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s, sells at $13 per cord, and coal at $40 per ton, and both articles are exceeding scarce at that. The description he gives of the Fort Jackson emeute makes it of much greater importance than any account we have yet heard. He says that the negroes in all the different forts and barracks then mutined at the same time. At Fort Jackson they killed 27 white officers, and that while the row was going on they sent the 9th Connecticut, 28th Massachusetts and 12th Maine regiments down from the city to quell it. Amongst the vessels sent down was the "Pembina." She is now lying amongst the fleet off Fort Powell. She is reported to be a very crank vessel, but has a heavy armament. She has one 200 pound 15 inch Parrott mounted amidships, three howitzers on the stern, and one 12-pounder on her bow. Some 217 of the negroes, he says, have been court martials and condemned to be shot — and the order has been sent on by Gen Banks to Abe Lincoln, and their execution only awaits his approval.
The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States of America will meet in the Presbyterian Church at Charlotte, N. C., on the 1st Tuesday of May, 1864. Bishop Ames has been empowered by Lincoln to "take charge" of the Methodist Churches in New Orleans. Miss Mary Bryan Hart, a school teacher, was burned to death last week in Halifax county, N. C. She fell into the fire while laboring under a fit. A young lady named Catherine Morrissey was killed by lightning in Charleston, S. C., on Friday last. Major Gen. Wharton has been transferred to Texas, of which State he is a native. Beef is selling in Marietta, Ga., at sixty cents a pound.