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V' Whole JVo. 1 1 65. Tarborough) Eilgcedmbe County, JSW. Saturday, August 12,1 849. ........urn . M IH lii lip lii lifiil pm IfipM mijm Immnn I SI ink HMfcHi 2 jii . BY GEORGE HOWARD, JR. Is published weekly at Two Dollars per year if paid in advance or, Two Dollars and Fifty Cents at the expiration of the subscription year. Advertisements not exceeding a square will be inserted at One Dollar the first insertion, and 25 i!vni for everv succeeding one. Longer ones at that rate per square. Court Orders and Judicial advertisements 25 per cent, higher. Fare Reduced. fTpHE Stage Fare from Rocky Mount to Washington is" reduced to $5 or, From Rocky Mount to Tarboro' $1 50 4 1 ii . Sparta . Falkland Greenville 2 00 2 50 3 00 t . Pactolus u i Washington Tarboro' to Sparta 4 00 1 5 001 0 50 1 00 2 00 H. Wiswall, H It 41 Falkland Greenville it For seats, &c. apply to WnsVi'incrtnn GooUl HoV't Greenville o or to G E 0. HO WARD, Tarhoro February 1, 1S4S. Dr. Jayne's Family Medicines. Everybody praises Jay ne's Hair Ton ic and for the best reason-in the world, bbcause it is the only hope that the bald headed can have of once more regaining Un f..ll ( n nr Lnl o r T li 1 1 t K wlllflt nature adorned - their heads in youth, which it does to the admiration of all who use it as directed. Tryjt, all of you who need more or handsomer hair. It is the very thing for you. . Worms! Worms! Worms! To re move those troublesome and dangerous inhabitants of the stomach and bowels, which so often impair the health and des trtry the" lives of childrerij" use Jayne's pdiation for the removal of the various jp IE defendantTBcnjamin C D. Eason, 3vinc?s of worms, dyspepsia, sour stomach,; is hereby noticed, that the above At want of appetite, infantile fever and ague, ' tachment was duly returned at.May term, and debility of the stomach and bowels! 1843, of Edgecombe Court of. Pleas and in-! organs of digestion. It., is without Quarter Sessions, and that unless he be exception one of the'.most valuable prcpa- rations in the world. "... . Hear Dr. Hizbv's opinidn.--Vir. L. J. Higby, Milwaukie, W. T., Nov., 1845, and there replevy ttdpledd to issue, jndg wriles to Dr. Jay ne, and says, Your ' Car- j merit by; acfauit 1 final. . Will be ' .entered minative Balsam, Hair Dve, and Hair' aga'nst hJm; and the properly levied oti Tonic, all go well, and the. Balsam goes' finely. It has saved many lives this sea-: son I had to get twice supplied from! New York in September last. I shall want of you at least 200bdttles. 1 have on sale, and have seen tried many of the 4crack articles" for this Bilious Diarrhoea, which we are subject to; and of all, yours is invaluable. I could get $6 ner.f bottle . ... .. . ? . 1 f UK for it, if it could not be had for less, and any quantity of certificates of the strong er kind. These Diarrhoeas are the worst diseases we have here, and your Balsam is the only thing that cures them. Prepared only by Dr. D. J wne, Phila delphia, and sold on agency by GEO. HOWARD. . Tarboro', Nov. 9, 1847. State of urth Carolina. Palsy Holland, .; vs. Jno. Holland, Epenetus Holland, & James Stallings and Martha Ann his wife, heirs at law, and devisees of the late Da vid Holland the two first being non residents. Petition for DowerIn Edgeddnibe Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions May Term, 1348. JpHE defendants, John and Epenetus Holland, arc hereby notified respec tively that unless they" appear at the next term of said Court, to be held at the Court House in Tarboro', on the fourth Monday of August next, and then and there pfead, answer, or demur to the petition of plain tiff, judgment pro confesso will be enter ed against them, 'and Mthe cause heard ftp parte so far as they are concernecl. I By Orcjer of said Court May Term, A. P, 848, , , ! JNO. NOR FLEET, ClerkJ State9 of North Carolina. Ichabod Moore, Benjamin C. D. Eason, Original Attachment In Edgecombe County Court Joshua Speight, vs. Benjamin C. D. Eason, Original Attachment In Edgecombe County Court. Both cases returned to May Term, 1818, of said Court, with the following return of Sheriff: "Executed by summoning Wyatt Moye and R. S. Adams as Garnishees May 151,1848." njniE defendant, Benjamin C. D. Ea son, is hereby notified, that both the above cases were returned at May Term, A. D. of Edgecombe Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, tnd that unless he ap pear at the next term of said Court, to be held at the Court House in Tarboro', on the fourth Monday of August next, and then and there replevy and plead to issue, judgment by default final will be entered against him, and the debts due from the Garnishees as confessed by them, con demned to satisfy the plaintiff's recovery. By Order of said Court at M iy Term, A. D. 1S48. J NO. NORFL EE Ty Clerk. State of North Carolina. R. & H. Belcher, rs. Benjamin C. D. Eason. Original Attachment In Edgecombe Count)' Court Returned to May Term, IS 18, with the dercd illusttious by the greatest names in following return of Sheriff: "The our history. But should the selcction-of within attachment was this day execu- the Whig Convention be confirmed by ted by levying on a certain tract of the people, I shall endeavor to discharge land, formerly John Thigpcn's, adjoin- the new duties then devolving upon me so ing the lands of William Y.. Moore, ' as to meet the just expectations of my fel Burrell or Allen Gay, and Levi Ilar-jow citizens, and preserve undiminished, rell 240 acres, be the "same more or ', the nrospei itv and reputation of our com- and appear before the Justices of said Court at the next term thereof, to be held at the Court House iaTarborougli on the fourth Mouday of August next, and then condemned to be sold to satisfy the plain-j tiff's recovery. I By Order of said Coartj dt May term, A. D. 1848. JNO KOft FLEET, Clerk iftbitssinian Mixture & ti r r j For GoNORnnc3A4 Gle Fluor Al- BUSj Gr'avel, &c. Letter from Dr. Jarrtes It. Callumi dated Milton, N. C. August 14' 1847. Dr. J Kuhl Dear Sin Your mf(Iicirie3 dave given entire satisfaction in this section of country, the Abyssinian Slixiurc especially, is highly approved ofvithas never fail ed W cttfe in every case. It sells like hot cakes. 1 have never had enough (6 Supply the demand. You will please send me a large supply of it as soon as you arrive at homei Yours, respectfully, J. P. CALLUM, Milton Druff Store. From the Milton thronicte. Laurel Grove, (nearMilton) Jan. 15,1848. Dr. Kuhl Dear Sir: , We have now been abont seren years. Agents for the? sale or yonr Restorer of tht Ifltrod, and oth er $ledicrnes, and are happy to slate (hey hate given in all cases general satisfaction, particular ly the fjlbyssinian fM&lure 5bas gireu universal satisfactiorr, sal that every orie Who has used it, has received that relief thaf you guaranteed in your directioo. Mr James M Verntm, to whom you recornmended rypttr: Aromatic Extract for Rheumatism, bought a-bottle of it at 50 Cents and two embrocations cured him entirety, and the disease, has fleVer fetornedi Yours, respectfully, K1RBY M NDERSON AgxtsGEO. ' fWlMliDi Tztfif- Y Hi Marsh'af ly Haliax? James Simmons, 'Weldon; C. CV Pogh, (JastoflV ' ' ! " E Cobk, ' Warrehto'b; Hen ry Goodloe, Warrenton; Pi C. Brown, Loui&burg; John:H. Brodie, FranklinC Louis H. Kittle, Hen; derson; Hi Hi Mitchell, Oxford. May 16. GEN. TAYLOR. The following is the letter of accept ance of the nomination for the Presidency by the Whig Convention:- Baton Rouge, La.9 July 15i, 1S48. Sir: I have had the honor to receive your communication of June 10th, an nouncing that the Whig Convention which assembled at Philadelphia on the 7th of that month, and of which you were the presiding officer, has nominated me for the office of President of the United States. Looking at the composition of the Con vention, and its numerous and patriotic constituency, I feel deeply grateful for the honor bestowed upon me,' and for the dis tinguished confidence implied in my no mination by it, to the highest office in the gift of the American people. I cordially accept that nomination, but with a sincere distrust of my fitness to ful fil the duties of an office, which demands for its exercise the most exalted abilities 3ntj patriotism, and which has-been ren mon country. s 1 have the honor to remain, With th; highest respect, Your most obedient servant, Z. TAYLOR. To the Hon. J. M. Morehead, Greensboro', Guilford Co., No Cav Front the Petersburg Republican. GENERAL TAYLOK'S POLITICAL SENTIMENTS. As. the views of Gen. Taylor oil polltl cal subjects arc important at this time we ruve careluliy Selected his opinions from his correspondence. It will be observed that he has, without One single exception, declared his unalterable purpose to refuse kf riflnnl !nn tf hnrtv fil lnrirlfS nml ihp mnlM.l r,fh,rlv inflnonrr.,. It in his M - tcr of accet)bnec bftlie parly nomination he hasjiist received he shall chanj ' e hiSilM-!! political position before the country, it will depreciate very much his high charac ter. . In a letter addressed to James W. Tay lor, of Cincinnati, dated Camp near Mon terey May IS, 1847, he says in reference to the Presidency 44 1 am not prepared to say that 1 shall refuse if the country calls me to the Pres idential office; but that I can and shall yield to no call, that dacs not come from the spontaneous action of the free will 'of. the nation at large," Sid - To Mr. Edward t)eloney, dated Mon terey, Mexico, June 9, 187, he toysi "Should I ever occupy the White House, it must be by the Spontaneous mov ?e of the people, and by no act of mine,; , , 1 . A ' hat I could o into the office, untram' so that melled and be the chief magislrat&of: the nation and not of a party.".- ; . ,; . T,o Gen. Peter Sken Smith, oT Phila., July 6, 1847 he says: "If i ever fill that high office it must be untrammelled with parfy . obligations or interests of any kind, 6c. To J. A. Barkery, Esq, July 13, lS4f, he says: 51 am not of -any party litical. creed To the Hon. J..B. Ingersqll, Aug- 3d, 1847,. he 9rtii "At the last Presidential election, k I willing to oe the candidate commencea on r nuay. iasi ..7. v.; - ' . ." - - ?!.. . ,:L t-Jt'titii.-i 11 W-1a1, to pledge myself to any 'po- A, W, and ended oKthe next morning at ave that wnicti,proieeeds di- o o ciock a. iu., .,-'i:';.;:7UiU ,x I kdi -hliivW -on record TheTerritdri- was decidedly in favor of Clay's election, and would now prefer, seeing him in thai office to any individual' in the Union.- I must say I have no wish for the Presi dency, and cannot consent to be exclu sively the candidate of a party. . r To F. S. Brownson,of Charleston S. C Aug. 10, 1317, .he says; - . . ' I need not hardly add that I cannot in any case permit myself to be brought be fore the people exclusively , by any of trie political parties, that now so unfortunately divide our country, as their candidate for this office." , To Wm. S. Goodj Esq., of N. Y4 Sept. 23, '47, he says: t ..v , .' ..t l I do not feel myself at liberty to ex press any sentiment having the nature of a pledge to any political party." . ..... . . To the Hon. Andrew Stewart, Pa., Nov. 25, -1847, he says: "I have no wish or intention of chang ing the position in which 1 stand toward the people of this country, in relation toStates, 9 of them whigs arrd 9 of them c$ the Presidency, or the course which I have felt it my duty -to pursue." To Wm.,M. Murphy, and others, Jan. 30, MS, he says: "I shall offer no active opposition to the use of my name in connection with this responsible office as long as they continue to use it thus independent of party dis tinction." To Gen Peter Sken Smith, of Phila., Jan. 30, 1848, he says: 'lt they the people) desire such a re sult, (a nomination of President,) they must adopt the means best suited to their opinion, to the consummation ol the pur pose, and if thc$T think fit to bring me be fore them for this office, through their legislatures, mass meetings, or conven tions, I cannot object to their designating these bodies as Whig, Democratic or Na-' . - . . 4 . " . ' tivc. liut in being thus nominatcti 1 must . insist on the condition, and my position on this point is immutable, that I shall not be brought forward by them cs the candi- lie says In subMancer I f t am elected I' willlook to the con stitution and not to a party for ray rule of action To Messrs. Baldwin k Gallahefy April 20, '48, he says in substance: --; 1st. "That if Mr. Clay is nominated he will not Withdraw his name from the can vass. 2d. That he has never Said that he date ol their parly or considered as the Mr. Clayton, in the Senate, for the organ exponent of their party doctrines." ization of the territories of Orecon, NevV io loi. Miicneii oi unio, icd. Mexico and California, and which finally was in favor of the tariff of 140, nor thefornia and?NeV Alcxlc'are'lcft4 open io subtreasitry, not that he originated the the Immigration ofall persons With their war,;nor that if elected he would select property of every ::kthfl, and if their right his cabifict ffdm both political parties.,, to introduce slaves; be contested undcr the To . Capt. J. S. Allison, May . 1, 1848, gefnCfa! principles of the constitution, the he says in substance: question of right will be decided in the 1st. "That' he is a Whig, and if elected first instance, by theerritoridl Judges, and he tvcruld hot he the there President o( a i in the last fesoftj bv the United Stales pariy. 2U. 1 hat he is opposed to.the e-, UrcUc - oM VetopOWef. . 3d. that the j'"lgcmeiit of Congress is the measure offbcing prohibited from passing la on the . . )l 4, To Brants! Mayer, of Baltimore, he says in substance! s - lf elected I will serve the people strictly as a constitutional, and not as a party President. All his Life in Office. TAiS is fl( lll2 objection to Gen: Cass. Unuckil, it is an argument with a dcfublfc edge, its keen est one being for.Gen. Taylor Gen. Cass has filled a variety of-civil offices, all of which were schools in which to form the man of business And the statesman. Cen. Tavlor entered the armv as lieutenant at 19 j'ears of age, has beenln the army, and in thq y of the government, for 43 years. He holds at this moment the highest rank l in Ko nw.,n, i nan.Iiflntff for the? PrP- J . . 7 j sidenc', and receives between 7 and rii , , . .A . ....t,... . ,uuu annual saiuijr. aiuiuugu ui his life in ol5ce, it has not been in offices where he could learn how to' make a Pr csi dent He acknowledges that himself. Boston Post. , , Prom the Union. A Io fig Session and an important The1 session (sf trie fSenateV which al Olll,SUIng, wi iu preseni,uit: uhddFcowideration, and its' fi Vends wcicj determined to press it to a vote. Through out the long night, grave Senators kept their seats, whilst speech after apeech7for hc. mos part against the bill, 'was made. At last, as we have, elsewhere noticed; tin! bilfwas'put to affinal vote a little before 8 'cloclc oh Saturday morning It rnay not be entirely uniustruclive to analyze this vote.4 The vote stood 33 yeas nays. Of the 33 Senators who' Voted for the bill, 25 are from slavchold ing Stated, and 8 from the free States." Of those whi vole 1 for thVbill from. thVsIaye Stales, 1 9 are -demderats r and' 6 whigs.-'.-KOf tlitf 8 Senators ' from" the free States v?who v6tei I for the bill, 70a re democrats and 1 only i a whig. Of 'the 2 Sehators who voted against the bill, 4 were from' slaveholdih Stafcsi-ffI-viz.i Mr; BADGER of North Corolina, Mr. John Bell of Ten ncsseef and Messrs. Underwood1 and Met calfe of Kentucky. Of those whd voted (against the bill, 18 were from the) Tree mocrat?. Two whigs and one democrat we're" absent All the Southern democrats) voted for thebilirOurofthe 8 Northern votes for the bill, only one was a whi vote. There was only 7 whig votes'alto gether cast for the bill. " ' - "Wre cannot imagine what reason George E. Badger of N, C, has, to offer to his cop stituents why he voted with trie North on this great sectional question.'' We have not seen his reasons. ' We do not know what can excuse him.; If will be seen frOni 'an examination of the Vote as stated above, that the democratic Senators, both North and South, supported the bill, we mean as a body, whilst the whig Sena tors, as a body, VJted against the bill. Why this was the case, we are not at the moment of writing this article, prepared to ay. So soon as: we get the facts fully be- f 1 II . . . I 1 1. . - ! i"e us, we snan recur loinesuujeciaguiu, The CompromiseThe following arc the main features of the bill reported by passcq that body oft the 27, Ult 33 to 22. 1. That the present laws of the Oregon territory are confirmed until they shall be aiiurcu uy me popular lerruonai legisla ture, under the new 'organisation and as" these laws are now understood to exclude slavery, the bill so far, perriBpsdmits the right of the territorijil-Je'gisraitife .to; pass laws on mat sunjecn. nui3'.v vi nat cau- Supreme Couft. The Gubernatorial ar.d Judicial Legislatures of these territories subject of slatery, thepnnciple of non-in terference js distinctly acknowledged. This schefne ts( compromise emanated from a cothmitteeof eight, by ballot of t lie Senate YoUr fr6m flhe section of the-1. niart, and four from the olhcrwhalfof (hem democrats, haif whiiiS: Mr. Cl.iv- frfn CKrt'iHnart nf. iht 'fitimfaUttdl hnr from a State situated in the middle' 6f the tfnion neither, in fact, northltfr south. The N. C. Regiment 'tUe tciir com panies of the N.iC; Regiment,' Under com mand of Lt. Col. Fagg and Major Stokes, now at Old Point, are an brderly and fipe looking set of men. We h(iard it remark ed with pride,y titie of tlic officers of the Regimeni, that none 0 his men ivete scei drunk or disturbing in any way, the quiet of the neighborhood in which they were. They had cheerfully borne the" exposures, perils and privations of1 the Camp, in the service of their country, andfreie now on ly awaiting an honorable discharge in or der to return to their. hdrhesv ' Norfolk IJcacon. VC3A Vans letter writer says that with each company of the Garde Mobile, be hind! the drummers fcut liri front of the company, marches a pretty girl, in panta loons, frock' coat ahd faftcifu! hat arid fea ther; to; indicate her office, -she. carries a hAit1 nf .;nft in one han, and a glass MimbleHin theothr. She is 'called Uiq Cantonicrewr. of Com: - I .V v. h r It 1 I t p h v. f II! I: -! 1 r art Vt I! u fx V- ':; ;.i ; is ' , if) if i': lis 11 'ml m ti1