gooa yiUaadjudzmentalflne. . ... - . There is no s afatr nothing but the most terri- Wsdacger to tbt country in such a state of iaily. tats danger increases. :ih are tfcrttteasdno with the gravest misfortunes that tu kappea to a country,. Congress leaves us in J revolutionary ' state ; how far off is anarchy t ncieiy is neia togetner, tnts a ay, in Aaitrica, by the mere good sense and forbearance eiuuni ; hut how long will this endure) 7 It ia KUtie or wise to a train e verr thin tt in this way t Oct only safety lies in the Quickest possible- to strict constitutional forms. There fc7 U risks ia thaL as some well mean in r men as- rt,Ht the risks we are now runing are isfinite- '7 ireiter. Under the Constitution, with all the of our complex goyernment working with rity, we may hope to gain all that is de fcwie by the safe course of argument jtnd discus wa. We cannot gain it in any other way secure not establish the Millennium by a ilitrJ gtneral order ; we cannot - put off upon "general government the work which citixens Mt do. Wejcannot aehieve in Mississippi, by Jjwet, a reform of public opinion which was Jjte4 ia Massachusetts, and New York and only by long, patient and persistent argu- ,wTe the right of free discussion let it 3i The men who, with Congress, propose p the states -out, and thus keep the coun v'tt disorder, decline to use' or exercise this They assert that it wonld be dangerous ! tans they make it dangerous, perhaps. jWieia' try it;they will find it safe eaongh. r that is the only way to reform the southern Ir--6y through, persistent, - continued, irrep- ioiscus3ion. Every southern state should l?mPd " this fall and winter by ihe ablest Ucb 1 1 7 "i"1 ua lecturers ; a gran a ia- "vu . . . atiTn t V0nTentl0n republicans should letlN, 1,1 a Bmthern city as eoonas possible; rH : southern men should be called to speak -Vythe 8outlu - 7 tatv M 11x6 Plican party refuses to be iVr.W0k' 10 lo8 docs ifc bject itself to be fea1i? n actional party. So long as it taf 7 0a Congress, or on the . military arm, t tawli? force of rgttmcnt, so long will it Tv lr4ruin. Pople of this country want things done : im " 'V4W4t wuiie ieaa:nz northern men sceak i -v t" fcuvuga, wues rir--,-T eii, ana au the other mere ob waUUwhn, wUUyer their merits, had not the - one - merit of getting. , ahead. So they want constitutional goyernment restored, they want to see the country safely back under the old safeguards and forms, with all the machinery working ; and they will brush aside all mere ob structionists, xhey ao nos. care .whether scheme of reconstruction is ingenious or the re verse what they demand is something that wii work.- and work at once. McClelland plans were correct and full of sciemee no doubt, but they did no beat the enemy, therefoi e he was dis placed. Grant's plans. West Pointers used to tell us, had yery little merit but Grant did the work and he is rightfully GeneraL ".We hope - the Republicans everywhere will put lA.nomination good men, lovers of lawful liber ty; and we hope . that for ' Congress they will nominate only men who see the importance. first or an, or admitting all the states to repre sentation, and thus bringing the country back under the : saf. guards of the Constitution,': and rescuing it from its present revolutionary condi tion. . . ; - We have invariably contended that cer- tain politicians in tnia otate , are so warped by party and sectional prejudice that they cannot see treason or treachry in any except' toso ' who are guilty ; of infidelity to the Confederacy, and the Raleigh Sentinel corroborates our state ments. That paper, in speaking of the approaching Convention to assemble at Independence Hall, in Philadelphia, on the" 3rd of SeDtember. calls it "the trai tors' Convention." Traitors to wnat t Why, to the Confederacy, of course. Then according to the Sentinel, it is dis graceful to be a traitor to the Confed eracy which according to its present theory, never was a government, but an illegal, unauthorized mob, in rebellion against the United States. We say, "according to its own'theory," for it en- dorces Andy Johnson's ' theory, and certainly that is his theory. The Presi-: dent says that the States were never out of the Union, but that those who fought against the United States Governments were traitors and guilty of treason this is the foundation stone of the President's reconstruction policy: and yet the Senti nel says he endorses . the President's policy, out and out Then how does the Sentinel make it pt that those men who stood firm to the United States Govern ment throughout the fight, are .traitors, and now 'deserve - they odium of the people. , , How will the " . Sentinel t explain this? Does not that paper see that it is either a hypocrite or a; slanderer ? If these men who' are to meet in Philadel phia are traitors, then the President is a traitor too. The Sentinel should . be more cautious how it speaks, and con stantly bear in mind that it never can restore this country to peace and quiet by the indulgence' of such vituperation. I THE NEW ORLEANS 1UOT. . We surrender a large portion of our space to-day, to the ofiicial dispatches which passed between the authorities at Washinjgton and New Orleans, during the late not at the latter place. JSearly every paper in the country, has, first or last, indulged in '' extensive comments upon this unfortunate anair, and many of -them very foolishly, as we have thought ; but we have refrained, and shall continue to refrain. We have waited patiently for the ofiicial proceed- ings in tne case, ana naving receivea . i a them in full, we hasten to give them to the public, and beg that they will make their own comments. . . Creation and Auwcr. (' To the Editors the Evening Tost : The Evening Post continues to press upon the jEtepnblican party tne importance ox Holding a convenuon in, we soau ; ana oz senaing Ae pnoucan speakers uirouga uio ooauu - f -Does not the Evening Post know that the life of every such "invader" wonld probably be sa- enned : - ;r- -'.-- Lu- Coeton, August 21, 1868. ' ' .- : The Evening Post knows nothing of the kind. We are amazed to find that so sensible a person as our correspondent believes any such, nonsense. We urge that the Republican party snau Hold as soon as possible a national convention in some Southern city. Does oar correspondent believe that such a convention wonld be molested or un lawfully interferred with ? We urge that a Re publican party shall be organized in every South ern State, and that the best speakers from the North should be sent down to help lay the Be publican doctrine before the Southern people. Does our correspondent pretend to believe such men would 'probably, be sacrificed. So long as the Bepablican party of the North ' gives the cold shoulder to Southern loyalists, it is probable these will be treated with bitterness and con tempt by ex-rebels, who now ; taunt them" with the desertion of their Republican friends. 2feio York Post. - , The Post is right in saying that dis cussion should be free, and we believe with it, that free discussion is the only way to break down the sectional preju dices' of our country. , 'We believe : in free discussion and our uniform course has been to publish the arguments j of both sides and what is the result ? We have been denounced as a Radical for so doing from one' end of the . State a ft ,a. . 1 . to tne otner oy sucn . papers as the Kaleigh Sentinel " and should Re publican speakers come down among us to address the people, , the masses would not have independence enough to go to hear them for fear of being denounced in the same way by these same time servers. : Their audiancesw ould be Very smaU this.ia ottr opinion. : ? 4 N"E"WB E EN "WE E ELY TIMES'. THE CHICAGO; EXCDRSION. 7 The President left the "Capital yester day, .accompanied by the V General of the United States Army, the Admiral of the Navy, several members of his Cabi net and their families; and other distin guished personages, to be present at the laying of the corner stone of the Doug las' monument at Chicago in his native State. ; Great - preparations are making at New York city and other points along the route for grand ovations and splendid displays:;; ..; . ; ;:l ' v; i-l ; : This movement has more, of politics in it than recreation to the President and his distinguished attendants. ? Happen ing, as it does, just upon the eve of the elections, the occasion " will be seized upon, by politicians and wire pullers, to draw out. a. full elucidation of the faith and creed of the great American Chief and his satelites. Grand receptions and pompous ova tions are almost exclusively relied upon these days to give cast and direction to public sentiment, and this occasion will be turned to good account; - Every cross road politician between Washington city and the great commercial mart x of the, West, will try to get a gjimpse of the President and hear a wo-X-d from his lips, that they may r have ifbmething out ; of which to manufacture capital for self and ' the party." : '-f. ; By the. way, 'it is a good tune for all hands to keep a sharp lookout, for the President's policy" will be fully elabor a ted cmnnsr tne voyaere, ana u any are in. doubt as to what - it j is touching, any given point of political doctrine, they may be fully enlightened by keeping an eye to the papers. The President will be called out at all the prominent points, and he will have to s make speeches, and it must be borne in mind that Gobiqht and other, telegraphers and reporters ac company ihe 'partyj Then, if the waver ing an'VoabtngVV; have to dp is to read the papers. : . ; We suppose, of course, the Cleveland. Soldier a!nd s Sailor Convention will - be taken in the programme, and the scene at mat city, ,wui pe yery oinereni. . irum what it was when we visited it in the spring" of last . year. ,Then the city was draped in mourning from one end to the other, and hundreds of thousands of people wept over, the mortal remains of Abraham Xcoiir;fas.his;'lifeleb'od was born slowly along to its last .t resting place. Then the people mourned oyer a aeaa c;nieiiain ; now tney win xejuivc over tne full Dust a nve jrresiaeni., and jrftitv and hilarity will be the order of the day. ).," ' ; 'v. V; . . , We are getting impatient with Presi dents and big; men generally. Why don t they come down boutn some times? Always, when they are going to get on a bust , and have a! great excursion and bier time generally, they go out North. East or WestTand we little folks down South never J get to see them. Buchanan did condescend to come to North Carolina once during his term, but he lost, all his greatness afterwards, and we do not now feel the effects of the distinction thus conferred upon us. Why dont some of pur great men die so that we could haye a monument-raising and get up "a great reception for' our distmguished rueirs ? - Truly, America is great and Americans are great people F. P. V. PliAYING OUT. ' We; clip the following fronx the Nor folk Day BtioJc, and would invite the spe cial attention of our readers to it. The time has nearly passed when blood alone can set a man forward in society merit and money will be the . test of worth and he who is without them will haye to take a lower seat here, as! well as in Vir ginia:: - . - - - --i;: ; - ;': Tlte 2XeensuUe.Arts. v , Our people here in Norfolk do not seem to realize the change in their social condition. In uOUUng la Villa junto, piouujr - beexx iuau ill uitt fact that so very few of the youth have embraced mechanical pursuits. The time was when these occupations were not looked down upon in Vir ginia, and we could point out many families in this city of the very highest social standing, whose fathers were mechanics,' and yet of the same enviable position as their descendants. We will not attempt in this place to account for the very absurd prejudice which now. exists against employing our hands for the purpose for which they were made. Suffice it to say, that foolish as it is it is of very modern growth, and unknown to our forefathers ; we trust that it will be equally unknown to our descendants. Our DeoDle do not reflect that such a convul sion has occurred that it has revolutionized every thing, not only political, - but social also. The leaders of our cities will, in future times, be not exclusively our professional men, but our manu facturers and mechanics. In all communities, hereafter, money' will be the supreme ruler, and the best chance for making money will be ex cellence in the mechanic arts. : : " : : Let parents think of the social position of their sons when thev shall be required to perform their parts on the great stage of human life, and quali- xy tnem xozis, dv naymg wcu wuguw ubu ; - ThinJC it not aeoasmg io your prey doj w see him. in a red flannel shirt, with his face all begrimed with smut. It is the sign that he will, in after days; keep up the social standing of his forefathers, for by alining vigorously his sledge hsmmer; or drlving his saw, he will make mouev: but if be he mut sink in theocial ecaleTen yearn fnml this time such will have been the chanze. that family connections and aristocratio blood will go but a yery small way towards1 keeping a man V heaid above water ; these corks wi:l be tornfroni the -young swimmer, and, in most instances, if he has not strong arms he must - sink. . . Tfesay no.hing agaimt the prof cjsioris, as they are called. If a lad has decided, natural bent for law or medicine, let him pursue it by all means. v All we mean to assert is, as but very few succeed in these lines of life, and as th j msjority of those who .'try the various branches of merchandise find ; them precarious, we should devote our children to those pursuits in life ' which are the most .certain in thoir re sults, which give the most remuneration to exer tion and natural talent, and which are sure, in the times to come," to i confer high social position and influence on aij wao excei ia ueo. What shonld be our demeanor to wards our recent enemies ? . .This ques tion arises oyer the length and breadth of thend ; but perhaps at no place nor timejfaith great interest and importance thpi at the present moment, and in the city of, Newbern. v This is evident to the most , stupid. The wayfaring man, tno a iool, can see that harmony and; co-opporation are ab solutely necessary! to enable us to recover from bur losses by the war ; and it is no difficult matter to foresee that unless such a course is pursued by our leading citizens, as will bring about this co-operation, there is but little hope of soon regaining our iormer peace ana pros perity. , ' - ..!-.".. We do not now propose to treat of this subject in the manner laid down by the golden rule; A great deal may be said in that view of it ; but we are ;free to say, we suspect thej practical and po litic side of the question will, have : most weight , with a majority of those we wish to address. What then is the best policy to observe; in our intercourse with our recent enemies ? Our yankee cotemporaries would answer ; the ques tion by asking another. They would ask what was most jessential to our rapid recovery from the tuin and loss of the war? And when we had answered: that capital, energy and increase of popula lation were the requisites, they would tell us to foster that class of people which to t he greatest extent 1 combines these essentials.' u; , . ' , . True this is "yankee", advice--but is it not perfectly true, and the most po litic course we can adopt ? Let us strip the question of all per sonal and . revengeful feelings. Let us , realize that the war is over, and. that the situation of our affairs both socially, po litically, and in every other way have been changed. The entire : system of our life and labor has been altered. J ; We Der force to relin- quish theidea of continuing a great ag- nV.nltiiral neonle. and must henceforth develope pur mineral, commercial and manufacturing resources as means oi support We can no . longer gaze at labor from a far off, for it has taken the wings of the morning or some other; con veyance, and departed in the immediate fear of Sherman's army. We are now compelled to go to work ourselves. But the white man cannot work in the cotton-field says one. i He must then depend upon hired labor, and his hands must be paid. . : We are aware that some old fogy will ask," where is the money to come from to pay for this hired labor, and this is the very question most wanted to an swer. Let the land-holders in these Southern States,- and particularly in this portion of North Carolina, but sell off their surplus lands at a fair price, and the country will at once be flooded with greenbacks in sufficient quantities .for this, as well as all other needful pur poses. Harmony and concert should be the watch-words of all who expect to rise and prosper in the future. These thoughts were suggested by reading the following extract from the pen of Gen. D. H. Hrxii in his "The Land we Love i We haye been asked by a lady friend how we qpght to treat "our late enemies.". As her letter is without a signature, we suspect that there may be some tenderness in the inquiry, and will Uerefore deal tenderly with the subject. i- It is a safe rule to recognize the gentleman and m an ox nonor wnerever ; zouiw, w ww execA. sect- or nation. "We cannot understand how men, who have fought each other squarely and bravely, " can continue to hate each other after hostilities have ceasea. . THE RURAL GENTLEMAM. The second number of this handsome periodical is on our table, filled with a great variety of rich " instructive and pleasing lessons)! real country life and agricultural happiness and prosperity. One Dollar sent to J. B. Robinson & Co., No. 2, North Eutaw . street,' Baltimore, will insure a .copy of this valuable work for one yer, and no farmer., should be without it. Then why not send and get it? ; I 'THE SOLDIERS CONVENTION Whatever may be said of the address u- JL je :run ana principles set iunu uj vi-iu jl iiuiuci phia Convention, it is now settled, be yond controversy, that the general ten dency of. the -influence exerted by. that body was for' good rather than eviL -Already has ; it' 'done much to soften the asperities and enmity engendered by the recent civil war, and the indications are that the principles and platform enunci ated by it, will give more general ; satis faction, and be more unanimously adop t- ed by the good and - pure men of the country than any document which, has emenated from a "political body since the revolution. V-; ; - V One of the earliest fruits of this convo cation, and perhaps an offspring which will prove greater in importance and in terest than its progenetor, is the Soldiers Convention which is to beheld in Cleve land on the 17th of September. s Our dispatches of yesterday give a very promising.aspect -to this projected assemblage. A large number of , Federal officers, from; all quarters of the North, have already subscribed to the call, and -hundreds of others are daily joining in the movement. Among these we note many names of the 'most brilliant re- cord during the war, and it is no mere . conjecture to1 say that Gen. Grant will head the list himself. We shall then, in all probability, have something like a party organization in support of the President, These plain, -straight-forward soldiers have learned obedience to the constitution and the laws of the land, by hard knocks in the field. : They recognize the duty of yield ing what is due to the constituted au thorities and the Executive, into whose. guidance the affairs of the : country have been placed; and in the future, as in the past, they will i prove their devotion V to principle, truth and right with an unan imity which will lift the National Union Party as far above the cess pool of dem agogical " Copperheadism" as Heaven is separated from the gulf of iniquity. , The ostensible object bf this Conven-, tion is to indorse the President and his policy. But we shrewdly suspect a plat- form of principles will be set forth which will leayeVthe President far behind ? in the work of restoration. . It will differ 1 from the Philadelphia Convention and the Presidential policy in this particular, that it will be a more certain index of popular sentiment North than either of them. The one might be the creature of personal or J partisan feelings,, and the other the creation of circumstance and party. But the soldiers in council will do.more to convince the , South and the country at large of the true state of sen timent ' in the North than all the , ad dresses and speeches that can be made between this and the next Presidential election., . L'v ; WH shall await the assembling of . this ; Convention with great interest. -: : ; The following table shows the date of the arrival of the first bale of cotton in each of the twenty years named : i842.,.!.v;v-;.v..v 1843 ,YV.vJ.'. ..Aug. 14. 1844 . .... .......... . .. i . . . . ......... :22 1845., '.".'... '., . . ..V.ii...... ..' 1846,. . ... .... ; L .......... . . . July 6 1847.. . . ; .... . . . I . . ... . J. . ... . ..... . . .Aug. 18 1848.. . . . . ..... .19 1849.. . . a. r 1860... . ; . . . ..... .......... ... . . , .v. .... 16 1851 ... ..... . ....... . . . . . i ............ ai 1852 . .to . An.1 7 1853 VJ ..... ...... . . . . J. ..... ... . . . . "4 . . . 1 1854h.. .....i.. . .......... .......j... 7 18551....... 7 1856.... i.... ;. 6 . ...v ... ... 9 ...22 ... 4 11 ..........July 22 1857....:.... 1858.... V.. !.. 1859........ ...... i i i860 .... 1861 .... ......... The average date, it will be found, is August 9. The first bale this year arrived on the 13th. Hon. E. Barksdale's plantations are in Rankin county. Miss , where i he has about four hundred acres in cotton, and au very promising. His laboring force consists almost exclusively of his former slaves, whose freedom he recogni zes to the full extent established by the fortunes of war, and "the statutes in such cases made and provided.' They are all working as faith- fully as formerly; but if there is. any extra dili gence and industry displayed it is on the part of those whose compensation is to be a certain portion of, thej( crop. Mr. Barksdale- intends adopting this system exclusively in his planting operations next year. Commonwealth, . . DiscounttAaiNa. The ; editor of the Old Nsrfh State has just returned to his post, after an ab sence of some days. He says: ''. . ' In travelhlg through the whole length y of Davidson county we did not see a single 'field which will yield a half crop of corn the coming fall they are literally burned up by the drought. And many other counties, we learn, are suffering quite as badly. The wheat crop, upon bjeing threshed has turned but much worse than we ex pectedless than a half crop being realized. . Beally it looks aa if we were on the eve of a famine. We can see no relief ahead of us for the people of this section of the State for the next year, but rather a constant increase of the present hard times, j . . ; "..-. ' r " o ' .- . 4 A PPOINT1TENT8 for the Newbern district in part. Einston circuit Cypress creek, Sept., 1 and 2. Snow Hill circuit Auman's chapel, 8 th and 9th Sept. I Trent circuit 15th and 16th Sept. y ; l ' KM? 5! fS' V4 W .' "i. :J;t jftj Jul li w9'iiwi