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Vr f ft Y SALISBURY, N.C., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1SG9. NO 20 TT71 TV A T TT TT TV Tm iTN ! v ''. 1 a' 1 r. 1. I, THE EXAMINER. PUBLISHED -TBI-WEEKLY AND WEEKLY, BY NUflAlVL -to STEWART. TJATH3 SUBSCRIPTIONS i ADVANCE. $900 4 - v uivuiuo( f " 3 months, ' . TEEMS rC ASH IN weekly, 1 jetur. t r 0 months, - 3 00 2 00 2 00 1 25 ItATE OP ADVER riSlA ti. Ten'linfet. lor on in $1 00 50 BDace to constiinte y H A- Jk. A J square. 1 One Square; -first insertion. Each iibseqTjeirt insertion, Liberal deductions made, by special contract, to large advertisers. , , , ; -. Court dveriiwmentsw ill be .charged' 25 per cent, highc'than the VeguJar rates - Spciai. Notices charged 60 per cent, higher than ordinary advertisements. ( For adterlisements' inserted; irregularly, 25 per cent. jjigber-kan-u,al rates will be charged. neTata6t!cer will be? charged as advertise ments. The simple' announcement of a death or marriage: will not. be chai-ged. Address all communications to THE PRESIDENTIAL THIMBLE-RIGGER Grant, in his interview with the delegation from Mississippi, on Thursday, was simply contemptible. Prominent men from that State, who are members of the Conservative party, called to consult with him concerning the. political situation, and -he wanted to know of them " whether they were acting in good faith in their present professions of loyalty." What does he mean by " loyalty ? " Does he mean obedience to the constitution, and laws made in pursuance thereof? Is. there anv ot.hp.r test nf " lnvnlt.v "in this nnnntrv ? weather, and filthv and miry In wet. Durins other test? He will not openly da it, nor lhe war savage tragedies were enacted here. will the Republican press : but both insist, in A week ago a small party of the wretched fact, on other tests. They inssst on alle- people who live on Crawford street, near Vine, eiance to the rulinsr mrtv as a rroof of " lov- eat on the low timber pavement looking out A GHOST. The Lick ranch bottoms, from the Sulphur Springs away out to the west, where the rising ground commences and where houses and gar dens, appear, and from the .trestle work north where the city begins ooce more and spreads into what is known as German town, is lonely and sombre after nightfall. It U a dismal waste overflowed every year by inundations of- the Cumberland, serrated with gullies overgrown with rank and poisonous weed, buanted by swine and vagrant dogs who feast upon offal east out from the streets above. Continuations of Summer. High and Vine streets, like broad metallic bands, cross the waste, dusty in dry ': NUTT ALL & STEWART. GEN. GRANT'S ADMINISTRATION. j Rev. Wm. T. Butler says that he did not declare in his sermon delivered on Sunday, that Gen. Grant was the weakest President the country had ever had, led to the certain acts of Administration had led to that impression on the part of many persons. Well, a man is better known by his acts than his professions and " the impression of many persons" is no doubt the correct one. Public opinion made General Grant President in No vember last almost by acclamation, and public opinion would unmake him President to-morrow, if it had the opportunity. Gen. Grant i a failure as a cirillian, whatever his military qualifications. lie failed in his Inaugural Ad dress, in the selection of his Cal-met, and has failea in the measures of his Administration. Fie reads no bcoks, makes no study of men or nnhlie mixtions. lu!'e or nothing of what 1 An Incident or mt Flood.- The Austin (Tejas) Gazette relates the following h cidentof the great fia : " In the neighborhood of Mr. Cnabon, widow lady, with six small cnuareu, anven from her house, which was swept by the high water, took refuge in a tree with all her little one. At the flood brought along rails and drift wood, she caught them and constructed a sort of a raft around the tree so that when one of her children alip ped and fell it was caught by the platform be low. 11 ere the hemic mmKr ;k ... , n mi uri pre cious treasure, remained for twenty four hour, until Mr. Coalson constructed a boat and took them all safely to shore. alty." over the bottoms. Lleven o clock had just been is. doce in the Executive I'epartmenta allows Grant knows that there is not a man in the struck, and the echoes had hardly died away an extreme nartuan named TulloCk, advanced State Of Mississippi who entertains a purpose from the market house bell, when out on the from the Secretaryship of a party committee, of disobedience to the Constitution, or to the dreary bottoms, just beyond the tresUe, where to turn out men of great necessity and value to lawful authority of the government. Obedi-1 tne mooniignt was oegmning to tali and to light the government, and to put in those demanded ence is secured by the tact that disobedience UP tfte prospect wun a weira ngnt, tne party by members of Congress and others, lieaban- is rendered impossible. The result of the 8aw suddenly a gigantic figure, wrapped from dons the seat of Government for weeks, allows war made it impossible. The government bead to foot in a winding sheet. It seemed to his Cabinet to be anywhere and everywhere, has demonstrated its power to compel obedi- come out of the earth and move solemnly from but at the post of dutv. entires in fast driving ence to its authority. The South looks on its P'ace to place wun a species ot gliding motion, and constant smoking, and expects to bold the desolate fields, its charred homes, and grave- Ubscured a moment by the shadow ot the tres- reins of Government as he holds the reins of yards filled with those who were its noblest tle the strange spectacle next appeared far out his fast teams on the beach of Long Branch, and best men, on its helplessness, and affirms 0I tQe Dottoms, swinging its gaunt arms, dis- Cape May, Annappolts, and elsewhere. But by these evidences of her inability to defy appeared into the earth to appear at another these are among the lesser causes of grievan the power of the government that she accepts sPot 800n alter. ces against the President. Naturalized Amen- its authority, and will obey its laws. She The effect on the little group of spectators can citizens aie shot without mercy a.. d almost has no choice in the premises. ma be imagined. The nijrht, still and solemn, without trial. Halpioe, Wyatt, Polhamus, all mon MfVirk xtrava an rrn rraA in Ua nror cqtt nOt a breath OI air Stimnor th thin niKtU tthli-h I n? yve oner ineioiiowinemuucemenis wuiobe utf wot , UK.Ui; MHcreDt nn from tha .diminntivA BtrnAm whih Tko PreMn h.a nn .it.nH t m, , wno wiixaKeine pains to gei up viuDb anu because of the failure of the Confederate gov- flows through the branch, and before them the done his countrymen in Ireland and Cuba, but gend us-the names ot Annual touoscriDers, .1 nnm nn An nn,- Qiao t horrib e figure in whit Th a mmmn. Jant nphma rr .ttonriin Klia Hnn :a Wlin iue suusitduou unueui mc iu-wjmv f cnWU TTr,5f Qfof Ta if nl lion and crowds rnshPd Fnrth frnm hA ha rh- .! ! AtA 71 ' ITT fll dr A 1 vvj ouuuiiu iaj mo U"iicu uiaico. 10 m uuu ... . . , ... jxamuTeri-npj,w, or ine. vv ee.iyr n, frt Qv if a m.n oo in mJ fnitV, in bonns? tenements in all sorts of hab iments and QUE CLUB RATES. CLUB ),00;6rtliel Weekly, $2,00. 1 T RI -weekly. ( submittine to what is inevitable ? If there tor a Club 6f 7 Subscribers to Tri-Weekly were the slightest ground for hope that re- Examiner, a' copy of the same will be furnish- lease from such submission could be obtained, ea tor one year. Fir a Qlub of 10 subscribers we will pay V in.cath, 11 u ill 50 $ 5,00 r 7,50 10,00 115,00 i 25,00 the case would be different. Grunt knows that the men in Mississippi, en gaged in the conservative movement, are of an gazed fearfully out at the spectre flitting in the mooalight. Two men of firmer nerves than the rest, seiz ed their revolvers, and rushed down to the tres tie, snapped their pistols several times at the figure, which was leisurely moving before them. innj menus, and watering places. It is no fiction, therefore, to state, 44 he is the weakest President the country ever had." New York Express LUB RATES FCR "WEEKLY. actly what they say they will do. They will act with tha republican party and the Presi- .1 -.11 ucui uij an ijuc&iiuiis tuuuuiug icuuusuuuuuu, provided the white men of the State can be en For ajQlub of 7 subscribers to Weekly Ex- franchised Is not this enough? Must they, mi net a copy of the. same will be furnished as a proof of 44 loyaltv," swear that they will for Pne liyiear... V . ' ' ' always act with the republican party? Must For a Club of 10 subscribers we will pay they pledge themselves to support any iniqut- order who bold their honor in as dear esteem Kit their weapons refused to go off, and su as any men in tne country, inev win ao ex- u,j usuic iuuiuuu uu mio iriuuiiu uro- " - " - . . I . l.l 11 r - portions, ana tnen nice a nasn disappeared into the earth and was seen no more that night. Several times since, the same figure has ap peared and always about the same hour, if re ports may be relied upon. One old lady insists that she saw the spectre placidly walking along the top of the trestle work, and that she saw in cash, ' a 11 $ 2,50 tous measure or scheme for plundering which a j o, 5 majority in a republican Caucus may devise j " 5,00 and wish to enforce ? 7,50 It is not strange that Grant should suspect 12,50 the honesty and truthfulness of others, j As a Ihese rats will be strictlv adhered to. and politician, his history is merely one ot perhdy thc amouritprinptly paid to any one com- and treachery. A President of the United plying wiibhem States, and members ef his cabinet, have put a V Our T&Wcekiy and Weekly Examiner mark 0Q Grant that no distiaction of rank can Contains more reading matter than any pa- conceal, and which, so long as he or his 1 name the stars hrousrh its thin body veil. Nash. Banner Aug. 2. as through 15 30 1 f1!50vf' DEATH CAUSED BY THE CARELESS NESS OF A DllUGGIST. A sudden death occurred in Chicago on Sat urday night last, the particulars of which are thus givsri by the Chicago Timet : Mr. George 1. Demmg. of South Bend. 9 Ghostly Experience of a Mdrperer. In the year 1858 a man now living in Kan , " sas City had a difficulty with a man in Cali- iornia, ana Kiueu 111m in sen-ueience. lie was arrested, tried and acquitted by a jury of his countrymen, lhe man whom he had killed had been his friend. They worked together in the same mines, slept under the same blanket, were, in short, companions and comrades. After the killing, the man of whom we speak has never seen a happy day. Grief, or a continued dwelling on the subject, has to a certain extent impaired his mind, and he positively asserts now that the spirit of the dead man is always with him. To avoid it he sold out in California and went to iJritisii (jolumbia. it 101 lowed mm like a shadow. Then he went to Colorado. Still the ghost pursued him. In agony, he fled to the States : no rest here. Day and night, he pefs'5offfliVkindpublished in this part of the live will proclaim him as a man who was h'n KiiWrmtinn Torino is? much glty of treachery and meanness which ought " i to have banished bim from the society of gen- Club, ot Rockford. He remained at 0rden says, he can see the countenance of his dead fnonrt nnrl fool nia nroeonM in fhp T"ATl m I h nd., came to Chicago for the purpose of wit- chost has never t spoken to him At first 11 wool 11 cue auj Ul IMOO uail UCIHCCII IUC lVUli I Jjq featU Stockings, of Cincinnati, and the Forest City lower. , Good,: active, enterprising canvassers can maiie 'money i oy geixing up ciuus ior me jl,.c tlemen. In deKling with the conservative movement, Park during the greater part of the game, but toward evening was attacked with diarrhec. tures expressed anger and resentment. Now they appear kinder and more compla cent. This story may appear a little ridicu lous. but it is true, nevertheless. Names! Tni Tennessee Election. The election returns from Tennessee received at a Utt hour last night indicate a democratic triumph in tht vote for Governor and members of the L?gi lature.' Returns from Memphis, Nashville and Germaotown give Senter a majority generallT andstatathat .Messrs. Slaughter. Etheridr- Cooper and Bailie Peyton were elected to the Suite Senate. A moat crntifvinff notnt aftl news is that the contest passed off quietly and that alt the refreshment saloons were closed during the dy. iV. Y. HeraU, 6. Business Dull in tub West. The New Yoik Times ?aya: "The 'drummers' for the business houses of that city are returning from iuc uesicru ouies wun aoierui accounts ox the condition of trade. Orders can no be ob tained, neither in the dry goods line cor in the V. 1 n 1. .. IZ a. a tuisj ime, or in any otner line: aoa even the sharpest and most energetic 'drummers have been unable to make their expenses in their attempts to secure orders in the West," GEXERRAL news. A Newport lady has had a riog cut entirely from a single diamond. The State of Massachusetts paid $3,5S0.782 for educational purposes last jear. The negroes in Arkansu propose topcitiant public lands and hire the Chinamen. Secretaries Rawlins and Cox are the only members of the Cabinet now in Washington. Philadelphia is going en masse to AtUoiio City, because the Zouaves are encamped there. Five hundred pupils are annually cared for at the New York Deaf and Dumb Institute. 1 It is rumored in Constantinople that theSaU tan intends baoishiog all Jesuiti from kis do ' mains. A Bostonian has raised this season, on pfot of less than two acres, 2,500 worth ot straw berries. Paris gossips gay that Madame Patti loolar five years older than she did at this, time hut. year. - The Ilavana journals are dlacrcslng; the fn- a K a ic a-v itt n rl I nn tta mllnf in r nto onf Ira I rn MIA rt frm ti Ihm r i vw i iU a A i L amines as well as do much lor the good ot ,,c 10 wa.ui auu vawuauug, w.,,..Cv ulliJ tu icavc iue uene m me the peopll'UntV country ' by aiding toicircu- discourse with the Mississippi delegation was contest. On his way to his hotel, Deining ,i i i f 1. Ti irnnr. nr a t n im rim-ritrcrpr. i :n iriitm MiTn.rx. i ki nnKii ai i mh iirnv Kmrp rr iii .1 .1 iiomnn- dea linormation. souna roiiu- .. ..B... ... :-. rr y. . v. 1 4) 1 late mucii nee , cal I principl.an,weUs0lected reading mat ter calculatsd and . intended, to excite i enter prize! encourage industry, and give tone and character to society. The field is open and a fair chance is given to all'. Who will furnish us the1.firs!t'Club!? ; ! , I i.Tlfe name of each. subscriber should EETURN OF A CONFEDERATE PRIS ONER TO ARKANSAS. ! The Jackspnport Herald and Bates ville Times have lengthy accounts of the capture :Wf?? "t, eS u. n , 1 and imprisonment lor six years of Mr. H, H. be given miull, with Post Office, County and L R f , General E Lee and for. State. Address, NUTTALL & STEWART. . J 7: 1 ' ;" '. merly a citizen of Madison, in this State. In November, 1862, he was arrested in Mem- i phis on a charge of speculating in Confederate ton, and asked the proprietor for to check his complaint. The druggist said he could give him immediate relief, and, going to his bottles, undertook to prepare a compound of brandy, ginger and camphor, but, by mistake, prepared a dose of ginger, camphor and aconite, the latter, very singularly, standing in a bottle next to, and similar to, the one in which was kept Harrington's supply of brandy. The un fortunate man drank the mixture, and lived only three hours afterward. After voun? Domini? could be given, if it were possible to betray confidence. The man is known to a few here. He rarely goes upon the street, and expresses himself rosirrnoil tn hi. fntn nntl nmrs thnf medlCinft I .r.ill Vri Ittwt oo 1 liAliAttAd nnnf V.rtl- VJUU Will lUlDC 1111U, M 11C Otllt llVtT 111 lib his dead friend has done. Kansas City Times. i WHOLESALE AM IT BT.1L DEALER IX 'CBSte L ASS, AND OTJ ml mi l 1 SWAM c. aud then shipped for Camp Douglas, in Illi nois. Arriving there, the officer refused to receive him because there was no law forbid ding speculation in money of any kind; The Lieutenant having him in charge then started with him to Rock Island, accompanied - by seven guards. They went to Milwaukee, itfWv flr -i - i tri' , Wisconsin, and were going to put' Lee jail for KertJsri6 Xamps and bhades, Kline S safe keeping until they could have a spree. : PaieBiGErmtfiJarsI &C., feV- About this time Lee and one of his guards, ' I nth A o f-nrYY rn m on him acoo rnri rn r nnrn soon recaptured. Mr. Lee was then impris oned in Milwaukee jail, and kept in close con finement for two and a half years without a trial. At the end of that time he was taken out and sentenced (without a4 trial) to four years' imprisonment in the State prison at Madison, Wis. During these four years he was not allowed to write to his friends, or read a book or newspaper of any kind, but was effectively excluded from the world. During this time his health f was good. The time for release came. He went to Cincin- natti, where he heard that bis wife was dead, at:e Lhad taken the notion hn hnrriprl t- Kia hnfnl money, put in the Trying Block for one nightq anJ Koin at once t0 hi3 . ,j Mi I . " . . . . . . . ' : It Store opposite Mansion House, Salisbury, N. tR. G'ODtlN'Sl J COMPOUND j GBNTIAN' BITTERS Cures &U!srjfctf"FeTer; Dyepp8la, Indigestion, Colic,SiplStaaichv Bronchitis, Asthma, ' fNeurlgiftTkheumatrsra, &e. jlASlVrm TONIC.-a A aarej gate, and Yeliable preventive and cure for all Maariil diseases, and all diseases requiring a eeneral toulc impression I Prepared only byiBaN..A. H. GODDIN andfor and he could hear nothing of his child. ealo eTr7Uer4 ' . p T From there he went to Memphis, where he VPniri f. U -Rakir .cl 7pk;r ai was received by his friends as one risen from ndUVholesale dealer in Patent Medicines, Norfolk Virginia. mpr-o-i-ijf 'TV. the dead, and learned the joyful news that his wife and child, the latter a grown young lady, were both living, and at Batesville. The telegraph was used in announcing .to his wife his safety, and stating that he would meet her at Jacksonport on the 13th. Says the TTeralA ' i , i I -,- s ill II fi"! a ; r. 1 ' . "-'U.- I 1 i " I v'' jnf Vitii I-3t.'iiAl,.ITT-'v ". "They met,. and such a. meeting as! it was DEALER vt IN - GROCERIES, PRO VIS - never occurred within our knowledge.) The IONS EfARDVVARE, GLASS AND ioy of the wife at the sight of her restored , COCKBRYiVARE, W A L L husband was too great. and swoon after swoon iFiBiBf WNl) O.W.I followed in rapid succcession;" " j odjimS E S, &C. , i From here they went to Batesville, their ROMPT attentioa i given o orders, and to the uiure nome, wnere we will leave them, trust- t "sal of Cottoa, drain, Naval Stores, Tobacco, mg lhat a long and happy life may be vouch and asked that a physician be sent for, as he feaied he was going to be very sick. As soon as possible Dr. Lee visited the sufferer in his room, and, afcer a rapid examination. rave it as his opinion that the man had been poisoned. He questioned his patient, who speedily inform ed the doctor of the fact of his having drank of the mixture prepared by the North side druggist. Soon afterward Mr. Dcming expir ed. Coroner Cleaves was notified, and an in quest asked for. After a jury had been,im pannelled, the tacts as above narrated were ad duced, in addition to which Mr. Harrington, the druggist, appeared before the jury ,and vol untarily stated that he had made the mistake which had been productive of such terrible re suits. The following verdict was rendered : 4 We, the jury, find that the said George H. Deining came to his death from an overdose ot aconite, administered for brandy by one J. J. Harrington, druggist, on the corner of Illinois, ard Rush street j and, from the testimony ad duced, We, the jury, believe that the said Harrington was guilty of criminal carelessness in not having his bottles pliinly marked, and in tneir proper places, tnrougn wmcn means the mistake occurred which led to this fatal re suit.' " A ROMANTIC INCIDENT. Some years ago fsays the New Orfeans Pica yune) a gentleman named Paul Escott, a resi dent of New Orleans, but formerly living in France, lost his little son, a lad of ten years of age, from a vessel ot the Canary Islands. It was night at the time, and although every pos sible exertion was made to rescue the bov, yet were they unsuccessful, and the little fellow was given up for lost. Shortly afterward the fami ly came to New Orleans, and in time the grief of the parents frr the loss of their son became only a sorrow living in their memories. He was dead, they thought, and grief could not bring him back to life. But he was not dead, iile had got possession of one of the planks thrown out to him, and although missing his friends. was picked up the next day by an English ves sol. In this ship he made a voyage to China, and failing to communicate with his family on his return, continued in the employment of the vessel for several years. At last, learning ttie whereabouts of his family, he reached this city in quest of them a few day? since. The joy which the appearance of one they had long con sidered dead can as the novelists say, be more easily imagined than described. It was like one risen from the grave, and discloses a series of inccidents as fruitful of romance as often en gages the pen of the novelist and essayist. crease of the eorttraBend trade between that city and the rebels, and urge measures for U suppression. A man living in Bonhev, France, fell into stite of lethargy, produced by over indulgence- t in drink, and w.is laia oui xrr nanai.. xjlk. subsequently revived. The Tallahassee (Fla.) Sent'md rajs there fi no probability that the people of the State wilh vote in favor of the cession of the !f eiCarci' patfc i of the State to Alabama. The reports from the interior of Cuba are generally favorable for the revolution, and one Spanish officer gives it has opinion that J 100,-. 1 000 more troops from Spain will be required t to conquer the island. , The Hong Kong Press says there is an or ganized and extended system there, by which !, voung girls are kidnapped and sent to Sab , trancisco, there to be consigned to a life of prostitution.- " . The revenue receipts are largely increased in the South, especially in New Orleans, and along the Mississippi. The illicit distillation of whisky has been pretty thoroughly broken up in the cities. A Dresden despatch says the accounts of the explosion in the mines have not been ex nggerated. Three hundred and twenty -one t dead have been counted, and the scenes in the neighborhood are heart-rending. In July there were one hundred and on fires in the city. Excluding from this nutn ber'thoe caused by fireworks and the explo sion of burning fluids it wonld be reduced nearly one-half. AT. 11 Herald. , Dried FAd"c.ytt Commission Ooiixxrt lbuso Bulldine. " . KEWBERNV.N. ed tq the happy family, and trusting that inis is, tne last Confederate prisoner, j j JjUlle Hock Ark.) Gazette. n iWFQR RENT, A N fcXCEJLE NT. BRICK STORE 70 by 25 feet Admiral Charles Stewart, familiarly known as " Uld ironsides," reached the age of 91 on V'ctaQiNa, .Mwpky't .vranite kw on on the zsttr of July. While his mind is as j embarrassed missionary effort in Ireland. a fi wonon.w Pou8B w v, 4 clear and vigorous as ever, and his general I' -Icn 'il' J.kTitr liwrilRRlNS or " ' ?'eaI g4 ifc is reported that he is suffering i ii JS.i wauu UBirio or A '.iV itt 8. R. HARRISOX. from what is supposed to be a cancer tongue, pf the The CnuRcn in Disestablishment. The prelates of the Irish Cnurch meet the serious crisis inaugurated by the disestablishment leg islation of the English Parliament with devo" tional courage and as brave men. Instead of sitting down in lamentation over their altered fortunes they are likely to bestir themselves in missionirv effort. The bishops have called WW a General Synod to assemble in Dublin, iu which the Episcopacy, the clergy and the laity, will be fully represented. Provincial synods will also be held. The local changes absolutely necessary iu consequence of the action of Par liament and the Crown will be debated and adopted if approved. This is the right spirit. Thrown off by the State, the Church will fi id support in the ranks of an ardent and still wealthy laity, and will, no doubt, in a very short time commence her nrst real,lree and un The movement is quite important and the Irish st t . n J . aI n unurcn oynou may couuun me germ ot an ecclesiastical offset to the great Ecumenical Council in Rome. jV. Y. Herald. A phenomenon of a most extraordiary nat ure has lately been witnessed by the inhabitants of the barbers ot the Caspian Sea. This huge salt lake is dotted with numorous islands which produce yearly a large quantity of nptha, and it is no uncommon occurrence for fires to break out in the works and burn for many days be fore they can be extinguished. Early last month, owing to some subterraneous disturbances, enorraous'quantities of this inflammable sub- stanee were projected from the naptha wells, and u a spread over the entire surtace ot the water, i and becoming ignited, notwithstanding evcrv precaution, converted the whole sea into the semblance of a gigantic foaming punch bowl, many thousands ot pquare miles in extent. The fire burnt itself out in about forty eight hours, leaving the surface strewed with the dead bodies of innumerable fishes. Herodotus mentions a tradition that the same phenomenon was once before observed by the tribes mhab ltingthe shores of the Caspian Sea. an Ex-Senator Lafayette S. Foster of Connec ticut, who was for several years presiding offi cer of the United States Senate, has accepted the nosition of Professor of the l ale JLaw School, to fill the place made vacant by the death of Ex-Governor Dutton. V Western piper announces the death of editor, piouslv adding : " All good paying subscribers are requested to mention him in their pravers. The others need not, as the prayers of the wicked avail nothing, accoru- Sj ing to gooa autnoniy. Secretary Boutwell has concluded to have a new issue of all denominations of Green bocks, from one to one thousand dollar note. No likeness of any living man will be placed on any note, and every precaution will be used to prevent fraud. At a meeting of the Bkard of Trade in St Louis, on Monday night, a report was read and adopted to appoint a commute oi iweivo to rai-e by subscription iu.uw o duuu ru iron seagoing propeller to inaugurate trade between St. Louis and foreign and domostio ports. The list of jeixures reported TnesdYy at the Revenue Bureau included $20,000 worth of manufactured tobacco, Mixed by the revenue officers in the Second Alabama district. . There were several large seixurcs in Georgia and Hem siana of whiskey and tobaeeo, the ralnuiorr ef the property reported being not Ws than t50 000. . , !
The Tri-Weekly Examiner (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Aug. 11, 1869, edition 1
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