L It WIN HANin Kit PNll Military Kale. Wo have before bad occasion to say that whatever may be the extent of tho powcri a I I... .L. OL III I . 4 M coiiieneu uy uic niic riuun 0.11 wum on 01 . i , . t . . . , ' mm bill H.uil th it it was notorious that Uoveniment we snail really nave uuuYr it ICIUII, ifr the .1 Mr to II Sl.er- miller i lie , ' i, ,, I.. I 3i fl. depends upon the innuuci in winch it may i u . , i , r V ... , . . ' l nioii men conhl uot obtain j tint Ice that be executed. We doubt not thai (lie grncra . , . . m .Secessionist H ll'i'M. iwtl I,... I !.. tl..jr iiiiiipiii ii ,wi , nun .1. i that If Prov. Gov. Holden had been elector! civil Governor of the State it assigned to command will be an officer of Justice and magnanimity, and that he will Bet interfere in the slightest degree with ear civil authorities. Wo say this for the reason that we know thai our Courts will administer justice as fairly and as impar tially between all parties, all classes and all conditions of our people as can possibly be doue by the Military niithoi ities. In that event they will be satisfied, for it was apparently to secure such administration of justice that the bill was passed. we need not be much surprised at of such a bill by (Jougreaa we remember that a certain class of and politicians at the South have been constantly representing to that body that Union men and freedirjen could not obtain justice in our Courts 'that Scces aionists and war men were permitted to perpetrate all sorta of outrages and indig nities upon them with perfect impunity be cause the governments of the Southern States were in rebel hands. That such representations were being constantly made in Washington by men terming themselves "Southern Loyalists" we hap pen to know. During a stay of" eighteen days at the Federal Capitol in the tuonlh of January we met many of this class of men from the States of Virginia, Georgia, Louisiana, Arkansas and, Texas Con gress, believing these statements, naturally felt it to be its duty to protect that class of men at the South who had been true to Che Government of the United States dur ing the war. For this, if it beluivcd their statements, it was not to blame it would have been ungrateful to them if it had not done so. But were these statement ts of the 'Southern Loyalists" true? All of our readers know that, so far as this State is concerned, -they were not true. Not on ly have our Courts administered justice impartially, but they are not in rebel hands Of the eleven Judges of our Supreme and Superior Courts, seven of them received judicial api o'ntments a th;b; a Is of Prt visional Gov. Holden selected on ac count of their known Unionism, and the Union record of the other four is quite as good. All the solicitors of the State, with single exception are of the same class. And yet the Standard, and other papers of that clas", have constantly, for some time past, assured Congress that under the present "rebel government" of this State the Unionists and freedmen were left with out any adequate protection. Now, bow- ever, that they have partially accomplish ed their object the disfranchisement of a portion of the Southern people- wc sup pose we shall hear no more of this unju&t oppression of which they so loudly com plained. Their object having been attain ed they will now become silent if, indeed, they do not retract. The Standard of Tuesday, replying to some remarks of the N. Y. Tribune, utters the following ; " We beg the Tribune to belcive thai there are not as many rebels as it suppo- wouhl have been otherwise, him to mention a siugle Instance ia which a secessionist bad been acquitted of the murder of a Union man. He mentioned an instance, growing out of the war, where tho case was compromised -it being con . . . m.""M ' i a necteti with a civil suit tor damages, and a nolle prosequi entered against the prison er. We asked lum what judge was onthe bench, and who the Solicitor was that made the compromise. He answered Judge and Solicitor Wo asked him if they were not both the appointees of Gov. Holden and if the Solicitor who made the compro mine and entered the nolle prosequi was not now a radioal, and an intimate personal and- political friend of Gov. Holden. He an swered in the affirmative saw that he was caught and admitted that if there was any cause of complaint it was not to be attrib uted to auy particular party. This is but one instance among thous ands where the strength of men's prejudi ces lead them to believe they are wronged by their political opponents when they are not when in fact if they are wronged at all their own friends are quite as responsi ii . t , i . Me tor it as i hen- opponents. The very case to which we refer may have been re ported at Washington without the slightest explanation, and have aided in bringing Congress to pass the military bill. Glasgow, Scotland, in 1815, and, like Hugh Miller, gained his rudiments of knowledge while working for bis bread. For uine years preceding 1834 be was a cotton spin ner. Having won a medical and theologi cal education, be sailed for Cape Town in 1840, and spent soino years with the Bech uniuis. In 1840 ho reached Lake" garni, via the Rtkatihari desert, but failed in an attempt to revisit it in 1860. The next year he visited the Zambesi. In 1853 he . I I. - - - V .. . 1 1. . J e asaep . w , . , tiie, aihkoioios, anu reacnen i. . uki.i in 19 54. The neat year he followed the Zam besi to (Jjiilimanc, on the Indian Ocean, and completed a journey of more than nine thousand miles never before travelled by white man. He reached England in 1856 and publislied an account of his travels. In 1858 he returned to the Zambesi, and explored it in the hope of planting cotton culture along its banks, destroying slave ry, and making a marko for British man ufactures. His record of adventure in this expedition has quite recently been publish ed. The attempt in which he is said u have lost his life was undertaken with a view to explore a route from South Africa northward by the interior, and great ex pectations were placed on what he would do. With no more knowledge than we have, it is reasonable to suppose that after having escaped every, form of fever, the at tacks of wild-beasts and the most veno mous serpents, the hostility of slave tra ders along the coast and of tho savages of the interior, he has fallen a victim to the malice of a tribe which has constant com munication with the coast and which he hud visited before. JNo one has done more for the geography of Africa, or for science and religion there, and he cannot be readi ly replaced. His accounts of his travels were written with much force and perspi cacity, and will continue valuable records when the falls of the Npaoaa ase visited like those of Niagara, and Ngami is dis turbed by steamboats. Phila. North Am. gXW The Charleston Courier learns through private sources from Washing'on, that Gon. Meade will probably be assigned to the command of Military District No. 2 composed of the former States known as North and South Carolina. Since we .are to have a Military Dictator over us, we have every reason to be satisfied, should Gen. Meade be selected by theresident to take command here. - ses, in at least one of the Southern States," Very candid Mr. Standard; it is time you were trying to undeceive your North ern friends. But having taught them to tebie..illtl..X&xejcei.ujidi!r rebd domina tion here to such an extent that "Unionists of both races" were unable to obtain just ice at the bauds of the "rebel State Gov ernment," will they beleivc you now when you tell them that "there are not as many rebels here as they suppose." Yonr ex perience in this State ought to have taught yfltTiClesson on that score. From 1850 to 1858 you instilled the false and fatal doc trine of Secession into the minds of tens of thousands of the best young men in the powerless to convince them that you had taught, them erroneously they have ever since, justly or unjustly, regarded you as a renegade. Would it not be bettor to tell your Northern frieuds that since the pas sage of the Sherman bill the rebels have become much scarcer, and are not now as plenty "as they. -may suppose.' They might then beleivc you, otherwise they will not. But to return to the subject again Peace of Radical Reconstruction. The New York Times draws the follow ing truthful sketch of the peace brought by such reconstruction as it yet aids to thrust upon the South : " Tennessee. It any ex-Confederate State-is to be subjected to military law it certainly ought to be Tennessee which however, is the only ex-Confederate Stale exempted from military law. e At the same time Tennesse is to be pre sently placed under a sort of military pow ernot military power as wielded by the National Government and. administered by Parson Brownlow and administered by his appointees. Brownlow as Governor of Tennessee, has called out a force of 20, 000 men, to be in the service of the State for three years, and to operate against its enemies in the varies comities. The present civil administration of Ten nessee is certainly a failure. So far as the duties of a State government consist in preserving order, euCm-ing justice and maintaining law, there is no Stale in the South whose croverument makes such a show as that of Tennessee. Georgia,- Tex as and Arkansas are quiet and orderly, add life and pr -perty are secure, in camparison with Tennessee. We hear through the local papers of confusion, disturbance ami collision in numerous localities, and it is evident that the condition of affairs through out the State is such as to offer abundant opportnnt.es for work on the part of the Brownlow army, which JbajL'been called rmder arrasY The dTsfranchisemcnt of the of all Tennesseeans who were rebels ; the conferring of exceptional franchises upon the black' ; the administration of test oaths right' and left, to e all men, under all cir cumstances, and at all times all these things huve failed to secure those ends for wbich state governments are instituted and administrative officers are appointed. The bayonet is now, therefore, the necessary resort. ItTWas a mistake, however,, or Brownlow to have called out his army for three years he should have called it out for thirty years service." 9. The "year and a day " spoken of, in reference to executions, runs from the time of issuing out the last elocution, aud not from its return. 3. Persons who gave notes for the hire of slaves for 1865, are liable for the whole year, notwithstanding their emancipation. 4. The ordinance declaring a presump tion as to the money in which contracts made during the war are solvable, does uot conflict with the Constitution of the Uni ted MUtes. 5. One who took payment in Confeder ate money during the wttr ttf bottnd there 7 . . .. 6. A Trustee who, without any occasion, in February, 1863, received Confederate money, at par, for an old debt, then and still good, rendered himself personally re sponsible. 7. The operation of the act requiring rep resentatives to be parties within two terms &c, ia suspended by the act suspending the i ilec i of the lapse of lime. 8. The Stay Law of 1801, allowing de fendants twelve months to plead, did not dispense with an appearance at the return term Sentinel. , yielded but once to the ind then when a young Senate " ' District 1TX If the National Intelligencer, wbich pro pounds the foltowiug question will repeat it till TtgetS an aimwer, it lpfrj jf)pr,.v,. the statesmanship of C- nercss and oro- . . m w m Standing Committees of the Fortieth Congress. Foreign llelations Messrs. Snmner, chairman, Fessenden, Cameron, Harlan, Morton, Pattersou, of New "Hampshire, Johnson. F inanceMessn. Sherman, Morgan Wil- liams, Van Winkle, Lattell, 11 ndersou, Morrill, of Vermont. Appropriations Messrs. Morrill, of Me., Grimes, Howe, Wilson, Colo, Coiikling, Guthrie. Vi)mmercf Messrs. Chandler, Morrill, of Maine, Morgan, S'prague, Corbett, Pat terson, of Tennessee, Doolittle. Manufactures Messrs. Sprague, Pome- roy, Yates-, Cole, Dixon. Agriculture Messrs. Cameron, Cat ten, Morton, Tipton, Guthrie. Jliliturg Affatrs and the MiltUa. Mes srs. Wilson, Howard, prague, oamcron, Morton, Thayer, Doolittle. Naral Affairs Messrs. (immos, Antho ny, Cragin, Nye, Frelinghnysen, JJike, Hendricks. Judiciary Messrs. Trumbull, Stewart, Krcii.ighuy sen, Kdinunds, Conkllug, John son, Hendricks. '"" Post Office and Post Roads Messrs. Ramsay, Conness, Ponieroy, Van Wink I?, . r - ..j. '-mww- - .-.wr - Marian, Btorrul, ot Vermont, tJixon T'hlic Lands Messrs. Pomeroy, Stew art, JSdmunds, Cattell, Williams, Upton, Hendricks. Prirak Ixtnd Claims Messrs. Williams Howard, Terry, Kiddle, Morton Indian Affairs Messrs. Henderson, Morrill, of Maine, Ross, Corbett, Thayer, Buckulew, Doolittle. Pensions Messw. Van Winkle Ed munds, Trumbull, Fowicr, Tipton, Sauis lui i v, Davis. Revolutionary Claims Messrs. Nye, Chandler. Howe, Saulsbury, Pattersou, of Tennessee. Claims Messrs. Howe, Wilier, Fre liughuyscn, Howard, Morrill, of Vermont, Cole, Davis. District of Columbia Messrs. Harlan, Sumner, Henderson, Willey, Patterson, of New Hampshire, Corbett, Patterson, of 1 ennessee. , : Patents and tlte Patent Office Messrs. Willey, Sherman, Thayer, Ferry, Norton. Public Buildings and Grounds Messrs. Fessenden, Trumbull, Grimes, Ferry, John son. Territories Messrs. Yates, Nye, Cragin, Fowler, Ramsay, Ferry, Davis Pacific Railroad Messrs. Howard Sher man, Morgan, Conness, Ramsay, Stewart, Wilson, Harlan, Drake. Contingent Expenses Messrs. Cragon, Drake, Buckalew. ' Engressed P.ills Messrs. Fowler, Sum ner, Norton. Mines.. and., Mining Heansr Coanesi. 4 - Sto wart, Chand W, Anthony, Yates, Conk- L ling,. ,-airisnury. The Atlanta New Kra contains the fol lowing from the pen of an eminent jurist of Georgia, on a matter of groat interest at this time : Who ark Afkkotkd by thk Amend ment. It is believed our people do not generally understand who are affected, by the Constitutional Amendment and exclu ded from office, and from the ballot box by the 1 ite bill. Tho following persons are excluded : 1st. All persons who before the war, were members of Congress, or officers of the United States, and afterwards engaged in the rebellion. 2d. All persons who, prior to the war, wore executive, legislative or judicial offi cers of the State, audalook the like oath, and engaged in the rebellion. This embraces, Governors, members of the Legislature, and judicial officers from a Judge of the Supreme Court down to a Justice of the Peace, who at any time, held the office and took the oath and afterwards engaged in the rebellion. Who, then, arc not excluded f , 1st. No one is excluded because he held an office under the Confederate Mates froui President down, it he does not fall within one Bl the excluded classes above specified. The simple fact that he was. a Confederate Senator or a Confederate General, or that he took an oath to support the Constitu tion of the "Confederate "States does not ex" elude him. 2. No State or county officer is exclud- eil on account ot having iieio tneomoe - no ' taken the oath and eiieajred in the rebel . lion, if he were jot an executive, legisla j tjve or judicial officer ; therefore, neither a iwyer, shenn, clerk, tax collector, receiv- perbaps, never power of Cupid - . . asm.. - man, and was disappointed. Wc nave beard it said, oAcu, that ever after, when auy friend could dare to joke him on the subject of marriage, his reply would be, he was not able to support a wife. With alibis eccentricity, he had many excellen cies of character. His trusted friends and servants wen- objects of affection and con sideration ; but he was implacable when he uas deceived or lost confidence. . The will ease occupied over three weeks. We have made sPTCTsi notices from imr exchanges of it, but, we belie ve, in no in stance irave a full and correct lift of tho lawyers engaged in the case. A friend .furnishes us a complete list: For THK Will. B. F. Moore, Ral eigh; U It. Heath, Memphis, Tenn ; W. N H Smith, Mtirfreshoro ; John Pool. Ber tie; P II Winston, Windsor) Edward Cuiiiglaud, Halifax ; H A Gilliam, Edeu ton ; Thos. U i . .11. mi. Hertford. Aoainht thk Will. Gov. Graham, Hiilsboro; V.U. Bragg, Rarefgh ; Gov. Vance, Charlotte ; Win. Eaton Jr., War renton; W. F. Mai tin, Elizabeth Cityi J. W Hinton, Norfolk, Va.; Wiu. A. Moore, Edeutou. We repeat, that a brighter array of legal and forensic taleuthas boenseldom brought together hi this State on any case. The. patters state that the counsel for tbe Will received rsch $1000, and those against the will each 600. Wc do uot know the cor rectness of this. Whether correct or not, Is certaiuly tbe business of no one but the parties concerned. As we have said before, Col. J. W. Hinton, of Norfolk, intends publishing, W the special use of tbe profession, a full and authentic account of Jue evidence. and the pleadings in this case. II is said that it will make a book of about 750 pages Raleigh Sentinel. husband iku the er, comity treasurer, coroner; surveyor, constable, or road commissioner is exclud ed. 1 3. As no man under twenty one years of age, when the war began, held an V such office as disouyriht:(L and none of tluiui took the oath to support the Constitution of the United States during the war, and as the war commenced nearly six years ago, no man in Georgia, under twenty seVeo years of age can be excluded. ...jlth-.Mflitia officers- are Uot-'g'fda'itid. 5th. The whole moss of our people who fall within none of the excluded, classes above mentioned, are free fromthe'disqual ification, and may vote and hold any office in the Suite without regard to the part they took in the war. Cp3 Gen. Mahonc, one of the most en ergetic, bravo,' and successful of the Con federate officeis of the war, is decidedly in favor of a. convention. He says there are but two things left for us : fight or surren der ; and since we have neither men, nor money, nor guns, nor ships, nor anything with which to Carry on war, it is pfain that we must submit, and comply with the de mands of the conqueror. And yet men talk about hishonor and disgrace, and all that, as though the solo representatives of honor and loyalty to the State. It's aH fudge ! There is lionor, and good sense, and true patriotism now in the efforts to save V lrginia from utter degrada tion anarchy, and ruin ; aud the men we find engaged in this important labor will compare well especially for their ser vices in the last six years with those who are so free in denouncing the call of a con vention as disgrace aud dishonor, and all tha'. Norfolk Dag Book. ArPAIM IN A it Kansas. A correspon dent of the Milwnukie Sentinel, who is now living at Little Rock, Arkansas, gives a more favorable account of the condition of affairs in that tate than Radical papers usually allow to see the light. He says : Political matters here are qu'e', and I may say I find men hero more radical than they are in Wisconsin. Politics is a sec ondary matter hen-, and it is well that it is so. This coHiitry is in need of immigration that kind of Cinmigration that knows how to make the sod yield lis full and adequate product. In fact all classes endowed with energy are wanted here. To all such I cau say, come. Notwithstanding what you may have heard in regard to the difficul ties in the country. I tell vou franklu and honestly that no trouble need be apprehend ed. Here you will he sile, and the warm hind of ae'cotne will beexte ided (ball im migrants, of whatever nation or climat Law and order, 1 am happy to say, are ob served. MOHTH 4 IHi'LlVI JtlOXtCY HI UIKKI BKPORTKD BY SPRAGCK IIKOS.. BROKKRS- taltbury, X. C, Maipti 14. 1867. Buying rates. Uarrk of fane Fear,.....: Charlotte, . 90 Clarendon, 3 Commerce, 12 Fayetteville, .. .. North Carolina, ..35 Wadesboro', pj TC4muUn,....-.. ...... 5 Wilmington, ..18 YanceyviUe, ft Commercial Bank W ilininirton, . . 18 r armors1 llank Greensboro', (old) , ,80 tense er, kn guarantees to ir picture of the rut applicant, with date of marriage, occupation, leadiug traits of character, ice. This is no imposition, as testimonials without number eau assert. Hy stating place of birth, hi;.., disposition, color of eyes and aair, ami enclo sing fifty oeuts, aud stain pod envelope addres sed to yourself, you will receive the picture by return mail, together with the desired informa tion. Address iu con fide nee, Madame Gertrude Remington, P. O. Box, iiU7, West Troy. N. Yurk- sepli-ly , ,mmn To Planters and Tanner, Tho Uali llanulwturiiig Company, (establUb. ed -nice 18111,) having tbe delusive eoulrul ul .d) tbe uigbt soil of New York City, otter for saW ex, eluslvely rou cash, a new article of HOt' HI. K UKt'lXKlt I'ufltRKTT9 warranted free from impurity and rubbish, nlch they will sell for Twenty-Five Dollar per Ten, delivered on board of vessel iu Xcw York city. This article, which is pulverized us lino u ftjOur, ha unequal for corn, cotton, aud tobacco, and is equal to No.. 1, Peruvian Guano iu the proportion ot two I lis Gr on ot'Uuaoo, and better than the lie. i hnirtdsorSuper-Pbosjihatcs, pound tor pom ul This is just hc thing for those who win pay i m , . I I . , i . . - cosnnra )(hmi arucie ui a low pnee. wonuwit coarse, itrficic at T eiiiy Dollar- per Ton. Kuui prCs sent by mail, free, on receipt of 3 cent utauip Send for pamphlet, and he convinced. Address the" Lodi Maiiafacturiog Coinpnin ," of? Court laudt st., New York. Rooky Mount, Ldgecouibe co.,N. C. Jrr. Jiimis It. icy Sir : iu reply to your.in- quiry of (lie re .ults of oiir -experience iu th use id your unproved PnudrtU, purchased of jou for this year's Cotton CropTWe wonid .tiejr leave to say that the present season has been one quite tin favorable tu the .u-t ion of all fertilizers. Hnveral kinds of ilanurs.s were used by us, with the ex ception ot lour l'oadrette, with little or nu effect to the crop. Where the l'oiidrctto w as applied it gave us near hall a hnle more per acre, and cuu-ed the Cottou to opeu much earlier, and wc would therefore recommend the samaras s eencoBti.iu-d in. mure for the growth of Cotton, as well us itu proveuieut to the soil. Y nrs, very rcspertfullr, HENRY P. 6TCLTS A filiO. Feb. 13, 1866. jun 10 tw 8w Merchants' Bank Newborn,. Hank of Koxboro, Miners and Planters Bank Hank of Thomasville, (Irconshoro'o Mutual, .V Hank lx;smgtoh,. '. :' Bank Ijcxinirton at Graham,. . GOLD Buying $1.33 Selling. . S1LVBB lluying 1.30 N, C. Coupons ...35 ...35 ... ...Hi ... 6 ..10 ..10 ..$1.40 Read This ! ! Manhattan, Kansas, April I -Mi. Gentlemen : 1 want to sav a little more about the Pain Killer. 1 con sider it a very mliutble Medicine, fudalwayseoep it on hand. 7 have travelled u good deal since I have been in Kansas", and never without taking it with me. In rny pra dec, I use it freely for the Asiatic Cholera m 1S51I, and with better sue cess than any other medicine ; I also used it lice for cholera in IH55, with the same goodieiult Truly yours, A. Hl'STtXO, M. D. From Rev. H. Telford, Mtsniomri in l'kiut, now visiting his home in Pennsylvania' : Wasiiimiton. I'ii.. June 36. 1S6& Messrs. Perry Ikirif- Son, Providence, K. I. Dear sirs : Burin? a residence of. some ton Tears, as a missionary, iu siam and chirja. 1 round your Vegetable Pain Killera most viduable remedy for that fearful scourge, the cholera. In administering the medicine, ITound it most, effectual to give a toaspt sinful of the Paln-Killcr, in a gill of hot water sweetened with sugar; then alter about 'fifteen minutes, bcjrfn to give a tablu spoonfuVof the same mixture even minute nnfil rdiei Was obtained. Apply hut applications to the extrenii io. Bathe the .stomach with tho with the ain Killer clear, and rub tho limbs briskly. Of those who bad the cholera, and took the nSMliciue faithfully in the way stutyd above, eight out of the Urn recovered. Truly yours, B. Tklhokd If attacked with diarrhoea, dysentery, or cramp colic, dou't delay the use of the Pain. Killer. Beware of all Imitations. The Pain K iller is sold by- nil respectable drug; gists tttrough(u the United states and foreign countries. Prices fc" cents, 50 cents-. and$l per bottle oct 2 wfctw4iu Selling 1.33 35 MARKET REPORTS. SALISBURY, N. C.f MARCH 14, 1867. COKKMVKK BY BIMIIUM t CO., OKOCEKS. me haii. t and the gnu bout Marblehoad sails , u'. ' u I , 'AIinUII 1 T 1 i' . I IIVU . iVMsffsiMessrs Anthony, Rose, Rid- ! h,,m u,ll"l)f ,,. . ' . eruise to the moie tho welfare of this State " AYas Governor I 'iermou t a legal Gov ernor of Virginia 7 If not, how was the consent of Virginia obtained to its division? If he is the bona pile Governor of Virgin ia, how can Congress, without an inevita ble violation of the Constitution, contem- if plate the establishment of a military gov- . J I I, III. tit in fliii 4 iA I . . ri i I I . L . n a-)nn .ai - . 11 mi ill xmu i '"iniiinMi, n urn in- we deemed it at all mxcssarv wc r ,icir u. his IgwlalBre have asked Fed urge upon our people the importance of ral interference!" rigid justice iu all their transactions cir-1 cumspection in all their inte rcourse with A Singular Sign -At the reeral elee , , , tmiis recently held for the worth' German one another an exact observance of tbe ,ri;. ..,..,. n tlu. ;i;tr nt things. .Xlijs we tbe' late war, uicludihg Count Bismark, die Joint Committee. IM lflTotlwd Messrs Ross, Patterson, Dixon. Library Messrs. Morgan, Howe, Fes senden. Joint Committee on Retrenchment Ed munds, Williams, Hnckalow. To Revise and Fix Pay of Officers of the Tuny. Bouses M-ssrs. Fessenden, Sher- , buck il. w. -J ti I i - . I ton noaus lo-uay, on tneir Atlantic Scjuadrom.-fc. Sale of a TnUed States Fngate.-lftie old V. S. frigate Bnuidywiue iold at auc tion to-lay for $18,600. Malthy & Co. purchasers She will be cut to pieces for the copper and iron lb. Absent Eight Years. The U. S. frigate Lancaster, wbich arrived hoio yesterday, has been absent from the United States eight years, and this is the first port in this country, thai che has visited in that tune Hiti-oa, perjioiind, Curliae, fr Kund, Corn, per bush, of &B lbs., V M.mI. bush. 46 " Copperas, per pound, (.'ainlles, Tsllow, " ' Ail. nu. inline. Cotton, per pound, 't Yarn, per buncli, Krs, per (loxeii,' I . ;u in is, per pound, flour, per bbl. Fisli, Mackeral, So. 1. " 8. 3. f'uiit. dried, apples pealed, " " ' UUp'ld, " " Peaches, iwale'1. ..JU, .Ul ;;;;; vrcrsnrtrs" Pj. law of the land in all know they will do, and coireeiu iitly wc have no fears of any interference by the Military in the civil affairs of the Slate further than tecsH the Convention the law of Congress just paecd: nuder The wen' defeated by their civilian opponents. The men who were invincible in the field have been routed at tbe polls. Tbe list of tho defeated embraces toe most renowned generals and M bister of War. It. I. utrsm. i Medical Collegk or SoUTtt Caro lina. At the commencemeat of Ike South Carolina Medical College, on Satur day last, the Ltegiee of Doctor of Medicine waa conferred on J. C. M. Loft in. Mount Mount Olive, Wayne County, N. C.; D. McCallum, Alfordsville, N. C, and J. A. Jackson, LilesviUe, N. C. A license to practice Medicine was granted to Mr. M. r ill- V- . i . J- fii , . nuua, Aiiaoiif iiie, ss. j. on iruil place lasi r-Ttiy. i ne iroojii, were , f,1HSt,. ine pnxe preaeateu ov toe faculty for lainl.il sal- iv, int me vessel win do a uvi umr " castinirs, " Nails, cut. " Molasses. soTjrhaili. per jrsf . . . ,v ssi! Wmt listla, fl, .-wiu.,. Byrup, " Qnions, per bushel, l'ork. jier pound .'otatoes, Trigh. per bushel, ISweet, ............ snar. Brown, per poqml, '' VuiAfZKr. " (.'rushed Tnlrerised Salt, coast. ? per sack, ' I.irerpool, " " Tafil, Tobacco, Leaf, per ponod, Mannlactiired, Katokiaa;. 15!. i 16 SO to 83 to 1 1.3B to 1.30 10 to. 13 to 90 S7to 30 90 to 33 to 3.60 into 90 40 to 60 13.60IO 14 3H.Q0 00 to 00 to 00 to e 00 to 00 to 10 --Jo to oo 8to 8 to 9 to to ffcto, 1.00 to I 26 to 10 to 75 to 60 to 80 lb to 30 90 to 96 93 to 36 0.00 toO. 00 S.66 to 3.75 6.60 to 6.90 00 to 00 30 to I. Ml 40 to I .() Marriage Guide.-t0lIJW,8GREAT WOBK, or Every one his owu Doctor-. Being a Private Instructor for Married Persons or those about to Marry, both Male and Female, in everything concern ing the -physiology and, relations of ur Sexual Syslom, ami the Production or Pre vention of Offspring, including all the new discoveries never before given in the Eng-. Huh language, by Wv. YOUNG, M. D. This is really a valuable and interesting work. It is written in plain language foi the general reader, and is" illustrated with, upwards of ope hundred engravings. All young married people, or those contem plating marriage, and having the least im- C imen t to married life-, should road this k. It discloses secrets that every one should be acquainted with. Still it is book that must be locked up, and not lie about the house. It will be sent to any one on the receipt of Fifty Cents. Address Dr. Wm. Yowxo, No. 416 Spruce St., above Fourth, Philadelphia, June 16,'6G 64tw&wly. to in Ml JEW ADVERTISEMENTS J W. BITTING, . (MIDDLE BOOM.) Mo'Neety rf- Young's New Brick Building, - - MAIN STREET, DrMMVfDS: OttO. 10 LCERIBS, Hard w-ara. Boots. Shoes, Hata, 4c. musonrv, a. i ., Mareii 7, ISb7. Lm 0 BarrrlM Fine LAROE mkr w U Ktt MLYKAjk 4ut eeWetl at 1.25 1.60 100 march 7, Unf BITTIXGS'. Tar r . , l A Card to Invalids. Ai-lerjty-uian, while residing in Sooth America flt,-,imhin A share. Tbe steainshin I Flambeau, a hie- eft this port several i Z?Zih 1 ' Tv w ' Tma "'"'P1!' , "! i i u .' ' l,,r er' of Nerrous W eaJuieaK, Karlv De- daj s ago havnip on board about 500 men j rmr Diseases of tb Uriuy sud .unuolorlS of the 49th repiroent Luited Mates troops, and. the Mt train of disonlers brought on bv destined for fhe forts at the ffiouth of the hsneful amrvTcioiw habits. Great number hsve a . ' I I lOiil i llmarl i- At ..I I... iLl...t f a Cape Fear river, went ashore on the bar , " " T "-, ""'' remeaj. iTonip- ... ., ,rnrui i r amicieu and nnTor, HEXRY W. BELCHER & CO., SlfCCESSoRS TO SACKETT. BELCHER A CO,, Wholesale Grocrs, AT THB ill. II s I t n 28 and 30 Rcarfe street, East Broadway, WW YORK. septan. 1866 tw-Sfa tbe beat wntteiT exaauaatiou. and comnle-1 al loss. The Flambeau was bailt at N. "n' wb it. ted for by the graduatea, was awarded to j York iu 661,, and is owned there by Liv-1 AdlreAM' Dr. John B. Elliott, of Savannah. Ga. 1-WpMon Fox. lb. K 166. VALUABLE PLANTATION for stele. For sale a Valuable Plantation tying on the Vadkin Rirer. in fJavidson Couoty. aev Dtrni sailca irtlitt Jr. on l., OL-t.o, and fonttrea miles Moutlorest from 2lera. cnntaimi about MH acres of tSnd. This i a icry valaa,ble and desiratjlr farm, lyinp immediately on iTh river whlrti bonada It on tkt ' Solliil41il fur rk.rk- (In. mil., .n.l .nntftiH. .Iw.n. miw- ', i will send the receipt fur prepsrina and i ,T crp ,ceunt hotwn, r- a (iiaiiar of tlx tm UMMlicine. In a sealed envefone to mr i npland in a rod tjtof mitigation. Thrrr m -lcl enrefnoe. to anr I is J I i K or i ha ana. J(KIH T- IMfAV. Station D, 11. hie Hoass, -twly XewTorkCity im on tm pla-o o f.tl,.- I.m V ATKK PilH'KBS to lr met aitli .n MV Va.ikin, rirr. below ta Beaa shoals. The impRKvrmeutii are od. For farther parti, u 4m ad .In-, lac editor oftae Oi a Noata Statk. .Sali-liniy, S. V. o;t 16- ti

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view