tsceltaneouft Front the New- York Evening Post. The following lines were written by a young lady, 15 years of age, after seeing Miss Martha Honeywell, who is now to be seen at reale s Museum, 13roadway. . Miss ri. was born without arms, and with her mouth does the finest work with the great est ease. She cuts watch papers, (most exquisitely fine) landscapes, and any de sign presented to her. The Lord's pray er surprizes is the most. When first thy name assail'd rriy ear, My heart was fill'd with fear and dread; Methought affliction so severe, W ouid sink to earth thy hapless head. But when to visit thee I came, I saw thy eyes so full, so meek; I view'd the bright good humor'd smile, That mantled on thy glowing cheek. Instead of fear, instead of dread, My heart with admiration glow'di And thy example, Martha, dear, Teaches us to adore our God. For who could murmur or repine, At common ills or common woes; Whene'er so hard a fate as thine, Is met with calmness and repose. What skill, what taste, what neatness shine In all thy various works of art; They surely show the hand Divine Has stamp'd his image on thy heart. Thy resignation and thy trust, Shall meethip-h h And when thy body joins the dust, Thy soul shall wing its way to God. importance were destroyed, andi'exactncss that the wounds healed j although some ot the dooks vvere.auiiusL uumuij uy . . o - . LECrAL WHISKERS. As o'er their wine and walnuts sat, Talking of this and tnen of that, Two wights, well learned in the law, That is, well skilled to find a flaw; Said one companion to the other, "How is it, most respected brother, That you of late have shaved away Those whiskers which for many a day, Had ornamented much your cheek? Sure 'twas an idle, silly freak." To whom the other answer gave, With look half merry and half grave, "Though others be by whiskers graced, A Lawyer can't be too barefaced" rrmsiderablv burned, the Edenton Gazette states, that they were not so much iniured but that the con tents rriav he made out. The Cashier, Mr. Pullen, was absent on a visit to Raleigh. Newbern, Sept. 6. Since our last, we have been gratified to learn, that Lieut. Eliason, of the U. S. Engineers, has been order ed, by the War Department, to superintend the contemplated op erations near Ocracock for deep ening the Swash: and that the Work will be commenced as soon as the necessary machinery can be procured. Spectator. Death hi Poison. A Pennsyl- vania paper gives an account of the whole family ot a Mr. William Clarke of Union town being des troyed by poison, On the even ing of the 1st of August they sat down to their supper of mush and milk in perfect health. A short time.aftenvards they were all sei-j zed with nausea and vomiting. They remained in this situation the whole night, feeling little a- larm at the circumstance and drinking plentifully of cold water. 1 he next morning a physician was called, but his prescriptions were attended with no relief. At 10 o'clock in the forenoon, Oliver a boy six years of age died the physicians opened the body and declared that the death was occa sioned by mineral poison. On the night of that day, Albert a boy aged three years died, and on the third day which was Sunday, at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, Mrs. Clarke the mother, breathed her last. Finally, on Monday even ing, the father of the family Mr. Olarke, expired. The boy who Sept. 4 -On Tuesday died first was buried on Sunday, tinn. IcTnvinf? the smallest possible vestiges of the performance, the scars are therefore much less ap parent than could have been ex pected. The cicatrix upon the forehead, whence the adventitious nose was taken, is very small, and may be entirely concealed by the hair of the foretop, with the ex ception of that portion which ex tends to the root of the nose which was designedly made in the place where there is usually a natural wrinkle for which without the clo sest inspection it would be taken. The bones ot the nose, which iorm the partition between the nostrils and also the one forming the left side of the nose were destroyed by the disease (a cancer) but the . operation was so conducted as to fill up the deficiency occasioned by the loss of these bones and to give the nose an aquiline appear- ance so that the horrible deformi ty caused by the loss of the facial handle has disappeared, while the new proboscis stands forth with becoming modesty. " . Oneida iV.1. Observer. t t ."-r . . . last, William L. Wolf, a lawless and desperate fellow, was taken up m this city arid ordered to pri son as a vagrant. On arriving at the jail, he was directed to enter one of the lovyer apartments; which he refused to do, and immediate ly ascended the stairs, seized a large bar of iron, and threatened to kill any person who should at tempt to bring him down. A man by the name ot Merrill Miller then ascended for the purpose of tak ing him. On approaching him, he gave Miller a severe blow on the side of the head with the bar, which fractured his skull; when ?,;JVY.i,'!lt' the iailor firi at Wolf with a pistol, and lodged a ,ball and two buck shot in hfs ab domen. He lingered until 2 o' clock yesterday afternoon, when he expired. A coroner's inquest was held over his body, which rendered a verdict, that his death was occasioned by three wounds received from a pistol fired by John T. C. VViatt while in the dis charge of his dutv as iailor. Mil ler lies dangerously ill, and his icuvciy is uonsiuered somewhat doubttul. Star. f ire. A'hre occurred in the Branch of the State Bank at E denton, on the 23d ult. which but for its timely discovery, would Boon have consumed the whole Duilding, with its valuable con the three others were committed to the grave at one time, on Tues day, in the Baptist burying yard in Union Town. One child about nine months old is the only survi vor of the family. How the poi sonous substance found its way into the food is not conjectured. Renovation. It is stated that a Mrs. Galusha. of Mnnmniitlv Maine, now 83 years of age, has had, within the last three years, an entire set of new teeth, a new head of hair, and her sight, of which she had been for some time deprived, has been so pcrfectlv re stored, that she is now able to read the finest print without the aid of spectacles. The New Nose. The import ant operation of making a new nose has been recently performed in this village by Dr. Batchelder, the late professor of surgery in one of the eastern medical colle ges, with complete success. The operation consisted in taking a piece of flesh from the forehead and bringing it down, applying and fastening it to the face where the nose should be, the part to which it' was to be applied having been previously scarified. We have examined the face of this untortunate individual and find that it is not only true that such 'an operation has been performed nnto t?.. i " cmuuii nas oeen periormeu tents. Fortunately, no papers of but that it was done with so much Social System. Miss Frances Wright, the authoress of "Travels in America," who has formed a settlement in Tennessee, with purchased negroes, intends to li berate them as soon as the pur chase money, with interest, is re funded by their labor. As a vi sionary theorist, she has thrown Robert Owen in the back ground; she has adopted many of his licen tious opinions, and added to them principles of infidelity, shocking in the extreme. A "Community" is formed under her patronage, somewhat similar to the one for med by Robert Owen, at New! Harmony. For this community; she has written and adopted ai constitution, which abolishes the institution of matrimony; allows a! promiscuous intercourse of the! sexes; advocates the amalgam a-! tion of the black and white popu lation; and denies a state of exist ence after death. Many, once fa-! vorable to her enterprize, which was first undertaken under the! guise of philanthropy, have be come disgusted, and left her set tlement. Lockport Jour. Notice. STRAYED from the Sub scriber, at Greenville, Pilt county, on Friday, 5th inst. ft. spare made Bay Horse, Blaze face, one of his hind feet white and when travelling drags his hind feet con siderably. Said horse broke his bridle and went off with the saddle on him he was brought from Tennessee last fall, and it is supposed he will make his way in that direction. Any person taking up said horse and notifying the Subscriber therof, or delivering the horse to him in Pitt county, eleven miles east of Green ville, shall be suitably rewarded. JAMES M. DANIEL. Sept. 9, 1S28. 4-3 Notice. ALL persons are hereby forewarned from trading for a note of hand, giv en by the Subscriber to G. Shurley, for 100, dated 29th March last, and due twelvemonths after date the considera tion for said note having failed. IVM. R. D UP REE. Aug. 2S, 1828. 2-4 Notice. rjMIE Subscriber informs the public, that the Note of hand for SlOO, giv en him by Mr. Wm. R. Dupree and which they are cautioned against recei ving, was traded off a few days after it was given, and I have nothing further to do with it. GER. SHURLEY. Aug. 30, 1828. 3-3 A young woman was found last week at Philadelphia, disguised in man's apparel for the purpose of ascertaining the haunts of her hus band, of whom she was jealous. Snvff.Vr. D. M. Re ese, a re spectable physician of New-York, ijiua work recently published, says ue nas Known two instances of death from eating smrff, a habit which is perhaps increasing a mong the ladles of our country with a rapidity only equalled by the ravages of ardent spirits, and which is no less ruinous to health and destructive to life) This practice has its origin in using the Scotch snuff as a tooth powder a fondness is soon acquired for it, and hundreds among us, especial ly among our females, get drunk upon it every day of their lives. The effects are paleness of coun tenance, torpor of body, stupor of imnu, uiseases oi the stomach, lungs, &c. PROPOSAL, For publishing in Petersburg, Va. a Newspaper, to be issued every Mon day, to be entitled THE TIMES. Francis G. Yancey, Editor. Henry Whyte, Publisher. Devoted to Agriculture, Manufac tures, Com?nerce,the Mechanic Arts, Sciences, Literature, Poetry, and General News. MIE TIMES will be of the largest size of Newspapers, exceeding in dimensions any journal at present pub lished south of Washington City. It will be printed on paper of the best qua lity, with entire new type, of elegant modern cast. Its pages will be compact, filled with the most valuable matter, un der the heads above enumerated: and the Editor and Publisher pledge themselves that neither expense nor labor shall be spared to render it useful and entertain ing to the planter and farmer, the mer chant in town and country, the profes sional gentleman, the manufacturer, the mechanic, as well as the lover of mis cellaneous reading. They wilt endea vor especially to make it acceptable as a Family Newspaper. The stale of the markets will be particularly attended to; every kind of information industriously sought, and the prices of domestic pro duce, as well as of foreign goods, given with the utmost attainable accuracy. To insure the readers of the Times the earliest intelligence, a correspondence will be established with Europe and all the principal cities of the United States, besides a general exchange with the in terior newspapers; and slips will be is sued immediately after the arrival of ev ery mail with interesting news. THE price of Subscription will be Three Dollars per annum. Advertising by the year $15, limited to two squares g20 for three squares. Transient advertisements inserted at the customary rates. With this exposition of our views and intentions, we respectfully solicit the support of our friends and the public. Those inclined to favor the undertaking, will please call upon either the Editor or Publisher, and subscribe their names. As the terms are as low as can possibly be afforded, and as considerable capital is required in the commencement, sub scriptions in advance will be gratefully acknowledged. The first number is ex pected to appear early in August; before which, it is requested that all the lists may be returned. Petersburg, June 24, 162S. P