-4 NORTH CTffl-tiBB f '$ 1 the Speaking of tbe scarVtyand high price e Wilmington Journal mys , J . r of corn u Ml ate av irtd c jh to lwp. -C.-W. FBNTON, Editoe. . y TnURSDAY:::::::::::::; JANUARY 30, 1862. V AKSOJf IXSTITUtE. : I Oof..ro4 jmwUotj rrn : we Jure just been informed, is to much prostrated bj psst&cted illness of two months, thai he will not bo able to take his place here under four or fivweekaC4 School 'pens'this dsy, the . 27th "ICTCoI. L. L. Polk requests tbeoficersj com xnlsiioned and non-commiaaooed, of the bistres iment, to meet a Piney Grove Church, oo Fri day, the 7th of February, at 9 o'olock, for the purpose of drill; i ICV: W k the Attention , of the reader, and especially of our county officers, to our Fort Bee crreapondc'atyjetter. Ve askibrsn explau 'tdlThii (frajlainof oneouir Ni CKegi - - meats has requested to be famished with books, . td,bf loaned to the volunteers for their perusal ad profits Horal books are the kind needed books that will teach1, them,' not only how to Uvt soldiers, are those who are enlisted in the army of the (rod of battles; and who; fight, trusting score to His power than to their4)wa'ejBcietieyI The' people of Anson art requested to look tip jail books suitabU for this purpose, ana leave them, at this oacoi to he for warded .to the cbiplxioRer. Jlr. Powers, who ririU,ake the j best possible to of them. Do thuat once, without 'dcla, for'it is an important ' otfcKTr ',,''if -?ur i.'--.t- ; A TOafr box of "books hare ' alreadr been re ctiTedi packed, and forwarded but man j 'more .. miteee4.., T u ,VW14r'"', ' "fc ' : f. Why it thU? Why pliraty because dlatillert, get. ting vl.CO per gallon for whiskey a day old, can afford to boy up tho corn on the spot, thus preventing it ever geitS atroad to perform IU legiUmau funcllon la inp- Eoruag urs (applying broad to man and rood for orsts- - ' : It is a buriung shame and a heinous sin,, that it should be so sin that. our. rulers and law makers will bare to answer for at the bar of God if not at an earthltribunal. It is an 'txhibl Uon ofthe basest inxratudeto ;Him who gaire the people of this State, and the Confederacy such bountiful crops the past season. Is it right that Ilia bounties gi ten for the sustenance of the people, should be converted into poison for their destruction f lie who knows all things; sends to this "people, just al a time when; they need such a favor most when their enemies are strain log everj nerve to lay waste and destroj and en slave them when all communication with" the outer world is cut off, and the means of obtaioing supplies from other sources inhibited and in con sequence the people 'subjected to great inconve nience and suffering st tuck a time a time of universal distress Heaven sends a, most bountiful crop of corn ! A supplj so abundant that the hearts of the poor end the rich are rejoiced and made glad, and thej send forth their sons to the battle fieldr;confident of support io their absence But how is it? Soddenlj there comes arcarcitj! Prices go up. Flour, which ought to bring from three and a half to four dollars, brings nine, and corn, which ought to sell for fifty cents, goes up to $1,50. Why is it? , Why, it is because the gift of God has Wn prostituted that which he gave to noori&h and strengthen them, has been converted into wkiakejf There are menin the Confederacy, uwell as elsewhere, who care for nothing but themselves eo they make money, they care not how, much wretchedness, and misery come upon ii . liZTjR militia of the following counties hare been ordered out, as we learn from the Raleigh , Journal: Beaufort Green, Craven', Jones, Car teret, Onslow,' New ; Hanover, !Duplin; Xenoir, tVsyne, Halifax, Sampson, Brunswick, Colum bus,' Bladen, Johnston, Wake, Carrituek, Pas quotaak, Camden, Perquimans, Chewan, Wash 7ngton,vTrel, Gates, Hertford,.. Northampton, ' Irtie, Jlartln' Edgecombe, Wilson, Pitt and . Hyde. J When ordered to the field , (says the Journal) the militia will receive the same pay. rations, and quarters, as the volunteer or regular tit wsj reported b Baltimore that five vessels 5 of v the Bornside .Expeditioti had grounded in Pamlico Sound and were burnt to. prevent them frotn'falliog into the bands oC the Confederates. ..The Baltimore Sooth says a large steamer with troops for the Barnside Expedition was wrecked on' the South Carolina coast and burnt. The crew and troops were all saved. Three coal ves Taehj Irere also beached and burnt. It was stated -at Fortress Monroethat the steamer Louisiana, of the Barnside Expedition, 'with seven hundred troops on board, had been lost. , VRicnMOn,Jannary 26. Intelligence received id i oScial quarters, from tVilmington, states that the British vessel York, had stranded near the mouth of Cse Fear. . Some Yankee vessel threw "eombustible material bn board of the York, and set fire to her. ! Her crew escaped. - r;tt; ::7?'' The ststemenlt thsl a large 'Federal fleeUhad been officially, reported as having been seen in Pamlioo . Sonndf is omcislij contradicted .'" '"KorfolFiijr Book of - the 22d, ssys: Intelligence hss beeoieonTeyed Jto ':' us hat SIcCIellan wajf preparing to cross the Potomse j and when our rorMnteft the servation, the r neeeesary twiraHons "were very The Ysnkeer are represented u being about to make one more great effort," upon which they -rest their ability to subjugate the South. : Richmond; January 25. It was stated in 2 Coagriss to dsy,nhst a message .hsd been re- eeived by ft high offqialof. the Government, eon- TeVin intelligence of the failure of -the Burn aide Expedilionv most eC the.vesseis hsviog been wrecked.., 4.yi ; iAA. -r- ,V nRTxrtsr jstfc.Pssaeigerif by tbe cars tart ul-ht, report that there are 10,000 Yankees focr tles sooth' of the Tennessee river; and alltcct mHcs OrtS of Paris.' ' -Their hesvy crilterj if stsck 'ia the mud end unable to be oovsJ forward. The Confederates are collecting - there farcrtat points. 1 1-' r ' V: their fellow men 1 The people pay taxes to Gov ernment Tor protection I Uugnt tbey not to oe protected from the mercenaries who buy up their bread and con vert, it into prison t Who have gone so largely into this business as to cause a scarcity amidst plenty! They will they do de mand it, and the day is not far distant, when they will call their legislators snd representatives to a reckoning, if they do not act promptly and give them relief. Is it not monstrous, that while the judgments of heaven are resting upon a people whilst they j being vwiteoTby khe terrible ecourge, war whilst our patriot soldiers are' fighting for our Ubertics -yielding up their lives to secure bur independence, and all the blessings .'that flow from peace and good will among men that men can be found 'so undeserving so recreant to the cause of liberty so ungrateful to Heaven so ubcharitable to" their fellow, beings so unut terably selfish as to prefer their own individual aggrandisement, to the success of the Confederate cause? " The fact is, these men are doing' more to defeat the accomplishment of success, than our enemies ! ;. They are preying upon the soldier his wife and children, and the result will be, that our volunteers, when their time is out, will refuse ,to leave their families a second time, to the tender mercies of grain destroyers and bread speculators. Instead of being all in union-r each doing his best to defeat our enemiesin stead of those st home, striving to make comfort able and assist each other in bearing' a mutual burden-hese ; m indifferent to.aH ,;bnt ; themsehefr are preyin his favor, and we shall become a conquered peo ple. . God will not be mocked. AMibpatch, - if eeied; by the authorities in Baeighfjutes that there are 125 vessels, with 25,000 meo, in the Sbund,sneacaped Pilot gave the information; and he says. tbey propose to at tack Newbern, Washington, and Boanoke Island. 4The Principal of the Institution for the Deafj Pumb and Blind,' at Raleigh, desires to purchase broora corn. Farmers pay attention France porti J IofBrniaiion has beea(f received at Vashington f toTthe effect that the English piftf the allied expedition will soon, or hu already occupied Metaraoras, ana tnai tney wiu open an wnwi trade bj way of Brown villewith the Mebels.w 1 is more than .hinted that England joined ce end Spain for the especial purpose of im ng cotton. if so,1 look ont for war. j Two men, : supposed to be British1 sub jects, were .shot, in the Pariah; of Plaquembe, la Jewdays'since owned a small craft, with which tbey carried on an illicit trade with the slaves along the coast, it night. . They asasulted a man by the name of Clement, going to his house for that purpose, and beat him cruelly , and threw him into , the river." They then ransscked his house; took all the money they could, find and departed.' Clement pursued' them and shot them both. , a. .- A McClellan' asserts that the War will be short but desperate, and that he sees the way clearly through to lucccs in conquering the re bellion. He can see a long wsys, if he docs. But seeing is one thing doing another 1 He must have very little faith in" the success of his schemes for faith is the Substatce of things not $een. '. t&L E. andJIeoryLillj of Fjyett?yillet have each presented the Cumberland Association, one hundred dollars, each, for the benefit of the soldiers. This is noble. .. v Forney says there are public men in Washing ton who favor a peaceful and prompt separation from the Confederate btates, and who are acting with a co-operating party in the free States. .The Prussian Minister at Washington has been officially informed from Berlin, that tLe seixure of Mason and Slidell is regarded by his Govern ment as unjustifiable.- ' :;; ,. Mrs. J. & F. Garnett, of Greensboro', have es tablished a hat factory in that place. Tbey are manufacturing hats of any grade or quality. 1 i u i 'r Col. C. C. Lee, of the 87th Regt. N. C. Vol. nnteers, hu been appointed Commander of the post at Newborn. " 7 ' Richard Hughes, from Virginia, aged about 40 years, a shoe maker, was found dead, a " few nights since in tbe grog shop of Grandison Rob erts, in Salisbury, kept by one Mr. Little. ; General 7 jtlxeciUaU: "ark my words, " Ufcre sixty days aVcrvi's Insurrection will be rscirjr over tie t!ouii. v Je! know t-e material is ire for iLand hare sttiied theiaatter.M' " fhe Smithsonian InstitutVat Wuhinffton h The Smithsonian lost! tuts at W ubington hu been prostituted to an anti slavtry engine. All -the wiokdAliprW' fccf oth'txii ire : filling the series of lectures there this winter. ! A special dispatch' from Cairo to the VDemo erat,t y tbat 5,00 trop m oXbeiwsy there fron jdifferent points. . As soon . as they i arrive a column of from OjOOO JtijOO,: trpojj will march from there and PadWa under , Gen! Grant, 1 The destination bf this force" Is said to be Nuhville, vberej if a junction can be made with Gen; -Basil's eommssd, tbe 1 entire army fill proceed to New Orleans, .IjThe i more ment will undoubtedly be made within afaTdays. 3Ir.' Sumner has presented to the1 Yankee Congress petitions from citizens of New .York and Brooklyn again.! sending the! slaves out of the eoonty', but proposed Instead to send the . slave owners out -of theeounUy. w,i,.,;it'j -.. - The mortality in tbe Federal army since tbe war broke out wiM 'reach 25,000 men. ' The number killed in battle, skirmishes, &c, is,' about ll,(KH, and rthe'immbtr;cf; founded were tl7,O0O. .. . wire, with batteries. &o.. have been msde snd p?at to ihs Co Went army; ti fieKl eperstioni at a costoif MJG3 : Tbe manufacture of 'pure Vinegar wpon a large scale has .jut .Wencoaiqeaeed in Wil- mington, N. C.ii .? ' v. . Cspt. John C. McCauley, with three hundred . other Arkansiaoshsre offered their services toj the Confederate States for three yean'. The Federal steamer Hensscols. which lately succeeded in roaning the blockade of tbe 'Poto-v' uouse ot jiepresenianves. giving voDgreas u power to reduce to a tentorial condition nine Southern States. - Texss, Virginia, and Ken tucky and Missouri, are excepted from the oper ation of the proposed meuure. . " Death or Ex-Presidiht Ttler. Ex-President Tyler died suddenly, at bis rooms in the Exchange Hotel, in the city, of Richmond, oo Friday night at a little past twelve o'clock. V W bile sipping a cup of tea on the Sunday morning previous he wu seised with -a sudden fsintness, and remained indisposed during' the following days ; but as he bad been at different periods of his life subject to severe attacks of vertigo, no serious apprehension was entertaioed until Friday evening, when he was suddenly taken worse, and failing rapidly, without pain, died precisely at fifteen minutes put twelve o'clock., President Tyler was 72yesrs of sge, and served bis country with fidelity and distinction in many important offices.' W. J. Hoke; of Lincoln; has been elected Col onel of the 384Regiment N. C. Troops, O. n. and needy. Can, we ought we, to expect sue cess bave we aoy right to expect the blessrngrof heavon rwiur.irmsi-Are.wowortby-of -it ? God hu msnifestly shown his favor to s hereto fore but if We desDise his blessings and mntinn to'oDoress sndUke ad ran ti ere of each other, and . .:The Confederate authorities are taking meas- 1 . - ' l l. ..z-itr.-4...i . . t . . turn his blessings into nirtes he will withdrswi urcB wr - ,e VUCK1 puon or we loyal .v-ii W-lJ- - " j. people of Western Virginis. TheFederai government'is about jbTllevy a stamp tax to help fill, their empty treasury. ; About 100 men near Wilmington, are engaged in rriaktng salt: It sells there at 14 per bashe). and Harnett, to fill the vacancy occasioned by lhe resignation of Honi WrWinslow:" Tbe vote was a smalfpne. Mr; McDuffie's majority over Mr. W. MoL, McKsy wu 78. , ; It is said that Charleston will be visited by the French naval authorities to invesjtigajejjhe mstterof the sttetopted stoneblocksde.4 : t General McCIellao has fully recovered from his recent illness, and the Yankee newsps persare oW jubilant rbver his plans for aspeedy sup'pressien bf tberebeilibnl,.;:'v':." jyyy;:z y Greet dissatisfaction is said to exist atriong Tbe entire strebgjh of tbo Federal irmy, u appears by leturns id the Adjutau Gene ral's officer foots pTOQPabout 4tlO,OQ6 now reported u fit for service. Many of the ij treos jo- Galveston are now bearing a second jtfCj) of figs,' o:t of which sre nearly ripe, and appear quite u large and fine u the first crop. . $ issssaM -sa e- ssISjismii i Ten sad a half miles) of' insulated copper rels of the enemy. ! She hsi, it Is said, a very heavy armament. : In addition 1 to her broadsides of twenty-two nine-inch f shell uo, she hu one eleven-inch gun, . and two eighty pounders. It is supposed that she hu jointd the Burwide expedition hi r t 'iii. st---- t& One hundred and one vessels have arri ved at Havana from' Confederate ports tince thb blockade was establisbced This fact st least, ought to convince foretgn nations that the block ade is riot effective. . ' . ' "'' , : " ' ' ' ' .'S ' '. . . -; - ?; . f i i t i- : I . -- -j f I r f ; A CosFE88ION,--A Lincoln 'correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, speaking of the progress of the war, says : y . .'""--"r ' The fact is, the c,nse of .the Union bTrnoT f regressed one inch, anywhere, but bu cdnstant-. y lost eroond'' every where. IV is not in tho power of Mr Seward in aeeordaoce with Whoso ut his finger on the spot where the cause of the n ion has progressed one inch, eitbet in huropo or . in America."' :--s: Arrest of BRirox-BukxkRa.2 Lefoi v. F. Parker, of 20th NtC, Regimetft; got on the trail Dockety, RicbmefldLtr-Cb SbarfrOf-Alexanderilajori1 and with a. Sauad of bis men followed them into this Siate-and arrested them some 12 or 15 , miles north of this plaqe at 1 o'clock in tho mormug.'Jinievtiie iveics, torn. , r; . . tbe approaching 22d of February, the refma Malcolm J. McDuffie, Esq.,. has been eleeted deleeata to tha-Stata'Convestfja froa Csabefland 6Q Ubternrbcr.t of tbe Ccofsderaie Stateiwil? be inaugurated at luenmona, president JJsvis will bftJostalledJoMfxeari, ano: ptberiintercjitingl ceremonies take place.. It will be a memorable and intefesting occasion, snd a vast concourse of persons, no doubt, will sseemble to witness the jf ceremonies of the day.'" ,: - " ' ; r . ... In a speech delivered lut week in the Fcderat House .of RcpresentsiivuLby MrV-Conklin, of New York, he stated that besides the defeat, and -the large loss of arms; andTmsinitionir of war, fr there wu a sacrifice of nine hundred and thirty men atihe. battle of Efesbnrj, or Ball's Blut, On, ; ' the Potomao, where the Confederate tibopsunder s General Evanldrove the Federals under Bsker,