Newspapers / The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, … / Dec. 31, 1867, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL. I. M). 115. WILLIIRGT0IT'lP6ST.' TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION INVA.RIA.BLT IN ADVANCK Xri-Weekly ::bne yean : . . ..v! : 00 J; six months.. ;..v...ii.ivv.3 5( f" j one m6nth. . .'. . .... . J.-;.. . . i .1 00 KATES QF ADVERTISING; V ? ' Avertbements will be inserted at f 1 00 per eqaare for first inaerUon; and 50 cents or each sabseauent insertion: -' 1 1 4 v ' j Ten lines o.rless,-80lid minion type, constitute a square. v -r -A;; ;:-:;'z:.-i'::-,-ir: . THE n 13 PUBLISHED EVEKY MONDAT; 8UBSCBrPTION : One year f . :.,...$2oo -Advertlseaaentf $1 per square BUSINESS CARDS. GLOTHES CUT AND MADE IN THE L 1T vest Styles and of the best Material. f 1 - North East Cor. Market & Second Sts., ; WILMINGTON, N. C. octsa . I Sm DAtllEL A. Gr.llTII. Manufacturer and Dealer in all klndsrof , Parlor, Dining Uooni. Cliarnber and Office Fiirniture, ! ; I Mattrasses, Featliersf rTVindow V i siiaaes,. uau :raper, " &cc also Sasli, Blinds and Doors: SOUTH FRONT ST., WILMINGTON, N. C oct2i ' , r T , , ri f , r fly SHIIP CHANDLER. AND DEALER IN . ' . SIIP STORES, GROCERIES, IIARD ware, Paints, Oils, Boats. Ors, &c. No's 23 Water, and 2, 4 6 Dock I Street, WILMINGTON, N. C, , GEO; Z. FRENCH, No. 10, South Front Streetj Wilmington, IS.' O., WHOLESALE DEALER IN I Groceries, Provisions Wines, Liqnors. Cigars. 1 ' ' . Wood, Willow, and Com mon Crockery ; Ware. Cotton and Naval Stores Bought or Received on Consignment, j oct 6 . . . . L tf , ! " j " H. DOLLKSB, . O. POTTKR, 1 ? V.! CAMESDEN DOLLTJEH, POTTER & CO , Commission Jtlerchantsj i j Liberal cash advances on consisrnmentai of Na-; val Stores, Cotton and other Southern produce.' sept. 24 -s , -; ' iy ' E.VESCOTTv I V DEALER INr'OBAIN, South Side Princess, near Water St., ! s WILMINGTON, N.,C. j KEEPS CONSTANTLY ON HAND A FULL supplrot; ' P !' ' CornMeal, Homony, FlonrrOatsiPeasi IIva . nmn. Hat. ate. aCti-7' . aug tf VICK, & CO., iROCERS, j: . i ! ; Forwarding and commission ' MERCHANTS, i I Corner Chesnut and Water streets, ! , ! -1 'Wilmington' N. C. aii2 5 iUi. tf M. T. HATCH. HATCH, ESTES.& CO., - GENERAL :,!,.; Commission Merchants, NO. 132 FRONT STREET, CORNER OF PINE ! NEW 3TORK. -MoAxramxriPArTft OTT COTTON & NAVAI all orders promptly executed. u Aug. 5th, 1867. tf L. A. HART, jNO. C. BAILEY IR0x IND COPPER ; WORKS, AND MACHINES :ti!r A LSO Manufactu-s iV STILLSl ani COPPER WORK in au us branches. - L. Proat Strnt, bei.r Market ft;eetf f t Wilmington, .,C. ' , t j Propr sept 25 AS. T. PKTTBWAT. , . ; , ". , PETTEWAY & MOORE' GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, NORTH WATEB SVI s COTTON, SOLICIT uuaisw"1! Ytvt'RV PRO' DUCE. - t t Jifv ; 4' f-i.fnrert? are. i Being AGENTS toraB ,T- . prepared to fill, on the most reasonable orders for :A nnA Trinivfl rrRT.TSRRATED ' " cotton. om. ZELL'S RApOTBBtlOiW Sin'ER-PHOSPHATE BROWN'S COUNTER,; , j , 4 PLATFORM and '-'rvi no AD SCALES iTif ifTirnmAiT WW POST ' . ; ...,1Vt., ' , OF THE-- ! - E MA JN C1P ATION ; 'J AlSr-XJR,Y Lio I The vpakins From Slavery's fatal sleep. The yoice of the Universe, v Deep, calling unto deep. r".,f rriHE 'JOLOKED CITIZENSt t)F t i : JL qaeated to meet oo M WEDNESDAY, ; JANUARY 1st 18 6 8, i- .. ., -' '. ". ' - -.- at I ASHIiEY'S SCHOOluiirHMSE, -it.-: on SEVEUTII DETVEEH ANN AfJD NUH STREETS, where the several LEAGUES. SOCIETIES, and ORGANIZATIONS will meet and form in GRAND PROCESSION. The difierent Organizations will form at their respective places ot meeting and -ra arch froni there, ' School House; where ihe Grafld Procession will form at ?10 o'clock, A. M., and march thence o Camp Lamb, where stands will be erected and decorated for the occasion.' ;; ifc'-s.'Ai . ..' . i - V' F f '-;tr- ',: i i , ".. ; , - - j : THE PROCESSION, will move in the following oifder: BAND OF ' FIRE DEPARTMENT, r s r, J ' UNION LEAGUE, No. 1, i "Stevens Council." UNION LEAGUE, No. 2. i- - - i -1 - ; j ' ' UNION LEAGUE, No. 3, :"Garason Couxcil." UNION LEAGUE," No. 4 "Wilson Council." r , CARRIAGES, WITH ORATORS, INVITED GUESTS, &c. I CITIZENS GENERALLY. ; - : . The following is the order of march : The will - move at 10 O'clock; A, M-V down Nun Church to Front, up Front to Market, up Chestnut to Front, up Front to Walnut. ud Brunswick to Sixth, down 6th to the stand; where the following will be the orde PROCEEDINGS: r PRAYER BY THE CHAVLAIN., Music by the Band: n READING OF EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION. ':.""'.: CMusic byj the Band. . ; - -f v ' : READING. OF. CORRESPONDENCE. .' , J V . ' . Music by tfie Band, j : ' ORATIONS BY ORATORSi'T tA').- M r- ' -"- , "Music by the .Band.. t j : , ; 1 . r BENEDICTION BY THE CHAPLAIN. No drunken or.disorderlycharcterswill or Transparencies, be allowed in tba' Procession, except they be approved Banners, Mottoes, bv the Committee of Arrangements. It is earnestly requested, byhe Committee seped to the end, that no discredit may pe OUB LATEST IMPROVED ; 1 New Scale Piano-Forie- i , , , - - NnTTCE. Alter me juubii unw"6 - : ials fronfthe first Pianists in the country, whn At. our solicitation; have tested them in the reveres manerSSIBLE, . have .been pro- nouneed ' ' ' ' 1 The Finest Square Piano-Forte Made in the World. t ' . 1 II has always been our policy' during the Zftir 0.. t Vonr that -we n-:,K,',"X-: i in tne S5i. S5L.E e finest in- Tjnited J"".; X w superior facU strument atthe lowesvvu fr0m One to three ities enables tom her first-class hundred dollars . less than.-auj . ( . House. A; -vVo. instruments are remarkable The tone of these great brilliancy, forhexr.pecul rjggw forced to their, Never losing their iregisterf rekining utmost capacityv ' rjgttr 0y the middle and 5s positlveness does not ibem in disa upper registers by mins" d beaDty,of tone greeable of&tM toiP'feticed 1111410 Being equaUydeUffhWiwwi culUvated ear. yle of KaIlo; finish They areaa JJSer.-withifonr-. full ed ma W SKack,: heavily carved, round corners SJBueiAmrMi1 Legs and Lyre, Serwnuno WARRANTED for five ye;:,:, -Broadway, NewYork. , , ' dec 7;( w(fh rombination and Powder-proof Locks, mth - Srranted free from dampness. and Banners' Safes, V,B" -!tirtTardened Steel. Made to Order wt Houston StreeeV iTSa Street, N-Y.; PROCLAMATION, 1st., 186.8 ud of Nations r ) : r- t ;? jit : i I WILMINGTON AND ; VICINITY, AREi RE ' i h I .Mi under the direction of their Marshals, to the MUSIC. . Procession forming at Ashley's School Housl to Second, down Second to Chureh, do Market to Third, np'Third to Chestnut, ,d up.Walnut to Fourth, up Fourth to Brunsw r 5L be allowed in the Procession ; nor anjj t utmost order and, decoruii be ob that tue renewnu uv, . " SC1EUT1F1C Af.lERlCAt! BEST PAPER IN THE I WORLD, J Published for Nearly .-r A QUARTER OF yA CENTURY.' , 1 ereatly enlarg- cd and improvea, is ol-c ui mo ' , :r- . j i.r fnnrnflin ever Dublished. L 'K.-,4a iionntifnllv nrintea ana ill very iiumi-rci ---- ' 1 n.i.iniii - 1 elegantly .iMra.uYtoM. Photo crapny , w.anuiaciun, s1"' t : Art - - v '" Farmers, Mechanics, Inventors, Enginee.s, . i.tc MflTinfm'tnrera. Deocle in every pro- - vnin a Ktn he of CTeat value in their re- BDectiye callings Its counsels and suggestions 8Iir, trr? TTnnr? rPd if Dollars annually, besides affordmgjthem a continual s knowledge, the value 101 or pRtimate. AU paieuw Kut Every I'ublic or rnw the wo?k bonnd aod preserved for reference. 4 The yearly numners 01 iuc o w - -. m -ir- a .T,iendid volume of near ly : one thousand Quarto pages,- e"ei1"n -nearly fonr thousand ordinarjookai- a 'Nw Vninme commences Jan, I, Mhiifthed Weekly. Terms I One - Year, 5KliierO ! Cluba'of Ten Copies for One Year, $25. ; Specimens Copies sent graus. . y Address " MUNN & CO., ' , i 37,Pari Row,; NeYprk. . mi tciipra nf the Scientific Amer lucir - have sought the counsel . dec 21 - " - .' 1 , The Buffalo Fnneralit. Th funeral ser vTcestlwhich were 1Vp1 k Buffab yesterday over the bodies" ot the un- recoghized dead of the-Anirola railroad cidea signalized an event! as-solemn Ms anv v mau,cuw rrmuurwere iwitnessea aa- riof? fie period Of the war ?of thRph11iftn In th ponduotiDg 'of.rtbem, tha citizens of Buf& o did credit to v themselves and to hu man ature. The large j depot ofi the new York Central Railroad, which lis .'also the depc ; cf the Lake.Shore 1 passenger trains, was LHWl by a f large crowdf estimated' to number .3,000 persons, j The i.servides .were conducted by the; clergy r of the 1 city in a bod, tie singing was cd6ne by ibnlihoirs of tleiflferent churcbef,And theirEmanies: were yftnessed by by the officials1 of th&city anc in rauroaas as sue hi T t Alter the r . sem-s ce3 animp(,8iig prbsession; -with signifiicane embis, .marched tbrougli then principal streetjand tlie remains were finally :deposi ted,ithe vault of the Episcopal iCathedral,' to aJit indentification,- if it ever N becomes posjoie. All was done. that could.be done to .stow respect for unknQWn . humanity. Sucj testimony gives a melancholy and only anpVject satisfaction ; but .such: as it fa, theyienas of the deceased, : some of whom havyet to lind that they are frienda have It. ' .,if -A. v.. il.-'. .-. ow, while the memory: of. this dreadful calinity is fresh in all of its imorrssivenesa. wiEnotthe minds which control the railroad 8ysJ;m of this cotintryuset s themselves earn esJf' at work to devise, means to improve the avl age standard of security on their various lin ? r The present is the cumulative one oi a lig series of disasters too regulacin their ocfirrence and too alike in their'featuresto bwlassed . among unavoidable -: accidents, wpch enforce a conviction that the best rafroads'and machinery are not sound eaaugh, and that . the strictest watchfulness aci carefulness now;exercised are, not visi- Jait and careful enough. The occurrence ofhe worst accident on record ton a -road tbitwas considered one of the best s affords a itirbnger commentary, than any amount of lcturing could on tbe truth of these posi fons. The travelling public will demand n!improvement, in the material securities on r ilroads ;at any cost.j If it cannot be afiEor d at the present rates of transportation, ley are ready to pay more provided they In secure the return) for their money that fiey demand. While they will not consent p be imposed on, or ; pay a higher price for ihat they , nowt ger,!they iinsist upon the brest safetv within the capacitv of human Iaja voi.f auu TTiii uvv uvm Air.ui) Ci iucj get it, at any price.-r' , - m ? ysLii 1 j.v jv h sMrpoklyn Union, The American Methodist Chnrch. v The American methodists have celebrated he hundredth year of the exis'tence of their Jbrgani zation in this country; in a truly Amer ican manner, liastyear tuey were a century Id, and in honor of. this event their ; General1. enfernce proposed that they should raise wo millions of dollars, to be applied to ed ucational purposes, apart from their ordinary pfchurch expenses.' ! i 4 Ii The resnonsc has been a contribution of keven millions of dollars, all raised in onei year. And this is not a complete return, as ive father from a late n umber of their leadinsr t brgan, The Methodist. This vast sum has wpeen subscribed by only forty -five conferen- .roa wlicppaa thprn , nro o5tir fiiro an rri n rr vfli 'ill - i JJ i ' 1 m. : twenty, more iu uuu 10 ine4iunu. luey now numbert wo millions of communicants, and some eight millions of our population in their congregations, .! or one-fifth ; of -the whole American people !, These are astounding facts. Considered as the work of an extrem ely loyal church, (for the Methodists are per haps more thoroughly imbued with radical republicanism than any of the great religious bodies,) and almost distinct from the church in the slave States, with Ithe exception of the freedmen, most 6f whom are methodists, but generally too poor to ' contribute to this mighty accumulation, it is a stupendous proof of the wealth and energy or our coun- ymen. But it is more ; itt.is the sublime ecursor of the triumph of reconstruction Marly all the great lights of the Methodist Uhvch are heart and soul with Congress in the 'eieat strusrerle for the reoublicanization ot theate rebel State.-; The bench, the bar. toe Ieaiaed professions, the great industries of the Republic, the producing classes, are adorned w Methodist leaders. Bishop Simp son, Hon. dames Harlan, Senator from Iowa ; Hon. John Wns. of Colorado, and other great names, Ve not less eminent for their influence a3 nVihodists than for their cour age as statesmen. When we tell our readers that its record f ojie tricentennial and the present year exhipV an increase in church memoersuix ""tuF, equivaieni 10 nearly one-fourth of the . wvle strength v of the Church in 1865, and th within the D.csent hyear alone it has built SSVhurches and par sonages, equal to neanjr tipe a except ing Sundays, and all this uber pressure of unparalleiea nnancmi crrassment, we think we may say human anMg presCnt no similar spectacle. Its increase? n church property alone within the - PWt - year amounts to seven millions, of coo, exclu sive of the magnificent fund raised foVjaca tion. It reports more than a miry of children in its Sunday schools, mstructb uue "Hundred and surety-five thousand te. era. As the. most aorgrcssive of all the eva' trelical denominations, the Methodists hav good reasons to be proud of their astound ing progress. The Church , of Rome may well look to its laurels, with' such an antago nist at work and always in the field. & ' Washington Chronicle. x Russia Preparing , ron War, The movement of the various divisions of the Russian army westward, which we noticed the other day, has been completed ; and the Government i3 now - in a position to send 203,000 men 0 the Turkish or Austrian fron ;ir at a fftw dsivs' notice.; 145,000 men are f stationed betweenTJunaburg, Polotsk, and Witebsk, 20,000 at Bonzov and orza, 10, 000 at Minsk, 50,000 in other parts of Lithu -nia, and 70,000 at Teheringov, Zytomir, Kiev,; and Ostrog. Speaking of these war like preparations,- the i says : ,ttOur Government may continue to circulate peace ful phrases among the public in Paris, Lbn don; and Vienna, but we know here that war IS 1U11UIUCUU , Earthquake in the North Burlington. Vt December 18. At three, o'clock this morning very distinct shock of earthquake was felt in this city, awaken ing most of the inhabitants, and lasting twenty seconds. It was felt throughout Vermont, and in New York as far south as Whitehall,- ' - - .: , Improvement oi Freedmtn's Schools. . JnW. Alvord,Esq.t General Superintend ent ,of the schools under the Freedmen'a Bu- rean,hasissused a circular to the Superintend- v.Uy vy , juLiuii mruuguout me OOUlll, requesting. them to do all in'their power to i make the schools self-supporting; to encour age' legislation for a public school system; to organize the Freedmen, into sbhooi districts with, a school i committee to carry 1 on the same, to perfect the : regulations of schools, method of teaching, selection ot books, &c;, with special attention to all the; habits of pupils; both in and out'of school, and to re. ;pOrt the moral condition of the freeamen in alt respects; gather statistics of " localities uesuiute oi scnoois; report all places where committees or teachers will open schools, if a school house is provided; to bring the adult population into night and Sabbath schools; urge all suitable persons of both . f colors to become teachers; labor to . improve normal schools; and instruct the children to exert a gobd influence at home ' upon brothers, sis ters,' and parents. J- - - j- The Prpidppv. ? t t "For President, Janies Harlan, of Iowa, For Vice President, James Tj. Orr of Sbuth Carolina.? r ' - , f This is a Chicago card, with the follow ing platform added by a New York branch: 'Tbat alien foreigners of recognized Cauca sian or:European origin, ' and none other,' shall be eligible to 'naturalization in the United States, a Also, that no persons other than those of recognized Caucasian origin or Aboriginal American origin shall, be eligible to civil office under the Constitution of the United States.": wxsmmt d , ; The Anti-Slavery Standard, Wendell Phil lips, puts into the field General Butler for President, and Benjamin Wade, for, Vice Presidentupon a thoroughly Radical plat form. " , ' , ii The American Union, published in Tetf nessee, nominates President Johnson ' and General Hancock for President and Vice President. , , ". i' r The Shelby ville, Tenn., American Union runs up the name of Andrew Johnson, for President and Gen. Hancock for Vice Presi dent in 1868. ' '' "'"r' r I It is reported that Gen Dix will rernrn from Paris next spring, hoping to secure the Democratic nomination for the Presidency. The Bristol, Tenn.; News places the name of Andrew Johnson at the head oft its cpl umns as its candidate for the 1 next Presi- S; ; Boston, St. Louis, Philadelphia, Baltimore, "and Cincfnnati are named in connection with tne uemocratic JNationai uonvention. ,1 ryi : :a liostoman says tnat upvernor Andrew desired, the nomination of Geni Grant, say ing "his. administration will be marked'by even, impartial justice, the security of all citizens, and the country will have rest, peace, and confidence." . t a Catastrophe by Compromise. ; The statement is made that the Angola railroad accident . wascansedrby the use of "Compromise" car8,' to which classbelonged the fears that flew the track. These are cars made to run on two gauges : : broad enough for a gauge of four feet ten inches, and with the flanges far enough in to fit a gauge of four feet eight and one-half inches. On the broad track, like that j of the Lake Shore road, the wheels have a side play of. three fourths ;of an inch. It is held, that in the casej of ; the late catastrophe, the variance was sufficient to cause the flange of the wheel to strike the guard rail at the frog, by which the car was lifted up and thrown from the track.; .TThis goes to prove that compro mise may be as much a source of disaster in railroad matters as it is in affairs of Stated Brooklyn Union. ; . ,;--r' . Death of a Wealthy Colored Man. We see it stated that Ja9. Roper, the ,larg: est land holder and the wealthiest man in Jefierson county, Va., is dead. ; Roper was a colored man, the natural son of :an eccentric Englishman, who bequeathed ; the most of his property to the recently deceasedwho added greatly- to "his ' patrimonial estate. Roper had a great faculty for acquiring pro perty, and a mania for adding" to his large landed estate. Every year br;two he would purchase a farm, tor which Vwe hive known him to pay as much as $110 per acre, when dollars were dollars. , Roper Was an intem perate man, yet such was his natural shrewd ness that nobody could take advantage of hind in a'" trade even when he was drunk; He was a quiet, inoffensive man, and as gen erally esteemed as a mas of his habits could expecc to De.xjynciwurg , v irgmian. Joe Miller was a.comedian in the rei sn of George the FirsC He. was so. rema kably grave and taciturn when on tne boards, mat when ' any joke was ,' related, his friends would farther it upon him, and this contin ued even after his death . in 1738. Having leff his family unprovided for, all the stray je3ts about town were collected and publish ed for the benefit of his widow and children. They were entitled, "Joe Miller's Jests : or, the Wit's Vade-Mecum ; being , a t collection of the most brilliant jests, '.the politest re partees, the most elegant bon-mots and most pleasant short stories in the English lan guage ; first carefully collected in the com pany, and many of them . transcribed . from the mouth, of the facetious Gentleman whose lame they bearf and now set forth and pun ished by his . lamented friend, and former lnt old book was, reproduced within a tewVar3 by a London bookseller. , Here is one ; oue originai jests : "Colonel Blank, who m! the fine fireworks in St. James square, npn the peace of Res wick, being in compadwth :some ladies, was highly commendinne epitapn just then set up in the Abbey onW . , parceiiv monument: - ' iftefougn tfat place where only his own Harmony exceeded,1 , . fLord, Colone$aid one 0f the ladies, the same epitaph tit serve for . you. bv altering one woru uu " me has gone to tfifce where only his men J? ikewoiulb can vc cj.j.j, , : ju-AJ JliUHt can n una.. vj,f IJofi 1 ever make a body which He cnobered with idle members t i Never. WbaVU-rK what member of this frame, mouldedf cjaT Te so fearful and wonderfully made oesnot work was made for working 1, Th made to see, the ear to hear, the to; sneak,' the legs to walk, the hands to syes is le to busy heart tne nrst to uve, tne last to aw --a clock 'that needs, no winding to- bea and, beating,4 sends its blood.' through jo. the throbbing arteries,: Let .'. all, 'or even sone, of these members cease to work, I die instant- List of Members Elect to the Constitu- i tional Convention of North Carolina l : Anson. Henry E. Chilsten, Geo. Tucker, i Jtepublicans. ,.;; ,.;?,,- -i- . ;; Alamance. Henry M. Ray, Republican, p : Burke and McDowell. John S. parks, W.; A. B. Murphy, Republicans. - . . 1 ," Brunswick. E. Legg, Republican, s v , r Beaufort Samuel Stilley, W. B.Rodman, Republicans. , - Bladen.A. W. Fisher, F. F. French, Re-i '! Bertie,-i cuns. " ' - Lee, Robins, Republi- - 1 1 Cieavelahd. Plato Durham, Conserva--,ti7e,. r-...'i - t . , i I CaswelLWilson Carey, Republican, PhU lip Hodnett, Independent. 1 1 - f CumWland, Maj. W. A. .Mann, Rev. J. W. Hood," Republicans.' Craven. Hon. David Heaton, W. H. S Sweet, CvD. Pierson, Republicans. Catawba. Dr. J. REilis, Conservative. Cabarrus. W. T. Blume, Republican. ! Chowan. John R. French, Republican. ! - Carteret.--Abrham' Congleton, Republi- ; can. . I r ' " - j--' Columbus. Linnon,' Conservative! 1 '-. Chatham. John A; McDonald, . W. T: Gunter, Republican. , k . . - . - - Davidson. Isaac Kinney,; Spence Mulli can, Republicans. , . , ' Duplin.-John W.Peterson, Samuel High-; smitb, Republicans' " " . : Edgecombe. nenry A. Dowd," J. H. Ba ker, Republicans. . , - ft JFrankUn-James T; Harris, John H. Wil liamson, Republicans. t I ; , . - ;Forsyth E. B. Teague, Republican. Guilford. Rev. G. : W. Welker, A. W.' Tpurgee, Republicans. ' ' ' ' - Gates. Timothy H. Lassiter, Republican. Granville. -John W.Ragland,J. J. Moore, Cj Mayo, Republicans. ' , , - Gaston. M. J. Adjylott, Republican. ' Harnett.-J. M. Turner, Republican. .. Halifax.-i-J. Hi Renfrow, J. J. Hays, Hen ry Eppes, Republicans. IHertford, J. B. Hare, Conservative. Johnston Dr. Jas. M. Hay, Nathan ,Gul leK Republicans; ' ; Jones. David D; Colgrove, Republican. ; iLincoln. Joseph HJ King, Republican. t; ILenoir, -Richard W. King, Republican. ; IMecklenburg. Edward Fullings, Silas M. Stillwell, Republicans. i ' ' Montgomery. Dr. Geo. A; Graham, ReA publican, j , i : , gNash Jacob Ing, Republican. iNdrthampton. Uenry T. i Grant, IRoswel J ' Cl Parker, Republicans. ! New Hanover. Gen. J. O. Abbott, S. S. Ashley, A. H. Galloway. Republicans, .--. Orange. John ,W. Graham, Dr. Holt, Conservatives. : Person. Dr. Wm. Merritt, Conservative. . iPerquimans. Dr. William'Nicholson, Re publican; . . ' Pasquotank and Camden. C. C. Pool, Mattchett Taylor, Republicans, r Pitt. Gen. Byron Laflin, D. J. Rich, Re publicans. i 'v Robeson. O. B. Hayes, Joshua L. Nance, , Republicans. ' .I Rutherford and Polk. Rev. W. H. Logan, Jesse Rhodes, Republicans. " Rowan and Davie. Dr. Milton Hobbs', Allen Rose, Isaac M. Shaver, Republicans. 3 1 Rockingham. Henry Barnes, John H.. ' French, Republicans. , ; I iRandolph. R; F. Trogden," T. L. L. Coi, . Republicans. Richmond. Richmond T. 1 Long, ' Repub lican. 4 ' ' . : i f ? Stanly; L. C. Morton, Republican. -. .Wake. B. S. D., Williams, S. D. Frank- lifi, JjP. Andrews, James H. Harris, Repub- iica'ns, ; ;- - ,h,,; I !' ,.;m;,V'' h'r Warren. J ohn Reid, John A. Hyman, Re publicans. " . 'L ," , , - . . ;Wayne. Maj. n. L. Giant, Jesse Hollo-, well,' Republicans. -,; ; r !; ; ' Wilkes, Iredell, Alexander, Caldwell.-tJ. Q.; A. Bryan, Calvin, J. Cowles, C. C. Jones, , Wesley George, Jerry Smith, Republicans f Wilson. Wiley Daniel, Republican. IGreene. John Patrick, j Madison, Buncombe, Henderson and Tran sylvania. Gl W; Gabagan, Thos. J. Cand ler, James JtL Duckworth, Republicans: i Mitchell i and Yancey. Ju lus uar land B.G.Garrett, -G. W. Dick- Republican. Haywood and Jackson. W. Republican. ? v - ! fiMaCon, Clay and Cherokee. -t son, Mark Fay, Republicans. I jlMoore. Sween S. McDonald,"Republican. . 'jSampson. Joseph D. Pearsall, Alexander Williams,' Conservatives. ' . r Stokes. Riley F. Petree, Republican. ! Union. William Newsom, Republican: - Washington and Tyrrell. -(-Edmund W.'i Jones, Republican.- -1 ; ... .iMartin.-S. Wi. Watts, Republican. ' ! 'Onsiow.Jasper Etheridge, Republican. yYancy.-Garland, Republican. , The abova returns foot up 96 Republicans' i 10 Conservatives, and one Independent. We i coun, wua. tne vo, iwo ivepuoucans irom Bertie, whose: names in full ' we have not learned, and do not, therefore, ,give them in , our list. . Thirteen delegates to hear from nine of whom are in all probability Repub : Si I Union Ieasue of America ! State Councils of the Union Leagues of America may be addressed as follows : : !IW. W. llolden, Raleigh, N. a, Grand President for North Carolina. Charles Wilson Horner,' Raleigh, N. O- Gtand Secretary for North Carolina. homas G. Baker, 74 avail street, Jhew Yprk.t ; hU .'":.;,!: , : . Samuel F. Gwmner. or Wm. B. Thomas, PhilaaelpbiaJa.:.v?v'-V:' -jlBenj. 8. Morehouse, Newark, N. J. ' I Charles H. Oaten,, or uenry btockbndge, Baltimore, Md. 1 i . ! , ' . ! Andrew Washburn, Richmond, Va. .8, Pillsburyor E. W.M. Mackey, Charles, ;Wm. Marham, Atlanta, Ga. . ' , ;'A. A. Knight, Lake City, Florida. , t It A: 3Iygatt, or James Dug an, .Vicksburg Sliss;!"; -f T j; Gen. H. HV Thomas, Nashville, Tenn. , . I V. Vetti Fort Smith , Ark: ' f I IT C: Dibble. New OrleansrLa. GeoJ arlow, Springfieldi'ni.' ' ' 1 j j . i tommm ii ' i t 1 A half nounafter midnight on a deserted Paris bbuleyard. -'A poor fellow sleeps on a . tvknAlt . M n..j4 A M C it. M a a A a i . 1 vwutu, m guatuiiku ui wucp-acc espies uim I qd shaking him roughly exclaimsv -'"Here 1 t are yon doing here all alone t & I must ' t yoia for trying to draw a crowd," I I SSSSS W-PLTerwilliger. descriptions.' dec .7 . ' i .:
The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 31, 1867, edition 1
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