Ji hole ao. uau. The Tarborough Press, BV fJEORilE HOWA11D, s t, published weekly at Two Dollars and Fifty n..'-T. at the expiration oi ine suDsenpuon year. ran P,rid leSS t!jan a year Tu'ent y-fw !-.,' ner month. Subscribers are at liberty to J ,wnue at any time, on giving notice thereof v ,1 pavmj arrears im'sc n-Muing ai a instance yy ' invanably pay in advafice, or give a respon !" V nference" i this vicinity. v.ivcrtisements not exceeding a square will he ,iteil at One Dollar the first insertion, anil 25 iU U T every coimiuuiui t . uuiin uuveruse- i (n' j:1 like proportion. Court Orders and Ju : siil advertisements 25 per cent, higher. A1 1 Vi-merits must be marked the number of in 5 1 required, or they will he'eontinued until rwiw ordered and chargeil accordingly. 'letters addressed to the l'ditor must be post paid or they may not be attended to. MY BROTHER. I iv is brn away dnvn at Rangor, Where tradiu' is well untie rstood, Wh' re Puukins are raised along shore. And nutiaegsarc grown in the wood. ;,lv hv ther was fixed at 'astinc, "In the pork manufacturing line, F r !ie had a patent machine To make bacon hams out of pine Tie tirn-il concern did it slick, si.l -iw ni'd make other notions with ease, y..i. pat in a thuwleriiig stick, Cut tumbled a white oaken cheesei N tan article there was abused, F( r he was so saving, 'twas said The saw-dust was all of it used Toa.ake the dyspepsery breadi HtM a mil!, to, that worked as expert Dv steam 'twas a curious caper! V- u put in an old cotton shirt, And it came out a handful of paper, Aa a when speculation was rife. My brother, who that understands, M .inui'artured its true, on my life Manufactured and sold eastern lands. Bt, then, sir, the climax to cap, The buyers of all these made a stir, Th uirh acres they bought on the map, They couldn't find out where they were. They talked about going to law7 Then what could my poor brother do? Byway of confounding their jaw, He failed, and he's rich as a Jew. Tie great first cause. John Mason Goode, cu t. rcfthfi Studies ef Nature, and the translation rf the Hook of Job, has in four stanzas stated the 'ru:nent in ftvor of an intelligent first cause, the vise contriver of all the arrangements of this mat-rid world, as strikingly as it could be stated in a whole voluinci THH DAISY, N'-'t .worlds on worlds, in phalanx deep, N ed w e tell a (iod is here : IVdtisy, fresh from winter's sleep, Tells of his hand in lines as clean V hut power but his who arched the skies, And poured the day-spring's purple Hood, Wdnuu alike m all it tries, t'uuid rear the daisy's curious bud; Mould its green cup, the wiry stem, Its fringed border niecly spin, Aal cut the jrdd embossed gem, That set in silver gleams within; A-:-! fling it with a hand so tree, O'er bill and dale and desert sod, ifiit mm, where'er he walks, may see, la every step, the stamp of God? CTM'he late whirlwind in Rhode Island, seems to have been of a marvellous descrip li ':). The Providence Journal furnishes the following additional particulars : I" passing through Cranston, the whirl Kind drew all the water and the fish from ingue Pond. It also drew all the water ,rm a pond of several acres in extent on form of Mr. John Burr. A powder !l nise on the top of Fenuer's Ledge, in Cranston, containing ten casks of powder, carried away, and no traces of either ,lJe building or the powder have been iUnJ although diligent search lias been made. I lie following is belter still, and seems n show that Hecate and her imps were ac liVly at work : j2 Witch. One of the most amusing in cidents of the late whirlwind occurred in ranston. An old woman who has long "ed an honest penny by telling fortunes, promising rich husbands and hand ; te wives to the inquiring damsels and .stood in her door, broom in hand, ''en the tornado passed in its fury: she t'as borne aloft in the whirlwind amidst j ees torn up by their roots, the ruins of TSr w,,alever e,se had in the i- of the tempest; but true to her char- H '. . rode out l,,e slorm and descend . "njnjured. The suspicion long enter "eu thai the old woman holds converse ll spirits of another world, has thus be C0Rie certainly. South by Sfeam.A gentleman from in Carolina has handed us a map'exhi lm; the routes as completed, in pro Thorough, gress, or in contemplation, for steam trans d ,on ""ie south. Every body knows m.c ..u,n oi steam communication i complete to Baltimore, and il,.- ... m. in one direction, and to Washington lucie 10 rotomac Ureek.near Fred- minuurP- another. On the latter route a rail road is completed part of the way, and will soon bp.ll ih ,o ... ui: 'ax on the Koauoke river. On the othpr route a rail road will also c, u pleted from Norfolk to the Samp rknifit nn the Roanoke. Thence to Wilmington, . C. there is a rail road in progress, and for a considerable portion of the way com pleted. To this point it may be expected all the works will be ready for use by the end of the next year. From Wilmington to Charleston a rail road is contemplated, and a line of steam boats is already in suc cessful operation, which, running as thev do near shore all the way, will be likely to he less objectionable to passengers than must open sea navigation. From Charles ton t.i Augusta a rail road has for some vars been in successful operation. When ..v ..... ,,it. completed winch we have named above, the passage may be made from Aocusla to Boston in ihrp- !ltf r-.ll p,v I . l . . '1 iys and nights, the nights being spent it. Meamnoais, and vt course in sleep Leav ing Augusta in the morning, you come on as follows miles 2-n- 170 190 2K To Charleston 1st day Wilmington 1st night, Norfolk 2d day, Baltimore 2d night, New York 3 1 day, Boston 3d night, 1090 Some of these stints may be rather to largely set, still no more U out down than can be accomplished, we dure say, in two years more. I he Rail Road bv Rich mood and Washington would afford iqnal and perhaps greater speed. We have se lected that by Norfolk, merely to get a night's sleep on the Chesapeake. Such a line of communication to be traversed so rapidly and with so little fatigue, is not to be found on the earth besides; and all done not by autocrats or Kings, but by indivi duals, stimulated by nothing but the ge oius of our free and secure institutions. New Orleans is within two days of Augus ta, when a rail road has been made on to the Bay of Mexico. We might have ex tended our table to the Kennebec River n the Last, for steamboats run thither, from Boston, and a rail road is just com pleted to Salem, and is in progress to Port land. The Lxpress Mail will soon be left in the bark ground. By means of well organized stages to fill up the gaps where the R.til Roads are not completed, passen gers are now transported South with great despatch. jV. Y. Jour, of Com. The Crerks. The Arkansas Gazette, of August 3, saS : "It gives us pleasure to publish the following extract of a letter Irom our old friend, Col. James Logan, Agent for the Creek Indians west : "I have been on the eve of writing to you several times, particularly nhen 1 see any thing in your paper about the proba bility of a war with die Creek Indians. It is ridiculous to talk about such a thing. I have been travelling among the Creeks since the first of May, in order to make myself acquainted with them, and can say that, instead of preparing for war, ihej are emulously engaged in the arts of peace, i'hey are making more corn than I ever saw in one country before, and are becom ing well satisfied. I never talk with them on the subject of war with the whites, but stimulate them with the prospects of be coming a prosperous and 'happy people. They are desirous of mixing with the wliite people, and becoming wise, as they call it, like them. I am on my way to the Indian country, whither 1 shall move my family by Christmas." OCr'It is stated in the Army and Navy Chronicle that the requisition of General Gaines upon the Governars of Tennessee and Kentucky for ten thousand volunteers. has been submitted to the Secretary of HT - 1 I .1 - r- War and in reply the Governors of those States have been informed that the Execu tive has nd authority to call out, or to ac cept the services of, volunteers. Should the contingency referred to arise, and it may be necessary to call for troops, a mili tia force is the only description that could ko rcmiirprl rtr rerpivefl. Such a rpnnici. bj V- .W'.a.V. v " I lion will not be made without more pre- cise information oi ine uesign oi me in dians alluded to. The same Daoer states that the Naval - r i - . r I 1 I I constructors irom ine scvcrai yuiu nave ueen ior icu pao omnium ou- ington as a Board, on business connected with the construction of vessels of war. been lor ten weens past sitting in vasn (Edgecombe County, jy. C.J Muita September 22, ,838 Mavinrr cnrrrnlofQ.I .1 . i.i -i . adjourned and I. Z . .k J?"l.'Zndu stations. Norfolk Herald. Police. JVie slave robbery case. Mr. Corse was yesterday examined before Jus tices Lowndes respecting the negro slave case, but declined answering, saying that be did not wish to implicate himself being unconscious of having acted improperly. Men have very singular views of right and wrong. David IWoles and several mlipr colored and white persons were examined, and it was proved that there is a negro band of regularly organized paid conspira- iui5 employed to protect runaway slaves. JY. Y. Star. Saving Trouble. A New Hampshire Farmer going to oarish meetinc. met the Clergyman, and told him they were going to raise his salary, (which was a very mean one,) to which he drily said, "I beg you would'nt, 1 find it so hard to cet the little you vote, that if von vote anv thirm mnrp am afraid 1 shall have no time to do any tiimg else." Cure of Club Foot. The operation of dividing the tendons of the foot, for the i ure of club foot, has been successfully performed by Dr. Togno, of Philadelphia. The sole of the foot, which had previously been turned inward, and stood in a verti cal position, after the operation rested flat upon the floor. The patient experienced but little pain and is now.we II, and has the full use of his foot. d?A Berlin chemist having discovered a secret of distilling brandy from common herbs, by a most economical process, a temperance society in that capital, alarmed for the health and morals of the popula tion, have, it is asserted, offered him 75, 000 florins not to publish his secret. Famine in India. The upper provinces of the Bengal presidency were (when the last despatches reached England,) the scenes of the most frightful misery and mortality. Owing to the extreme poverty of the natives, occasioned bv the impolitic and ruinous system pursued by the government of India towards the occupiers and culti vators of the soil, tens of thousands have been reduced to utter starvation. On the I4ih of April last 78,000 pining wretches, men, Women, and children, were fed bv bounty at Agra; and between the 1st and 15th of March 71,523 infirm and sightless creatures were relieved in a similar man tier. So great have been the ravages of rJcaili that the air for nules is tainted with the tfil'.ivia from the putrifj ing carcasses o men and cattle, and the rivers of the Jurna and Ganges hoaked up and poison ed by the dead bodies thrown into their channels. The water and fish of these rivers are rejected as unfit for use, and men are kept constantly employed in push ing the accumulated bodies down the tor rents. From the July number of the Ori ental Herald we learn that starvation, dis ease and death are doing their work at Caivnpore, Muttra, Gwalior, and Delhi, while the wealthier natives look on with list irssntss and unconcern. Though a famine fund has been established by the European public of India, it is found im possible to meet the necessities of the des titute and dying multitude. A correspondent in Calcutta thus writes on the lOih of April : Since the despatch of the overland mail for Borenice, which left Bombay at the close of last month, public attention in this quarter has been engrossed bv the accounts which daily reach the capital of the horrid ravages of famine in the provinces to the west and north west. It is impossible to compute the numbers who die in their tedious pro gress from the desolate districts to the towns where food is procurable. We hear almost daily of mothers deserting their children on the highways; of infants crawl ing around the granaries to pick up the grains of rice accidentally scattered du ring the process of distribution at the doors; oi the roads being lined with dead bodies: a prey to the vulture and jackal; I... .. . of the course of small rivers actually ob structed by the masses of bodies thrown therein, by those wfro are employed to clear the highways; of the inhabitants of the large towns of Agra, Cawnpore, &c. being compelled to abandon their evening drive, from the impossibility of encounter l IHl, V iAJ b.. ..W... fW.a.M VWIdlO around! and the worst of it is, that two iner trie emuvia irom me puma corses months more must escape before a fall of roin n hp PTtiprterl. and the earth vipIH IIOIII VW" f 1 " j... r-nit tvhprewith to aDDease the irresistible - - . r i cravings 01 nunger Progress of Science. Among the many new invention? which have lately astonish- i i P . ! r1 We lUlnU ' l,,at l,ie "Railroad Counting Alachine" of Dr. IWr. ... i . "jy ue said to can the rlim-.v l. ,,i. td by a dog! counts the pdU with unerr g acclirdC:i!dist.ibutes lhem .mo ihe.r Doxes.m and performs the labor of twelve person.,'!! The greatest difficulty whieh Hie proprietor has experienced in the pre parauon of his pills, was in the time it took up m counting them, so many to a box; and this has been most happily ob viated by his exceedingly ingenious in vention. Dr. Peters is procuring a patent lor his machine, and will exhibit it at the t air of the American Institute. . New Yorker. Jl Land Flowing with Milk and Honey lTiere are a great many stories told of the prolific soil of the Great West; how that bread, ready buttered, grows upon high trees; that pigs' tails planted in the rich al luvial bottom lands, in the fall. fr.,nfv. ;.. such wise, that on some finp pvunimr ;.. early spring, a crop of juvenile po.ker wy ue seen marching into the sower farm yard, from the "spot where ihe3 grew," w ith short squeak, and in military order; and that jack knives are "raised" by n.uureu agricultural process. However this may be, we are credibly informed that the truth of a statement en-iallv snrnrisiiw can be easily established. In Illinois, it i quiie a common thing for deer, being previously accommodated with a "bucket lull of sail" on ihcir tails, to walk up to a squatter's tent in the forest, turn his fat haunches to the fire, and keep lhem there uimi properly cooked, and then permit a oencious stake to be cut therefrom. They then go about their business with equani uniy. In some instances, it is farther sta ted, they return at nightfall, to furnish lortu a "cold cut." We have this state ment in the hand writing of Mr. J.din Smith of Illinois, who refers " rnnfi.leiiil v- in Mr John Thompson of Ohio. -Knickerbocker. 1 ir e p"JUf. frc is method in it. A Cincinnati paper tells asiorv of a crazy vagabond who recently figured in one oi me streets of that city, to the amuse ment of the passers by. There was no symptom of intoxication about him, and we suspect that he was only mad "nor-nnr-w estj" for there is a good deal of the Ham let vein in his rhapsody. As he approach ed several gentlemen, he cracked a large wagon-whip which he held, and cut a few antics exciting a laugh in the crowd, whereupon he exclaimed, "do not laugh, gentle.nen; every thing goes to the ciack of a whip. The world would standstill without it. When I was a boy I was whipped to school and when there, the lessons were whipped into me. Many a scholar have 1 seen the whip make a dull fellow. As 1 grew up, circumstances whip ped me into employ menl and responsibili ty. I was married, had children and means; but death and misfortune whipped all off and now fate whips me alone round the world. Tis all to the crack of a whip. You are all scourged by the dri ver Time. He drives you at a gallop along the road of life, whether you will or not. You may whip the devil around the stump, but the devil will repay every lash ten fold. Here we go! All to the crack of a whip. Patience! patience! Better be w hipped by poverty, disgrace, bereave rnent, ay, madness, in this world, than by the fiends of hell in the next. Mere we g! All to the crack of a whip!" And, suiting the action to the word, the crazy philosopher went his way. tn peace prepare for war. ''The wife of 1 f"" A r I i. r . cannon, ol INew balem, lately pre sented her husband with four small Can nons, or swivels. This fine little park of artillery, at the last accounts, was in fine serviceable condition. The lady deserves an appointment in some of the public ar mories. Important Decision. By a decision in the Baltimore County Court, on the 7lh iust. it appears that railroad companies are not responsible for the value of animals killed on the road by the locomotive or trains, when it appears that the agents of the company have used all due diligence and precaution to avoid the accident. (T?"A case of considerable interest was tried in the New York Court of Common Pleas a day or two ago. It was an action hrnuoht to recover navrnent for a suit of o r- clothes which were made by the plainlifi, to the order of the defendant, who ac knowledged that the suit was well made, but refused to take lhem away from the store, because thev had been sent home while he was absent, and taken away by the messenger, who was instructed to do sol ine messenger, wno was insirucieu io ao so if the money was not paid. The Court charged, that under these, circumstances Vol XlVXo. 38, the articles were as much "goods sold and delivered," as though they had been taken away and worn by the defendant, and the jury uc ordingly rendered a verdict of the lull amount claimed by the plaintiff. New Cotton at Natches. The Cmvrier uf the 2Sth ult. says: ' On Saturday, eight b iles of cotton were sent in fiom a planter in Adams county, to a house in this city, for sale. Before the cotton was one hour on hand it was sold at 13 cts. per lb. This is the first sale of any part of the new crop in this city." Advertizing Jor heits A New York paper advertises for the heirs of one Thomas Stewart, who rame to this coun try from Scotland, 40 years ago, and resi ded in New York in 1822. There is a large estate coming to them, if thev can be found. Dreadful Fire in New Jersey The fire in the ISiew Jersey woods, we just learn Irom a gentleman who left Bt-iduitowii yesterday, has ine reased lo a most alarm ing and frightful extent. Millions of pro perty have already been consumed. A space of 20 miles in length by 14 in breadth, through Burlington and Mon mouth connties, and consisting chi fly of pine woods and cedar swamps, is now in a state of conflagration. The clouds of smoke are seen twenty miles off, and at night the air is filled with a lurid bb-ze which dims the moon. The grass and woods are so parched from the drought that the flames spread with lightning-like rapidity, presenting at night a scene of un paralled sublimity. A great many houses and thousands of cords of w oods are de stroyed; and it is feared a number of per sons, hemmed in by the flames, have per ished. Fatal Accident. Mr. John Hildreth. of Phelps, Ontario Co. (N Y.) w as shot by the accidental discharge of a gun which his son w as cleaning and preparing for use at a militia parade. The ball passed w ithin an inch of hi mother's head, and di rectly through the body of his father, who died from a loss of blood, a few hours after the accident. Mr. Hildreth was a farmer, extensively known and esteemed. $300 Reward. The Governor of South Carolina has issued a Proclamation offer ing a reward of three hundred dollars for the apprehension of Abner Striplin. for the murder of Hiram Addison, of Uirh land District. Said Striplin is about ihir ty years of age, five feet ten inches high, well made, fair complexion, light hair and blue eyes, sharp features, prominent full mouth and white teeth, fond of gambling and brags much of his manhood. Imaginary evils. If we expect the bles sings of strength, health, and the testimo ny of a good conscience, all the other conveniences an'd pleasures of life depend on opiniont Except pain of body and re morse of conscience, all our evils are im aginary. Singular Marriages. A widower at Camden, who was not very you np, became smitten with a y ung and beautiful girl, and married her. A short time after, the son of this man by a former wife, became also in love, not with a younger person, but wih the mother of the father's new wife, a widow lady still in the bloom of life. Ha offered himself, and soon the young man and the widow were united in the bands of matrimony ; so that in consequence of these? two connexions, a father becomes the son-in-law of hia own son, and a wife not only the daughter-in-law of her own son-in-law, but still more,the mother-in-law ofher own mother, who is herself the daughter-in-?awr ofher own daughter- while the husband of the latter is the father-in-law of his mother- in-law, and father-in-law to his own father. Sintrular confusion mav arise, if children o J , should spring from these peculiar marriages. Curious.As a train of railway cars was passing along an inclined plane on the railway from Bolton to Kenven in Eng land, moving at the rate of thirty or forty miles an hour, a man who was standing on the side of the railway threw a stone about the size of a hen's egg in a horizontal di rection, and with considerable violence, at the train. The stone was distinctly seen by a gentleman who was Seated in the last car, w ith his back to the enerine. and he re- ------ O ' t marked that, when it had attained its max imum of velocity, it appeared like Mahom et's coffin, suspended in the air a few sec onds, within afoot of the gentleman's head! He seized hold ol it, ana aescnueu me eu sation as similar to that of grasping a stone, in a state of rest, suspended by a thread. in a state or resi, ouan-v" j - Thus it seems that the train and th had both attained the same velocity. lib etvuw