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Religion Proscribed. --Revs. James Moore, John F. Baker, Thos. W. Dosh, and E. T. Perkins, have been compelled to resign their charges in Wheeling, because they were true to Virginia and their congregations false.
er good behavior for twelve months; which she gave; avowing at the same time her determination to leave the city. James Moore came up to answer the charge of keeping an ill-governed and disorderly house, where people make a great noise to the disturbance of the neighborhood. The witnesses testified that Moore is a peaceable man, but his wife was guilty of the offences laid to his charge. His Henor thought that fact no excuse for Moore, and told him he was responsible for the proper goveMoore, and told him he was responsible for the proper government of his household; to which remark a German witness in the case, whose tone indicated intense earnestness, responded, audibly, "certainly." However, the case was continued till this morning, and the officers directed to have Mrs. Moore presentMrs. Moore present as well as her husband. John Gold, a soldier, a deserter, was remanded to jail. William Walls came forward to withstand a variety of accusations — namely, assanlting and beating William O'Brien, and threatening to kill him, and selling ard
For hire. --I have for hire for the balance of the year, a Servant woman, said to be a plain Cook and good Washer and Ironer. Also, a man, accustomed to waiting in a hotel, James Moore, 5t Main st no 14--1t*
Negro Hiring for 1862. The subscriber offers his services to his friends and the public again, the coming year, as Agent for Hiring Out Servants. To those who may patronize him, he pledges himself to make every effort to promote their interest, with a due regard to the care of the servants. James Moore, de 28--6t* 51 Main st.
Negro Hiring for 1862. The subscriber offers his services to his friends and the public again, the coming year, as Agent for Hiring Out Servants. To those who may patronize him, he pledges himself to make every effort to promote their interest, with a due regard to the care of the servants. James Moore, 51 Main st. de 28--6t*
The Daily Dispatch: January 1, 1862., [Electronic resource], News from the coast — movements of the enemy. (search)
ght at Hudson's Landing, Red Bluff and Mar's Bluff, under cover of their gun-boats. Our pickets at Hudson's Landing were reported to have been driven in and the enemy landed a force of about 250 men. A detachment of the North Carolina Artillery and Colonel DeSaussure's regiment, had been ordered to reinforce our troops in that direction. We also learn from passengers by the Savannah road, of the crippling of another of the enemy's gun-boats Wednesday afternoon. A detachment of Captain Moore's North Carolina Artillery, under the command of Lieut. Baker, fired on one of these roving crafts at Buckingham Point, with good effect, and inflicting serious damage to the vessel. The wheel-house was knocked away, and the splinters were seen to fly in every direction. This vessel afterwards drifted with the tide towards Hilton Hand Shore, and is now lying up high and dry, completely disable. After running on shore, those on board sent up rockets as a signal of distress. The fancy
fore the congregations of the First and Second Presbyterian Churches in this city, on the National Fast Day, November 15, has been published by request, and is for sale at the bookstore of W. H. White. We have read this admirable production, as we read everything from the gifted pen of its eminent and excellent author, with the most sincere satisfaction. The leading points of the discourse are that "War is a part of the agency by which God disciplines nations." 2. "The proper resort of a people in time of war is to God." 3. "We should then gird ourselves for this conflict, in the hope that God will maintain our cause." These positions are sustained and illustrated with the power, brilliancy, eloquence, and pathos, characteristic of Dr. Moore's remarkable pulpit ability. No patriot can read it without being nerved to do, to dare, and to die for his country; no Christian, without feeling to his heart's inmost cere that "the Lord of Hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our refuge."
Negro Hiring for 1862. The subscriber offers his services to his friends and the public again, the coming year, as Agent for Hiring Out Servants. To those who may patronize him, he pledges himself to make every effort to promote their interest, with a due regard to the care of the servants. James Moore, de 28--6t 51 Main st.
be more derogatory to Southern than to Northern volunteers, because when the latter left they injured nobody but themselves, and did not expose their territory and their homes to foreign invasion, whilst the withdrawal of Southern volunteers would leave the way to their own fields and firesides open to an invading horde, who declare that their time for submission and compromise has forever gone and who are panting to bring desolation and defilement upon every Southern home. "Never," says Dr. Moore, as truly as eloquently, in his late Fast Day Sermon, "never since the terrible scenes of La Vendee, under the ravaging hordes of Publican France, has the old heathen war cry Va Viclis, (wo ! to the conquered !) been more unmistakably sounded by an army of invaders. Let this tremendous crusade become successful, either by mismanagement in the Army"--or, we may add, by the refusal of volunteers to re-enlist--"or cowardice and greediness at home, and history furnishes no page so dark and bl
Negro Hiring for 1862. The subscriber offers his services to his friends and the public again, the coming year, as Agent for Hiring Out Servants. To those who may patronize him, he pledges himself to make every effort to promote their interest, with a due regard to the care of the servants. James Moore, 61 Main st. de 28--6t*