Newspapers / The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, … / Jan. 14, 1868, edition 1 / Page 1
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Vt)Li I. WILMINGTON POST. TEHMS orU4CirriOSllTABIABtT M A0TAHOB Tri-Weekly pne year! . . . . . . t 00 " I bIx months.. i . i 3 50 one month.. 100 RAT ES OF, ADVERTISING : I ... . ' - ! OA -ui- TertHement wiU M;;iu , t - i. i-rion and 50 cent for each ClSKSw minion type, constitute a square. . J - , I ' - -. v - - " ' - ' - THE WIIMISGTOX 1 IS PUBLISHED EVEBY MONDAY BUBSCBIPTIOS : .:...$2oo Oneiyear.... Advertisements tl per square. BUSLNESS CARDS. WM. LYNCH, ? : rU)tnE8 CUf AND MADE IN THE LiTr jest Styles and of the best Material,;;.? 5 wtrt k Rait for- Market A Second 8ts. WILMINGTON, N. C. oct 3 : '-V 3m DANIEL A. SMITH, Manufacturer and Dealer In all kinds of .' - Parlor. Din ins Room, Chamber I add Oflice Furniture, Jtf at trasses, Feathers, TVindow Shades, i Wall ; Paper, &c also gash, Blinds and Doors. A SOUTH FKONT ST., WILMINGTON, N. C JOSEPH II. NEFF, SHIP HANDLER C AND DEALER IN';', , ' ... SUtV STORES GROCERIES, HARD- Ware, Paints, Oils, Boats. Oars, dec. No's 21 Water, and 3, 4 & 0 Dock street, WILMINGTON, N. C oct iy GEO. Z. FRENCH, No. 10, South Front Street, J ...V.: " Wilminjg: ton X. c, - - . -.- - WHOLESALE DEALER IN Grocfirles, Provisions, v Wines, Liquors. Cigars. AVowl, j WiIowyl and Cora mi)ii; Crockery Ware. Cotton and Received oct 6 i" . Naval Stores Bought or on Consignment. I tt. DOLLKEH, O FOTlBR, 9. CAM EH DEN DOLLNER, POTTER & CO , Commission Merchants New Yorlc. Liberal caah advances on conslsmments '.-of .Na val Stores, Cotton and other Southern produce, sept. 41 .-j' 'i:; " - :"' J' ' ly V E.7ESC0TTr DE A j E R filV GRAIN, Soath Side Princess, near Water St., WILMINGTON, N. C. i K KEEPS CONSTANTLY ON HAND A FULL supply ol fjorn, .Ueat, Ilomony, Flour, Oats, Peas, Rye, Braa, Hay, Arc," &c. ang 20 . ';;'' . it ' VICKj J1EBWE A CO., QROCERS, V . . . FORWARDING AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ; : Corner Chesnut and Water streets, I Wilmington; K. C. : tttf 5 ' '.-vlii.:-.-:.'"- : . , ; . tf o. c. HATCH, New York. L. O. ESTES, Wilmington, N. i M. V. HATCH. C. New York. DATCfli ESTES & CO., '" J. - GENERAL V'.':r, Commissiori Merchants, NO. 133 FRONT STREET, CORNER OF PINE 1 NEW YORK. - V n CONSIGNMENTS OF COTTOX At, NAVAI iV-Zstores solicited. Usual advances made ant all orders promptly executed. Au. 5th, 187. , : ir . ' tf X. A. HART. ' JNO. C. BAILEY ' WILMINGTON. IRON AN D COPPER WORKS, ': r- :." " AND ; .,j ' : ;fv9. MACHINE SHOP, V La8T?r fi VtSv " re r 8 of TURPENTINE rV. STILLS. Aud nnpppp wnuv i -n i. bwucUes. T . " x rom street, below Market I Wilminf ton , N. C. I Street, J HART & BAILEY. I - r Proprietors. sept 25 it .as. T. far r a wat. , ; . aoaxa mookk PSrrBWAY & MOORE' t QENERaL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, NORTH WATER STREET, WILMINGTON, N. a.. , i!9rt CONSIGNMENTS OF COTTON, ;QAQ5NW for the Manufactarera are' )5ersftJ- a th9 moSt rea80nDle'erni 3EO. KIDD'8 CELEBRATED 1 ' COTTON GINS, ZELIS RAWBONE y SUPERPHOSPHATE. BROWN'S COUNTER, f - , PLATFORM and RAIL- ROAD SOAL"RS. lpS.J?!Untly on FERTILIZERS of all WEEKLY POST WILMINGTON, N; e;, TUESD AY MORNING JANUARY 14, 1868. A RISE Iff LIFE. How a Barber's Boy Became Lord Chief ' Justice ol' England. ' Let readers transport themselves to Can terbury in 1776, and let them enter a : bar ber's shop hard by Canterbury Cathedral. ; . It is a primptive shop, with the red and white pole over the door, and a modest dis play or wigs and puff boxes in the window. A small shop, but notwithstanding its small- ness, the best shop or its kind in Canter bury;: and its lean, stiff, exceedingly respecU able master is a man of good repute in the cathedral town. His hands have, ere now, powdered the archbishop's wig, and he is specially retained by the , chief clergy of the city and neighborhood : to keep their false uair in (ruci, auu utui iuc uaiuiai vicsacs ui their children. . ., ' 1 Not only have' the dignitaries of the cath edral taken their worthy barber under their special protection,' but they have extended their care to his little boy, Charles, a de raaro, prim lad; who is at the present time a pupil in the kings school, to which acade my clerical interest gained him admission. The lad is in his fourteenth ryear,f and Dr.1 Osmond Beauvbir, the master of the school; gives him so good a character ior industry and dutiful demeanor that some of the cath j edral ecclesiastics' have resolved to make the little fellow's fortune by placing him in the office of chorister.- There is a; vacan t place in the cathedral choir, and "the boy who is lucky enough tV receive the appointment will be provided for munificently. Hie wilt forthwith have a maintenance,4 and in course of time his salary will be 70 per annum. During tue last iortmguttue Daroer-nas been in great and constant-excitement, hop ing that his boy will obtain this valuable place of preferment, persuading him that the lad's thickness , of voice, concerni ng which the choir master spoke with aggra vating persistence, is a matter ot no real im portance, and 5 fearing that the friends or another contemporary boy, who is said by the choir master to have an; exceedingly mellifluous voice, may defeat his paternal as pirations. The momentous question agi tates many humble homes in Canterbury ; and while Mr. Abbott, the barber, is en couraged to hope the best for his son, the relatives and supporters of the contemporary boy are urging him not to despair. Party spirit prevails on either side Mr. Abbott's family associates, maintaining thati the coTi temporary boy's higher notes resemoi inose of a penny whistle ; while the contemporary boy's father, with much satire and same just ice, murmurs that "oldAubott, who is the gossip monger of the parsons, wants to push his son into a place for which there is a bet ter candidate." - To-day i the eventtul day when the elec tion will be made. ;Evennow, while Abbott the barber, isr trimming a wig at his shop wimlow, and listening to the hopeful talk of an intimate nei innrtitr ma snn i .iinripp i chantina the "Old Hundredth" betore the whole chapter. Wben Charley has been through his vocal piece the citetnporay bo is requested to sing. Whereupon thatclear- thToated competitor, sustained iy ju$uua- ble self-confidencfSauda new laid egj;.which he had sucked scarcely a nnaute betore, made a bow to their reverences, and sing? out with such richness and compass that all the auditors recognize his great superiority.; Ere ten more minutes had passed Charley Abbott knows that he has lost the election. and be hastens from the cathedral with quick steps. Running into the shop, he gives bis father one look that tells the whole story of ; failure and then the little fellow, unable to command bisgriet, sits down upon the floor and sobs convulsively. Failure is often the first step to eminence. Had thei boy gained the chorister's place be would have been a cathedral servant all his days. - . Having failed to get it he returned to the King's School, went as a poor scholar to Oxford, aod tougbt his way to honor. He became Chief Justice to the King's bench and a peer of the realm. Toward the close ot his honorable career Lord Tenerden at tended services in the cathedral of Canter' bury, accompanied by Mr. J ustice Richard son. When the ceremonial was at an end tlie Chief Justice said to his friend, "Do you see that old man there among the choristers ? In him, brother Richardson, behold the only man I ever envied.?: Wben at school in this town we were c-ndidates for a chorister's place ; be obtained it ; and if I had gained my wish he might have been accompanying you as vniei justice ana pointing me out as his old school fellow, the singing man." ' 1 PflUNNYGRAMS. r Why is a blusb like a little eirl ? Because it becomes a woman. . i Do the ladies like tail or short men best ? We don't know as to the latter but every body knows that the ladies are fond of Hy men. -: " u Can't you trust me, Mr. Butcher, for a little meat this morning ?" .No, you already owe me for that on your bohes.4' - ,. . . ' ... ; An Atrociouslt Good Conundrum. Why is a iifty-pounder gun like a rainshed der ! Because it is a number-Ler. ) t Why is a constant attendant upon auctions an unpleasant companion t Because he is for -bidding. r V f A red -nosed gentleman asked a wit wheth er he believed ius spirits. 44 Ay. sir.' replied he, looking him full in the face, "I see too much evidence before me tcdoubt that.' i A blind negro boy in Louisiana Jbas learn ed to read by feeling oyer the inscription on grave stones. He now understands tombs'- tones. : - ,-' ; :' -, ' I The Post says that u woman is composed of 243 bones, 109 muscles, and 39G pins. Fearfully and wonderfully made, . and to be handled with care to avoid scratches. The "New Dominion" wants to take the letter D; for a dollar mark. It thinks f stands for U. S.f and it wanU nothing which is so connected with this country. 1 . - m- . - Colonel McCardle, notorious as f having been arrested by General Ord for disgrace ful and incendiary language in the,Vic)cs burg Timet, apologized one morning recent-' ly for the lack of editorial matter by sarin that be had been walking the afreets the day before in the hope of meeting some of those who had threatened him with violence! He further announces bis intention to fight a whole kennel of hoandf, bat the time for the dogfight is not fixed yet. MIR 1CUL1U ESCAPE. JL Man Disentombed Alive after Serentv " two Hoars Burial i a a Living Tomb. si From the Wanpaeca (IHi.) Criterion, , , .The most remarkable case of preservation from extreme peril that we ever had occa sion to record, occurred Jnthe town,, of, Amherst, piirtage' county; -on Sunday list (the 23d ult.) The fact, as we glean them, are these : Mr. William Bahe,; a German farmer, livinsr two mile9 east of Amherst village, has been t r some; time past engaged in digging a well on, his premises. . At the, depth of 83 feet :, lie encm:itered the bed rock, and after expeiidins a large quantity cf powder, with lit; le effect, on the, solid granite lie alanlonel the shaft, and com menced sinking a new one in; a more prom ising locality. As is the'eomm m practioe in digging wells through the lo so drift of this region, he had protected the. original well ov wooden carbine, being pieces'bl plank placel traversely and sb; contrived as .!.itL' j n ! " . .ill' .. ' t mj resist cocsiaeraoie. pressure.-s-r.st-i'-,..--'. ; On Thursday morniug iir Buhe was en gaged in removing the curbfognd- filling up tle" old well," and commencing at the bottom had filled up fourteen feet. His brother was at the top of the? 4shaft, assist ing in drawing up the planks.4 The work man at the: bottom had withdrawn about tour feet, of, the curbing, and commenced, drawing the earth from the sides, when the' one at the top saw him in the dim light bel6w8pring tJthe r ladder' heard him e ic Ulute"01i, Christ wlien lie' was intercepted from view by the whining. planks, and the unfortunrte man was buried seventy fiv feet Under ground: The' Walls" of ' the well had caved in except twen.y five feet of the top, and the wretched excavator lay overwhelm ed aud apparently crushed and lifeless at the bottom., Tlie : workman at thy top of the shaft was horror-stricken and paralyad.' The idea of rescue does not seem to have entered his mind, and during all dy Thurs day uot a spade was driven iiito the ground not art effort made to exhume the buried man. During theday, ; however,! tidings of the affair had gone abroad and some ener getic citizens of Amherst determined that an eftort should bo' made " to recover the body. ".-':'"'"''' Oa Friday morning, under the- direction of an experienced well -digger,, with a sufil cient f)rceofmen, they set to work. Hav ing to feel their way carefully, and provide at every step against a recurrence of the same disaster, -now doubly imminent from the loosened state of the earth adjacent to the walls of the well, they necessarily made slow progress, although relays of men kept the work raoviug without intermission day and night. i . Oa Saturday evening at sunset they were yet eight feet fro m4t he objtct of their search. At this time a young mail in the bottom of the shaft thrust his toot into a crevice be tween the pieces of broken, twisted and dis torted plank, the original curbing, and in stantly clambered up the ladder a' most speechless with agitation and fright. He had heard a rumbling noise in the hole! Men of firmer nerves made haste down the yawning cuasin, and word was instantly passed up to the expectant xrowd above the man was alive, he could speak ! 1 , From the i inumeat uutil his ftual release from his tearful prison, the excitement among the large concourse of people who had assem bled Irom the whole country side to witness or assist, was intense. Soon word came from below that they could communicate with the buried man, that he was nearly exhaust ed he despaired of ultimate release, and with his little remaining strength wanted to communicate his last wishes to his friends. His brother was sunt down, and by placing his ear to the crevice was enabled to make out from the faint voice below,: the speaker's last directions as - to his family and estate. Meanwhile, means were found to force down some rerrebhuienta through tue tortuous pas- sage uet ween tue xaiieu pianKS, and rags were forced down to enable him to stop up some crevices through which be said the sand was pouring m ou him, aud the work of ex cavation went on. i Ou Sunday morning the diggers had reach- the buried man. Oa removing the debris arouud- him, tuev found the poor fellow ulive. He was partly sitting, with one foot nearly under him, the knee bent outward, aud the who leg pinioned, by a stout plank resting on it with both ends inbedded in the sides of the well. It was found no easv task to remove this plank. In fact, it occupied three hours assiduous labor to chisel away this wooden fetter. At last, seventy six hours atter the accident occurred; tne buri ed man was brought to the surface. His joy and gratitude knew no bounds. He onered his deliverers his money, his horses, ,his farm, anything, everything he possessed ; nor were the spectators scarcely less profound ly affected. .iC;y..s. ! Tue poor fellow had eaten 1 off half his thick1 leather belt in the extremity of his hunger. He had heard every thing that transpired above him,1 and had passed the first twentyfour hours of his horrid imprison ment iu alternate wonder, anxiety and des piir; that no effort was inade to release him He was only slightly bruised, and at this date is walking arouud scarcely worse tor the accident: Goethe has said somewhere that a man of geuius who proposes to himself to be hap py in the world must lay -down to himself the fixed aud unalterable rule to consider his geniu as one thing and his" personal life as another, never to suffer the feelings of the au thor to interfere with the duties of the man. A Man in St. L uis recently setup a fash ionable shoe store, which1 was filled with the finest stock he could get on credit. ; (He was of an insinuating disposition and address, and he succeeded in borrowiug several thou sand dollars in various amounts. , On Sun day morning bis shop door was closed and draped with crape." Tlie gas was burning in the store and it was not until Friday that his. confiding creditors found that he had gone off on Saturday, as had most of his stock. , - , - - In marked contrast to what might have happenedfin this country, we read that when the prizes) were listributed to the successful competitors in the Oxford middle clas ex aminations, a negro advanced to receive one. and the entire body of spectators, obeying a noble instinct, cheered lustilv." Three negroes, bearingpork towards their houses in Bolivar County. Tennessee, were lately fired at and killed by persons who supposed the pork was stolen. . .1 - f, GENERAL JEWS. - -- - i t. i t . -1 x-ruwi ui3 ,oonsueu Tne passport I nuis - ance. , ... . . .-.a .v ' ; TheThumb3 are in the TVestl , I1 The Sultan h threatened with Iconsump- The London police costs $333,913 in iold. Carlotta has given up her dovy, but has $ 3,uuu,uuv lert. i ' - : Paris ha.3 a weekly . American paper,' just starxeu. y . - . I Girrotting is again coming into voue in Lonuon. . , i Gladstone's speech 'made ' seventeen amns in the London papers. f - col- The Archduke ot Austria has been indis creet enough to marry the comedienne i Made moiselle Hoflman, and of course s.ie h.ts been foolish enjugh to let him. ' . j , It is related that at a recent nftertiih London, the ; audience v hissed ' the Kvrie" fron Mozirt's jTweltth Mtss, Rat a son called the "Blue Tailed Fly'? was tumuitiT ouslyencored. I - . - . i The Chicago school -committee, after due deliberation on sundry memorials praying for the abolishment of corporeal punishment from the ; city public schools, ' have decided to justify its occasional and judicious use . A saw mill and bucket factory, - with a thousand acres of well timbered land, eight miles from Tuscaloosa, Alabama; was ;sold last week by the Sheriff tor twelve hundred and one dollars.' : Upwards of forty-one thousand letters were recently sent to Germany from the New York Post Office in a single week. The number sent to Great Britain during the sarne time was less Ithau forty thousand j Some of the prominent New" Haven citi zens held a meeting at M ivor Snerrv'a busi ness ofli3e, Friday last, to discuss the short line from B.3ton throusrh New HMven to le Pennsylvania coal regions. Minv of the citizens are active in the enterprise, j A story has been obtaining currencv in England to the effect that the IMlrquis of Hertford had paid 80,000 francs for a Titian originally sold for thirty shillings to a ib'in ignorant of its value, but who afterwards discovered its worth. Lord Hertford ide- nies that there is any foundation whatever for the story. He has had numberless otters ot other Titians from : all parts of Europe since tue report was started. An eunor uown oou;n says ne would l as soon try to get to sea ou a shingle, make a lander of tog, chase a streak of lightning through a crab-apple orchard, swim heels first up Niagara Uiver, or set Like Erie on tire with a wet match, as to stop lovers get ting married when they take it into their heads to do so. The editor is right. Mr. Golightly has leen summing up lis deeds for the year, f They are : Decidedly good and Christian,; two and a fraction; so s, fifty one; indifferent, two hundred and forty; very doubtful, aud about which he doesn't care to particularize, seventeen hun dred and sixty-nine positively shabby, sev eral hundred, ; performed frequently about every day in the year. We suspect Mr. Qo lightly is a good de d like other people. Rochester, N. Y., ( has an Enoch Arden case. Two young men, one of whom was married, were intimate friends. The, mar i ied one went to the War, exacting a proniSisiJ from the other that, in case he should fall, his friend should marry the widow. The repoit came that he was killed, and, after a due period of mourning, the promised mar. riage took place and a child was born. LAt last the tirxt h'isband returned and clainjed his wife. His successor objected, and the matter went into Court. Tne decision has just been rendered in favor of the first husi band. . , f- y ' A day or two since, in one ot the trains from Boston, a quiet individual sitting (by the stove in one ot the passenger cars drew forth a bottle and commenced laving his hands with tlje contents, The dy was vry cold aud the neighborhood of the stoye Was crowded." One old nian watched the bottle holder's operations with great interest, alnd finally asked him what kind of stuff he was using. "Glycerine," replied the quiet man. Glycerine thunder 1" and the old man rushed for the door. .Others caught up the word and they all rushed into the adjoining cars, leaving our glycerine friend to sooth his chapped hands. j j j The Congressional Library contains 105,- 4b7 volumes, exclusive of pamphlets and pe riodicals. . i J ,1 . A family of seven persons, living on Chey- cuuo xviver, were recently overtaken 0 a prairie fire and burned to death. ; j ' Cholera has carried off . 50,000 Arabs in Algeria, and famine now threatens to take the. rest. I . Never fill yourself so full of toner a to be a fool. It is an abuse of provender, and is wanting in respect to the gastric juice. ' London Punch was not very palatable dur-ing-our civil war this side of the Atlantic, and it hasu't recovered its original flavor since. i: , I A gentleman in Mobile drawn as a juror prevailed on tue suerin to erase n is name, claiming to be exempt by reason of his oe ing a Son of Malta. ' Some of the members of one of the rival hunting clubs of Toledo have been seen sea' ping" the tails of deer in the market, the aforesaid tails being evidence of an aui- mal killed by the club. I " " I In speaking of a new breech loading rifle which promises to be fired twelve times in a minute, and which is. called the iSoleil, 4VoiU," says a French paper, a sun whose object is to cart a most deadly shade 1" Maryland and Virgiania have been rees tablishing the division line by a joint c'mi mission. Several families find that they did not know what T State they were living in. A portion of the 'line is still in dispute. ' - l ' " ' ' Two medical centlemen have lately ac cepted appointments in TJxbridge. England, at annual salaries of i0 and 35 resiec- tively, and they have to hnu their own med; icines at that. The letter carrier of the town has a higher salary than either. It is the proud boast of a country paper u x-eiinsjiyama, inacAir.r AJicaeus wiu pa9 rt . i . - , r : Headquarters 2sd Military District; Z Charleston, a,C.r Pec 31, 18G7. General Orlera, ) No. 163. f At the election held in th Jitnf- i "ftU Canlina. nn the 19ih and 30th days of No vraber. 1837, pursuant to, General Orders; N. 101. from these Headquarters, dated OctoherJS. 1857, a mnjorify t the register ed voters of the said Statel having voted on the question of holding a Convention, and a ranj rity of the votes cast jibing in favor of holding such. Convention, the delegates elect ed thereto, and hereinafter; named, are here by notified, in conformity; with the provis ions of the foirth section in the Act of Con gress of March 23, 1837, toj assemble in cn ventum in the city or Rileigh, North Caro lina, at:n.ion, on Tuesdayij the 14th;day of January, 1863. for the purpose of framing a conHtitution and civil government according to the provisions of the afiiresaid Act of the 23d day of March, 1837, anid of the Act - of the 3d day of March, 1887,, to which it is supplementary.- , j, , . -, A copy of this order will be' furnished to each of the persons hereinafter named, and! shall be ithe evidence o; liis having , been eiectea as a delegate to thn aforesaid i Con-; vention. OFFICIAL; LIST OF DELEGATES. , Anson. Henry Chillson, Get)rge Tubker, ? Alamance. Henry M. Ray, Republican. Burke and McDowell. John S. Parks, W. A B. Murphy, Republicansj . Brunswick. E. Legg, Republican. Beaufort. Wm. Stilley.f W. B. Rodman, Republicans. : f' .' 1 Bladen. A. W. Fisher, F. F. French, Re- publicans'"; i .. ' - E?ertie. B. Lee, P. D. Robins, Repjbli cbu9. '.' Cleaveland. Plato Durham, Conserva tive. ; : . v . Caswell. Wilson' Carey, Republican, Phil lip llodnetr. Independent. I Cumberland. Maj.-.W. Aj Mann, Rev. J. W Hood, Republicans. Craven. H n. Dtvid Ileat-m, W. H! S 'Sweet, C D. Pierson, Republicans. Catawba. Dr. J, R. Ellis Conservative. ; Cabarrus. W.T.B! ume, Republican. Chowan. John R. French, Republican. Carteret. Abraham Congleton,' Republi can. ; ' I , ' Columhjas. H. Lerinon, Conservative. Chatham. John A. McDonald, W. T. Gunter. Republican. j ' Cunituek. Thomas Sand ;rlm. Davidson. Isaac Kinney, Spence Mulli- can, Uepublicans. ; l ! Duplin. John W Peterson, Samuel High- smith, RepnbHcans. - . . , - Edgecombe. Henry A. Dowd, J. H. Ba ker, Henry C. Clierry, Republicans. Franklin. James T. Harris, John H. Wil liamson, Republicans. I Forsyth! E. B. Teague, Republican. Guilford. Rev. G. W. Welker, A. , W. Tourgee, Republicans. ; ! Gates. Thomas L. Hnfner Republicah. Granville. Tohn W. Raglaud, J. J. Mobre, U. Miyo, Ilepublicans. Gaston. -fM. J. Aydlott, Re publican. Harnett J. M. Turner. R 'publican. Halifax.; J. H. R nfrovv, J. J. Hays, Hen ry Eppes, Republicans. j ! Hertford, J. B. Hare, Conservative.: Hydei Andrew J. Glover. . Johnston. Dr. James Hay, Nathan Gul- ley, Uepublicans. Jones. Dayid D. Colgrove.j Republican. LmcolnJ Joseph tl. King, Republican. Lenoir. Richard W. King,Repibljcan. Mecklenburg. Ed ward Fullings, Silas M. Still well. Republicans.. Montgomery. Dr. Geo. A. publican, i jGraham, Re- Nrtsh. .Jacob Ing, Reoublican. Northampton. Henry T. Grant, Roswell C. Parker, RepublicaLS. New Hanover. Gen. J. C. .blott, S. S. Ashley, A. H. Galloway Republicans. ' Orange. John W. Grahaui, E. M. Holt; Conservatives. j Person. Dr. Wm. Merritt, Conservative. Perquimans. Dr. William Nicholson, Re: publioan. i i Pasquotank and Camden. C. C. Pool, Mattcuett Taylor, Republicans. Pitt. Gen. Byron Laflin, D, J. Rich, Rp- publicans. i Robeson. O. S. Hayes, Joshua L. Nance, Republicans. Rutherford and Polk. Rev. W. H. Logan, Jesse Rhodes, Republicans. Rowan and Davie. Dr. Mi ton Hobbs, Allen Rose, Isaac JI, Shaver, Republicans. Rockingham. Hry. Barnes, John French, Republicans. - ' Randolph. R, F. Trogden, T. Lt L. Cox, Republicans. , Richmond. Richmond T. Long, Repub lican. . I Stanly. L. C. Morton, Republican ; Wake. B. S. D. Williams, S. D. Frank lin, J. P. Andrews; James H. Harris; Repub licans;: ! - " . I Warren.--John Read, John Hyman, Re publicans. I ! ' Wayne. Maj H. L. Giant, Jesse Hollo well, Republicans. Wilkes, Iredell, Alexander, Caldwell. J. Q A. Bran, Calvin J. Cowles; (J. C. Jones, JWesley George, Jerry Smith, Republicans. ; Wilson. Wiley Daniel, Republican. Greene, John M. Patrick. .! , Mai lison, Buncombe, Hendersop and Tran PVlvania. G. W. Gahagan, Thos. J. Cand ler, James H. Duckworth, Republicans.! Mitchell and Yancey. Julius Republican.; S. Garland G.Garrett, 1tinnb!icanJ -k Macon, Clay and Cherokee. d. Wi Dick son, Mark Jlay, Republicans. j ; Moore. Sween S. McDonald, Republican. Sarnpson.-i-Sylvester Carter, Alexander Williams, Conservatives. t, 1 m Stokes. Riley F Petree, Republican. Union. William Newsom, Republican. Washington and Tyrrell. Edmund W. Jones, Republican. ! Martin. S. W. Watts, Republican, r . Ousiow. Jasper Ether idge, Republican. By a new arrangement in Paris, de3-1 patches to be sent by telegraph may be paid oy amxing stamps as to letters ; boxes are to be placed for their, to be cleared every ten minutes. ' numerous reception. The ;de- patches will be sent by pneumatic! despatcb to and iroin the central omces,; . A silent man sat at . an aljoining table and appeared to bo devoted to Lib drink. NO. 121; The langnajfe nf fatureand exprrience n urates, that whoever would enjoy the pleasures or rood the beauties of landscapes the Jovs o compa .ionship the richnefs ot llti-rnturt o WrSlt4Uon and jrenown mint .present The stomach is the receptacle of a?l nourish ment. and the fountain from which all parts nf iISESIV e5T0 V11" The effect oT foul InjQrious fjK1 entering the stomach. Is to de. .-u tuouirBiivBTirpnsana prodnce headache, lOHSof appetUe. nnrefreshedxsleep. rasMd ivreath.! law pplrita, t-v'rish bnrnlnsrm capacity f perform any mental or phTlcal rtotv t Ac,, and are the symptom ortbat horrrid dUease which assumes a tuouand auapes, and points ? ,?fra' "' "W Hf OMtpreuMturt d J lie -Medical Faculty hAj iahrvd Iortcueittiiona io dibcover reiiaDle appetizers aud the rupr uit uns ol overconiuig stoiuacu derangemeuts. Cei tm lUiireUleuu have bfeeu lougkuowu a purtiully " etfeetivw. Aiuoug Uieo Were - - . .; CAIihya n rk v KT.citoik itnn'. . An Invalid rhraiclan, solonrnlng In thn tropical lsl nd oSt Croix; observing the habits ot the natives, raftwed the recipe fnr the final accom. plWiment of thi most important end. The art h cle was fipt risd as a private medicine, when Its palntarrj effects becoming known; It was brougLt out under the name of DRAKE'S PLANTATION TtlTTHUs. They act with nnrrinjr power, with the pleasure of a bverare. . and are taken. They-perform roost wonderful cures in stubborn cases of Dys- Eepsia, l.ivr Complaint. Nervous Anc.tlons: oss of Appetite, rntermlttent Fevers, Diarrhoea, Sour Stomach; Headache, F ver and Air ue,. Weakness, Mental Despondency. Ac. As a morn inir appntlKcr and after dinner tonic, ther shonld be in every fi-nily.' They are a deUtfhfful exhile ratln r s'lmnlant, without any subsequent etupo y ing reaction. IMPORTANT CERTIFICATE. x Kocn 8TBit, December 2Jtb, 181. Vessrs P. II. Dkakb. Gentlemen ."I have suf-. fered terribly with Dyspepsia for throe or four years, and tried many remedies without effect. I had to ahsndo-i my profcsshVi, and suffer id great ly from everything I ate. 1 have now t ted the Plantation Bitters they helped me I continued their use. and am now nearly a well man. I know, ot several similar ca$es. Kespectlullv yours, t , , Rev. J.S. Cathwkk. ' " -J-.'.-- K - . ' .-.- . li ' ' - . ! S. T. 18CO X. IntelHarent persona and physicians can Judzc on the efficacy of the PlmiUtiou liitters Iroin tlie tollowiu partial formula: , CASUAR1LL.A DARK I Was known'a'id useU in Germany or Dyspepsia, Jbr.(iic tHarrliom Cuoiic. Deutery, and Dis eases ef the atooiucU and BuWcls. a early as liiJJ - DANDELION.. ' f For'Inflimatlona uf .the Loin and Spleen-; in Dropsical Affcctixiii and Miliary Secretions, or Obstructions of the Ahdjmlual Viscera.! , cams ay Cor king's dark, i Was u ikuowu to civilization until tuo tuidjie o the 17th century. Humboldt makes favombla mention of tue febritugu qualitiei of tiiU article 'us uu Antidote V Fever and Ague, fntermi. tent aud 'Malarious Fevers, in hi extensive cfouth American travels. The Counteaa, wita of tlie Viceroy ot Peru, hav ug experienced thei beneti; cial .etteet of the Birk, Bent it to Europe in HU0 with great uccesa in France, in the tre.itnient of Fever and Ague, Dyspepsia, Nervous Affections Loda of Appetite, Weakness and Debihtj-, tal--piUtton of the Ueart, Diarrhoe i, fco , under tlm name of Eugllsh Fowder; and in r19, he sold the secret ot its Origin to Louis XIV, by wltom It was iuivulgel It is now a tandar.l remeJy in all Pliarmacopajia, anctvis employed in prepar inir the -Plantation Bitters. UtVimomUie r lowtri, ior eniecuicu viiii'mmo, Winterareett. "valuable fur Scro-ula, Kheumatisin,' and eiratlc AfftfCtions; Lavtitdr FloiMra aro matic, st mulmtaud Tome, iJiguiy invigorating in Nervous Debility ; Ante, an aromatic carmi native, creatimr flesh, muscle find milk. Much used In nureiug: ' .s i " :'!V..'..- -I S T 1860-X. ' V 'V.:;! Another ingredteut ot rcmaraable and wonder ful virtue used lu tue preparation ol tuese i oil- lers, is a native oi Drau, auu uuuw m iu the commerce ol the world. A Spaulsh writer w w aauuuuiereu. wit u ou , vruiJL - : " it. H .A t-l.i A .tlU at V Ra never fails to relieve nervous tremor, wake' fulneso. dbturbed sleep, c., aud that it is ued willi great eaect oy tue urazoiaus, opauisu i auu Peruvian ladies to heighten tueir color und feau ty. it imparls cueeriulue6 to the disposiliou, vigor to tne appetite, laud brilliancy to tu com we wiiuuoia its name tcuut utc uuuu ior iuv present.'v' v -' , ,,..?. - -t-- . j 1 t To the abovo are aided Clove Bads, Orange, Carraway, Coriander,- tiuake Koot, all pre terveu la peruy pure . , 1 ST CROIX UU3I. i The tonic properties ot at. Crorx Bum, and its powerful tuviguratiug effects, Uavu been lvDg auowu to tUu physicuns ol tue world. i BUiousiutermitteLit aud Cuill Fevers, engen dered by the cuaug ot water aud diet ut' travel en, particularly upon western rivers, are tre'veu ted aud cured Dy the Ptautaiiou bl iters. They are also reliable to prvvcut sea sickness, j . WHAT OTHERS SAY. ' J Philadelphia, 1st uiouiu, ltitu day, iwjj. "K&iiEMZD jTmicxo. Wilt thou iseud we an other doxeu ol thy Hi ters t Nothiuglws proven so OehefltUi to my lu valid wUe or m a tht It wa a Id by the Jenulw tor the enonivni u; of it ice'ght in Uer, and was thus called Jesuits' HovpOkk. In Sir John Talbot employed it t P. - f A 1 3 turougu tue town by rallroa, , j I le. was very drunk indeed, , . 4 ' .1
The Wilmington Post (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 14, 1868, edition 1
1
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