)hole tfo. 012. The Tarborough Ircss, EV GKOKGE llOWAIW, Ts publish weekly at Tivo Dollars and Fifty - W yet year, it" paid in advance or, Taree V Virs at tin' expiration of the subscription year. rt'aii period loss than a year, Twenty-Jive A,s iut month. Subscribers are at liberty to vco'itinue at any time, on giving notice thereof VniV'i'1 r arrrars t',ose residing at a distance iii variably pay in advance, or give aicspon M, reference in this vicinity. ' ,lvertiscinents not exceciliair a square will be i-Ttel at 0:ie Dollar the first insertion, and 25 (or every continuance. Longer advertise . it's in li'11' proportion. Court Orders and Ju A advertisements '23 percent, higher. Ad" ..r'ist'm 'Hts must be marked the number of in- - r "hns required, or they will be continued until 'tii-Twise orJereJ and charged accordingly. J j l,,u r ;;d dressed to the I'M i tor must be post p3iJ or they may not be attended to. A GEM Of oM English Poetry. Shull I, wasting in despair, Die, because another's fair? Or n ike pale my chock with care, Taue another's rosy are Fcshe fVirrr than the day. Or the nvery mead? in May, be U'it so to mr What care I how fair she be Should my h art he giiev'd or piu'd 'Cause I see a woman kind, On well disposed nature, J.,ir.ed with a lovely feature ! o fh1 merker, kinder than Turi'e dove rr pelican, If she be not so to me, hat care 1 how kind she be ? Shall n woman's virtue move Me to perish f r her love; Or her well deservings known, Make ir.e quite forget my own ? Be she with that goodness blest, W'nieh may gain her name of best; If she he not so to me, hat care I how good she be 1 Cause her fortune seems too high, Shall I play the fool and die! Th"se that bear a noble niie.d. Where they want of riches find, Think what with them they would do. That without them dare to woo 1 And. unless that mind I see, What care I though great she be? Great or good, or kind or f lir, I will ne'er the more despair; If she loves me, this believe, I will die ere she shall gr.:eve ; If she slight mc when I woo, I can scorn and let her go; For if she be not for me, What care I for whom she be 1 From the Globe. MR. CLAY AND HIS FIFTY .MIL- LION HID. The pioject of Mr. Clay for a fifty mil lion h ink in New York, with Albei t Gal latin for president of ii, seems to he gene rally understood io the sarn v i v as a farewell to Mr Middle's bank nod the Stale of Pennsylvania, and an overture lo New York anil Mr. Gallatin. It sterns lo be looked upon as a bid to New York for her f.uty-two Presidential votes; and, in that point of view, is enough to shock and li'Miiliate the moral sens? of the communi ty It was bad enough to bid for Penu svlv,i:iia with an offer of a thirty-five mil lion h mk; but to quit that when hij found Mr. Middle notable to succeed for him in Pennsylvania, and push in to Mr. Van Bu-j ren s own State, and there offer a bank ol ft'ty millions, was carrying the business of undermining a competitor, and opening an auction for the Presidency, to nbom as great a height as lite most degenerate days of old and delmiched governments had ever seen. It is really shocking and af flu ting to see such things in our young Republic. Mr. STRANGE, of North Cirolina, made some patriotic remarks on litis sub ject some days ago. Without naming, or particularly describing, Mr. Clay, he drew pictures which no one could fail lo apply, and gave it as his opinion that the Consti tution ought to be amended, so as to pre vent members of Congress from being eli gible to the Presidency for a certain num ber of years after their membership ceased. Such is the faie of Mr. Clay. When Speaker of the House of Representatives he work so openly to put up himself and pull down his competitors, that the coun try begin to think that no Speaker of the House of Representatives ought to be eli gible lo the Presidency. When he be came Secretary under Mr. Adams, and had got into the 7in of safe precedents " he played his hand so boldly for the same purpose, that all agreed no Secretary ol State ought ever lo be allowed to be a can didate for the Presidency. Now that he has got lo be a Senator, it is still the same on his pirt. and ihe same judgment on the part of the public. Tarbovough, Surelv tin mm ! r ' ouern times and in a free country, has ever defied public opin ion and insulted public decency as Mr. Clay has done. For fourteen years he availed himself of his public station to bid lor I residential votes, merely varying the bids as ti.nesand circumstances change, bora long time it was high tariff and in ternal improvement; then it was distribu tion of U,e public land money; then it was buhl e s bank; and now it is H,e ni,,e hun dred local banks, and a filly million Na ti mul Hank in New York. All ihese suc cessive biddings liave had their turns, and, tor the lime being, each scheme was pufftd ofi m the same identical phrases, and pre sented as the sole means of saving the country from instant and total destruction Auxiliary to ihis bidding for votes, was a system of attack carried on against other candidates for the Presidency." To attack their characters, principles, and conduct, has been his daily and notorious avocation. Time was uiili all Presidential candidates, when thfy would scorn to electioneer lor themselves in ihe most innoceui measure, much less to bid for it wiih public inonev, or to undermine and calumniate a rival, Time is when some candidates will do nth wise. The Washiugtous, ihe J ff.-rsons, the Madis.nis, the J acksons, & . were and Mr. Van H iren isan instant ei pure hand ed candidates. None of ihese hai adeis were ever seen bidding for votes out ol the public Treasury, or by the oiler of tanlV , roads, canals, division of money, m banks., to Pennsylvania, or to New Yoik, or to some other State. None ol'ti.cse chanc ers were ever seen in ihe Senate, or the II oise of Repi tsentaiivts, at b arbecues, oi public dinners, attat king, impeaching, villi lyiug, degrading, ridiculing, and calumnia ting his competitors. They did none ol these things. It was left lor Mr. ( lay to set urh an example, and to follow it for lourtecn years. Three limes he has been signally rebuked, we may say four times; for, alier his venomous attacks upon Gene ral Jackson, he was too much lowered in the public estimation even to be allowed lo be a candidate. How it will be now we cannot say. Certain it is his own parly is loath lo lake him for a candidate; and if they do, the voice of ihe people will give the rebuke which his conduct deserves. This country is too y onug to have the Pre sidency put at auction. The nine hun died local banks are powerful, but the may not take the bid. Fifiy millions to New Yoik is m igninVent a truly imperial bid but she may despise it. The (Jhcrohtes. The Message of the President in relation to this tnbe of In dians has produced no little excitement in Congress. Whatever may be thought ol ihe expediency of all uding time for ihe execution of the Treaty, it is certain thai Georgia will proceed to lake possession ol the Territory ceded. The Slate million ties, no doubt, authorized entries on es terday the day specified by ihe exiting Treaties; and il seems to us useless lo dis cuss the in liter now. Ii can but lead to violent excit-ments of Heeling, if not to something worse. Already the tomahau k is lifted in Georgia blood has been shed; and popular excesses may be anticipated. which this inflammatory discosmn eniiy calculated lo increase. We see no good that possibly can come of it. A to threats employ ed against the Slate by speakers in C -ingress, they aiv out of lime, and can have no possible iullueuce. Federalism has tried menaces belore, but aUays without effect Mr. Wise, we were sorry lo hear, declared he would not give a Cij. for the Government if it had not ihe rinut lo compel the States to bow to its de- cision. "The majority has the right," he is reported to have sanl "to castigate ihe minority into submission by the whole power of the Judiciary, the army and Hie Navy of Ihe Uoited Stales!" In sooth, this is going a bow shot beyond Messrs. Adams, sen , Webster, Otis, and Clay. This is worse than Federalism it is cen tral despotism. But the mantle of Whig covers the offence, or sanctifies itGeor gia, however, will go on, we suppose; and talk of the extravagances of Nationalism hereafter. Washington Chronicle. Loans. The United States Bank has taken the Michigan state loan of $5,000, 000, to be expended in purposes of Inter nal Improvements. Indiana has effected a sale of 1,000, 000 of her Internal Improvement stock in New York. The Louisville Journal remarks that the sale of I, '225,000 of Kentucky bonds re cently effected, will furnish an abundance of Eastern exchange for Kentucky, and greatly assist the Kentucky banks in the resumption of specie payments. Resumption ly the Banks of Lower Ca (Edgecombe VomxlijW.) Saturday, June 16, nada.U is stated in th Tn.rMi r-,,., . Ol Oil U U U rier of Thursday last, that the chartered banks of that city resumed payment on the previous day, and the belief is express ed that those of Quebec had done likewise. The banks of Upper Canada, will, it is to be hoped, follow the good example. dMichigan money is thus classed First quality, lied l)ogt second quality, Wild Cat; third quality, Catamount. 6l the best quality.it is said,il takes five pecks to make a bushel. South Carolina. An extra session of the Legislature of South Carolina rooven- ed at Columbia on Monday, S28lh ult. in ooiormny with the Governor's Proclama tion, in order lo ;.ffrd relief lo the suffer ers from the lale disastrous Fire in the City ol Charleston. An act is passed, au thorizing the Governor lo issue b uids for two millions of dollars one million paya hie at ihe end of twentv years, and ih other million at the end of thirty years, al rate oi interest not exceeding six oer cent, and which is lo become a pari of the capital of ihe hank ol ihe Slate, to be loaned lo individuals, on the appraised va lue of iheir I is, in uu eq ial instalments, viih security for ihe payment of ihe inter lerest, semi annually, and the principal in 12 years. The new buildings to be erect ed of bi n k or stone. The loan on the State bonds is lo be procured at ihe lowesi rate of interest io litis coaulry or in Kurope. Having finished its business, the Legislature adjourned, afier a session of live days only; having also passed the fol lowing resolutions : I. lies Iced, That in the opinion of the Legislature, the resolutions adopted at the last session, recommending the senaration of Ihe Government from ihe Banks, and the eventual collection and disbursement of ihe public money of the United Stales, in ihe constitutional currency, have receiv ed the approbation of the people of this State. 2. Resolved, That in ihe opinion of this Legislatuie, ihe policy indicated by those resolutions, is essential to the best interests ol the country; and that any public ser vant who refuses to piumotethe same, pur sues a course injurious lo the welfare ami prosperity of the Stale. 3. rttsulvuf, That the presiding cdli cers ii' the LegisJature be requested lo li ausmit copies of these resolutions lo the Senators and Representatives of this Stale in the Congress of the United Stales." 7i ft slavery Sociey. Al ihe lasl an nual meeting of ihe Ami slavery Society, recently held in New York, the Report sta ted thai ' between three and four hundred new societies have been formed within the past ear, and the whole number now re corded amounts to about fifteen hundred." (XT'riie fanatics are again al work in terfering with every man's rights and abridging every man's liberty. In addi tion to an order to shut up all shops on Sunday, including those even exempt by the revised statutes, we find a recommen dation in that "sober and religious" pa per, the Journal of Commerce, to stop the sale of ihe Sunday morning News. The next order w ill he to prohibit our reading a newspaper at all on Sunday, and ihe next step may be for a tall lanterned faced constable stalking into your parlour on Sunday morning, taking you by ihe collar and carrying you oil to church. We are always in favour of a respectful ob servance of Sunday, or any day that a freeman sanctifies as his Sabbath, but infi delity and profanity, and bad principles are promoted and encouraged by a spirit e.f fa naticism, which in attempting to compass every thing destroys every thing. True and successful religion is mild and persua sive, not fierce and despotic. VVe are filled from lop to toe wiih what is called religion; wiih Priestcraft; conventicles; alt kinds of societies, prayer meetings and as sociations, and yet who that can look back will not say ihat fifty years ago under a milder and less imposing form, there was more pure, simple, unostentatious religion, than there is at present in this city. N. Y. Star. Claimants on Negroes. Love, a half brped, has claimed 07 negroes among ihe Indians at New Orleans emigrating to ihe West, declaring ihat they are the properly of an old negress ihat belonged to him. They were found, however, to be the pro perty of an Indian, and had descended to him from his father; The negroes were about being given up on the 2 1st inst. in conformity io" the decision of the Court, when the Indians at the Barracks, 1200 in number, made resistance, and had to be quelled by military force. The whole 1838. body of Indians, were in consequence lo be detained four days. ib. fX?By advices from Barbadoes it ap pears the Colonial assembly, with the Go vernor and Council, have determined upon giving complete emancipation to the slaves ol that island f eighty thousand) on Au gust 1 si ensuing. 0?The list Legislature of Virginia having passed an act abolishing the pun ishment of branding in the hand, which had (though stldom enforced) been too long permitted lo disgrace ihe penal code of the Stale ihe Court of Norfolk Bo rough, previous to its adjournment last week, ordered lo be removed in their pres ence, from the pillar in ihe Hall to which ihey had been attached ever since the house was built, those odious relics of ihe bai ba rous ages, the shackles and staples b which the hand of the criminal was fixed and fastened to receive the impression ol the brand Norfolk Her. M? We infer (says the National Gazelle) thai Ihe controversy which has so long agi tated the Presbyterian Church is to be continued in ihe civil tribunals of the coun try. The New School, so called, elected six irustrees of the Theological Seminarv and removed six of the Board. Tin Hoard, however, refused to admit the new members to a seat, and the old ones contin ue to act. A contemporary says "Here upon issues the w rit of quo w in unto, h which the wind? legal question will be de cided, concerning ihe rights of ihe respec live parlies to the name, properly, kc. of the General Assembly. CTThe great Arctic problem has at last been solved. It is now certain that tl exists a water communication between the Atlantic and Pacific ocedus around the Northern portion of the American Conti nent. To Lugland, fhrough the enter prise of ihe Hudson's Bay Company, be longs the honor of the affair. (X?A Baltimore paper says that a hu man skeleton has been brought to that citv from Ihe Rocky mountains, near the head waters of the Missouri, in height eight feet nine inches! and weighing one hundred and ninety pounds! Lock (d Jaw. A remedy has been dis covered for this dreadful affection. Il is nothing but the application of strong ley made from wood ashes. The part injured should be bathed in the ley frt-quentlv, and if it be in a part of the body that cannot be conveniently immersed, apply flannels wetted wiih ihe ley. Ii affords speedy re lief and gradual cure. This is a vervYim pie remedy, hut it is worth remembering and trying. the simplest are. often the most fftVient agents. Many cures are said to have been w rought by this. Green field (Mass ) Gazette. Perpetual Motion once more Mr. Asa Whitman and Horace Woods, of Walpole, Massachusetts, have been at work for se veral months on a machine of their own invention, and have succeeded in obtain ing a self moving machine, capable of ex erting unlimited power, and may be easi ly nd cheaply applied to all machinery w hich now use water and steam. The man with the nose. We have seen the mineral nose described by Dr Smith in the Medical Journal and are free to confess thai the excellence of this singular species of nasal protuberance, the entire absence of which, causes one to look rather queer, has nol been overrated. We argee with the Editor of the Naniuckel Inquirer, that Dr. Harwood is entitled to an honor ary degree from Brazen Nose College I The nose is fastened firmly lo a pair of Spectacles, and may be removed at pleas ure. Such a nose is convenient on more accounts than one if an ill mannered fel low threatens to pull it, all you have to do is to put it quietly into your pocket, and defy him to do his worst. The metallic nose should be made trumpet form, so that it might be blowed to advantage. Boston Jour. Apprehended Riot at Boston. A large number of persons collected in Washiug lon, Milk and Summer sis. at Boston, on Thursday night, in consequence of ihe an nouncement thai a Free Church in Marlbo rough st. for all colors, was to be dedica ted thai night. Rev. Charles .Filch, pas tor. The police dispersed the crowd be fore any riotous proceedings took place. Many colored persons were in ihe Church, and it was rumored whiles and negroes had been seen arm and arm. The light infantry battallion were under orders to vol xirtfo. . act, and had plenty of ball cati idges pre pared. N. Y. Star. Another defeat of the Abolition party. For some lime past these fanatics have been busily at work upon Connecticut.- The state prison report however was some thing of a damper, showing what an alarm ing disparity of free negroes occupied the tenement when considered in connection with the very meagre population they have and the very great means of ameliorating their condition extended to them by the laws. Blind, however, as usual to such facts, the zealots were determined to make a bold push, and accordingly medilaled the high handed attempt to alter al ence the elective franchise by allowing the ne gro io vote. This was backed by numer ous petitions, chiefly signed by colored people. On Tuesday ihe subject came up before Legislature, and received its quietus hy a vote, to the honor of the Whig House of Representatives, of 105 to 33. The same fate awaits il in the Senate, should it be brought up there. to. Awful Ocath. Calvin R. Stone, Esq. of the firm of Stone, Field &. Marks, St. Louis, Missouri, is ascertained to have ieen the unfortunate individual who was thrown from ihe extreme end of the boiler ieck of the Moselle several hundred feet into the air, and ihence driven through he roof of a dwelling house in Cincinnati. He was much respected, and has left a wife and five or six children. ib. Virginia Gold Aiinvs. We understand dial arrangements are now in progress lo nosecute with lenewed zeal and vigor, the enterp:izeof opening and working the Uold :Mines in various pans of Virginia. I lie gold region is lar more extensive in the South than is gmerally supposed. It commences in Virginia, and extends South West through North Carolina along the northern part of South Carolinainto Geor gia, and ihence northwestardly into Ala bama and ends in Tennessee. In 1S31, the whole "number of men employed at the Gold Mines in the Southern Stales was estimated at $20,000. The weekly product of the mines was then about $100,000 in value, or $5 000,000 annually. But a small part of ihe gold is sent to the U. S, mini; by far the larger pari is sent to Eu rope, particularly to Paris. The Gold M ines of Virginia have only attracted at tention since 1827, and the first Gold no ticed as received at ihe U. S. mint fr"m Virginia was in 1S29, amounting to $2, 500. The quantity received in 1833 had inc reased lo $104,000. Since ihe year 1832, numerous Mining Companies have be n incorporated by ihe Legislature of Virginia, and several of them have gone into successful operation. ib. Botanic Medicine. The Legislature of Maine has repealed the law restricting Bo tanic practice, and the Botanic practition ers are placed upon equal fouling with the regulai faculty. This is the ninth Slate which in a few years have repealed so much of their medical laws as deprived the Hotanic physicians the privilege of colleo tion for services rendered. A ew' Haven Herald. Subterranean Travelling. The line of railway between Lvons and St. Etienne, the largest manufacturing town and the richest coal disirict in France, is only 34 miles in length; yet, such is ihe tineven ness of the country, and so greal has been ihe anxiety of ihe Engineers to preserve as complete a level as possible, that there are actually no less than twenty tunnels be tween ihe two termini. One of them is a mile in length, while another, w hich is half a mile long, is carried under the bed of a rirer, which crosses the line. A problem solved. "A western editor says he has tried il both "ays, and has conffc to the deliberate conclusion that the single life is the most easy, but the mar ried one is ihe most happy. So Adam thought. Absence of Mind. We lately read of a man (says the New York American,) who, from absence of mind, put his candlestic k to bed, and blew himself out; but, ihe fol lowing, from a respectable source, is more astonishing : Mr. Editor One of the most remarka ble cases of absence of mind occurred in our neighborhood last night, that I ever heard of. Mr F. and his wife, about re tiring for the night, put the shovel and tongs into bed, and, covering them up warmly, stood themselvesagaihst ihe jambs of ihe fire place, and did'nt perceive the difference, till the tongs called the shovel 'mv dear." Yours truly. SamU W .