! iris " , 1 l ' : ' ' ' . ' ' JFioZe No. 000. Tarhorouzh, (Edzecombe County, X, C.) Saturday, June 17, 1837- Vol. A'UIJVo 24. f 77? "Tarborough Press," ' BY GKORGK HOWAIID, Is published weekly at Two Dollars and f y;nv Cents per year, if pai.l in advance ' o. Time Dollars at Hie expiration of the subscription year. For any period lei than a year. Twtnlv jive Ccn' per month. cui,iC,i"ler8 aie at' liberty to discontinue fat anv time, on giving notice thereof and pavin? arrears those residing at a dis tance in tist invariably pay in advance, or ! Pive a responsible reference in this vicinity, f Advertisement" not ex reeding 16 lines in length (or a square) will be inserted at j fit) cents the lirst insertion and 25 cts. each 'continuance. Longer ones t that rate for every square. Advertisements must jg be marked the number of insertion? requi- red. or they will be continued until other- wise ordered, and charged accordingly. I Letter addressed to the Kditor must be post paid, or they may not be attended to. Miscellaneous ' From the N. Y. Evening Star. j STANZAS. 1 1 love to roam on a summer's night I Along sonic silent stream, iWhen the Lady-Moon, with radiance j bright. I Lends her silvery beam; I When nature seems hush'd and gone to rest, And all around is still t When the tiny songsters seek, their I nest, I All save the Whip-poor-will. I I love to roam on a summer's night, I And catch the passing breeze, ; As it skims the glassy surface bright I And tans the nodding trees. Oh! I love to watch the water's play I And see reflected there, 1 The starry heavens, and the moon's I soft ray, The Queen of night so fair. I love to hear soft music stealing j So sweetly on the ear, 1 And list to echo, now repeating Each note so true, and clear. I Then, I love to think on days of yore, j When friends were kind, and true; j Away, fond mem'ry, no more, no more, To them, to thee, adieu! CONSTANT! A. HO! HO! Fair women win the hearts of men, Men the hearts of women too; It has been so the Lord knows when, What can thw poor things do? Their blueeyeswill be blue eyesstlll, Will have fire, and lips will warm;: J Linswill be lips, say what they will, ! And to kiss them, where's the harm. To church to marry, fair one go, Bells in belfries toll dinir, dong, If your mother did not so, Then your mother, child, was wrong. To St civ a Ru'mi of Beef. Wash it well and season it hot, Bind it, cram it in a pot; Frv three onions, put them to it, j Carrots, turnips, cloves and suet; With broth or gravy cover it up, i Put in your spoon and take a sup. holt and gentle let it simmer, Then of port throw in a brimmer. With judgment let the ketchup flow, Of vinegar a glass bestow. Simmer again for half an hour, Serve at two, and then devour. HOMCEOPATHY. The question is very often ask ed, what is homcepathy? Homoeo pathy is a modern system ol med ical practice, sometimes called ! Hanuenism which, if we mistake j not, like almost all other humbugs f in the scientific world, originated in Germany. It is built upon the principle maintained by its disci ples, that like mast be applied to like, in order to effect a cure. If! a person is afflicted with high inflammatory fever, the remedy must consist in administering sti mulants, which, according to the common principles of practice, would serve only to aggravate the fever, like throwing powder into fire, in order to quench it. So, on the other hand, if an individu al is afflicted with chronic debili ty, if he has less heat about his system than health requires, stim ulants, which according to the common system of practice, would benefit the patient, must, accord ing to the homceopaethic system of practice, be totally avoided. For such cases the homoeopatbist would administer depletiug reme- dies, as they are styled by 'physi cians. They would bleed a pa tient who was feeble and seernpd deficient in blood; they would give cooling draughts to one who was suffering willi ague chills, and stimulating draughts to one afflic ted with fever. On the same principle, if an in dividual was much depressed with melancholy, they would remove him from all contact with cheer ful scenes; picture to his mind the miseries of his situation; read to j him accounts of horrors and disas ters, and to keep him on low diet: The usual method in proceeding with such a patient is just the op posite. The Homct'opalhists pre tend that by their method of prac tice they are assisting nature; and that when nature has kindled a fire (a fever) in the body, that the skilful physician must add fuel to the flame, in order to assist nature in her operations. When, on the contrary, there is a general cold ness, and torpor, and debility in the bodily frame, the skilful phy sician must keep the patient upon a low diet and prevent him from using stimulants, in order that na ture may have rest which she is desirous to take. Hence, accord ing to this principle, when one la bors with a feverish stomach, and craves draughts of cold water and acidulant drinks, he ought to take no liquid except ardent spirit or pepper sauce. Such is, we be lieve, a correct exposition of the general principles of Homoeopa thy. To explain it in a lew words, it may be defined that sys tem of medical practice by which every disease requires for its rem edy that kind of medicine which will aggravate its peculiar symp toms. Boston Post. Wonderful Curiosity. One of the greatest living curiosities in human shape now in existence, is probably that in the person of a child recently arrived in this city from the West Indies. He is aged 9 years, and has a head of such enormous magnitude that the sight r . - . L . I .T. n creates atiumumicm um Its shape is not distorted, but seems to have been formed for a f man of about 10 or 11 feet stat ure; in tact, it is of colossal di mensions, like that of some an cient statues. It measures 31 in ches in circumference, and the arch over the apex measuring from ear to ear, is 23 inches. Its weight is prodigious, being almost 50 pounds! The child was born so, and the head has always borne iI.p snrrie nronortion to the rest of t.'.c and limbs which arp well II rhiM of that age. He never moves from his position on his back, but tosses his head constantly, rolling; his eves as if in agony with thecuities, a cubic line contains, in Atlantean clobe, which a divine providence for some inscrutable causes, has placed upon his infant shoulders. His features are natu- iral and well shaped, but express- ive, as might be supposed, of an age and maturity corresponding j to the immense mass of brain. j 1 heretore they have the physiog nomy of a full grown man with the diminutive size of those of a child. At the apex the sutures have not yet united, leaving an open interval as large as the hand, much larger than a new born in fant. The child presents a re markable phenomenon in the cha racter of the functions as affected by this monstrous formation, and the subject may throw much light on physiology and pathology. He never drinks any liquid what ever. All his food however, which is two pounds of rice per diem, seems to change into water. This probably keeps him alive, as the tendency to dropsical effusion in the brain, is thus evaded. Where the ventricles are so large the predisposition to effusion there must be greater, and for the same reason the greater quantity depo sited would cause death mon speedily. This and the appear ance of the eye and unclosed slah of the head, has raused the cast to be thought one of dropsy of the brain. However the extraor dinary development of the brain, (much less however than this, which is the most extraordinary we know of on record) has been seen in several remarkable cases in Europe which were also idiotic like this, and Gall endeavors to explain it, by saying that the tex ture is more spongy, and less solid or firm than in health; that the same quantity of matter exists, but the convolutions are more unrav elled. Here, however, there is unquestionably a vast augmenta tion in the quantity of cerebral substance over the ordinary allot ment, and there is without doubt much water in the veuiicles and cavities of the organ. He indi- cates no other sense than that ofj pain, when touched, or hunger5 when the hour for eating arrives.; His father was a stout Spaniard of Porto Rico. The mother a dark quadroon of Martinique. The child's name is Barlolo, and he will be exhibited, we learn, for a few days, previous to his depar ture lor Paris and London. He bore the sea voyage from .Marti nique admirably. A. Y. Star. fVonders of Galvanism. Some pretend to doubt the efficiency of galvanism or electricity to pro duce power for mechanical pur poses. To such knowing ones we commend the following remarks from high authority, Professor Farady of Loudon, (as quoted by Professor Hare,) in a recent pub lication: "A grain of water or of zinc contains as much of the electric fluid as would supply 800,000 charges of a battery containing a coated surface of 1500 square in ches. Four grains of zinc, with one of water ma3' yield as much electricity as is involved during a thunder storm." Who, after reading the above and examining Davenport's Elec tro Magnetic machine, will not say that the days of steam engines are numbered? N. Y. Herald. fVonders of the Animalcular IVorld. In the last published part of the new edition of the Ency clopaedia Britannica, under the article "Microscope," by Sir Da vid Brewster, we have the astoun ding information that "the size of a single individual of the animal icuhe lately discovered in silicious : rocks is l-288th of a line, or 1 3-456th of au inch. In the polishing slate from Bilin, in which there appear to be no va- i round numbers, twenty three mil lions of these animals, and a cubic inch contains 41,000 millions of them! The weight of a cubic inch of the polishing slate is 270 grains. There are, th'erefoe, 187 millions of these animals in a sin gle grain, or the silicious coat of one of these weighs the 187 mil lionth part of a grain." Norfolk Her. Light Houses and Cutters for North Carolina. Capt. Skinner, of the United States Navy, who is examining by order of govern ment suitable points for light hou ses, is now surveying in Pamlico Sound, North Carolina, where he has recommended one to be erect ed on Boddie Island. He also recommends a revenue cutter to be placed at Pamlico Sound, and another at Cape Fear. N. Y. Star. More hidden treasures found. We understand that Mr. Burras Munday, while engaged in remo ving a heap of stone on the land of John Douglass, Esq. in the northern part of this county a few ys since, discovered the remains I a wooden box, containing four iiundrtd and forty-nine doubloons of gold cin! amounting to near $7,500. The fortunate finder is Mr Douglass's overseer, an in dustrious, worthy man. Charlottesville (Fa.) Adv. A Caution. A schoolmaster in New York has been fined $100 for making a blunder buss, as some of the papers call it for kissing one of his female pupils. Santa Anna. We have seen a letter from Vera Cruz to a gentle man in this city, stating that on the 7lh of May a party of cavalry, amounting to 100, made a descent on Mango de Clavo, and took the illustrious hero of San Jacinto prisoner. The orders came from Bustamente. He is to be tried immediately on his arrival at Mexico, for his mismanagement in the Texan war. This is but the first step towards his death. When on the scaffold, the cries f his murdered victims will re sound in his ears, and he will beg the hangman to rid him of the torture. Poor Santa Anna! New Orleans Am. Interesting. We learn with great pleasure, by the schooner Mechanic, fro::) Matamnras, that all the American vessels, with their passengers and crews, which had been captured and detained at that plate, have been liberated by order of General Bustamente, and that the commander of the Mexican fleet w as arrested and im prisoned at Vera Cruz, for having captured those vessels. This is a striking proof of the magnani mity of Bustamenle's character, and an omen of returning amity betweeu the two nations. General Santa Anna was still at his plantation near Vera Cruz; and consequently the report of his having been taken to the city of Mexico is untrue. Ale to Orleans Bee. (tTIt lias been proposed to the abolitionists to raise the sums de manded by masters for runaway slaves, as a test of their devotion to the cause. The proposition was made in vain in many places. The disposition to shell out was sometimes manifested, by mode rate men, as in the case of Mr. Herman, who went to New York in quest of his slave found and agreed to sell him for $260. The sum was raised by contribu tions at several churches; the master pocketed his money and went his way. The Star pro nounces it all wrong as the negro was C3 years old, and must soon be upon the alms-house. That paper fears a business may soon be made of it. The New Yorkers need be under no apprehension on this score. The people of the South have loo much regard for faithful servants, either old or young, to part wiih them especial ly for the doubtful chances of re muneration at the North. The disposition of Jonathan to engage into the business of course we can say nothing about. Portsmouth Times. A true Fish story. We are credibly informed by an eye wit ness, that a large Catfish, weigh ing ninety-eight pounds, was caught in the Ohio river, a few weeks since, about a hundred miles below Louisville,( which on being opened, was found to con lain a negro child of considerable size. Cincinnati Whig. Excellent Advice. --Never call m business men, in business hours, except on business; and when you have done your busi ness, go about your business. Wilmington Adv. From the Knickerbocker for April. TYPOGRAPHICAL BUTCHERY." Unfortunately, typical mutations in published manuscripts have come down to the present day. Not many moons since, I was called upon by a small and hum ble looking person in green spec tacles, behind which there rolled two enormous gray eyes. He said he was a man of many occu pations, and sometimes dabbled in literature. You make pieces some times for the Knickerbocker, doo't you? apt kind of pieces that come out of your head? ' 1 bor row that there periodical, some times, of a friend, and 1 seen a piece there about a man who was ihe 'Victim of a proofreader.' 1 am one of that class. Two years ago I was in love. I was jilted. Hang details; the upshot is the main thing. Well, I had tried the young lady, and found her want ing; and 1 thought I would quote a line of scripture unto her, as a motto for some bitter and re proachful verses. So holding a manuscript in one hand high up, and placing the other arm akim bo, he read as follows: TO ONE FOUND WANTING. Mene, mene, tekel ujiharsin!" Scripture. Thou art no more, what once I knew Thy heart 5c guileless tongue to be; Thou att no longer pure and true, Nor fond to one who knelt to thee; Who knelt, &detm'd thee all his own; Nor knew a dearer wish beside; Who made his trembling -passion known, And look'd to own thee for a bride. What is the vow that once I heard From those balm-breathing lips of thine? Broken, ah! broken, word by word, E'en while I worshipped at thy shrine! Broken by thee, to whom I bow'd, As bends the wind-flower to the breeze, As bent the Chaldean, thro' the cloud, To Orion and the Pleiades. But thou art lost! and I no more Must drink .hy undeceiving glance; Our thousand fondling spell are o'er, Our raptured moments in the dance. Vanish'd, like dew drops from the spray, Are moments which in beauty flew, I cast life's brightest pearl away, . And, false one! breathe my last adieu! Here he slopped his grey eyes rolling in a wild frenzy and drew a newspaper from his bree ches pocket. "Sir," said he stri king an attitude, "I sent them ver ses for to be printed into the 'Lite rary Steamboat and General Wes tern Alligator.' It is a paper, sir, with immense circulation. A col umn in it to be read by the boat men and raftsmen of the west is immortality. I say nothing. Just see how my infusion was butcher ed. . I can't read it." I took up the paper, a little yel low six by eight folio, and read it. TO ONE FOUND WASHING. "Mere, mere, treacle O'Sartin." Sculpture. Thou hast no means, at once to slew Thy beasts, and girdless tongue to tree; Thou hast no l'argent pure and true, Nor feed for one who knelt to thee; Who knelt and dreamed thy all his own, Nor knew a drearer wish betidle; Who made his tumbling parsnips know, And look'd to arm thee for a bridle. What is the row, what once I heard From those brow-beating limps of thine? Brokers! oh, brokers, one by one, E'en while I worshipped at thy shine! Broker by three! to whom I lowed, As lends the wind-flaw to the tries; As burst the Chaldron thro' the clod, To Onions, and the fleas as dies! But thou art lost, and I no more Must dirk thy undeceaving glance; One thous& squills are o'er, Our l pturecl moments is the dance! Varnished like dew drops from the sprag, Are moments which in buaines flew ! I cut life's brightest peal a-wag, And, false one, break my bust adieu! On breaking into a loud laugh at the utier stupidity of this typi cal metamorphosis, 1 found that the stranger grew red in the face He snatched the paper from my hand, and disappeared, making his bow as he retired. , The Dorsey Stakes. Trie great purse of the Dorsey Stake ?, value $S,400, for three year old colts and fillies, (32 subscribers, $300 entry, $100 forfeit, 1 mile beats, was won on the Central Course, Md. 16th ult. by Col. William Wynn's brown colt P'uton by im ported Luzborough out of Label la. Only 1 1 of the 62 started, 51 paying forfeit. Pet. Con. Connubial Love. Wm. F. Mo Kee, indicted for the murder of Beaufort Scott in Arkansas, has been convicted and sentenced to be hung. Catharine, the wife of Alexander McKee, also supposed to be the murderer of Beaufort, is sister of Beaufort, and through her testimony, naturally supposed by some to have been colored by connubial bias, did her husband escape, as she placed the murder on the other brother. A. Y. Star. Heresies. The general assem bly of the Presbyterians, now com menced at Philadelphia, have re solved to cite before them at the next session, all such inferior judi catories as "by common fame are charged with the toleration of gross errors in doctrine and dis orders in practice.' CyNorth America possesses Ihe longest rivers, largest lakes, greatest cataracts, wildest prai ries, profoundest caves, strongest tobacco, biggest canals and rail roads, and wisest statesmen, pret tied girls, and rankest rattle snakes, in the universal yearth, as Lord Duberly calls it. Wrho would be fool enough to be born in any other quarter of the world if he could help it? Small Change. A market man at Lowell, Massachusetts, being like every body else, bothered for change, has hit upon a new expe dient. With his other marketa bles, he carries a basket, from which he makes change in hens' eggs. Now, unless the Legisla ture, like some other wise bodies, -i i i . i. 4 r. snuuiu truui i n prii.m iiji issues of so small a denomination, we don't see why the Lowell man won't get along very well. Gazette. This "egg currency" is cer tainly "better," and of course more convenient, than that of some countries we wot of Texas, for instance. A gentleman, in conversation with a citizen of that infant republic some time since, asked him how they supplied themselves with a currency. "Oh," he replied, "we have mo ney enough." "Ah," replied the inquisitor, "what kind of curren cy have you? Specie, of course, living so near the mines of Mexi co?" "Not at all," said the oth er. "We pay in cows for large sums, and throw in the calves for change." A. Y. Com. Adv. fjyA simple method for pre serving life has been suggested by the recent loss of lives, from the conflagration of the steamboat Ben Sherrod. It is that of tying your hat up in your handkerchief, with the tie under the brim. By holding that part downwards, the air contained in the hat will float a person for upwards of six hours. The ruling passion in America. A vouni? rrentleman at Chicaco. whn had won the heart of a fair lady, wished her to defer the mar riage till an important law suit of her father was decided. The la dy insisting on prompt action, the disinterested lover said 'I can have the refusal of yon for six months, can't lr' v. z