TO ATI CI J Jgfc IP 'Sm&fe Tarborangii, (Edgecombe County, wV. baturduy, December 21, 1839, ToZ. ATF JVb.51 BY fSKOP.lR 1IOWAHD, Ja puVisIicl weekly at 7V.v Dollars and F'fy Cr'fs per voir, if n liJ in advance or, Tares Dollirs at tho expiration of the subscription year. For a) period less than a year, 'Ic:i? y-five re-its per month. Subscribers are at liberty to jiscoiitiiiUe at any time, on rrivin notice thereof anJ paying arrears thos? residing at a dLstancaj sihle reference in this vicinity. Advertisements not excoi-Jiacr a square will he jn?tftetl at One Dollar the first insertion, and '25 cents for every continuance. Laager advertue )(,nts in like, proportion. Court Orders and Ju dicial advertisements 5 per cent, higher. Ad veru'sements must he marked the number of in sertions required, or they will be continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. Letters aJdressed to the iMitor must he post or they may not be attended to. Kecoaaimeiiiled hy ihe Vacuity. rj Pi s. Jl. 8$ J HarreWs CELEBRATED PREPARED MEDICINES. TUGSE NEW AND PLEASANT REMEDIES COM Pill S E Their Alterative Extract of Sjrsaparilla and Blood Hoot. This is a valuable remedy in ihe cure of scrofula or king's white swelling, p ains in ihe bones, ulcerous sores, erupiion ol ll:e skin, rheumatism, syphilitic and mer curial affelious, debility, and all diseases arising (Voir, impuritscs of the blood, ol impaired constiiutions from long habits ol excessive dissipation, price $ -per b'Uile. Their Improved Extract of Sarsaparillu and (Jubcbs. For ihe cure ofchrouic diseases of ih mucous membrane, such as dysentery, leuohon hea. gleets, strictures, henuorrhoi dd alT-clious, but especially tor nnon he; it) all its stages, catarrhs of mucous sni fa res, in re panicolarly the luu, kidneys. $C their appendages. Price $ I pr Ijolik. Thtir Cuncenlrtiii ! Exirucl of iJuchu and Via Ursi. For curing di.-ead urinary organ?, jrav.-L m nmd iniiaiiou mid i mi' i. tteni . i Uic Usdtieys, in -!( and nre. ii : .d.., disea-'-s Sll .ilr i: 1, t d lo ir li: pa- , . ;' o.:- :.li" ; io;j. and i ,ieu Prt. e I 25 ;u r bmih. l'-!)rif'igi or Camomile. Tunic. t'l: t lit C. ilMtilrS, Ins o ap- ; 'iy f r Fever and Ague :t si- iLV! noie particularly , JO; dlilite IS C"!2I pOllfl- j t IMS tlou! ;c and is in '.l.ialCU a !i Mlin,.ilt) aii'ivul,,!,, tA hie t.-iiiintri l!r nit iinlv in. j st ! tin iie ca i s hy rrite ST pt-r buitle. ! ir ii is iii nl ic or L utn'thoruted Cord itd. De-dgUL-d to cure exs es J ive voinitiinc, ! dior'tea, cholera iiiorbus, Aiasic clndcia, in tne dies, ilV j)' sin:is uii, cramps, hsttuics, i-.nnlri . snasms. cinivnhuiio :ei. ui i.'li'i ing deinnuii in tin- low L.ums ol biii eis lover. h is a li te S'ibstiiuie lot pucg,;ric. Price 7o cents per botlle. Their Coah Jlixiitre (f Carrageen Afoss and Squills. Fnr thf? eure (d diseased Lung?, rhron ic alfjctions of the stomach and bowels, and ail diseases produced by-sudden chan i ges in temperature. I battle. nee to cents j ;et Their Jlnti bilious Tomato Pills. Thes pills combine the extract of To rnato and Slippery Elm, wiih several ol the most approved remedies of the Mate ria Medica, and if taken according to the directions, will cure all diseases within the reach of human means. As a cathartic they are copious and free; as an aperient they are mild and certain; as a tonic they are prompt and invigorating; as an altera tive they are superior to calomel or any other known remedy, and as a purifier ol die blood, they are unequalled in the his tory of medicines. Price 50 cents per box. Their Superfine TootU loivder. For cTiriug and hardening th-e gums, cleaning, preserving and keeping white 'he teeth, and for sweetening the breath. Price 50 cents per box. The above preparations are 'offered lo the public generally and Physicians espe cially, not as nostrums, or panaceas, but as neat and convenient preparations made on strictly scientific principles. They con aiti the active virtues of their respective ingredients, in a .concentrated form, ami U'ill do all in removing disease that such Medicines can possibly effect. Since their invention, many afilicled with the prece ding diseases have i een restored by their transcendent virtues; and the great and de sirable reward of he.alih still awaits those who avail themselves of their use accord ing to prescribed directions. They are for sale at the office of GEORGE HOWARD, Agent. ; Tarboro', Nov. 20. f7V .' --v ? Correspondence of the New York Express. TROUiiLE IN ALBANY. ltb my, 20!n. ilire is a promise of trouble here. Thi tena v!S of tluj la- tro in, Stephen Van Ksnsabar, have refu ed to pay rent anv 1 on' r, alleging ihal t'ney luivsi pii l it lon enough, an, I it i.s ti'iie to quit piying rent. This propvrty, you know, is very extensive, comprising almos? iho entire towns of Knox, Waierloo, and Kt;ii3eiaervi!le; , most of wiieh is held on long leases, a nominal rem hav ing b 'Cn piid heretofore in produce. Toe son of -the old Patroon has tried the Liv upon ihem, and they have icsist tl. - The sheriff, in consequence of this re sistance, has called out the. Posse Comi ta lus of the county, and has been Migaed all day. he and his deputies, in summoning the inhabitants of Alhany aud the adjoining towns to appear at his o'lico on .Monday morning, 10 o'clock, to aid him in pu'ting the law into execution. We are all called out; Whigs and Loco Foeos, th E-(5ov-ernor, the Siate Printer, John Van Uuren, Dix, Flagg, &c, &c., wiihout ditinclion of person. In short, they have sum uioned the whole Directory. We nre to go from the Sheriff's O.liee on Monday morning to Renssi.d;,ei-villt', distance ahoj; twenty six miles, wheic we expect to inert 'hf tenants, Mippoed to number from 1500 to 2000, all armed and equippe b.t no! according to law. As this Posse.Comitatits will onlr lie laughed at, and probably be treated by th" Teuanls to good dinners, when they arrive in the disputed territory, the Sheriff vvili be obliged to report to the Governor, that on rannoi execute me Ij.hvs dv mv. aul of tile Posse Comitntus, wherepon she Gov ernor is compelled to call out the Militia of the aojoinmg counties. I ver) much douhi whether the Miiilia will do any good. A good p ttion f R nsselaet county is 'setded in the same mann- r. and itout)le is alo hrewmg siune. j'ine Young Patroon's ageni and the shcr- ilF, in Ucn-seiaot vilie, have b en treated verv badly. Their h"r.-eM' tails and mail' s h jve been shaved. Their harnesses have been cut, and th ir carriages broken. They have been threatened with personal- vio lence, if they did not clear out with then lawyers, writs and proc-tes. The end of all ti.is, we nre y t to see. The Patroon and his Tenants. The Albany Evei.ing dournil of Wednesday. I contains an c.rpnse, prepared and publilied nn,e ..is ase)y tie patroon, of tne o; ig: n and progress :i ' di'".i! so v'r ,!:( difjoatcnl exiting' among a luge .i""" - " V "1' n ,;.,; to have the law 0:1 his side. Tlit; .If;un:al states ih. t the sheriff do i.oi contemtdate ar un summoning: the Pt.-ssc Com ita t its to enforce the authority of t: u law. The number ut icsutanti am- ouul to about. 1500. Frrm a lute English paper. fihts of the Chartists Twenty killed ana' forty ivunnded.--''ieu- per.-onsaiv in movement in Mouu.oudi and (jiamoran-shne-i, and aiso again at Newport. The advanced &uaid under Frost, in South Wales alone counts 15,000 pet sons, chiefly in the nuniiij; di?;riet:s. Tiie orgmiz dions appe.ir lo be complete, and to have be.-n a loii lime maturing. The p'op'e tenaci ously ciiut2,to their l.mguage, am! have fix ed a repugnance to the iS-iglish and Irish. The public authorities are resisted. On the morning of Nov. 4ih, they entered Newport to burn the house of the Sheriff, but were repulsed ly a detaeliment ot the 45tn, losing 20 killed and from 40 to 50 wounded. Among the latter several of the inhabitants of the to'A'n. 'Idle mayor of the town vvas shot thro' the arm with a'ug and several vvounilcd in the groin. The chief instigator of this excitement was, cold as the name may he, aMr.Joim Frost, quon dam member of the National Convention. iT reward of 100. was offered for him, and rite was found three hours before the attack in the house . of Partridge, a printer, who with Frost and a Mr. Waters, all well arm ed and wjth lucifcr (loco-foco) matches, arrested and sent to the Jail at Monmouth, which place they had intended to attack- to rescue the Chartist prisoner, Viin-enU It appears the Chartists held large midnight meetings, and were armed with pikes, pis tols, stakes, mandrills, (colliers tools) &c. Eight companies of the 25th foot had pro ceeded from Winchester to the disturbed district. The iron districts furnish plenty ol the raw materia! for arms, and it was found the blacksmiths of Newport had been busily at work making pikes, spears, &.c. for their brethren from the coun- try. , : . ; The examination continued at Newport and some half dozen more were arrested for high treason as ringleaders. The de tachment of troops of the 45th, w hich re pulsed the attack of the 4th, consisted of on iv 30 men unuer ui. -uasu rey, euu m a room at the Wesfsr-it I lin.lSltV IS t'lPrf f.t I.ij I'ptn enroll I.rif V The rhartists marciied in four sbre ist, a cun ! t each fnur, the rest with pikes. They number somo hundred. Wm. Jones, a watchmaker,Chartist General of the Ponty pool division, had been brought in hand cuffed. A reward of 103. h id bean offit ed for him. One account, in illustration of the ex tent and maturity of the orgumizalioa, savs: Jf we noed proof the plan has long been nviture, the qu unity of arms of all descrip tions possessed by the deluded men of the hilU, gives suIHeicnt evidence of the state of preparation; nor can its organization he doubted, whenve find among the prisoners men who have worked in one employment for 20 years, rmrching a distance of 20, 30, or 40 miles to the attack many of whom had not been in Newpjrt previously in their whole lives; added to which it may b2 stat-d that it has been proved that, in some por tions of the ironSc mining districts no person would be allowed to remain even for hours, without enrolling themselves in the secret Chartist Lodgeof the place, with its sections, captains and companies; that all the boys were formed into YouthsChartisiLod $..s," and the women into their "Females' Asso ciaiion." In turns out that there wore 2,000 on the road, and that they expected to be joined by Dr. Price, with 7 pieces of cmno.i. Their march, however, was re tmh d till morning, and thus a genera! slaughter of the town prevented. The following is a specimen of a Chartist 4 'card. " The words on it are "Monmouthshire Working Men's A-sociation. Motto, Peace, Law, and Order. Equal cares and qu d rights we advocate, and claim as our hidienable birthright; and as citizens, universal suffrage vote by ballot, an nu.d parliaments, and no property qua lifications; we udvocale for the elector and the elected." It appears the insurrection in South Wales vvas, or may be, of a most alarming char'Cter. The whole of the mining ami colliery districts turned out en masse hy preconcetted ariangement, blew out the furnaces and dragged the populace with them, nil armed with pikes, crowbars, lngs, &c. I'ney had given out that Vin cent, the leader, in prison, should be King of' the Mountains- that there should be no slaves in England, Nov. 5ib, and that a Chartist republic .diould be founded in that region. Welshmen areof the brave Gaelic or Celtic race, and it is not the first time they would have shaken lie throne of En gland, whose authority they hive never vet fully ackuowleged (rom long before Liu time of their heroic Owen Giendower. Lookout for more Murrcl men W since, two irenttcmen in a o,rr',n came into the neighborhood of Jo,Cph Spm- .en, eq. in D.v.dson County, and sold a Ne;iroto Mr. Jacob Vokely tot SG00 iy iof fcGoo. Mr. Yokely paid. them in two horsey am SI 00 in cas!wtter which they left thH ueiiihhei hood. The nrtrro seemed r pleased with his new home until Saturday night last, when he decamped and has not been heard of since. Tiie presumption is, fiom circumstances, that, the whole vvas de signed by the negro and men, lo swindle .Mr. Yokely out of Ids property. After the men left, he w.ts seen to have a Si 00 bill, ami same specie. Mr. Yokely is said to be an honest, hard working man, but not so well qualified to judge'betv een a Murrel man and an honest man. It would be well for some of our honest farmers and trades men :o be more on the alert towards stran gers trafficking through the country, in ne groes and other stolen property. fly stern Carolinian. Good Sense. A North Carolinian, non living at St. Louis in Missouri, has writ ten a series of letters to the Editor of the Greensborough (N. C.) Patriot, in one "of which we find the following paragraph, which speaks volumes in favor of let ting well enough alone.'1' Fay. Obs "It is the rankest folly for any man who is doing well in North Carolina, to go wot for the purpose of bettering his condition he cannot do it if he has nothing there, he may probably (and it is only probable) get something by going west; but even the chances jre against him. Evcrv kind of business is overstocked, except far ming. There are more mechanics ofali kinds than there is employment for, with the exception perhaps of some few favored -pots. There are more lawyers, doctors, and preachers than can find the means of obtaining an honest living; and there are also mote "speculators," than there ought to exist in the whole Union. As to farm ing, if properly conducted, it is good business, and may be made profitable any where; and if a man cannot make it in Carolina, he may as well despair of doing so in the west for depend upon it, corh wont grow without working in tiie west asTittle as it will any where else. Then if he can enrich himself where he is at home, among friends what neces - ery one n )nder unon tli -sa things, b.-fare determining to forsake aceitainty fjr an uncertainty Cruelty. Sohe demi-savagos at Cam b.idge, Massachusetts, covered a horse all over with spirit gas. and set him on fire A woman seeing him running bv, horse and harness both in ihmes, thought it wa the Pale Horse of the Apocdypse. The buhirian a -tors in the scene had to pay Si 00 and costs. ib. IS'eio York Stock and Money Market. There was a fair amount of business done on Monday in Stocks at the fnt tioirU, alt hough, generally speaking, the rates somewhai rece.led. At the second Hoard, verv little was transacted, and very litti e animation vvas e m cd. The Liverpool packet ship being stili detained by the weather, all the sterling liills offiring were bo-ught for remittanc by her at 9i premium Ihe market vvas etdirely bare of them. w!ich is probably in pirt attnoutaQlo to the two l est Southern mails having brought no supply whatever.. This state of things, however, caano last long. Toe Cotson croo will seek ; market as soon as su.di ni'ural obstacles to H m the low state of the waters are re moved, and hills drawn agiinsi it be forth co. rung to an amount more than equivalent to the de mad. In ihvi meantime, there is considerable stir in Specie, and Mexican dollars are a 1 per eeut, premium: Ame rican halves at a i per cent.; other coins remain as before. Southern exchange is si ill in good de mand at the last quotations. The rales of discount remain unchanged. Tiie inclemency of the vveaihcr has pre vented any business of consequence being trans icted.GOOO bb!s. Genesee dour have ben taken at 6. Interesting Fact. The banks in Ohio have all resumed specie payments. This shows the effect of Democratic legislation. A law vvas pissed by the Legislature of that State, at its last session, in relation to the hanks which has. in a measure, controlled their operations, and although most of them suspended for a short time, it has been but for a short time. It might have continued longer but for the fact that the next Legislature will be strongly Dem ocratic, and they can hope for no indul gence if they persist in refusing to comply with their promises. The truth is, that there is not now any plausible reison for any ol the banks continuing their suspension. .The rate of exchange i.s so decidedly in our favor, and is likely to con.inueso, that spe cie cannot he exported without considera ble loss. There is, therefore, nj ground c '" wiuueiun on nu CCie Ul,,Ci!s 11 00 1,-0111 1112 impression ? ? "V haS ?Cen rS0 fiir8.'l;,ku1,, h t peopie at home will prefer h? e specie to keeping their notes; and if this be the ground, the longer the 7 ' T " :L"'i a puw wr wul utJ ..... . a1. . .. 1 1 i Pali. Republican. (trWIichas! E. Israel, Eq. Cashier of tiie eslei n J3auk in Philadelphia, has died of tiie wounds inflicted by his own hand. lie had abstracted 512,000 from the liank, being precisely the sum which he had a shoit time previous invested in some speculation; and it is .supposed, that a fense of violated honor drove him to self destruction. Violence. Some of the Whigs have complained ih.t ihre vv.is reason to appre hend the commission of some violence in relation to the contested seats in Congress, because the Democrats-contend that the minority Whig candidates from New Jer sey must not be permitted to take seats in the organization of the House. If thev are leally so much alarmed as they profess to he, there is a very ea-y method hy which they may. prevent any difficulty; and that i.s for the minority candidates to refrain from miking any attempt to take seats lo which i hey very well know they are by no means entitled. Provided they do so, there can be no possible' clanger of violence being committed in the case; hut if they attempt to thrust themselves into Congiess, it will be an act of violence on their part, ar.d must be resisted. Such a daring attempt as has been made in the case, by the Gov ernor and Council of New Jersey, to tit feat the will of the people, and trampie down all law and justice, must not be permitted to succeed, because the Whigs choose to talk aboutviolence in caseof renting the at tempt; for if it is, the formality of holding elections will amount to nothing more than a mere machinery. , . But there is some language in a letter of the Washington coi respondent of the Patriot, which shows how little the Whigs desire to avoid violence; notwithstanding ail their professions upon that subject. Speaking of the contest between Messis. ln- rrorsnlt iurt fiulrtr frr the coif r( i-r r..r.. 1 ber from the tkird district in Pennsylvania, (j1- unv. .w. j v inv. PV.UI, VJ1 VIIV 1 1 ICII1- he says Mr. Nay lor is determined r.o: to re linquish hU seat but with his life. It will be recollected that Mr. Navlor's esse cor responds with that of the Democratic can didates from N. Jersey, Mr. Ingersoll hold ing the certificate, and Mr. Navlor claim ing the seat on the ground of having receiv ed a majority of voles. Our it-sends !o not claim the right of voting at the organiza tion of the Houe, but insist tlm thtr op ponents shall not; but Mr. ?Sal.;r, whoso ca-e is precisely similar, not o dy claims the tight to take part in the organization of the House, hut is determined not to relin quish his seat but with his life, no matter what the decision of Congress mav be: and tiie correspondent of the Patriot expresses no dissitilaction an account ( ih 'H alleged determination on the part of Mr. Nay lor. Baltimore Evp uOiican. (JJPork, at Ann Arbor. Michigan, is selling at 3 to 4 dollars a hundred. Neic York Star. A 7nost during attempt of. murder and robbery. As Mr. Daniel . (loode, one of the Deputy Sheriffs of Chesu i i A coun ty was going home from ivi-hmoud last Sum-day, the 30th ult., he was attacked bv two white men ab ml thre-j mil ,s above Manchester, on the Turnpike leading to the Cod Pitts, armed with guns. Mr. Goode was riding in a sulkey, with a top arid it b ung a rainy day, he did not notice these two devils in men's cloth- s until they approached very near him, when one ob served to the other (At the same time taking hold of his horse) this is the man, take him out;" the tine hold of the horse lead ing him out of the woods, the other with us gitn co eked at Mr. Goode. In taking the sulkey over a ditch by the side of the Turnpike, Mr. Goode jumped out and ran do'vvn towards Manchester, one of the men ran some 3 or 400 yards after him, and he thinks snapped the gun at him. Mr. Goode came on to Manchester, and sever?.! gen tlemen went with him to the pl;;ce where he was attacked, but could discover noth ing of the robbers. They found the sul key in the turnpike, and also found his saddlebags about 150 yards in the woods, open, and the papers and book lying near them. Mr. Goode had been to Richmond to pay the taxes of the county, amounting to about $6,700, and had depositrd it in Bank, but thinks he did exhibit the money in Richmond in paying so.r.e gtocery bill. Two suspicious looking men were in Man chester with dogs and guns during the ear ly part of the day, and this daring attempt at robbery happened about 1 o'clock, P. M. Such villains ought to be detected, and no means should be sp red to detect them, and no death that could he inflicted would be half so severe as they deserve. We learn that two men, susp cied of the above attempt, were yesterday arrest ed. Pick maud I fh ig. (fyWc learn, from the Compiler, that the persons arrested for the robbery and at tempt to murder the Sheriff of Chester-fi-dd, Mr. Goo. le, were John Blevins and Wm. McCoy, who were in the Penitenti ary some time since; the former twice.'. The Examining Court of Chesterfield were unanimously in favor of sending the accused before the Superior Court for in dictment and trial. Pel. Statesman. (QGen Bernard, formerly at the heaJ of the E igineer Corps in the United States, but lately Minister of War in ihe French Government, dieJ at Paris on the Gth ult. The Kiag undertook the expence and mode of his funeral, which was a most splendid aflair. There was a great Military display, the ground apartments at the P. dais Royal were thr wn open, and the mo .rneis com prised a Deputation from th"otu r Chamber of Peers, many members of the o hcr Cham ber, ali thebranchesof the Royal Household and high Functionaries of the Government, Marshals, Judges, our Mirister, Gen eral Cas, and more than 2,000 other per sons. JThe New York piper announce that Governor Campb.di's Message, gives them th- firt iut tiit; they have had of (he difficulties which has taken place in consequence of the refuel of the ( Jove: nor of New York, to so ? -ender, ac cording to the requisition of th' Governor of Virginia, the individuals eh:.rged with i.avint: feloniou-Jv ;tbduco d f-a .m slaves from Virginia.. We trust ihaf ,.aie of the New. York papers may do Ihe South jus tice in this matter. Gove? not Campbell makes the case very plain, and t i j- argument in our opinion, is unanswerable. Alexandria Gazette. A New Article of Traflc Due of our exchange papers contains ihe full, wing par- The Morus Multicaulis Speculation thrown in. the shade. A man :evvu east, who is the owner of a very valuable breed of hogs, has lately realized a great profit by selling their tails at three ceats a cuttiag . kinks double price.