Newspapers / The Durham Recorder (Durham, … / April 16, 1862, edition 1 / Page 1
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T H E C 0 N S T I T U T 1 0 N A N D T H E L A W S T H E G IT A R D I A N S 0 F 0 U R L I B EK T Y . Vol. XLI1L IIILLSB.OROUfrll, N. C, APRIL 16, 1862. . No. 2139. 1 THE HILLSBOROUGH RECORDER M rOHUHEB WEKKLT BY DENNIS HEARTT. TPrm. TwiDo(Jar tyear, if pid in advance; Two Dollar and Ffty Cent, if not paid within thaee months; or Three Dollar, if delayed until after the ipiralion of the year. Wo paper will be discontinued until all arrearage re paid, unlet al the option of the publisher. , No paper wilt be tent to a new auliocribor out of the 8ite unit payment i made in advance, or aonie per. on in the Bin ahall become responsible. . ' idle rtiing Etlft fer the Rctordf r. Advertisement not eiceeding fourteen linee, on dollar for the firl, end lweny.fie cent lor each ub qucnl insertion; longer one in proportion. Court iWeitixmenU twenty five per cent. higher. A deduc tion of on third will be made to dverlifer by the year. ; , Nolwithtndin: the bizh price of psper, and every thing e!e w are obliged to buy, hae wa.!e no .... .. i i II : ' I - tT. addition la t price of the Kecorder, We n.'l offer! it on the following term I A eingle eopy, one year, $J 00 Club of eii, one year, 10 00 Giubi often, one year, 15 00 Payment always in advance. Aov of our "Id ubwril v , . i - i oew uWr,l.er. and ;...d u. lb. C..h. .ball leee.v, ; their own pap r fio of charge. V A 11 II . X the aWnceof reeul.r.Turei, I will attend to the Tunifie of FIANUS in 11iIMioiieI). Cbree;! Five Dollar. ,. .. - - 1IKNUI BASKI.ER. Janoary S3. 27 lim JOIIN W. GRAHAM, -Attorney and Counsel or ut Law, fjlfice on door north of Mr. Lynch Jewelry Jioie HILI.MJOKOIGH, JanS7. , 49-11 rt, P iN 't " z X.X-j illiartlC! tltl t'nitltUtol' lit Mjair. 221V.2C7.rJaZ, If. C. Will nr.rticeln 0..r,ce. J ih a, ti .i,,.,.e Ccon.le.. claim. Mii. hfl.lSCO- 33 lSrn M.r h il. To the LuJics of Oranjro County. M rrj.teteJ bv iheGovern. of tour Mate, to eal uK.n faSi i litmUti f tr the ulhrr in the araiy wim v,kt an l Mnket fw theii omirt al pr.rfec- ti oi dunoj it. i.r iking ...iter. Kfh d . w.U i. ii ....................... -i,..-... ........ on jor ,..rt! I enr.ot :,r that it wilt; tncrrture ri tiputt ynn M cme I rr,l with your gilt, nil lie them houiaifutly neon the altar of your cun try. ! it.te the etm,ile ol your mother f ihe revo- luit..n. a,d .!! the MWi. wno hve t.kn up iti!l Je.er. ,mt boo t onpr..vi,!cJ far; .o:T, , 1 wf II'VII.,, 1 uu. Ii'f'i .114 wM rot your dctrnder w U ep..eJ unprwirctKl toih winter', fhiiliof bUmt. Come, ttten. to their telicfj IXo.'tZ.l;;; LnheXit'tt'Hhf ",. :,B":B,n':!'nVlT "Ul l"rm...u..,i luiufeivnrra.ivi.a. t ant & All K aa. t. la . anl it i Ji'iM! Shrrln r7"Th folloifl?;e0tlemcn will pleme receive and ""' '.()0( ree lice. At hs recommenda forr.l io me tnkie f.ir the ol.iirr! tion, a marsh titmouse was located in the W. W. AlUaon. X. P. Iltt, A.tin M.ngurn, M. A.?t ;!!. brood, and left the me. pcrfcClv .clean. . SEQUESTRATION NOTICE hip -i- i i .id .t DROtiMa AND BKOOM t ORX. rllilt. miueriHitned, pnttlnird Receiver under lh . . , 1 Haeairauon A. fr the eoun.i.c. of Orange,! e find in the last number of the Deal Vk,t:omirUnd anJ lUmeti. hereby give mittcej Mute Caket," the following on the ubj. ct to all peHoti hivtiif ny lnU, tenement or hcredna-Sf Uronms and t'rotun Corn. Any one de- iaenu,Uoi e!.tiri..rihi or credit, or ant inter, giritts erit or information on the "euhject of a..t tkai.a .1 a r . ..u .l..a r Ika I'...r. .1 i:n :Z2rJV, am. snJ t, renler an .ceount ihereot, .,,! .o f t.r.ei..ble, t p.u ih .m in mr poe.iun, under I... . ' i in lrniiy oi me hi i.ir iiotiH'oiiipiiarice. lal.inm.ry ewh mJ every fitii-Mi of the Contele.; b IVn. O. H. W!Ll)i:it, Heceiver. Ortoher t. ''"-'I I .Patent .Window - Minds. Creti laprjicta.'Bt-Sopcrlofti lattbog In lie. P tl BLIXO wheneliMoJ shut perfectly light, and ke.ps t all et, d.i.t.ineci. 4e.,nd entirely ei . in 114T11, n.i m Heantiful appenrtnc on tat eita.e. .peed.iy ti give intm.tion i. we of ny u owi , ,,. t scarcif, f materials, ri-ht to exptnt, and that, therelo.e, as far a wailare and mutual extermination. I " broonl eorn Our farn,r. have ,,,11. are the ..' difficult to bear not I -oking I. V' I .ttenJ th. d.tTrreni entie. in . few d.y. for ' neglected the cultivation of this in,. Vc had no i iht to expect that flaming and . upon the ho, r d proie-s ol war as 11 tne It,. ..I i. . . .! I ,. ':n'...l. ....l. an.l U. t.itai h f. tnf... -m I'.. .... ... . ..t I u U a i....r.tl. a u u 1, ... a 1.1 r 1 1 th,l t h.l'l OCe I OU C tl I U IHI S1 1 11 aC UIMI ... '..I'm ui iVifflTina. vi wmru huv ui'iiiv win ih uuile. It , .dvant.g ovTVhnoth7rl0,., ,or lh cultiati,.i. of Broom corn, kmJ mil mat but trifle more. Tho, lltmJ will renmnnl iirlf. A ny oneetn judge of it uparioiti rr the old atvle at nrl iaht. a fi.rii ti,i ha a thi Uliinl will aver order ny thrkln4. fc rH "" entisr will be ksppy toshnw a model lo any prn whini, , obui uiiettt. and rceia their or. es,walch will U prmptly Ailed. ), I). BUROICK, . , . mna.uu, ... . l'lT V. ii- .-jv-ir --vcrt May your fich oil, Eiuliernnt, nature' better bleoiing pour O'er every land." THE COMI.VQ CROP We commend the following sensible arti cle, from the Shrcveport Gazette, to the careful consideration of those to whom it is addressed. The question suggested cannot be too deeply weighed, and those who res- j pond unfavorably will not only be blind to i their own interests, pecuniarily speaking, i,,.. .--.ii ... ;n:.i,,;...,ci. ..t ,;. .,!;,.?. ; Hy. Profit and patriotism alike dictate that i l.ttle cotton should be planted, and that the luiic vMiuil oiiuuiii wv ptv,,t mi .i . cma crpg &houl(, reCeie KcneraUltention. ! The Gazette ayi: j It is difficult to change the routine of cul-' ture on a rdantation. and it is natural to sun- ,unt - n,pr t ,,,,. own liu.- ... T 'i. . - " .: . ,.r litors are Igenerally treated with indifference, end their ness ucm. - arte roirs;e!iiuii ui cunuis ate beautiful theories only amuse the practical planter. Ik-ins .ware that we cannot change - - i i jthe mind, or alier the plans f ur pl-nt.ng i am i- i - re-uers. we will state a lew lacis lor tneir conMdera.ion: ; large . ottm crop is already made, and " P'ccf or:au "'ul "e ,"l-"cs pi,ea abroad, but als... and een n.o.e ear ..not be s-dd. Another crop would glut qu". not quite l.al an inch thick ; tQm Igcariof8 , hone. it cannot ihe markets of the 'world for several years reduce the price almost one-half. ' The )u..r.L.u..:J,.,rmU.i ..i.n,lnrr... n oA Uv ,t,a n,r ,rmw rann..t h. ...... v ' v o -. - hln su'or-lie fro'i that source. The cotton S'ales. with Viririni,. must feed our an.-ie i this year, and nerhan- next year. Tiou Jauds on thousands of laboring men will en- i,t this upring, leaving their I'tile liiriim de- jserteuand their iattitlies epenil 'nt upon tiie 'charitie of their wea'thy neighbor), j T rpl ii.iailcr e must have at ileast HjOX'OO men, including the militia. To feed a l cloihe such an army ill as the capacity of every acre . f land and bring in- a . : - .... .. i.i a'd loom in the Cond dtrary. Bibds and Ixect. At the agricultural meeting at St. Gallon, in Switzerland, Har- ! or TVhudi, the celebrated Swiss natu ralist, dwelt n the important scrvires of bird in ihe leti UCtior. uf injects. With- birjs $lit 4P ,, ,jrrif 0!:ttre atul vege- ; tatioii are possible. They accomplish in a (f' months the profitable w orkof destruction which miUions f human hatitix could nut da hslf o well in at many years ; and the sage. j))f refore, blamctl in very severe terms the fuitJUh ptacfe )f shooting and d.stroving . t ,f ' I.I . oi-u, wmt n Pans nior;rpeciaiij in staiy?. rccouiweno mg. on me cotnrary, me prot ess oi alluring birds into gatdens and corn fields. f ;W,,".!he. roo,t " ifT ,,C T 'WaI lows, titmice, red-taiN, &c. Iti'a flowery r - r I,!, ..;.l,... lalt roe-treet had been" audtlenly cereil ... ... if'..v., .....v. .... 1 with garden, wh"th in a few hours consumed the v rm Comhoald address their in. quine. toy . j. rai liter, i rtncpai weai aim I''mb Asylum, Kaleigh, 1S. . ..!. i... . ..i.i.i. ft. i4 " e rcreivc a g'eat many orners ior Itroiims. li ch we are unable to h i. I his I'l "UW tSIIU " .. WI V V .ma n atttirnf I ta rat mn t ttitiri flirt Vitttt fa l" tiroilltel Sfttlll taVA lilt ttrl(lltl'a , tupply. Ve are pleased to learn that ome of our fanners will raise a crop this jear. le- VI I'm I II 101 1 win 1 1 wi. win j , vm- cause the) are beginning to find m.t that U willp.y as well as any cmp they can culti- ate. We -used to pay from fie to seven cents per pound for broom coin North, now . r . t -... we are paying our ow n lannera itmn etcnt i (en cents ner nound. We have lull dtrec- which we will tend to anv one desiroua of gaining information upon the subject. We by usurious contracts, and exhorbttantcharg can alo procure aetils for any one wishing ?e for aupplics which the poor giddier often to tdant a cron.M ! find to hi cost were made to tell and not , The Cotton ''nop. The Atlanta Confede racysayai From all point we receive the '. J , 1. r .1 r moil graiuving inieugcnce oi tne iarmer i i'i" m"'vn"..' 1 I , ,i 7 C t having revived to plant largely of corn.Jttraitened faintl.ea find the wolf at the door pfaanJpottoe, and bu little Cotton thio year. " A gentleman who take9 great interest in agricultural matters, arid who is as well posted as any one In the State, tells us that he has information t front all directions in Georgia, and that he has not heard of a man who is going to phut the usual crop of Cot ton. PtAvr Grain. Every available acre must be planted in grain. Tennessee and Ken tucky are lost for the year as far as their usual supply of grain and provisions are con cemed. ,,, There is cotton enough in the Confederacy for hone consumption ; let us have provi sions. ' Substitute rmt Leather. -There has been much talk about leather and the want thereof for harness uses for the Government. A sub- 8 "ole Deen, T'- , r , Ir,"Yna ch,a,ns re needed. Simple oA or hickory "n b ued ; f,,r heavy or light loads, V e are assured that every part of a harness, "7 10 bridle and collar, can be made from hickory or oak splits. It has been proven " ril l' !hi wo,,d "00P. be ""''J useJ Jn Baling cotton, in place oi nen.pen rope, in f"t. " entire wsgon harness, which costs ? . ea,,,er' at t"nif,om. f".rty to. fift7 dollars or more, Cn be turnishea on almost 8D7 'ar,u ,or ,ew u""68' T . . f ., 3 :l'If , !: "in r .i l Toast and Water ..'" ?"u '.'"' i c i- . .. c .I.IHII9 iCBSUiiauie r iiruiuiiun t i wne tune, one oest atH.pt- Ail tk tli i'linuiltl'llAn tMkait rft t All IlV llltlOdfill ; ' - - rJ V'e WT W?-V P.rfpt"re.,,.i' t0-CUi 8 t"t ' brown ail over without burning it, d then nut it int.. a pmt mug filled with clear, cold water, clapping a saucer over the , , top to k keep tne teain irmn ecaptiig. in a- ' ....... r?. -"i-.. .J bout ten minutes a pint of nice, co-ling and refreshing dnnk will be produced REMEUIAHF.E EVILS OF WAR. THe fillowlnz extr-cU are from a dls- After the Federal reverses of last year, e course delivered in Richmond, bv Uev. T. t eard of nothing but the un-haken resolution V. Moore, I). I)., of the PreVjvterun and unwearied energy of the North, which Church. It is eitiiMtd, The proppr resort only wanted . lit'Ie. more trinin and dis of a people in time of war is t Gud." opitnr t- it il..ire l. The recent P" ' o ' r...r,A ...orle.,, ,,, ler, the reverend gintleiiuii nuu ihl umj sa: There are ewls inetilable to war, from which we cannot expect t escape. e must expect tn fi"d personal ambitions in the guise of patriotism itch for oiiice, with it horse leech cry of "give, give;" favor itism and depotiem, by which the sons, re- . . . t i .'i .!... n? ..... : 1 1 i . , ' latious aud friends ol those h office will be accd over the heads of better and tilde r men, wno are unauic to commanu iu mhu , . - 1 .1. I, ' . I ,.f patronaee. and-mut, theielo.e, !rud-e in liuititj.iT aiui uaauer positions; nasinui- s in the use ot public Itinds and the ..,:, r ,,!,!!.. r.mtrct! blunders in ne craiitic movement, bo'i, civd and miUtarv, that are HUM llll Miff, i.'. ........... ,( rIpjaillJ 1H-,.vUkmg ciicuia.lauces rC(j.ta " J,J,,v i the' tran-action of , jj. bu ttpas ins-denee anl peitv i rati- in men'raNed from scr,iy anU tlress- . . iUtU f .H,K.,Piir' h.. lord it ! ii'v .. .-.,.- ftn.i a.MuetiiiieA with true tr ; i - ... i ..t-..i t..V over Oiaver aiHl urtirt imih jiiavv.. mum their cominmd; heartless brutality in i!runk- ... ,A,-tn ,l tn'-r '....1 . .. dio n;, rjj, inoubienegtect ; drunk- jcn.ies in the ranks.a well as among the of- 'fiwrfrs, preparing many a gallant man f,,r draci aid .leleat in battle, and a drunk- 1tifKmc' mu icitai m ih,ihi iu ru?, grave when the war is ended ; profani- ty, gambling, pillage and speculation at leat in small matteit. All thee evils are well-nieh inevitable in a time of war. with e- our poor fa tmor fallen nature as it is, a.al can only " " . be Hminis,r.t uy looking 10 mat uoti uriore iwlioiw we bow thts day in rcveicnt supplica - " . .1 . . , (toll. lt.,t iheri. ure ome rv Is that we had nr I..M...a.a . ak t a k I Mi 1 I IUUI llltl IV9 V V. IIIMIII. fi.i ft'ii. at ai It sii ti r X tr oil ttl.,i' twU!d not eo as fast and lar as thev, should III) IV UC llivc hi !.," - irir t others the burdeita, sacrifice ami idangeri ol .hi contest whet it ha really come. We had no rikht to expect that they now be as meek a:id as mute as mice, Ifav - who have been so long sneering at Yankee . 1 ... .1 .l I grccu ana laiiKee nieamies, snouiu emulate this itrnoble examule, by filchins: the funds flmt (lie bard taxation of a burdened people hive eenemustv civm to their government to use; buying up the very necessaries of I'f lo pile enormous prontson tnetu, so mn j while brave men are driving nlT the hungry I ai tld noinl if Ihe awnril. lite in the anape oi tne nungry tpecu.ator, w..v Bpares not even medicine for the sick, and will wring his per centage out of the very agonies of the suffering ; trafficking in the hunger, cold and ntkedness of the soldier while living, and speculating upon his very shroud and coiTni and grave when dead ; blockading our homes by land as really, a wickedly, and as heartlessly as our memies are blockading. them by sea ; bnbipg officials to act as accomplices with them in their schemes to obtain undisputed control of a market ; creating needless panics and pres sures, that they may wring from a groaning and helpless community the hard earnings of the poor on whom these exactions must fall most heavily ; and whilst a struggling coun try is bleeding at every pore, instead of seeking to staunch that blood, are gathering it up drop by drop to sell like butcher's meat in the shambles, and coin it into gold; acting a treason more deadly than an armed aid to our enemies by compelling many a poor man who once calculated the value of the Union to begin to calculate the value of disunion, and ask what have we gained by escaping the leeches and blood suckers of one Con federacy, only to fall into the fangs of the sharks and cormorants of another ; surely, surely, we had a riht to expect that in a struggle so sublime, so tremendous and 8 desperate as this, we should have been safe from the cruel greed of such hungry Sli v locks, uch human vultures as these. AnJ I if in anv cases we have been disappointed in itliis reasonable expectation, it but creates another reason for iominir 6ef.r. Him who d u b h- ow-clo9en CO(T,paion .... f thirty pieces of feilver, to pry that He would not only deliver us I mm the Ahito- he , niiJon T March ,s tV-.o " A K TIH' IMPIK H . I KS t" ' V l )' IV All the iiiielligenr-e and all the opinions from America bring out into strong relief the existence of very great power and very trial spirit on both side of the tonflirt- feet, in ending u renewed urauce of the Southern determination :to continue resis- feet in ndin2 renewed trance f the Uce thrwutfh all it possible pha.es, down to the cuerdia warfare of p;nn ml Mexico, even though, its in the latter case, there ahou'd eii'iie an iritenninable anarchy. At this distance it is useless to di-cuss the expected operation, whu-h before this iUue been fontnei-rea wit i more or ie,s . . . i eftVd. It w pri.oi iiecioeu oy mi, time ,.l up liali-t Ml Mil Ifll.ltl Cfllllll I-, Ml till' . , , . . -If It of the i ..nte.teia.e ion e, a-., oy re t. """. " . rear ol the enemy and ob'ain po..esM..n ! Ktchmon.!. A third victory in Tut C-.se- w.il have ccured the western half uf that ... . , ,. 'I, State to the l etieral nine, or ne. ar m have reiulereil liuitu ss an tne ot.iou sneti ai FU Ueni vatid Dotielson. I he superiority of the .No-th in numbers, in we.i.h, at, t in the means of locomotion, m ke, it mobile ...4 Hiai liiey tiar iimow vu i xicii . ii.-.-. . , . p.tii.li.he.l thetiiaelves as thoroughly .on the - - - -. .1 west i f the chief ceding States as they have, bv means of their fleets, on the .east and south. Hut. on the most lavorali!e up- p.iti.m f..r the rVtlerd caM. we have only arrived at the qu. st.ons whether we d. tn- deed see the beginning of the end, and what that end is likely to be. ""We nee no aut.ci i.,;. nl ihtt am in miv pation or prophetic visum ol that en-l in anv of the communication Irom either Mie oi the war. . The Fcdetals talk only of present victory. . a . "a and seem to look no lurmer into uie imure. ii. r..r.,.L,Fiia ail riw'itea talk ol tievasta- ; vv.....-j , tmn and . epopnlatim, ot baro.ng cities, tie i, ...j trinir im ratU. anil reducing i " vl "" ' " r .. the country l a mate oi nature, oi I . a a I aft more in the means than in the erni. inese j fearful anticipation are probably only .too The tone on both aide Is "thai of bit. - e . . ... . ( ter and msulti..? lefiance. ortl. and Ninth I rad at one another mucu as the lloueuc ! Combatants did before the lata interchange j true of snears. But there IS this unhappy tl titer nice the poet manages to dispose of one combatant, ai d an gives instant and entire effect to the menaces on at lest one aide ol the duel. In this case, the abuse, the threats, the defiances, the determination, threaten to be endless, and from both sides we Rather the lamentable truth that, as far as the eye can ican the American lioriaon, there u nothing but war. . Hut when both sides ce no conclusion of war except the exchange of one ferni of war for another, and tradition from order to disorder, from method to madness, it remains for the bystanders, to speculate tm ,he natural development of the struggle. T.. show thet we are not exaggerating its chaotic lenden. cies, we need only reler to the very able let ter of a correspondent, who undertakes lo interpret the Southern prospects and sympa thies. The amicable separation which some good people talk of, he asserts to be neither possible nor desired. The North would not be content with Ies9 than all the Border States, leaving to the Confederates only the seven or eight original seceders. But were this their object, they would still have to garrison Virginia with an army out of all proportion to their resources, and, even so, they would feel the Union at an end. They would find it impossible to get on without the trade of the South; and slavery would thus be more recognized than ever, more odious, and more fertile in quarrels. Sepa ration, then, he holds to be neither possible nor wished for, so long at least, as the North has any fight in it. But, whatever may be said of the difficulty of conquering the Southern State, there can be no doubt ot the ability" of the North to keep op the war in one fashion or other. What, then, is the alternative to which we are to look, when conquest is impossible, when union, in the form we have seen it, is impossible, when success on either side is impossible, when peace ss impossible, when war itself, as it is now carried on, is impossible, when every thing is impossible, except something that does not come under any of these heads,' and that is beyond all present reckoning or rea sonable expectation. What is this but to avow that the Federa tion itself is impossible ? The principle has been tried and found wanting. The Southern States will not submit to the ivorst of all boti' daqesa tyrant majority. The Northern SL-es can neither conquer nor conciliate, nor win by any method. So the appeal is to war; and the war.it is admitted on both sides, must work itsell out to its Wgititnate remits. Tiie question is no longer whether the North will conquer the South, but what the war will lead to, and what state of things will supervene upon the present. The mokt far seeing discover nothing in the prospect but guerilla warfare, anil devastation. This is simply to admit that, the statesman having (failed, the cause is now m the hands of the !"'" - li-o-Ii i.-uiureivi is in the hands of j the soUlier who sees the aark'en topTiratra j tion. instead of its bright beginning." This is (not the itg" in which a French monarchy is oieakiit up, it a republic is inaugurated, j bat in uhicha Fitu-ii empire has been re- toted ami re established. It i$ an age in which stronz monarch) tslht fathionable cure If or Ikmocialic disorder. Luiojie ha-sj'ist congratulated Italy on lite acquisition uliich philosophers wanted for tier, iiis'fiid of the independent State which I la vly existed, instead of the theocracy which f llom'i piufcsses to give, msiead of Ma.z ni's rep 'b!i-. Tne Western Slate of Europe hive, at least, the credit of offering Mexico a c i-ntitution.il monarchy instead of a re j publican l iir.at.tu.iun, winch las had no ex j interne except in alternate anarchy and des ; pnti-iii. Tint it oil age of rtuctivn, for which I Danocrmy has to thank ititlf. The Dicta I lor, the Kmpeior or the King is everywhere, i superceding the hirer of the Consul or the. j paper si heme of the lawgiver. Whtn we are t"U that everything else u impossible in America, and that politics are absorbed in the chance of war and thegeuius of the commanders, then, indeed, we seethe f beginning ol the end. Bui that end i tint ttre one desiied by either North or South, nor even by u who look on. It ca u' b;f 'for our interest that a military adventurer should possess the lairest reghn ot NVth America, even though that were better thati anarrhy. Bat it is ihe haen toward winch the great American commonweal:" see.ns now drifii-'g. It is possible. That isenocgb, when everything else i confessed t be im possible. jieVTafV-,w HfAW S.ioT.-The Norf-lk Day Book of vesterdav. says: We are gratified to learn Utat the large iun.recent(ycat m Richmond, v: Jl . hn placed in its flusi- rioriue ircuM., -"-- , .. , - . Uon on board td- that wsaej. Jl throw, a solid shot, we under'"-. ' "5 The .hut is Ion., and ha a steel point. Th.a together with her two Armstrong gun,, pu & ... I... i-.turn from Iunort tiwe'E one of the most formidable itVtttr.rt.rif -rid. in .ddicio. to her b- ' ing perfecclr nc " The British hip Elt.a Bonsall hag lately iled fr (N:P- for LrPw! ,th , cargo of 3.000 balea Cotton. ( . Confetlerate schooner, with t cargo of Nj,'u!,re, lately reached Nassau, (N. P.) -here her coods were immediately aold at a e y high pr-ce. The Captain haa only made , few trips, and he expect now to rei.r with . blucePin hi. favor of forty-five thousand dollsr. Oarnncr.-
The Durham Recorder (Durham, N.C.)
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April 16, 1862, edition 1
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