(f) TPT 44&4S '6a i&Q W7w7f JV7. 865. Tarbornuzh, (Edgecombe County, JV.C.J Saturday, Octobtv I, 1842 of. Will wVo 39. X? Tttrbo rough Press, BY G EOR3 E HOWARD, Is published weekly at Two Dollars and Fifty Cents per year, if paid in advance or Three Dollars at the expiration of the subscription year. For anj period less than a year, Tiomt y-fivt Cents per month. Subscribers are at liberty to discontinue at any time, on giving notice thereof and paying arrears those residing at a distanre, must invariably pay in advance, or give a respon sible reference in this vicinity. Advertisements not exceeding a square will be inserted at UneDollar the first insertion, and '25 cents for every continuance. Longer advertise ments in like proportion. Court Orders and Ju dicial advertisements 25 per cent, higher. Ad vertisements must be marked the number of in sertions required, or they will be continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the Kditor must be post paid or they may not be attended to. FOR THE TAUI50RO PRESS TO AMANDA. Lady, life is bright to thee, All a vision of dejight; Lady, nought is dear to me. When I want thy lovely lighti Let the festive scene pas by. With its beauty, with its glare; I heed not how the moments fly, If Amanda is not there. Lady, things that flit along Thy rosy path of girlish glee, Slav enchant with siren song, Hut are not what they seem to be. Lady, life is like a stream, With its scenery lovely bright; But along its margins teem. Hideous forms of gloomy nighti S1LVIUS. SELECTED FOR THE TARB0KO PRESS. Mr. Howard: Here is a morceau for you! T de fy the whole host of "metre ballad mongers" to beat iti They are the lines of Lee, the mad poet. Hide your heads, ye worshippers of the gentle nine! Oh! that my lungs would bleat likebutter'd peas, And by their frequent bleatings catch the itch; And grow as mangy as the Irish seas, To engender whirlwinds on a shabby witch. Not that a hard-rowed herring dare presume, To swing a tithe-pig in a catskin purse; Because of the great hail stones that fell at Rome, A lessening of the fall might make it worse. I grant that drunken rainbows lulled to sleep. Roar like Welch rabits o'er a fair maid's eye; Which made him laugh to see a pudding creep, For creeping puddings only please the wisei The reason's plain, for Charon's western barge, Running full tilt against the subjunctive mood; Beckoned to a porpoise and made the charge, To fatten padlocks on antarctic food. AN A13DUCT10N PLAN. The Richmond Whig of Thursday con tains a letter from John H Pleasants, Eq detailing a pbn which he says, was deter-: mined on pending the Presidential election ! oflS40, for the abduction of Mr. Van j tlemen were his humble servants forth Buren from Washington, in the happening j with. They rode round for him, pun lns of a certain contingency. The letter is in j ing horses, buggies, ami stocU. He drove reply to an anonymous note addressed to Mr. P., asking for information as to the true nature ol the plan, if it was formed, as it was likely, the writer said, to be talked of and exaggerated. In November 1S40, before the final re turns were from New York, the Whigs of Richmond apprehended for 24 hours, that the State had gone against them. The Democratic papers claimed it, which Mr. P. says, afterwards appeared to be a strata gem to affect Pennsylvania, which voted a few days after New York. This was not suspected in Richmond at the time, and the Whigs were thrown into the greatest consternation; 'for,1 says Mr. P., 'if New York had thus disappointed the sanguine calculations made upon her vute.by the Whig Party, it was not doubt ed that Pennsylvania whose vote was ho ped for rather than confidently expected, would follow her lead, and the vote of Vir ginia was already sufficiently in to rentier it next to certain that she had vo'ed for Mr. Van liuren." The excitement in the city was very great, and w is much increas ed by the 'universal conviction of the Whig party' in Richmond, 'that (here had been fraudulent voting in Virginia to much ex tent.' If by this fraudulent voting the State should be cast for Mr. Van liuren, and the States of New York and Pennsylvania had gone as it was then feared, it was assum ed that he would have been indebted to fraud in Virginia fi r his election. The Whigs enquired, says Mr. P., what was to oe done:' Legal gentlemen were con suited, who decided there was no rem edy in such an event that the returns of the Presidential Commissioners were final a;id conclusive, and could not he looked behind. Mr. P. says, political and pirty passions rheady in high ferment, were still further jrniame by the assurance that the laws cguld afford no redress for the m jnstrou a crime of strangling the voice of a free Peo ple by corrupting (he ballot boxes. If it should even be demonstrated that it had been committed. In this s'ate of feeling, three individuals who happened to he to gether, interchanged opinion, found an en tire concurrence of sentiment among them selves, and lustily arranged the heads of a plan for redressing the wrongs of the countrv by securing the person of Mr. Van Buren previous to his inauguration. Three tilings were to precede putting it in execution. i. The election of Mr. Van Buren. 2. That he could not have been returned without the vote of Virginia. 3 Proof, carrying positive and undoubted cer tainty with it that this majority in Virginia was fraudulent. The preliminaries ascer tained, twenty persons, men who could de pend on one another, were to be admitted into the association under the pledge of se crecy and fidelity. Ten of the number were to proceed to Wahington in a fast steamboat, giving out that their object was a jaunt of amusement, to witness the ap proaching inauguration. It was imagined that there would be little difficulty in liul ing an opportunity of conveying Mr. Van liuren on board by stratagem of force, and this done the boat was to run with all de patch for Albemarle Sound, previously a grced upon as the destination. There the ten were to he met by their associates, and Mr. Van liuren to be escorted by the whole into the upper Districts of North Carolina. Cornwaliis' 'most rebellious People in America,' and whom we knew to be known as staunch Whigs as their fathers were in 17S0. Arrived there a manifesto was to be p-iblished, addressed the Ameican People, declaring the motives anil objects ol the act, and the vicinage as s-mbledand appealed to. Mr. Van liuren himsclf was to betre.tel with tin gie ttest possible repect and courtesy compatibl with s lie custody. I he mamtesio was to demand a new election and the restoration of the rights of the majority. jpThc Trade Resistor contains a list of the Banks that have failed in the United States since the report of the Secretary of the Treasury for 1S41, with the amount of capital, circulation and specie of each. The capital of the whole of them, one hundred and fifteen in number, is set down in the table at 5132,362,398; the circulation of the whole at 543,329,554, and the specie on hand at 10,289,571. ' Perry's Victory. The Anniversary of the memorable battle of Lake Erie was ce'ebrated on Saturday last at Pi evidence (it .) bv a irand Military Fe-t'ival and Review, to whic h all t he companies ol Stale were invit d. The Journal says pageant was the most brilliant one ot kind ever witnessed there. the the the Hail Riding. A man made his appear ance lately in Castile, Wyoming county, N. Y., and paimel himself oil as a drover He exhibited a large roll he called money, and dechred mat "he was right in town with a pocket full of rocks'.'' Certain gen - with a pocket the best horses and the handsomest buggy in town, and was the admired of all obser- vers. He examined and purchased a quan- itity of cattle; and all were to assemble at the hotel on a certain day to receive their pay. A crowd assembled, but our h ro was minus the needful! The duped he came clamorous, and the drover insolent. A Lynch court was held; the criminal was sentenced to be dipped thrice in the horse trough to have one side of his head shav ed; and to he rode out of town on a rail; which sentence was carried into effect forthwith. Conviction of Sfeg'tll.We have just been informed that Stegdl, the individual charged with the murder of the German Pedlar, in Halifax county, in March lasi, was put on his trial before the Superior Court, Judge Leigh presiding, on Saturday last, and that on Monday, the Jury render ed a verdict of guilty of murder. The evi dence although circumstantial was such as left not the least doubt of his guilt, on the mind of any individual. We trust that the Executive arm will not be interposed to shield the culprit from a punishment demanded no less by the se curity of society than bv the just claims ol ihelavv. uanviue ttep oj rriuay. j3 Moderate Fortune. It is stated that the Rothschilds of London have off-red to compound their tax, undr the new Income Tax Act of Sir Robert Peel, for the three years at 24,000. In other words theb aic willing to be let off with the payment to the tax collector of S40.000 a year They admit therefore if the report be iru.;, that their annual income is at leat one mil lion three hundred and fifty thousand dol lars. is a Humbug. The Richmond Whig gives a humorous sketch of a series of expe Hmentsin Animal Magnetism, before a select company, (Mr. Ritchie being one of the number,) by two young gentlemen of that city one the Mesmeriser, and the , other the Mesmenzee. The eyes of the latter, after being magnetized, were effect ually bandaged, and in that condition he swdlowed, tasted, saw, and heard with the faculties of the operator, as in the case of j mi. rmncii, anu just as successiuuy establishing the "community of sensations' j to the satisfaction of all present. Mr Ritchie declaring both results to be similar, though more perfect than those of Mr. French! So far, so good but then came the grand denouement. The two young . gentlemen, having thus shown their ability to deceive the persons present, declared that there was no magnetism about the matter that he who was supposed to be in a profound sleep was all the while wide , ......i... . i i l . i i i i i j . awake, and that he was enabled to give correct answers to the questions asked by pre-concerted arrangements with the pre tended magnetizer. The Divining Rod. The art of discov ering water courses under the surface of the earth by means of a green rod newly cut from the peach, hazel or cherry tree, hs been known in Europe for several years It is said the discovery was made n Germany, but by whom is uncertain. Until a very late period it has been consid ered an imposture, and ranked with the arts of magicians and other vain preten ders to mysterious powers. This opinion of the power of the 'divining-rod' or 'magic wand,' as it has been termed, has undoubt edly arisen from the fact that in the hands of many persons the action of the rod is wholly imperceptible, while in others the attraction ol l,ie waier, especially u u dc near me sur- e ami the vein large is surprisingly gieat When the wand is of a brittle nature, the at tractive power is so forcible as frequently to break it. From the numerous experiments made in France, since the commencement of the present century, by ThoUvenel and other men of science, the claims of the divining rod arc found to rest on well known mate rial powers. The art of finding water by its means is well established and promises to be of great utility to our country. The theory explaining the phenomena of the 'magic wand, supposes that the water forms with the earth above it, and the fluids of the human body, a galvanic circle. This circle is mote or less perfect, as the state and condition of the body of the operator qualifies it to be a better or worn conductor . of the galvanic fluid. The human body is one of the best conductors yet discov ered, and weakly or debilitated persons are said to be better conductors than per sons in sound health, and the attraction is greatest whentheskin is wet, particularly the hands & arms. Salt water, or a weak solu tion of muriatic acid, are the best fluids for moistening the skin. The effect will he increased if the operator be barefooted. j his leet and hands having been previously 'netted with cither ot the aforesaid fluids, 1 h U luj Iiavc silk S,oves or stockings on, the rod will not be suspended by an elect ric, or in immediate contact with an elec tric no attraction will be felt, and the de gree of attrction varies as any substances ly"g between the water and the hand of e operator are more or less auapieu to coihiuci me gaivauic uuiu. Such are some of the facts stated by wri ters on the subject, but of the reality of the powers attributed to the 'divining-rod,' we now need no foreign authorities to carry conviction to every intelligent mind. We have in this city several operators; men of the most unquestionable character, whose powers have been tested by the severest scrutiny, and who have never failed to con vince the most incredulous. 1 he writer has known several stout unbelievers thrown into the most ludicrous predicament by suddenly discovering that they themselves were among the magi, and had all the nowers of the best water-finders! The powers of the 'magic wand' being natural powers, it oniy requires mat me natural means be present in any individual to produce the necessary result. Anv person may discover whether or not he has the powers of a water-finder by the following experiment: Let him cut branch of peach or cherry tree having a fork with two twigs ot a length and thickut nearly equal, and slender enough to be unite flexible. If formed correctly it will iieai Iv represent the letter i. L.et nun take the small ends of the twigs, one in his i j iriit hand and one in his left, and hold it so that the main branch, where the fork begins, shall be uppermost and nearly perpendicular to the earth, but a little incli ning forward. Holding it in this position, !el him walk slowly and carefully over the Mound where water is to be sought for, md if the body of the operator be a good -dvanic conductor, the wand when over a vein of water that is near the surface, will be drawn forward and downward with onsiderable force; and if the vein be large it will point directly down to the earth. The causes of this phenomenon being nalu- ral, and invariable as the principle of j gravitation, water will always be found nearer the Surface of the earth when thus indicated bv the divining-rod, than in other places. Delaware Journal. DTho New York Journal of Com mtrce stales that the world of science is in- debted to Col. Payerne, of London, for the discovery of means whereby persons are enabled to remain under water in divine bells any desirable lime within the limits of twenty-four hours, without a supply of lresh air from :ihvi Thij rlii-:ihh nli. iect is obtained bv takimr ,f,wn in the, boil two chemical substances the one to ab sorb the carbonic acid gas as fast as genera ted by the lung the other to give out oxy gen gas to supply the place of that consum ed. The first, of these, is found in nine potussa, which readily absorbs h df its own . . . y vvtriuiui earoouic acm gas; tne other is the sulphurate of poiassa, which when heated, gives out a very large proportion of pure oxygen. Wit.hihe.se two simple bodies, says the Journal, Col. Payerne late ly descended in a divin& bell, to the bed of the Thames, where he remained for the long and hitherto unattained period of sev en hours, cut off from all communication with the upper air, without experiencing any of tne unpleasant eff-cts usually attend ant upon such experiments, to the great surprise of a number of distinguished men of science, who witnessed his performance without the knowledge of his novel appli cation of a couple of well known facts in Chemistry. ..t.t ,r i. . fyThe Jonesborough (Tennessee) Whig gives a long account of an assaul committed upon its Editor, (the Rev. W. (t. Hrownlow,) on a Sabbath day, at a camp meeting, by Col Fayette McMullen of the Vir ginia Senate, and two of his bro thers, with clubs. The editor drew his pistol and snapped it. at Col. McMullen's breast, but the cap exploded without firing. The Editor was severely bruised and cut before the combatants were separated. The cauc of the assault was a harsh criti cism, in the columns of the Wrhig upon a speech delivered by the Colonel at the Polk-barbacue at Rogcrsville a few weeks igo. The old Horse Eclipse in Marketl Mr. Wm. Dodd, of Georgetown, Ky., the agent of Col. Wm. R. Johnson, oi Virgin ia, advertises for sale, Eclipse, Mons. Ton son, Siili Hamctk and some fine brood mares. 11 not nrevious v disooseu oi ai i .1. . . . . l .1 I i private saic, inoy wtie 10 oe mjiu hi hut tion, at Lexington, on Saturday last, ilC 34th. Mr. I), in his advertisement re - marks of Eclipse, who was twenty eight ....,Ami llio OJtlwif lnv hist th.-il Iih is in fine health and vinor. havini the an- f l -i.i- i i- ii... nearanee nf his vouthful davs. Pethaos a horse of the same constitution never was seen or heard of before. Good Xews. The interest on the Debt of the State of Alabama due January 1st, IS 11, was la-t week remitted to London. This will do something toward tbe restor ation of our National character for honesty in Europe. Wh'.t A.z7? We received the "Pe tersburg Intelligencer" of the 22d int with the following endorsement, viz: kiThis paper is made entirely of Moras Multicautis leaves." The specimen is very fair indeed, and the body or texture of the paper is most excellent and substan tial. The colour is not so white as it might be, but, no doubt, as its use becomes more general, some means of bleaching it will be devised. It is now an excellent Printing paper, and we should like to know at what price per Ream, the Manufacturer can furnish it. We copy from the "Intel ligencer," the following account of the Experiment: rome twelve months asro. our i owns- l)r. P. C. Spencer, conceived the idea! ki a selt;ement at the Ma.quesas M- r.....:. r, i...,a .-.Hands, situated in the Pacific Ocean, in 11 man ot manuiacturing pape inu iuv; in i 1 1 j ti wdijui ii win iiiv, n. ii Kit that, of late, much neglected plant, theegn es oi Mot us Multicaulis, and communicated hisj'ati s that ideas on the subject to our n.-ighbor. With the assistance of Mr William Mil ler, the Manufacturer oftheMatoaca Paper Mill, Dr. Spencer has succeeded in manu facturing excellent paper from Morns Mul ticaulis leaves, and we have now in ourpos session several numbers of our issue of to day printed on this paper. The discovery of Dr. S. will prove, we have no doubt, highly useful. The diffi culty of pi ocuring suitable rags'd b en a draw-back on the operation of Paper Mills. This difficulty will now be obviated. Su -h is the proline nature of the Multicaulis plant, that in one year's lime a sufficient number can be raised to supply "stock" to all the Paper Mills in the United States. Dr. S.'s discovery, we have no doubt, will be much improved upon, and we should not be surprised, if, in the course of a year or two, the use of rags in the nunu facture of paper were entirely abandoned. lialeigh Register. Murders William Martin, of Stokes county, was recently kille I by a man nam ed Tilly, who is now confined in jail a waiting his trial for the fact. Tilly was in Martin's employ, as overseer, and hd for so -in; time cherished ill will to wards the de ceased. Some altercation took place in the woods where th- hands were about making boards, and Tilly struck Martin on the head with his gun, which fractured the skull and caused instant death. The accu sed wo understand acknowledges the act but stys he did it in defence. There is also in Stokes jail a man by name of Dunkley, awaiting hi trial for stabbing a man, in the neighborhood of IJ jyles' store, who died of the wound. Greensboro Pal. jTA heavy gale was experienced at Turks Uland on the 30th ultimo, occasion ing a loss of salt to the amount of over one hundred thousand bushels. At Grand Turk the loss was equally severe. Washington Whig. Suicide of Dr. Peters. Dr. Joseph Pe fprs, of New York, ''manufacturer and vender of Peter's celebrated pills and loz enges," committed suicide on Saturday night by strangling himself with his pocket handkerchief in his room at the boarding houe of Mr. George Ruck, No. 127 Lib erty s'reet Deceased it seems had been for several years in poor health, and of late has been v-ry much depressed in spirits. One day last week he purchased some prusic acid for the purpose of destroying himself, but was prevented by some of his Iricnds who became acquainted with the fact, to whom he stated that he was very much embarrassed in his pecuniary affairs, from which it was impossible for him ever to ne extricated. He was a man ot 30 or 35 years of age, and of temperate habits. On Saturday night he retired as usual, and on Sunday morning was found dead in his bed chamber, having strangled himself with Jiis handkerchief by attaching it to the bed post, his leg resting upon the floor. A letter was found in his room addressed to his wife who is at present in Portsmouth, Rhode Island." Phil. Inq. fi poisoned Spring. Some one is wai ting to Mr. (Iwin, Representative in Coa gress from Mississippi, giving him an ac count of a poisoned spring of water that has been discovered in the unsettled part of the State of Arkansas. One report says, Some hunters, on arriving at the place, being thirsty, a part of them drank ;nf hn iivifrr unil u-imp immn.-II.-lt.dv !)Trt j - v ; ed, and in a few hours died; upon which 1 the rest became alarmed, and refrained ! r,l drinking; and, on examination, they Hound the earth for a mile or two around illm Sririmr strnivn with liorif nf birds. 1 eats, and some human nones. Madisonian. Distressing Occident. As the morn- ing train west, yestcnlnj morntng, approa- jehed Schenectady, the engineer discovered a man sitting on the rail, with his head res ting on his knees, apparently asleep; but, as he was in the shade of the bridge, he was not discovered until the train was within a few rods of him. The engine was immediately reversed, the breaks ap pliid, and the alarm given, but the man could not be aroused to his danger, nor the engine prevented from sti iking and drag ging him forward some two rods, his legs becoming entangled in the machine, and badly broken. He was laken to Schenec tady, and every attention bestowed upon him; but it was supposed he must, die His name was ascertained to be Ezra Smith, j ,)jt hJs r(.s;(ence Was not known. suppo sed to be Utica. Jilhany Jirgus. New French Colony in the Pacific. The Paris Journal des Debats publishes a letter from Valparaiso, which discloses a project of the French Government, of ma- ' . . . South latitude. This letter R- ar Admiial Dupeiit I hoiiars, who had arrived at Valparaiso in the Reiue lilanche frigate, was believed to have been sent to those snas for that purpose. Il wis to he joined by a flotilla of four cor vettes one f which the Priumphante, had alieadv reached thrc, having on board a company of Maiine Artillery. A large transport, theJulex Cesar, had been freigh ted by the Rear Admiral, and laden with a considerable quantity of building materi als, which he had purchased previous to his departure. The captain had been in srm ted not to open his drspa'che.s until he was far out at sea. 'If the expedition has this obj- ct in view,' adds the corres pondent of the Journal des Debats, Ml is a noble conception, for ihe situation of the Marquesas Isiamls is peculiarly favoiable, eing placed precis iy on i iic iutu . ..v- new line ot rope and Asia, across the Isthmus of Pa- uauia. 1.;.' i 4 r -I CI