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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 8, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for January or search for January in all documents.

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By J. A. Cowardin & Co.terms of Subscription: Daily Paper.--For one year, one hundred Dollars; six month, Fifty Dollars; three months, twenty-five Dollars; one month, ten Dollars. Agents and News Dealers will be furnished at thirty Dollars per hundred copies. All orders must be accompanied with the money, to insure attention; and all remittance by mail will be at the risk of those who make them. Advertising.--Advertisements will be inserted at the rate of three Dollars per square for each insertion. Eight lines (or less) constitute a square. Larger advertisements in exact proportion. Advertisements published till forbid will be charged three Dollars per square for every insertion.
A visit to Fort Sumter. "Carleton" writes to the Boston Journal as follows: "After a ramble of several hours through the city of Charleston, we made a visit to Sumter, entering by the sally-port where Major Anderson entered on that ever-to-be-remembered January night of 1861. The fort bears little resemblance to its appearance then, externally or internally. No portion of the original face of the wall is to be seen, except on the side towards Charleston and a portion of that facing Moultrie. From the harbor and from Wagner it appears only a tumult--the debris of an old ruin. "All the casemates, arches, pillars and parapets are torn up, rent asunder and utterly demolished. The great guns which two years ago kept the monitors at bay, which flamed and thundered awhile upon Wagner, are dismounted, broken, overturned, and lie buried beneath the mountain of brick, dust, concrete, sand and mortar. After Dupont's attack in April, 1863, a reinforcement of palmer to logs w