ir : r vrA 1-1 4 IBM v . -. 0 vol; WILMINGTON, N. THURSD AY MORNiNG AUGUST 15, 1867. 10 IIIEllSMllAM POST E. A. PA-UIi & CO, Proprietors. VTrS 01" SUBSCBtPTION INTABIABLT IK ADVANCE : !iir one vear. yo IJtU'J r . six months.. - i: ' t : . 600 one month.... a..... .... .... - t RATES !OF ADVERTISING:. rtisements..will he Inserted at iw per uare for nr&t insertion ana y cenw iui gnbsequent' insertion. - J.' . " , Ten lines or less, sona minion type, constitute 8quare. IHE WEEKLY : WILMINGTODf ; POST. - 1 IS PUBLISHED EVEKT MoVdaT.' Subscription : 1 f: One year. .,....,.-....... Advertisements; per square. .". .i.$2 00 JFIGEIT , WIT II . PIRATES, SHERIDAN AtlD ROSSEAU. Heavy Raiiis. ' J 1 ' THE MARKETS. flOK. J. &. PENDELTON AND JUDGE THOMAS OF VA. INDICTED. New Y6rk, Aug. 14. Arrived--Schooner Ira Birdsell, from jtfavannab j several of her seamen are sck, and one died daring the passage from Liverpool. , . I tie Minnesota arriveu irom; r lymoutjb Foq ChqWaqvicea state that fourteen mil- lion pounds of j new crop eii sold. j ' H tea had already i Washington, I Aug; 14.- The " President, through Gen. Grant, has. instructed General fjtckles that no order, can bet issued by the latter conflicting with the process ! of 'federal' courtsr This revokes Order No. ilO, inter fering with cases recently adjudicated 'by Judge Chase, of Nortli Carolina, 1 ; 0enf ahejidan writes to Gen. Grant com plaining that Gen, Rousseau's sreneral de- meanor, towards hinr was not such as the Commanding offices of the right to expect. District had a i i r Cable Summary, j New Yobk, Auff. 14. The Federal steam- en Hartford and. Wyoming fought the Chi nese pirates on. the Island of Tenos?i, who refuse to surrender the murderers of the American bark Reyers' crew. After shelling Jhe shore, several boat loads ( effected a land ing, A.hve hours' sharp right ensued. Fif- &6n officers ahji men Were sun-struck.' Lt. McKenzie was fatally wounded, whci) the lighting party withdrew, but the bombard- ment continued until ,he natives disappear ed, wnen tne vessels lert. the scene. ' 'The Chinese refuse to receive dollars coin ed by Maximilian, ', ... Garibaldi is at Siennat renewing his prepa rations for a movement on Rome. . . - Jt is nimored tha.t Omar pasha, obmmand bg in Candia, has resigned. r ' ' - r Capt. Moriarty has' been sentenced to ten jear's imprisonment. Negotiations between Denmark and Prus ,n&.are progressing amicably. From New Orleans. "New Orleans, Aug: 14. jit appears that Sen; Bhcjidan was wrong In the premises tAketf in iBpeckl Order N. 110, ejecting J Congdon from possessioa of the Killard Plantation,' iff St. Charles' Parish g and i n italling "Mark Hoy t, on : the ground' that Congdon still remained in possession,' al 4ongh the Court having nd jurisdictioii bad dismissed the injunctionissued by it re training action as stated in! the order.) The se is still on the docketffltriai ripx ses- 0n, and the Deputy Marshal was in posses non, by order of theCourt, fte order giving, possessio hen ejected by to Hoyt. The matter , tq the " 8. Marshal will refer th Attorney. General. -.r Arrest of Two Prominent Virginians. Richmond. Aug. 14. Hon. John S. Pen- eton, of Culpepper cbunty a former mem ber of Congress, arrived here this evening, "Ting been arrested on the charge of per .toy in having registered, r ll pif. ; .The case of J udge W. Thdmas; of Fairfax, ho arrived last night under arrest for hav ing violated the Civil Rights bill by refus- ing to takq negro testimotiy, has been set for next : term of the U. S, Oourt. He was taled,tb ar)pekr. Eoth parties' had been indicted by .the Grand JuryJ -crr- f -" ' . ' V1''-';;- From Washington.! - Washington, Aug. 14. An Omaha dis patch aays the Sioux Indians were banding $gether $nd crossing th,eJPlaUe for battle, t, BlumV Creek 8tation. f 'General advices lfldicate the hostilities increasing. 9$$aj "aotice is given ttat on and afte October the first, , a first order fixed light, will be exhibited .from" Assatiague 6n the Virginia coast, in place of the fourth order niit heretofore exhibited there: " post offices are reyived and new nes open ed every lay, throughout the South, j , 1 ,,y f : From Charleston Chableston, Aug. i4.Hegistered to-day, sii hundred, and t forty.four jof whom one hundred and sixty-two were white, and four hundred and eighty-two colored. - ' At a meeting, of the - Board of Trade1 this morning a long letter was read from Gen. Sickles; in reply to a recent j-emonstrWc of thj Board concerning orders No. ten and thirty-two. " He .UpholdsT alt provisions "of thjse orders. , "' tv ' ' ' 'r Cotton firmer and advancetl. a tc. 65 bales;; Middlings ' at 27c. a!27c; Sales , Re- eiy ceipts 2lt) bales. - -i ; failed. Schooners Americus lor Yqrk, and Wenmah, for Baltimore.' mm- Baltimore Markets. ;Ba'iTimobe 'AuS-s 14. dotton firm' and oochanged.;, Coffctr dull , flat ; Flour, quiet anJ steady some demand for export. Prime, wheat steady ; prime to choipc red $2 25 a $2 5 ; inferior lots $1 75; prime and choice whjte $2 .50. a. $2 60. Whitelcorn active and higher;. prime $1 10; yellow; $117 a $1 18. Oals -common to prime $1 68 a $1 80 ' in ferior $: 106 ; bulk $1'75 a j$l '78.' Sugar firm and unchanged. Provisions dull land unchanged "Whiskey noniirjal; quoted fur free- $2 pd'5 in bond $1 30 a 1 35! - 9-.-. y'li 1 " - : ! ! . -.'I" - Washington1, Aug. 14,-J-Secretary Stan ton andj wife have gone to Boston. Stan- tons sop retains a clerkship: in-jthe War; De partment.! Gen. Grant is j very busy there. Few visitors are admitted. ! , Jpo. II. Kinkuid is appointed -Post-Master atTitka Walrussia. Fjaymaster B. W. Bryce has issued a circu lar discrediting the :rfnnrtn nf navmm,fc nr. fratiriiiionf ri;0n i v - i j ttdujentdischarge papers, and cone udes rj j "r! r ; - xcojwusiwh:iwi i illegal disbursements bv navmasters.- ':T ' j.' i . j, . , i 7 i . - .;j ... i Attorney-General Stanberry is at Capon Sprtngs in bad health j j 1 : - -1 j . ! ; J a Yesteirday'4 Cabinet meeting was the most harmonious that has been held for months. lo day's revenue receipts are $486,000, New York- Markets , - ' ' I ew lii ore. Aur. 14. Uottor very nrm salens 1,400 bales at.28&c. Flour State and it ' . s - .1 Western $15 25 ;" better for old new ; dull lower State $7 a $11 75; Southern $11 50 a $1 50i II Wheat rather imore doing Southern new amber Southern $2 23 a in $2 30: white Georgia 40 a $2 47. J Cbrri opeped i-J- better, but advance lost, closing dull ; mixed western $1 10 a $1 11 ; ' white Southern $1 22. Oats less, active and ' firm rie southern 90 a 93c. Pork lower, closing at $23 20.; Lard dull. Whiskey, rice and sugar quiet. Turpentine 59 a 60c. Rosin $3 $5 a $8 50. Tallow llfja llc.; Wool heavy ; 1 Texas 24 a 33C. iFrciffhtS Quiet. StofcHs 1 1 heavy,! Gold 140f. .'62 coupons registered, 131 j I 1 I ! Mobile Markets, v Mobile, Aujr. 14. Cotton market closed firmj; lpw middling 24c ; j sales - .. 10O bales: The first receipts, one iDaie new cotton. bale: of new cotton at Selma yesterday, class ed Iqaiddling, bought by Basil M.'Wooley, at 25cJ per pound. - . i ' 1 - :1, ' .i i Angnsta Cotton Market. I I Augusta, Aug. 14. Cotton I firm and in T0od demand; but offerings lierht.. Sales , of 79 bales ; middling at 1 25ic. . ' Tb,ere has been a heavy rain storm here al I IrloTr, artrl ia atill nnntiniiinf It is feared that cotton will be seriously injured.. . . i-. - , wvv.i Jul .-v. New Orleans Markets &c. Hew 1 OBLEAKS,Aug; i4.-Cotton' (juiet htlfirm, with sales or 450 bales low mid. dling at 26 a 36 Jc. Receipts s 1,1 1G bales. xports 2,376 bales. Flour dull and unset tled; superfine $ 25. i Corn dull and de clined 21 a 5c; mixed to white- $1 12 a 1 i 15. I Oats dull and declined 5c, WltU f at sales at ou a ooc. r rorK amei out nrm $25 75..;- Bacon shoulders! 13 a 13c; clear sides 16J a 16f ; sugar cured hams 20 a 210. Lard 244c t Gold 140. Sterling 521 a 54. Yoxk Sight ic. premium. Admiral Tigethaff arrived here r last vcn- insr land! wilt await orders from i. . he Austrain govienimeiii. Lrii -f J :.r M Cincinnati Markets. Cincinnati. Auer. 14. Flour unchanged. Corb firmer. "Cotton firmer,: demand light U. i! - ii . . 1 . - xri.;i at Steady, prices ..b 1,1r Ktinoca Moca porjc $23 70. Bacon shoulders 12$c; clear sides 16c; ! Foreign Markets. , V ondon,; August "14 Evening. Consols closed strong at 94. . Bonds 74.. Frankfort, Aug. 14 Evening. Bonds closed steady at 77$ . I 1 j Liverpool; Aug. 14 Evening.UCottJn closed firm with 'an advance of lid. Mid- dliog uplands 10$c;- Orleans 11 i. i i Savannah Markets ayannah, Ga., Aug. 14. Cotton';quiet steady, middling, twenty six and half , cts. Receipts two : hundred i and ? forty bales. Sales one hundred and ten bales.- It 13 raining in torrents to-day. Reports from Florida and Georgia state hat the crops are very good. London, Aug. 14. 2 o'clock, P. M. .Weather throughput. England very 'hot. Consols 94 13-16. Bonds' 74; ; ! ; LrvERPooL,'Aug. 14. 2 o'clock, PlJM. Cotton firm and less active ; sales now esti mated at 12,000 bales. & f , ! ' '" New ToVlI "llarkets. ' New York,-Aug. 14. Stocks very dull. Erie Strong money 4 a 5. Gold 40f Ster ling on time 05; sight 10$. ' '62 coupons 13.' Tennessee sixes ex-coupon,' 68f ; new issue 66fr."4 - .- ' , ') . 1 FOR FATHER'S HONOR." i "So much gone ! L might have ! known how it would be I" said Mr. SterlingVlookr ing up from the morning paper, with a most unpleasant expression upon his face, ji " : j "What is gone ?'T asked his wife, jl ' My money is gone,"! answered Mr. Ster ling, fretfully. m' "What money ?" ! "That money I was foolish enough to lend ill. Granger." . . , ! "Why do you say that ?" ' ? I rf ."He's dead," replied Mr. Sterling, coldly. "Dead !7 The wife's voice was full ot surprise and' pain. ' Sorrow overshadowed her face. i 1 . t 'Yes, gone, and my money ; with him. Here's a notice of! hisdeath .; I was sure when I saw him go away that he'd never come back, except in his coffin. Why will doctors send their patients , from home to die!" . ' ' uIoor Mrs. . Granger ! Poor little or phans 1" sighed Mrs; Sterling "What will they! do?"' i : i! . , i"As well without hi pi as with hiin' was the unfeeling answer of her husband who was only thinking of the three hundred dol lars hu hail J)ten over-persuaded to loan the sick clergyman, m order that he might go J3outh during the Winter. "He's been more pf a burden than a support to them these two years.".!. : . . i -il . - "Oh,.Hfirry ! how can you speak so !" re monstrated j Mrs. Sterling. "A kinder man in his family was never seen. Poor t Irs. Granger,!! she will be heart broken." -ill. Kindness is cheap and easily dispensed,'' coldly replied j Air. Sterling. "He would have been of more use to his iamily if he had m d clotlied them beltel, ieckori tney can up pitnout mm. it l naa my tnree nunqrea aoiiarsii wouian t " x But he checked for shame, liol for any bettei feelipg, ! the almost brutal ' words his. heart sent up to his tongue. j- Not many yards away from. Mr. Sterling's handsome residence stood a small, plain cottage; with a garden in front neatly laid out in box-bordered walks, and filled with shrubbery. I A honeysuckle, twined with I a running rosebush, covered the latticed por tion, and' looked in -at the chamber win dows, giving beauty and sweetness. The hand of taste was seen everywhere, not lavish but discriminating taste. Two years befdre there was hot a happier home than this in all the pleasant town of C ;. Now the hand of death was; upon it. 'Poor Mrs Granger ! Poor little orphans !' Well migh t, Mrs. Sterling pity them.' When her mercenary husband was sighing over the loss of three hundred dollars, the young widow lay senseless, ! with her two little ones weeping over ner in cniiaisn terror. The hews ot his ' death found her unpre pared Only a week before she had received a letter from Mr. , Granger, in which he fnllfftrf.. KnnefnTlv nf his rprnvp.rv. T am art cnA : nW (fnnofita ia hotfor. T have gained jfve . pounds in flesh since I left home.' Thrbe days after writing this letter there came.a sudden charge of temperature. He took cold, which was followed by con gestion of trie lungs, and no medical ! skill was sufficient forthe,case. ; His body was not sent home for interment.. When the husband and father went away two; or three months before, his beloved ones looked Upon liis face lor the lastjtime in this world, j vLove and honor made the heart strong. Mrs Granger j was a gentle, retiring woman. She had. .leaned upohjier husband very heavily ;" she had clung to him as a viae. Those who lenew her best felt most anxious about her. 'She has no mental stamina, they said ; ihe-cannot stand alone.' 5 But they were mistaken. As we have iust said, love and honor made her heart" strong.1 Only a week after Mr. Sterling read the news oi the young minister s deathyne receiyed a: note from the widow. ; j , 'My ! husband,' she said, 'was able to, go 1 South, in the . hope of regaining, his health, JmJ.: faithfullV returned, for he was a man " ; - . . for hp. was a man oi honor. Dying,- he left that honor in my keeping, and I will see that the debt is paid. But you will have to be a little patient with me, t All verv fine ' muttered Mr. Sterling with a curling lip; 'I've heard of such things before4-thev sound , well. People will say x nrj,f: nilUWn iwiinf nVnnWp wnman I nrfor 'What a noble woman I What a fine sense of honor she has V Butl shall heverf seen the three hundred dollars was foolish enough to lend her husband.' I I Very much to Mr. Sterling's surprise, not a little to his pleasure, he discovered about tw0:mnnfh9 afterwards that he was mista- ; Wtiniatfi of Mrs. Granger. 1 he pale, sad, fragile little woman brought him the sum pi xweniy-nve uuuai see the tears' in her eyes as he aispiayeu uer husbahd'srlnot with sits dear, familiar wri- f. nfl Zde. thereon: with considerable I. ' ii .L ,inrv.Hf f thn sum naid. of her Shft WOUia nave Siveu uiauj utvr- i h KiAri frt havfi been aDie to ciuiuu Ileal i o uivy .i" t , i j that document from Mr. Sterling's hands His possession of it seemed like a blot on the dear, lost ones mebory. ; 4 ;r1 ' Katie granger is tho queerest little girl I ever knew," : said Flora Temple to her mothWloti&eW Which her first payment was .-f; flf.riin lipard the remark, and letting his eyes drop from the newspaper he was reau- listen. i i "T thmt her a verv re- So she is'nice" returned the child, but tuen SUC la w uwi, " What do you mean by queer? " to-be continued.j. , Seth Green's Hatching had at IIoI yoke. BY GKNIO C. SCOTT. ' c'i think' tath trie New England States are in a fair way to replemsii tneir wavws w all the . food-fishes, and well as the. i game-. fishes of the North.- Legislatures' ot these States have appointed commissions to carry forward the enterprise of restocking ;their rivers ;' but they have not appropriated the wherewithal to carry it out. Men of enter prise and science may , be willing to give their time and horne t philanthropical per sons might even' pay some, money ;. but few meriwourd be willing to combat prejudice, and invest money to benefit fishermen whose ignorance renders - them - worse than a vis inertia. If, therefore, a driver can be annual ly stocked, by artificial means, with h 100, 000,000 shad, and only one-fourth of them live to mature, shad' would be so much cheapened as to save millions of dollars ev ery year. For it would hot. only benefit in the reduced cost ot shkd, but it would cheap en meats and help the poor. . , ' Seth Green, brought up" a fisherman, has studied the habits of; different families and species of fishes, probably as closely as any other man in the. Union. Some tea years ago, he purchased - the Caledonia trout. springs, and part of the brook, and built the necessary troughV , for fish j culture ; . since which time he ha? been engaged at artificial ly propagating trout. Finding, " however, that trouts were easily reproduced, it ;n-' couraged him to trfcrt in multiplying liz ards and frogs.2uUit he found no difficul ty in hatching, d the formed food, for his trout. 'Last March, he hatched 100,000 frogs, and they are all doing wen. j They are now worth $30 a i; thousand, or three thousand dollars. This is an item! Worth knowing, by any farmer who owns a lot of swail or swampy land. Mr. Green tells me that he might have hatched several million frogs, about as easily as the 100,000. 1 gThe great Creator, in stocking waters With food for man, made the provision for re stocking them ; so that man's ignorance, or cupidity, should not ruin him past recuper ation. Hence the annual increase of a mil liontold by artificial propagation. ; t The soul and body ot Mr. Green afc in this great work. After he concluded' the sales of his stock of young trout last Spring, he wrote to i different places and persons, asking the privilege, of i increasing the num bers of shad in their waters by artificial propagation The Fisheries Commissioners ot New England gave him a cordial invita tion to come and help them. He went to Holyoke, Mass.. It was just the time when the roe escapea by handling the fish. In other words, it -was spawning-time. Tuc fishermen were! drawing the seine when he arrived f and. so anxious was he to ascertain whether he could hatch shad artificially, that he deferred changing his clothes until he had put fecundated roe into his pans (which he had brought with him) to hatch. Clad in a black frock-coat and pants, Mr. Green 'took his pans and went down to the river, to be in at the haul of shad.1 There Was a good haul. He informed the fisher men of his business. They tipped each oth sr the wink, and with the passage ol a little Billingsgate slang,' all jocosely among them selves, they handed him a female fish, and another, and: another. ) In fact, they consid ered it so good a joke, and him so great a greenhorn that a dozen shad were held for his use at a time; and while he was on his knees, stripping three shad, they let the roe of a dozen drip uver him. Mr. Green saw it, but took it all in good part, mildly at tributing it to1 ignorance. ;He mixed the troe and melt of three pairs of shad, kmd then deposited his boxes in water, uiitil he could change his clothes at i the : hotel ; for he must work all . that night to build patch ing boxes and proceed with his work!; . A creek entered the river near,. Hdlyoke. He dammed it, erected his sub-dams aud wabte gates, uuiit ms batclung-boxes, anil placed his eggs in them." ' : 4 In the meantime, the fishermen became sur prised at his earnestness1; and as a shad con tain about 200,000 egss, they thought that if one in a hundred should be hatched; it wotild materially reduce the price of shad, and' thus injure netting. i r ; Vf The Fisheries Commissioners had inotar ri ved, andthere was not a person in Holyoke with whom Mr. Green was acquainted. The fishermen, upon consultation, decided hat if he should succeed, it would injure the lousi ness: and if he should not, why, he was m not much account, and they might: just as well head him off. They therefore j closed the gate which supplied his hatehingj-boxes, ri oil in a ocrrra. rlird Tift thfin tfifid.fhfi'p-Y periment of-hatching them in boxes 'placed ' . i i? : 1 a in the current orj tue. jonneciicui ; luyer, and watched nightly to jwevent the .fisher men from destroying them. . '' . j Seth Green had hot been long at Holyoke, before it was somehow ascertained that? he was one ot 'the best shots in the Union, with rifle, shot-gun, or pistol. The respect shown him was? therefore, commensurate. . ' j: ' , One night, about one o'clock, while Seth satin a clump of bushes .on ilk. shore jhe es yied a man wading out to his hatching-boxes, i lie waited until sure of bad , intention, when hecalled "Stop !" The man', surprised and alarmed, desisted, and, at the order of Mr. Green, came to hi m and acknowledged his object. . - f : The next day, Mr. Russell, one of the most efficient of the Fisheriea Commissioners, ar rived. On dipping lip, with a glass, some of the eggs from' a hatcniqg-box, it wa$ at once discovered that they .were alive ind natural. Suffice it to say, ninety per cent, hatched in the most healthy condition. ; . : It was ascertained from experiments, that WAf Pp of 75 decrees ' temperature is the best. Shad requires much warmer water to hatch in than do the nsnes oi tue, saino penus. Not but that all fishes will hatch in water ot mi Id temperature ; out caqu species requires, . - . i ... ..ii.- i... - in order to be healtuy, water similar to iuat wliich it is hatched in naturally. River wa- " .1 ( J . A Z wlii oh is warmer man spring waier, is bes't for hatching shad. ; swirrTR show life in 33 hours after de- 0;tol in the hatching: box, and tbey hatch j x en liMira Tho n.lmn a Mini in from 4:0 LO vv UWi" t mw - rPrfinires from .70 to HU aays umaicu. ou?u V - ... . .. ...... . - -, ij 1. 1 2.x. : iocs nn m her oi uours man ioe naicu iu .u "-.: - .' lU . , ... UbUCl A HI w --,' . beiuff the coarser auui ww r " Z71..?B nlv Vis many hours as does the ,aLo genus, which is more refined and gam- This is n i fact for a nat- lli: 'i atinv a nin of remembrance in 1 KS? f Grhatched, while at .Holyoke, from two to six millions shad daily. -r. T?nccoii;-wrnie me. on I the 9tb inst., that he expected to stock Connecticut a uu mn 000.000 voung shad this sea- - j iiAd to have all, the New BOD. SUU luai uv mvj.. Sri. j I in a few years, and mAnM h in time to warrant Min In inviting me to cast fly for salmon in the ;onnecuvub , are piacta under obligations to Colonel KAiik, wimiuanttant or this Post, for a copy of 6e?J,Pde No 65i from HeadquarterslSec ond Military District. ;j The oifler directs that reffistration commence at once, and prescribes rules aud regulaUons for the government ot the Registration Boards. We publish it in full: also tne form of oath prescribed for Registers, and r ..jtovu tcguu;riut wnicn are aiv- Head Q'ks SscoirD Militabt Distbict, Charleston, S. C, August 1, 1867. , No. 65." ; . , , v. uiwuiiwiiua - ' J. Registration, shall commence immediai upon the Dromalation of this nrdfti- ly IL Post Commanders will be Superintendents or registration within, tbeir respective cotamarids, exercising, in addition to the functions heremaf ter specially conferred, a general supervisory authority, looking to the faithful execuUbntof the several Reconstruction! Acts, the mainten ance of order, and the - protection of political rights. They will suspend registrars for malfeas ance in office, neglect of duty, or incompetenfcy, promptly reporting their action, with the reasons thereibr; to these Headquarters, j 1 IIL The Boards of Registration are empower ed and required to suppress all disorders inter f ering with thiexecutipn of their duties, to cause the arrest and confinement of all persons falsely taking the oath prescribed, all persons commit ting any , breach of the peace or conducting themselves in a manner tending thereto, and afl persons who shall threaten or otherwise attempt to intimidate, or corruptly or- improperly influ ence any citizen offering td register; and for this purpose they may apply for aid to the Post Com mander, and may require the attendance and ser vices of sheriffs, their deputies, ; constables; po licemen, and also Of any citizen ; and all State, districtycounty and town officers charged with the preservation of the public peace, as well as all citizens, are required to obey the orders if said Boards, given in pursuanae of the authority aforesaid and to perform all such acts land duties as may be requisite therefor. .1 ' , 1 ; ; All arrests made as herein provided will be promptly reported to the Post Commander to whom also the prisoners will be turned over with charges for trial by a Post Court, to be or ganized'asjprovided in Circular of May 15, 1867, from these Headquarters,! and any civil officer cjr citizen tailing to . respond to the call of the Board for assistance will be dealt : with in like manner.. ' ; --j , . ;t-.. - j IV. Whenever any citizen shall suffer injury in person, family or property, while exercising or seeking to exercise the right of registration. in auvuuuu w aujf yeuuiLy prescnueu uy law ior the offence, damages shall be awarded to the in jured party against the . perpetrator, upon his conviction ; and in case of default in' payment of the same, or of the escape of the offender, if it shall appear that the wrong was countenanced! or the offender harbored ior concealed by the neighborhood, or that the civil authorities failed to, employ proper measures to preserve th6 peace, the damages shall be assessed, against and paid by the town, county or district. - ; V. Offences perpetrated by white persons dis- guiseuas DiacKs, oeing 01 irequent pecurrencei the attention of all authorities, civil and military, is directed to the device, as one adopted to es cape detection, and to cast unmerited obloquy upon the colored people. In all cases, when re sort thereto shall be shown, the fact will- be taken into I consideration as aggravating the offence. ' i 'i'. ' )- " v f. ' . :' J j-' ' VI. Depriving a citizen of any right, benefit or, advantage of hire or employment, to discour age him from registering, or on account of his having registered or having sought to register, shall be deemed an offence punishable by the Post Court, and shall entitle the injured party to damages against the offender, any clause in any contract or agreement to the contrary notwith standinff. " :-" VIL The Act of Conerress entitled "An Act for the more efficient government of the rebel States," and the several Acts supplementary thereto, will be carefully ot served by ali Boards of Registration, j , i :.j ! VIL' EachlBoard shall, af er having taken the oath prescribed by the Act of Congress of July 2d, lS6'i, entitled "An Act to prescribe an oath of office," see Appendix, forrn 1,). choose one of its members as chairman, who shall preside at all sessions of the Board, preserve order at its meetings for registration; and " represent the Board, and announce its action in all matters cominer before it. K- IX. The places of session of the Boards shall be the voting places established by law. or cus-? torn in each election prechlct, unless for good cause otherwise directed by the Post Comman der.' ' ' ' 1 ' : i- :' X. Eadh Board shall determine the order ' in which the registration shall take place im the several election precincts, that may be assigned to it by the Post Commander, and the time which shall be allotted to each, bearing in mind that the whQle work is to, b6 finished before Ihe first day ot October. i , j ' XL Each Board shall, fmlb with Upon notice of publication ot this order, and at least five days fip.rpnf for the Post Commander, and the sheriff, and the mayor of the city or the intendant of the town, and sqaii cause wniien or pnmeu uuuwo to be posted in five of the most public placas in each election precinct, announcing the time when and the place wherel Jts sessions will he held, the number of days (m no case less man flH thft hnnra of the da v the Board will re J mfinn an! Invitln? iall Dersons auali9edto tnn.n fn BPQSlflll SIT, P.H.CU TJliLUC lUf IrUC UlUUVOS v& I f ttitk-nrninBioriR M the Act of Con&ress passed SLlateh 2d, 1867, entitled " An Act. to pro rphAi stotftg." And the several Acts supplemen tary thereto , to appear hefore the Board of Keg !;YiT i nn H. davand at tne nour aesiiniaieu m tn nntina ifn,' commencing resisirauuu, Board shall; at tiA' ." ZL .' dr.tW. and fihall then anal thnr,.,!.. r,Act r,nfiv of the time of final sea s - i . iTcrn XIX. t aiii. ;xuB.tuviu uovu :- o 5 . j fnl K .l.At.m.n .1,1.11 1rn x Tft Vl Oil ll IT T PATi . iO r Vlll 'I'll a .nnm nn'orl lur FKiraij UUUi ' the Duroose. shall be so ani.1"ged that the BoaiJ shall be saparated by a bar frt"uu all other persons who may be assemhied and thJ'fe w oc register ed shall be admitted within he par, one by one, so; ai'raigned as to and their ingress and egress avoiu uuuiusiuu. .i.ji-:- :!J - ! , " XIV. Two citizens shall be admitted within the bar as challengers, whose duty it ehall be to challenge the right of any citizen ; offering to register, upon any of the grounds of disqualifi catioe enumerated in the Acts of Congress before cited ; but the general right of challenge snail he conceded to ail citizens present. -vv ) Tf nnr rhallAnp-H be made, the Board shall.! before final decision, examine the : person pre senting himself ror registration, in reiarence to the cause of disqualitication alleged, and shall hear any evidence that may be ouerea, -to suo, stantiate or disprove the cause of challenge, and shall have power to summon and compel the at tendance of witnesses and administer oaths, in any case of registration, j w xVI. In reeisterikg.the names of whit e and iolored citizens shall be entered alphabetically, n separate columns Ol the list. XVIL The following shall be -the process oi registering :) t , First. Everv citizen presenting himself for reg istry shall take and subscribe the oath prescribed by law, (see Appendix form 2,) which; shall be ad- ministerea oyra mfmuer oi tne xuaru, uu euvu oath shall be preserved witn tne usis Second. His name shall then be entered in the proper column of the list, and called out by the chairman. ; , : t . .. . . v. ThtrvL Adt challenere made shall be noted in the proper (.olumn, opposite the name, with the causetnereoi. ! . " , 4; V i Ftmrih. It is recommended to Boards to defer the hearing and decision of contested cases until the session for revision provided for in paragraph XIX I - . . . ' .' '. m mflh. Whether or not tnere De.any cnauenge, ; the "Board must ascertain upon such facts or in formation as can be obtained, that thd applicant ; is entitled 4 to be registerea Deiore maritu u , name as "accepted v the oath not being con clusive. T 1 ,MI. tOUT Sixth. Section 7 oi ineactoi amj ui, aji, declares that no citizen shall be entitled to vote v-w i.nn nf anv PTecnuvemaraon or amnesty iur any act or thing which without such pardon orj amnesty woma m&qu&uiy mux www acted by Section 6 of the Act of July 19th; 1867 .true meaning of the oath Se- "rtbed in said supplementary Act Is, (amon ! i other things, tlAt no person who has beef member off the Legislature ot any SUte, orwhS : rf? he bas taken an oath to support : the ConsUtuUon of the United States or noLd -whether he was holding such office at the corn- mencement of the rebelUoa,or had held it & fore, and who has afterwards engaged in Inurit4 rectlon or rebellion against thenited 8UtesJ i i ?.rft?ld or comfort to the enemies thereof! ! Is entitled to be registered or to vote ; and the word " execuUve or Judicial office in any State " 5 d mentioned, shall be construed to In-' f dude aU civil offices created by law for the ad-' mhdstratipn of any general law of a State, or for i f headmnistration oflustlce. ' - ; i ! j If there bo no challenge, or If the chal- f lenge be finally overruled, and the Board deter- S mine that the applicant la enUUed to be regis- v tered, the Board shaU mark opposite the name of Hi the applicant, in the proper column. m j J and he shall thereupon be deemed legally leis tered.; 4; m:- J -:. . --i . y. 6 2SxnOi. If the final decision of the Board be that the applicant is not entitled to be registered, the lioard shall mark in the kroner ml his name. ff&jectecL" : Zr.rp 'f Tenth. In every case of a rejection, the Board'; shall make a note or memorandum, setUng forth t the &und of such rejection, and return it, with: ! I the reeristrationi list. mehtinni in rNM.K ' 1 xx. ! . T n i XyilL j The registration, conducted as provi ded In paragraph XVil, shall be made in tripU- ' cate lists, two of which shall, after the conclu sion of the i first session, be exposed for public "S Inspection; iat convenient' places, fori five days and the third shall be retained la possession of the Board till after the completion, of registra tion at the meeting provided for, in paragraph XIX, when the three having been compared and verified, shall be certified in the form prescribed ' and printed at the end of .the blank registration 1 1 llStS. ' - ;tf" 'jvll''".- 5 ,5V' I : .fii'-.V.-. p a ', 'X-f: '. .1 'i'i- i XlXi Sessions for revising the lists shall be I held in each elecdon precinct, after said five days exposure of the lists, upon notice as provided in" paragraph ;Xn, and thei Boards of RegistraUon, shall have power, and it shall be their duty, to revise the (same for a period of two days rand upon being satisfied that any person not entitled thereto ; has been registered, tp strike the name of such from the list.- And the Boards shall also during the same period, add to such registry the -names of all persons who at- that time possess the qualifications required by said Act, who have V pot been already registered and who shall then fr apply to be registered. i ! . ut. y r u i XX. One of the said lists shall then be imme diately delivered to the Post Commander, who will forward the same to these Headquarters. V I 1 XXI. :l Each Board shall, at or before the con clusion of registration, forward: through the Post Commander to these Headquarters, a recommen dation of three suitable person for Inspectors of Elections in ; each election precinct, stating the name, occupation and postoffice address of each person recommended. ' ?!! ': i i 1' ' I XXII. It is enjoined upon all Boards of Regis tration to explain, carefully, to all citizens who have not hitherto enjoyed. the right of suffrage, ' ' the nature of the privileges which haver been ex tended to them, and the importance of exercising ' with intelUgence the hew and honorable fran chise with which they have been Invested by thb Congress of the United-States. ; i Ml 1 fi ; XXIIL; Boards will take notice that aecoruing to Sectfon 10, of the Act of July 19, 1867, they arp not to be bound in thelp action by any opin ion ot any civil officer of the United States. '! XXIV. Boards are. instructed that all the pro-r rvisions of the several Acts of Congress cited, are' ito.be liberally construed, to the end that all thai intents thereof be fully and perfectly carried out ? i XX The attention ot all concerned is direct ed to the requirements of Section 4 of the said Act of July 19, 1867, by which it Is made the duty of the Commanding tiecral i to remove from of fice all Persons who are 1 disloval to the covern. ment of, the United States, or who use their offif, dial influence. In any manner to hinder, delay, preventer Obstruct the due and perfect ad minis-' tration of the Keconstruction Acts; The names of all such offenders will be reported through the Post Commander; and all persons ; in ' this Military District are called upon to aid and facil ilate the execution in good faith of the said Acts' and the Orders issued in pursuance thereat t I JLA.V1. rue Major ueneru Uommandlng, m the exerciso of an ultimate revisory authority, will, In due season, before : the holding of i any election, entertain and determine questions as signing errors in the registry. ; and will, upon In spection of the completed lists, cause corrections ol the same, that tne true design and purpose of the laws be faithfully answered and that' all the rights thereby guaranteed be fully and fairly en-i joyed. " f.-.'i"b . S--X- i ; ay command or Mau uen. u. is. sickles: ": J. VV. UL.UUS, ; I Ca pt. 38th U. S. Infantry - A D. C. and A A A G, i APPENUIX. ivAUxx'll OATH PRESCRIBED. TOB BEOISTXBS.- ' I (rOKM 1.) ' i ' y ! . 'i . : ' " ' of - county of and State of : , do solemnly swear I cor af firm) that I: have never voluntarily borne arms against the United States since I have been a clt-i lzen tnereoi : mat i nave voluntarily given no Hid,: countenance, counsel or eneouragemen to ; persons; engaged m armed, nostiilty thereto; that I have neither sought nor accepted, nor at tempted to cxercisd the functions of any office whatever under any authority or pretended au thority in hostility! to the United States; that I i have5 not yielded a voluntary support to any pre tended government, authority,-power, or consti tution within the United Stiles; hostile or Inimi cal thereto. And I do further swear (or affirm) S that; to the best of my knowledge and ability, I' , will support &nd defend the Constitution of the United States against ail enemies, foreign or do- . mestic: i that I will bear trun faith and allegiance i to the : same: that I take this obligation Treety, Without any mental reservation or purpose of AvnAinn and that I will we! 1 and falthfullv dla- charire the duties of the office on which i anr1 about to enter, bo naip me uoa. 4 ii- -'. ; ; ; . Carolina, 5nbscritkd and sworn to before me. a this uay 01 , une tuuusauu eigut hundred ana rweven. .- , j K ; t i'-r NoTtUKiisters will be! required to Uke the Ik i-T-irTw ! bv the Act IbtConzress approved furnSficd E triPot Commanders, and wheni duly Post Commander, wh 0 jgf ifEiSBbatt UJ brfns dulyvcon- victcd thereof, shall be subject to thepa, f-. aities and disauiituea which, by taw, re proviaeu ior me punishment ort the cnm. o wuiQi na corrupt perjury. ! v ;f . oxTa FaEscRiBxo foa votbhs. I do solemnly: swear (or affirm) la the presence of Almighty God, that I am a citi- zen of the State of -r-t that I hav resided . in said State for month next preceed- ing this day. and now reside in the County ; of or the . parish of in aid State, fas the case may be;) that I am twenty-one years' old, that I have not been disfranchised for parti cipation in any rebellion or civil war against the United Stateb, nor for felony committed against the laws of ny Stage or oi the United BUtes; ? that I have never been a member of any 8tate legislature, nor held any executive or Judicial oflice in any State and afterwards engaged in in surrection or rebellion against the United 8tates, or given aidt or comfort to the enemies thereof:- that I nave never ttKen an oaiu u & dicww vt A nti-jt ata a. .t nfllMf nf (congress vi 110 j uitvu owti v. m - wv. j United States, or as a mcmoer si any Dtaw Agi- ? lature, or as au executive or judicial officer of any f State, to support the Constitution of the United vi States, and afterwards engaged In Insurrection or j rebeulon imst the United: States, or given id V or comfort to the enemies -thereof; that I will faithfully support the Constitution and obey the ; lawa'of the United States, and will, to the beat or my ability, encourage others so Jte do ; So help me God.' :. 1 '. : Sworn to and subscribed bciore me, 1 :;i 1 ; : this day of 1867. I; .- is Mi;-: i8 4p 1: ii rv r. t-