x RALKIGH. C. TUBSDAY,.... .. . .OCTOBER 9, 1S7T. CONGRESS. - To-morrow week the Forty-fifth Con cress meets in special session "because of the necessity that exists to provide ways and means for the support of the army and i a i -.:. a Eavy. 1 DO DQCeauiT uiU luuccu, cuavcu for three months, all the provision made by Congress the only department of the Government that, under the Constitution, had the power to make such provision - having expired on the 80th of June; but . Mr. Hates has seen proper, for . three months and more, to provide ways and means for the support of the army and navy unknown to the Constitution, and so Congress will not meet in -special session - until Monday next, .' i" ,In an emergency of the sort that now exists, and the existence of which was cer tain from the adjournment , of the last " Congress, it was manifestly the duty of the President and in accordance with prece dent, to have called an extra session at once. But .plain as was his duty and manifest as was his violation of it, we hear J not a word of condemnation from those gushing admirers, who hang upon his ut- terances with all of a lover's ardor, 'and. who see patriotism in all his acts and hon esty in all his words. This is a singular spec tacle now presented to the country, in which men in the last six months of. a year can find no fault with their fellow man in whom . for the first six months of that year they could find no good. We do not believe that such a spectacle carries pleasure with it to the "North Carolina heart. We do not . believe that plain honest people in our State can think it is right thus to praise Mr. Hatks to-day without its having been wrong to abuse him yesterday. We do not believe that those same honest people can think such sudden changes consistent with both integrity and sound judgment, in the men who make them. We do not believe the plain honest people of North Carolina can be persuaded that Mr. Hayes is entitled to all the tncense and all the adu lation that is daily offered up before him by a certain class of people without shaking .their confidence . either in the honesty or in the Judgment of the Democratic party and. without destroying their belief in the necessity for the continued existence ; of that party to restore and maintain our , rights and the liberties of our country. The people of North Carolina are not thus fickle and changeable .in their habits, ei ther of thought or action; but fixed and steady in both as they have been from the beginning, they must naturally lose their confidence in- men who thus prove themselves as unstable as the wind. It is unquestionably true that in refus ing to maintain carpet-bag governments in South Carolina and Louisiana against the expressed will of the people of those States, Mr. Hayes did an act that was both consti tutional, wise and just The very statement of the proposition shows that to be true. The peopled South Carolina as did the people of Louisiana' had a right under the Federal Constitution, and one too that existed be- - fore the Federal Constitution, to live under . a government and under officers of their own choosing. And because Mr. Hayes did only what he was obliged in this mat ter to do by his oath to support the Con stitution, as he himself confesses, are the people of North Carolina to fall down and ', worship him as no- President before has ever been worshipped? Has Mr. Hatks ever said one word in condemnation of the- many usurpations of Geast's ad ministration ? Has he even said one word in condemnation of all the thousand crimes committed in the South and against the bouth by Gkaxts minions both military anacivuf Who Knows that had he not found himself stripped of Gnxyr's power by a Democratic House of Representatives he would not have continued Gbast's programme? Mr. Hatks wished to be President and he saw that the Democratic members of the House of Representatives had the power to prevent his inauguration ana over and. over again it has been nil n w An ,J 1 1 r . . uioixcu uiu ne ami ma menus made a specific baigain agreeing on the one side to permit the inauguration and on the other to obey the Constitution in leaving South Carolina and Louisiana to govern them seves. ... .ho longer ago than the 14th of last month, the New Orleans Picayune boasted in the plainest terms that Louisiana had nothing to fear from Mr. Hates, saying ;'If the wont comes to the worst, we have President ' Hayes' promises reduced to writing and securely stowed . away, which may be produced when occasion shall de mand." With all these facts staring them in the face, we think the people of North Carolina will deem a much longer probation ' necessary before they can consent to receive Mr. Hatks in full; fellowship with those whom they have been accustomed to es teem as worthy of their admiration and regard. We take it then that knowing the senti ments of their constituents, that not one single Democratic member of Congress wiU go to Washington next week, as a Hatks gusher and incense burner not a single one. We take it that measures of legislation that promise to enure to the benefit of the country they will sup pers, no matter if. Mr. Hates favors them, ana no matter if he opposes them; in a word we take it that in deciding what votes they will give, they wiU not stop to consider trom what source any measure may come but only whether it is constitu tional, just and wise, and vote according v. What win be done at the special session, fa Wytr wt twin hi rr,i "j urau tciiaui. i ne regular ses sion wffl meet in less than two months, and -a very large proportion of the special term must be consumed in the selection and ar rangement of the committees of the House ' . ... so, mat py me tune the committees are all appointed, and the House ready to get to wore, tne beginning of the regular session I wiU be at hand. We are Inclined to doubt, mereiore, u the special session does more man organize the new House, appoint its committees, and make temporary provision I for the maintenance of the army and navy, and leave all legislation pertainine- to th I vexed questions of the day to the regular I session, which begins on the first Monday j in December.' . -.-1 hebe win ne lively times in 8outh Carolina this month. The legislative com mittee have Incontestable evidence of Pat- tessom and Chambermin's robberies, and that nearly every Radical member of the present State Senate is guiltyof bribery. xorgery and corruption. Warrants are out for the arrest of ,all of them, and their cases win come up in the present term of me general sessions. : Quite Quite a number of W rascaU are anxi 10us.1t is said to ipeaclL s . LET THE SCHOOL FVSD BS COLLECTED. Under the Canbt Constitution, the mon eys coming in from fines, penal ties and for feitures were all required to. be paid into the State Treasury and securely invested as a permanent fund, the interest on which was to be divided among the several counties in proportion to the nuin of school children Uving therein. It mattered not how much a county might have contributed to the principal of this fend, : it -could - only- receive- its pro portional part of the interest. For exam-" pie, from" "fines, penalties aad forfeitures' the county of Edgecombe- in five years, paid into the State Treasury the Bum of $2,496.17, .while ,the jcounSyi ofi Craven during the same period paid in from the same sources, the sum of only one dollar ; yet when the interest on that , amount came to be paid put for the support of schools,-: the ; county -of Craven, having about the same number "of schoolchildren living in it that ' Edgecombe' had, received about the same amount that Edgecombe did. :- In other words Edgecombe paid in' very near twenty-five hundred times as much money as Craven did, but for all that she took out of the fund no more than Craven did The county of Bruns wick paid into the school fund three times as much as did the county of New Hano ver, and yet New Hanover drew put near four times mote for its share of the inter est than Brunswick did. ; - .' The Democratic party thought a system that permitted such f gross inequalities as these, was manifestly wrpng and ought to be broken up, , When therefore the Con vention met in 1S75 the provisions of the 9th Article of the Constitution in regard to the disposition' of the money coming in from fines, penalties and forfeitures was changed so as to read as follows: -'" Sec. S.x All moneys, stocks, bonds and other property " belonging to a county school fund ; also, ' the net proceeds from the sale of estrays ; also, ,' the clear pro ceeds of all penalties and forfeitures, and of all fines collected in the several coun ties for any breach of the penal or military laws of the State ; and all moneys which shall be paid by persons as an equivalent for exemption from military ' duty, shall belong to and remain in the several coun ties, and shall be faithfully appropriated for establishing and maintaining free pub lic schools in the ' several counties of the State : Provided, That the amount col lected in each county shall be annually reported to the Superintendent , of Public Instruction. . The reasons for this change are plain. It was seen that the present necessities of the State for money for school purposes were greater than they would probably ever be again, and therefore it was wiser to devote the whole of the fund arising from fines and forfeitures to educational purposes as fast as it came in than to go to work creating a permanent fund that could be practically available only to future gen erations. It was thought and wisely too, that situated as we were, it was about as much as we could do to take care of ourselves and leave posterity to look after itself. It was found from sad exper rience that under the old system the mon eys received from fines and forfeitures were not paid into the State Treasury at all, but were irrevocably lost to the school fund both for the present and the future. This evil it was thought could be remedied by provi ding that all such moneys should remain in the several counties, and the whole amount, not the interest merely, but both principal and interest should be expended in the support and maintenance of the pub lic schools in that county. It was thought that if this was done the county commis sioners and school trustees would be more vigilant in seeing to it that clerks and mag istrates made prompt and honest returns. It was estimated that the money thus saved to the State and devoted to educa-. tional purposes would be the means of furnishing instruction every year to thou sands and thousands more children of the State than were taught under ihe old sys tern, thus benefitting both blacks and whites, and all good citizens irrespective of race, color or previous condition who wished their children to have the privi leges of an education, and who had the prosperity of the State at heart, were urged to consult both their interests and the good of the State by voting for the amendments containing the new provision above , set forth. As is Well known to every one the people responded to the appeals thus made to them and rat ified the amendments by an ovewhelming majority; by such a majority indeed as was before unknown in the State. With us, we frankly confess as we stated at the time, in the columns of another paper, one of the very strongest reasons that moved ns to desire, a Convention, was that the Constitution might ' be so changed as to permit the Legislature and the people of North Carolina to go forward untrammel led in the cause of education. -' Under the Canby Constitution the work was a hope less one. ' ' . But changes in the Constitution for the better will, do no good practically unless the better provisions aje regarded, and it would seem, if the complaints that are be ginning to come in are well founded, that the new provision of the Constitution in regard to fines and forfeitures is not obey ed. ' It is said in some instances, not many we hope, that the moneys received from fines and forfeitures have not been paid over to the county authorities, and in this connection we take occasion to commend the recent action of the Board of Commis sioners for WaSe county in directing pros ecution to be instituted against all persons failing to account properly for ail funds of this" character, and to express the hope that the example will be promptly followed in every county in the State. Let school committees and school trustees, and every Dody who feels an interest in promoting tne emoiency of our school system feel that it is his duty to see to it that the fund thus arising shall be appropriated to the purpose prescribed by the Constitution. : We look upon this as an important mat. ter, and beg that our temporaries of the press will call special attention thereto Wa have entered upon a new era in the matter of education in. North Carolina,' and let us see to it that it shall prove a better one well as a new one. But to make it a better on we must have more money as well as better intentions, and this the prompt and full return of all moneys arising from fines and penalties and forfeitures into the hands of the proper county authorities will give us. If the press of the State shall do Us duty fully in tt premises, as we doubt not it will do It, our experience will prove that the benefits actually derived from the ratifica- - tion of the amendments to the Constitu tion, in this regard at least, are to. the full as great as it was predicted they would be. A hew Radical paper called the Na. tional Union made its appearance at the National Capital on Wednesday 'nJ last It will m,nt r. n ' . 0 . 41 ui i - 1 : THE LOUISIANA TRIAL. '" ' i The superior criminal court, before which the case of the . members of the Louisiana Returning Board will be pur sued, has opened, ; and the case, will be set down for trial at as early a day as pos sible. The . State will be assisted by the Hon. Jeremiah Black, while Wells and his colleague have caiiea mr. duklla b auger, of Ohio, anJ Mr. Wilson, of iqwa now pracUcing Attorneys in Wash ington City, to their assistance. What old Jere Black don't know about trying a. case is scarcely worth knowing, and what' he doesn't know, about j the Louisiana Re turning Board and its irascality is just nothing at 1 all," We wcjuld father see him in charge of the prosecution than any man In America, His ability and h;s integrity, and his will to prosecute to the bitter end are all ; undoubted, and - the public may therefore be satisfied t$at all that can be done to convict' the scoundrels according to law will be done. ' I : ' . There, has been and there still is a great deal of talk about an agreement alleged to have been entered Into" by Governor Niciiolls or his friends io screen the mem bers of the Returning Board from their mer ited punishment. We rust that no such agreement has been entered into; and 'we shall : believe . that hone has been until forced to do otherwise !by. the most un doubted testimony. . '"; , ' , 't It may have beep thai jit was agreed tha political , ollences were Go be pardoned, on either side, but that the 'crimes of forgery and perjury wi th ' whicp. Wells and Ah desoij stand charged before, the court now in session pan be Classed as political offences is something that passes our com prehension.' ' Certainly any party that ad mits that such practices are the means to which it has had resort .to accomplish sue-, cess, damns itself to everlasting infamy in. the estimation of good men every where-; And yet what is it to claim that Axpeb son and Wells have been guilty of politi cal offences only, but to 'admit that forgery and perjury was the means resorted to by the Radical party to put Mr. Htes in the position he"now occupies? ' And stiU to-day both; these men are the trusted agents of the FeVkijal government. In spite of their known villainy, Sir. Hates puts them in positions cf . honor and emol ument, where none but men of the highest integrity and moat spotless character ought to be and there be keeps them. It would seem to be the very aim, and object of Mr. Hates to throw his weight and influence between these guilty criminals and their just doom. If this be not so, why does he thus publicly take occasion to declare his belief in their innocence of crime in the most direct manner in which it is possible for him to do so ? . One of two things is pertain. When Mr. Hatbs appoints men charged as Wells and Axdeesos have . been charged, with the gravest crimes, lie cither docs not believe those men guilty, or he intends to screen them from punishment at alL baz- TW 5 n ' m a. aras. -vs Air. uatesos not a tool, it is not to be supposed hef thinks Wells and Axdeksox two injured innocents, and we are forced to the conclusion,, therefore, that he is bent on saving them from pun ishment for crimes jcommitted in his interest, and the fruits of which he is to-day enjoying. le may do this sim ply from that kind of Jionor which is said to exist even among thieves, or he may do it because he fears their disclosures ; we know not which it is njr do we care much. We do know, howeveV, that the appoint ment, oue after another of the Radical mem bers of the Returning Boards of Florida and Louisiana to offices of- honor and trust and lucrative emolument Is a shame and a dis- -'race to the country and to the age in which we live. We trust we shall not be censured as Bourbons fcr j objecting that such a dis grace is upon us, but If we are, we can not help it. Every time j that we . remember that such scoundrels as those now in office in New Orleans are the trusted and honored-agents of our . government, we can not help feeling the 'greatest indignation at the man who is! responsible for the damning disgrace. S r Instead of indicting the rioters at Pitts burg the grand jury has indicted Gen. Peaeson the officer by whose command the rioters were fired! upon by the mili tary for murder. Commenting upon this fact the New 1 ork Nation asks what the Northern people wduld' hve thought if instead of indicting: the men who took - 4 part.in the Chisholni, tragedy, the grand jury of Kemper county had indicted the I !A ax 1 .im ' ' Duenu vi me county for Killing a man m his attempt to prevent the . tragedy! The question is a very pertinent one and shows the difference between the Southern view of things and the general Northern one. Lbe Natwn evidently thinks that the Pittsburgh . grand jrj as Judge Pearson would say '-got the wrong sow by the ear. . " ; " : ' : - " The mail service ip North Carolina does not often afford opportunity for congratu lation either on our bwn account or that of our neighbors. But the people of Fay ettevUle, we rejoice? to see, 'are at last to nave daily mail .service from this city. After Monday nexfe they will be able to read The Obsebveb on the morning of its publication and to find therein later news than will reach theni from any other quar- ter- : ..! J'-":! V'-- :.. With our old fnftnds of the Pee Dee country, too,, we are to be brought into close connection.) So soon as a mail agent is piacca on ine ( route or the Kaleigh & Augusta Air-Line, subscribers to The Ob- 8BBTKB on the line ? the Carolina Central ... J. "um """ngion io unariotte, will receive their papers on the day of issue. ,"aaEEEEEj .The removal bf Mehemst Au from his position or tommander-in-Chief of the Turkish army on the Danube and the ap pointment of Sclem ah Pasha to the com mand is attributed to Turkish jealousy of the foreign elemenf in civil and military positions. Between! the two Generals also there has long beei rivalry. The recent victories of Sulkisun and retreat of Me hemst have given .opportunity for the change, though thef Turkish Government has not been slow to change its Generals. "The organization of Texas State troops for service on the Rio Grande looks like business.- . We hope it does, (. II the Gov- ernment of the United States cannot nm. tect the people of? Texas they should m 1 they should protect themselves. ExperieHce has shown that; Diaz either cannot or will not stop the raids of Mexican? marauders. He needs assistance from the American side, and we hope the Texans will teach him how to administer justice. The Grand Duke Nicholas is suffering n"' r-r -uova witn nim. . i - 1 HAMPTON IS COMING. Governor Hampton will deliver the ad dress to the North Carolina Agricultural Society at the approaching State Fair on Thursday, October 18ttu ;'taf - , . ' No! , more welcome, guest than Waob H-istPTOS could eome to North Carolina, Men of all colors and of every shade pf poliiical opinion will unite bj'giv'mg a most cordial greeting to the citizen who, in ad dition to being a peerless soldier, wears among -his laurels the crowning honor -of being the redeemer of his State from a government that for corruption and op pression is without a parallel in history. But it is not alone as a" famous solder aiid distinguished citizen that he will be wel comed to our State for as their faithful old commander also he"wiU be greeted by men from, every portion of the State with whom he shared evorjdanger and every hardship.. " '' " ' ; - It is therefore with the greatest pleasure that we announce that he will be with us at oar approaching Fair knowing" as we know to how many hearts in North Caro lina it will carry joy.'' : ' ' . Senator Moktos's father and grand father arc said to have died from paralysis, and he lias a sister whom the same disease has rendered perfectly helpless. ; : The Pope has been contemporary with all the Presidents, having been seven years old when Washington died. . . ., New York bankers have issued $45, 000,000 in letters of credit to" American tourists this summer. . . NEW TOltK CORB(SiPOiVDEIrE, Correaponilence ot TBI Qbskrveb.1 . -' y ' ' ,' New YoRK,'Oct. 2.,J877. ' I had a call to-day from the Hoh. A. H. Stephens, of Georgia, who is here for a week before the meeting of Congress.- He is remarkably well for him, though his man Aleck had to carry him in his amis up and down stairs. Upon a level he walks with the aid of crutches. " Otherwise he is less changed since 1 first saw him than i might have been expected,, He reminded me of our first acquaintance, on the visit of Mr, Clay to Wilmington in . April 1844. On that occasion h delivered a speech at the stand erected in the Walker lot a speech of great power and humor, which delighted the great crowd in attendance, as is no doubt remembered by many, still Uving, few of whom, I suppose, expected the di minutive and sallow , young man : before them to reach the. eminence to which, he has attained, or: to live through thirty three years of a stirring period, a dreadful sufferer as he has been from rheumatism. The recollection of that first meet ing carries me back to the events which followed it, brings" before me the towering and imperious form of Mr. Clay, full of undoubting confidence in his election to the . Presidency ; the faces of the State Committee of escort, with the Hon. Richard Hines at its head, viz : Jas. C. Johnston, Hon. Ebenzer Pettigrew, Hon. Burgess S. Gait her, N. L.' Williams, Dr. J. II. Montgomery, Giles W. Pearson, T. P. Devereux, Dr. F. J. Hill, Bryan Grimes; of whom only Col. Gaither.Mr. Williams and I are living. And of all the conspicuous act ore in the course of that ovatiou, how few are yet alive ! 1 recall but two, Mr. Stephens and Hon B. F. Moore, who delivered the address of welcome at Weldon. Mr. Clay's Wil mington friend, Gen. Jas. Owen, his hos pitable entertainer in Halifax, lion. An drew Joynef," Governor Morehead, whose guest he was in Raleigh, Mr. Badger, who welcomed him at Raleigh, and with whom he and a large party dined, all gone ; Mr. Clay himself 1 dying without re&ching the ffreat height' of bis ambition, though greater as a Commoner than others as King. s ... ..,, Mr. 'Stephens said to-day thai he had advised against the issuing of the celebra ted Raleigh letter in regard to Texas, which was one of the two causes of Mr. Clay's defeat. The other was the associa tion of iir. Freltnchuysen, as the candi date for Vice-President. If the Texas let ter had never appeared, or if Mr. Fillmore had been ou the ticket, the election would have been sure. Who can tell what disasters our country might have been saved from in that event ! . It was a proud boast of that period, that though no Whiff doubted of Mr. Clav's election, he bad not a solitary application for office whilst in the State. That could hardly be the case now. . 1 had the pleasure also of secin? vestcr- day and to-day several ; North Carol in friends on their way to the triennial Con vention of the Episcopal church at Boston of the clergy, Rev. Dre. Huske and Bux ton, and Rev. Mr. Hughes ; and Dr. A, J. DeRosset, and daughter, Mrs. Daves. Hon. W. H. Battle and Gen. Martin were also here on the same business, but I did not see them. -w.'i i . : The interesting letter of ;your Halifax correspondent mentions . the fact that in 1776, when Halifax was one of the con siderable towns in the State if any at that period could be called considerable one qf the five newspapers of the State was pub lished there. At present I think there is none, its neighbor, Weldon, having super seded it in that and most other respects. But about sixty years ago there ; was a paper . of some notoriety printed : there. It was called Ihe Halifax Compiler. I for get who was its editor, but he lived in a stormy time. The little town was en tiled, under the State Constitution adopted there in 1776. to a Borough member of the Legislature, .rarty spirit was terribly high, the celebrated (or notorious) Robert Pot ter leading one party and the Hon. Jesse A. Bynum the other. I think there were less than fifty voters in the town so that a few votes either , way turned the scale. Public Jmeetings, coUisions, and even pistollings, were common. The Com viler of course ; did its part in the excitement. Printing- offices in the country were seldom locked j and on a Sunday some one entered the Compiler office and transposed the large types form ing the head of the paper--so as to make it read, "Helfiar Compilax." The paper was printed off and circulated without nv discovery of the change. It was consider ed a very good thing in view of the char acter of the paper and the hot politics of me town ; put ine iditor was in a tower ing passion, . and offered -five dollars re ward for the discovery of "the miwroant X never heard that be avowed himself; there would probably have been occasion for the services of the coroner if be had. - jr. DtPLIS COUNTY LETTER. TheOreat Kain Storm Heavy r.oc r lumen ana iimcnantfi Kejiassviixs, N. C, Oct. 2, 1877. ' Correspondence of The Observbb. . 'r Messes. Epitors: If. the news should not reach you before this you may men tion, as a matter materially affecting the farming prospect of Dunlin conntv tH. fact that the largest freshet ever known to the oldest citizens of this county omnnwri in the North East River a few days since (Saturday night and Sunday.) Some of the best farms in this section are com pletely overflown and materially in The merchants on the river have sustained extensive losses by the washing away of turpentine, tar, staves, &c, and stock will be injured or lost more or less. A ;i lustration oi tne dimensions of thfl fnehj we mention that the stores of R H. rown-a?Td,.Wlace & Middleton, in the ZZZZ. J? f? could be carried We hear of some famihes that had to be vuui au Jiiiiik. 1 vja. 111 868 ln boat8- Tin 'A- j 1 .iT . . 1. owy 10 private I individual -but to the oountv as mmr I nndges are washed awav entire!-. Pmm several portions of the. county there nan hn nopassing at alL . ... . . M torn Onslow county we hear thai th state of affairs is similar. , . ., - I will mention tha fact. too. tkioiti,;. the last week two negroes have been killed at Magnolia, by the ?W. W. R. R. .The coroner has been mvesti gating them tn. Very truly,, X. Y. LETTER FROM CHOWAN, i . - . . - - . -; v"- EDmrroN bkactt ofYts sits the ikon steam ship CHOWAN QUAKER GUNS AN OLD MARKET . HOUSE STATELY TREES 'ANCIENT LANDMARKS Or COLONIAL TIMES THE GOVERNOR'S PALACE ST. - PAUL'S THE KING'S ARMS GOVERNOR : DRCHMOND N INDIAN MASSACRE GOVERNOR . EDEN t-A NEUTRAL GROUND TRUCE OF THE BLUE AND THE GRAY INDIAN GRAVES UNA ': NDf ITY'LODGE VALUABLE AUTOGRAPH LETTERS ; THE ALLEN HOMESTEAD THE THURMANS - VE8TRT BOOK SP 8T. PAUL'S PARISH AN EARLY : DECLARATION OP INDEPENDENCE THE COURT BOUSE WASHINGTON'S MASONIC CHAIR A ALL-ROOM OF THE LAST CENTURY THE FISH ING AND TRUCK INDUSTRIES. Correspondence of The Obsebveb. ; - Edbntos, N.-C Oct. 8, 1877. ;:; Messes. Edixobs: Making in slightly from the great, wide sound, clearly defined frou.it is a; - fair inland bay on whose curved shore stands Edenton, queen city of the richty historic region known si the Albemarle country. . It is the oldest of aU the existing towns of North Carolina. Its citizens look forth upon a . watery expanse as broad to the eye as the ocean, for its op posite boundaries are out of sight, while to apnroachin? vessels and steam-craft tne thick green of its embowering trees seems as the emerald setting of a well-jeweled ring, such as Once Venitian princes wedded the Adriatic with. . , - 9 . , Taking passage at Franklin,' a young Virginia village, fast growing around ; the. nucleus Of a station of the Seaboard and Roanoke Railroad, to a thriving and busy town, the fine Iron Steamship . Chowan, Captain 'Ains worth, bore me-in a few hours to the wharf of this ancient burgh. Here almost the first things my eye fell upon were several venerably memorials of the antiquity of the place in thei shape of some ante-revolutionary iron cannon in use as posts for fastening the hausers of the steamboat .They were made in 1734; or, at least,' that date is imprinted on the trunnions. In Wandering about this town I afterwards saw others of these old guns, set upright at the corners of . the streets. ' I was told that they lay for many, years behind John'.M. Jones' ice-iouse, uncovered from the weather, except where they had buried themselves by their own weight in, the ground. , Occasionally one Was made to do service in honor- of the 'glorious Fourth.! They are 32 pounders, and are very long,, with thick muzzles. During the late war they were mounted on gun-carriages taken from the wreck of a Spanish vessel , which foundered near Hatteras. -About eight of them remain. As I walked from, the landing up the main street, , I paused at the . small brick market house now fearfully dilapi dated and mouldy-looking, where, " '. ,:. "in the good old colony times, . . , "When we lived under the King," the citizens were wont to come , to cos- sip over the news and to fill their hamp ers. It stands in the middle of the wide highway. Much as the rusty weather worn houses on either side of this street need repairs and paint, and unattractive as they are in themselves for the Jack of careful keeping, they are. .invested with a certain aristocratic dignity by the stately overshadowing presence, of a triple row of elms, i These are of immense size. The Central row' threads the JUum via, per haps to mark the limits of latent proprie tary right, subject to use for passage, in the opposite holders of .the soil. . The street is thus split into two majestic avenues, shut in above by Gothic arches by interlacing boughs, grand and dim, even in the noon day, as Cathedral aisles. -v . 1 . At the -.left going up, -and occupying with its ample grounds enclosed by a high fence an entire block, is the "Governor's palace ;" on the right and nearly opposite are the old Colonial court-house and that antique hostelry once known as the "King's Arms." Near the upper end of this same street stands St, Paul's, still used by the Episcopalians, with its wide vesti bule and i high-backed pews. Here the stately prelate, John Stark Ravenscroft, was consecrated Bishop of Virginia and North Carolina. Within its walls Bishop Ives, intrepid and conscientious, who gave up his high sacerdotal place to become a layman of the Church of Rome, has ad ministered confirmation and ordained priests. This is the oldest extant church edifice in North Carolina. ;. The people of this vicinity, as indeed of the whole North-eastern section of the State, are of Virginia stock that is, all the descendants of the old families are. The ; original ' Albemarle settle ments were composed of immigrants from Virginia. WiUiam Drummond, a ccoicnman, wnose name is com memorated in the beautiful hfke of the Dismal fcwamp immortalized by Moore, was appointed by Gov. Berkeley, of Vir ginia, as governor of these old settlers. He gave-them a simple and liberal govern ment, and gathered the first legislative assembly at Edenton in 1668, twenty years before James II was supplanted by William and , Mary. The, colony had a rough time of it with the Tus carora and Coree Indians. A hundred and thirty of them were massacred in a single night in 1711. The next - year the unruly aborigines met their Nemesis and the remnant of the Tuscaroras were driven northward and received as a sixth nation into the confederation of the Five Nations. Some stragglers, it is alleged, found their way into the swamps in what is now known as Robeson county, and to the Sandwich Islands ; and from them came King Kalakaua and Henry Berry Lowery and his gang. .' , , , ' . At the session of the provincial lcgisla ture here in August, 1720, Gov. Charles Eden was present, and the .village, up to that time called Queen Anne's Creek, from a stream which flows through it,- Was in his honor, christened Edenton. This amiable personage seems to have projected the influence of his pacific qualities into the population and , . fortunes . of .. the town; for I cannot learn that it was ever afterwards the scene of any battle or other sanguinary incident of warfare. The re volutionary war left its soil unstained by blood. During the war of 1861-5, it was recognized as neutral ground, not so much by any special convention as by tacit con sent of both sides, and the understanding was never, in a solitary instance, violated. It was a place of recreation, especially for United States naval officers and' marines; but - the Confederates, who came there often, were treated with equal kindness and hospitality. In the very hottest epoch of the war . "the blue and the gray" met there not unfrequently, in social inter course. I myself once saw Northern and Southern officers, with lady partners, ami cably playing whist together, I think in 1864, in a. cozy Edenton parlor. How different a fate from the bitter experience of Plymouth just across the sound taken and retaken . continually by either party, sometimes reeking with the gore of slain and wounded, ever and again scourg ed by lire a bone of contention always t . . i , i , i . , iui me uuieasuea aogs oi .war. . Ana yet-tKienton lfr ft OTmiro!1 Tf iron tho K,nr-plr.r , " . I centuries 'ctclSw tr aians. ineir graves cover the whrile nit js of the town. Human bones, wonderful! v well preserved, are even now exhumed in digging wells and ditches. But then, Young or Pollock, I forget which now tells us, i .. . - "All the world's a grave." , ' The "Governor's Palace" is a unique two storied structure, located at the inter section of Queen and Broad streets, and occupying the - southwest corner. It is built of timber brought from abroad, hav ing been framed in England. Was not this something like bringing coals to New castle? It was erected By Francis Corbin in 1757-8. On its top is a queer octagonal observatory or tower, which seems a meet abode for owls. Age gives dignity to this old, dreary, grim-looking wooden pile; as " uw 'F'W ? UJtnnstcally worthy. It is approached by huge steps of imported hewn sandstone. The wains coting and other interior wood-Work is chiefly of black walnut, , entirely free from knots. The mantelpieces are oaken, high and massive and elaborately carved with the British- coat-df-arms. The windows are small and glazed with about 6x8 panes. In the large hail George IV., when Prince oi . vv aies, attended at a ball, and lmi Miss Singleton throiifrh thfmBr,rt,Z I v v aim. auLmii iff mi m noii ami ia m ow n6 stately minuet. Some of her de- i sceDuanto reside m Perquimans and Frank-1 lin countip .Tm fnn , odentof the United States, was formally I welcomed to Edenton in this same hall by now owned and occunied bv four maidpn 1 a. ouu a. iw iraua) 18 daughters of Captain Nathaniel Bond. J a . long since deceased. , These ladies have a great . many; interesting ' ar- ujoxuuKn-ai vunosities. Aneir waua -are Edenton, including Mrs. Ptnelope Parker, the lady president of the famous "Tea ParryNgiven at Mrs. King's in February j 1774s, - Tne record or, this "Tea Party," found by some naval officers .when station ed in the.! Mediterranean, is now in the1' pofeession-of Mrs. Dr,iT. D. Warren. It is on glass and has been much broken and otherwise defaced ; but its prominent fea tures, including the resolutions adopted by tne patriotic iauiea,,guu appear. " Amongst the valuable old papers owned by the Misles Bond,' swne of which are of an official character and of very early date are seyeral jinpublished autograph letter oi Ueorare Washington, of his mother Han nah, and or his -file . Martha, written in itqi-iw. ana oi. . i ney also have one from Benjamin Franklin, dated at Passy. France, June 10th 1783,- and addressed to Hon, Thomas Barker, then a prominent lawyer of Edenton.''" A special correspond ent of the New ; Xork ; Herald came here last year and tried to get .'copies of these precious photographs, for publication but without success. ' ' ' : Next'dcor to the law office of State Sen ator Octavius Coke, who by the way is a younger brother of Gov. Richard Coke, United States Senator elect from Texas, stands a .middle-sized frame house with one of those giant Dutch roofs which seem to have suggested the modern Mansard. Here was born, in 1807, no less a character than Gov. William-Allen, pf Ohio, some- - u . - J J J - . f - vulgar "Uiepiiiaiien, an.d popularly sup - posed to b& of immense age. The house is on . King , street, two- doors' from the southwest Conner of Main or Broad, and is now. occupied by James C. Warren, but owned by the estate of the late Edward Wood. . It is still known as the .Nat. Al len place.. The Aliens, were a reputable and highly cultivated family, but rather fond of fighting. Nathaniel Allen was a man of hifb standing, a wealthy merchant, and one of 'the proprietors . of the. noted "Lake estate" Of 75,000 acres, in Wash ington county.' He.: died when his son WiUiam was hardly more than an infant, leaving a daughter named Mary, several years William's .senior, who afterwards married. Rev.' PJeasaht Thurman, 'then stationed at Edenton as a Methodist preach en - .When Mr.-Tburman left Edenton be took William Allen, then about four years old, with him to Virginia and thence to ohi. -; : - Since Pleasant and Mary Tburman were the parents of the distinguished democratic Ut S,. Senate ftpm Ohio, Hon. A, G. Thur man,. Gov. Allen's nephew, it. may not be without Interest to the reader to .transcribe the following -entry from the records of the M. E. church at Edenton, kindly shown me byvMrN J, R. B. Hathaway. At page 4 l. found this: 4 -Married on Tuesday, .the 21st May, 1811, by the Rev. James Boyd, the - Rev. - Pleasant Thurman to Mary G. Allen, daughter of CoL Nathaniel Allen, deceased, of the town of Edenton." Another entry at page 8 indicates that the newly wedded pair removed.- from Eden ton between the 15th and 21st of October, in the same year. And thus North Caro lina gave. ' to Ohio her , two foremost Democratic statesmen, for one is a native and the other of Nbrth' Carolina parentage. 1 St. Paul's church was twenty years in building, 'having been commenced in 1736 und finished in 1756. , Its completion was provided for by a poll tax for two years of two' shillings on each taxable person in the province. : It is a substantial brick structure and venerable with ivy whiqh .entirely covers one syje of it. Its predecessor, which occupied the same site, was of .Wood and very small. The deed of the church lot is recorded in Old English or Germaivtext. , Dr. John Blair was the first minister of the congregation. His service began in -1704. - In the church yard, amongst many handsome modern monu ments,' are h'e humble tombstones, of dark 'slate 'Or -red sandstone, of some of the early settlers. " Owing to the per ishable quality pf the stone under the sure .though slow" attrition of the weather, most of the oldest inscriptions have become un decipherable.. Of those that I hurriedly examined I could make out none older than 1763. The most ancient cemetery in this", vicinity is .about four miles south eastward of the village, immediately on the sound. - It ijS called Montpelier. One of the patriot brothers Lillington is buried there. On, the farm of the late Joshua Skinner is the grave 'of Gov. Henderson Walker ' and his wife. Their- memorial' tablet is of slate, seven inches thick. The remains Of Gov. Samuel Johnston, an emi nent Jurist, whose opinion was quoted by Judge Black during -the "progress of the recent Belknap impeachment trial, are en tombed near the residence Of the late James C. Johnston, . . . . Through the courtesy of Mr. Wm. B. jShepard, , present secretary of the vestry of 'St Paul's, I was permitted to examine the ojd records of the yestry. 'l'hey com mence December 15th,' 1701 almost two centuries ago and extend without inter ruption to Sept. 28th, 1779. A break then occurs, of which there is no known record extant, to October 2d, 1811, with which date begins the vestry-book of St Paul's church as a purely ecclesiastical and "non political organization the separation or church and State being one of the imme diate: results of the Revolution. No record, so far as is known, was kept during the latter part of the Revolutionary war. . ' ' - r.'' -;- These ancient minutes, are pf that ecru color which was so appropriately popular with; the ladies during the "centennial year.'' They begin with a record of the appointment . of .. Hon-, Henderson Waiker. and eleven others as a vestry for the 'Chowjm Precinct," in obedi ence to" an act of Assembly made No vember'lO, 1701. TheBe vestrymen first met at the house of Mr. Thomas Gillam on the 15th of the following month. The re cord proceeds It being debated where a church should be built, Edward Southwick undertakes to give one acre of land nnon his old plantation and to give a conveyance for the same to the church wardens for the use and service of the precinct to build a church itpon, andfor no othei use, and to acknowledge the same i in court", .Pro vision was made the same day for the erec tion of a wooden church " 25 feet long, with posts in the ground.' : ' .- : The following is a literal copy, from the vestry book,' of the famous Edenton de claration of independence. . ,As the vestry was all in all in those days, and spoke for the whole people, the- Episcopalians can claim no exclusive credit, for its patriotic utterances. ' '. , " ..-V-' DKCLABATIOS. ' s " St. PauT V Be it remembered that the Rarish, 1776. f ' Freeholders of - Sf Paul's Parish met the Sheriff at the Court House in, Edenton on Monday the 8tbT of April then and there pursuant to an Act of As sembly did elect the following Bersons to serve as v est ry men. for one year agreeable to resolve Of the Pmvtneial t Vuiimo t.a1A I at Halifax the. 2d" bf 7n? cnd agreeable -thereto,' viz: Thomas Bonner. ..iHi, ,1 . Vim i. . i Wm. lioydV Thos. Benbary. Jacob Hun ter, - John Beasley. Wm. Bennet, Wm. Roberts, , Richard Hoskins, David Rice, Aaron HilL Palatiah Walton, Wm. Hinton. We the subscribers, professing our Alegi ence(!) tothe King and acknowledgin g the wuouiuiiuusi executive power or uovern mentjdo sotemnly profess, testify and de clare mat we uo aDsoiuteiy believe that neither the Parliment Gjfe) of Great Britain nor any member or., constituent Branch thereof, have a right to impose Taxes upon these Colonies to regulate the internal Poli cy thereof, and that all: attempts by Fraud or rorce to estaousn and exercise such Claims and Powers are Violation)) of h reace and ; Security of the People and ought to be, resisted to the utmost and that the .People of this Province Singly " f " giy iteaoiutions of the . Continental and . the Provincial Congresses because in. both pi: .v. ?r I mey are. freely represented, by. persons chosen by themselves and we do solemn ly and sincerely " promise and - engage under the sanctions of Vinoe Honor and the Sacred Love 01 Liberty and our coun try to maintain and suDDort all and the acta, resolutions and regulations of the "d Contmental and Provincial ConirmweH I wvaMwua nuu iciuiiu.iiiiiit 1 1 1 ties i . tne ntto08t of our power and ability. 1 i-Tf . - nave nereto set 1 our hands this 19th of Jnnp-177 ' Kichaed Hosktss,, Wm. Botd. David Rice, . Thos. Bekbubt - m iaju. rt al.wh, . o van AEASLKY. Wit Hnrro . Wni..v K-i I "Thos. Bosseb, 'William RobeW i . - MMm MMAiai -( I "nr - -1 ine present ijourt-ftouaein Eripntnn wa I m - I - ..: . of North Carolina, approved by the Gen eral Assembly which convened here the year before, providing for the purchase of one acre of land fori the purpose and levy ing a poll tax ofjfive shillings. It is a solidpiece of masonry and looks likely to endure' indefinitely!. The tower which surmounts it afford a far-reaching view. The court-room proper is on the ground floor. Over the judge's bench still ap pears the royal coat of arms, albeit some what indistinct from hard knocks and the wear and tear of something like a hundred and fifty years. " Among the court records are registered indentures -signed by Lord Granville. The original deeds, some 'of which were deposited there forcpnyenient access and have survived all the imitations of time, are scolloped instead of indented. I do not-knew,-however, that lhiswould affect their validity!; at least .at thi3 late .r i ja anjuppet Hoop or the, court-house is the ample room in which Unanimity Lodge of Masons has held Its communications or wimis a Tffw mum up vi an uunureu years. By the records pf the Lodge, which were. politely shown me I by W. D. Pruden, Esq.. it, appears, under date of July 6th, 1778, that a resolution was that day adopted that, in accordance with- leave granted by the Justices of the" Peace, fhe Lodge be ' moved from the ' King's Arms inn rnow Berkeley's hotel-rto the' court j house, which, is; immediately east; of,, it on 1 AUUg UB-LV.. , A. UV. W. UV iw.UU.. J 1 moved " states the record, "when Bra. Kua sel (a newly-made Msson) presented the lodge with an elegant Master s chair for which he received their sincere thants, This chair has been the subject of a good deal of discussion, through the newspapers and otherwise, for man y years. It has been thrice demanded by Virginia lodges. It was called for bv Norfolk Lodire No. 1. Jan. '2, 1815,' a previous demand having been made for it id 1811; Ther-ehair popularly but erroneously supposed to hare come,, from. Alexandria. . ihe .tradition, quite wejl authenticated, is that k was brought from Williamsburg, V- when m 1777, tlie . year . before its presentation, Washington ab said to -have presided, in ffTent lodge" held in a marquee. On the back of the! chair is the odd name "Ben jaan Bucktrout' Capt. : Coke, who came from Williamsburg, says that Bucktrout is an immemorial patronymic of cabinet ma kers in that old town, J ust alter the bold ing of the "tent lodge" mentioned, many valuable Masonic relics ' became lost or scattered. , ; ! I .- i Ibis chair is of mahogany.. .It is sur mounted by a sealed book, under which is the motto m gilt letters, "virtuu et silen- tio." Mr. John M. Jones tells me be caused this. motto, which, had become somewhat defaced, to be renewed in 1817. The back of the chair is composed of three upright standards, of columnar form, representing the three orders of S architecture. Above the central columnis a bust with the head covered with a turban and designed to rep resent the Worshipful Master, of the lodge. A gilded device of the sun crowns the right hand i column, and a crescent moon the left Immediately, tinder the capital of the second column was a 24 inch gauge, now detached, and below this the lloly Bible, opened at Kings I, chap, vii, with the square and compass across the pages. On either side of the , bottom of the central column are crossed quillsT the Secretary's emblem and crossed keys the Treasu rer's. Just oyer them is the - level and plumb; above this two gavels, and, still higher and directly under the open Bible, two plumbs. The whole presents a wealth of symbolism to the brethren of the mystic tie. The seat is roomy 2 feet deep by 2 wide and has a buckskin covered cushion, The front feet of th chair represent drag- According to the! minutes, the Lodge was organized Nov. 8th, l7o, six master masons being present, by virtue of a war rant from J. Montfort, P. G. Master. On that date officers were elected and the name Unanimity" -adopted- - Two years ago its centennial was duly celebrated. The Bible of the lodge was printed, at London in 1738, and is still in bse: Other old relics are : a quaint - porcelain pitcher decora ted with masonic emblems and odes, and an hour-glass . whose sands require pre cisely 60 miButes. to run put, as they did scores pf years ago. ' ": 5 Adjoining the lodge , room is a high pitched halL 60 by 40 feet in size. . Here the Legislature of North Carolina was wont to meet when Edenton was honored by its sessions. Thej walls ' are of waia scoting V This hall has witnessed many a scene of colonial festivity in ball and ban quet, and is yet a place where often "Youth and beaut meet, ' ' ' 1 To chase the glowing boora Mrith flying feet." : Every North Carolinian who can, and for that matter everybody else, ought to visit Edenton, see all these antiquarian treasures, and drink in from the lips of the old citizens all theses riches of tradition. The trip from Franklin, is, in itself, de lightful. There are immense fisheries in the vicinity where single hauls of 150,000 herring and 6,000 shad have been made. The seines are operated by steam . engines. The truck ' farming , industry . has de veloped rapidly within the last few years in this neighborhood,! and great 'quantities of early vegetables are annually sent bence to the numerous Northern markets. There is much to see of new as well as old. , . ., . .,;., .. ; J., - PsIjUpstlos,',' ; f ; ' CorreapondencBol'THE Observer. i ; - ' ! ? Norfolk:, Oct 1877. . , Messrs. EorroBS: I notice your able editorial and also, the communication of your correspondent id Baltimore in regard to the Dismal Swamp Canal in your issue of the 27th September , , ,-. . . .? ': : s You and your correspondent' have been led into so many mistakes in regard to it, that I desire to correc; them. ' l ' The Dismal Swamp Canal is perhaps one of the oldest works of its kind in the Lmted States. Its charter dates in 1786. it was enlarged and tebuilt in 1818, and since that to 1840, all 'the surplus earnings were spent on ' its enlargement and im provement In 1841 a change of manage ment was maue, aoa tne. company whose stock was owned principally by the Uni ted States Government and Stateof : Virr ginia, divided the surplus earnings instead oi expending u on U9 canal as before that period. The company has been incorpo rated 92 years and baa made only thirteen dividends, amounting! in all to about $30O?OOO; of which two-fifths, or about $izu,uuu was due to the government and nearly a like sum to the State of Virginia. The State received her dividends, but owing to the representations made to Con gress, the United States Government re mitted to the company jiearly all her por tion of the profits. j T '" wiicoj x our correspondent has endeavored to J profitable enterprise, and therefore entitled to aid from the mn. uuu mereiore e umgmciuuicuL - e ;wui consiaer this. He says the "United States received in div idends on f 300,000 of Stock f 136,000, but does not say anything jjjbout that amount being returned to th pended on the work. fThirteen dividends m ninety-two years d i$300,000, will ave rage j,J50U annually E ;i he United States, owning two-fifths, would be 1.304 a vear. It must be admitted not a good investment on 3uu,uw I Therefore, Messrs. Editors, it cannot he said the fcanal has been a H- lumaat wucccg. . . ina( it nas oeen or great service to the State, none will deny, and if the amount set aside; for dividends since 1841. had been expended in keeping up the canal, it would not now be in such a de plorable condition, It was owing to this fact that the States of I North Carolina and Virdnia chartered another 0,; .: Albemarle And f hMannofrsi r..i n nyr which is the only canal in this coun- jmww vauoi jaiiiiK7a "J "uwuicu steam power tued exclusivity- This , canal has duly one Lock forty feet wide, the largest on the. Atlantic coast, an abundant supply ; of water and aorxmung to the report of the Hon. W. McAlpme, Civil Enfrinper anri Vn-t t the U- S. Supreme Court is rarwhi f 'ransportmg pity millions of tons annually: k - nundred tones its present lZTTl '''IL - '. v , It may not be generally known that tn navigation of Dismal Swaihb Canal haa not been interrupted for several veara. aoats continue . to pass thronsrh it i without the expenditure of. mmv it . "yj?" business now offering. has been w .HiMmmc un im in lniipni novo T KAH mnma m. : . . estimated that fSOO.000 would tho a j - rrn a sixty foot channel he does not state The Albemarle and : Chesapeake Canal is eighty feet wide, and in many places one hundred feet wide. It is well known; that the Dismal Swamp . Canal Company has' expended over $200 -000 in improving leas than three miles f ( 'its navigation, - and well informed engi neers estimate the cost of its enlargement at $1,500,000- . Whether it would be judicious to spend, this latter sum,' wifl le for Congress tff determine. If any im provement is tb be made, it certainly should be for a larger class vessel than can : pais through the Albemarle and Chesa peake" Canal, j which Professor McAlpine says in his Report may be from 1,000 to 1,500 tons burthen. ' -: - The United States Governmpnt liaa ttansed surveys to be made since the war lor the improvement of the Dismal Swamp Canal, and the amount estimated was so great compared with; the small amount ($100,000) required to light up and deepen the channel across Currituck Sound, on the line of the Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal, that no action has been taken in the matter. The great importance of an inland coast line considered in a militar point of view, cannot be overestimated, and Congress should provide a channel of navigation free from the dangers of Hat teras for ther light draft Iron-clads and Torpedo boats.: ""There are two routes by which they can avoid our dangerous coast. -The Dismal Swamp Canal and the Alte marle and Chesapeake Canal. As the State.of North Carolina owns one-third of the stock in the latter and none in tie former, it would seem it would be for the -interest of the State of North Carolina "that her Representatives in : Congress slioukl look to the improvement of Currituck, sound and that canal, particularly when by the xpenditure of $100,000 the same re sults could be obtained si by the expendi ture ot fifteen times that amount by im prpring theD. S. Canal. f p. M. r.LErtTEiz, FKoa ci.eyeiai. ; r . CwTcspondence it The Obsekvbr. - '.Kiso's MorKTAis, Oct. 2, 1877. i Messrs. Editors : Your columns have contained at sundry times interesting com munications from almost every other sec tion . of our State but this. These com munications constitute an admirable fea ture, of your - excellent journal, bringing to the attention of persons abroad the vast and varied resources of a State which is but poorly known at home and little un derstood abroad" The truth is that hith erto there has been no journalistic medium of communication between-the different portions of our State. Our people are not behind others in general information or intelligence, as is unjustly supposed, .but. various causes have combined to , keep the citizens of one section ignorant of the ad vantages and attractions of another. Our local newspapers have not come up to the full measure of their duty, in this impor tant regard, and then we are without any great State railroad system ; no great trunk line from the rich mountain region of the West to the spacious and beautiful harbors of the East. But a better day is dawning we trust.' You, at least, are . deserving of ': the thanks of all lovers of North Carolina, for your persistent labors in her" behalf, and your noble efforts to build up her in terests at home and to defend her honor abroad. ; . , King's Mountain is situated in Cleveland county, near the Gaston county line, on the Charlotte and Atlanta Air Line Iia.il ' Road. - This is certainly one of the finest agricultural and mineral sections of the Slate- Within 14- miles of our village is the King's Mountain gold mine, which has been in operation for years until recently,' and from which mi.lionsof the coveted ore has been taken. Crowder8 Mountain, which is but a continuation of the King's Mountain range, both of which are a singu lar and beautiful span of the Blue Rklre. is almost a bed of iron, said by Prof. Kerr, to be found in more abundance and in as fine quality as anywhere in our State. The ore creeps out in various places and here and there masses can be picked up lying about on the sides of the mountain. These mines are not worked now at alL simnlv for want of enterprise and capital. jn ear urowders Mountain is a remarkable spring which is Known locally as the all healing spring. ;t I do not know that the water has ever been analyzed, and f et any number of certificates could be obtained of its wonderful curative properties. All cu taneous and scrofulous or syphilitic di seases yield to it like a charm. Cases of chronic and acute sore eyes sore legs of years standing and alj other maladies growing out of impurities of the blood. and diseases peculiar to females, and others more than I can mention have been relieved after regular course of medicine trom the physicians have failed. The wa ters are fine and persons send for it from a distance in quantities and it does not seem to lose its efficacy. Near it are jnounds and old camp debris which show that the Indians, years ago knew its proper ties and came to seek its virtues. Were this spring in New York instead of North Carolina, it would be eagerly sought after as an investment and made to contribute its wonderful relief to suffering thousands. Even consumptive ' patients, in th liist stages of the disease, have been cured by using the waters of this spring. Mrs. Chism, a-highly respected lady living near here, is a remarkable instance of the latter. All her friends had given her nn tn die and after using the water for less than two. months she has been entirely restored. : - This is but introductory to other letters which I, propose to send you. from our section. . We have cotton factories and paper mills and flour mills and school and agricultural societies which are emi nently worthy of notice. : : - ; ; Respectfully,' J. S. BEAUFORT COUNTY LETl'Elt. " Tll?.?tr!lllBr,dfe Mill-Uania ant '" wpi . Aivar Uauiaire to Crops, Etc, Etc. - " 'J Correspondence pf The Observer. ' r Washtsgtox, Oct. 1, 1877. ' Messes Editors : This section of the State is visited with the heaviest rain fall : known within memory, of the- oldest in habitants. For several days the clouds had been gathering with ominous indica tions, and on Thursday evening the rain set in and continued falling .in torrents stead ily without intermission or abatement until Saturday morning, accompanied by a heavy northeast gale. All the creeks and smaller streams are swollen to a height unpreceden ted, the "water sweeping away all the bridges in every direction, thereby putting a stop to traveling. All the mill dams throughout the county are broke and several mill houses carried away the destruction to this kind of property being great and serious. The bridges over the streams be ing earned away, we have had no mails since the 27th ult., and it may be several days yet before the mail carriers can travel. The most serious and disastrous effect of the storm is the damage to and consequent loss of the cotton crop, it being blown flat on the ground and much of it covered with water and mud. " Our isolated communitv ia mnairoi, ' excited over the comtletion of thn i?,;i road from James ville to this place very many never having seen a railrnarl tk; with the new line of 8tPflnwrj ni,i the route from New York nH n.,i more by the Clvde li facility for transportation of freight and prouuee and causing considerable reduc tion in the cost of freight is awakenin hope8 Of prosperity and imnrmrnnw.3 Another enterprise has recently been in augurated which,: if the people 0f the county will accent and ntiHro m-o ion,. add to the material prosperity of the east Tnricottntie a real estate agency by B. F. Havens & Co. This company will ad vertise all over the Northern States farms placed In their hands free of charge, only demanding a fair commission when sale is made. It is to be hnwri rvw)r uri has more land than they can profitably cultivate will place iiwith this company, and thus encourage tMSfeffort to settle up the country with a class of good practical farmers. A B Wilson Items. Oiir onnntv na twn visited by a heavy storm and freshM Thn damage to the crops, while considerable, we are glad to learn, is not serfous. The Black Creek section seemed to suffer most. several bridges being damaged, and Sir. -trry .newsonrs- rmu-tlam washed away. A negro man who murdered . his wife's daughter in Greene county, was pursued by the officer in this county and arrested in Black Creek on Tuesday night and taken to jail in Snow Hill Advance,