:f Supreme Court. lJeeisions have been made by this Tribu nal m the touowing Cases, since our last no- Per Daniel, J., in Powell v. Jones & -Rolesi ill Equity, from Northampton ; de gree fa Plaintiff. AUd, in Fox r. Alexan- rffr lifi Ti,i"J.Jk f HT1 'l ' . t rr - ' "-aiiijr, iiuin inecKienDurg ; amrmiug the .'degreo below Also, in Jamesc. Clark. i -l affirming the judgement below. Also, m btate v. Fore & Chnt fm T noir ; affirming the judgement below. Per Gaston J., i Parker Vm Hinsou, in ,iuity, from Wayne ; dismissing the bill Also, in Hewlett's heirs v. Thompson and umers, m equity, irom Uuiltord ; declaring the Plaintiffs entitled to an account. Also, in Rawles v. Ponton, in Equity, from North ampton ; reversing the degree in part. Also, in Lindsay v. King, from Rockingham ; af firming lira judgement below. Per Ruffin, C. J., in State v. Jones et al, from Buncombe affirming the judgement below. Also, in Crawley v. Timberlake, in Equity, from Caswell ; reversing the degree, &c and remanding the cause. Also, in Grier v. Fletcher et al., from Buncombe ; reversing the judgement below, sustaining the demurrer, &c. Also, in Carter v. Mc Neely, from Davie ; affirming the judgement below. Per Da niel, J. in Woolard v. McCuHoeh from Beaufort dii eciing a new trial. Per Gaston, J., in Cherry v. Woolard, from Beaufort; affirming the judgement below. Also, in McLaurin r. W right, in Equity, from Richmond ; directing an enquiry. Also, in Bethune v. Terry, in Equity, from Rich mond ; declaring the plaintiffs eutitled-to re deem, and directiug the ordinary accounts to be taken. Also, in Muzzall v. Lee ; appli cation for certiorari ; certiorari refused. TIE NOJRTM CAROILIKIAM. Superior Court. The following arrangement has been made by the Judges of the Superior Courts for the Fall Circuits oflS4l: 1 Edenton. iNewbern a Judge 3 Raleigh, Hillsborough, o Wilmington, 6 Salisbury, 4 ivi orcautini it Dattle. Settle. Dick. Nash. Pearson. Bailey. Manly. "The Tost Oaice and the I? Postmasters Kespongibiliiy. The able editor of the Louisvillle Journal states that it has been every where held by court that, in an action for subset ipliou money, it is sufficient to prove that the defen dant took the paper from the post office. It makes no difference whether he ever subscrib ed at all, so that he receives the paper from the office. If one to whom a paper is sent refuse to lake it from the office, the law makes it the duty of the Postmaster to notify the pub lisher of the fact ; and should the Postmaster neglect to give this notice, he becomes liable "for the subscription money. This also has been 'decided in all parts of the country. These are the most material poiuts of law "bearing upon the newspaper business. We may remaik that between subscriber and pub lisher, the trust is all on the side of the latter, and, therefore, that subscription debts ought to be classed by debtors among their ' debts ofi honor,' while judges ought to be liberal in construing the law ant the evidence in such cases. r-Sal. Courier. "Still They Come." The Indiana Democrat says, that the Hon. JOHN Mc LEAJsT,,,a prominent Whig in that State, JAMES BAR I DEN, Esq., a late member of Congress, and JONATHAN McC ARTY one-of. The Harrison Whig Elector?, have .abandoned -the Whig party, as they conceive L A .1 r..T . J T . . . . 4 . I ..... 1 . . ! . w. , 1 iVki-t .The Xaticnss.1 Intelligencer cauglit in a lie! -SEMI-OFFICIAL ACCURACY. The National Intelligencer of this morning ,1.. r. UlH5ll UjlliiUUSI V UMCIU IUUL " The; Bank bill, which has gone from the Senate to. the House, and which we trust and believev will become a law, founds the power for establishing branches for local discount on the consent of the States respectively. " If any State objects, there can be no such branch vi:hiu her limits." "Now, this is directly in the teeth of Mr . i i i Ciay s-amendrnent, wiucn, alter providing as to asking the States for their assent or dissent unconditionally, goes on to add : " And pro vided nevertheless, that when it shall become necessary and proper, for carrying into ex ecution any of the powers granted in the Constitution to establish an office or offices in any of the States whatever, and the estab lishment whereof shall be directed by law, it shall be the duty of the said directors to estab lish such office or offices accordingly." So that nevertheless or notwithstanding a State objects, a branch can be placed within her limits, whenever Congress pleases to direct. . . . t t i .,,i c Via J. his is not ouiy uio twu jJim ui 4.mfindment. as published in the Intelligencer itself, and as must be known to its editors, but it is fee view taiten oi n iu ueoaie Dy ooiu sides. This was explained fully by Mr Woodbury, one of its opponents, and also by its friends, Mr Clay and Mr Dixon. The latter, as reported in the Intelligencer, says explicitly, " Congress still retains this power, and will order branches wherever that neces sity is proved to exist." Globe. ICaval. H. S. Squadron in tlie Pacific. A correspondent of the N. Y. Journal of Commerce, writing from Calloa, under date of may 21st says : The U. S. Frigate Constitution, Capt. Dani Turner, is here, and will sail for the United States in the beginning of J uly. The sloop of Wrar Yorktown, Capt. Aulick, is nearly ready for Sea, bound for the Sandwich, Society, and Friendly Islands, and New Zea land ; the U. S. sloop of war Dale, Capt. Gaunt, is here, but is expected shortly to take a cruise to leeward, perhaps as far as Guaya quil. The U. S. Schr. Shark, Lieut. Comdt. Bigelow, is on a cruise to Payta, Guayaquil, &c. The U. S. store ship Relief, was also at Calloa. JSforfolk Beacon. The following lines have been in our possess! or. I for twelve months" or more, during which time we have endeavoured to find the author, but have not succeeded. ' Every one disclaims the burning pas sion here expressed. The lady, perhaps may pos sess some clue to the Poet. He is certainly a warm admirer. , May heaven assist me in the enchanted song Inspire my Muse and bring each line along So that jour chirms, I thus, may proudly sing: So that your name, in these devoted lines I bring. Let mine the pleasure be, to sing your praise, And call in aiJ, the poets tuneful lays; Untold the lale that in my heart abides, Relenting in rny fute, my spirit often chide.-, And bids me tell the passion I approve, And here I now confess, Tis that oflove, No form so lovely and no smile so swe.t -INo lault to injure every act discreet, Which to your youthful charms (I learn) is joined in lull perfection, every grace of mind- -lo.ji.tciumrvuws disclose, at fortune's shrine L.et otuf-rs 'round ambition's stately altar Twine ; 1 11 shun them ali, and love, my motto hence shall be, And every sigh shall bnathe in love sincere for ihee. May rival Angels guard your coming davs ! buch, oe the lory of my Muse's lays. News by Mails. The Illinois Bank Robbery. " From the St. Iouis New Era, we learn that nearly all the money recently stolen from the Branch Batik, at Jacksonville, 111., has beeu recovered. A letter received at St. Louis, and dated on the 20th uhV says that the community was, at the moment of writ ing, in the greatest excitement, iu conse quence of the developemeuts of the previous night; and a public meeting was then being held. Col. Mather, who had been iu Jack sonville a day or two, received on Monday evening an anonymous letter, informing him wheie the money was concealed. lie kept this information an entire secret until night ; and late at night heamifitOitomn with all the notes and Jhe gold, but not ffisUifTt He then toM the President of the Bank and another gentleman, and enjoined them to keepEhe matter a secret until time was allowed-him to get to Springfield. At breakfast time, the disclosure was made, and a meeting of the people called. Tt is added " About fifty men immediate ly pursued Col. Mather, determined to bring him back at all hazards. They left under whip and spur, thinking to overtake him be fore he reached Springfield. Mather left at four o'clock in the morning." The letter states that II. D. Town, the Teller, had just been arrested, on an affidavit made by Mr Stacey, and was on his way to the magistrate's office, followed by a crowd, who talked of lynching, &c. Lightning. One of the most remarkable cases of a lightning stroke that ever came to our know ledge, is now occupying the attention of a portion of the medical faculty in and about Jersey city. The Advertiser of that place furnishes the following account of if : Sun. On Wednesday last, about noon, the house of Geyrge Newkirk, at Bergen, was struck and greatly shattered, from the gable end to the foundation. The fluid appears to have separated in threo streams, and upon striking the house, to have passed through it in as many directions, leaving destruction in its track. It entered the house at the South west gable end, and branched off to the north and west, passing off and entering the ground from each track. In one room, the chimney-piece was forced about six inches from tho wall, whence the fluid passed across the room to a looking glass, which it shivered to atoms. Large stones, over a foot in thick ness, were broken, and many parts of the house singed, so as to present the appear ance of having been scorched by gunpow der. The remarkable features of the phenome non are the circumstances attending the case of Mrs. Newkirk, who was struck by the fluid. She was standing about three feet from the window at which the fluid entered, and apparently received the entire charge, her whole body having been traversed, from the left temple to the extremities of thojoes. (Her husband, lying on a cot ten or twelve feet from her, in the same apartment, was stunned for a short time, but received no per manent injury.) Mrs N. was at first suppos ed to be killed, and foi twenty minutes ex hibited no signs of life ; at the end of the pe riod she was revived by being sprinkled with cold water. When the water was thrown on her. a considerable evaporation was perceived from her body, and after the restoration of consciousness, tho entire lett side, whicn, re ceived the shock, was for many hours in a stale of paralysis, while the right side was strongly convulsed. She was ignorant, until informed, of the manner of her injury, and inquired of her at tendants in reference to the burns of her body, " why the doctors had blistered her," remark ing that her illness must have been very sud den, from her knowing nothing of it until she found herself under the vigorous medical treatment. Mrs. N. is still alive, though in a very pre carious state, which was rendered more so, by the birth, on Sunday night, of a dead in fant, (within two months of the proper time of delivery) apparently killed by the shock when it was first received. Maryland Tobacco Crop. The Marl boro' (Prince George's county) Gazette, of Thursday last, says: "The tobacco crop in the immediate vicinity of Marlboro', and the forest of this county, it is said, promises to be a good one ; while from the lower section of the country, as also in the adjoining lower counties, we learn that nothing like a full crop can be made, therefore, while ia some parts of the State the crop will be an average one, in others there will be a considerable falling off, and on the whole we are inclined to the opinion that the yield will be much less than last year." . . From the Charleston Courier. Intended Servile Insurrection ia Louisiana discovered and promptly crushed. The New Orleans papers of the 23d inst, contain accounts of a servile conspiracy in the plantations on the river, in both Louisiana and Mississippi, which was discovered in season, as all such mad and ignorant plottings of mischief ever will be in this country, and which will of course be signally punished in the persons of the ring leaders and others. We copy the following particulars from the N. O. Bulletin: Intended Revolt of Slaves. Intelligence was received yesterday, by the packet steam er Clipper, from Bayou Saia, of a systema tized plan on the part of the negroes to rise upon and murder the whites. The news, greatly exaggerated in its repetition, has crea ted quite a sensation in town. The plain truth is certainly sufficient to occasion serious apprehensions. The particulars that we have received are these. The overseer of the plantation of Robt. J. Barrow, of West Feliciana, having occasion to arise from his bed late on one of the recent hot nights, heard what he believed to be ne groes conversing in one of the quarters. On silently approaching the vicinity and listening, he overheard two of the slaves discussing the subject of a rising against the whites. This led to the examination the next morning of the two fellows, when thev confessed the fact, and gave information that led to the arrest of several others. The alarm was immediately spread abroad, arrests were made in various plantations, and it was found by the confes sions that they all agreed in the main facts, that there was to be a general rise, and that the first of August was the day agreed upon. A white man, a carpenter, who had lately done a job of work for Mr Barrow, was also arrested on suspicion, and examined. Jfe said he had nothing to do with thgjQ'that he had never said any thing to the negroes on the subject, but acknowledge that they fre quently spoke to him,Snd informed him all about it. Thi. white man, with about 40 negroes, all or whom had confessed their knowledge of the intended rising, .were in the jail at St. Francisville, guarded by a company of volun teers, lheir examination by a competent tribunal, was to have commenced yesterday at 1U A. ii. , Sew Mail Arrangement. We are gratified to learn from Washineton, that the Postmaster General has given direc tions to have placed on the railroad between the cities of Philadelphia and New York, via. Trenton, frincetown, New Brunswick, New ark, &c, new mail cars or travtlUnz post of fices, which will leave each city every morn ing and evening, and thus supply regularly the post offices between these places, in the same manner as is now done between Washington, Baltimore, and Philadelphia, and between Al bany and Utica. and other places on the main railway tnorougntares of the U. States. At Woodville, we learn numerous slaves were confined in the jail, having confessed to the same facts as those arrested in Felici ana. Capt. Laurent states that on stopping a Point Coupee, to communicate information of the situation of the affairs above, several gen tlemen recollected occurrences of recent date which tended to confirm the suspicions that the slaves of their section were parties to the wicked plot. Dr said he had been asked what day of the month it was, by more ne groes, witnin tne last ten days, than in seven years before and there had been unusual as semblies of the slaves, in rather by-places, for several Sundays past Some of the negroes have confessed that the combination was from Bayou Sara to Natchez. It may not be amiss to remark, that the plantations in Feliciana and Wilkinson coun ty from which the slaves were taken who are imprisoned are owned by the most wealthy and respectable planters of the State, whose kind and humane treatmnet of their slaves is proverbial. Science Preparing the way for Reli cioif. The Albany Advertiser says that H. Rawls & Co. of that city, have prepared some very valuable philosophical apparatus which has been purchased for the use of of the mis sionaries in India. One of the greatest ob- i . .t c i r t i sracies to me spreau oi vnnsuaniiy mere nas been the conflict between the Missionaries and Brahmins on questions of natural science. The religion of the latter strictly forbids the use of animal food in any shape ; the Mis sionary with the microscope shows them that every drop of water teems with animal life, and that a strict compliance with their tenets is impossible. The Brahmin believes that in an eclipse the moon is swallowed up by a great fish ; the telescope forever dispels this absurdity. The same thing is true of nearly all their popular prejudices ; they may be dis pelled, and a way prepared for the reception of religious truth, by the simplest philosophical inventions. Christianity and Science may then go hand in hand. JYew York Tri bune. Important to-American Farmers. The Corn- Law Question in England. It appears certain that there is now awaken ed throughout England a feeling such as has never before been aroused. The corn laws have had their wickedness pretty generally ex hibited. The people ae determined. They think that they have argued this corn law ques tion long enough. The pressure on the ope rative multitudes, is becoming too strong and threatening for prolonged reasonings. The season of action is arrived, and it cannot come more favorably for the national interest. The announced purpose of the Queen's Min isters, is as the setting in of the tide. Let it rush on, and sweep before it all the defences of this inhuman monopoly. If.the people are truly awake to their own interests, such a result is inevitable. If that national enthusiasm which their determina tion must produce, be but evinced in time by a people awake to their own most vital con cerns, we cannot but augur the happiest re sults. The returns of the political contest now raging there with so much virulence and bitterness, will be found to be productive of the deepest anxiety ; and for the melioration of the condition of her multitudes, let us hope for the most auspicious results. Yet so strong has the aristocracy planted its heel upon all things in English Institutions, we may not be too sanguine. If there could be any thing like free trade between the United States and England, so far as our wheat and corn are concerned we could not only be clear of debt to that country in a very short time, but we could bring to the agricultural districts of the United States, in less than six months, more than ten mil lions of dollars, for the sale of our pent-up products, which do not now command a fair price. Saturday Coiarier. The Cotton Crop A letter from New Orleans says, that should the weather pfbve favorable, the yield will amount to 2,000,000 of bales, and perhaps 2,300,000. Courage. -It ia apopular error, says Bul wer, to suppose that courage means courage in every thing. People are brave in the dan gers to which theji accustom themselves. ,A naval hero would turn pale, if, mounted on a hunter, be were put to jump a five-barred gate, and the boldest fox-hunter, if desired to leap one of the ySwiss chasms, over which the mountaineer springs like a roe, would feel his knees Knock under him. Diarrhoea. People need not be lone troubledjwith that disorder, so generally prev alent afthis season, commonly known as the summefor bowel complaint, when the certain remedy therefor may be found on every man's dinner table, in the shape of salt and vinegar. ... - . f i e -i r J : 1 I If two lea spooniuis oi me lormer, uissoivcu ju half a cifof the latter, and swallowed at a This arrangement is an excellent one, andl draught, will in most cases effect an instant well calculated to give satisfaction as well as much greater facility to the transmission ot letters and newspapers. Princeton IVhisr. . An Officer of the Navv Drowsed. Lieut. Ross Crawford who was attached to the schooner Nautilus, employed in theWurvey of our river and bay, and was goiug-Ao the re lief of a seamen who had failed overboard, when the boat he was in upsetand he unfor tunately drowned. Mr Crawford was in the 27th year of his age, andwas the son of T. ! H.Crawford, Esq., Cojnmissoner of Indian Affairs, in Washingp4f"City. Bait. Sun. One Hundred years in Prison. A French papers-states that a young man aged IS years, iaT724, was condemned to the gal leys in Knce, for the period of one hundred yearsiy-4'hich was probably intended by the judge toconfine him for life. Remarkable as it may appear, in 1824, the man being in perfect health, after an unremitted series of hardships for one entire century, was dis charged, being 118 years old. Prison Labor. The mechanics of Alba ny, N. Y., held a meeting last week, and earnestly protested against State Prison labor. Sun. Extra Session. The Governor of New York has called an extra session of the State Senate, to convene at Buffalo on the 16th of August, for the purpose of filling vacancies ia the various civil offices of mat State. lb. Another Slave Case. Rose, a colored girl from Mobile, was brought before the Su preme Judicial Court at Boston on Saturday, on habeas corpus, having come to that citv in the service of Mr Ticknor, from Mobile. Her good friends who sued out the writ contended that she was not old enough to judge for her self whether she would run at large or stay with Mr Ticknor, but the judges held that no one was so capable of judging in that matter as herself. She preferred the latter and the writ was thereupon dismissed. Honor Conferred. The degree of L. L. D. was conferred upon John Tyler, Presi deut of the U. States, by Amherst College, Massachusetts, at the commencement meet ing of the trustees last week:. cure. ine second dose, it needed, win as suredly accomplish it. We are ready to give pur certificate to Dr Pickle in the premises, fclr we witnessed the truth. Quod eral de monstrandum which is as much as to say, in Dutch, 4 It haschbeen tried.' . This recipe should be published annually, every summer. JVantuck-ct Jnquirer. , LOOK THIS. Th Subscriber wiU keep con etaafiy on hand a Iai&e uppv of ROM AN CEMENT, PL AS JTER PARIS, WATER L1MF ROTTEN PLASTER for MANURE, ilyl THO- noTrPr MME, and also a constant pupply of BRICK. , r TO SMOKERS. I keep the beef Principe and Spanish Cigars, Long Stem Pipes, and Smok ing Tobacco nkelj puf up jn pnn. , GROCERIES. In this linel keep Bacon, Meal Sugary Coffee, Piah, and almost Ivery article ex cept Sfiritous Liquors. . WORKMEN. I will beetle to furnish firs' rate Workmen, in the line of Bricklaying and Plas- either for plain or ornamental Cornicing, or ttenng Clouds 3 bf insects are very common this4 year., iney are sometimes so dense as io represent the spiral columns ot smoke, pass ing off into the illimitable space beyond. What is the cause of the swarms of insects this year? Swarms of yellow flies are un commonly abundant. -lb. American Steam Ships. The people of Uoston have held a meeting and responded to tho proposition of building lines of American Steamers under patronage of the government. They are willing to step forward and take the Havre line. Sun. . Deaths in New York. In New York last week, there Were 192 deaths, 96 of them under two years of age. Twenty-nine died of consumption, and an; equaf number from cholera infantum. IV. Crops jn Alabama. A letter from Sel ma, dated on the 17th inst., states that the corn and cotton crojis in that section look very promising, and a cotton crop ecfual to that of 1838 was expected. lb. From the Old Dominion'. Communicated. Scarlet Fever. As the above disease prevails in Portsmouth at this time, and is consigning many to an untimely grave, J will take the liberty to say that in the treatment of that disease, Thomp sonians, upon an average, do not lose ode patient out of fifty. In 1833 I treated many cases of scarlet fever, boih in Virgiuia and" North Carolina, some of which were extreme cases, and I never lost a patient with that fe ver in my life. Proof is obtainable if re quired. Try the medicines fellow-citizens. J. L. Confusion of Tongues. Some of the members of the Canadian Parliament speak altogether in French, and of course are per fectly unintelligible to their English compa triots, and vice versa. The Union will never harmonize with such discordant materials. Saturday Courier. A Distinction without a Difference. The Hartford Times says there is just about as much difference between Ewings "Fis cal Agency " and a National Bank, as there is between a Whig and a Federalist just about. An Opinion. An eminent physician at New Orleans avers his belief that sun-stroke kills by apoplexy of the lungs, and not of the brain ; in which opinion he has been con firmed by every dissection he has made with in the last two years. The Right Wav. The farmers of Hart land, Livingston comity, Michigan, held a meeting on the 1 3th, and resolved to take nothing for their wheat but specie and the notes of specie paying Banks. They invite the holders of such money to come and buy of them. The Statue of Washington has arrived at WaaV ington city, from Italy, and will displace Mr Jeffer eoa's, now in the centre of the rotunda of the capitoI. Mexico is on the eve of another revolution. w o CD OE o 73 59 H a 2 & a 3 S-f S - 3 c B ,3 - a P c 3 B3 ' 1 w op- 3 jf s - o 1 1 . 6 ; fl 2? i"S!0',o cT 5 I 5 I od w w to ww? . a Splendid LOTTERIES. I? 4 prizes of $25,000 amounting toff lorcom ocpicmocr . auu lmfrsepttfm at ft ociock, undav.-VreraTrcg S50.000S30.000 $25,000, V for 23d OCTOBER. JT. fir. Gregory, 4k Co., Manager8, SPLENDID UNION LOTTERY, Glass 8, for 1 34 1. To be drawn at Alexandria, D. C. on Saturday, September 25. GRAND CAPITALS. 4 prizes of 2 5, OOO dollars, makingr 100,000. - $25,000 25,000 25,000 - 25,000 - - 10,000 8,000 6,000 6,153 4,000 2,000 1,000 - 600 - 250 - 200, &c. 14 drawn numbers outctf7S. Tick eta 816 Halves T 0 Quarters 3 IS Eighths 1 ST. Certiftcatea of packages of 26 whole tickets &20 1 PRIZE of tt it ti tt 2 prizes of 4 50 ' it tt 100 " Do Do Do do do do 2G Half 26 Clurt'r. 26 eighth do do do 100 50 25 $50,000 $30,000,$25,000. On SATURDAY, "Oct. 23. GRAND UNIOJ LOTTERY, Grass 9f for 1841. Wilt be drawn at Alexandria, D. C. 16 JOrawn Ballotm. . " BRILLIANT SCHJEME ; 1 Grand capital of $50,000 1 Splendid prize of 030,000 " - - 25,000 10,000 of $8,000 7,000 6J00O - 5,000 - - 4,000 2,500 2,311 - - - 2,000 1,750 - - - 1,500 1,250 1,000 600 400 300 250 200 PRIZE tt tt tt f a tt tt tt tt tt t tt ft tt tt tt 4 5 10 10 50 50 50 100 100 170 - i 16 drawn numbers out of 78 Tickets 820 Halves lO Quarters . Eighths 2 SO. Certificates of packages of 26 whole tickets S260 Do do 26 Half do 130 Da do 26Q.urt'r. do 65 Do do 26 Eighth do 32 50 IrCP'Orders for tickets and shares and certificates of packages in the arove s lendM s hm s will re ceive themost prompt attention ; and the drnwirj of each lottery will be sent irr.m d aTels fcf t i over, to all who order from as. A.'.d q J. G. GREGORY & Co. Managers, I Washington City, D. C. 123-6L Friday afteroons The CARTHAGE & SALISBURY MAIL ar Jives at 12 o'clock on Mondays and Thursdays, J-r closed and" d parts at 1 o'clock, on Mondays and firh'irsdav. . The ELIZABETHTOWN MAIL arrives by 9 o'clock on Sunday, VVedncsday, ai d Friday morn ings, i closed and departs at 10 o'emck, on Sun day. "Wednesday and Friday motnin s. Tho WILMINGTON AND CHARLESTON MAIL, via. CLINTON and WARSAW, arrives n Sunday, Tuesday, and Thursday, at about 3 a. m., and departs on Sunday, Tuesilay and Thurs day, at 8 o'c'ock.'p. m. : The LAURENCEVILLE MAIL arrives hy 5 o'clock on Saturday evemnir, is closed and departs at 6 o'clock on Wfidnsdav mominff. Th MAIL by" McNEILL'S-FERRY, BLACK'S STORE and OR AUGHAK'S STORE, arrives at 9 o'clo' k MoncT-iy night, ig closed" and departs at 5 o'clock on Fridav nominj... . PRICES CURRENT. . Corrected weekly for the JVrlh Carolinian. FAYKTTKVILLEi Brandy, peach, apple, Bacon, Beeswax, Butter, Bale Rope, Cotton xarn,' Coffee Cottofrf Cotton Bagging, Corn, Copperas, Caudles, F. F. Flaxseed, Flour, Feathers,, Hides, green, dry Iron, bar;. Lead, bar,r Lime, Lard,' Molasses, Nails, cut, Oats, OH, Linseed, per gallon, 1 Powder, kejr. Rajs, per 100 lbs. Salt, per bushel, Sack, Sugar, brown, ' lurrp, " . I, loaf, Tallow, Tin, per box, . Tobacco, lea ' Wheat, Whiskey. vx Wool. . . 15 Gay and 9 60 a $00 in 00 45 a 00 5( 00 6J a 00 7 00 25 a 00 U Il a 15 00 a a 00 10 16 o .20 00 12 a 00 13 00 7j a 00 10 00 25 a 00 20 55 60 3 a 4 00 17 a 00 75 a 80 6 a 7 00 35 a 00 37J 00 4 a 00 5 00 12 a 00 14 5 a 51 7 a 8 2j 2 7 a 8 20 a 25 6ja 7 a 30 75 a 70 CJ 2 60 a 75 1 90 a 2 8 a 00 11 16 a 00 00 13 a 00 20 10 a 11 131 3 c 5 1 20 a 30 a 2d 20 4-4 Sheeting, FajeCfceville manufacture, 8 J cts. yd 3-4 do do do WILMiaOTOS. 00 co-Pay tiie Printer Bacon, Butter, . ' Beeswax, -Brandy, apple, "', Corn, per bushel, Coffee, Cotton, per 100 lbs. Cotton Bagging, dull, Flour, per bbl. Gin, American, Lime, bbl., Xlolasses, Pitch, at the Stills", Rice, per 100 lbs. Rum, N. E. Sugar, bTown, Turpentine, soft, per bbl. Tnrpntine, hard do 'I-mring boards, M. Wide do do Shingles. Country, do Contract, do' 17 25 40 ' 8! SO' 50 33 90 22 75 25 30 n 800 1 8 6 1 3 00 75 00 91 22 26 42 80 12$ 9 24 00 33 12 24 2 50 9f I 90 n 2 SO a 8 50. a 6 50 1 50 00