|ieplator's Column. riIHE BEDFORD REGULATOR, No. 2 ANDERSON'S ROW. IRVINE & STATLER Are again in the field Wattling against the imposi tion of high prices and would respectfully inform their friends and the public generally that they have just received a large and varied assortment of goods, consisting of Boots and Shoes, Muslins and Tickings, Notions and Perfumery, Groceries and Spices, Queensware and Glassware, Tobacco and Segars, White A Colored Shirts, Cotton & Woolen Yarns, Trunks A Valises, Brooms A Twines, Ac., Ac. GP Call at No. 2 ANDERSON'S ROW. If you want a good p'r Boots, go to the Regulator. QUR STOCK OF BOOTS A SHOES are full and complete. BOOTS, SHOES, BALMORALS, GAITERS and SLIPPERS, Ac., to fit any man, woman and child in the county. Measures taken for Ladies and Gentlemen and neat and complete fits warranted or no sale. At IRVINE A STATLER'S, No. 2 A.'s Row. If you want a good p'r Shoes, go to the Regulator. ROCERIES.— Prime Rio Coffee, - 25 to 30 cents per lb. do La Guayra, - 25 to 30 " " " White Sugar, ... 18 " " Light Brown Sugars, - 12i to 15 " " " Teas, - - - - $1 50 to 2.00 per lb. Spices, all kinds, cheap and good. Best quality Syrups and Molasses, at the lowest market prices, at "The Regulator's," No. 2 A. R. If you want good Toilet Soap or Perfumery, go to the Regulator. TTNBLEAOHED and BLEACHED MUSLINS, From the best Manufactories in the country. Bleached and Unbleached Muslins from 12} c up. Sheeting, .... - from 18c up. Tickings, all grades and prices, at IRVINE A STATLER'S. If you want a good Shirt, go to the Regulator. /\UR NOTIONS ARE AT ALL TIMES FULL AND COMPLETE in Shirts, Collars, Neck-Ties, Soaps, Gloves, Hosiery, Perfumery, Suspenders, Combs, Threads, Buttons, Wallets, Brushes, Thimbles, Pins, Needles, Sewing Silk, Linen and Cotton Handkerchiefs, Shaving Cream, Ac., Ac., Ac. At No. 2 Anderson's Row. If you want a variety of Notions, go to the Reg'r. i and PERFUMERY. Letter and Fools-cap Paper, Envelopes, Perfumery, all kinds of Toilet Soap, Tooth Brush es, Ac., At THE REGULATOR'S. If you want Queensware er Glassware, go to the Regulator. QUEENSWABE & GLASSWARE. We have a large and magnificent selection of Queensware and Glassware, of the latest and most fashionable patterns, and will be sold at the most reasonable prices, by IRVINE A STATLER. If you want good Spices of any kind, go tPthe Regulator. rpOBACCO AND SEGARS of the best brands and manufacture : Gravely, Oronoke Twist, Century Fine-cut, Cavendish, Baltimore Twist, Congress, . Ac., Ac. Smoking Tobacco, all kinds. Segars from a Cheroot to the finest article. Also, a large assortment of Pipes, jy Call at No. 2 Anderson's Row. If you want good Hosiery, Gloves, Neck-fies col lars, Ac., go to the Regulator. HAVE EVERYTHING that is usually kept in a No. 1 country store. iy MARKETING of all kinds taken in ex change FOR GOODS, and the highest prices paid. Any goods desired will be ordered from the Eas tern cities iy Country merchants supplied with goods at a small advance. No trouble to show goods. All we ask is a call and we feel satisfied we can please ALL. Thankful for past favors, we solicit a con tinuance of the same. apr2B,'67. IRVINE A STATLER. If you want any thing in onr line go to the Bed ford Regulator, No. 2, Anderson's Row. ught and died in the struggle. And here let us pay a pass ing tribute to those who yielded up their lives in the wager of battle. "How many a glorious name for us, How many a story of fame for us, They left! Would it not be a shame for us, If their memory part From our land and heart. And a wrong to them and a blame for us ? No ! No! No ! They were brave for us, And bright were the lives they gave for us. The land they struggled to save for us, Cannot forget Its warriors yet, Who sleep in many a grave for "■ But how shall we do justice to the brave men who perished for the sake of their country? Whence shall we borrow the glowing language that be fits their eulogy? Monuments may be erected in their honor, and their ashes gathered in gorgeous mausoleums, the epic page may burn in description of their deeds and the painter's canvas glow with the picture of the red con flict in which they fell, but all will fail to cancel the overwhelming debt of gratitude which the nation owes them. We cannot estimate the value of the sacrifice they made for us; we can only drop a tear to their memory and wish for them, "Iu Heaven a borne with the brave and blest, A name in song and story, And fame to shout with her brazen voice, 'Died on the Field of Glory.' " But whilst we keep in remembrance the fallen brave, let us hasten to re build the waste places of our country; let us restore the Constiution as the su preme law of the land; let us banish faction and check innovation ; and let us strive to make our government con form in spirit, as well as in letter, to i hat liberalism which knows no oppres sion for opinion's sake and which makes the title of American citizen syn onymous with that of freeman. With our hands upon our hearts, with our eyes uplifted to heaven, let us, in hum ble imitation of those grand old patri ots who, this day ninety-one years ago, announced the birth of a new nation, pledge u our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor," that, so help us God, we will stand by the Union of the States and the liberty of the citizen, against all opposition, whether from armed usur pation, or peaceful revolution. THE DOOM OP THE WORLD.—What this change is to be, we dare not even conjecture; but we see in the heavens themselves some traces of destructive elemets, and some indication of their power. The fragments of broken plan ets, the descent of the meteoric stones on the globe, the wheeling com ets, wielding their loose materials in our own satellite, the appearance of new stars, and the disappearance of others, are, as the solar furnace, the volcan ic eruptions, all foreshadows of that impending convulsion to which the sys tem of the world is doomed. Thus placed on a planet which is burned up, and under heavens which are to pass away; thus treading, as it were, on the cemeteries, and dwelling upon the mausoleums of former worlds, let us learn the lesson of humility and wisdom if we have not already been taught in the school of revelation.— North British Review. A SWEET TEMPER.—No trait of char acter is more valuable in a woman than the possession of a sweet temper. Home can never be made happy without it. It is lise the flowers that spring up in our pathway, reviving and cheering us. Let a man go home at night weary and worn by the toils of the day and how soothing is a word dictated by a good disposition? It is sunshine falling on his heart. He is happy, and the cares of life are forgotten. A sweet temper has a soothing influence over the mind of a whole family. Where it is found in the wife and mother, you observe kindness and love predominating over the natural feeling of a bad heart. Sfhiles, kind words, characterize the children and peace and love have their dwelling there. Study, then, to acquire and retain a sweet temper. It is more gold; it captivates more than beauty; and to the close of life it retains all its freshness and power. A REMINISCENCE.— OIiver Crom well was buried in Westminister Ab bey, but after the restoration, by sol emn act of Parliament, more barbar ous than any private act of him they called the "usurper," his body, together with that of his son-in-law, Henry Ire ton, Lord Deputy of Ireland and John Bradshaw, who presided at the trial of Charlfes I, was taken from his grave, conveyed upon sledges to Tyburn, and there hung at three several angles of the gallows until sunset. They were beheaded, the trunks thrown into a deep pit under the gallows, ami thtir heads set upon poles on the top of West minister Abbey. THE COWAKD'S "ARMS, "—His leg*^