Newspapers / The Daily Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Oct. 30, 1865, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE DAILY DISPATCH. D A It It Y & BERNARD, i EDITORS 15D PROPRIETOR.. " JOHN D. BARRY, WiL IL BERNARD. Office Ifo. 41 Market street. WILMINGTON, N. C. OCTOBER DO, 1WK. AGENTS FOR THE DIM PATCH. .Ma4.;A."M. Campbell ..FjycttcviIlc, Wm. 11. McLaubin ......Laurinburgh. C L. Cuesnctt..... Magnolia. Cou E..B..I.H TH....liIyllct AuMtu County. IUibt. L llocs tox.. ..,.. Marion C. II., 8. C. .......... Whites villc. Lurubcrton. Capt. V; V. RicuARDSox,r A. Rowland, .... T3f It is said that whin Benedict Au sold, the XUrvunJtrcvolution of of 1776; was in France, stfeagc?, whotim- ply knew that be was an American, wim uiuj that it was 7uis intention to Visit the new re- publievand asked for letters of introduction to sonic friends, which miht icnciit Imn.ui his travels. 44 Stranger, replied AittfoLD, - I can truly say I havnt a friend upon the earth." , ' : We wtro very much reminded of- tin cir cumstance upon learning Inour teUnujis of 3aturdaymorning concerning JIJIkxhyA S. Foornj of Tennessee. TJ was formerly a, 1 Senator in the United Stale Congress, late a memlKT of the Confederate Congress, h-i serted the Southern cau.se iu its bitterest and most trying hour crecped int& the Federal lines, was by the United States government shipped to Europe, tinally permitted to re turn, received a, cold welcome from the peo ple ot Tennessee, went to New York to prac tice law, and upon the oath of allegiance leing tendered him declined taking it on ' ; Captain A. I). Cazalx is .authorial to receive subscriptions, advertisements or orders' for job work for ithis office TO ADVERTISERS. Parties sending advertisements lor inscr tion in the Dijitch must, in all cases, sjccify Uv nuMtxr of insertions desire I. e can not hereafter receive advertisements marked "till forbid" without a special agreement jn every ca-c. TIiotc of inir patrons who have hi I vert i semen ts now in the I)lj-otch marked tf will plea.-: advise us a- to thc number I" insertions clcsirctll , ,! THE ELECTIVE FRANCHISE. Judge Caldwkll who is among our .most learned jurists and lest men, and in fact one I road and North Carolina road, and who as- of the 44 noblest Romans of them all,' in his I sure us that after a careful olscrvatiou,thcy barges to the grand jury while he was one are satisfied that Mr. Wokth will teach Mr. of our Superior Court judges, took occasion Holdkn as memorable a lesson as did Gov. to impress uKn them the purity of the bal- Vance in 18C4. kit-lox. There, he used to say, rested the A friend who has thoroughly canvassed ftafety tC the Itepublic. Corruption there this county during the past week, and. who wa corruption at the fountain. otujh t to liunr, assures us that he has not met Freedom of thought, freedom of action, a single Holdkn man since he left Wihning- freedom in any and everv kense dciicndcd I ton. Precious few here. the ground that "nis connection with, the late Confederacy rendered it impossible. Where" he will go next we don't know. 'Strangers, I can truly say, I have not a friend upon the earth." ' - THE ELECTION. We have con verse I with Jentlcmen, who have been up the line of the Charlotte Kail upon the sanctity -of that ballot-lox. There men were expected. to deposit tlieir ballots n freemen. What, think you, would that venerable jurist say- now, if he wa told that the frcv m men of North Carolina ln fore they could Ix considered as loyal or indeed honest fd- though they have already vxvorn allegiaijce Mo the, United States Uovcrnmcnt--mut vote for Mr. IIoldex for Governor of their State, and that they eontd not 4c allowed to vote for the man of their choice. Shame, shame upon such doctrine! The elective franchise under such circumstances is a farce, and those olitieians who are now" seeking to deceive the people by the advance ment of such arguments, or rather threats, arc but undermining the -principles of that first to declare her determination to establish on this continent. m These attempts at tleception;'iv1iich werc- fn'l tiiuir tlif lenders nf the IbiMcniti-s in- - - . making every day to secure if possible "the election of their chief, showsthat they have not only but little pride ami confidence in mir eople, but also that fhe only object of their desires is securing, the election of Air. Holdln over Mr. Wokth. How utterly re gardless are, they ofoujr1cst interests! How they trifle with our State honor! How care less of our future welfare. . i We put itrthen to the free voters of the State, whether, ifMluring a canvass for Gov ernor, the leaders of a jKirty and the rgau of the head ot that party, seek to deceive them to delude them into conduct which would but tear down the very .freedom which for so long a time has been their only safe guard whether tint party or its dHcf rep resentative can Ik: trusted in the administra tion of the State Government. If, in the campaign it is sought by them to deprive us of that privilege of voting, which is not only a safeguard to our lilerty, but a preventative to even an approximation to military despot ism, what guarantee have we that, should the reins of State Government Ik once placed in their hands, they would not use it to the advancement of their political ends. Ambition has been the fault of Air. Hoi.dex, as has a desire on the part of his friends to nild at any sacrifice of State pride, been an Jiject for which all good citizens should ex- Tt Hii-mil vts to ililYvf ris tln-v linvi aw cessfully tlone before. Le Mr. IIoldex lay aside that ambition . which teaches man to serve himself first and his jHoplc afterwards. Let him follow the example of the great and good men of our State who have lived for the advancement of their State's glory, who have sought to elevate North Carolina first, and waittpiietly 'until North Carolina saw fit to elevate th?m: -not ' watch and wait" for every opiwr- tumty which may occur of seizing the highest office in .the gift of. the people of spending one whole' life time with no other object in view, lletter. Air. IIoldex, that you should let the office seek you and not you-the oiBcc. Most, patriotic men, not too much blinded hy partr zeal or jHTsonal ambition, have done t7" It apears that thirty-four members elect to the Georgia -State Convention had not been pardoned or, rather, were excluded from the amnesty " of the President. Gov. Joiixsox wrote the President on the subject, and the latter determined to pardon the whole number which he has tlone. Correspondence Between the President and Gov. Johnson .yll Members to be -Amnes tied. M I lle doe v i li.e, (.a., October 21,. l&V). ' Several of the members having been elected to the Georgia Convention, who were excluded ironi the amnesty, Gov. Johnson wrote toJlie President and received the following telegram I Washington, October IS, !$. "Governor J. Johnson: Your. letter of the Uh was; received. Send a list of the members elected .'to the Convention in order that pardons may he issued and the aiuucbty oath may be ob tained ly the members. j" " W. Hunter Acting Secretary.11 . Thirty-four members are-alreadv elected who require pardon, and they are the ablest men elec ted. 1 EXECUTION OF CHAMP. FERGUSON. il.L- Ajnwntimi securetl. the couiu IT 11 II t HLJ - "I - . ' ... t i HMdnrt n-th Scanold His East Mo- wilfonec more feci throbbing witinn ncr: ments What He Had to fcay. tmo 0f i1Cf ancient glory, ana from the dust, she will enter the race that is N'AsnviiXE, Oct. 20. 1805. Champ. Fer- set before her, and win, peruaps "X""! gusjn was"xccutcd at noon to-ilay, at the triumph than any oi wmicusucuow w Penitentiary irrotmus just ouisiue mc city, i a ream. He died iramc oh the -gallows, evincing no emotion until the rope was placed around his neck, when Iris face turned very red and broke out into profuse perspiration, attended with strong: fiuiTcrin of the lips, Ho sUd comiksedIy on the dropsobie twenty minutes while the charges, specifications and sentence w ere read .by Col. Shaftcr. He nodded rec ognition to' several icrsons in the crowd. and shifted his iKsition in an impatient manner while the sentence was lcing read.. To some secification.s he inclined his head in assent. To others, lie shook his head. That about Elam Huddleston caused him to say, r I can tell it better than that." When the speaker read, "To all of which the pris oner pleads not guilty," he said, "I don't The Marriage Relation Among the Frccd men in Alabama. The follow ing ordinance was aciopieu oy KTwo FrencS Uohpf Marseilles an?Vnnc-have lately becomnsanc, -l tAn fndiana female was fined one cent for The Earl of Stratlmiore had his life insured - J-ll . .,,! .-.- . Tor a auuioujuuiuiB-: 3F The ZToHitcur newspaper one million of francs. .,4-V- A French canro at New Orleans pald$ U-V tesj ----- . , , . v - - , i ' f ArKAUwH IN SOIITHCAROJ4NA. dilc attitude toward each oth Ti... 1 11 lif"'v ....... i I.I Hill,. irarts of South Carolina oi the whites and is represented as, assuming a phase thrmi, . serious results, unlqto the dlfllcul ties' bc , ,t;,.; adjusted. Especially is this the ease al.'.i,- Jhi.' tions of the coast and on the Pea Islands, jr'(. the "negroes have -been established on the .!,,, rLi' In Taris for doned plantatlops, subject to the control ,; i ue wn"o ' . ,-m.s' lv s i .L.tSoA.. .he rccc?t CmrctJrB U '' "f 1 l.r J - - . v m - ' LAW Ti . After a prayer by his spiritual adviser, he was then asked if he had anything to say be fore proceeding 'with the execution. He re plied, " Nothing to say particularly at all. No, I don't tliink I have." TImj noose was here placed around his neck, and then, for the first time, he gave signs of emotion,-and his face blushed to a deep scarlet. The 'perspiration bnke forth profusely frdm his face, and his lips Closed with a convulsive quiver. The realization of his awful situation seemed to have Hashed over his mind in all its fulness, overpowering his fortitude. Colonel Shafter wiped the sweat away, and the prisoner gradually recovered his equa nimity. : ' . lie expressed himself as much opposed to having anything placed over his eyes, when a handkerchief was called for. Then he vol unteered the statement: I don't know some things in those spec- illcations. But I don't deny anything I ever done." For a moment .or two he seemed to be re pressing an impulse to make fuller remarks. Alter a bnet pause, lie added : " I want to be sent to my familv. want to be buried on this soil."" After another pause, hecontiluied, excited tone: " Don't give me to the doctors. want to be cut up." Here Colonel Shaiier ' anscred : shan't, Mr. Ferguson."-" A short silence lollowcd, when the pris oner again spoke, I w ant to bc put j in that thiiiLT." pointinir to hiscollin, " and taken to. White county, where -I can have my 'family around me. If I had only lia I my way, I wouldn't have, been lure. Whenever you are ready, I. am done. M last request iso be sent away with my wife." His last words were: ') Lord have mercy on me,T pray thee." . At seventeen minutes to 12 o'clock the drop fell, and life was extinct in sixteen minutes. , . Proud, Brave and Noble, Tho following article is from the New York Ifetrs : ' lie it rhth,cd ly the ifile of the $Me of 'Ahtlftm. id Contention asemMeay mat au marri aires between frecdmen womerl whether in a state of slavery, or since their emancipation, heretofore solemnized by any one acting or officiating as a minister, or anv other claiming to exercise ' the right to ttio riti; of matrimony, whether ljond or free, arc hereby ratified and made valid, provided the parties arc now living tswri'thfu- as man and wife; and in all cases f frfvi Inien ami freed wTmen who arc now livin" together, recognizing "each other as man and wife, le.it ordained that the same n nm feei hiirlu in Austrix -, - , -gr Wife heat ing b due of the popular offences in Nashville. s i- Roger A. Pryor is about to start an cyCn- iinr paper i" Baltimore. ' " " v f EST It b said the fall of the waterfall will pre vent the thinning out of many a horse's tail. j-A man in London kiUcd himself for grief at a quarrel with his sweetheart, t- A Vienna miser has left two million francs to the Pope. Generals Hood and IIUMriiuEY Marshal are on their way to Washington. r" The entire state acot 01 u-uui, are hereby declared to le man and wife, and and contingent, is I -35 -77 406. ft!.. n. '' e rnuuliilAli'u Dilri'ntr Ti... . l Olliccra o mv mwiiivii o 'uiuti. g in- ji'.i (. who, now that the 44 rebellion" has In-en rrt!;,,' arc anxious to regain possession of th -nC '. .. . r- 1 .' ..11 . .. allege that inc ireeuiuen me uuuwing iiut,, jM to ruiu, do not raise enough for Uair ov. n u tenance, arc totally ncgleetlng-.pre;wr.ttl..j.; f','r next yi-ar's crop, and yet refuse to ive u-u , session. It is .principally with the object ..f ,., deavoring to ndjust these difficultie?; n-- , heretofore announced, that (I'encr.i! 1 , ,v, . Commissioner of the Freedincu's Uuaaii,';. i(,,A on a visit to South Carolina. Xne Y,,k I !.,.,:,-, DAVIS ASKS FOR A TRIAL. rSpecial Dispatch to the Public Led-. r ! . WASiiiNaTdN, Oct. 19. I hear that the -.. , of Jefferson Davis has expressed a u:r. t; his c lient may be accorded Immetliat v 1 rial I desire comes originally from Davis, Win., a i. ttaid.. has declared that he has "no fears 1, i r , Juiiind bv tlie leiral obligations of such rcla- u . r-y - m tionshin. . . appearance mi . Beit further prdaineti, inzi It to reported that the cholera has made its issue," and that therefore the govern,,,, .... " ' -J Rrnoklvn. New York. U him a great favor by arraigning lum at tlu ... ,.v.w jt . i : .in. . t lie. issue oil rgs-Aiasuionauicujitia .-..---. such marriage or co-habitation are hereby in New York as a farm in Illinois, legitimatized, and shall be held to the same Cotton stealing and highway robbcrie are reTat ions and obligations from and to their rifc in Savannali, Ga. . . parents as if born in lawful wedlock. It is said that Fernando Wood will be a Be. tt 1 uilhrr oramnea, mat mu candidate for the mayoralty oi incw iors. It is said that Maine is how building liny- five per cent, of all the vessels constructed on the Atlantic - . : rr"The French occupation ofARome wiil soon cease, and Poland will shortly be relieved of mar tial law. General Grant has recommended the dis charge of all major and brigadier generals in the volunteer service who have not been disabled. T - A. 1 . ! itinnit li-lll 1 Xft.- Ill env fl.-il . XUl.lll? n'iaiv i.v.i . i,iiji ui nt'i 1,; favorable chamre In his every -tiny life, was ni iih the work of the President' aud'ut this u M has almost everything that he could a k liberty Itself and the presence of his family .il-.l; him. '" 1 i ALB OF OIL rilOrERTT IN WEST VIlU.INU The Parkcrsburg 'Gazette records the s-.l, ,,t Handlen & Co's oil property, to li. Comi-t-.s, . of Michigan, nud other partics'at BufTalo and M.j wauklc, for $400,000, Including $"J00,(iuu cx-h ! the balance . iu thirty days. The (i,u:,th- a,s The property consists . of l,-rU acres of l,ic next adjoining and north f Pctrolcuni tsi: don't, iu. an don't You' . : At children lorn without the tather ana motner having lived together as man jand wile, or when thev have heretofore lived together as man and wife, and have ceased to do so, shall be required to take care of such child ren as in the case of bastards, under the laws of this State, and such laws on this subject as mav bc hereafter enacted by the General Assembly Be it' further ordninalr That hereafter the same laws of intermarriage, and bc re- government by Southern postmasters have, been all, or quite all, of Oil run and its wat er ; :t ,.1.1! to ronfnnn to similar ceremonies, with mirtmenccd bv the Post Office Department. tionof the waters of Laurel lork of(.oo,e , r. , I. , tli,'. ,.v,-m.tiMn Huil tbov Hhall be reouirCd to ' ni- AT:.lnr Rtmprnl Fravklin talks Of resign- beginning about three rods froni the New M. -111,1, irtvc bond in marrying, as ill the case of inr i,i nosition in the army '-and acceiting the farm well, all of Allum Cave run ; thirty six jn whites, mitil otherwise enacted by the Gen- presidency 6f the Colt's manufactory, at IIartfordk dueing wells, seven engines, horses, black-mil!, era i Assemoiy. - ri . -At a Welsh watering place a numner or ana cooper Miops, eve. Be it further ordnined, That the General ladies in "Zouave bathing dresses" swam " election of vsseiiioiy siiuii pe, uuu. tiiv hcicuj iuivonu . i n a i ? i IV L at. : i nil mil ow ers lo .provnie lor me mauueii SrSuits for tlie recovery of money due' tho I on tho Baltimore and Ohio Kailroail, eml.r.i. iti- ince and support of the freedmcn, and wo- -1 1 ! "I P il. - C1iX-1 -. at 4 men and cniiarcn oi me oiaie; oi aiauama Benjamin fitzpatrick, President of the Convention, Gunpowder, Shot and Percussion Caps ior me kodio. . children The cholera- is declining on the Adriatic. It has followed the track where filth, mostly pre dominated a warning to American cities: rsf SuARrE's rifle company, at Hartford, shut The regulations under1 which gunpowder, Mown their works Saturday night, ft is not shot and purenssibn. caps, for j sporting pur- known when they will resume. ..- poses may bc sent South, have! been decided j- The close carriage belonging to the estate on at the Custom House, and jnany permits 0r the late President, Air. Lincoln, has been .sold to make shipments of these articles have this in Ncw. York for nine hundred dollars, morning been issued to powder merchants .e;.. r ..vsa ml...i... ti,,i iin.r, and mamifaclurers of tins city.' 1 he .num.- I .n nrnnn tbn .Wo-miiiioiiH Catholic ber ol aprvlications that had Ixjeir ; ainirovcil ,r 1 ' of msiiors. through the figures of a quadrille. Tho General convention oi mc i roti.mi ' . 53? A woman residing nea Pittsburg, Pa., lias Episcopal Church, at its session last M. ..,.!.. just been arrested for the murder of her three night, elected the following bishops : The U- children i I George M." Kanpall, D. D., Missionary in the permit? granted up to one o'clock this afternoon, w as about one liunR.trcd' and fifty, and. new applications were coming in con- suumy. i ue ju;iiuii!iu umuuin ui uiiiiuliui tion which may be sent to one 4 person in the South, is 500 pounds of powder, 5,000 )Oimds Lxti.t fmm speech of lion. JoMah lurnc,-. Proud, brave, noblc-without a tarnish of hot, and 100,000 caps. Nearly all the kill cost 0,006,000, Free Masons. Two thousand men and women get free in struction, daily, in - music and painting, at. the Cooper Institute, New York." . . - " There is to be another World's Fair at Paris in 18C7. The building in which it is to be hcjd w heretofore. aVi!,we see no reason why yon should not now lo the s.ime thing. "Watch and wait" as long -as ox choose for oppor tunities to jump into Hiwcr, but you must destroy your record or make a Vtter one in time to come. Then., and not until then, will Vou receive favor ami honor at the hands of that honest people in whose midst you have lived all vour life. . If the principle announced byyour sup Mrt era be correct, tliut unless they vote for. and choose you Governor. North Carolina ..will not be admitted into the Federal Union. wliy"not issue the order ami have it obeyed ? -"Wlir go through the farce of an ejection ? No! .Mr. Wokth will lc equally acce4able to President Joiixsox as .Mr. IIoldis;. " The davs for the suppression of our opinion or of (' . - . i ' r. 1: "... i . .1 exercising a cnoice nave ,-passeu, ami imtsc wjo assert Uhosc coutrarv' are the. bitter cne inics in oar niicLst, who, should they fail to .succeed.; woukl lc willing to. rise to place and power upon the ruin of their kith and kindred. ' ". ' If vdu can tbrgive a little mirth on a sub jeet s 'rcj)lctc with grief and sadness, I w ill relate what1 occurred between Dr. Thomas Warren and Gov. Vance, when the. Dr. vis ited the Governor in prison in Washington: How came you here f said the Dr. to the Go veil) or. Goykknou I am here for debt."' Dtx. tor "Debt f Govkknoi: Yes; aiid security ilebt, at that. t Jloldcn pledgeil 4 the hfst dollar and the la.-?t man' inNo'rth Carolina to make se cession' gooil, nnd I went his security. Ilol den failed, ami they are 'making the debt out of nic." T1IK GOVERNORS CARD WHEN" UE CANVASSED FO.R THE CONVENTION, MAV -1TII, 1SG1. To tie mY rs oj' Wuke County : Fellow-Citizens : I am a candidate lor a scat in the Uipproaching Convention. My opinion are so well known to the people of Wake County thai I do not deem it ueeessarvto set them forth at h-nrh. The old Federal L'nioii is dissolved. The Pixideut of the late United Suites, is at tempting to coerce and subjugate the people ol" IlieCMoiua. 1 neeu only to say that 1 am with North Carolina and the Southland for resisting, to the hist extremity, the usuriitions and aggres sions or the federal Government. j . YV. W. IIOLDEN. j - ' tue Governor's card ix tue standard or . j mav 8th, ISO!. "I told you in February that I would rcij-t all attempts by the Federal Govern ment, under airy pretences whatever, to maintain tlie Union by loice. The proclamation of 'Mr. Lincoln, calling for troops to make war on the South, 'dissolved the Union, as far as we are con cerned,' and summoned every true Southern man to arms. 44 It 5s idle to sin-eulate about the past. The proclamation referred to, as ov a stroke of lightning, made tho North wholly North and the South wholly South. There is no issue before us for discussion. We are now a unit in defence of oar rights and liberties. Lam for a uniou of the South for tho take of the South, and for all con stitutional liberty that yet remains. -If elected to the Convention,! will vote' to disconnect North Carolina from tlie old Federal Union, and I will also vote to make North Carolina a member of the Confederate Mates. i - - W. W. IIOLDEN. upon her banner, without a I .lemish upon orders were small, comprising! from five to her. lair lame, respected at -home and lion- twelve kegs ot powder, with shot and caps ored abroad lor all the manly qualities that for it. No danger is "apprehended from the shipment of these invoices. The shot is all the kinds known as' " birdihg :"' no buck- 1 . j1 -l J jiT snot will, ior rue present, ne permit-tea to go. There is no powder in the South, -where, for merly, so large an amount of it was used in hunting; and as game has vastly increased since the beginning of the war, and provis ions are-very. -scarce, the inhabitants 'will de pend, to a considerable extent, upon game tor their tood. A. 1. lost. r Ex-Post Facto .Wakhioks. Said Gen eral Jetf. Thompson a few days since : 44 Tlie only ersons in the South who wish to do any more fighting, are those who didn't do any when they had a chance. It is the same iii the North.'' Tlic.'most' valorous'and blood-thirsty men. since ."the .war are, those who,, during the contest, refused to go into the army. It is the home guard that calls McmlxrsofCongre are already le-) m:.hltllnf,n nf ' nrt. . w fp f!n- ginning to arrtvc at Washington, in view of! uin,r comlition of war after the proclama- 3Iit Heaoax Advocates Neoko Sin- fuaoe ix TRX.8.-rHon. John. II. Heagan, late Postmaster General of the Confederate States, while confined in Fort Warren, wrote a long letter to the people of Texas in which he urges them to give entire submission to the 'Government of the United States, recom mending the. alolition of slavery, and the extension f the privileges and protection of the laAvs to negroes upon, the same footing as the whites, allowing them to testify in. the courts, and finally suggests to them to fix an intellectual and moral, and. if thought ne cessary, a property test for the admission of all -persons to the exercise of the elective franchise, without reference to race or color. Smakt Rascals. There are some smart rascals in Memphis Tennessee, who, when thev find a horse, unmarked they represent L themselves as Government agents, and boldly claim the animal as a 44 U. S.' . horse,' that has I een stolen hum the Government! If the owner of the horse claims that there arc no 44 U. S.r marks on fhe; animal,' the rogues produce a glass, w hich they declare is ajiiag nifying one. and, as the lens on this glass has a faint " U. S. linetl tiion it, the looking through it makes the 4 U. S. visible,' apjia rently on the lnrse. This astounds the owner of the Ix'ast, and with cool audacity, the thieves ride off with the horse they have thus appropriated. have been developed in peace or war, the South rests' from her struggle. With the prejudices of fifty years, and llie education of a century moving the. hearts of tlie people, -she dared the perils of a revolution, encoun tered all its sacrifices. s'ulVered Its agony, and without stint gave men. who lived great lives and 'in death are not forgotten. She failed, anil her sorrows will become as "old as kings of a grand and peerless 1 arc. SI ie sta nds 1 c fore the world to-day, not humiliatcil, but dcjircssetl ; liot compiercd, but casi.-down-. A new life opens to her' view. lrught by force back into, the Union from which slit had dissevered herself as by the voice of one man, she finds presented to her new condi tions of political existence. The old fabric of. society is undermined and in ruins. Old institutions that 'gave her wcal-hi and power.; and contributed to tlie prospe.n!. greatness of the' common country, are gone forever. A a nation, the South starts afresh. She commences under another leae of existence; and under a system with Which .she is unac quainted, the aggressive, i inpatient spirit of j the Norfh demands that she shall at once and without restraint succumb to the new relations that have been ..created by the war. .We believe that she will. Before the South there looms up the forest of a. mighty future, Upon the whole Mr. Stephens thinks far bet that w.ill give shade" to those who may reap tcr of the prospect ahead than many persons the harvest. But the seed must be planted had 'allowed themselves to hope for. lie left now. By the voices of their living and deaH, yesterday morning for his home -in Georgia, the people are called upon to work- now accompanied by his brother, Uifllge Linton Brigadier-General li. D. Mussey, is about to resign the post of Military Secretary to the President, and also leave the service ' jg-Colonel Dick Jounson, the veritable per son who killod.thc celebrated Indian chief, Tecum seii, died suddenly at his residence in Douirlas county, 111., oi Saturday night last. 5:5? Cen. Tciuivis about to marry a Kichniond Miss of eighteen, beauty, wealth, ct edu-u: Mrs. Terry says there will boa muss if he docs. She is not living in Utah. 25 Mr. George Francis Train apologized to tho Fenian Congress, at Philadelphia, on Wednes day, for " the misfortune of having been born in Massachusetts." ' SJSTTlio Clumbus Enquirer is' informed t hat the rice crop iu Georgia will be almost an entire Mr. Stephens in Lynchburg. The .ynchburg Virginian, of yesterday, says: Hon. A. II. Stephens, who reached here Saturday evening, spent the next day and j. : i . i u.....i.. - - - ii. ' :.i c ' J . .. - . .. uigiiL loumiay; in iae-eiiy, ioi, me purpose lailure, owing to the tact that the negroes have I all north of the Potomac excepting ten. r. oi rest ani recuperation, ocing ioo iceoie ior wasted too much time in idleness. of Colorado and parts adjacent,' with Juri-di. ji..n in Colorado, Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming. I L. I,lev. M. A. DeWolf Howe, as.Miion'ary hi l . of Nevada and parts adjacent, with jui.Mli, ti r. In Nevada, Utah," A ram I ago, and New Mu.. Tho Kcv. Ciiannino Mckuu: Wiuti m , ' W.i chosen Missionary Hi.diop to Japan. . ' UIOIIWAV UOREERY. A gentleman jvas roljbcd on the pnldie hc'.Utt.n', font" miles west of Sullolk, on Sat nid.iy, ! 1 1 horse attached to his cart and a pure n'onuinin over two hundred dollars. The ai'idacions tlii l Todo off on. the horse, leaving tho cart Hand'n.;-,. iu tho road, and subsequently sold thel Jjiiimal ! a Mr. Parker, near Sullblk. Tho accused plnh is represented as a young mai'tall, hliiu :iul decked otr w ith badger whiskers. r HEATH OP-A- 'J. EAST VOLO MAN." The Paris papers record the death of tin IM. de (Jramont, at tho age of thirty Un ji known as a very 'wealthy anil " ta.-t" )oni iu.ni .of that city, and who, in tii'. hi t t n iar:--, .('.:':.; iio lessdhan seven duels. JU, biotiiri . . ! . of-the passengers who jieiished in tlii-iHr..' i steamer Arctic. ' I'MNI) TOM. , General Uirfni NE has not been Ijitl!.. i . i lered with about Ulinp Tom siiree the alt ni'-t take him away at Ciucinhali. We bei -ii;.i Tom is performing before largo ami woinh audiences at Philadelphia. f An order was on Wednesday proiinil gated from the War Ollicc,. under jwhicli nil tho forts in the - defeimis f Waliliiton south of tho Potomac excepting Ito, and ai ' t i'lj T f-ontinuous ana )iotracrea travel, lie was called on by a' few citizens during his stay, who had an interesting-. interview' with him. Mr, Stchens is hopeful of thej future of the country, thinks the South will getlicr rights in the Union, and expresses conlilcrice in the justice, wisdom and magnanimity of the President,-after aninterview with him. He thinks the Southern delegation to Congress win oe aamitteu, sucn men asf benator Wil son, ot Massachusetts, having expressed themselves to him as being in tavor ot it TChicf Justice Chase left Washington, Wednesday evening, for Now York, to be present to bo forthwith dismantled, I he barrack ami other structures sold, and the tewitory they oc cupy delivered up to jtho owners. ILls nnd. r at a meeting, to be held there for the purixwc of j htood, howevei-, that all the piHipiiclo'r- of t! sites of lhe.se lorts, who are willing to lake ' 1 1., buildings in full satisfactiou of all damage don. A V . v w-. mIi 1 M rV'J 1 alWl tion of peace. Albany Argus. wdiile the day lasts. Great duties are to le done; tremendous rejonsibintics are at stake. The men who hereafter represent the thoughts and interests ot the South must be and have been, true to her in head, am heart, and hand. Thev will come to Con gress, the y will be called upon to mingle their influences, social - and political, in the t A. il. . T? V.. .A il l.Jli euirem oi iuc luhiu; uui 'uiose liiiiuenees shouhl illustrate tlie South, or nothing at all . Wo want earnestnes-s, ttuth, reality; and when a brave man w ho has fought, be it morally or physically, through this Avar m behalf of his cause, and conscientiously comes forward acknowledging his deleat, and pledging himself to future support of the Constitution and laws oi the United States, we. would rather see such an one standing upon the floor of Congress to ex press the w ill of his people, for occupyinga station of honor and trust than all the so- called "loyal men of the South," so plainly quicK loxueir masters worn, in wiiom ttoa has breathed, the breath of. lite. We say therefore to the people of the South 'elect to your public ofiices your best citizens not those who have played the hypocrite during ine war ana mc traitor since, Put men whom you have tried in the fire and not found wantingmeri who have ' sealed their devo tion to j our cause and shared vour weal and woe.' Let no arbitrary; power of sword or bayonet, or threat of radical pol.iticans deter you in this, a sovereign right. Go into the Union and vote. You will come to the doors of Congress as a Union party, and you will Ic admitted as such ; or, by the jrrace of God jtjicrc will be schism in ' the rank of your enemies, that wiH scatter. them . to the four-winds of heaven. We want, likewise irfw men as well as true. The issues des tined to arise in the halls of national legis lation, demand young fresh thoughts and yigorons brains. The era is one of reform, the spirit of the age is progressive, and to lostcr its good or combat; its eviLn-ill re quire thc.bnghtest and bravest intellects that illuminate the South.: J?or a while they may lS surpassecL- Ofistacles may be thrown in the way or tlieir election, or acceptance,, but let the people persevere. Change, if abso lutely necessary, the object of your choice, but yield no one jot or tittle of the right which the" law of 'the land confers, and 'be fore many months have elapsed it will b discovered that, if the South le true to hor- self flic majority of the people of the North. w iieiuer Known oy one political name or Stephens, who has been sharing his incar ceration for six weeks. j Li:ctuue on Tskoro SurrttAOK in Col umbus. A colored "gemnianj,' from Bosto held forth on Monday afternoon in the col ored Mcthpdist church, to the frecdmen of Columbus, upon negro suffrage. A quarter was cliargei I ; lor each admission. A large number pi men, women ami children at tended, and fhe Boston "genfman" must have taken in a considerable sum. The lecturer, we suppose, demonstrated very conclusively that suuragc j woukl greatly enhance the hap piness of the African race! One of the audience, after the lecture, was heard to say, "iNex quarter i se got to spend, rin g wine to de theatre or circus. Don't ketch mc at no more quarter dollar Boston nigger shows. lalk better ilau he can myself. Votin aint gwine to poke bread down a niirtrer's mom. isoiumom oun. The lady who was recently married 'to Gen." Hooker, is described las a woman of noble bcauty and address quite as likely to make a lasting impression for personal love liness and grace as her younger relative. Some years ago she visited Europe and was in London awhile. Of the) impression-she left there one little incident tellfr-nletale. An admirer ot the Duke of Wellington sent him some cases of Longwortli's Sparkling Catawba. He wished to know where so d? licious a w inc Svas made. 'Cincinnati, my Lord Duke," was" the reply J "Cincinnati V rejoined the hero of Waterloo, 44 Ah! that's the place Alias Grocsbcck came from." ' HT An actl bas leen brought against Moses Hanger, a well known farmer at La- Fayettc, Indiana, for giving employment to a negro, in violation of the thirteenth artielp of the Constitution of that State, which nro- hibits the emigration of persons of color? inc case was tnea betorc a magistrate, who imTKjsed the minimum fine of ten dollars and cost. The, case will be appealed, it is said to the Supreme Court of thej United States. another, will be equally firm in the assertion on the following day. 1?" A man named Buhler. residing at Berne, was in the habit of training doirs tn perform tricks, and sometiincs cruelly ill treated thenLl A few days since he brutally Ix?at a.little dog which would not obev his order, and wiiile doimr sn nfin'o imn dogs sprang; forward, seized him bvitL throat, and bit him so severely that he died re organizing tho Christian Commission. mA lniii.niT.l'ri4 f,.. !. ,.rrK, lf...- ford,; whoso husband was executed at New Or leans in 1802, by order of Geueral .Butler, came off near Withcvillc on the l'Jth instant. IST" Mrs. Wahu Beeciier will read her hus band's lectures this winter. Ward probably lets the lady lecture in public to keep her from lectur ing in private. ' . , ' 3f" The sums, collected in the Catholic churches of tho Baltimore Dioces in aid of tlie destitute in tho South amount at present to $11,334 88, and the generous work is still go ing on. ;.. r . ( : a . There aro sixteen thousand blacks in Memphis, anilr.of tills number tho Memphis Jiul let if i estimates that from twelve to fourteen thousand will bc objects of charity this winter; aqd that thousands' will starve. 23 At the compctllive.decjamatlori at Cam bridge, Massachusetts, last Saturday, open to all applicants from the new Freshman class, the first premium wa awarded to a student who lost his aha serving as a captain iu the Confederate army. "SPlt is stated that a new pajcr is to be start ed in New York under the auspices of the National Bankers' Express Company, on the - plan of the London Times. The patronage of the National Banks in the country is said to bo already secured, and a capital of $3,000,000 to bo invented,, ISf The Einpctor of Morocco eo nsents tothe telegraph in his dominions. , If he knew as much, about it as we do ho would let the telegraph alone and stick to his morocco. "There's nothing like leather." J37 Major Alfred ; M. Bardour and' Mr. Richard W. Birchett, of Prince George,' left to their land, aro allowed to do so. 1-? A son of Joun Brown has jta.t in:iU Iooch, in which ho,' urges the negroes to mm themselves and insist upou ruling thd Month Ly force. President Johnson has just made u hjm-i el, in which hq urges tho negroes to go to work and leave their political future to Providence. tSJ" General Canuy has confiscated I wo .Mol.il. steamboats for ." having refused to traiisjiorl ojli cers of the General Govcriiiiicnt trav .-lling up.."i oflicial duty, eoujiling' that refusal with ;r sions of disrespect and disloyally to the "(J.ivi i .. menl of tho United States. ty Emerson EryERi i ui: h;w benk acuilLd of tho charges preferred against him Military Commission at Columbus, how at his homo in Dresden, Tcnn. ' 'ZiF There is to bo an increase of tlie capita! ml tho Atlantic. Telegraph Company of 1(50,000 sliarcs of T each. beJore tl. Ky., 'and i JtHOO.oiW hi SPECIAL NOTlCEi North Carolina Conference of tlie Mctlio. - dlst ICpiscopal Church Nouth. By eonecnt of the ieopIc of Kockfngliaiii, anl mc uiutnunous agreetiieiil oi all tfio prcacli -r- from w'honi we have heard, we hereby uiinmiiH-e that the next session of our ,Confcrc,nco will 'h. held in the city of lialcigb, coininclitiiig on ll. Gth of December next. j D. B. XICMOLSON. . C. F. DEEMS, , N. K. UEID, , - W. BAKlUNi.Ku, I PETElt DO LB.. IJnptist State Convention. viY aneelAn r T H(t Tli Jf.l OLJ,. '..ni t. Petersburg over two months to attend to somwi tion of North Carolina- will bp -held; with tin business inthc8outh, and have not 6incc been I c!,urch at Forrestville, seventeen mijes north il heard from. Any information concerning them I HJ'S". 011 ihtl Raleigh and Gaston railroad, an.l will irlallv ro-ivi i, t, r V' ?' . I wlU mniciicc on Wednesday the 1st of Novciu. will nc gladly received by fheir friends, through ber. The Usual eourtesvrturn ticket free i.L tne editor of the Petersburg Index. J charge will bo extended to the delegates hy I In K-Tli nnwil'ni. nAn tL ti..... ... I ofiicers of the Railroads of the State.? "f"" ii x ui la, m , uj oe opened in March, 1807, ready to receive the crowd FOR S.UjIJ. which will visit Paris at the time of the. Universal 3IV DWELLING HOUSE, TWO Exhibition. : The work is being pushed forward HOUSES, STABLES. CARKI A(J E with activity, aud after tho 1st of March, 1800, HOUSES, fcituatcd in the beat locality of the city. JtTti, Oi l and WOOl" tlm minfin on1 a ..i 1 .a w .i..4:ij r . . -1 .. w wm nvuijavio ucuuivu ior vue oecor- ation will take possession ' of their allotted de partments. , . STJons O'Reilet, formerly a mcmlx:r ofthc First Georgia (Confederate) regulars, but hailin" from Louisiana, was found dead In his bed at the Lancaster House, Bristol, ou Monday moming last The deceased was suffering from consump tion ana Asthma, and was on his way home from a Northern military prison, where he had been confined for two years. X3A tlie steamer Queen, from New York was unloading aXlycrpool, the dead body of a man was found stowt--aay anions the o nrrm The body was naked, and the clothes were discov ered tied up in a bundle near- the body. There corner of Dock and Second streets, will be hiM for less than their value FOR CASH, f fold ! lium. diatcly. GEd. MYEK4. C. D. Mr ers, Agent, . - Nos. 11 and 13 Front utrect. oct 17 , . 8tf w. n. wppitt, DRUG G IS I 'AND CJlJlMJ.ST. Always on hand a full and select supply ot PURE MEDICINES, CHEMICALS,! . DYE 8TUFF8, PERFUMERY,' SOAPSi, BRUSHI. FANCY ARTICLES, etc., etc. , Prescriptions accurately and neatly ompouiulcd. 16. Market street. P. R .Slnro nivn fmm .11 A V I,. l l M was blood about the; spot, and the Indications I Person wui.w nnXma .,..,..wia at nCriiaSeb5:rihfld "-P1 there with night will please call at my residence on Second a : ;V wuo' 8lowed the vessel, street, between Dock and Onmgc. A verdict of found dead " was returned. - I : ; At O i l-Cm
The Daily Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 30, 1865, edition 1
2
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